THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE !Mw- Leg Injury May Force John Viergever Out Of Penn Game Matmen Meet New York A.C. In December The Varsity wrestling team will meet the New York Athletic Club grapplers on December 23 in New York, it was announced yesterday by Coach Cliff Keen. The meet with the Winged Foot aggregation was arranged because of the demands of several Michigan alumni, who are members of the New York Athletic Club, and further interest was de- veloped by the Winged Foot coach, Merle Thrush, who wrestled at Mich-' igan under Keen in 1928. The Club team has lost only one meet since 1929 when Thrush took charge of the squad and has one of the strongest groups of wrestlers in the country. While Keen does not feel that Michigan has very much chance of winning, he expects the trip to act as an incentive to the wrestlers and believes that the Wol- verines will put up a good fight. - The team has been practicing every day under the direction of Captain Heavenrich and is coming along in See the NEW PIG=TEX L EAT H ER JACKETS Specially Priced $6.95 SUEDES in the NEW COSSACK STYLE $5.50 to $7.50 WOOL JACKETS Fancy and Plain . . $5.50 CORDUROY REEFERS Wool and Slicker Innerlined at $7.50 THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN h & & Mlle Serve Ic a sa ..lgein 809 SOUTH MAIN sTIaLT Sports of the Day NEW YORK - Gerald Walker, Detroit Tiger 'wild man,' receives honors as American League's lead- ing pinch hitter with average of .462. EAST LANSING-Coach Charlie Bachman seeks to point Spartan eleven to game with Warner-coached Temple squad. DETROIT - Pug Vaughan to be at quarterback spot for Detroit Lions in game with Boston Redskins to- morrow night. HONOLULU - Brain hemorrhage suffered in grid contest fatal to Mil- lard Hunter, star end for the 13th Artillery eleven. KALAMAZOO - Strong Western State basketball squad, perennial conquerors of Michigan team, begins drills. fine shape. The 155- and 175-pound classes are still open to any one, as the material now working out is not sufficient to meet the strong schedule which the Wolverines will face. The remaining divisions look strong, and by the time the regular season ar- rives Keen expects to put a strong team on the mat. Tiny Wright To Be Moved Over To Tackle Spot Joe Rinaldi Will Be Back At Center; Everhardus May Have Cracked Rib John Viergever, veteran Wolverine tackle who suffered a reoccurence of a leg injury in Saturday's game against Columbia, probably will be unable to start against the Quakers of Pennsylvania in the Homecoming battle this week, according to Coach Harry Kipke, who sent his battered Varsity through a light drill Monday afternoon in preparation for Penn's invasion. Joe Rinaldi will be placed at center and Tiny Wright, who has surprised onlookers recently with his brilliant play, will be moved to tackle. Three others who started against the Lions are on the casulty list. Capt. Bill Renner, John Smithers and Chris Everhardus were kept out of hard drilling by Kipke Monday but should be ready for action Saturday against the team that Coach Ray Courtright, after watching Penn in action in its three games, rates as the best in the east. Everhardus May Be Out Smithers was not in uniform Mon- day and is suffering from a contusion of the mouth, but according to Dr. Frank Lynam should be able to play Saturday. Renner is again bothered by an arm injury as he was the week before the Wisconsin tilt, and Chris Everhardus has an injured rib. The exact identity of the latter injury has not yet been determined and there is a possibility that a rib may be cracked. Otherwise he will probably start against Penn. Add to this quartet of injured the names of Amrine, Ziem, Hanshue and Cooper who were listed as probable regulars before the season opened but who were hurt early in the year, and one probably has the longest listof injured stars in Michigan grid his- tory. Twelfth Intersectional Tilt Michigan's coming game with the Quakers will be its 12th intersectional contest in a decade, ten of the eleven 9'm r Ml LTONS SHOP FOR MEN 119 South Main St. What Will Joslin's Flounders Observe Absence Mean To Tenth Anniversa Basketball Squad? The Flounder's Club, faculty swi ming organization, is celebratingt Just what effect the elimination tenth anniversary of its found from competition for a position on this week. the Varsity cage quintet of Dick Jos- iti ek lin, who dropped out of basketball in Several of the original members order that he would have more time to work for his master's degree, will have on the success or failure of the Michigan team next season can only be a matter for conjecture. Joslin, a letter winner in 1934 and 1935, would have been a valuable man to have had on the squad if he had shown the ability that he exhibited at the pivot position as a sophomore. However ,his performances last sea- son were poor and he proved of little aid to Coach Cappon.- Because of expected difficulty with the center position, due to the new rules governing the pivot player, Jos- lin was expected to be an outstand- ing candidate for either that post or one of the forward berths. Should John Gee fail to show the necessary qualities to fill the pivot post John or Earl Townsend will probably replace him. Earl Meyers, first string forward last year, John Jablonski, Earl Townsend, George Rudness, and a number of sopho- mores will be trying for the forward positions. played resulting in Wolverine victor- ies. Courtright's estimate of the Penn eleven makes it seem likely that the Wolverines, to win, will have to omit their seemingly customary second half let down, for the Quakers will be here to bear out pre-season predic- tions of their strength which in the last two games has seemed enormous. Members of the Varsity who didn't get into the Columbia affair were sent through a hard offensive scrim- mage against the freshman on Ferry Field by Coaches Cappon and Ooster- baan. Campbellsand Barclaywere the most impressive of the reserve backs that found Weber's first year- men a tough eleven to gain ground against. Frosh Scored Against Twice The freshmen were on defense at all times and were scored upon twice during the drill. Ray Courtright was in charge of one freshman group and spent the practice session teaching them Pennsylvania plays. The Quak- ers possess a world of power both in the backfield and line that will give Harry Kipke's grid machine all the trouble it will want in one afternoon. Michigan's Varsity will concentrate on a defense against Penn plays the rest of the week in an effort to stop the team Saturday that has scored 101 points in its last two games. Pat- anelli, Savage, Kramer, Johnson, Sob- sey, Bissell, Wright, Ellis, Ritchie and Remias besides Renner, Ever- hardus and Viergever were kept out of the drill against the freshmen. Amrine was at the field in street clothes, having been released from the hospital late last week, and Bud Hansue worked out for a few minutes' in a sweat suit but is not expected to be ready to play until at least the Illinois game. ry im- the ing Varsity Coach Matt Mann's group are still active, including Professors J. C. Brier, Preston Slosson, Charles Gordy, Preston James, and Charles Fries. There are still openings in the groups meeting every day in the week from 12:15 to 12:45 p.m. The pl E beginners' class convenes Tuesdays of and Thursdays. Read The Want Ads wi A.. 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