?ii MC IGAN DAILY' . Returns To The Mat PRESS PASSES By BUD BENJAMIN . Eight Football Players To Join Keens Varsity Wrestling Squad Thanksgiving Grid iron Battles i 411 That Glitters . . odds, and quite probably the eventual runout. Was Barnum right? HUNDIIREDS of Michigan students Is -- - nteevl and townspeope have been ERE IS ONE ANGLE on the evils filched out of some $5,000 by foot- of the racket. Gordon Cobble- ball gambling syndicates which failed dick, columnist of the Cleveland Plain' to pay off. to pa off.Dealer, penned the piece about a' This in itself should cause no wide- month ago. Maurice J. Meyer, an spread surprise, for the entire ticket official in college football for 20 years, racket was run by a bunch of cheap gave the writer the following quotes: crooks who did what might be ex- pected when the i law of averages "There is enough commer- turned against them. They skipped, cialized gambling in connection leaving behind them scores of spec- with college football to wreck ulators clutching the green and yel- the game within five years. low slips that had become slightly less valuable than Confederate mon- ,Some day, somewhere, in some big e b schoolpreparing for an important y n.... . r mwn "l lnx n n h l The pool fold up was not local- Ized in Ann Arbor. Detroit, Chi- cago and other towns felt the sting as the syndicates collapsed. After a season of good "takes" the combination of a financially disastrous Saturday %nd the vir- tual close of the season motivat- ed the runout. John R. Pieters, '22, was arrested and arraigned as the operator of these pools. He was released on $500 bail, and his examination was set for Dec. 1. A bear story by Edward F. Conlin, Pieters' attorney, that stu- dents who testify will be liable for prosecution was immediately termed fallacious by Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp and several faculty members of the law school. Mr. Pieters is, charged with the operation of a foot- ball pool based on chance. Students testifying will not be in any way liable under this statute. The students are not the only ones who have been left holding the bag. So has defendant Pieters. Obviously a front for the larger gambling syn- dicate, Pieters' backers welched on him, leaving him no alternative but to skip. The conviction of Pieters, should he be found guilty, will mere- ly remove one of the many smaller fries in the immense racket. At the top are the big shots, whose identity Pieters either does not know or will not reveal. They will have new stooges here next year, lining up their student representatives, and distrib- uting their bookie slips with the im- possible games, the almost foolproof, game, a gambler will snow a lootoall player more money than the boy ever knew existed and tell him it's his if he will perform a certain service. "The boy, who has known pov- erty and is struggling to get through 'school, will comply. Someone will find out about it. And football will spend the next 50 years trying to recover from the blow." And Cobbledick adds his own bit: "The growth of football bet- ting has reached a point where, for about 10 weeks each fall, the college game rivals the races in its appeal to the sporting instinct. "The Black Sox episode of 1919 proved that gamblers could reach professional athletes, who are, gen- erally, well paid. To deny the pos- sibility that they could as easily reach amateur athletes who, in theory, are not paid at all, is to shut one's eyes to certain plain facts.I "If football in the bigger colleges were a game played by students for the fun of the thing and the glory of alma mater and patronized only by students and alumni there would be no gambling evil. But big time football is a pretty highly-commer- cialized enterprise itself, and com- mercialized gambling inevitably fol- lowed the growth of its popularity. "Not all college football play- ers are high-minded young men. There are rats and muckers among them. There are dis- gruntled individuals who believe they have been badly treated by Forrest 'Butch' Jordan, a senior from Clare and a reserve guard and tackle on Coach Fritz Crisler's football squad, reported yesterday to Cliff Keen, Varsity wrestling coach. 'Butch,' who did not attend school last year, was a heavy- weight mainstay on the squad two seasons ago. Anderson.May Be Iowa's New Coaeh IOWA CITY, Ia., Nov. 23.-(AP)-- The opinion was general on the University of Iowa campus tonight that Dr. Eddie Anderson, Holy Cross coach, would replace Irl Tubbs as head football coach at the Hawkeye institution. Although University officials would neither affirm nor deny the reports, the Iowa City Press-Citizen said to- day that Anderson "will be the r ew football coach at the University of Iowa barring unforeseen develop- ments." The University athletic board was expected to announce Anderson's ap- pointment Friday, exactly on the deadline set after its -last meeting when board representatives said an "important announcement will be made within 10 days." their colleges. And there are boys reared in poverty with needy families looking to them for help, to whom $1,000 would seem a fabulous sum. "There has never yet been a pub- lic scandal in connection with a foot- By MASE GOPLD Football invades the wrestling ranks! That's the latest news from the Field House balcony where Coach Cliff Keen's Varsity grapplers are hard at work preparing for the com- ing campaign. No less than eight members of Fritz Crisler's gridiron crew will join up with Keen's champion array with- in the next week. Two of them are veteran grapplers in the heavyweighti class, while the rest are comparative newcomers. Savilla And Jordan Joe Savilla, towering tackle who was forced out of play early in the season due to an ankle injury, and Forrest 'Butch' Jordan, a capable replacement at guard and tackle, are the heavyweights and both have seen Varsity wrestling service in the past. Savilla, who took up wrestling only last winter, quickly developed into a finished grappler and proved a con- sistent winner all last spring. Jordan, who was not in school last year, was a Keen mainstay two years ago and will do plenty of damage to rival heavyweights this year with his 200 pounds, already toughened by a hard football season. Kromer To Report Paul Kromer, the other half of the Touchdown Twins, will soon report to Keen fit and ready to challenge all members of the 155 pound class, and the speed which carried him to many a score on the gridiron should also prove to be an invaluable aid to him on the mat. 'The Jeep', Howard Mehaffey, is another footballer who couldn't resist the opportunity which wrestling of- fers to throw the other fellow around the ring and will also report this week. 175 pounds will be his class, although 'The Jeep' isn't at all partic- ular about whom he wrestles, just as long as there's another guy around. Dave Strong, the diminutive half- back and accurate passer, will now try his hand at tossing rival wrest- lers around in place of heaving the pigskin. He's a 145 pounder: So is ball game, but among themselves with doors locked and blinds drawn, coaches have been known to talk soberly of certain suspicious instances that have come to their attention. They couldn't prove a thing, but they have long been conscious of the dan- ger. They have reason to be." Capt. Harold Nichols, which should' make things very interesting indeed. Another Tackle Bill Smith, 210 pound junior who alternated at tackle this year with Don Siegel, will be another addition to the heavyweight ranks. The foot- ball boys seem to have a monopoly here with Jordan, Savilla and Smith slated to fight it out for the right to represent the Wolverines in their first match. Then there are two reserve guards of Crisler's crew who have chosen wrestling as the next sport on their program. They are Art Paddy, a can- didate at 155 pounds, and Art Ben- nett, at 165 pounds. Both of them have had previous wrestling experi- ence and should prove valuable addi- tions to the squad which already numbers well over twenty. Oosterbaan Cuts 11 From Cage Squad The first cut of the basketball squad was announced yesterday by Coach Bennie Oosterbaan. Eleven men were dropped from the team be- cause of the limited space for prac- tice and Oosterbaan indicated that another cut would follow in the near future. The cut left a total of 20 men on the squad and that number will be swelled when the candidates from the football squad report within the next few days. Danny Smick, last year's second string forward, incurred a leg injury in the Ohio State football battle ard is expected to be lost to the cage squad for at least two weeks. The team takes a holiday today but will be back at hard drill tomor- row. The opening game of the sea-, son is scheduled for Dec. 10 with Michigan State's strong Spartan five furnishing the opposition. During Christmas vacation, the squad will make its annual eastern trip meet-, ing Rochester, Syracuse and Cornelll on Dec. 17, 19 and 22. I-M OPEN TODAY The Intramural Building is open today from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m and the pool from 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Southern Cal. vs. U.C.L.A. Alabama vs. Vanderbilt Pennsylvania vs. Cornell Tennessee vs. Kentucky Brown vs. Columbia Nebraska vs. Kansas State Texas vs. Texas A.&M. 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