-; r .- HE, Mf 1 L T ?ESI)AY, FE . 1; + er.. ... } TA 4V AQM Y.hTU37A sAF.- xw a ws. Y 1. a.. . lowa Cagers Upset Wolverines 38-30 To Dim Title Hopes Close Guarding StopsVarsity Michigan Offensive Stalls As Quintet Misses 52 Out Of 60 Shots (Continued from Page 1) wzvo Townsend tip-ins for their -e s7ht points, while Van Ysseldyk and Stephens crashed through with furious efforts for the buckets that clinched the affair. Wolverines All But Out Inability to make its dogs count and a woeful display of shooting from the field spelled defeat for the Wol- verines. And, of course, the presence of an inspired, determined Hawkeye quintet didn't help much. The Wolverines still cling to that slim thread of hope that upsets among other Big Ten fives might elevate them back into the race. Minnesota and Wisconsin play here this week- end, and neither are soft touches by any means. It means a grinm struggle for recognition. SUMMARIES Iowa g fto Stephens, f.............6 3 15 Kinnick, f ...............1 0 2 johhson,f f................1 1 3 Drees,c................3 1'7 Suesens, g ................ .0 1 1 Hohenhorst, c-g ..........0 0 0 Prasse, g ...............60 2 2 Vanysseldyk, g...........3 2 8 Totals.............14 10 38 Fritz Crisler Makes No Claims To Football 'Miracle Man' Title Shot-By-Shot COLLEGE BASKETBALL Notre Dame 45. Butler 22. Wisconsin 46, Chicago 32. Nebraksa 50, Iowa State 23. Temple 48, Carnegie Tech 39. Duke 48, Washington and Lee 39, U. of Kentucky 35, Marquette 33. Drake 43, St. Louis 32. Read Daily Classified Ads (Continued from Page 1) after he succeeds to Yost's posi- tion. "That would be much too hard a job," he said. Crisler had a difficult time making n his mind whether to go or stay, but he says tvo Michigan students ayed a part in his decision. One vas a boy whom he saw standing on i street corner in Miami during Christmas vacation. He was holding a sign saying "University of Michi- -an." The Crislers picked him up and took him to Atlanta, since he was broke and already three days late for classes. On the way they pumped him as to what he thought about the football situation at Mich- igan and the prospective new ^oaches, but they let him out without ever telling him their name. Last week Crisler went out to Ann Arbor, and coming back on the train he was seated next to a girl who was going hom for a short vacation in be- tween semesters. The conversation was steered around to football by tactics which he considered very skillful. He asked her what she thought of the coaches being men- tioned for the job, and finally she got around to Fritz Crisler of Prince., ton. "When she finished with me," he ruefully admits, "any shred of vanity I might have had was coil- pletely destroyed." He wasn't as clev- er as he thought though, for sudden- ly - she looked at him intently and asked, "Say, you can't be Fritz Cris- ler, can you?" When he admitted shame-facedly that he not only could be, he was, she blushed 10 shades of red and hastily excused herself to take another seat.- Those two Michigan students don't know it yet, but they're going to be invited to the Crisler home for din- ner just as soon as they get settled in Ann Arbor. "I think they ought to get to know each other," he re- marked with a grin. If Crisler does present Michigan with some winning teams he will certainly qualify for the degree of F.T.S.-Football Trouble Shooter. When he came to Princeton six years ago, the outlook was as bleak as it is now at Michigan. Football had been Player in the doldrums here for some years, Smick 2 and Old Nassau didn't exactly wel- come him with open arms. Stephens, If ever there was a tradition- FIRST HALF Shot fouls (Prasse) ... flip shot ....... fol (T'ws'nd).. hook-side .... M 'I .2 0 .2 2 .2 3 .4 3 bound college, Princeton is it, and Stephens, foul (Beebe).,...4 4 the old grads did not take kindly to Kinnick, tip-in..........4 6 this interloper from the Middle West. Townserd, hook..........6 6 Eveilsince the 1870's Princeton foot- Stephens long............6 8 ball had been coached by Princeton Townsend, foul (Drees) . ..7 8 graduates, and to hire a man who had Townsend, foul (Drees) ..,. .8 8 no previous connections whatsoever Van Yss, long..........8 10 with Princeton was tantamount to an Townsend, foul (Suesens . .9 10 admission that they couldn't find a Johnson, flip-side....... .9 12 ,good coach from their own ranks. Stephens, tip-in. ..........9 14 And such an admission was almost Rae, foul (Drees)........10 14 enough provoation to make all loyal Pink, foul (Prasse).......11 14 alumni give up. Drees, foul (Rae) .........11 15 To make matters worse, just before Van Yss., foul (T'wns'nd) .11 16 Crisler arrived, the Daily Princeton- ian put out its annual April Fool's is- were mollified. Crisier says he didn't receive one lettgr of cirticism on the sue, the chief hoax story being that season. Crisler had rented a ranch in the As it is his leaving has evoked wilds of Montana, 50 miles from the ' nearest town, as the summer train- only a chorus of genuine regrets and ing camp. No man would be eligible best wishes to Crisler% for his new to play football unless he went out job. The attitude of the students to- there and worked as a cow-puncher wards him is not one of adulation all summer. The gullible wire services but rather of respect. He is a difficult and metropolitan newspaper corres- man to know well, they say, and he pondents thought it was true, and jdoes not believe that a head coach promptly sent it out in their dis- should ever be "rust one of (le patches. Crisler, when lie arrived boys." Just ask any of the team here, found stacks of letters from in- what they think of him, and they dignant alumni telling him to go a y. "Weil, he's a swell guy and a back where he cane fron. real gentleman, but he sure is a How he won the respect and ad- tough ('Qach." mirtio ofthe alumni, students, Crisler' has his own philosophy miration ofth almisudn, about coaching, and he thinks it's and not least, of opposing teams sounds like an Alger story. To put it stood him in good stead-. "Football briefly; ii- his first year lie did quite is a business," he says, "and a coach well, losing but two games, one of has to produce the goods, If he does them to Michigan. In 1933, though, not, he loses his job just like any the fun began. His star was riding other businessman. The only dif high, and for the next three years, sm he lost but one game, '33 and '35 be- lose his job without; having it head- ing championship years. In '36 he lined in papers all over the country." again lost two, one of them the game And the Pass. Punt and Prayer of games as far as Princeton is con- system, Mr. Crisler-what about cerned-which Yale, with the aid of that? Is it doomed? Crisler smiled. Larry Kelley, won 26-23. "Not at all-I'm going to be doing Things weren't so rosy les fall, 11plenty of praying." though. The Tiger came home with its tail between its l+gs, sourdlyISHOW.5 WATCH whipped by two of i traditional S ' C foes, Iarvard and Yale, by wcor -s of and 34-6 n 26-0. how-0''r wln 1, JEWELRY REPAIR team staged a comeback to beat Navy 347 Maynard Cor. William decisiely in the last game of the Watch Crystals 35e year, those who had begun to gruimbl1_ ; .T i4 t..t _- ._ JA I n J _y ' " a MViichigan Townsend, f Thomas, f Smick, c .... Rae, c....... Slavin, c ..... Beebe, g ..... Dobson, g ... Fishman, g .. Pink, g..... ............ ............ g f ..4 7 ..0 1. ..1 2 ..0 1 ..1 0 ..1 0 ..0 0 ..1 0 ..0 3 ..8 14 tp 15 1 4 1 2 2 0' 2 3 30 WATCIA ? - N4N 3W,/ii/rPRACf/'m SWATCIIFORSUO BY Totals ........ .. . Half time score: Iowa 16; Michigan 11. Personal fouls: Prasse 4, Suesens 3, Drees 4, Stephens 2, Kinnick. Town- send 2, Smick 2, Beebe 3, Rae, Sla- vin, Thomas 2. Free throws missed: Drees, Stephens, Van Ysseldyk, Kin- nick. Townsend, Smick, Pink. ", .. , , . . ! 4 7j. M 1 ~ ti ® " ti ~ ' t _ N : 'tee a _" +a + m' w % ti w o- ti _. We're Ready For You With the Largest and Most Complete Stock of #2 # # 2 2 NEW...If You Prefer and STUDENT S UPPLIES q aWe Want You To Prefer To Do Business With Us" For All Departments el&AW "ftrAo____ . .w ar ! - -Vrmk