9 North Carolina . 17 Texas A&. 6 N.C. Mate ... ... Arkansas . . . 27 Mississippi . . . 14 Virginia . .. ..47 . . . . P7 Chicago . *. . . 0 ... . . . Vanderbilt olverine Eleven Is Upset By Inspired Fighting Illini, L6-7 Crisler's Leader Valiant In Defeat Assistant Grid Coaches Merit Recognition For Invaluable Aid By MASS GOULD Of invaluable aid is the work of Michigan's group of assistant coaches who year in and year out put their shoulders to the grindstone in an ef- fort to keep the records of the Wol- verine football squads up where they belong. The football squad has the largest personnel of all the sports and there- fore requires more men to handle the instruction. Coach Fritz Cris- ler's present crew numbers around 40 and obviously he cannot hope to do all the work himself. And there's where his competent staff of assis- tants come in; namely, line coach Clarence Munn, backfield coach Earl Martineau, end coach Campbell Dick- son, and utility coaches Bennie Oos- terbaan, Wally Weber and Ray Court- right. Munn Is An Institution: In his second year at Michigan, Munn ("Biggie" as he is known to his colleagues) is already an institution. The great line which he developed last year and which reached its pin- nacle with a thrilling defensive stand' against Northwestern, was a tribute to his painstaking ability. And yes- terday was the first time this year that an opponent has scored through the Michigan forward wall.' Earl "Marty" Martineau found a trio of outstanding sophomores in the ranks' when he took over the back- field duties last year and proceeded to make of them a polished unit. Quar- terback Forest Evashevski and half- backs Tom Harmon and Paul Kromer provided the scoring punch which ac- counted for six victories out of eight games last year, and this year" Mar- ty's" trio, together with Bob West- fall, has shown even greater power, although the unit has been tempor- arily broken up by Kromer's knee in jury. Martineau's insistence upon a quick start has been one of the reasons why the Michigan scoring machine, al- though slowed down yesterday after- noon against Illinois, has totaled 172 points in five games. Dickson Is Patient Patience has been the virtue of end coach Campbell "Dick" Dickson since he joined the Wolverine staff last year. He immediately recognized the natural ability of Ed Frutig and spent hours in brushing up his play until such time as he could be worked into the starting lineup, at which time he blossomed out sensationally. Another end in whom Dickson sees a future star is Joe Rogers, who, crude at the outset of fall practice, has profited immensely from t'ie blocking, tackling and pass catching instruction of the Wolverine coach, as well as from "Dick's" advice on how to break up interference. The work of Bennie Oosterbaan, Wally Weber and Ray Courtright has likewise been indispensable. All three are excellent scouts, and the end experience of Oosterbaan in particu- lar has greatly aided Crisler and Dickson in developing brilliant flank- ers. Not to be forgotten, either, are the untiring efforts of the men in charge of furnishing Crisler with new ma- terial from the freshman ranks. Wally Weber, as head frosh coach, and Cliff Keen and Ray Fisher, Varsity wrest- ling and baseball coaches respectively, can be found on South Ferry Field daily, drilling the first-year men in search of another Harmon or Eva- shevski, Kodros or Savilla. JOH N' S TAILOR and CLEANER Suits Made To Measure Satisfaction Guaranteed! Also Alterations and Repairing 609 PACKARD STREET Michigan's able captain, Archie Kodros, witnessed his team's first defeat yesterday afternoon at Champaign, IlL. In spite of this entirely unexpected loss, Kodros played his usual steady and brilliant game. Iowa's Hawke yes Down Purdue Boilermakers With TwoSafeties LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 4.-(P)-- After staving off two smashing offen- sives with their backs to the wall, Purdue's Boilermakers were thrown for two safeties to give Iowa a 4-0 decision in a Big Ten Conference football contest before 22,000 specta- tors in Ross-Ade Stadium today. Both safeties came in the fourth period, the first after the visitors 'had been thrown back from the Pur- 'due six-inch line. Dropping back to. punt out, Jack Brown was smothered behind his goal line by Iowa tacklers before he could get the ball away. A blocked Purdue punt a few minutes earlier, recovered by the Hawkeyes on the Boilermaker 15, had paved the way for the Iowa thrust and the re- sultant two points. Brown's Punt Blocked Iowa tallied its second safety short- ly afterward when its linemen ripped through the Purdue forward wall to block Brown's punt and down Leon Dewitte as he pounced upon the ball behind his goal. The Boilermakers stopped Iowa's vaunted aerial game, the Hawkeyes completing only one forward pass in eight attempted. But Purdue couldn't withstand the visitors' power on the ground. Iowa reeled off eleven first downs against four for Purdue. Brown intercepted four of the Hawks' heaves. Purdue's aerial offensive likewise was bottled up, being good for only 18 yards on four successful tries. Iowa had much the better of it otherwise, gaining 179 yards from rushing against 59 for the Boiler- makers. Kinnick Leads Running Attack After a bad opening kickoff by August Morningstar, which Herman Snider covered for Iowa on his 44, the Hawkeyes loosed a powerful run- ning attack, with Niles Kinnick and Ray Murphy carrying the ball through wide holes in the Boiler- maker line which advanced to the Purdue 15. Then Brown intercepted the first pass attempted by Kinnick, the Iowa ace. Early in the second period, Iowa pounded to within 22 yards of a touchdown but couldn't go any far- ther in two downs. Bill Green was tossed for a 7 yard loss and Kinnick's short pass into the end zone went straight into the arms of Brown. I PENN GAME RAIL EXCURSION RAILROAD TICKET - GAME TICKET NIGHT IN HOTEL - BIG DINNER and DANCE AFTER THE GAME- ll m UII _ &