4. -Daily-Fred Shippey -Daily-Fred Shippey TWO TALLIES FOR THE WOLVERINES-Dave Raimey and Bennie McRae, 'Michigan's talented halfback duo, were two important factors in Saturday's 38-8 victory over Army. At the left, Raimey breaks loose from eight yards out to score the Wolverines' first six-pointer in the first quarter. McRae, right, finds running room as he cuts back into the Army secondary on his way to a 43-yard 'touchdown gallop. That's Michigan's Scott Maentz (96) giving McRae blocking.assistance. Army's Paul Zmuida (85) and till Whitehead (50) try to close in on Raimey. Wolverine Ground Attack Batters Cadets (Continued from Page 1) Bickle kicked the first of five xtra points, in a busy day which lso saw him boot a field goal nd kickoff seven times. The im- ressive sophomore made his field oal from the Army 11, which oosted the score to 10-0 after -uy Curtis had recovered Army's econd fumble, again onsthe 23- 'ard line. The grab by Curtis came on Ar- ay's first play after the kickoff. rack Stroebel, Glinka, McRae and, runnicliff combined to carry the all down to the four where Ar- ny stiffened and forced the hree-pointer. Shortly afterward, McRae elec- rified the crowd of 65,012 by cut- ing over left guard and racing 7 yards for a score with 3:31 one in the second quarter. It was % moment that Michigan fans, as well as McRae had been waiting or. When asked how he felt about shunninlg his "almost, but not quite" tag on his longest college run ever, he said, "I really wanted that one bad and once I shook off that last tackler's hand, all I saw was daylight." McRae Leads Runners McRae was the game's leading ground gainer, racking up 95 yards in only nine carries as he finally approached the stardom predicted of him. His run completed a four play, 65-yard drive following a quick kick by Army's Dick Peterson. Late in the half, however, Eck- ert took to the air and started riddling Michigan's pass defense. He completed 7 of 12 in that quar- ter alone, as an aerial to halfback Tom Culver carried the Army into Michigan territory for the first time with 2:30 left in the half. Time and the' Wolverine first string defense stopped the desper- ate Cadets, leaving Bump Elliott's squad 17 points to the good. Both coaches agreed that the first half was the key to the game, though Elliott admitted that he was concerned in the third period. "Things looked rough for us," he said, "but breaks and long gainers got us going again." It was also breaks and long gain- ers thatsArmy Coach Dale Hall referred to in lamenting his team's poor first half showing, but he called them "our mistakes.", "The fumbles and poor tackling allow- ed them to get ahead of us," he said, "and it was too far to come back." Black Knig) MICHIGAN ARMY First Downs 15 12 Rushing 11 2 Passing 2 10 Penalty 2 0 Total Number of Rushes 48 32 Net Yards-Rushing 239 15, Passing 50 164 Forward Passes Att. 1 33 Completed. 4 22 Intercepted by. 2 0 Yds. interceptions ret. 62 0 Total Plays (Rushes and Passes b59 65 Punts, Number 7 6 Average distance 32 45 Kickoffs, returned by 2 7 Yards Kicks Returned 79 168 Punts 33 32 Kickoffs , 46 136 Fumbles, Number 0 3 Ball Lost by 0 ) Penalties, Number 5 4 Yards penalized ' 45 50 RUSHING MICHIGAN Despite Hall's words, his squad was still very much in the game after the half as Elliott remark-I ed. Filling the air with passes,3 Eckert led the Cadets to touch- down territory in 15 plays after Michigan stalled on the visitor's1 38 and Scott Maentz punted intos the end zone. Eckert completed seven passes inl the drive- for 58 of the 80 yards, with the las flip going eight yards to Peterson all alone in the end zone. Sub quarterback Joe Black- grove came in and flipped a bas- ketball type shovel pass to end Bob Fuellhart for Army's final two points. ht for Army Tunnicliff 8 McRae 9 Raimey 3 Strobel 5 Tureaud 1 Ward 1 McLenna 4 Hood 4 Chapman 3 Raeder 1 Hornbeck 1 Dougall 2 Spacht 1 Totals 48 30 95 17 11 8 6 11 8 8 6 2 6' 0 30 0 95 0 17 0 11 0 8 0 6 0 11 0 8 17 0,6. 0 2 0 6 Michigan came roaring back after the aerial-show ended, as Ed Hood returned the kickoff 42 yards into Army territory, almost going all the way. One minute and 45 seconds later, Tunnicliff bulled three yards for the third touch- down, culminating a five play, 48 yard drive. A 15 yard personal foul helped the Wolverines in the march. Army Moves This didn't stop Eckert as the moved Army to the Michigan 48, completing three passes along the way before disaster struck in the person of- Stroebel. The defensive halfback was man-on-the-spot as he intercepted Eckert's pass and rambled 42 yards to the Army 16. Tunnicliff smashed twice to the seven, then sophomore halfback Bruce McLenna . carried three tacklers into the end zone at the third quarter gun. A Stroebel Steal Stroebel had completely dimin- ished any remaining Army hopes with his timely play, as he took 'advantage of the one on one sit-' uation. Eckert was surprised be- cause no defender had been close to his halfback on the pattern all day long. Even Elliott admitted that Stroebel "was only creeping up on the play." All in all, the win established Michigan as a solid football team which will be firmly challenged by arch rival Michigan State before a packed house next Saturday. -Daily-Ed Langs A TOE IN THE OFFENSE-Sophomore end and placekicker Doug Bickle is shown above kicking an 11-yard field goal in the first period of yesterday's game with Army. It was Bickle's second field goal of the season. The rangy end also had a perfect five-for-five day kicking extra points. In two games Bickle has accounted for thirteen points for the Wolverines. SMELL ROSES? 'M' Rose Bowl rea- Faces Spartans in Big Ten Opener 4 t Blakistonl McGraw-Dill Books for Medical J Students MORRIS' HUMAN ANATOMY, 12th Ed. Edited by J. Parsios SchaeJer, M.D., Ph.D., 1718 pp., 7 x 100, over 1220 numbered hgs., 8 plates of X-rays, $17.00 An excellent textbook in which the practical clinical applications h ve been emphasized even more heavily in this edition; so that the book may be used as a reference book as well as a.text. SHEARER'S MANUAL OF HUMAN DISSECTION, 4th Ed. By Charles E. Tobin, Ph.D., 258 Ppp., 74 x 9%sa, 97 Wlus., $7.50 An autonomous unit which does nothave to be used in conjunction with or with reference to, any specific descriptive text, and can be used with any dissection sequence. HANDBOOK OF HISTOLOGY, 4th Ed. By Karl A. 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Slobody, M.D., 530 PP., 6 x 9, iul, $11.00 The 3rd edition forms a good basic outline and is an excellent review for the student who is preparing himself for the state board exams. HUMAN GENETICS By C. C. Li, Ph.D., 218 pp., 5% x83/, 17 Was.,$8.50 The entire text Is devoted to aiscussions of human families and human populations. THE BLAKISTON. DIVISION McGRAW-HILL BOOK COMPANY, INC. 330 West 42nd Street, N.Y. 36 Stop in at your bookstore to examine any of the above titles. Player Eckert Culver King Rushatz Cunningham Peterson Pappas BIackgrove Stanat Totals ARMY Tries 11 2 4 4 2 3 1 3 2 42 240 1 239 Gains Loss Net 10 41 -31 4 10 4 23 0 23 11 1 10 4 10 -6 68 53 15 Player Glinka Tries Gains Loss Net 5 29 0 29 v."":.v. :::: n1c" 1 "r. 11V:"' " V.MVt.':." r r {.:. }r : S ,r "w,.;{.;t : ,;.": rv.,.;1 fi :.":::::::.:":"':::. '. nt:::1"."::J.":: :.. i....n... . i...:.V: Y::::il:.".1 "1 :":" '::. ...V J:"1 :V.. i . ..:.....: ":v:fi:":":"i:" F.ti...,.... .. n........ ..2i1: y}j{::{{.Fr... f... .V:. .a'.! .S"" .fihv."sv v."n.". n. ..S-.. ..> :"."."f :....1..":r.:. .v:":":"::: ifi;.y,."::":". 1.... S.,aa.".1...........;a:.a ................xk":x......n".."1a":.1".1...n.$:": :{i."r .. :":n........n........ ':".1.1;:" .;:.;.";1.1V:1:?:.:.;.fAJ.:':: :::.{':"::: i::'.": "" ::"h'.. .J1:1":' ..1::1".J".":7 "J 1.":ii{':1"..........f.........1:.....1 F f1 "V1 r s r r a s a r r a r era r e r- r o c s s r 4 r 5 r a a r e 7 v v TV TV s a e r r r a r a r# IH I~ Iu U" Midd~le -Weight Worsted's 1= 1 L +r.1 r. . ( I I. I " Irsr 4ii nI 'I '1 nI nI .1 '1 'I ' n 4a By DAVE ANDREWVS .Associate Sports Editor The smell of roses floated faintly over Michigan Stadium yesterday as the Wolverines convincingly dumped Army 38-8. Last week it was UCLA, 29-6, and many non-believers were con- verted. The victory yesterday" turned a few more. The most skeptical looked ahead to next week's clash between the Wolver- ines and Michigan State. "We'll see next week Just how good Mich- igan is,", they said. To Michigan Coach Bump Elliott this simply means that his team is now 2-0 for the season and for the first time since 1955 a Michi- gan team has won its first two games. "There's still a lot of foot- ball ahead for us," he said, "and we'll still play them one at a time. Didn't Look Ahead "No, we weren't looking ahead to Michigan State," he continued. "How could we? The game was still in doubt until the middle of the third quarter. Until then, things looked a little rough. We were kind of standing still for a while." And concerned he might be. The Cadets had found the Michigan air defense full of holes. In all the' Black Knights connected on 22 of 33 passes for 164 yards and a touchdown, and had narrowed the gap to 17-8. "We were conceding the short pass," Elliott said. "They can throw long and we wanted them to have to work for their scores." Big Ten Standings WI L T Pet. Michigan State 1 0 0 1.000 Northwestern 1 0 0 1.000. Wisconsin 1 1 0 .500 Michigan 0 0 0 .000 Iowa 0 0 0 .000 Ohio State 0 0 0 .000 Purdue 0 0 0 .000 Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 Indiana 0 1 0 .000 Illinois 0 1 0 .000 But, for what it's worth, for the second straight week the Wolver- ines have dumped "the best." Last week UCLA came to town wearing the tag the "best in the West." Yesterday it was Army's turn as the "best in the east." And be- lieve it or not, two national maga- zines in pre-season forecasts had predicted a UCLA-Army match in the Rose Bowl game come New Year's Day. Fumbles in Michigan Stadium seem to have become a. habit for Army football teams. The last time the Cadets were here, in 1956, they dropped the ball eight times, lost it on six occasions, and wound up on the short end of a 48-14 score. Though the Army fumbled only three times yesterday, all of them came in the.first quarter and two of them led directly to Michigan scores. Army Coach Dale Hall blamed the bobbles on "sophomor- itis. We've got seven of them on the first two teams," he said. * * * The 38 points the Wolverines racked up was the highest Michi- gan total since Bennie Ooster- baan's last good team piled up 49 against Indiana in 1956. *e ' * Army's mascot yesterday was a fake. The real "Hannibal" was left behind at West Point. The beast who balked at entering the Stadium shortly before kickoff time yesterday was really "Abner," a borrowed burro from a farm in "Keep A-Head of your Hair" We specialize in * PERSONALITY CUTS * CREW-CUTS * FLAT TOPS o PRINCETONS try- THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre FALL SPECIAL Dexter. Wonder if he passed secur- ity clearance? * * * For the second consecutive week-_ end Michigan captain George Mans has lost the flip of coin. He can't possibly be worse, however, than last year's captain, Jerry Smith, who lost seven in a row be- fore finally winning the Indiana toss. Guess the Hoosiers weren't much good at anything. The television cameras that dot- ted the camera deck of .the Sta- dium press box belonged to Sports Service. A closed circuit telecast was being beamed back to the rest of the cadets at West Point. * * * Last week senior halfback Ben- nie McRae scored his first TD in two years. Yesterday senior end Bob Brown, better known for his antics on the basketball court, scored his first Michigan touch- down. MNM P I N This new exclusive fabric is woven in fine basket-weaves and subtle Glenurguhart plaids that can be worn com- fortably most months of the year. In solids of Cambridge Grey, Navy, and Tobacco... plaids in Grays and Olives. SIInrdinc slacks ::::.: #1 ugeed IV th col/qcwardrobe We major in slacks! Tweeds, corduroys, worsteds! The right slacks are here at . r- t .. the right price! 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