GHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY sUNa ON irst Half Touchdowns Insure lue Devils Come Back in Second Half to Score Twice; , aimey Leading 'M' Ground Gainer with 116-Yds. Wolverine Victory I pass to lonesome end Jay Wilkin- son, who was stopped by John Stamos, saving a touchdown. Two plays later Raimey proved he was more than just a runner as he dropped Joel Arrington for a five yard loss on a completed swing pass behind the line. There; was no one else between Arring- ton and a touchdown. Inspired Defense An inspired Michigan defense then succeeded in pushing the Blue Devils back to the 20 where the Wolverines started their eight play drive for the final touch- down, capped by Glinka's perfect picture pass to Brown. The big senior end went in all alone for his second touchdown of the sea- son, and the TD catch ,was his second reception of the day as he picked up 55 yards. But the Blue Devils wouldn't give up and bounced right back to score in nine plays on an 85- yd. march. Leggett and Wright started it off with runs of 23 and 13 yds., then quarterback Walt Rappold found Wright all alone for 30 yds. The Duke halfback fell at the 17. Fullback Burch scor- ed his second touchdown from three yards out with ten minutes still remaining in the game. Carries on Back With fans starting for the exits, Raimey proved once more his hight to be regarded as All-Amer- ican material by carrying Rappold, on his back for the last 10 yds. of a 20-yd. scamper. But the drive fizzled, and Michi- gan punted to Leggett, who came back to the, Wolverine 48. Rap- pold then took to the air, and on fourth down from the 37, he spot- ted Wilkinson in the end zone, but didn't reckon with Raimey who came out of nowhere to bat the ball away. -uauy-James &eson -Dally-Fred Sippey THAT MAN AGAIN-Michigan halfback Bennie McRae (left) comes down in the endzone with quarterback Dave Glinka's (right) 15-yd touchdown pass in the second quarter. Forty seconds later McRae ran back an intercepted pass 34 yds for his, third score of the game. He scored in the first period on a 5-yd end sweep. Glinka completed four of eight passes for 76 yds and two touchdowns, the second a spectacular 45-yarder to end Bob Brown. Duke Bedevil MICHIC First Downs Rushing Passing Penalty Total No. of Rushes Net Yards-Rushing 1 Passing Forward Passes Att. Completed intercepted by Yds. interceptions ret. Total Plays (Rushes and. Passes Punts, Number Average distance Kickoffs, returned by Yds. Kicks Returned 1 Punts Kickoffs Fumbles, Number Ball Lost by Penalties, Number Yards penalized 1 1 4 18 .8 1 3 5 3 10 2 8 4 [ed GAN DUKE L6 16 L1 11 5 5 0 0 5 53 88 116 6 129 L1 20 5 10 1 1 4 0 6 73 6 5 30 38 3 4 01 107 20 25 81 82 1 3 1 0 4 1 10 3 ns Loss Net 13 0 13 48 2 46 16 0 116 9 4 5 1 1 0 . 12 0 12 2 6 -4 02 14'188 ns Loss Net 11 6 5 30 0 30 46 0 46 53 0 53 3 7 -4 0 34 -34 20 0 20 0 2 -2 2 0 2 165 49 116 -Daily-Fred Shippey SHEER POWER-Michigan's right halfback Dave Raimey drags two Duke defenders with him on a ten yard gain during the fourth quarter of yesterday's 28-14 victory. Raimey carried 15 times and gained 116 yards, more than half the .Wolverine ground attack. -Daily-Ed Langs BLUE DEVIL DOWNED-Duke quarterback Walt Rappold is thrown for a loss as Michigan's captain George Mans dashes in from his defensive end position to foil a Duke pass attempt. Rappold, however, completed 4 of 9 pass attempts for 52 yards during Duke's 28-14 loss. TRY TWO POINT CONVERSIONS: Michigan Uses New Offensive Strategy Player Tunnicliff McRae Raimey Glinka McLenna Strobel Hood Chandler Totals Player Rappold Wright Leggett Burch Arrington Garner Bostock Wilson Futrell Hawn Totals RUSHING MICHIGAN Tries Gal 7 10 5 1 3 2 3 2 3 45 2 DUKE Tries Gal 5 8 8 14 4. 4 7 1 1 53 1 I By DAVE ANDREWS Associate sports Editor A new Michigan team emerged, yesterday in the Stadium-in more ways than one. Bob Chandler junked his role as last minute man. Bennie McRae scored three touchdowns in one game for the first time in his collegiate career. Dave Raimey suddenly became a power runner. Dave Glinka threw passes on first down, and Coach Bump Elliott let placekicking artist Doug Bickle sit on the bench as the Wolverines tried for two points after two TDs. All this happened with half of the first team watching from the sidelines. Injured Players Watch Tackle Jon Schopf looked on from the pressbox and grumbled that he "didn't particularly care for it." Fullback Bill Tunnicliff ran on a sprained ankle. Todd Grant and John Minko were less than at full strength with hip and back injuries respectively, Lee Hall came out of health service to play. End and punter Scott Maentz sat out most of the game with a slight PARTY FAVORS by. BUD.MOR 1103 S. Univ. NO 2-6362 head injury, and handyman back Ken Tureaud missed the whole show with a pinched nerve in his leg. But Michigan won on the strength of a 21-0 first half lead. Duke took the second half, 14-7. "They just outhit us at the start of the second half," Elliott com- mented, "They fired up real good. Gained Momentum "We got started slow and they built up momentum. The big spot for us came when we stopped them on their second drive." The Blue Devils had narrowed the Wolverine lead to 21-6 and threatened to pull back into the contest midway in the third quar- ter by moving to a first down on the Michigan seven. Four plays later Duke was back on the 20 and that was the ball game. "We moved the ball well after that and scored," Elliott added. "We came back strong against a good ball club. They're every bit as good as last year." Wolverines Win Early Off ' Duke's first half perform- ance, however, some observers would be hard to convince. On the other hand McRae's three scores and an overpowering Michigan line built a pretty strong case for the Wolverines. Striking through the air twice Michigan mushroomed a 7-0 lead into 21-0 in just 40 seconds. Mc- Rae took both tosses into the promised land, one a 15-yarder from Glinka and the other a 34-yd. "wrong way" pitch from Duke quarterback Walt Rappold. Bennie Happy "I smelled that one coming," said Bennie with a huge grin. "We'd worked on that play all week in practice. It's something that's either there or it isn't." How does it feel to score three times in one game? "Great!" * * * "We lust thought we'd go for it," times all year that Michigan has elected to go for two points. Could it be that maybe Elliott was ex- perimenting with plays to use in case the Wolverines needed them -against Illinois, Iowa, and Ohio State in the next three weeks? Why Bob Chandler- all of a sud- den? "We" feel now that he's ready," Elliott explained. "I'm sure he'll see more action from now on. Off today's performance he certainly won't have the same status." * * * Raimey and McRae also drew heavy praise from Elliott. Raimey brought the slim gathering of 56,488 to their feet in the fourth quarter by breaking away from three Duke tacklers and then car- ried Rappold for an additional 10 yards before the rest of the Duke backfield finally wrestled him to the ground. 4 Raimey Romps In all the speedy junior picked up 116 yards in 15 carries for the best total of his career in running from both the wingback and left halfback slots in Michigan's wing- T offense. Previously Ralney had been confined to the wingback position as McRae monopolized the play at left halfback. Yesterday the two alternated, McRae running from the wing on the left side of the Michigan line and Raimey from the opposite for- mation. Punts Often Queried on why his team punted on third down three times early in the game Murray explained that Duke does it all the time. "When- ever we've got third down with more than five yards to go and we're not trailing by more than seven points we kick," he stated. "They (the other team) drop one once in a while. And if we get a bad center on the first try we've still got another chance." Subscribe Today To CURRENT TIMES Your Best Bet For Better Grades I I _ U s......n.n Generation THE UNIVERSITY INTER-ARTS MAGAZINE will be on sale = a =mmm a e an a ' B a I I