a rd-Hitting ABacks Stun Illinois SIWolverinesEven Conference Record; r li ni Now Winless in Seven Garnes -AP Wirephoto ACTION AT CHAMPAIGN--Michigan's George Mans (82) and Guy Curtis make an attempt to block Illini Doug Mills' (26) punt in the first quarter of yesterday's ,'game. Illini Pat - Murphy (75) is throwing a block. Michigan won the game, 38.6. PETE-WEAK SISTER: Bump Wins Battle of Brothers lini 23, the Wolverines upped the count to 14-0 at 8:29 of the sec- ond quarter. This time Raeder took it over from the seven to cap a 60-yd. march, but the touchdown should have gone to McRae, who was bumped out of an apparent; 38- yd. scoring jaunt by Raimey at the Illinois 10. The fleet senior, who led the Wolverine ground assault with 118 yds. in ten carries, turned right end, cut back past three Illini defenders and broke into the clear at the Illini 20 only to run into Raimey at the ten and fall at the eight. Raimey had followed the play down the far sideline and when McRae sprinted in his di- rection, Raimey cut back to block. A slight hesitation by both men at the, twelve failed to alter the collision course as both chose the same route. Electing to have the strong wind at their backs in the third quar- ter, instead of the ball, Michi- gan' almost duplicated its first half feat of reaching paydirt the first time it gained possession. The Illini were held for no gain in three plays, but this time Doug Mills' punt rolled dead at the Il- linois 48. Rips Off Ten: McRae ripped off 10 yds. in two carries and then Raeder, playing for regular fullback Bill Tunnicliff, who is still bothered by an ankle injury, charged through the middle for 26 yds- and a first down at the seven. Here the Illini stiffened, thanks to a dropped pass in the end zone, but Bickle salvaged three points with a 21-yd. placement. it was again McRae who set it up, this time with a 46-yd. scam- per around right end to the Illi- nois 21. Raimey then went the other way to the eight and on third down Glinka flipped to Mans for the score. Score on 'M' Fumble Illinois picked up its lone touch- down early in the fourth quarter after hopping on a Michigan fum- ble at the Wolverine 20. Six plays later fullback Denny Gould leap- ed over from the one and that was it for the Illini. A Michigan penalty on the two point conversion try didn't even help, as on the second play quar- terback Mel Romani was spilled on the five. Raimey returned the kickoff 38 yds. and came within one block of going all the way, but it' didn't matter. Raeder got a first down on a third down draw play to the Wolverine 48, and then McRae, behind guard John Minko's crush- ing block on the corner lineback- er, roared to the Illini 30 on a reverse. Hall Delivers Block The same reverse with Raimey carrying the other way and Lee Hall delivering the key block mov- ed the ball to the 14 and Raeder finished the job on the next play. The final Michigan touchdown came with ridiculous ease. After Illinois had moved the kickoff for a first down on its own 48, Ro- mani was dropped for no gain and then was smeared for a 12-yd. loss while attempting to pass. An intentional grounding penalty, called on the same play when Ro- mani heaved the ball out of bounds while being tackled, set the Illini back to the 26, and another big loss moved the ball to the 18., Then with fourth down and 36 By MIKE BURNS Sports Editor Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN-The "battle of the brothers" turned out to be just a scrimmage between a big brother and a weak sister yester- day, disappointing Illinois' fans for the seventh straight week. "The team was up for the game and wanted to win it badly," Illini Coach Pete Elliott said.' "But Michigan played well and we play- ed poorly. That's the whole story of the game." The Illinois mentor declined to compare the Wolver- ines to Purdue-"We played well against Purdue and poorly today,!' he explained. "However, our kids haven't giv- en up . . . They believe they can come back against Wisconsin." S e Swimers Set,T Reco rds Special To The Daily TORONTO - Michigan swim- mers set or tied three more Cana- dian records in the second half of the 2nd Annual Olympic De- velopment Swim and Dive meet, held yesterday afternoon in Tor- onto. Senior John Urbancsok took 'first in the 1650-yd. freestyle with a record time of 18:47.5. Sopho- more Tom Dudley and Freshman Ed Bartsch completed a sweep of the, event by taking second and third with times of 20:04.4 and 20:33.5, respectively. Then Bartsch came back to set the second mark of the day with a time of 2:05' in the 200-yd. backstroke. In the 200-yd. breasstroke, soph- omore Jon Baker tied the existing Canadian record with a winning mark of 2:24.2. Michigan also took a first, place in the 200-yd. butterfly as sophomore Bob Shae- fer negotiated the distance in 2:13. The Michigan swimmers were forced to compete unattached, be- cause of NCAA regulations, but their combined points would have given them third place in the meet. In the winners' locker room, brotherBump was happy with his squad's impressive win. "I was glad to win . . . it doesn't feel any different beating Pete than any one else. He's had a lot of tough luck this season., The Wolverines couldn't be ac- cused of running up the score on the hapless Illini-everyone of the 38 Michigan players saw action and the second team played a good portion of the second and fourth quarters. Senior Paul Raeder, primarily a defensive specialist, played his finest game yesterday, filling in for starting fullback Bill 'Tunni- cliff, who retwisted his ankle in the first quarter. The 5'11" Rae- der scored the first two touch- downs of his college career on runs of seven and 14 yds. He also played an outstanding game on defense, coming throlgh with sev- eral key tackles from his corner linebacker post. Raeder gained 62 yds. * * *{ End Doug Bickle played more offense than usual, too. He caught one pass for 10 yds. besides dem- onstrating his powerful toe in, kicking situations. The sopho- more booted six of eight kick- offs into the end zone, ;convert- ed five extra points and kicked a field goal. Bump saw no particular turn- ing point in the game. "We were able to break- away to the outside a couple of times early in the game and it really helped us." Pete agreed, but thought the 54- yd. punt return by Michigan's Dave Raimey for a touchdown in the first two minutes was a cru- cial play. * * "We couldn't move against them up the middle," Bump said, "so we ran the reverse more than we ever have before. It was our best gainer." Indeed it was as halfback Bennie McRae ran wild for 118 yds. for an 11.8 yards-per- carry average. Tunnicliff was the only Mich- igan player injured in the game. But Illinois'eproblems continued in that, department. Half back Jerry Parola twisted his left knee; guard Neal Anderson has a bruis- ed crest of the right illium and second string quarterback Mel Romani separated both shoulders. "Stan Yukovich, Gary Brown, Tony Parilli, Pat Murphy also suf- fered minor injuries, but should be ready to play next week against Wisconsin," Pete said. * * *- Scotty Maentz, ranked second in the conference, boomed four punts for a 42.5-yd. average and had a 66-yd. effort nullified by a third period penalty. Illinois' Doug Mills also had a good day, having to punt the ball 10 times for a respectable' 37-yd. average. Winds of between 13 and 16 m.p.h. were working against both punters, however. But the Illini's Ken Zim- merman had the longest of the game, his solo effort going 62 yds. Pro Scores NHL Toronto 5, Detroit 1 Montreal 2, Chicago 1 NBA St. Louis 132, Detroit 129 Syracuse 135, New York 109 Boston 128, Philadelphia 125 AFL New York' 23, Oakland 12 Three minutes verines got their later the Wol- third score and Bump Bumps Brother 'U First Downs By ,rushing By passing By penalty Rushing (No. Rushes) No. Yds. Gained Forward Passing No. Attempted No. Completed No. Had Intercepted Net Yds. Gained Total Plays inois Michigan 9 16 7 2 0 46 55 19 6 0 55 65 13 2 ~1 46 309 10 4 0 32 56 Total Net Yds. Gained 110 341 Punts (No.) 12 5 Average Yds. 35.1 39.4 Had Blocked 1 0 Kick Returns Punt Returns, No. 2 9 Punt Returns, Yds. 21 107 Kickoff Returns,, No. 5 1 Kickoff Returns, Yds. 114 38 Fumbles (No.) 2 3 Balls Lost, Fumbled 0 2 Penalties (No.) 5 7 - ---7 SWEATER SALE NEWEST FALL STYLES ?$2OO OFF our regular low price SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington Samuel J. Benjamin, Owner, '27 L.S.A. I M-CLUB MEETING . SPEAKER: TERRY BARR ." v . , r *: :. :.:. . 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