FlIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1964
THE ~MIC~HIGAN 'hil.y
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FAGE SEVEN
N
" U it"WOLVERINE STATISTICS:
emp s Punting Aids ' 'Defensive ni
Paces Offense
By GIL SAMBERG honorable mention for two years
on the All-State team.
Given a punter who can con- When defensive coach Bob Holl-
sistently put the ball out-of- way was recruiting him, it was as
bounds inside the 20-yard line and an end prospect. "They actually
an opposing quarterback who has didn't know much about my kick-
rushed for a total of minus one ing at all," says Kemp.
yard in the Big Ten this year, the Hollway didn't have to do much
Michigan defense could be in for recruiting.
an afternoon of its own this Sat- Kemp had decided to come to
urday. Michigan long before his football
The man who can give them career began. His father, Cass
the advantage of facing Gary Kemp, lettered on the 1933-34
Snook and the Iowa offense deep
in Hawkeye territory is Stan
Kemp. f
good punter is invaluable to
a football team," says head Coach
Bump Elliott. To put your oppo-
nent in the hole as soon as he gets
Possession of the ball really helps '
a defense out."
Michigan track teams. "When I
was a kid, my father once took me
to a Michigan football game, and
I've been following them ever
since. I've always wanted to come
here."
All the Punting
Kemp did all of the punting for
his high school team, and is now
the Wolverines' first kicker, ahead
of Ed Greene and Wally Gabler.
Dick Rindfuss, the second kicker,
is now probably out for the rest
of the season. He hasn't done any
place-kicking but can kick off,
and he hopes to be able to display
that talent against Iowa tomor-
row.
End coach Jocko Nelson, about
whom Kemp "can't say enough"
is his instructor as a punter and
as an end. Kemp has hopes about
gaining an end position on the
Wolverine offense next year. El-
liott seems to believe that the
sophomore does have a chance.
All-Stater
Kemp is a 6', 195-pound sopho-
more from Greenville, where he
captained his team as a senior at
Greenville High, and earned an
Braves Deny
Abandoning
Atlanta Plans
ATLANTA (41) -- The Milwaukee
Braves have not given up hopes
of moving their National LeagueE
baseball franchise to Atlanta for
the 1965 season.
Tom Reynolds Jr., executive vice
president of the team, told a news
conference yesterday there areI
slim hopes the team will go to the
south before 1966.
"We would like to play in At-
lanta in 1965 but we will have to
play, where our league directs usE
to," Reynolds said. "We would like
to work out an agreement with
Milwaukee officials to get out off
the city now.
'Best Interests'
"It would be in the best interest
of Milwaukee, Atlanta and base-
ball in general for us to move
now," he said.
Reynolds, noting that a final
decision would have to be made
soon, placed a Dec. 15 deadline on
working out some arrangement to
get the Braves to Atlanta for 1965.
If something can't be worked out
by that time, he said it would be g
difficult to move until 1966.
"But, keep in mind that when1
the Braves left Boston in 1953 theyv
left in March, Just two weeks be-
fore the season," he said. "Noth-
Ing is actually out of the question."k
All this week, Kemp has b
playing the role of Karl Noon
Iowa's pass-catching threat,
practice for the defensive backs
"I'll be doing a lot of work
end before next year," says Ke
"Defensive end is the weakest p
of my game, since I've never pl
ed it before. I was a halfback
defense in high school. Tha
where I'll be working the hardes
37.4 Yards
In the statistics, Kemp's tale
ed toegis responsible for a 37.4 y
average over 29 boots. But tl
includes such feats as puttingt
pigskin inside the 15-yard l
four out of seven times agai
Illinois and still averaging X
yards per kick.
"He's done a fine job for
He's really helped by getting
out of some tough situations," s
Elliott.
But the important thing
Michigan is that Kemp is justx
ginning his career here. S
Kemp, "It's the greatest thrill
my life to be playing at Michiga
.lambda CL
AsI Playoff.
By CHUCK VETZNER
The social fraternity intramu
football playoffs moved intot
quarter-finals this week andt
latest team to advance tot
round of four was LambdaC
Alpha, as it took an 8-2 vict
over Delta Tau Delta Wednesd
peen I
ban,
in The key to the Michigan of- Detwiler has also made his mark Stan Kemp has a 37.4 punting
at fense. quarterback Bob Timber- in the pass reception department. average in 29 punts for a tota
at lake, has scored 66 points and has He is second in yards gained pass- of 1085 yards.
ar a 4.4 rushing average, ing with 128. Craig Kirby follows Again in the rushing depart-
ay- Timberlake's seven touchdowns with six receptions for 38 yards. ment, sophomore fullback Dave
an lead Michigan, and his net rush- Ben Farabee has four catches for Fisher has gained 142 yards in 35
at's ing total of 466 yards is tops also. 50 yards, and Dick Rindfuss has tries and has a 4.0 average. Fisher
st , !Sophomore halfbacks Carl Ward three for 31 yards. Rick Sygar also has scored two TD's this year.
Sohpomore halfbacks Carl Ward has three for 24 yards and a
nt- and Jim Detwiler have compiled touchdown. Both Anthony and Ward have
- impressivestatistics too over Timberlake (naturally) leads in 18 points to their credit, and
ti Michigan's first seven games. passing with 49 completions in Detwiler and Henderson each
Ward's 5.5 rushing average is 95 attempts, and constitutes a have 12. Rick Sygar rounds out
te the best for the Wolverines, and total of 626 yards and three the scoring with seven points on
nst he is followed by Detwiler who touchdowns. a touchdown and one extra point.
38.3 has a 4.6 average.
Ward is the closest to Timber -
us lake i total rushing yardage ithusshereIgnitesTeam
;sus 442, and fullback Mel Anthony 1.
g follows with 395. Anthony's rush-W
for John Henderson leads the ends Pistons warriors
be- with 20 receptions and 306 yards.
ays He is followed by Steve Smith who DETROIT (P)-The Detroit Pis- the difference just two points be-
of has caught eight passes for 131 tons made it two straight under fore DeBusschere ignited another
n." yards and one touchdown. their new coach, Dave DeBussch- Detroit burst that lifted the Pis-
ere, as they swept past the San tons to 79-70 at the three-quarter
Francisco Warriors 121-99 last mark.
night in a National Basketball A Rout
Association game despite a 53- Scott, Rod Thorn, and rookie
point effort by Wilt Chamberlain. Joe Caldwell then turned the
S N ea lose Winning their fourth game in game into a rout before the final
13 starts and tying the Warriors quarter was four minutes old.
for fourth place in the Western Chamberlain took 23 rebounds.
dropped back to pass and was Division, the Pistons started and Dischinger topped the Pistons
nailed in the end zone for a finished strong. with 30 points, while Scott had
eal safety. For the remainder of the Scott Drills 24 along with 20 rebounds. De-
the half neither team was able to Ray Scott drilled in eight quick Busschere netted 13 points and
the i pauScottdilletinrighaquiksBaschredntted13eointaan
the put together a sustained drive, and points and the Pistons took a 28- grabbed 15 rebounds.
C the score stodat 2-0, awaitig 18 lead by the end of the first It was the 24-year-old DeBus-
ythe one touchdown of the gamequarter. San Francisco rallied on schere's Detroit debut as coach. He
ory Meanwhile . . . the sharpshooting of Chamberlain, replaced Charley Wolf, who was
fraternity games who dumped in eight baskets and fired early this week.
1111x, IIIIttiv~u]
The D.ests had a z- o2-0 ntII Tuesday, Chi Phi shut outpre-
lead, but the third of five Lambda viously unbeaten Tau Delta Phi
Chi pass interceptions turned theby oy eo1-naDeltaUp-
tide. by a score of 12-0 and Delta Up-
tid.silon swept past Thta~ Xi
a free throw, and was in front
49-45 by halftime.
Early in the third period, Scott
and Terry Dischinger paced the
Pistons on a spurt of 12 consecu-
tive points to a 61-53 lead.
The Warriors rebounded to make
Caldwell followed Dischinger's
high scoring for the night with
16 points. Center Reggie Harding
chipped in 15 points to a fairly
balanced Piston offense, but
couldn't contain Chamberlain's
-one-man show.
-Daily-Jim Lines
PUNTING SPECIALIST Stan Kemp (30) boots one against Minnesota, as Rick Volk (49) defends
against rushing Gopher end Aaron Brown (89). Kemp could almost be considered part of Michigan's
defensive strength. In putting the ball far into enemy territory he gives the Wolverines' defense an
added edge in its duel with an opposition's offense.
PHONES PARSEGHIAN:
Daugherty Looks to Defeat of Irish
Another Franchise
Any success in getting the
Braves out of Milwaukee will de-
pend on getting the city another
major league franchise, he said.
"I've heard a lot of talk about
people wanting to move to Mil-
waukee, but it's just in the rumor
stages for me," he added.
The Braves originallyintended
to move to Atlanta for the next
season but the National League
voted that down last week and
ordered the team to play the 1965
season in Milwaukee. At the same
time, the league approved moving
the franchise to Atlanta for 1966.
The National League acted after
Milwaukee officials went to court
to hold the Braves to the remain-
ing year of their contract.
'Not Bound'
"We do not feel that we're legal-
ly bound to stay in that city," he
said. "We feel that we had the
right to play there if wished, but
not the obligation as long as we
paid the rental due on our lease."
When asked if he thought Mil-
waukee would support the Braves
with all the adverse publicity
they've received because of the
transfer, Reynolds replied.
"We're not too popular in Mil-
waukee to say the least," he said.
"If we were running in an elec-
tion tomorrow against Adolf Hitler
we would lose up there."
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SOUTH BEND, Ind. (;')-Michi-
gan State's Duffy Daugherty put
in a telephone call this week to
his friend, Ara Parseghian, and
wryly told the Notre Dame coach:
"Ara, we're going to do you
a favor Saturday. We're going to
knock you off and take you off
the spot.
"You know, if you go through
unbeaten your first season, you'll
be in trouble. Your red hot alum-
ni will be expecting it every year.
So if you lose a couple, they'll be
yelling for your scalp. But we'll
fix that."
"Gulping"
Parseghian, a very serious and
intent young man, was still gulp-
ing for a reply when the telephone
clicked.
Daugherty is a refreshing de-
parture from the average football
coach, who grimly frets over
charts and electronic machines,
who whips players through their
routines like a Captain Bligh and
who thinks the world spins or
stops spinning on a football vic-
tory.
Duffy, a round little Irishman
built like a tree trunk, is a seri-
ous and astute coach, but one who
has never lost his sense of humor.
Ever loose and jovial, he laughs
his way from one pressure-packed
Saturday to another.
Don't Have To Worry
"I don't have to worry about
getting the boys up for Notre
Dame," Daugherty cracks. "This
week I had to shake the trees to
get them down for practice."
Once asked about his secret for
beating the Irish, he's won eight
of nine meetings, Duffy said,
"They had two Catholic All-
Americans, we had four."
The Michigan State coach ac-
knowledged that he has one su-
perstition. "I think it's bad luck
to lose."
He doesn't worry about alumni
and his constantly ribbing the
grads, such as the one who wired
him: "We're behind you, win or
draw."
Wife Understands
Duffy said his wife is under-
standing after an important
game.."When I get home, she al-
ways has my robe, slippers and
hot water waiting for me. She
hates for me to wash the dishes
in cold water."
Last year Duffy described his
All-America halfback Sherman
Lewis as a great player with one
weakness-"he's a senior."
Daugherty's wife did a book on
favorite recipes of football coaches'
wives and somebody asked him
if he'd read it. "No, I haven't,"
he replied, "I'm waiting for the
movie version."
Duffy denied that football is a
contact sport. "It's a collision
sport," he quipped. "Dancing is a
good example of a contact sport."
'All The Advantages'
Neighbors were surprised one
day to see a pool table being de-
livered to the Daugherty home.
"I don't want my boys denied the
advantages I had in my youth,"
Duffy explained.
A reporter asked Daugherty
whom he was most pleased to
see back this year. Duffy Iidn't
have to pause for the answer.
"Me," he replied.
* * *
Meanwhile, back in South Bend,
the Notre Dame players had a
slightly different approach to to-
morrow's nationally televised con-
test.
"I hate 'em. I think we all hate
'em," Jim Carroll, captain of the
Fighting Irish said yesterday. "I
think that's why we want to win
so much."
One player said that Michigan
State has beaten the Irish so much
they've become cocky about it. It's
the game that most of us have
been pointing to for almost a
year."
In the third period Lambda Chi
got the ball deep in its own terri-
tory following an interception.
Time was called on fourth down
when one of the Delt players lost
a contact lens. After a five minute
futile search by members of both
teams and the referees, action re-
sumed and Bill Wahl promptly
punted out of bounds on the Delt
two yard line.
Stolen Pass;
Gary Anderson then fired a pass
up the middle which was picked
off by Lambda Chi. After a short
gain, quarterback Jack Murchie
tossed a touchdown strike to end
Ed Petrick. The conversion at-
tempt was successful as the same
combination connected to give
Lambda Chi a six-point lead.
The Delts, in an effort to get
back into the game, inserted
southpaw quarterback Tom Carl-
son, but he too fell prey to the
Lambda Chi defenders, as two
of his aerials were picked off.
In the first half, the Delts
marched down the field after the
opening kickoff, but they were
unable to carry it in for the score.
Lambda Chi took over on its own
three. On third down Murchie
Other teams still in contention
include Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma
Phi Epsilon, and Zeta Beta Tau.
In the residence hall league,
Michigan House upset Wenley on
Monday, while defending cham-
pion Taylor moved into the semi-
finals. Cooley and Chicago also
remain in the running.
In the graduate division, the
Draft Dodgers are aiming for their
second straight crown. The X-
Rays, a group composed of work-
ers from the University Hospital,
are going strong in the independ-
ent circuit.
ry
NBA Standings
EASTERN DIVISION
{
W L Pct.
Boston 11 1 .917
Cincinnati 6 5 .545
Philadelphia 6 5 .545
New York 2 9 .182
WESTERN DIVISION
Los Angeles 8 3 .727
St. Louis 6 4 .600
Baltimore 6 8 .429
Detroit 4 9 .308
San Francisco 4 9 .308
LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS
Los Angeles 132, New York 123
Detroit 121, San Francisco 99
Philadelphia 110, Boston 109
GB
1 Y2
41/2
85 f
3 th
5
5
I
NEW YORK (P) - A 20-foot
jump shot by Paul Neumann with
eight seconds left provided the
Philadelphia 76ers with a 110-109
victory over the Boston Celtics
last night.
It was the Celtics' first National
Basketball Association d e f e a t
after 11 straight victories.
The game opened a doublehead-
er in Madison Square Garden be-
fore 14,378 fans.
Big Comeback
Neumann's shot climaxed a rally
in which the 76ers erased Bos-
ton's 25-point lead, 80-55, estab-
lished with :30 remaining in the
third period.
Philadelphia r o o k i e Lucious
Jackson, who led all scorers with
27 points, and teammate Larry
Costello sparked the rally.
Celtics Upset by Philadelphia
For First Loss in, 12 Games
Costello led the third period
spurt that closed the gap to 90-76.
Jackson scored 12 of his points in
the fourth period and sank two
free throws that drew Philadel-
phia even, 104-104.
Surge to 106-105 .
Chet Walker's field goal put the
76ers ahead for the first time,
106-105, with 2:04 remaining.
Jackson made it 108-105.
John Havlicek's jumper with 37
seconds to play brought Boston
within one. Havlicek, fouled by
Neumann, put Boston ahead again,
109-108, with 14 seconds to play,
setting the stage for Neumann's
winning shot.
Sam Jones, with 24 points, led
the Celts who had run up an 11-0
lead in the first 2:20 of play and
led 68-47 at halftime.
EVENING EMPLOYMENT
18-35
If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week and
occasionally on Saturday, you can maintain your studies and still
enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring an
average weekly income of $52.
If you are neat appearing and a hard worker see Mr. Moskowitz from
11 to 12 noon and 1:30 to 3:00 p.m. at 3200 Student Activities
Building, Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday. No other times.
A
b' o"
t s
I
r
Work with a group worth standing out in.
School Time
is
OLYMPIA
TIME
I
"SLIDES of UGANDA"
I
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I1i
oA.-
725 S. DIVISION
Friday, Nov. 13-8:00 p.m.
DISCUSSION-REFRESHMENTS
Baha'i Student Group
University Typewriter Center
613 E. William St. 665-3763
I
MICHIGAN
FOOTBALL
THE ROMANOFFS
GERMAN-AMERICAN CUISINE
TAKE-OUT ORDERS
*WIENER SCHNITZELS . . . . . . 1.35
k La -~ .. a - ., ~ .. .. .& ., . ... a
MICHIGAN
vs.
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Engineers and scientists at Boeing work in small groups, under supervisors
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-IOWAI
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