PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5 ,1964 PAGE SIX TUE 1~IICIIJGAN DAIlY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5.1964 YEARBY NAMED TO 2ND TEAM: Timberlake Earns All-American Honors Cagers Seek Revenge at Duke 4 I By The Associated Press Bob Timberlake, John, Huarte, Donny Anderson, and Gale Sayers comprise the offensive backfield of the 1964 Associated Press All- America football team named yes- terday. Michigan tackle Bill Yearby was named to the defensive squad of the AP's second team. Six other Michigan players - linebacker Tom Cecchini, fullback Mel Anthony, halfback Carl Ward, defensive safety Dick Rindfuss, end Jim Conley, and guard John Marcum - all earned honorable mention. Illinois linebacker Dick Butkus heads a first team defense aver- aging 219 pounds per man on the squad which reflects the wholesale revival of a platoon game this sea- son. Separate Units For the first time since 1952 sep- arate units, a 22-man first team, has been selected on the recom- mendations of the sportswriters and broadcasters who made up the eight regional boards. All games through Nov. 28 were taken into account. Timberlake quarterbacked Mich- igan to the Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl berth but his prowess as a runner got him elected at a halfback slot in the conference. The 6-foot-4 senior rushed for 574 yards, passed for 807 and scored 80 points. Huarte, Heisman Trophy winner as college player of the year, was the quarterback who changed No- tre Dame from a 2-7 to a 9-1 per- former and left a flock of school records in his wake. His most not- able season marks are 2,069 yards in total offense and 114 pass com- pletions for 2,062 yards and 16, touchdowns. Key to Offense "We built our whole offense around Huarte," says Coach Ara Parseghian. "I've lived in constant dread of what we would do if something happened to him." By means of pass receptions and kick runbacks as well as sprints from scrimmage junior Anderson from Texas Tech-a first round futures pick in both pro drafts- accounted for 1,710 yards. He also punts. Kansas' Sayers, the whirlwind of the plains, is one of the most exciting runners in Big Eight his- tory and leaves a league career rushing record of 2,675 yards be- hind him. Close Contest The closest of some hectic posi-. tiori contests on offense was at end where Florida State's Fred Biletnikoff and Baylor's Lawrencej Elkins got the nod over Jack Snow of Notre Dame and Karl Noonan 01F T-- By GIL SAMBERG But if it will be hot in the BACKS-Jerry Rhome, Tulsa; Craig stands, it will be even hotter under Morton, California; Bob Berry, Ore- Looking back to the days when the boards. gon; Bob Schweickert, Virginia Tech. Art Heyman ruled the courts in!Whtiexcedsago, DEFENSE Durham, and the rivalry between What is expected is a good, ENDS - Jack Jacobson, Oklahoma Duke's Blue Devils and the Tar boar when Came Bill, Ohe State; Bill Cronin, Boston College. Hel f ot arlntuhdboards when Cazzie, Bill, Ollie, Stae;Bil roin Boto Cllge iHeels of North Carolina touched and Trigger lock horns with TACKLES - BILL YEARBY, MICHI- off riots in that fine southern Duke's front line of Hack Tison, GAN; John Frick, Ohio University. city, the odds are that the Wolver- LINEBACKERS-Glen Ressler, Penn Jack Marin, and soph Bob Reidy State; Marty Schottenheimer, Pitt; Carl ines will get some added competi- for possession of anything in the McAdams, Oklahoma. tion tonight from the fans. air. Tison, a 6-10 center, is flank- BACKS-Tom Nowatzke, Indiana; Ken Michigan, rated the strongest ed by the two 6-6 forwards with Hatfield, Arkansas; Bruce Bennett, basketball team in the nation, the troika averaging close to 210 B oFENSE Fr should not expect- to be greeted pounds. If any of them should ENDS-Fred Biletnikoff, Florida State, by enthusiastic cheers when they fail, 210-pound Brian Kitching is 6-1, 192, Sr.; Lawrence Elkins, Baylor, invade Duke's hallowed grounds. sure to see action. 6-2, 187, Sr. The enthusiasm of a home crowd However, the depth of Duke's TACKLES-Jim Wilson, Georgia, 6-3, may be a factor in closing the men up front doesn't go far be- 235, Sr. gap between two teams rated a yond that. unchanged. We'll attempt again to play fast, exciting basketball with a tough defense.- "But," he adds, "this team will have to work harder on the funda- mentals of the game than any team we have had for the past several years." Sharp Passing Bubas has been grooming top flight teans at Duke for the past five years, and this season's start- ers should prove no different. Their basic game should be ball control, using slick, polished pass- ing to set up shots. Tison, playing more towards the head of the key, will be an important link in this strategy. The Wolverines are still faced with making a final decision on who will take over the guard spot vacated by Bob Cantrell. With four possibles in Tom Ludwig, John Thompson, George Pomey, and John Clawson still in the run- ning, there will have to be some experimentation along the way to the Big Ten season's opener with Illinois in January. But Coach Dave Strack has often stated his opinion that the whole pre-conference schedule is more or less a warm-up and con- ditioning period for the later im- portant games. It is likely that we will see, or rather hear, some of the expected rotation at guard, as well as other positions, even in the important clash tonight. I wGUARDS-Tom Nobis, Texas, 6-2, 215, Linebackers Jr.; Bill Fisk, Southern California, 6-0, Teamed with Butkus in the 1 200. Sr. Teghlym-cdmptithiBeksin thke- CENTER-Pat Killorin, Syracuse, 6-2, highly - competitive linebacker- 225, Jr. guard spots are Tennessee's Steve BACKS-John Huarte, Notre Dame, DeLong and Pat Caveness of Ar- 6-0, 180, Sr.; BOB TIMBERLAKE, MICH- kansas. The trio shaded Marty IGAN, 6-4, 215, Sr.; Gale Sayers. Kan- Schoteneime ofPitt Pen isas, .16- 195. Sr.; Donny Anderson, I Schottenheimer of Pitt, Penn Texas Tech, 6-3, 207. State's Glen Ressler and Carl Mc- DEFENSE Adams of Oklahoma. j ENDS-HaroldWells, Purdue, 6-2, The 1964 Associated Press All- 213, Sr.; Allen Brown, Mississippi, 6-4, America football team: 226, Sr.; John Van Sicklen, Iowa State, SECOND TEAM 5-11, 217, Sr. OFFENSE LINEBACKERS-Dick Butkus, Ili- ENDS - Jack Snow, Notre Dame; nois, 6-3, 243, Sr.; Steve DeLong, Ten- Karl Noonan, Iowa. nessee, 6-3, 243 Sr.; Ron Caveness TACKLES - Rich Koeper, Oregon Arkansas, 6-1, 215, Sr. State; Jerry Rush, Michigan State. BACKS - Tucker Frederickson, Au- GUARDS-Wayne Freeman, Alabama; burn, 6-2, 210, Sr.; Clarence Williams' Jack Abendschan, New Mexico. Washington State, 6-2, 196, Sr.; Arnold CENTER-Richard Granier, Louisiana Chonko, Ohio State, 6-2, 208, Sr.; Cos- State, mo Iacavazzi, Princeton, 5-11, 200, Sr. mere four places apart. The meeting, to be broadcast on WAAM in Ann Arbor at 8:15, is an extremely early test for both Michigan and fifth ranked Duke. New Rivalry Although the two teams will not be at top mid-season form for the contest, the newly started series between them has already sprout- ed into a tough rivalry, and an all-out effort by both teams is to be expected. Last year's defeat at the hands of the Blue Devils at Kansas City knocked the Wolver- ines out of the NCAA champion- ship battle, and almost the entire squad which suffered that defeat is back in hopes of returning the compliment. Vacendak Out At the guard spots will be Cap- tain Denny Ferguson, a returnee, and Bob Verga, a sophomore who averaged 33 points per game last year. It seems strange that Steve Vacendak, named the Most Valu- able Player in last year's NCAA regionals, and the guard who Coach Vic Bubas picked as most likely to follow Art Heyman and Jeff Mullins as an All-America, is on the bench. It could be the new-found strength at guard in Verga. "Our lack of depth in the front court may be a problem before the year is over," says Bubas. "We have adequate depth in the back court. Our style of play will be TEMPERATURE WEATHER I DEPENDABLE 'M' Tankers Enter Sto IMPORT SERVICE By JIM LaSOVAGE including freshmen who cannot ' We have the MECHANICS . . . compete in regular season meets, and the PARTS. An optimistic Michigan swim- the opportunity to compete ming squad, including 23 varsity against swimmers of his own cali- NEW CAR DEALER and 18 freshman swimmers, opens ber. Proof of this last year was a new season today i East Lan- seen when a swimmer from Jack- - Triumph- V OIO-- sing, as seven schools meet in the son JC finished sixth in the finals Every 15 Minutes - second annual Michigan College of one of the events. His coach Fiat-Checker Swimming and Diving Meet. commented that that race alone Starting as an experimentalt made the meet worthwhile. meee in Ann Arbor last year, the - Competition is expected to be SHERB ESTES meet was so successful in the eyes roughest between tankers of the of Stager and Michigan -State two Big Ten foes. In the free- AUT OMA RT coach Charles McCaffree that it style sprints the Wolverine nata- was decided to have a repeat per- tors have five likely prospects 050 319 W. Huron ' formance this year. Team scores while the Spartans have three. For 665-3688 are not kept in the meet which the Maize and Blue, Bill Groft, stages 15 events rather than the Bob Hoag, Howard Brundage, Bob usual dual meet total of 11. Tanner and Big Ten champion Besides the Wolverines and Rich Walls will be vying for the MSU, teams from Western Michi- top spot. State challenges with gan, Jackson Junior College, Flint Darryl Kifer, Jim McMillan, and ' k ''Community College, Henry Ford Ken Walsh. Pool records at MSU's Community College of Dearborn, Intramural Pool could be broken and Grand Rapids Junior College in this competition. f will participate. In all, 137 varsity Two Olympians and frosh swimmers and diverse The Wolverines boast two mein- - will enter the competition. bers who competed in the 1964 Stager is enthusiastic about the Olympics in Tokyo-Carl Robie meet because it gives everyone, and Bill Farley. Farley snatched: -}f ~GIFT 1EAS 1. CHRISTIAN DIOR Turtlenecks and gloves . . . $12.00-$15.00 2. MEISTER SKI SWEATERS ... $22.50-$35.00 3. SKI SKETCH PANTS, McGreggor and White Stag . . . $20.00';:: I 4. SKI PARKAS by Roffe, Hauser, Sport-Obermeyer and McGreggor .. . $20.00-$40.00 Tom Jones and Fanny Hill were only two of the many 18th-century fictional characters who had trouble maintaining their virtue in a world that, it would seem, couldn't care less. At one time or another, most of the period's leading writers were preoccupied with 1 Mile South of Campus the problem, and none more so than Daniel Defoe. After getting Robinson Crusoe out of his system, he in- t '° ''=" mm m m m mm "troduced Moll Flanders and, in 1724, a lovely young * - -. ite Meet fourth place in the 1500 -meter freestyle distance race, and Robie picked up a silver medal in the 200-meter butterfly event. State's Jerry Dilly duplicated Robie's ac- complishment by walking off with second in the backstroke. How- ever, as these three could not enter school for the present semester, none will be eligible for today's meet. Freshmen Watching the freshmen will also provide some interest in the meet. Stager says that Michigan's crop is developing much better than he had expected. One in par- ticular to observe will be Ken. Wiebeck, an all-around swimmer who excels in every stroke. Preliminaries will be staged at 11 a.m. with the finals beginning at 1 p.m. This will be Michigan's only competition until the dual meet season opens next January. The Wolverines' opener in the Big Ten will be against Wisconsin at home on January 8. * * * Contrary to a statement made in yesterday's Daily, Steve Rabin- ovitch and Geoff D'Atri are no BRIAN KITCHING JACK'MARIN SPORT SHORTS: Illinois Beats UCLA; Dodgers .Deal Howard longer on this year's squad. Rabinovitch is no longer enrolled in the Univrsity and D'Atri re- cently dropped off the team. NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION i L Pct. GB x-Boson 185 .783 - By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN - Shooting a torrid .605 from the field, Illinois ruined the debut of UCLA's NCAA basketball champions with a 110- 83 victory last night. The veteran Illini team, paced by six men in double figures, moved to a 52-38 halftime lead and never allowed the Bruins to get within range. Hitting on 46 of 76 shots from the field to establish a school record, the Illini were led by Skip Thoren's 20 points. Bill Mc- Keown added 19 while Bogie Red- mond and Don Freeman contri- buted 17 points each. Gail Goodrich led UCLA with ,25 points but the closest the Bruins could come was within 11 points midway in the second half when Illinois' lead was chopped to an 80-69 advantage. The Illini, however, put together another heat of steam and moved out of of range. HOUSTON -The Los Angeles Dodgers traded four players, in- cluding towering Frank Howard, to the Washington Senators yes- terday for pitcher John Kennedy and $100,000. Besides Howard, the biggest man in baseball, the Senators got pitch- ers Phil Ortega and Pete Richert and infielder-outfielder Ken Mc- Mullen. It was the 10th trade of the busy, winter meetings. Earlier in the day, the Los An- geles Angels of the American L e a g u e unloaded controversial pitcher Bo Belinski to the fast- changing Philadelphia Phillies of the National League for rookies Costen Shockley, a first baseman, and Rudy May, a pitcher. Cincinnati Philadelphia New York WESTERN Los Angeles St .Louis Baltimore Detroit x-San Francisco x--Incomplete. 15 10 .600 4 12 11 .522 6 5 15 .250 11x/ DIVISION 15 8 .652 - 12 19 .545 2 f 12 12 .500 3x/ 8 16 .333 7 f 7 17 .292 8x YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 119, Detroit 106 Cincinnati 104, Los Angeles 90 Baltimore 108, St. Louis 106 Boston at San Francisco (ic) TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore vs. Phila. at Detroit New York at Detroit Boston at San Francisco TOMORROW'S GAMES Baltimore at Cincinnati New York at St. Louis Philadelphia at Los Angeles And the Minnesota Twins of the American L e a g u e exchanged southpaw pitched Gerry Arrigo to the Cincinnati Reds of the Na- tional League for infielder-out- fielder Cesar Tovar. Howard, 28, batted .225 last season, hit 24 homers and drove in 69 runs. He was National League Rookie of the Year in 1960. He had his best season in 1962 when he batted .296, hit 21 homers and knocked in 119 runs. Ortega, a 25-year-old right- hander, was 7-9 last season. Ri- chert, a southpaw who also is 25, was 2-3 in Los Angeles and 7-8 with Spokane of the Pacific Coast League. McMullen batted .234 for the Dodgers, hit 14 homers and had 49 RBIs. He can play third base, first base or outfield. Paddleball Tourney Here Michigan will play host today in a pentagular intra-state col- legiate paddleball tournament - the first of its kind-at the I-M courts beginning at 11 a.m. The participants will be Mich- igan, Michigan State, Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, and Western Michigan. Each school will enter a No. 1 and No. 2 singles player plus a doubles team, and one point will be awarded to the winner of each match. A team champion and in- dividual champions in each divi- sion will be recognized. Each school will also furnish a faculty doubles team. For Michigan, the entrants are George Skaff and Dan Milgram in the singles brackets and Jack Berman and Tom Silfen in doubles. Representing the faculty are Andy Kozar and Guy Reiff, both of the Physical Education Dept. Christmas Special 1 Hr. Kleen King 1226 PACKARD Corner of Woodlawn Hours: 9-6 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 Sat. 49c TROUSERS WOOL SHI RTS SKIRTS SWEATERS SILK BLOUSES SPORT JACKETS "can IBM If use my Idas? " IBM's computers must solve many kinds of problems. Your ideas can contribute now to new methods and new computer systems. What you'll need: intellectual curiosity, the will to stick to a problem, competence in your field. If you are earning a degree in engineering, the sciences, mathematics, or business adminis- tration, see IBM. You might work in Research, Development, Manufacturing, Programming, or Marketing. Ask your college placement office for our bro- chures and an appointment with the IBM in- terviewers. Or write directly to Manager of College Relations, Dept. 882, IBM Corporate Headquarters, Armonk, New York 10504. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Interviews February 8, 9 I 4 A I ; Chan Stick'ao a/ona ! I