0 Page 8-Tuesday, November 24, 1981-The Michigan Daily Bo happ with Blue bonnet Carter, Becker are Kodak Ali-Americans (Continued from Page 1) students, faculty, staff, and alumni who plan to at- tend the bowl game. Ticket orders for the game are now being accepted by the Athletic Ticket Office. Tickets are $15.50 each and will go on sale to the general public at a later date to be announced. While Schembechler was enthused about playing the Bruins, he could not help but ponder some of the "ifs" which inevitably arise when a team loses The Big Game. "IF WE HAD beaten Ohio State and couldn't have gone to the Rose Bowl, I would be very happy to go to the Bluebonnet Bowl and play UCLA,"he said. "You all say how unfortunate Ohio State is to win our game and still play Navy in the Liberty Bowl, but Ohio State is happy today." Schembechler, in the last of his 1981 weekly get- togethers with members of the press, reiterated the comments he had made after Saturday's 14-9 defeat to the Buckeyes, pointing to the Blue's inability to get the ball into the end zone from in close as the con- test's determining factor. He also lamented Art Schlichter's third-down, off- balance pass completion which kept the Buckeyes' winning drive alive. "The (Ohio State) guy clipped (middle guard Al) Sincich, or he would have been right there in his (Schlichter's) face. He cut him down right in back of the legs. And that was way out of the clipping zone. But our own mistakes are what hurt us." SCHEMBECHLER lightened up the conversation a little when discussing his role in coaching-in the East- West Shrine post-season all-star game, where he will share the spotlight with another fairly well-known mentor, Paul "Bear" Bryant. "Apparently, they were all thrilled they got Bear after the record (for most wins ever by a college coach)." Bo then tied to imitate the gravelly voice of the coaching legend. " 'I'll go if you guys go up there to get Bo to coach with me.' Which means Bo does all the work, carries Bear's bags for him, handles his press conferences," Schembechler laughed. from the Associated Press Wolverine wide receiver Anthony Car- ter and offensive guard Kurt Becker were, named to the 1981 Kodak All- American Football Team yesterday. Carter currently leads Michigan's pass catchers with 44 receptions and 7 SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Harrier Larsen 15th at AlA W touchdowns Becker proved to be a mainstay on the Wolverine offensive line this year. MICHIGAN, Pittsburgh with linebacker Sal Sunseri and quarterback Dan Marino, Southern Cal, with run- ning back Marcus Allen and ofensive lineman Roy Foster, Nebraska with CENTER Dave Remington and defen- sive lineman James Williams, were the only schools to have two'players selec- ted for the Kodak honors. Other notables pick for All-America honors include running back Herschel Walker of Georgia and Notre Dame linebacker Bob Crable. Walker was the only sophomore to be named while Crable is a repeater from last year's All-America squad. Michigan's Carter was one of five juniors selected this year. Others named on offense were tight end Tim Wrightman of UCLA, lineman Terry Crouch of Oklahoma and Sean Farrell of Penn State, and fullback Darrin Nelson of Stanford. Joining Crable, Sunseri and Williams on defense were linemen Harvey, Ar- mstrong of Southern Methodist, Glenn Collins of Mississippi State, Billy Ray Smith of Arkansas and Ken Sims of Texas, linebacker Jeff Davis of Clem- son, and defensive backs Fred Marion of Miami, Fla., Steve Cordle of Fresno Stae and Tommy Wilcox of Alabama. By SARAH SHERBER Lisa Larsen has managed to do what no other Michigan womens cross coun- try runner could do, become an All- American. Larsen, the former Wolverine swim. team member, finished 15th during last weekends AIAW meet in Tucson with a time of 18:22. The Battle Creek native also out paced fellow Michigan runner Melanie Weaver, who until this season had never been beaten by a fellow Wolverine. Weaver, who had been ex- pected to receive All-American honors, was only able to capture the 45th spot when she ran the course in 18:55. The only other Michigan runners to compete in the race were Judy Yuhn, who capped her first season as a thin- clad by finishing 63rd (19:08) and Sue Fredrick who crossed the tape at 19:43 for the 101st place. Though the Wolverines did not com- pete as a team, the meet did mark the end to their season. The team "cham- pionship was captured by Iowa State. Tumblers second. Wolverine gymnast Kevin McKee took first place in the floor exercise and vaulting to lead the men's gymnastic team to a second place finish in the Buckeye Invitational at Columbus last weekend. Ohio State won the match with 266.60 points, but Michigan was not far behind, totalling 262.60. Illinois finished third, with Indiana State and Indiana rounding out the tournament. "WE WERE pleased with our win over defending Big Ten. champion, Illinois," said coach Newt Loken, "and we were definitely in the ballpark with Ohio State, almost catching up to them in the latter events." Milan Stanovich and Merrick Horn were the top all-around performers for the Wolverines, finishing fourth and fif- th, respectively. Rick Kaufmann took the rings with a 9.4 total. Mike McKee scored third places in the floor exercise and vaulting, while Dino Hanus earned a second place on the parallel bars. -JESSE BARKIN Neira, O'Brien eighth Two members of the Michigan syn- chronized swimming team, Betsy Neira and Cathy O'Brien, participated in the three-day national synchronized swimming team competition which started Thursday in Colorado Springs, Co. The pair appeared in both duet and individual competition. In duet form the Michigan teammates swam their way into the finals, earning eighth place overall. Performing individually. Neira placed 27th in the field of forty- five, followec closely by her Wolverines teammate O'Brien, who finished the meet in the 29th spot. The top 18 finishers were chosen to perform with the national synchronized swimmimng team. - MATT HENFEHAN Schlichter MVP COLUMBUS - Quarterback Art Schlichter, the second-most productive Tinted Soft Contact Lenses-$199 Soft Contact Lenses-$169 Extended Wear Contact Lenses-$350 Wear for 2 weeks without removal Hard Contact Lenses -2 pairs $150 DR. PAUL C. USLAN Optometrist 545 Church Street 759-1222 performer in Big Ten conference history, was selected last night as the most valuable player for Ohio State's Buckeyes, league co-champion with Iowa. The 6-foot-3, 208-pound Schlichter ac- counted for 8,713 yards in total offense, starting all 47 of his college games. He has one contest remaining against Navy in the Liberty Bowl December 30. Schlichter, selected by a vote of his teammates, led Ohio State to an 8-3 overall record and a 6-2 conference mark this season, climaxed by a 14-9 triumph Saturday at Michigan. Schlichter, despite injuries to both ankles this season, shattered eight school records and equaled another one in his senior year.. He established an Ohio Stae single- season total offense record in all four of his years. H had 2,392 yards in 1981. Ohio Stae Coach Earle Bruce said, "If you saw the Michigan game, you know why Schlichter is so valuable He is a wsinner in every sense of the word. When you need the big play, he makes it for you." BILLBOARD All campus squash entries are due by 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, December 1 at the IM building. The', al-campus squash tournament will be held Wednesday, December 2 from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. at the IM building, and if needed, Thur- sday, December 3 from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. at the same location. Becker I ... Kodak All-American. AP Top Twenty 1. Pittsburgh (60) .......10-0-0 2. Clemson (5)...........11-0-0 3. Georgia...........9-1-0 4. Alabama...........8-1-1 5. Nebraska..........9-2-0 6. So. Methodist.......10-1-0 7. Texas .............. 8-1-1 8. USC................9-2-0 9. Miami (Fla.).........8-2-0 10. North Carolina....... 9-2-0 11. Penn St................ 8-2-0 12. Washington ........... 9-2-0 13. Iowa ............... 8-3-0 14. Brigham Young......10-2-0 15. Ohio St-............83-0 16. MICHIGAN.........8-3-0 17. So. Mississippi ......8-1-1 18. Arizona St........... 8-2-0 19. UCLA.............7-3-1 20. Washington St......... 8-2-1 1,294 1,234 1,157 1,054 1,015 965 904 797 708 656 645 604 491 377 330 292 264 253 199 139 UPI Top Twenty 1. Pittsburgh (39)........ 10-0 2. Clemson (3)............ 11-0 3. Georgia ............... 9-1 4. Alabama .............. 8-1-1 5. Nebraska ............. 9-2 6. Texas ............... 8-1-1 7. USC ................. 9-2 8. North Carolina ........ 9-2 9. Penn St................8-2 10. Washington ........... 0-2 11. Iowa .................. 8-3 12. Brigham Young .......10-2 13. MICHIGAN;.......... 8-3 14. Ohio State...........-8-3 15. So. Mississippi ........ 8-1-1 16. UCLA.............7-3-1 17. Arkansas.............. 8-3 18. Washington St....... 8-2-1 19. Houston ...........6-3-1 20. San Jose St........ .8-2 627 578 538 487 455 394 375 276 269 249 164 145 116 104 84 59 51 26 12 8 ATTENTION Juniors, Seniors, Grad Students BUILD YOUR CREDIT. through Vs- and/or ms - Guaranteed "Bank Action" Ap- plications are available to l 000 Univ. of Mich. Students through CSA on a first come, first served basis only! You must CALL NOW, to receive your approved application TO- DAY! Michigan Grid Statistics THEY WILL GO FASTi' 1-800-424-2494-24 HOURS A DAYI CSA Marketing, Inc. Team Total First Downs.. Rushing .. Passing .... Penalty .... Total net Yards Total Plays.. Avg. Per Play Statistics MICH Opp. 234 205 152 97 70 97 12 11 4556 3684 775 760 5.9 ' 4.8 9 1. EITERVIEWUUH,'s THELEADERI COMPILE TECHNOLOGY. ON THE UNIVERSIY OF MICHIGAN CAMPUS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30th Avg. Per Game ...... Net Rushing Yatrds ... Total Attempts. Avg. Per Play Avg. Per Game ...... Net Passing Yards ..... Att/Comp/Int Avg. Per Attempt ..... Avg. Per Comp...... Avg. Per Game . Punts/Yds/Avg. Punt Ret/Yds/ Avg......... KO Ret/Yds/ Avg......... Int/Yds/Avg.,.. Fumbles/Lost Penalties/Yards Scoring: Total Pts./ Avg... Touchdowns. Rushing ... Passing ... Returns ... PAT's/Att. .. 2-Pt. Conv./ Att... Field Goals/ Att... Third Down Conv./Att. Success Pct.. 414.2 2973 572 5.2 270.3 1583 203/91/11 7.8 17.4 143.9 45/1969/43.8 34/306/9.0 25/551/22.0 19/220/11.6 16/9 59/528 322/29.3 43 28 15 0 37/38 2/5 7/13 70/144 .486 334.9 1504 435 3.5 136.7 Dickey .... Mercer ........ S. Smith .. . Dickey ........ 5 19 14 1 2 0 Passing PA PC nt 195 88 11 . 8 3 0 Receiving 5 1.0 0 8 2 2.0 0 2 2180 325/175/19 6.7 12.5 198.2 61/2396/39.3 13/29/2.2 28/411/14.7 11/19/1.7 18/7 38/352 149/13.5 17 9 8 0 16/17 0/0 10/17 56/156 .359 ~rs 3 4 Tot/Avg 70 98 322/29.3 34 23 143/13.5 Pct Yds TD .451 1509 14 .375 74 1 Carter....... Bean........ Dunaway ...... Edwards ...... Woolfolk .... Betts........ Brockington ... Ingram... No. 44 14 11 9 7 4 2 1 TD Yds 825 303 152 97 47 76 67 6 Avg 18.8 21.6 13.8 13.9 6.7 19.0 33.5 6.0 TD 7 3 0 0 1 LP 71 46 27 24 13 52 42 6 0 LP 71 42 Scoring S. Smith...... Ricks ...... Carter ......... Haji-Sheikh ... Woolfolk . Edwards:.. Dunaway ...... Bergeron ..... Bean....... Betts .......... Hassel........ Rogers... Team'.. .... . TDr 11 9 1 0 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 TDp 0 0 7 0 0 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 TDo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 '0 0 ExP 0 0 0 32-32 0 0 0 5-5 0; 0 0 0 0-1 2-Pt FG 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 6-11 S0 0 0 0 1-2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TP 68 54 50 50 30 18 18 8 6 6 6 6 2 Punting 6 Score by Quarte 1 2 MICHIGAN .................57 971 Opponents ..................47 442 INTERMETRICS, INC., with. 450 employees, is an established and growing firm with nationwide offices; involved in a wide spectrum of software development activities. We are advancing the state-of-the-art in the design and implementation of multi- targeted, highly optimizing compilers integrated into complete software development systems. In addition, Intermetrics is committed to the continued development of sophisticated tools as the keystone of powerful and supportive programming environments. We are seeking outstanding candidates at all degree levels for these key positions: COMPL ER WRiTERS To design and implement compilers for such languages as Pascal, FORTRAN, Ada. JOVIAL, and PL/1. PROGRAMMING METHODOLOGY SPECIAUISTS management, and to software engineering these techniques. build tools appropriate supporting Bracken. Haji-Sheikh; ..; Bergeron ... No. Yds. Avg. Long 45 1969 43.8 61 Field Goals 0-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 1-1 2-2- 2-4 1-4 0-0 1-1 0-1 0-0- 50+ Total 0-0 6-11 0-0 1-2 Individual Statistics Returns SUPPORT SOFTWARE SPECIALISTS To specify, design, and implement editors, debuggers, linkers, loaders, and static analyzers in the development of user- friendly systems. INTERMETRICS offers an informal yet results-oriented environment, flexible working hours, rapid advancement, and outstanding benefits. If you are a technical self-starter, available in December or June interview with us on campus, Monday November 30th or send resume to: Personnel Department INTERMETRICS, INC. 733 Concord Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 An Equal Opportunity Fmnlnver M/F/H Wooltolk ...... S. Smith ....... Edwards ... Ricks....... Rogers ........ Carter......... Ingranr .. Hassel ...... K. Smith . Rushing Att. Gain Loss 226 1305 32 124 743 133 88 437 0 78 400 7 21 127 2 11 69 12 8 30 0 7 22 0 3 19 0r Yds Avg TD1 1273 5.6 5 610 4.9 11 437 5.0 1 393 5.0 9 125 6.0 1 57 5.2 1 30 3.8 0 22- 3.1 0 19 6.3 0 LP 89 42 30 60 20 23 15 8 12 PR/Yds/Avg/LP KOR/Yds/Avg/LP Carter..........10/150/15.0/59 15/406/27.1/52 Edwards 0/0/0/0 6/92/15.3/26 Burgei 0/0/0/0 2/24/12.0/12 Hassel ........ 0/0/0/0 1/16/16.0/16 Ricks0.......... 0/0/0/0 1/13/13.0/13 Carpenter,.... 12/100/8.3/48 0/0/0/0 Jackson........ 10/47/4.7/13 0/0/0/0 Cooper......... 1/8/8.0/8 0/0/0/0 Rose .......... 1/1/1.0/1 0/0/0/0 . F t° 0 EXCITEMENT * TRAVEL * RESPONSIBILITY INVESTIGATE THE NAVY ALTERNATIVE f'