.............: .x ""{.: . . .. rr........ .. ar....,.....fi ........:.......:.. , :...r....,.....:.......r E ll ........... ....{.:.::::.: ::.. :":Y:::::::'.Y:.:??.:.:?<">:t";:Y:::.>:.:";...:: "YY{Oi:4 .. ... ...... .. .... ...... ....".w:. r ":::" v " vv::" " :".:w:::: ....................'":: "r??:d:?{{.i::: v:::::"::".v:.:::::.....::::.y} a:."}::::::+k.:".? M E :? ::: {:.v':+ri": Y'"x: + :.>."Y:.v:::::.v:::w:vi'vw}::?w.:v:. ..... .v n ........... ........ ... ............ ..... ...v.,..........:.. x. ... ... -::::.v;:: v.vw:::v::::.v:::::::.';::ti:M1+.v::.::;.}}Y"::":{ ::::?i"':O::v}'":{";' The Michigan Daily-Thursday, December 4, 1980-Page 9 1980 Associated Press BY ALAN FANGER With AP reports Anthony Carter earned himself yet another prestigious post-season award yesterday when the Michigan wide receiver was named to the Associated Press All-America fir- st team. Two other Wolverines - defensive tackle Mike Trgovac and inside linebacker Andy Cannavino - were selected to the 9 IP ta b s second team, while center George Lilja made the third team. Six Michigan players also received honorable mention. Carter, the sophomore speedster who has thrilled both Wolverine fans and his teammates with electrifying moves and an uncanny ability to catch the ball in a crowd of defen- ders, had previously garnered several other honors, in- cluding the Wolverines' most valuable player award and a firs tm tE a -first-team All-America selection by Football News The Riviera Beach, Fla. native becomes the first Michigan sophomore since 1925 to be named an All- American. Bennie Oosterbaan was named a first-team All- a American as a sophomore following that season. While Carter has reaped his share of awards this season, he has broken an even greater number of records. He shat- tered Michigan records for career touchdown receptions (20), touchdown catches in, one season (13), and career kickoff return yardage (824), while breaking the Big Ten mark for touchdown receptions in conference games (11). Carter also led the nation in kickoff return performance with an average of 29.4 yards per return. "He's the most gifted athlete I've ever been associated with," said Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler of his flanker. Quarterback John Wangler, who connected with Carter on 43 passes this season, said of Carter, "There are a lot of great players who have earned awards like this one (Michigan MVP), but the thing that separates Anthony from others is the fact that off the field, he is truly a great person." "All he wants to do is play for this team," said Schem- bechler. "He worries about keeping his spot in the starting lineup." Trgovac weathered a rash of midseason injuries and finished fourth on the squad in total tackles with 56. He was moved from his middle guard spot to a down lineman position at the start of the season. Cannavino's improvement during the season has been described by Schembechler as "amazing", adding that the Cleveland senior and defensive captain "ranks among some of the outstanding linebackers who have played at Michigan." Lilja, the Wolverines' offensive captain, has held down the starting job at center for three straight seasons. He an- chors an offensiveline which many experts describe as the best in the country. Four of Lilja's fellow linemen - tackles Ed Muransky and Bubba Paris and guards John Powers and Kurt Becker - were given honorable mention, as were outside linebacker Mel Owens and fullback Stanley Edwards. Becker and Edwards have been granted a fifth year of eligibility and will return to the team next year. All.America Team OFFENSE Tight End-Dave Young, Purdue Wide Receiver-ANTHONY CARTER, MICHIGAN Wide Receiver-Ken Margerum, Stanford Tackle-Mark May, Pittsburgh Tackle-Keith Van Herne, Southern California Guard-Frank Ditta, Baylor Guard-Randy Schleusner, Nebraska Center-John Scully, Notre Dame Quarterback-Mark Herrmann, Purdue Running Back-George Rogers, South Carolina Running Back- Herschel Walker, Georgia \ DEFENSE Defensive End-Hugh Green, Pittsburgh Defensive End-Scott Zettek, Notre Dame Defensive Tackle- Leonard Mitchell, Houston Defensive Tackle-Kenneth Sims, Texas Linebacker-E.J. Junior, Alabama Linebacker-David Little, Florida Linebacker-Mike Singletary, Baylor Linebacker-Lawrence Taylor, North Carolina Defensive Back-Kenny Easley, UCLA Defensive Back-Ronnie Lott, ti Southern California Defensive Back-John Simmons, Southern Methodist yv: r v .:. .. v. x".: .. ... ". "v ". vrv "".v .:. ., .r.. vv:':" :}' ..v .. .v.. .. .. ..: h..n.... v.:. ::. .. .a ... .:. .x3. x .. v:r"'x r ... .v':rr YiS.., }5.... .3' ... .. ... v.....:........,..{........... ......... x ............. . x.. ..,. }. .. x .,.x . x ..................................... ... ...:.:................. .. ti .............. .. x . ... :. ,. ...... . . : . x ... .. . .. .... ...........x,......:........ . . " r .... ,. .. , .. .. .. .. .. :;,.:5: r..x, t",. x.. r.".,..:..". ............r.....r:,.:....... ................... .:"c.:..... .....:...... ............ :,.h.. Cagers down Kansas By DREW SHARP Special to the Daily LAWRENCE, Kan. - Michigan for- aard Mike McGee rebounded from a ackluster season-opening performance in fine fashion last night by leading all scorers with 28 points and pacing the Wolverines to an impressive 64-52 vic- tory over the Kansas Jayhawks at a rather boisterous Allen Fieldhouse. The Wolverines never trailed during the contest. McGee tallied only 12 points in Michigan's . victory over Eastern Michigan Saturday, but on this oc- McGee leads way in road win McGee ...back in form .SCORES , College Basketball Virginia 83, Randolph Macon 52 Old Dominion 75, Texas Wesleyan 50 West Virginia 53, Ohio Northern 50 Kentucky 70, Ohio State 64 Clemson 102, Stanford 59 South Carolina 85, NC-Asheville 57 Wright St. 81, Bowling Green 68 St. John's 78, Manhattan 58 SMICHIGAN 64, Kansas 52 IM SCORES TUESDAY Pre-Holiday Basketball Quarterfinals Tuesday Night Terror 22, Thornton's 19 Fisher 53, Dustbusters 9 Kardiac Kids 42, Law Gold 34 Legal Ease 49, Wounded Bizarre 29 Special Edition 64, Shemps 44 Andi's Bar & Drill 26, Michigan House 24 Hatchets 39, Arbory Pirates 33 Love Handles 2, Rambling Reeks 0 (forfeit) Gold Inlays 61, Powerhouse '80 58 Raging Plegmen 44, Phi Alpha Kappa 33 Pretenders 75, I Don't Care 37 Buggy Busters 29, Bush House 12 White Shadows 68, Sigma Phi Epsilon,'A' 38 Excalliber 47, B.O.T.'s 32 Yo, Adrian! 50, Jugaderos 40. Kelsey Roots 27, Law Dogs 26 Martha's Marauders 46, Nationwides 44 Chi Phi 57, The Center 24 Bursley Players 69, Jud Heathcotes 49 Dust 38, Chicago Hoopsters 20 casion he was much sharper. The 6-5 senior was constantly on the receiving end of the Wolverines' potent fast break, and wound up pouring in many easy buckets. McGee was always driving toward the basket, and the Wolverines benefitted from it. "IT WAS A really hard game and I came ready to play," said McGee, who, with his performance last night, moved into third on the all-time Michigan scoring list. "I don't really know why I played so well. I guess I was a little quicker than the guy who was covering me most of the night. "I can't take full credit for the per- formance. It was a total team victory," he added. McGee's play was supplemented by the success of a new zone defense, which Michigan coach Bill Frieder planned specifically for this game. OSU Hurt in 70-64 loss to Kentucky LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Charles Hurt broke a 64-64 tie with a dunk shot following a steal and Derrick Hord sealed the game with two free throws and a dunk as No. 2 Kentucky defeated No. 9 Ohio State 70-64 in college basket- ball last night. Clark Kellogg, Ohio State's highly- touted sophomore forward, scored his team's last five points, the last on a three-point play with 2:34 remaining to tie the game for the final time. But Kellogg was victimized with 1:21 remaining when Hurt stripped him of the ball near center court and drove for a dunk that put Kentucky, 2-0, into a 66- 64 lead. Kellogg, who finished with 11 points, fouled out with 43 seconds to go, sending Hord to the foul line. His two free throws made it 68-64. Ohio State guard Carter Scott missed the first free throw of a bonus oppor- tunity with 23 seconds to play and Ken- tucky maintained the upper hand. Sam Bowie led Kentucky with 19 points, including 17 in the second half, while Hord added 14 and freshman reserve Jim Master had 10. Herb Williams, the Buckeye's superb senior center, led all scorers with 21 points. "THE REASON why I felt we needed the zone defense was because of the quickness of the Kansas players," said Frieder. "We had to neutralize that quickness, especially Darnell Valen- tine." Valentine, the Jayhawks' consensus All-american guard, was limited to 13 points and only three assists. "Valentine is just a great penetrating guard and we had to shut him down," said Frieder. It was indeed a sterling defensive ef- fort for Michigan, as the Wolverines held Kansas to a 37 percent shooting mark from the field. And the one leading the defensive surge was for- ward Thad Garner, who had nine poin- ts. THE JUNIOR co-captain was con- stantly flying across the floor for loose balls or scraping the boards clean for rebounds. He wound up with eight boards for the evening. And the Wolverines' gutsy perfor- mance was typified by the play of in- jured guard Marty Bodnar. Marty had severely sprained his ankle in the EMU contest and was con- sidered doubtful to even make the trip, but he hobbled his way up and down the court to contribute five points to the Wolverine cause. "I WAS kind of worried about playing on the foot," said the 6-3 senior. "But I thought I had to play and with the trainers we have, they fixed me up to the point where I could play above the pain." In the second half, Michigan was playing a control-style of offense. The Wolverines weren't in any hurry to make things happen since they were usually up by a dozen or more points throughout most of the game. Anytime the Jayhawks tried to form a comeback the defense usually forced a turnover and negated the effort. THE ALICE LLOYD PLAYERS present 3 Plays by Eugene lonesto THE LESSON , THE LEADER THE BALD SOPRANO Hawks creamed MICHIGAN MIN FG/a McGee.................40 12/21 Garner ................36 4/9 Heuerman...............29 1/5 Johnson..............32 2/8 Bodnar, Mk...........28 5/8 McCornmiick .............14 2/3 James...................6 1/2 Bodnar, Mt ..............15 . 1/1 Team rebounds ft/a r a pf pts. 4/5 8 0 1 28 1/4 8 1 4 9 0/0 6 1 2 2 0/1 5 2 0 4 0/0 2 3 3 10 0/0 3 1 3 4 0/0 1 1 0 2 3/4 1 1 0 5 KANSAS MIN FG/a ft/a reb a pf tp THE PROJECT COMMUNITY Income Tax Assistance Program is having a mass meeting for people interested in volunteering for the program. Volunteers will be trained to fill out 1040-1040-A & State Tax forms. " Gain Experience " Make Professional Contacts e Explore Career Opportunities a Help.Others MASS MEETING THURSDAY, DEC. 4 AT 7:00 pm Anderson Rooms C & D First Floor of the Michigan Union For further info. contact the Project Community Office, 2204 Michigan Union, 763-3548. Office of Student Services & Office of Community Service Counseling Services and the, Center for Continuing Education for Women are co-sponsoring a workshop about: THI UPRWOAN:TE STRESS OF MANAGING MLTIPLE ROLES f ~Tuesday, December 19; 12-3:000 pm. Michigan Union: Conference Rooms 4 A£5 This workshop is for Women Graduate and Pre-Professional Students who are feeling the pressure not only to do it all but to do it all perfectly. If this sounds like you, join us in a supportive and open setting to explore such issues as support systems and networking, role overload, setting priorities, combining career and family and mental health con'cerns. This is a particularly useful forum fortwomen who are currently in a multiplicity of roles-sudent, partner, parent, employee, daughter, etc. Please pre-register by calling Anne at Counseling Services, 764-8312 Magley..................28 Crawford...............29 Mitchell.................22 Guy ...................35 Valentine..............40 Housey ..................21 Neal ..................25 Team Rebounds 2/10 3/7. 1/1 1/13 6/11 1/6 4/13 0/0 0/0 0/0 2/4 1/2 1/2 0/0 5 4 4 1 7 4 10 2 1 0 3 0 0 2 5 0 21 21 3 4 6 2 16 13 3 8 Dec. 4 5, and 8 Alice Lloyd Hall 8:00 P.M. Tickets $2.00 For More Information. Call 764-5946 or 764-5947 Halftime: MICHIGAN 34, Kansas 22 Attendance: 13,100 TOTALS .............200 24/61 4/8 37 6 15 52 FUNDS FOR STATE DIRECT LOANS' RUNNING SHORT Due to a funding shortage, the deadline for applications for the State Direct Loan Pro- gram for the Spring and/or Summer Term 1981 is December 5, 1980. Submit State Direct Loan Applications to: Office of Financial Aid 2011 Student Activities Building . Dec.NDE OSA .thruec. 2atPOND 1 - Save $2.79y BO Os uwrth on two Regular GetponderOsa Sirloin Strip Dinners G t Certif Dinners include - Baked Potato or $5 " Warm Roll with Butter " All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar. __ go No CUT OUT THIS COUPON IEE5EN CUT OUT THIS COUPON IEMU TWO REGULAR SIRLOIN TWO REGULAR SIRLOIN STRIP DINNERS.. '$5.99 STRIP DINNERS...$5.99 3 Beverage and dessert not included. Limit one Beverage and dessert not included. Limit one coupon per couple per visit. Cannot be used coupon per couple per visit. Cannot be used with other discounts. Applicable taxes not with other discounts. Applicable taxes not included At Participating Steakhouses. included. At Participating Steakhouses. SOffergoodOffer good ., Dec. 5thru "'t tUtDec. 5thru "'U t * Dec. 21 Dec. 21 - m Mmm - ... .. mn m mm mM m mm m -.. . mm -m Highway Imports Inc.; 155 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y 10013 SPECIAL OFFER 30% SAVINGS I PLUS Free color CLUB Poster with every order - a $3 value I I