Page 12-Tuesday, November 30, 1982-The Michigan Daily o*y Kudos given to eight 'M' gridders CHICAGO (AP)- All-American wide receiver An- thony Carter of Michigan, guard Joe Lukens of Ohio State and defensive back Keith Bostic of Michigan were unanimous selections on The Associated Press' 1982 All-Big Ten Conference football team announced yesterday. Carter and Lukens made the team selected by a panel of sports writers and broadcasters throughout the Midwest for the third straight year, as did nose guard Tim Krumrie of Wisconsin and linebacker Marcus Marek of Ohio State. REPEATING ON offense along with Carter and Lukens was Illinois quarterback Tony Eason. Repeating on defense, in addition to Marek and Krumrie, were tackle Mark Bortz and punter Reggie Roby, both of Iowa, and back David Greenwood of Wisconsin. Defensive lineman Jerome Foster of Ohio State, a first-team selection in 1980 but who failed to make the team last year, returned this season. Linebacker Brock Spach of Purdue and defensive back Matt Vanden Boom of Wisconsin failed to repeat this time. Grabbing the other wide receiver post was Mike Martin of Illinois, who led the Big Ten in receptions with 56. His average of 6.3 catches per game topped the league and was among the best in the nation. CLIFF BENSON of Purdue was the tight end, with Chris Hinton of Northwestern and Rich Strenger of Michigan grabbing the tackle spots. Stefan Hum- phries of Michigan joined Lukens at guard and Michigan's Tom Dixon was the center. Joining Eason in the backfield were running backs Tim Spencer of Ohio State and Lawrence Ricks of Michigan. Mike Bass of Illinois was the kicker. Rounding out the defensive unit were lineman Darryl Sims of Wisconsin, linebackers Carl Banks of Michigan State and Robert Thompson and Paul Girgash of Michigan and back Bobby Stoops of Iowa. Michigan, the conference champion and Rose Bowl representative, landed five players on offense and three on defense, while Iowa and Wisconsin had three each on defense and Illinois three on offense. Only Minnesota and Indiana failed to have a player named on the first units. Carter . -another day, another award anmBostic . .. unanimous selection A professional can never be over-Coached®. x: 4A~ A U We are proud to carry the complete line of Coach® Leatherware products for men and women. A family-owned business since 1941, Coach® is deeply committed to the excellence of their work and the satisfaction of their customers. This holiday season stop in and take a look at our incredible selection of Coach® products. We're sure you'll find something just right for your special someone-or for yourself. W.W. Trent A tradition of excellence in fine luggage and leathergoods. 539 East Liberty 995-1866 Major Credit Cards Parking Validation V I j AP Photo 'M'-UCLA to have a ball in a bowl Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler beats UCLA head coach Terry Donahue to the loose ball. Donahue and his Bruins, however, beat the rest of the Pac Ten to the Rose Bowl. UCLA, which was idle last weekend, earned a spot in the Rose Bowl by BILLB( virtue of Arizona's 28-18 win over Arizona State last Saturday. Had Arizona State won, it would have gone to Pasadena. Tomorrow is the last day that Michigan students and faculty can or- der Rose Bowl tickets through the Michigan Athletic Department. Ap- plications are available at the Michigan ticket office (corner of State and Hoover) and the office is open from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tickets cost $30.50 and must be ordered in person. They can be picked up at the Sports Arena in Los Angeles on December 31. Alumni can order tickets through Friday, December 3. 4 MEN'S BASKETBALL CENTRAL MICHIGAN, Dec. 1, 8:00 p.m. NORTHERN MICHIGAN, Dec. 4, 8:00 p.m. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL at DePaul, Dec. 4 NATHAN Z. DERSHOWITZ Director of the Commission on Law and Social Action of the American Jewish Congress speaking on: "CONGRESS AND THE FIRST AMENDMENT: A JEWISH POINT OF VIEW" Tuesday, Nov. 30, 8 PM at 1429 Hill St. WRESTLING at Penn State, Dec. 2 Penn State Invitational, State College, PA, Dec. 3-4 Michigan Open, Mt. Pleasant, MI, Dec. 4 MEN'S SWIMMING Canada Cup, Toronto, Dec. 4-6 unda BRIT io (oundation WOMEN'S SWIMMING at University of Toronto, Dec. 2, 3:30 p.m. Canada Cup, Etobicoke, Dec. 3-5 MEN'S GYMNASTICS All Around Classic, Washington, D.C., Dec. 4 WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS at Eastern Michigan, vs. Eastern Michigan and Kent State, Dec. 3 HOCKEY WESTERN MICHIGAN, Dec. 3,7:30 p.m at Western Michigan, Dec. 4, 7:30 p.m. co-sponsored by Hillel and the U of M Law School Student Senate I ow the Journal achieved- and Imantlauins -its unique power and influence. For the first time, you can learn how the Wall Street Journal gathers its fast-breaking news, uncovers its unique insider's information-and how its powerful front page articles can send a company's stock soaring ... or plunging. Noted business school professor Jerry M. Rosenberg went behind the scenes at the Journal, delved into sel- dom seen archives and interviewed I I ~ m «>