The Michigan Daily--Saturday, September 9, 1978-Page 13 NO TRE DAME UPENDED: Missouri slips past, Irish, 3-0 PART-TME EMPLOYMENT NIHTS The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts is currently interviewing students interested in partici- pating in an alumni fund-raising telethon. LSA alumni across the country will be called from cam- pus. The telethon runs four nights per week, Monday through Thursday, October 9 through November 16. You will have the option of working a minimum two nights per week to a maximum four nights. Hours are 6:30 to 0:30 LSA students preferred Pay: 350 Per hour aw SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)-Sopho- more Jeff Brockhaus' 33-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter yesterday sent Missouri's charged-up Tigers to a 3-0 victory over Notre Dame's defen- ding national champions. Flustered by 94-degree heat and a Missouri defense that repeatedly refused to yield, the fifth-ranked Irish blew numerous scoring chances in the second half which put an end to their 10- game winning streak and saw them suf- fer their first loss at home since their opening game against Pitt in 1976. It was the first time Notre Dame had been shut out at home since a 21-0 loss to Michigan State in 1960. MISSOURI'S WINNING drive began after the Irish failed on a field goal at- tempt when holder Joe Restic fumbled the snap from center after Notre Dame had reached the Missouri 14-yard line. Earl Gant ripped off a 21-yard gain and then took a 16-yard pass from Phil Bradley to move into Notre Dame territory. Bradley connected on a 15- yard pass to David Newman down to the Irish 25 and four plays later Brockhaus booted his game-winning field goal. Notre Dame's final scoring chance was lost in the heat with 3:21 remaining when Vagas Ferguson fumbled on the Missouri 24-yard line and Eric Berg recovered for the Tigers. THE IRISH HAD their chances, Early in the second half, they moved to the Missouri 11-yard line where quar- terback Joe Montana failed to gain on a fourth and one. . Moments later Gerry Ellis fumbled and Jeff Weston recovered on the Missouri 7-yard line. Notre Dame got down to the 1-yard line where Montana failed to get it across and on fourth down the Tigers' Chris Garlich and Kurt Peterson threw Ferguson for a loss. ONCE AGAIN the Irish got good field position on a punt and Montana hit Kris Haines with a 35-yard pass to the Missouri 3-yard line. A penalty put it back on the 18 where the fumbled snap on the field goal attempt occurred. Turnovers by Montana repeatedly stifled Notre Dame's chances of getting on the board in the first half. Missouri had the game's first scoring chance. The Tigers moved to the Irish 36-yard line where Brockhaus attempted a 53- yard field goal which fell short. Notre Dame roared back and, with Montana passing to Pete Bolohan for 18 yards and Ferguson for 15, the Irish had a first down on the Missouri 18. Mon- tana fumbled the next snap and Garlich recovered. 1P . j WW O4A~A Call 763-5576 NU TIES ILLINI, 0-0 ictory'for Venturt CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP)-Illinois and Northwestern fought to a 0-0 tie yesterday in the opening game of the Big Ten football season. Illinois got inside the Northwestern 20-yard line on five occasions, but failed to score. Northwestern got to the Illinois 20 only once and couldn't capitalize on it. The game was played in 116-degree heat and had originally been scheduled as the final game of the season, but was moved up to improve at- tendance. Illinois missed two field goals and fumbled twice deep in Wildcat territory. Northwestern's only scoring attempt was a missed field goal in the third period. It appeared that Illinois was mounting a scoring drive late in the fourth quarter. But after moving from the Northwestern 32-yard line to the 25, quarterback Rich Weiss passed to receiver Eric Rouse at the Wildcat 14. Rouse snared off the pass, fumbled it and the Wildcats' Pat Geagan recovered. Northwestern took over on the 14 with less than a minute to play and was unable to score. It was the first time since 1951 that Illinois had played to a scoreless tie, and the first time since 1956 for the Wildcats. Illinois mounted a 68-yard drive early in the second half, but gave up the ball on the Northwestern 2-yard line when Vincent Carter couldn't hang onto a pitchout from Weiss.. In the fourth quarter, Illinois' Dave Finzer missed on a 35-yard field goal attempt. Northwestern's only scoring try came on the first possession in the third quarter, when Nick Mirkopulos missed a 47-yard field goal attempt. A crowd of 40,000 watched the scoreless game. Sooners butter-finger Stanford STANFORD, Calif. (AP)-Quarterback Thomas Lott produced four touchdowns, one on a 70-yard pass play, for the Oklahoma Sooners, who sur- vived eight fumbles and needed a last-second, end zone interception to beat Stanford 35-29 yesterday in a college football season opener. The fourth-ranked Sooners, the Big Eight champions, lost four of their fumbles, including two in the third period when Stanford of the Pacific-10 capitalized on recovering to score 10 points, cutting Oklahoma's lead to 28- 20. Stanford quarterback Steve Dils, who completed 32 passes for 299 yards and three touchdowns, suffered his second interception of the game when safety Sherwood Taylor picked off a pass at midfield early in the final quar- ter. The Sooners then drove 45 yards for their final touchdown, a 1-yard sneak by Lott. The Sooners gave Stanford two points with an intentional safety in the final minutes. Taylor then made another interception at Oklahoma's 3-yard line and Dils passed 11 yards to Ken Margerum for a touchdown with eight seconds remaining. The Cardinals then recovered their on-side kick at Oklahoma's 31 and the game ended when cornerback Darrol Ray made his third key defensive play of the game by intercepting a Dils pass in the end zone. Trojans triumph LOS ANGELES (AP)-Paul McDonald, poised in his first start at quarterback for Southern California, completed 12 of 18 passes for 194 yards and Charles White rushed for 156 yards on 30 carries yesterday as the ninth- ranked Trojans downed stubborn Texas Tech 17-9 in the college football opener for both teams. A junior who was used sparingly last year,,the left-handed McDonald brought Southern Cal back from a 9-0 deficit at the half to two third-period touchdowns. Fullback Lynn Gain scored first for the Trojans, punching over from the 1-yard line five minutes into the second half. Reserve quarterback Rob Preston played a key role in that score, taking over for two plays when Mc- Donald was shaken up. On his first place at the, helm, Preston threw a 22-yard pass to Kevin Williams that put the ball at the Tech 1-yard line, with Gain scoring on the next play. Southern Cal, plagued by fumbles throughout the contest, took the lead for keeps in the closing seconds of the quarter when White dove over from the one to cap an 89-yard scoring drive engineered by McDonald. Free-FILM SERIES-Free Tuesday 4:15 pm- MLB Aud 3 "Wodd Religion" -a series of BBC Documentaries Wednesday 4:15 pm-- MLB Aud 3 ROOTS -the TV Documentary series ton av These two series of hour long films will be, every Tues. and Wed. during the falltterm. Sponsored by the Of flee of Ethics and Religion sh Ar Photo MISSOURI'S DAVE GUENDER (right) and Notre Dame's Mike Calhoun dive for a loose ball fumbled by Notre Dame quarterback Joe Montana during a first half drive in Missouri territory in South Bend yesterday. Missouri recovered, stopping the Irish in the scoreless first half. A second half field goal by Missouri was all the Tigers needed to defeat the defending national champions, 3-0. Bruins wilt Huskies SEATTLE (AP) - Brian Baggott pounced on a punt blocked by teammate Ken Easley in the end zone for a touchdown and Peter Boermeester booted a 37-yard field goal to lead 12th-ranked UCLA to a 10-7 victory yesterday over 11th-rated Washington in a nationally televised season opener played in a rain storm. EASLEY, a sophomore free safety, blocked Aaron Wilson's punt from the end zone midway in the second period and Baggott was the first of a host of Bruins to land on the ball and give UCLA a 10-0 lead. Defensive tackle Billy Don Jackson dropped Husky quarterback Tom Porras for an eight- yard loss at the Washington 8, setting up fourth down and forcing Wilson to kick from the end zone. Washington, the defending conference and Rose Bowl champion, closed to within 10-7 at halftime on Porras' six-yard scoring pass to tight end Scott Greenwood that capped a four-play drive. The drive began at the UCLA 31 where linebacker Bruce Harrell recovered UCLA running back James Owens' second fumble of the half. SCORES College Football Missouri 3, Notre Dame 0 Illinois 0, Northwestern 0, tie Maryland 31, Tulane 7 Penn St. 26, Rutgers 10 Oklahoma 35, Stanford 29 USC 17, Texas Tech 9 Texas A&M 37, Kansas 10 Nebraska 36, California 26 Duke 28, Georgia Tech 10 William & Mary 10, VMI 3 Holy Cross 19, New Hampshire 14 Lehigh 23, W. Chester St. 20 Tuslsa 35, Virginia Tech 33 S. Carolina St. 34, Delaware St. 0 Hillsdale 40, Wis. Platteville 20 Colorado 24, Oregon 7 Nortwd. Mich. 21, Michigan Tech 10 Delaware 37, Rhode Island 0 Florida St. 28, Syracuse 0 W. virginia 14, Richmond 12 UCLA 10, Washington 7 Drake 38, SIU 14 Western Michigan 27, Illinois St. 17 I Io .L#. A 'efua rke m I BOWLING LEAGUES FORMING MEN, WOMEN, 8 MIXED OPEN 10 a.m. MON.-FRI. 1 p.m. SAT. & SUN. Sign up now UNION LANES 60C per game -ALSO- PINBALL at UNION LANES & UNION STATION ELECTRON ICS Kent-Moore Instrument Division located in Ann Arbor, Mich- igan is looking for conscientious students for the following part-time positions ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Familiar with PC board stuffing, soldering and chassis assembly. FLOOR SUPERVISORS Experienced in all phases of light electronic assembly and PC boards to be leader of electronic assemblers. QUALITY INSPECTORS Experienced individuals in PC board and chassis inspection. ELECTRONIC TEST TECHNICIAN Graduate of trade school and/-or two years experience in testing of PC board