The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 24,1978-Page 4 a w. ' Y f ?Mt J o itt'1 \' t WY, 2 x BIG TEN ROUNDUP Huskies By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Tailbacks Mike Harkrader and Derrick Burnett ran for one touchdown apiece yesterday and safety Dave Abrams stopped two Washington drives with pass intercep- tions as Indiana handed the 15th-ranked Huskies a 14-7 upset in college football. The victory squared Indiana's record t 1-1, while Washington fell to 1-2. Harkrader, who sat out all of last season with a knee injury after, becoming the only freshman in Big Ten history to gain 1;000 yards the year before, scored Indiana's first touch- down on the opening play of the second upset; Bucks roll, 27-10 DETROIT PISTONS CLEVELAND CAVALIERS CRISLER ~ ARENA Tonight 8 P.M. TICKETS. UAC TICKET CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNION LOBBY S4&'5 quarter. Burnett, a senior, took over the bulk of Indiana's ground attack in the second half and scored the final touch- down early in the fourth quarter. Gophers gouged MINNEAPOLIS-Freshman quar- terback Art Schlichter ran for two touchdowns and directed Ohio State to two others yesterday as the 16th-ranked Buckeyes blitzed Minnesota 27-10 in the Big Ten opener for both clubs. Schlichter completed just three of seven passes for 57 yards, but rushed for 56 yards to pace a balanced Ohio State attack. He scored on runs of three and one yard, while the Buckeyes also got touchdowns from Joel Payton and Ron Springs, who led all rushers with 82 yards. Ohio State finished with 300 yards rushing for the game. Minnesota scored on a 39-yard field goal by Paul Rogind with four seconds left in the first half after Ohio State had assumed a 21-0 lead. Spartans sail EAST LANSING, Mich.-lflanker Kirk Gibson raced for one touchdown on a reverse and hauled in a long pass for another yesterday as Michigan State scored three quick touchdowns and went on to maul Syracuse 49-21 in an intersectional football game. Sophomore MSU 'quarterback Bert Vaughn, filling in for the injured Ed Smith, completed two long bombs for touchdowns, and the Spartan defense kept a misfiring Syracuse attack bot- tled up in its end of the field for most of the game. Syracuse was never in the contest as it fumbled away the opening kickoff, then gave up a trio of touchdowns the first four times MSU had the ball. Illini whipped CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-Stanford, led by the sharp passing of quarterback Steve Dils and the powerful running of tailback Darrin Nelson, breezed past Illinois 35-10 yesterday. Dils completed 80 percent of his passes including one for a touchdown. Stanford tight end Pat Bowe pulled in two touchdown passes. Tailback Mark Dismuke broke loose for a 13-yard run and scored Illinois' only touchdown with 2:40 left in the game. Stanford is 2-1 for the year, and Illinois dropped to 0-2-1. Hawkaees hexed IOWA CITY, Iowa - Reserve quar- terback Walter Grant threw three touchdown passes and No. 2 tailback Victor Mack raced seven yards for a score with 39 seconds left to play as 20th-ranked Iowa State humiliated Iowa 31-0 yesterday. Iowa stopped the Cyclones on their first two possessions, but Grant came in at quarterback to start the second quar- ter and threw a 47-yard touchdown pass to split end Stan Hixon the first time he touched the ball. The battle between the intrastate rivals drew 60,075 fans, the fourth largest crowd ever to see a game in Kinnick Stadium. Purdue coasts WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Sophomore quarterback Mark Herr- mann threw for 223 yards and com- pleted touchdown passes to Mike Harris and Bart Burrell as Purdue defeated Ohio University 24-0 yesterday. Herrmann, second in the nation in passing yardage as a freshman, had only seven yards passing in the opening period as the Boilermakers stayed on the ground for 17 of 20 plays. He wound up completing 13 of 23 passes, sitting out most of the final period as reserves finished the game. Wildcats sunk EVANSTON, Ill. - Tom Stauss ran for 123 yards and two touchdowns and Ira Matthews broke loose for 123 yards and a touchdown on a 78-yard punt return as Wisconsin whipped North- western 28-7 in Big Ten football Satur- day. It was the 200th conference victory in Wisconsin history, the first for new coach Dave McClain and the second in the Badgers' first two games this season. Northwestern scored its first touchdown of the year but fell to 0-2-1 in the conference and overall. USC rips Alabama; Razorbacks roll, 19-7 There will be a WOMEN'S INNERTUBE WATER POLO CLINIC Monday, September 25, 7:15 pm at the IM Sports Building Pool rBring your suits and give this fun sport a try! For more information call Ellen Gold, 763-3563 By The Associated Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-Charles White made up for two costly fumbles by shredding Alabama's vaunted defense for 199 yards, including a 40-yard touchdown run, as seventh-ranked Southern Californiarknocked off No. 1 Alabama 24-14 yesterday and ended the nation's longest major college winning streak at 12 games. SOUTHERN CAL wrapped it up in the final period on TD passes of 6 and 40 yards from Paul McDonald to Kevin Williams. McDonald's touchdown pas es to Williams built the Trojans' lead o 24-7 and more than offset a 41-yard Alabama scoring pass from Jeff Rutledge to Bart Krout with 7:10 remaining. Both teams came into the game with 2-0 records. Cowboys clipped STILLWATER, Okla.-Halfbacks Ben Cowins and Jerry Eckwood, bot- tled up for.much of the first half, finally broke loose during a lightning quick Razorback drive in the third period yesterday, leading second-ranked Arkansas to a 19-7 college football vic- tory over Oklahoma State. THE RAZORBACKS led only 3-0 at halftime against an Oklahoma State team rated as much as a four- touchdown underdog. Arkansas launched the third quarter with an 80-yard drive that took only one minute and 21 seconds. Eckwood bolted for 51 yards and, two plays later, Anyone interested in being an Innertube Waterpolo Official' should attend the innertube Waterpolo Officials Clinic on Mon- day, Sept. 25, 6:00 pm at the IM Sports Building Pool. For more info call Jan Wells, 763-1313 Cowins raced into the end zone from the 25 with a pitchout from quarterback Ron Calcagni. Sooners walk . NORMAN, Okla.-Quarterbacks Thomas Lott and J.C. Watts scored two touchdowns apiece yesterday as third- ranked Oklahoma and its wishbone of- fense rolled to a 66-7 victory over Rice in a college football game. LOTT'S NEAR-FLAWLESS play helped Oklahoma, now 3-0, to an over- whelming 52-0 halftime lead as the Sooners scored every time they had the ball while he was directing traffic. Lott was replaced in the middle of the second quarter after rushing for 102 yards and hitting two of five passes for 32 yards. Mustangs mauled STATE COLLEGE, Pa.-A pair of third period touchdowns on a 16-yard pass by quarterback Chuck Fusina and a 3-yard run by fullback Matt Suhey rallied third-ranked Penn State to a 26- 21 college football victory yesterday over Southern Methodist. PENN STATE, unbeaten in four games, trailed the 17-point underdog Mustangs from the Southwest Con- ference 21-12 with 12 minutes left in the third quarter. Bruins bounced LAWRENCE, Kan.-Jeff Hines threw two touchdown passes and scored on a 3-yard run as Kansas shocked UCLA with three touchdowns in a three- minute span of the second quarter and held on to defeat the 8th-ranked Bruins 28-24 yesterday. UCLA, a 17-point favorite over the previously winless Jayhawks, fumbled two kickoffs which Kansas converted into quick touchdowns and saw its final opportunity die when quarterback Rick Bashore was sacked for a 10-yard loss on a fourth-and-three situation with 2:09 remaining. RICK MONDAY of the Los Angeles Dodgers piles into shortstop Ozzie Smith of the San Diego Padres. Smith was able to complete the double play, but to no avail as the Padres fell yesterday, 5-3. AP Photo The races roll on American League East Indians 10, Yanks 1-Red Sox 3, Blue Jays 1 By The Associated Press CLEVELAND-Rick Manning's two-run bloop single ignited a 15-hit attack that helped David Clyde and the Cleveland Indians to a 10-1 victory over the New York Yankees in a nationally televised game yesterday. The Yankees grabbed a 1-0 lead off Clyde, 8-11, in the first inning on Lou Piniella's RBI single. But the Indians struck back for four runs in the second inning off New York starter Jim Beattie, 5-9. Manning's bases-loaded single put Cleveland ahead to stay and Jim Norris added a two-run triple on a line drive that was misjudged by center fielder Mickey Rivers. Rookie Wayne Cage added his second solo homer in as many nights in the third inning and the Indians came up with three more runs in the fourth and single runs in the seventh and eighth, the latter on Cage's infield out. In 'Toronto, Jim Rice betted his 43rd home run of the season and Carl Yastrzemski and Jack Brohamer added run-scoring singles as the Boston Red Sox beat the Toronto Blue Jays 3-1 yesterday and moved within one game of the first-place New York Yankees in the American League East. Luis Tiant, 11-8, scattered seven hits to get the victory for the Red Sox. nave McKay's leadoff walk in the sixth followed by Alan Ashby's double into the left field corner produced the lone run off the veteran right-hander, who struck out six and walked five. National League East Expos 3, Pirates 2-Phillies 1, Mets 0 MONTREAL-Pinch-hitter Del Unser singled home Larry Parrish in the ninth inning to give the Montreal Expos a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates yesterday. Parrish opened the ninth with a double off Bert Blyleven, 14-10. After Chris Speir grounded out, Unser batted for winning pitcher Ross Grimsley, 19-10, and singled up the middle to score Parrish, who barrelled into Pirate catcher Duffy Dyer at the plate. Dyer was helped from the field and Parrish was removed on a stretcher. In New York, Larry Christenson fired a three-hitter and Garry Maddox doubled home Larry Bowa in the sixth inning run to give the Philadelphia Phillies a 1-0 victory over the New York Mets in the opening game of yester- day's doubleheader. Christenson, 12-14, won for the first time since September 2 by pitching his third shutout and ninth complete game of the season. He struck out five and walked two. The only New York hits were singles by Tim Foli in the first inning and Doug Flynn in the eighth and a double by Lee Mazzilli leading off the ninth. Blue Booters bow to Irish on penalty kick .dpo- sock sale 3 pair for ,$5 STORE HOURS 109 Monday Friday 10.6 Saturday 12-5sunday F AAk i Use Daily Class ifieds 3150 Carpenter Road 971.4310 Want The Inside Scoop? RELAX! Read for.fun! GAMBLER'S DIGEST * P Edited by Clement McQuaid. A S#The best seller that people are buying quietly, then clobbering pals at poker, gin, craps- packed with plain talk from pros. 11 sure ways to win at any game, tips to spot cheaters. Best bets, bad bets, ruses, bar bets. Tilting the odds. Money management-how to profit even if you lose half the time. Covers sports pools, lotteries, a track-proven handicapping system. A no-nonsense roundup of the gain- bling arts for the occasional player who would rather win than lose. Sprinkled w.ith classic gambling stories. 320 full house 81" x 11" pages. Wt. 2 lbs. No. 7116 Retail Price $6.95 .I By ERIC OLSON "This may havefbeen the best that any soccer team from Michigan has ever played," said first year' Michigan Soccer Club coach Steve Olson after his team dropped a 2-1 decision at Notre Dame Friday night. "It's just too bad the game had to be decided by the referee." With the contest knotted 1-1 in the second half the Irish were awarded a penalty kick which they capitalized on to win the game, 2-1. THE PENALTY kick was whistled when Wolverine goalkeeper Jeff Boudin pushed a Notre Dame forward while he punted the ball out. "We're protesting the game," said Olson adding, "it was the kind of a call that never should have been made because he (the Notre Dame forward) fouled our goalie by obstructing him first, before the push, just by being there." That call really changed the game because at the time we were outplaying them," stated Olson. Both Notre Dame goals were unassisted by Mike Finagan and Ralph Schwaeger tallied the lone Michigan score on a pass from Ihor Fedorowycz. FOR THE GAME Michigan had 16 shots at goal and Notre Dame 20. The Club's next game is Wednesday, Sept. 27 at Eastern Michigan at 4:00 and their record now stands at 2-1. GOLFER'S DIGEST 7th Edition Edited byEarl Puckett, PGA Professional, and Robert Cromie An all-inclusive collection of golfing wisdom and entertainment that every golfer will find rewarding, stroke-saving and amusing. This comprehensive encyclopedia of golf experi- ence analyzes your game from tee to green. Provides helpful advice on basic technique, playing strategy, and more effective use of equipment to trim some key strokes from your score. Colorful features on many of golf's greatest shotmakers are part of the experience. The game philosophies of professionals like Johnny Miller, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player give new insight into winning golf. 288 stroke-saving 81/" x 11" pages. Wt. 11/2 lbs. . I j _.._ To the Freshmen: It wouldn't be the DEKE HOUSE If there weren't some rumors about it. Just for the record, Here are some of the things we're not: TEKES QUARANTINED SUBSCRIBE TO A900OW- - I I