The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 1, 1978-Page 9 Irish trim Purdue; By The Associated Press SOUTH BEND - Jerome Heavens bolted 26 yards for a third-period touchdown and Joe Unis added a 27- yard field goal Saturday as Notre Dame shook off the frustrations of two straight losses with a 10-6 victory over previously undefeated Purdue. Totally outplayed in the first half, in which the Boilermakers cashed in on field goals of 28 and 47 yards by Scott overeen for a 6-0 lead, the Irish finally broke on top with Heavens' touchdown to cap a 46-yard drive. THE NEXT time Purdue had the ball, the Boilermakers attempted a double handoff and a pass by Mark Herrmann was intercepted by Randy Harrison, who returned 34 yards to the Purdue 13 before Unis booted the first field goal of his career. Purdue so dominated the first half that the Irish had only one first down until mounting their only drive in the closing minutes of the second quarter. Notre Dame moved from its 11 to the Purdue 19 but a botched end-around play lost five yards and Unis' 41-yard field goal attempt fell short. Purdue put on a last-ditch rally on the passing of Herrmann to move to the Notre Dame 37-yard line before Steve Heimkreiter intercepted to end the threat with 1:47 lef t to play. * * * Ohio State 34, Baylor 28 COLUMBUS - Freshman quarter- back Art Schlichter passed 51 yards for Bucki one touchdown and ran 24 yards for another score Saturday, leading 13th- ranked Ohio State to a 34-28 football vic- tory over Baylor. The victory gave Woody Hayes his 200th career victory with the Buckeyes in his 28th season. SCHLICHTER, WHO earlier had snip L thrown a pair of costly interceptions, unloaded a 51-yard bomb to Doug Donley that gave the heavily favored Buckeyes the lead for good in the third quarter. Schlichter also ran 24 yards for the opening touchdown for Ohio State, 2-1-0. Baylor suffered its third consecutive 14 yior loss this season. However, the Bears forged a 21-17 lead at halftime, stunning, the 58th straight sellout crowd in Ohio Stadium. Baylor quarterback Steve Smith tossed a pair of first-half touchdown. passes, throwing 19 yards to Gordon Marshall and 15 yards to Mike Fisher. TONY LAWS ran three yards for the other Baylor touchdown in the first quarter.. Ohio State's veteran defense adjusted at halftime and shut out the Bears in the last 30 minutes while Schlichter hooked up with Donley, Paul Campbell ran one yard for a touchdown and Bob Atha booted a 34-yard field goal for the Buckeyes. Baylor nearly pulled off an upset in the final minute, regaining possession of the ball with 48 seconds left. However, on the second play, Ohio State defensive end Kelton Dansler hit Smith at his own three and the Baylor quarterback fumbled. Mark Sullivan, the Buckeyes' middle guard, recovered at the 10 with 36 seconds left. TU I1 - Phillies clinch title; Yanks, Sox both win By The Associated Press Three down, one to go. The Philadelphia Phillies, engaged in a late-season struggle with Pitts- burgh for the National League's Eastern Division title, defeated the Pirates 10-8 yesterday to clinch their third consecutive divisional crown. Meanwhile, the hotly contested American League East race remained just that, as both the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox won yesterday. The Bronx Bombers thus take a one game advantage into today's final day. A New York win or a Boston loss will clinch a third straight AL East title for the Yankees. Phillies 10, Pirates 8 PITTSBURGH-The Phillies, powered by Greg Luzinski's three- run homer and a pair of solo homers by pitcher Randy Lerch, ex- tinguished the Pittsburgh Pirates faint title hopes yesterday with a 10- 8 victory over the Bucs. The Phillies, who survived a four- run Pittsburgh ninth inning, will host the NL West champion Los An- geles Dodgers Wednesday night in the opener of the league's best-of- five playoff series. The Phillies had 16 hits, then sur- vived the Pittsburgh burst in the nin- th to take their title. Dave Parker had a two-run single in the Pirates' last-gasp rally. The Pirates, who needed a four- game sweep of the Phils to gain at least a tie for first, had their~home winning streak stopped at 24 games. Yanks 7, Indians 0 NEW YORK-Ed Figueroa pitched a five-hitter to become a .20-game winner for the-first time and Chris Chambliss-and Roy White drove in two runs apiece in a five-run first in- ning yesterday as the New York Yankees whipped the Cleveland In- dians 7-0 and clinched a tie for the American League East Division pennant. The Yankees knocked out Mike Paxton, 12-11, before he could retire a batter. Singles by Mickey Rivers and Thurman Munson and a walk to. Reggie Jackson loaded the bases. Graig Nettles singled off the glove of right fielder Dan Briggs for one run. Chambliss doubled for two more and White delivered the final two with a single. Red Sox 5, Blue Jays 1 BOSTON-Dennis Eckersley posted his 20th victory with a five- hitter yesterday as the Boston Red Sox sent the American League East race down to the wire with a 5-1 vic- tory over the Toronto Blue Jays. With their seventh consecutive victory and 11th in the last 13 games, the Red Sox remained one game behind the New York Yankees. The regular season ends today. Eckersley, who has lost only eight games since being acquired from Cleveland just before the season began, boosted his Fenway Park record to 11-1 with the help of a four- run Boston first inning. NOTRE DAME TAILBACK Vagas Ferguson (dark jersey) is tripped up by Purdue tackle Calvin Clark (94) yesterday in South Bend. Ferguson topped the Irish with 84 yards rushing in leading them to a 10-6 triumph. FOOTBALL ROUNDUP 'Huskers rip Hoosiers By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON - Tailback I. M. Hipp ran for 123 yards and four touch- downs yesterday as 12th-ranked Nebraska set an Indiana Memorial Stadium record, rolling over Indiana 69-17 in a regionally televised college football game. The 69 points was the most ever scored against Indiana. Hipp, a 6-foot, 209-pound junior who set a Nebraska single game record of 254 yards rushing against the Hoosiers last year, scored three of the Cor- nhuskers' four first-period touchdowns as the Indiana defense was virtually non-existent. His fourth, early in the third quarter, also set a Stadium record for touchdowns and points scored by an individual player. * * * Wisconsin 22, Oregon 19 MADISON - Kevin Cohee scored the winning touchdown from five yards out with 1:32 to play, capping a furious comeback led by third string quarter- back Mike Kalasmiki as Wisconsin defeated Oregon 22-19 in college foot- ball yesterday. Kalasmiki completed 16 of 35 passes for 252 yards, including a 12-yard touchdown pass to freshman Tim Stracka with 2:14 to play as Wisconsin closed to within 19-14. Wisconsin 3-0, then tried an onside kick, and reserve linebacker Mickey Casey recovered for the Badgers at the Oregon 25 yard line. Cohee scored the go-ahead touch- down two plays later, and a Kalasmiki pass to David Charles gave the Badgers a two-point conversion for the final margin. * * * Illinois 28, Syracuse 14 SYRACUSE - Lawrence Mc- Cullough and Larry Powell scored two touchdowns each as Illinois won its first football game of the season yesterday, beating winless Syracuse University 28- 14. Greg Foster set up Powell's first touchdown by running back the opening kickoff 82 yards. Three plays later, Powell scored on a two-yard run. Powell scored his second touchdown later in the first quarter on a three-yard run. McCullough's touchdowns came on one-yard runs. * * * Maryland 20, Kentucky 3 COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Steve Atkins, thwarted twice by magnificent Kentucky goal-line stands, scored one touchdown while rushing for 153 yards and leading unbeaten and 15th-ranked Maryland to a hard-earned 20-3 victory over the Wildcats yesterday. Atkins, who topped the 100-yard mark for the fourth consecutive game, scored on a 16-yard run in the second quarter but was stopped four times from the one-yard line as Kentucky twice kept Maryland from scoring.' Ed Loncar kicked field goals of 49 and 31 yards early in the fourth quarter for Maryland and the Terps added an in- surance TD with 2:48 left to play on a three-yard pass from wingback Don Dotter to Tom Burgess. * * * Oklahoma 45,Misouri 23 NORMAN, Okla. - Billy Sims wriggled through Missouri defenders for four touchdowns and had another called back on a penalty and Uwe von Schamann set an NCAA record for con- secutive extra points yesterday as Oklahoma opened its Big Eight football season with a surprisingly easy 45-23 victory over Missouri. Sims and quarterback Thomas Lott were the cogs that geared an im- pressive Sooner machine that ground out 484 yards on the ground and another 32 yards in the air. 4 4n 4 4 MHTP &MSA Present Phils rejoice -f . . C William HILLER HALTS BIRDS, 5-4 c Up-and-down By LIZ MAC ,special to the Daily DETROIT-The Detroit Tigers withstood a tug-of-war battle with the Baltimore Orioles yesterday, and went on to win the rain-delayed contest, 5-4. In a contest which featured run scoring in six different innings, Steve Baker (2-4) emerged as the winner with relief help from bullpen ace John Hiller. The loser, Mike Flanagan (19-15), was snubbed in his bid to become the second Oriole hurler to win 20 games this season. THE TIGERS OPENED the scoring in the first inning, as Lou Whitaker walked and went to second on a passed ball. John Wockenfuss then singled, and Whitaker came home when Steve Kemp looped a single to center. A leadoff blast in the second tied it up for the Birds when Doug DeCinces tagged one to the upper deck in left. The two teams continued to exchange one-run innings in the Detroit second and the Baltimore third. TIGER NEWCOMER Dave Stegman contributed a solo blast, his first major league home run. Tigers prevail After retiring the first two batters in the third, starter Jack Morris gave up a base hit to Ken Singleton. He advan- ced to second when Whitaker juggled a ground ball and scored on a single to center by DeCinces. That deadlocked the score at 2-2, and the game was delayed in the middle of the fifth by rain. WHEN PLAY RESUMED more than an hour later, Wockenfulss lined a 3-2 pitch just fair in left. Baker came in to relieve Morris, and again the Orioles countered with two more runs. Catcher Rick Dempsey walked and Larry Harlow bounced-one off the upper deck in right center. Then it was the Tigers turn to tie it once more. Kemp and Parrish singled to lead off the inning, and came home on a throwing error by second baseman Rick Dauer. IN THE SEVENTH, singles by Wockenfuss, who had three hits for the afternoon, and Rusty Staub and a fielder's choice by Jason Thompson put the Tigers on top to stay. The Tigers finish up the 1978 season today, as Dave Rozema (9-11) faces Oriole righthander Dennis Martinez (15-11). Rep. V5. Edward C R Dem. Wed. OCT 4 30 PM Pendleton Room MICH UNION i You'll Find A Home for Your Masterpieces IN THE GERBIL The University's quarterly literary magazine r/A/wI rm , /Yq A~P An rYAi'Crnin e hlnd M ck nd Les McCann and OIR CONDO --- ,. .. ., r-.. . r\ n . s