Graduating Seniors and Grad Students JOB OPPORTUNITIES in THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMIN. Page 8-Sunday, October 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily NCAA ROUNDUP: Stan ord, Southern Cal end in tte 70 Special Agent Positions (Criminal Investigator) Contact: Mrs. Virginia Stegath 3200 Student Activities Bldg. 763-1484, for additional information and application DEADLINE: 10/17 k' MICHIGAN UNION SEVENTY FIFTH ANNIVERSARY One famous incident on the Union's history occurred on October 14, 1960 when Presidential candidate John F. Kennedy stood on the front steps and first proposed the Peace Corps. The spot is now marked by a Medallion. By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES - Quarterback Turk Schonert threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score yesterday as Stanford rallied from a 21-0 halftime deficit and earned a 21-21 tie with top- ranked Southern California. Both teams missed field goal attem- pts in the closing minute of the game. Stanford's Ken Naber was short on a 53- yard try with 43 seconds left and Southern Cal's Eric Hipp had a 39-yard kick blocked after holder Jeff Fisher fumbled the snap as time ran out. Schonert, scrambling under a heavy Southern Cal pass rush, darted 14 yards for the Cardinals' final touchdown with 4%/ minutes left and Naber kicked the conversion as Stanford snapped the Trojans' 13-game winning streak dating back to last year. The Cardinals are 3-2-1 and 1-0-1 in Pac-10 play. The Trojans are 5-0-1 and 2-0-1 in conference action. Charles White gave Southern Cal a 7-0 lead on an eight-yard scoring run to cap a 72-yard march after the opening kickoff. He tallied again in the second quarter on a one-yard burst, making it 14-0. Marcus Allen dashed 15 yards making it 21-0 midway in the second quarter. Texas 16, Oklahoma 7 DALLAS - Senior tight end Steve Hall's fir-st collegiate touchdown, on an acrobatic one-handed stab of a wobbly two-yard Donnie Little pass, staked the fourth-ranked Texas Longhorns to a 16- 7 victory yesterday over the No. three- ranked Oklahoma Sooners in a battle of unbeatens. Hall, a second-stringer from Broken Arrow, Okla., out-jumped Sooner linebacker George Cumby with a left- handed grab just 2:00 before the end of the first half. It gave Texas a 10-7 lead and the Longhorn defense, No., 1 in the country, made the play stand against the awesome Oklahoma offensive arsenal, which had averaged 45 points a game. The Longhorn defense, led by tackles Steve McMichael and Bill Acker, shackled Heisman Trophy winner Billy Sims, who gained only 73 yards in 20 carries. It was the first time in 14 games Sims, whose longest run was 16 yards, had failed to gain 100 yards. Sims suffered the indignity of fum- bling away the Sooners' last chance late in the fourth quarter to Longhorn defensive end Tim Campbell at the Sooner 30. Sims' fumble led to a 38-yard game-clinching field goal by barefoot kicker John Goodson, who had earlier connected from 37 to 23 yards. Georgia 21, LSU 14 ATHENS. - Georgia erupted for two touchdowns early in the third quarter on an 11-yard pass from Buck Belue to Carmon Prince as the Bulldogs upset 13th-ranked Louisiana State 21-14 in Southeastern Conference football yesterday. The Bulldogs survived a fourth quar- ter comeback by the Bayou Bengals, who drove 80 yards for one score and had another threat die at the Georgia 22 when Scott Woerner recovered a fum- ble with a little more than two minutes remaining. Simon's touchdown run came with 12:32 left in the third quarter after Jeff Hipp had recovered an LSU fumble at the Tiger 37. Belue's scoring pass to Prince came on the possession after an LSU punt and staked Georgia to a 21-7 advantage. Georgia, 2-3 for the season and 2-0 in the SEC, got its first touchdown on a 13- yard run by Anthony Arnold to cap a 31- yard drive with only 2:01 left in the opening half. Alabama 40, Florida 0 GAINESVILLE - Second-string quarterback Don Jacobs set up one touchdown with a 24-yard run after a fake punt alignment and bolted 73 yards for a third-period score, leading second- ranked Alabama to a 40-0 romp yester- day over winless and punchless Florida. Jacobs' fourth-down run after Alabama shifted out of punt formation set up Steadman Shealy's three-yard touchdown and Shealy's nifty running set up Steve Whitman's five-yard plunge as the Crimson Tide took a 14-0 first-quarter lead and coasted to its fif- th triumph of the season and 14th in a row. Wake Forest 24, N. Carolina 19 CHAPEL HILL - Tailback James McDougald scored two touchdowns on short runs and quarterback Jay Venuto threw a 60-yard scoring bomb as Wake Forest stunned 14th-ranked North Carolina 24-19 in an Atlantic Coast Con- ference football game yesterday. McDougald, a senior, broke a 10-10 tie in the fourth quarter by plunging one yard for his second touchdown. Venuto, who picked holes in the North Carolina defense all day with his ,, -M " 11 MISSOURI NOSE GUARD Norman Goodman (98) gets a tight grip on Okla- homa State running back Steve Hammond (35). Hammond gained 3 yards before the tackle yesterday afternoon, in a game which saw.the Cowboys upset the 15th-ranked Tigers, 14-13. ! tiw. (;Outi III Inviti Join s0# St * Off s Sun tL E Sipajto Mon.-Safi. 11 A.M.-2 passing, sealed the game with 8:30 remaining with a 60-yard pass play to fullback Albert Kirby, making it 24-10. North Carolina fought back late in the fourth quarter as quarterback Matt Kupec threw a five-yard scoring pass to end Mike Chatham. His score capped a 72-yard drive and made the score 24-17. It was Chatham's second touchdown reception of the day. In the third quar- ter he tied the score at 10-10 on a nine- yard pass from Kupec. es You To Him For: andwicl opec is day, Oct. 6 P.M.-12 A.M. 1140 S. Univ 668-841 A.M. Sun. 3 P.M.- hS 14 ers ity 1 -12 A.M. Li) ASU's Kush- fired ."x for hitting player TEMPE, Ariz. (AP)-Arizona State football coach Frank Kush, who was accused of punching one of his players and forcing him to quit the team last year, was fired yesterday after 25 years at the helm of the Sun Devils. Kush, at a hastily called news co, ference only hours before his team wa to play Washington in a Pac-14 Con- ferenced game, said ASU athletic direc- tor Dr. Fred Miller advised him that he would be dismissed. KUSH SAID he was fired because, Miller did not believe him when he I I Alh, IF . - ---- K * * * * * *k * * U-m Row/big Team T0out Sundgy October 14- 10 am Women and Men Sign-up at Union Lanes for: Michigan intercollegiate League, Association of College and University Tournament BIG TEN TOURNAMENT This is Big Time! Don't Miss It! denied punching former Arizona State punter Kevin Rutledge. Attorneys for Rutledge have filed a $1 million lawsuit against Kush and the school over the incident. Bob Owens, ASU defensive coor- dinator and a veteran of 11 years on the Sun Devils' coaching staff, was named to coach the team at least for last night's game. Kush's prepared statement read: "WHAT I CANNOT accept is the manner in which this matter was han. died. "No one can contradict rumors, in-, nuendos, or untruths. That is why I feel so personally hurt and troubled at the action taken this weekend by Dr. Miller. "I am told that the reason I am being fired is that Dr. Miller did not believe me when I denied punching Kevin Rutledge at the Washington game last year in Seattle. "THIS MATTER is in litigation, and I expected that Dr. Miller and the university would at least allow me to respond to these charges in court before taking such actions. "I have been given no opportunity to question my -Ccusers." * * * * Y *" * BUY EARLY -AVOID FROST*ITE !!! WE FEATURE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN ON THE WINTRY WEATHER WARMERS YOU NEED MOST TRIVIANIGHT Tonight 8-12 with SAM SIEGEL -Plus- SPECIAL. on Burritos and "The Earl, " y99 SCORES Nebraska 42. Kansas 0 Ohio U. 9, Miami (O.) 7 Notre Dame 28, Air Force 13 Arkansas 20. Texas Tech 6 Oklahoma State 14. Missouri 13 Iowa State 7, Kansas State 3 Houston 17, Texas A&M 14 Texas 16, Oklahoma 7 California 45, Oregon State 0 S. Illinois 31, Wichita State 7 Southern Cal 21, Stanford 21 Washington State 17, UCLA 14 Youngstown State 24, N. Michigan 23 Dayton 36, Evansville 7 Central Michigan 31, N. Illinois lI Akron 24. E. Michigan 12 Bowling Green 28, Kent State 17 Georgia 21. LSU 14 Wake Forest 24. N. Carolina 19 N. Carolina St. 7. Maryland 0 Auburn 52, Vanderbilt 35 Alabama 40, Florida 0 Brigham Young 48, Utah State 24 Florida State 17. Mississippi State 14 Kentucky 14. Mississippi 3 Toledo 17. W. Michigan1 0 Penn State 24, Army 3 Clemson 21, Virginia Tech 0 Tennessee 31. Georgia Tech 0 ORLON HATS ALL WOOL HATS SCARVES & MUFFLERS KNIT & LEATHER GLOVES WOOL MITTENS WINTER SOX 1.27 to 5.10 2.55 to 7.65 _ _ ___ ___ 4.25 to 10.20 Interested Students and Faculty Invited . PRE-LAW DAY. . . * ,.- - 1 3.19 to 3.60 INCLUDES ICELANDIC 1&1^^l 'f 5.32 3.19 to 4.25 ,8 Friday, Oct. 19 /I j.