30, 1977-The Michigan Daily ByI Sp VLIN dividu T's co gan's d up ;iate onakowski leads Wo ERNIE DUNBAR championship, yesterday on the tany Lions have played second fiddle leave the field ecial to The Daily Bowling Green golf course. to the Wolverines since Michigan the 3.25 mark, G GREEN, Ohio - Paced The Wolverines totaled 55 points to joined the conference in 1975. gap between ual champion Bill Dona- Penn State's 78, with Western Michi- Donakowski's time of 24:07 over Michigan's T urse record performance, gan trailing in third with 106 points in the flat five-mile course knocked 40 burgh's Melvi cross country team the 12 team field, off the course Duits, who its third straight Central Penn State's second place finish econds previousthird, tried to r Prsenn te ecrdpaehi record.g Conference cross country represented the third time the Nit- he er bonntvebgnt the three-mile C , ,a n t P lverines to. of 79 runners behind at "This is the first time I've been opening up a 40-yard picked as the favorite in the news- himself and Western papers," said Donakowski, "so I was Dm Duits and Pitts- a little uptight. Boyd. "This victory gave me the confi- eventually finished dence I needed though. I knew I had ut the race away near the ability all along, but it's nice to mark, but both Dona- have the scoreboard to prove it," he Body, who finished added. nto the Bronco star. Donakowski was supported by a o see Duits move when pack of Wolverines, led by Mike Donakowski: "He was McGuire in 12th position at 24:29, pull away slowly and Bruce McFee in 24:52 for 13th spot, uch of an effort after I Doug Sweazey in 14th in 24:54, and him. Dave Lewis in 15th position in 24:55. kowski anda second, hung or "I was glad t he did," said I just content to didn't make m came back on r crown igan a stronger battle. "I though it'd be between eight or ten points," he said. Warhurst had nothing but praise for Donakowski, who ranks as one of the favorites for individual honors in the Big Ten championships on No- vember 5 in West Lafayette, Indiana. "Billy (Donakowski) dominated the race and just ran super," War, hurst said. "He's just coming off the best two weeks of training he's ever had at Michigan." Glancing at the score sheet, Penn State coach Harry Groves was impressed with the Wolverines' per- formance. "Michigan showed a lot of strength with its 12th through 15th finishes," Groves said. "Also, Donakowski showed how good he is by winning today. Boyd and Duits didn't let him go easy. He had to work for it." The Wolverines will try to keep another streak alive next Saturday when they'll shoot for their fourth straight Big Ten championship and Michigan's'200th Big Ten title. "When I made my nove, I knew Duits was finished," the senior said. The easy early pace was just right for Donakowski, as his pre-meet plans fell right into place. "The pace was nice because I had planned to go at 3.25," Donakowski remarked. "An early fast pace could have killed me." Donakowski appeared nervous at the team meeting on Friday night, and the architect student admitted to being concerned about the race. In assessing his team's perform- ance, Michigan coach Ron Warhurst said, "I was a bit nervous before this race because we hadn't raced that much this year. But after three miles, I knew we were going to win, just by knowing what type of com- petitive guys we have," said War- hurst. "Lewis, Foster, and McFee all had super middle miles and that made the race for us," he added. Analyzing the team scoring, War- hurst expected Penn St. to give Mich- BIG TEN ROUNDUP MSU annihilates Illini, By the Associated Press EAST LANSING - Freshman tail- back Bruce Reeves charged for three touchdo\vns as Michigan State scored the first five times it got the ball yesterday and rolled to a 49-20 rout of Illinois. MSU scored every time it handled the ball in the first half, except after an Illinois fumble with seconds to play, as the Spartan attack. knifed easily, through the Illinois defense both on theground and through the air. Daily Photo by ERNIE DUNBAR GAN'S BILL DONAKOWSKI (260) battles Peter Hallop (60), John Roberts (129), and Paul Craig (7) in early season nuntry action. Donakowski paced the Wolverines this weekend with his course record performance in the Central ite Conference cross country championships. . i I 7Our.' PREPARE FOR: ?ea MCAT - DAT * LSAT - GRE GMAT-OCAT-VAT-"SAT NMB V1 , 111 ECFMG- FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours ?rere IS a differenced!t 77KAP N . EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Pleae Call: (313) 662- 149 For Locations In Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE:800-223-1782. Centes in Major US Cities I IRISH, SOONERS BURY OPPONENTS: Longhorns trample Tech, 26-0 By The Associated Press AUSTIN, Tex. - Top - ranked Texas dazed Texas Tech on a;57-yard touchdown pass to Olympian Johnny "Lam" Jones, followed it with a 60- yard field goal by Russell Erxleben and applied the knockout punch on two scoring runs by Johnny "Ham" Jones to rout the Red Raiders 26-0 yesterday. Texas fullback Earl Campbell car- ried 27 times for 116 yards against the swarming Red Raider defense to rumble past the 1,000-yard mark for the year. Michigan State mounted scoring drives of 73, 71, 83, 64 and 49 yards, as its defense kept Illinois bottled up in its end of the field. The Illini offense moved into MSU territory only once in the first half. In the second half, Michigan State rolled up scoring drives of 73 and 61 before the reserves took over. G "TU Hermann humbles EVANSTON - Quarterback Mark Herrmann hurled three touchdown passes and fullback John Skibinski gained 101 yards yesterday to lead Purdue to a 28-16 victory over Northwestern. Herrmann, a freshman sensation, completed 12 of 24 passes for 183 yards, giving him 2,041 yards for the season and upping his touchdown total to 17. Herrmann's first completion was a 12-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Arnold. He then connected on a 25-yard scoring pass to David Young, giving the Boilermakers a quick 14-0 lead which they never lost. "Ham" Jones scored on runs of three and 11 yards in the second half and Erxleben added a 35-yard field goal. * * * Sooners swamp MANHATTAN, Kan. - Thomas Lott scored three touchdowns and Oklahoma's whippet-quick defense intercepted four passes yesterday, leading the fourth-ranked Sooners to a 42-7 swamping of Kansas State. Kenny King, Oklahoma's injury- plagued fullback, zipped 29 yards on the Sooners' sixth play for the first touchdown early in the first quarter. King, who finished with 99 yards rushing, was shaken up in the second quarter but returned to set up Oklahoma's third touchdown with a 29-yard dash to the Kansas State one. Lott sneaked over on the next play. Irish eradicate SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Quarter- back Joe Montana passed for a career-high 260 yards, scored one touchdown and hit Dave Mitchell for another yesterdayas fifth-ranked Notre Dame beat Navy for the 14th straight year, 43-10. Fullback Jerome Heavens broke loose for a 49-yard touchdown in the first period, freshman Jim Stone raced 58 yards in the fourth quarter and Dave Reeve kicked three second- quarter field goals as the Irish cruised to their sixth victory in seven, games. The Middies, whose only scores came on a third-quarter 36-yard field goal by Bob Tata and a fourth-quar- ter, seven-yard touchdown pass from Bob Powers to Phil McConkey, dropped to 4-4. Buckeyes explode COLUMBUS - Quarterback Rod Gerald and flanker Jim Harrell com- bined on a 79-yard scoring bomb on the second play of the game and third-ranked Ohio State went on to crush Wisconsin 42-0 Saturday and keep its Big Ten football lead. Ohio State's veteran, swift defense complimented the attc with four interceptions, two of them leading to touchdowns. The Buckeyes now have 21 interceptions for the season, 17 of them coming in the last five games. Ron Springs piled up 104 yards. rushing, including a 31-yard score. Jeff Logan, the Buckeye's leading scorer a year ago who has been hobbled by an ankle" sprain, also ran 39 yards for a touchdown. Gophers gauged BLOOMINGTON - Fourth quar- ter touchdowns by Scott Arnett, Ric Enis and Tony D'Orazio and an inspired Hoosier defense lifted In diana to a 34-22 victory over 19th- ranked Minnesota yesterday. The Gophers led Indiana 16-13 going into the final quarter when the Hoosiers took charge. Starting from their own 35-yard- line, Indiana drove to the Minnesota 30. One play later, Enis took a pitch from quarterback Arnett and ran 27 yards to the Minnesota 1-yard-line. Enis failed to score, but the Gophers were penalized for a face mask tackle and Arnett snuck over on the next play. Indiana' scored twice more )to insure the victory. 4 HALLOWEEN SPACIAL 4 SUB-ZERO DOWN VEST 4 Zipper " Snap Flap over zipper *Two-way Pockets , " Down Collar reg. $35 NOW $29" 213 S. MAIN-665-3888 1 rst down 1 rst i ALL YOU CAN EAT! with SALAD BAR-$3.95 tlie Finest, Most Complete Salad Bar in Ann Arbor -Every Day Features- Bar-B-QuedBeef Ribs " French Fried Fresh Smelt * Pan Fried Perch " Veal Parmesan * Baked Lasagna * Pan Fried Frog Legs * Fresh Baked Ham * Southern Fried Chicken I I'Re got it! -AP Photo Makin' tracks to recover a fumble by California's George Freitas is USC's Ricky Odom (33). Despite the bad break, Califor- nia went on to win yesterday's game, 17-14. Alumni homecoming spirits flow atpre-game Go Blue brunch -Served At Your Table In Our Finest Tradition- Saturday thru Thursday 5-8:30 P.M. Sunday is . . . Imported BEER NIGHT' Bottles of Beer from Every Country Monday is.. . PITCHER NIGHT' FEATURING: Premium Imported DRA UGHT BEER Wednesday is BOTTLE NIGHT FEATURING: Premium American Bottled Beer By BOB WARREN and BILLY SAHN "Super great! Super great!," remarked super fan, super gymnastics coach Newt Loken at yesterday's "Go Blue Brunch" at the Track and Tennis Building. Over 1,100 alums, their families and friends were treated to a morning of "Go Blue" nostalgia and pep before the-homecoming game against Iowa. "This was a gamble," said alumni official and former 1 :.L..e. ..«..1«. .... L,1 -&10 T L - - -F, spirit with student spirit than any other previous year," commented an ecstatic Forman. "I think that the alumni spirit at this school is by far the best in the nation." The biggest laugh of the morning came when Forman told the audience that Athletic Director Don Canham was going to clean up the mess left behind. Michigan alumni Arlene and Ernest Rosenfeld trav- elled all the way from New York to partake in the home- coming weekend. I I