The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 20;,1981-Page 9 BIG TEN ROUNDUP *Bucks breezi 'COLUMBUS (AP)- Eighth-ranked Ohio State survived Michigan State's second-half rally that included a Big Ten Conference record 63-yard field goal by Morton Andersen to defeat the Spartans 27-13 in college football' yesterday. However, the Buckeyes, 2-0, played the entire fourth quarter without star uarterback Art Schlichter. The senior uffered a moderate ankle swain with 21 seconds left in the third quarter. THE BUCKEYES were leading 20-7 when Bob Atha took over for Schlichter and set the stage for Andersen's kicking performance. The left-footed specialist from Den- mark kicked field goals of 44 and 63' yards to bring the 19-point underdogs to thin 20-13 midway through the fourth quarter. Andersen's 63-yard effort wiped out the conference field goal record of 59 yards set by Ohio State's Tom Skladanly set against Illinois in 1975. Michigan State, 0-2, had an oppor- tunity to score a possible tying touch- down later in the quarter, but quarter- back John Leister threw three straight incompletions. Atha wrapped up the. victory for Ohio State by bursting 22 yards for a touchdown with one minute remaining. innesota 16, Purdue 13 MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Frank Jacobs ran for two touchdowns and Minnesota turned back two fourth- quarter drives by Purdue as the Gophers posted a 16-13 victory over the Boilermakers yesterday in the Big Ten football opener for both teams. * All the scoring came in the firsit half, with Jacobs bulling over from one yard out with just 29 seconds left in the second quarter for what turned out to be th winning touchdown. ' r JACOBS, A junior fullback, also scored pj a 3-yard run in the first quar- ter "and Jimn Gallery kicked a 35-yard field goal for a 9-0 Minnesota lead. Purdue battled back- in the second quarter on a 1-yard run by Eric Jordan and a 34-yard touchdown pass from Campbell to Steve Bryant to go ahead 13-9. UCLA 31, Wisconsin 13 MADISON (AP)-Tom Ramsey plunged for one touchdown and fired scoring passes of 27 and 3 yards to tight end Tim Wrightman, leading ninth- ranked UCLA to a 31-13 college football victory of No. 20 Wisconsin yesterday. Tailback Kevin Nelson rushed for 91 yards for UCLA, 2-0, which took a 14-0 lpad with scoring drives covering 66 and 48 yards on the Bruins' first two possessions. d THE BADGERS closed to within 21-13 late in the first half on a 7 yard touch- down pass from Jess Cole to freshman Michael Jones. But the conversion at- tempt failed. UCLA made it 28-13 in the third quar- ter on Ramsey's second touchdown pass to Wrightman. UCLA's Norm Johnson added a 40 yard field goal with 9:39 to play to*give UCLA a 31-13 victory. Iowa St. 23, Iowa 12 AMES (AP)- Quarterback John Quinn and tailback Dwayne Crutchfield esch scored a touchdown and Alex Gif- fords booted three field goals to lift Iowa State to a 23-12 victory over Iowa in non-conference college football yesterday. Iowa State 2-0, playing the Hawkeyes at home for the first time since 1934, was able to control the football against an Iowa defense that last week shut off powerful Nebraska 10-7 last week. QUINN RAN eight yards for a touch- down midway through the first quarter and Crutchfield bowled over from three yards out late in the second period as the Cyclones built a 17-6 half-time lead. Giffords kicked a 48-yard field goal in the opening period, and added three- pointers of 40 and 34 yards in the second ' half. USC 21, Indiana 0 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)- bypartan Tailback Marcus Allen rushed for 274 st scoring drive from their own 15-yard yards and two touchdowns yesterday as line early in the third quarter. Six plays second-ranked Southern California, took Southern Cal to midfield, then a wearing down Indiana's defense in the face mask penalty on Indiana nullfied a second half, rolled to a 21-0 college foot- fumble by Allen and gave the Trojans ball victory. first down at the Hoosiers' 32. The Hoosiers stopped three long Four straight runs by Allen moved Trojan drives in the first half as the two the ball to the 19, and the 200-pound teams battled to a scoreless tie at the senior then took a pitch-out for the go- intermission. The second half, ahead touchdown., however, belonged to Southern Califor- It took nine plays on Southern Cal's nia. next possession before backup tailback THE TROJANS, 2-0, started their fir- Fred Crutcher ran in from 11 yards out. boots, 2 7-13 Illinois 17, Syracuse 14 CHAMPAIGN (AP)- Mike Bass booted a 23-yard tie-breaking field goal into a 17-mph wind after Mike Murphy had plunged one yard for a touchdown yesterday to give Illinois an uphill 17-14 victory over Syracuse in an intersec- tional football game. Illinois marched 66 yards for a touch- down on its first possession. But the Orangemen came back to tie it and then went ahead after recovering a. fumble on the Illinois 4-yard line before Joe Morris scored his second touchdown to put Syracuse ahead. TRAILING 14-7, Illinois marched 77 yards on the passing of Tony Eason before Murphy went over for the tying touchdown. The next time the Illini gained control, they drove to the Syracuse 6-yard line before Bass booted his game-winning field goal. The victory was Illinois' second straight and gave them a 2-1 record, while Syracuse slumped to 0-3. Big Ten Standings Conference Ohio State ....... Minnesota........ Illinois ............. Indiana ........... Wisconsin........ Iowa.............. MICHIGAN ...... Purdue .......... Northwestern..... Michigan State. WL, 10 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 02 Overal W L 2 0 2 0 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 2 fI Yesterday's scores MICHIGAN 25, Motre Dame 7 Ohio State 27, Michigan State 13 UCLA 31, Wisconsin 13 Illinois 17, Syracuse 14 Iowa State 23, Iowa 12 USC 21, Indiana 0 Minnesota 16, Purdue 13 rNEISW1f0A OAKJ T r AP Photo io State to quar- MICHIGAN STATE flanker Otis Grant goes up for a pass with Oh safety Garcia Lane. Grant was able to take in the pass from Sparta terback John Leister for an 18-yard gain. QVCAA ROUNDUP: MPN YE TLJESIY: FPIZZKni E~AriiItrEMASREULAJ~e PtGG " ,e. -NO APAL-Y TO CAl[Rf OUT 8oUP GAL.AD at -4cNwc$ BAR: /EgY VAY u Fac/Git ' 514 e.WA~ffNR(jroN "2EL$t 996-rs cvI AM x'10 WIE CRmeNTV Tigers s CLEMSON' (AP)- Clemson's ball control strategy worked to perfection nd a fired-up defense intercepted eorgia's Buck Belue five times as the Tigers upset the fourth-ranked Bulldogs 13-3 in college football yester- day. The loss ended Georgia's 15-game winning streak, the longest in the nation. CLEMSON quarterback Homer Jor- dan tossed an 8-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Perry Tuttle with 7:13 remaining in the second period for the only points the Tigers needed to avenge a 20-16 loss last year to the eventual Wtional champions. Freshman placekicker Donald Igwebuike kicked two field goals, a 39- yarder just before halftime and a 29- yarder early in the fourth quarter, as Clemson improved its record to 3-0. Georgia's only points came on a 40- yard field goal by Kevin Butler with 11:24 left in the third period. GEORGIA'S All-American tailback, aerschel Walker, was limited to 111 ards rushing on 28 carries-well below his season average of 164 yards. Walker also lost two fumbles, including one at thetlemson 17 early in the game. North Carolina 49, Miami (Ohio) 7 CHAPEL HILL (AP)+- North Carolina tailback Kellin Bryant ran for tun Herschel, Do 136 yards and scored five touchdowns,x leading the 10th-ranked Tar Heels to a 49-7 rout of Miami of Ohio yesterday.. Bryant scored on runs of 8, 2, 1 and 4 yards, and caught a 15-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Rod Elkins. THE TAR HEELS' offense, which sputtered on a number of drives in the first half, came alive in the second to put together two long drives behind Bryant's running and Elkins' passing. Elkins completed 14 of 24 passes for 174 yards. Miami managed only 22 total yatds in the first half. The Redskins penetrated Tar Heels' territory only three times and had only 178 total yards, mostly against the North Carolina reserves. Three Redskins' passes were intercep- ted. The Miami TD came late in the game after backup quarterback John Appold hit Mike Haffey with a 29-yard pass at the Tar Heels" 18. Appold hit Bailie Moorlidge with a 5-yard pass for the score a few plays later.. Pittsburgh 38, Cincinnati' 7 PITTSBURGH (AP)- Dan Marino fired five touchdown passes, four to split end Julius Dawkins, and Pit- tsburgh's punishing defense yielded 50 net yards as the seventh-ranked Pan- thhrs beat Cincinnati 38-7 yesterday in college football. It was the second beating in a row for Cincinnati, crushed 52-0 last week by Penn State. But the Bearcats, 03, escaped a shutout in the last quarter when Mike Gates blocked a Dave Hep- pler punt in the end zone and defensive back Freddie Logan recovered for a touchdown. MARINO, WHO hit 22 of 30 passes for 270 yards, became Pitt's second all- time passing leader with 3,763 yards. He surpassed Dave Haverns' 3,659 yar- ds and trails only Rick Trocano's 4,219 yards. Pitt's defense allowed one first down and 27 net yards in the first half. Cin- cinnati finished with five first downs and 50 net yards, minus 28 yards rushing and 78 yards passing. Washington 20, Kansas St. 3 SEATTLE (AP) - Sophomore quar- terback Steve Pelluer teamed with speedster Anthony Allen on a 69-yard touchdown pass early in the fourth quarter to propel 15th-ranked Washington to a 20-3- victory over Kan- sas State in a mistake-filled, on- conference' college football game yesterday. Each team committed five turnovers and the Huskies, 19 point .favorites, didn't put the game away until the Pelluer-Allen bomb. PELLUER CAME IN early in the fir- st quarter when regular Washington quarterback Tim Cowan suffered what appeared to be a stretched ligament in his throwing hand. Except for a 74-yard scoring drive in gs, 13-3 the second quarter, the Washington of- fense mostly sputtered until Pelluer connected with Allen, a converted quar- terback, at the Kansas State 45. From there, it was a foot race bet- ween the fleet Allen and the Wildcat defenders, with Allen easily winning to put Washington in front 17-3 with 12:30 left in the game. Washington improved its record to 2- 0, while Kansas State fell to 1-1. SPREAD YOUR WINGS WITH UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COURSES IN ADULT EDUCATION ADULT DANCE DIVISION: CLASS INSTRUCTOR DAY Intermed. Modern S. Matheke M, W Beginning Jazz J. Krzyminski T, Th Beginning Ballet C. Flynn T, Th Intermed. Ballet C. Flynn T, Th TIME / 6:00-7:30 p.m.. 6:00-7:30 p.r. 7:45-9:15 p.m. 6:00-7:30 p.m, 4:30-5:45 p.m. 4:30-5:45 p.m. 9:00-10:15 a.m. NO. 18 18 22 22 22 22 FEE $80 $80 $100 $100 $80 $80 PREPARATORY DANCE Beginning Ballet 1(Ages 8-12) Intermed. Ballet' (Ages' 8-12) DIVISION C. Flynn C. Flynn _* T, F Th, Sat. All classes are held in DANCE BUILDING STUDIOS, and all begin the week of September 28th. To register: (1) Come to the Extension Service Building at 412 Maynard St. (2) Send in a mail registration form from our FREE CATALOG (3) Call 313/763-4321 if you have Visa or MasterCard CLASSES WITHOUT SUFFICIENT REGISTRATION BY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3rd WILL BE CANCELLEDI Normal business hours for the University of Michigan Courses in Adult Education are from 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Mon.-Fri. For additional information on these or any of our other fine classes call 313/763-4321. UMCAE U-M Extension Service 412 MaynardStAnnArbor48O109 / SCORES College Football BIG TEN MICHIGAN 25, Notre Dame 7 Ohio State 27, Michigan State 13 UCLA 31, Wisconsin 13 Illinois 17, Syracuse 14 Iowa State 23, Iowa 12 USC 21, Indiana 0 Minnesota 16, Purdue 13 EAST ucknell35, Kings Point6 liware 13, Temple 7 Fordham 14, Catholic U.0 Harvard 23. Columbia 6 Massachusetts 13, Holy Cross 10 Millersvill St. 20, Slippery rock 12 Rhode Island 21, Maine 10 Shepherd 16, W. Virginia Tech 10 Springfield 44, C.W. Post 9 Wagner59, Buffalo 7 W. Chester St. 15, Glassboro St.6 N. Michigan 52, Wayne, Mich. 7 Iowa St. 23, Iowa 12 . MIDWEST Nebraska 34, Florida St. 14 Albion 15, Valparaiso0DWsOlivet Nazarene 16, Eureka 10 Cent. Michigan 17, N. Illinois 10yA FR ET Clarion St. 15, Cent. St., Ohio 14 Wyoming 17, Air Force 10 Denlson 14, Oberlin s , Montana St. 30, Fresno St. 26 Illinois St. 28, E. Michigan7 N. Dakota St. 17, N. Colorado7 Kent St. 17, Akron 6 Washington St. 14, Colorado 10 Missouri 42, Rice 10 11111 ,