The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 4, 1981-Page 9 I NOTRE DAME'S Tim Koegel (14) gets protection from guard Mark Fischer (57) against Michigan State's Johnny Haynes (86) for this pass during second-quarter action at South Bend yesterday. The Fighting Irish rolled over the Spartans, 20-7. Miller High Life Presents SUPER FIGHTS 13 BIG BOUTS Six Round Heavyweight Exhibition Toughman Champ "STACY" McKinley vs. Professional "JAWBONE" Smith (12-2) Also: 12 FIGHT CARD Featuring Top AAU and Golden Gloves Boxers MICHIGAN vs. ILLINOIS AND WISCONSIN'S BEST ANN ARBOR ROMA HALL Friday, October 9, 1981--8:00p.m. Tickets $10.00 Ringside, $7.00 General Admis- sion. Available at Stein a Goetz, Rosey's, Stadium Sporting Goods, and At The Door. For information call 434-4540 Sponsored by O&W INC., Ann Arbor, Michigan i A 0 4 10 _kA P Photo BIG TEN ROUNDUP FSUi COLUMBUS (AP) - Opposing quar- terbacks Rick Stockstill of Florida State and Art Schlichter of Ohio State >assed for a combined total of more than 700 yards Saturday, with Stockstill engineering the Seminoles to a 36-27 up- set of the seventh-ranked Buckeyes in a non-conference college football game yesterday. Stockstill, a senior, led a Florida State rally with a pair of touchdown passes that gave the Seminoles, 3-1, a 30-21 lead early in the third quarter. S STOCKSTILL completed 25 of 41 passes for 299 yards. Schlichter set an Ohio State single- game passing record by hitting on 31 of 53 throws for 453 yards and a pair of touchdowns as the Buckeyes lost for the first time in four games this season. His performance broke a 29-year-old Ohio State passing record. John Borton had passed for 312 yards against Washington State in 1952 for the previous single-game record. He also broke the Buckeyes' marks for pass completions and attempts. 4 Florida State, which was playing a Big Ten Conference school for the first time in its history, stunned Ohio Stadium's 80th consecutive home sellout crowd of 87,158 with a 26-point explosion in the middle two quarters. 11&0:Dame 20, MSU 7 SOUTH BEND (UPI) - Reserve tailback Greg Bell rushed for 165 yards *n 20 carries and two first quarter touchdowns and Harry Oliver added two-field goals to lead Notre Dame to a 27 victory yesterday over Michigan Satie. :Bell, subbing for the injured Phil Car- ter in the first quarter, scored on runs of one and 36 yards to help the Irish NCAA R OUNDUP: tpsets even their record to 2-2 after losing suc- cessive games to Big 10 foes Michigan and Purdue. OLIVER BOOTED field goals of 38 and 34 yards in his first two attempts of the season as the Spartans dropped their third game in four decisions. The Notre Dame defense held Michigan State without a first down in the opening quarter and a half, forcing the Spartans to go to the air. The Irish defense forced two fumbles end five sacks in the contest. The only score Notre Dame allowed was a 63-yard pass from reserve quar- terback Bryan Clark to Daryl Turner with 1:06 left in the first half that cut ND's lead to 14-7. Wisconsin 20, Purdue 14 MADISON (AP) - Wisconsin spotted Purdue a 7-0 lead, then stormed back with two touchdowns and two field goals yesterday for a 20-14 triumph in a iegionally televised Big Ten football game. Wisconsin, led by quarterback Jess Cole and tailback Chucky Davis, packed all its scoring into the fourth quarter and repeatedly brought the Camp Randall Stadium crowd of 68,603 to its feet. PURDUE APPEARED to have the game under control well into the third quarter when Wisconsin safety Matt Vanden Boom intercepted a Scott Cam- pbell pass, which led to the Badgers' first score, a 25-yard field goal by Mark Doran. Three plays later, Wisconsin noseguard Tim Krumrie pounced on a pitchout fumbled by Purdue tailback Jimmy Smith. Five plays later Badger fullback Dave Mohapp scored from five yards !,ucks, out and Wisconsin took the lead 10-7. Iowa 64, Northwestern 0 EVANSTON (AP) - Eddie Phillips rushed for two touchdowns and backup quarterback Gordy Bohannon threw for two more as Iowa scored four times in the first eight minutes and devastated Northwestern 64-0 yesterday, handing the Wildcats a record 24th straight Big Ten loss. So complete was Iowa's domination that Northwestern was held to less than 100 yards total offense, their deepest penetration of the game going to the Iowa 23 in the third quarter. However, Jeff Jansen killed that drive by making the second interception of a Mike Kerrigan pass. The Hawkeyes, on the other hand, rolled up more than 425 yards of total offense with four quarterbacks at the helm. Bohannon, the starter, opened the second half with a 30-0 lead and engineered a 50-yard drive that ended with a 24-yard touchdown strike to Jeff Browne. Illinois 38, Minnesota 29 CHAMPAIGN (AP) - Tony Eason hit on 21 passes for 330 yards and three touchdowns yesterday to lead Illinois to a 38-29 Big Ten football victory over Minnesota before a Dad's Day throng of 63,814., Eason, a junior college transfer from California, took to the air 32 times and even scored a touchdown himself on a brilliant four-yard quarterback draw play. An aerial feud with the Gophers' Mike Hohensee never materialized as the Minnesota quarterback made only six completions in 21 tries for 81 yards with one touchdown toss compared to the five he collected against Oregon 36-27 State last week. The victory put the Illini at 2-0 in Big Ten action and 3-1 for the season. Min- nesota is 1-1 and 3-1. The Illini broke the Gophers' back in the third period after Minnesota had scored on a 78-yard thrust capped by Hohensee's 28-yard scoring shot to Walter Ross that brought Minnesota within three points of catching Illinois 17-14. Big Ten Standings Illinois ........... Wisconsin........ Ohio State........ Iowa ............... MICHIGAN....... Minnesota........ Indiana ............ Purdue ............. Michigan State ..... Northwestern...... Conf. A W L 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 2 0 2 Overall W L 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 I 3 1+ 3 1 1 3 2 2 1 3 0 4, Next week's games MICHIGAN at Michigan State Illinois at Purdue Ohio State at Wisconsin Indiana at Iowa Northwestern at Minnesota RELIGIOUS DIMENSIONS OF CONTEMPORARY CONCERNS A SERIES OF LECTURE-DISCUSSIONS Continuing the Monday Night series of lectures where subjects of current major interest are discussed at THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER, 921 Church Street. Everyone is welcome to these discussions. Beginning at 7:30 P.M., with refresh- ments, the speaker or speakers will make their presentation and engage in discussion until 9:00 P.M. COME JOIN US! MONDAY, OCTOBER 6th--Panel: REVEREND BARBARA FULLER, An Indochina consultant for the Division of Missions for the Disciples of Christ and a leader in the Ann Arbor Interfaith Council for Peace. DR. DONALD LESTER, Executive Presbyter, Presbytery of De- troit. DR. JITSUO MORIKAWA, Senior Minister First Baptist Church Church "HUMAN RIGHTS, PEACEMAKING, AND THE ROLE OF CHURCHES" The panelists have served in local churches and in national and inter- national roles for their dream denominations and ecumenically. At the Ecuamenics Campus Center FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, 921 Church Street (between Hill and Oakland) please call 662-5529 USC dumps Oregon St.* CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) - Sen- sational tailback Marcus Allen rushed for 233 yards to break two NCAA recor- ds yesterday as No. 1-ranked Southern California rolled over Oregon State 56- 22 in the Pacific 10 Conference football opener for both schools. Aa ien became the first college player to gain more than 200 yards in four con- secutive games, even though he sat out the final quarter against the outmat- ched Beavers. THE 6-FOOT-2, 202-pound senior has gained 925 yards in leading the Trojans 4*,,a 4-0 record. His total breaks the four-game rushing record of 905 yards set-by Greg Pruitt of Oklahoma in 1971. .,,.4Allen scored on runs of 30, eight and 13 yards as the Trojans burst to a 42-17 halftime lead. He gained 133 yards in 20 carries in the first quarter and wound up carrying 35 times overall. Oregon State, 1-4, was able to move the ball surprisingly well against the Trojans, but the Beavers' defense couldn't stop the powerful Southern Cal offense, Southern Cal was forced to punt only once. Penn St. 30, Temple 6 STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) - Tailback Curt Warner, the nation's second-leading rusher, ran for more than 100 yards for the third straight game and scored two touchdowns as second-ranked Penn State blanked Temple 30-0 yesterday in college foot- ball. Warner carried 22 times for 117 yar- ds, boosting his season total to 496 for the 3-0 Nittany Lions. Warner capped a first-period, 52-yard drive with a three- ml Potr Reading yard smash, giving Penn State a 7-0 lead. He ended a second quarter, 74- yard march with a 19-yard sprint, making it 13-0. Penn State led 20-0 at halftime as quarterback Todd Blackledge dove one yard, climaxing an 80-yard drive. In the third quarter, Penn State boosted its lead to 23-0 on a 35-yard field goal by Brian Franco. The Lions com- pleted their scoring later in the quarter on a five-yard touchdown pass from Blackledge to flanker Kenny Jackson. Yale 23, i]avy 19 NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - Quar- terback John Rogan tossed two second- half touchdown passes to split end Curt Grieve as Yale came from behind to defeat Navy 23-19 in college football yesterday at the Yale Bowl. Rogan completed 17 of 30 passes for 202 yards and three touchdowns. Defensive ends for both teams played a key role in the game. Navy's Travis Wallington blocked two punts to set up a safety and a touchdown. The University of Michigan announces that the State of the University Address by President Harold T. Shapiro on Monday, October 5; 8:00 P.M. has been moved to Rackham Lecture Hall with the Reception to follow in the Michigan League. p Adva nced R&D Careers Y K P The atmosphere at Fairchild's Advanced Research and Development Laboratory in Palo Alto, California, is charged with new ideas, new developments and new expansions. The Advanced R&D Laboratory is the force that will push Fairchild into worldwide technical leadership. The opportunity for you to play an important role in that push is very real. Nearly half of all our new technical staff will be MS and PhD graduates like you from major universities throughout the world. " £ I Sunday afternoon concerts in the Michigan1 Thea tre Oct. 4, 1-4 p.m.-$2.00 SAVAGE T. Petty, J. Starship, Heart covers great originals Fairchild is committed to taking over the leadership position on the frontiers of electronics technology. As a member of our Advanced Research team, you can make it happen. Make an appointment to meet with Fairchild's R&D representative at your Career Planning and Place- ment Center. Or write to: Fairchild Advanced Research Laboratory 4001 Miranda Avenue, Dept. A DaIA A l f"A f A '1n A i