The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 12, 1980-Page 1 II . was -3 11f I'll 1111 LI .,t i PF l Lo. Michigan's Jeff Shaw (95) senses the k were anything but helpless as they gave Fla. Sta 'Horns s TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)-Junior quarterback Rick Stockstill completed 10 of 20 passes for 127 yards and three touchdowns and Bill Capece kicked a school record five field goals as 11th- ranked Florida State shocked fourth- *ranked and previsouly unbeaten Pit- tsburgh 36-22 last night. The crowd of 52,894 roared its ap- proval for Florida State's second -vic- tory in a row over teams ranked in the top four in the nation. The triumph halted Pitt's 14-game winning streak. Last week, the Seminoles, 5-1, upset then third-ranked Nebrasda 18-14 in Lincoln, Neb. Stockstill threw first-half touchdown passes of 23 yards to. Hardis Johnson and four yards to Sam Childers and Capece booted field goals of 27, 43 and 50 yards as the Seminoles capitalized on three Pitt turnovers to roll to a 23-7 half- time lead. Capece, who has been successful on 14 of 16 attempts this season, gave the' Seminoles breathing room with field goals of 30 and 44 yards late in the third quarter as Florida State upped its ad- vantage to 29-15. tockstill's third touchdown pass of the game, a 13-yarder to Kurt Unglaub with 10:24 to play, was setup by Mc- Call's fumble at the Pitt 29 and put the game away. we ring the boom . . . Doily Photo by JOHNHAGIN ill as he prepares to sack helpless Spartan Quarterback John Leister. The Spartans the Wolverines all they could handle before succombing to Michigan 27-23. te upsets Pitt; lip by Sooners Texas 20, Oklahoma 13 DALLAS (AP)-Two touchdowns by junior halfback Rodney Tate and quar- terback Donnie Little's clutch plays propelled third-ranked Texas to a 20-13 victory yesterday over 12th-ranked Oklahoma. Tate ran one yard for a. touchdown with 8:13 to play on fourth down to give Texas its comeback victory. Fumbles by Oklahoma quarterback J.C. Watts in the first half led to a three- yard touchdown run by Tate and John Goodman's 18-yard field goal. Sooner sophomore placekicker Mike Keeling kicked the longest field goal of his career, to narrow the count to 10-3. Then Oklahoma sophomore fullback Stanley Wilson put on a one-mqn show in the fourth quarter as he ran 36 yards for a touchdown and dashed 39 yards to set up a 21-yard Keeling field goal that put the Sooners on top 13-10, with 10:09 Little completed passes of 25' aid'32 yards, in driving Texas to the Oklahoma two-yard line. The Sooners beat back three running plays beforef Tate scored the touchdown. Goodson added an insurance 48-yard field goal with 1:45 to play. Alabama 17, Rutgers 13 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)-Don Jacobs fired consecutive passes of 26 and 49 yards to world-class sprinter James Mallard for Alabamas first two completions, the latter producing a third-period touchdown that enabled the No. 1 Crimson Tide to hold off unheralded Rutgers 17-13 yesterday. Alabama, which was ranked 137th in passing among the nation's 139 major college teams coming into the game, failed to complete a pass until the third quarter. First, Jacobs hit Mallard for 26 yards at the Rutgers 49. On the next play, the 200-meter sprint star beat defensive back Mark Pineiro at the 15 after Jacobs momentarily froze the defense by faking a handoff and breezed into the end zone for the decisive points. Rutger's Alex Falcinelli started~ the scoring with his first three-pointer after Rugters moved from its 32 to the Alabama 27. The drive included a 23- yard pass play from Ed McMichAel to Ted Blackwell. Alabama's other scores came in Peter Kim's game-tying 23-yard field goal in the first period and Billy Jackson's 6-yard touchdown plunge in the second quarter. Kim's field goal tied the score at 3-3. Falcinelli's 39-yard field goal late in the second period accounted for Rutgers' other points. Scores' EAST Alabama 1, tgersE13 Army 24, L~ehigh 24 Brown 42, Fenn22 Penn State 24, Maryland 10 Syracuse 31, Temple 7 SOUTH Clemson 27, virginias24 Florida State 36, Pittsburgh 22 Georgia 2, Mississippi 21 North Carolina 27, Wake Forest 9 Tennessee 23, Georgia Tech 10 MIDWEST Akron 21, Eastern Michigan 10 Iowa State 31, Kansas State 7 Notre Dame 32, Miami (Fla.) 14 Ohio U. 24, Central Michigan 9 SOUTHWEST Missouri 30, Oklahoma State 7 Texas 20, Oklahoma 13 FAR WEST Air Force 21, Navy 20 Drake 41, Colorado 22 UCLA 35, Stanford 21 THE MICHIGAN UNION UAC Bring You The Wolver'ine- Express Game- Trip Package: U o.M vs. Wiosc. $8000* 11 m Big Ten Standings Con Illinois ................ Ohio St ............... MICHIGAN ........... Purdue ...... ........ Indiana............. Iowa ............ Minnesota........... Michigan St.......... Wisconsin ............ Northwestern ........ ierence W L 3 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 I 1 1 1 1 2 0 2 0 2 o 4 ORES Overall W L 3 2 4 1 3 2 3 2 4 1 1 4 2 3 1 4 1 4 0 6 T 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 DON'T MISSTHE BOAT MICHIGAN 27, Michigan St. 23 Ohio St. 63, Northwestern 0 Illinois 20, Iowa 14 Indiana 24, Wisconsin 0 Purdue 21, Minnesota 6 Daily Classifieds Get Results. FRESH BABY COP Beer battered and served with hou fries, cole slaw" roll and butter. To Make Your Reservation You MUST: Be a currently enrolled U of M student *Present your validated U of M student I.D. AND C se0 GK } Speical Sun-Wed This Week Only THE CROCKED CROB 112 W. Washington 769-8591 - YOU COULD BE A WINNER! Grand Prize Drawing! 10 DAY CARIBBEAN CRUISE r Pn ipt rpnr~h Crise LIine "One other picture I.D. " Make your payment in CASH (sorry no checks allowed) at the time you make your reservation. Packages Available at Ticket Central, Main Floor of the Michigan Union Mon- day, October 13 through Friday, Octo- ber 17, 11:30am-5:00pm FIRST COME-FIRST SERVED THIS IS NON-TRANSFERABLE NO REFUNDS * Based on triple occupancy. Single and double options available. **Q .. , II ..sLt ..... ...sL..^r% LmA: zo.....'. II..i,..vnnr, rij4.i, t.. Nn vmhar 7 ayf 2:00lm. a I