A, The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 10, 1982-Page 9 Wildcats stun Gophers; OSU drops third straight ,m rAAd h; EVANSTON, (AP) - Northwestern Coach Dennis Green has issued a subtle warning to those who enter Dyche Stadium assuming they can chalk up an easy Big Ten football victory. "I think we're starting to believe we have a turf to defend," Green said yesterday after the Wildcats stormed rom 18 points behind to defeat Min- nesota 31-21. THE WIN, Northwestern's second straight at home, snapped a 38-game Big Ten losing streak. Only two weeks ago the Wildcats . defeated Northern Illinois to end a 34-game overall losing streak, the longest in major college history. And they did it with a defense that held the explosive Gophers scoreless in the second half while scoring one ~ouchdown and setting up another in a 1-point third quarter. "You keep hustling around but you never know what's going to happen," said senior linebacker Rick Raffin. "THE DEFENSE scoring gave us a lot of confidence," said Northwestern quarterback Sandy Schwab, who ran for one touchdown and passed for another. "I think our defense is im- proving. "We've been more physical, and the better you get, it seems the Onore you don't want to lose." Minnesota Coach Joe Salem, who brought theBig Ten's leading offensive team to Dyche Stadium, agreed. "The only thing I can say is they kicked our tails," Salem said. "And they probably should have scored more points." Iowa 24, Indiana 20 BLOOMINGTON (AP)- Eddie hillips rushed for a pair of first-half 0ouchdowns. and Norm Granger raced 63 yards with a third-period touchdown pass from Chuck Long as Iowa edged Indiana 24-20. yesterday in a Big Ten Conference football game. Indiana appeared finished when Ron Hawley intercepted a pass by Indiana's Babe Laufenberg at the Hawkeyes' 3- yard line with just over two minutes to go. But the Hoosiers got the ball back when Iowa punted and started their final drive from their own 29-yard line. .Laufenberg, who set an Indiana single-game record with 390 yards passing,completed passes of 24 yards to John Boyd, 8 yards to Johnnie Salters, 14 yards to Duane Gunn and 17 yards to Terry Smith for a first-down at the Iowa 8 with 20 seconds to go. The Hoosiers, out of time-outs, managed only one more play, and a 6-yard com- pletion to Scott McNabb left the ball at the 2-yard line as the game ended. Wisconsin 6, Ohio State 0 COLUMBUS (AP)- Coach Dave McClain ranked Wisconsin's rainy 6-0 victory at Ohio State yesterday as the "biggest win" of his 12-year .college football career. It marked the first time in 64 seasons that Wisconsin had won in Columbus and the first time ever they had posted a victory in 60-year-old Ohio Stadium. "THESE GAMES have special moments," said McClain, a native Ohioan. "Coming back here and having a great victory is a real thrill for me and my wife. It will be a nice trip going back to Madison." McClain never dreamed the Badgers would post their first shutout over Ohio State in 52 years. - "The defense won the game for us today." THE WISCONSIN coach thought the elements-it rained hard most of the game-affected" the Buckeyes' game plan. "Apparently, they thought they could throw on us since we were tenth in the Big Ten in pass defense."~ Earle Bruce, after watching the Buckeyes lose three straight home games for the first time since 1967, blamed Ohio State's attack- for the defeat. "Our offense is inconsistent as the devil," he said. "I can hardly believe we would be shut out." Illinois 38, Purdue 34 CHAMPAIGN (AP)- Tony Eason hurled four touchdown passes, one a 50- yard bomb in the fourth quarter, as Big 10 leader Illinois rallied to defeat winless Purdue, 38-34, yesterday. In a sizzling aerial duel with Purdue's Scott Campbell, Eason connected on 27 of 39 passes for 354 yards. Campbell completed 20 of 49 passes, three for touchdowns. THREE OF Purdue's touchdowns stemmed from Illinois fumbles and a fourth was set up in the final quarter on a pass interference infraction that gave the Boilermakers the ball on the one- yard line. From there, Rod Carter scored his second touchdown and Pur- due took a 34-31 lead. Minutes later, the Illini exploded for 68 yards in three plays with Eason unleashing a 50-yard touchdown pass to Mitch Brookins with 6:33 left. Campbell herded Purdue to the Illinois 30 but his final pass attempt was caught out of the end zone by Derrick Taylor as time ran out. Making their finest start since the 1963 Rose Bowl team, the Illini romped to a 14-0 lead in the first four minutes. They went 84 yards in 11 plays on their first possession, with Mike Martin snaring three passes for 53 yards and Mike Murphy scoring on a 5-yard run. Then Chuck Armstead stole a Cam- pbell pass, the Illini's sole interception, and barreled 36 yards across the goal line. Eason fumbled on the next Illinois possession. David Frey recovered on, the Illini 9 and Campbell hit Cliff Ben- son for a touchdown. Big Ten Standings b4 QUARTERLY A NEW REGULAR SUNDAY FEATURE: EXTENDED DISCOUNTS ON SELECTED LINES OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE THROUGHOUT OUR FIRST, SECOND, AND THIRD FLOORS. STOP IN AND EXPLORE ANN ARBORS NON-PROFIT STUDENT BOOKSTORE. Illinois ......... MICHIGAN........ Iowa........... Wisconsina........ Ohio State........ Minnesota ........ Indiana ... ,...... Northwestern ...... Purdue . ........ Michigan State .. Conf. W L 4 0 30 2 0 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 3 0 3 0 3 Overall W L 5 1 3 2 3 2 3 2 2 3 3 2 2 3 2 4 0 5 0 5 SJets skate by Red W By JIM DAVIS, Special to the Daily DETROIT - Goaltender Ed Staniowski stopped 36 shots and recor- ded the first shutout of the NHJL season as the Winnipeg Jets bombed the Detroit Red Wings 8-0 last night at Joe Louis Arena. Staniowski was unbeatable in goal and made several brilliant saves. Oetroit was outshot 37-36, but the dif- ference was Staniowski's ability to thwart numerous Detroit rushes. WINNIPEG opened the scoring with three goals in a span of just over two minutes midway through the. first period. At.6:43, Brian Mullen drove a shot past goaltender Gilles Gilbert after Winnipeg dug the puck out of the cor- ner. 51 seconds later, Thomas Steen scored from a scramble in front of the et, capping the first period scoring, ormer Olympian Dave Christian tallied a power play goal from just in- side the blue line by whistling a slap- shot past Gilbert, after the Red- Wings had failed to clear the puck from a scramble in front of the net. Two second-period goals by Winnipeg defenseman Craig Levie stretched the Winnipeg lead to 5-0. Late- in the second period Detroit goalie Gilbert took a shot in the mask nd' was replaced by rookie Greg 'Stefan. The diagnosis on Gilbert was a bruised right cheek bone. GOALS BY Jerry Butler, Mullen's second of the night, and Willy Lin- dstrom closed out the scoring in the third period. The Red Wings next game will be at Calgary on Thursday. Their next home SCORES College Football OICHIGAN 31, Michigan State 17 Northwestern 31, Minnesota 21 Wisconsin 6, Ohio State 0 Iowa 24, Indiana 6 Illinois 38, Purdue 34 Edinboro St. 20. Slippery Rock 7 Fordham 23, Georgetown D.C. 9- Middlebury 12. Amherst 10 New Hampshire 3, Bucknell 0 Tufts 30, Bowdoin 14 Upsala 3, Albright 0 Salisbury St. 54, Wm. Paterson 22 Swarthmore 14, Dickinson 0 Towson St. 17, Morgan St. 10 enn 24, Brown 21 Jgers 24, Army 3 St. Bonaventure 10. Niaara.0 Harvard 25, Cornell a3 H'rbart 27, Rochester 14 Howard U. 22, Delaware St. 14 Iona 7, RPI 7, tie Wesleyan 27, Coast Guard 8 W.-Virginia 20, Boston College 13 Westminster, Pa, 3, Indiana, Pa. 0 Yale 27, Boston U. 24 Auburn 18, Kentucky 3 Centre 27, Principia 15 Elizabeth City St. 26, Virginia St. 0 Georgia 33, Mississippi 10 mpton Inst. 19, N. Carolina A&T 9 game will be on October 20 when they face the Quebec Nordiques. Linksters third Special to the Daily MADISON -_- The Michigan golf team holed up iriWisconsin the last two days to compete in the Badger Invitational tournament. Michigan tied for third place in the nine team, 36 hole tour- i 'nament. Wisconsin entered two five player teams in the event. Their first team had rounds of 373 and 372 for a 745 total to take first place. IN SECOND place, 12 strokes behind the winners, was Iowa State. Michigan finished 17 strokes behind Wisconsin, but had to share third place honors with Purdue when the Boilermakers made up a seven stroke deficit on the second day of competition. Dan Roberts led the Wolverines with scores of 75 and 73 for a four over par 148 on the par 72 course. That score was good enough for a fifth place finish in individual competition. Scott Anair and Ken Clark rebounded with good second round scores for iden- tical eight over par 152 scores. Mark DeWitt and Peter Savarino rounded out Michigan's team with scores of 155 and 156 respectively. BAD WEATHER throughout the tournament made low scores difficult to attain. Hopefully, better weather will prevail today and tomorrow as golf coach Jim Carras takes his team to Kalamazoo where Western Michgian is hosting the Bronco Invitational. Favored horse killed NEW YORK (AP)- Lemhi Gold won in s, 8-0 the $563,000 Jockey Club Cup which was marred when favorite Timely Writer and another colt were fatally in- jured in a spill. Timely Writer and Johnny Dance were humanely destroyed after breaking legs according to Dr. William 0. Reed, the veterinarian who bought a 50 percent interest in Timely Writer for $3 million last spring. TIMELY Writer, who has been a star- crossed colt most of the year, was run- ning third with little less than a half- mile remaining in the 1 /-mile race when he suddenly crashed to the ground, throwing jockey Jeff Fell. The colt, who had been favored to win the Kentucky Derby, before, being sidelined by abdominal surgery, broke his left front leg. Sing Sing then went over Timely Writer but kept his feet, although Miguel Rivera was unseated. Then Khatango, ridden by Ruben Hernandez and Johnny Dance, ridden by Bryan Fann, fell, throwing their riders. Duhon takes title TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)- Alton Duhon of Los Angeles, a retired postal worker, defeated defending champion Ed Up- degraff of Tucson yesterday to win the 28th U.S. Senior Amateur Champion- ships 2-up. Duhon, a public-course player, thus became the first black to ever win the event. FLOOR 1 EXPIRES: SAT. /OCT.16 I BQ EXCHANGE THIS COUPON FOR ONE FREE GREETING CARD OR PICTURE POSTCARD! ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. > C 't\ f V The Non-Profit Student Bookstore. 341 East Liberty, at Division. FLOOR 1EXPIRES: SAT./OCT.16 ON ANY ITEM OF SOFT LUGGAGE, SHOULDER BAG, OR DUFFEL. DESN.INCLUDE ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. 0r The Non-Profit Student Bookstore. 341 East Liberty, at Division. FLOOR 1 EXPIRES: SAT./OCT. 16 E 1/2 OFF LIST PRICES ON OUR WIDE SELECTION OF MICHIGAN EMBLEM JEW ELRY. DOES NOT INCLUDE CLASS RINGS. ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. The Non-Profit Student Bookstore. o4 1 East Liberty, at Division. W 2 H. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN jY3B A NDS Presents Band-O- Rama 1982 Saturday, Oct. 23, 1982, 8:00 p.m. Hill Auditorium Featuring: SYMPHONY BAND, CONCERT BAND, JAZZ BAND, FRIARS, MARCHING BAND e wU FLOOR 2 EXPIRES: SAT. /OCT.16 0 WITH COUPON: $45.0 MARKS STANDARD HNDBK. FOR MECHANICAL ENGINEERS 8th ed. ONE ITEM PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER. i