SPORTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, September 18, 1983 Pag97 BIG TEN ROUNDUP x MSU stuns Iris SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Free safety Phil Parker's second interception of the game set up Dave Yarema's third touchdown pass yesterday to lead Michigan State to a 28-23 upset over fourth-ranked Notre Dame. Parker, whose interception set up a first-half Spar- tan touchdown, picked off a Blair Kiel pass midway in the fourth quarter and returned it 42 yards to the Irish 3-yard line. After a 2-yard loss, Yarema hit But- ch Rolle with a 5-yard scoring pass to break a 21-21 tie. With four seconds left, Yarema ran the ball out of the Michigan State end zone to give Notre Dame the safety. The victory gave Michigan State a 2-0 record and dropped Notre Dame to 1-1. Until Parker's interception, the second half had been scoreless in a complete reversal from the first half. The Irish put together a pair of impressive drives to take a 14-7 lead in the first quarter, but had to battle from behind to gain a 21-21 halftime tie. Ohio State 24, Oklahoma 14 NORMAN, Okla. - Sharpshooting Mike Tomczak 'fired his fifth and sixth touchdown passes of the season yesterday both to tight end John Frank in the first half, and sixth-ranked Ohio State went on to defeat No.2 Oklahoma, 9,4-14. Tomczak, who was the nation's No. 1-rated passer after completing 21 of 25 passes for 273 yards and four touchdowns in the Buckeyes' opening victory against Oregon, whipped a 16 yarder to Frank to cap an 80- yard drive following the opening kickoff. He made it 14-0 with a 15-yarder to the senior tight end early in the second period. THAT CAME on the first play after a fumble by Oklahoma's Marcus Dupree was recovered by Ohio State linebacker Rowland Tatum. Less than a minute earlier, a superb goal-line stand by Oklahoma thwarted the Buckeyes without a point when cornerback Dwight Drane threw Ohio State tailback Keith Byars for a short loss from inside the 1-yard line on fourth down. Oklahoma matched that less than two minutes later, going 85 yards in four plays. Wisconsin 21, Missouri 20 MADISON (AP) - Wisconsin turned two punt return fumbles by Missouri's Ron Floyd into 14 third- quarter points and Missouri missed a 2-point conver- sion with 3:41 left in the game as Wisconsin edged the Tigers 21-20 yesterday. With Missouri leading 14-7, Floyd, a freshman, booted a George Winslow punt and the Badgers' Russ Bellford recovered at the Missouri 13-yard line. TWO PLAYS later, quarterback Randy Wright found Al Toon from 13 yards out to tie the game. Just 3:29 later, Floyd lost the handle on another Winslow punt and the Badgers' Dan Turk recovered the ball in the end zone as Wisconsin took a 21-14 lead. The two teams exchanged possessions and the Tigers got the ball back with 8:59 to play. Missouri quarterback Marlin Adler capped an impressive 13- play, 86-yard drive with his third touchdown run of the day as the Tigers closed to within one point. 28-23 Iowa 42, Penn State 34 STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) - Quarterback Chuck Long passed for an Iowa record of 345 yards as the 13th-ranked Hawkeyes capitalized on second half errors to hand Penn State its third straight loss yesterday, 42-34. Th e loss marked the first time the defending national champion Nittany Lions had been defeated three games in a row since 1976 and the first time they dropped their first three contests of the season since 1964. TRAILING 21-14, Iowa scored four times after the intermission, three of the touchdowns coming after Penn State fumbled. With the score tied 28-28, Iowa took the lead for good in the final quarter after Mike Yacullo recovered quarterback Doug Strang's fumble at the Iowa 38. Long and Owen Gill connected on a 39-yard pass play and then Norm Granger scored from 23 yards away to make it 35-28. Big Ten Standings Conf. W L Ohio State .................... 0 0 Iowa .......................... 0 0 Michigan State.............0 0 Wisconsin ..................... 0 0 MICHIGAN .................. 0 0 Illinois........................ 0 0 Indiana ....................... 0 0 Minnesota .................... 0 0 Northwestern ................. 0 0 Purdue ....................... 0 0 Overall W L 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 AP Photo Michigan State's Thomas Tyree rambles 50 yards for a score in the second quarter of the Spartans' 28-23 upset victory over Notre Dame in South Bend. The Irish's Ray Carter fails in his attempt to bring him down. NCAA Roundup: Texas corrals Auburn, 20-7 AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - Rick McIvor connected with Kelvin Epps on an 80- yard scoring pass play and Jittler Field set up a field goal with a 66-yard punt return as third-ranked Texas manhan- died No. 5 Auburn 20-7 yesterday in regionally televised college football game. The Longhorns, opening their season later than most major college teams, took control of the game with an 84-yard scoring drive on their second posession and overpowered Auburn the rest of the way. THE LONGHORN offense scored on three consecutive possessions to take a 17-0 lead and the defense stopped Auburn's wishbone offense cold, holding the Tigers to only two first downs and 51 net yards while building a 20-0 halftime lead. Auburn, 1-1, which had crossed mid- field only twice earlier in the second half, finally scored with 1:33 left in the game on a 1-yard run by Bo Jackson. The run capped a 95-yard drive on which sophomore Pat Washington completed passes of 20, 18 and 11 yards and also had two carries for 10 yards. Tulane 34, Florida State 28 NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Jon English, playing under a court order, led Tulane on three second-half scoring AP Photo drives as the underdog Green Waves quarter- upset ninth-ranked Florida State, 34- ranked 28, in college football yesterday. Tulane's offense couldn't get un-- tracked in the first half, but a 99-yard interception return by Greg Songy and a 77-yard punt return by Curt Baham staked the Green Wave to a 14-0 lead in the first 15:07 of play. KELLY LOWREY, 0-6-1 in the first quarter, got hot and led the Seminoles to three second quarter touchdowns to give Florida State a 21-14 halftime lead. However, Tulane bottled up the nation's productive offense in the second half and Lowrey could manage only one more scoring drive for a team that averaged over 40 points a game in its first two outings. Clemson 16, Georgia 16 CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - Tenth- ranked Georgia's Kevin Butler kicked a last-minute, 31-yard field goal to tie Clemson 16-16 and cap a mistake- ridden, hard-fought football game yesterday. It was the first regular season blot for the Georgia Bulldogs who had won their last 20 non-bowl games. BUTLER'S KICK came 38 seconds before the end of the game before a record crowd of 81,000. But the Tigers did not give up. With seven seconds left on the clock, Clem- son tried to snap the tie with a 68-yard field goal attempt by Donald Igwebuike. But the kick fell short. The ball changed hands and Butler tried a field goal from the same spot, failing on a 66-yard attempt. Clemson had several chances to up the score, but was thwarted each time. Georgia rover Terry Hoage was responsible for wiping out two Clemson field goal attempts, blocking two kicks by Bob Pauling. Alabama 40, Mississippi 0 TUSCALOOSA, ALA. (AP) - Walter Lewis hit on 13 of 15 passes for 230 yards to lead an Alabama offense that over- whelmed Mississippi 40-0 in a Southeastern Conference football SCORES College Football Michigan State 28, Notre Dame 23 Ohio State 24, Oklahomai14 Illinois 17, Stanford 7 Syracuse 35, Northwestern 0 Wisconsin 21, Missouri 20 Miami (Fla.) 35, Purdue 7 Kentucky 24, Indiana 13 Iowa 42, Penn State 34 Alabama 42, Mississippi 0 North Carolina 48, Miami (Ohio) 17 Texas 20, Auburn 7 Tulane 34, Florida State 28 South Carolina 31, Duke 25 Kansas 57, Wichita State 6 Colorado 31,Colorado State 3 Central Michigan 37, Northern Michigan 15 Slippery Rock 28, Millersville State 27 Baseball Boston 3, Detroit 2 Baltimore 5, Milwaukee ; Philadelphia 4, St. Louis 1 San Diego 2, Atlanta 1 Sen Francisco 4, Los Angeles 1 At press time, the Chicago White Sox had not yet clin- ched the AL West. But you know they will. opener yesterday. The decision gave Coach Ray Perkins, who succeeded the late Bear Bryant, his first victory on the Crimson Tide's home field and made Alabama's record 2-0. Mississippi is 0-3 under its new coach, Billy Brewer. LEWIS, OPERATING the Tide's multiple offense, connected on 10 of 11 first half passes for 190 yards as Alabama built a 31-0 lead with an attack that averaged 8.5 yards a play for the first 30 minutes. HIGH QUALITY COPIES 3C a COPY (base ovbrnight price for loose sheet-copying, not books) ACCU-COPY 402 Maynard 769-8338 I ~iI~t~:II~g 29N1 DkL H AT E I INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5,h A we orlibery 761-9700 I S2.OO WED. SAT. SUN. SHOW BEFORE 6 PM i $2.00 WED. SAT. SUN, SHOW BEFORE 6 PM FROM THE DIRECTOR OF "BREAKER MORANT" AND "TENDER MERCIES" Ohio State middle guard Spencer Nelms (54) pressures Oklahomac back Danny Bradley (1) as the 6th ranked Buckeyes cooked the 2nd Sooners in Norman, Okla. M' women 3rd in golf By MIKE BERRES With the Michigan football team 2,000 miles away in Washington, the Wolverine women's golf team had the 'stadium area all to itself and quietly moved up into third place during the second round of the Lady Wolverine In- vita tional at the University golf course yesterday. While the Michigan team made its move, the first day leaders, Michigan State and Indiana, left the other six tournament teams behind. The Hoosier and Spartan women golfers have nearly matched each other stroke for stroke in the tournament, with Mary Fossum's SSpa rtans holding a two-stroke lead going into today's final round. THE TOP TWO teams have the eight best individual scorers for the tour- nament. Barb Mucha, of Michigan State, turned in her second straight 77 to lead the tourney. Indiana's Karen Romberg, who will tee off tomorrow with Mucha, is close behind at 156. Un It was Bridget Syron, though, who got the home team excited. She shot a 77, which is tied for the lowest score in a round. Her 164 is the best of those not on the top-two teams. Michigan coach Sue LeClair was pleased with her team's scores. The Blue squad, which is the Wolverines' firsteteam, improvedkby22 strokes, while the Maize took 29-less shots yesterday. "I'M EXCITED!" said LeClair. "There was no way I expected to be this high. I really didn't know what to expect."- LeClair attributed part of Saturday's success to the fact that both the Michigan teams were playing together. "They were there to cheer each other on." Ten of Michigan's women golfers are playing their first college tournament. "They obviously got over their first day jitters," said LeClair. ON THE OTHER hand, Michigan State's Fossum expected her girls to be where they are. But she too was pleased with the way they handled themselves. "I was very discouraged at the turn. We seemed to be letting them (Indiana) off the hook," said Fossum "They're too good to let get too far ahead. But my kids played extremely well on the back nine. It's very heart warming to know that they could hang in there." The final round will be played today. The first tee off is slated for 8 a.m. MUSKET MASS MEETING for the fall production of WEST SIDE STORY Tuesday, Sept. 20, 9PM Pendleton Room, 2ND floor Michigan Union OPEN TO ALL INTERESTED IN CAST, CREW, OR OTHER TECHNICAL STUFF for more information, call 763-1107M BRUCE BERESFORD'S Starring NELL SCHOFIELD JAD CAPELJA R A UNIVERSAL CLASSIC FRI., MON.-7:10, 9:10 SAT., SUN.-1:00, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10, 9:10 1 1 1 M EDICA L SC HOO0L O PE NIN GS -M U NDIA L UN! RST 1 1 1 ALL CLASSES IN ENGLISH 1 * .. ...-.---- '- I "UNUSUALLY RICH" New York Times GERARD DEPARDIELL NATHALIE BAYE THE RETURN OF MARTIN GUERRE I . v;{";