Intramural Track signup Monday 11:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Intramural Sports Building The Michigan Daily BIG TEN ROUNDUP SPORTS Sunday, September 16, 1984 Men's varsity basketball walk-on tryouts, 6-3 or taller contact Dave Hammer, assistant basketball coach Page 7 Irish rail EAST LANSING (UPI)-Mike on Mian Haywood blocked a fourth quarter Jim Ke Michigan State punt, setting up the go- pleted 15 ahead touchdown and allowing Notre Miam Dame to take a 24-20 win yesterday in in 20 day the 50th meeting between the two Nebrn teams. The junior cornerback heroics put the LINCO ball on the Spartan 14-yard line. Three rushed b plays later Notre Dame star tailback dberg th Allen Pinkett spun five yards into the No. 1-ra end zone to give the Irish their final Minneso margin of victory, college f The score capped a comeback drive Smith that began in the second quarter with his car Notre Dame down 17-0 and quieted the going to fourth largest crowd in Spartan the third Stadium history. Nebra In the fourth quarter Michigan State touchdom had one good chance to pull out the week. W game on a 45-yard pass from Yarema to yard b Ingram, putting the ball at the Notre quarterb Dame 25. However, a Notre Dame Baglor, fumble recovery killed the threat. Cornhus Miami (Fla.) 28, Purdue 17 pass. Svrac WEST LAFAYETTE (AP) North Sophomore Bernie Kosar guided No. 5 Miami on scoring drives of 66 and 94 EVAN yards in the third quarter, scoring once yard tou on a quarterback sneak, as the the fina Hurricanes recorded a 28-17 comeback McAulay victory over Purdue yesterday in non- to a 13- conference football. yesterda The defending national champions, game. upset last week by Michigan, moved 66 On the yards in 10 plays after taking the seco- Norley 1 nd half kickoff, to score on Kosar's touchdom plunge from the 1-yard line and take the thwester lead for good. guilty , Kosar who moved into the third spot seconds] 4e yto be mi's career-passing list behind elley and George Mira, com- 5 of 24 passes for 194 yards. i, playing its fourth road game ys, moved to 3-1. Purdue is 1-1. aska 38, Minnesota 7 OLN, Neb. (AP)-Jeff Smith for 183 yards and Craig Sun- hrew two touchdown passes as anked Nebraska romped over ta 38-7 in a non-conference ootball game yesterday. carried 26 times to accumulate eer-high yardage- total before the sidelines midway through [period. ska, 2-0, allowed only one wn for the second straight Minnesota, 1-1, scored on a 63- omb from freshman reserve back Reggie Foggie to Valdez, who snuck 10 yards behind the ker defense before catching the cuse 13, western 12 STON. (AP)-Todd Norley's 2- uchdown pass to Jim Take on i play of the game and Don y's extra-point lifted Syracuse 12 victory over Northwestern ay in an intersectional football next to last play of the game, threw what appeared to be a awn pass to Mike Siano, but Nor- rn's Jan Keith Gatewood was of pass interference with 2 left on the clock. Norley then at MSU hit Tate with the game-winning touch- down pass. The triumph was the fifth straight for the Orangemen and gave them a 2-0 record for the season, while North- western slipped to 0-3. Kentucky 48, Indiana 14 BLOOMINGTON (AP)-Tailback George Adams rushed for 155 yards and a touchdown and set up two other touchdown runs by Mark Logan in the first half yesterday, leading Kentucky to a 48-14 college football rout of error- plagued Indiana. The Hoosiers lost the ball twice on fumbles and kept an other Kentucky scoring drive alive with a fourth-down penalty as the Wildcats raced to a 31-0 halftime lead. Kentucky scored on five of it seven possession in the first half, with Jim Rider missing field goal attempts of 31 and 42 yards the other two times. The victory lifted Kentucky to 2-0 for the season, while Indiana dropped to 0- 2. Ohio State 44, Washington St. 0 COLUMBUS (AP) - Quarterback Mike Tomczak, seeing his first action of the season, led ninth-ranked Ohio State on two first-half touchdown drives yesterday as the Buckeyes whipped Washington State 44-0 in intersec- tional college football. It was the first shutout in 43 games for the Buckeyes, 2-0. Washington State, losing to Ohio State for the fifth consecutive time, dropped to 1-2 this fall. Ohio State beat Wisconsin 21-0 for its last shutout in 1981. Tomczak, recovering from a double fracture of his right leg in spring prac- tice, replaced starter Jim Karsatos with less than 10 minutes of the first half, drawing a standing ovation from the Ohio Stadium. Associated Press Spartan fullback Carl Butler eludes a double dose of Irish defense in yesterday's Notre Dame-MSU clash. The Fighting Irish dumped the Spartans, 24-20. after a fourth-quarter surge. PennS IOWA CITY (AP)-Doug Strang passed for one touchdown and ran for another and Nick Gancitano kicked a pair of field goals to lift 12th ranked Penn State to a 20-17 upset of No. 5 Iowa yesterday in an intersectional football game. Strang, who had a subpar outing in Penn State's 15-12 victory over Rutgers last week, fired a 24-yard touchdown pass to Herb Bellamy in the final minute of the first half to give the Nit- tany Lions a 13-3 lead and scored on a 1- yard run in the first minute of the final quarter to put his team ahead 20-10. tate upsets Iowa Penn State, playing without injured tailback D.J. Dozier, sent its record to 2-0 while Iowa fell to 1-1. Wisconsin 35, Missouri 34 COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)-Senior fullback Mark Harrison ran 21 yards for a touchdown with 5:18 to play, cap- ping a 28-point fourth-quarter rally that gave Wisconsin a 35-34 college football victory over Missouri. The point-after kick by Todd G° ,goire proved decisive as Missouri scored again in the closing minutes but failed on a two-point conversion attem- pt that would have won the game. Missouri, 0-2 which led 13-7 at half- time, had expanded its lead to 28-7 on a 12-yard run by fullback Eric Drain and an 18-yard scoring pass from Seitz to Shorthose in the third quarter. After overcoming a 28-7 deficit, the Badgers, 2-0, held off a furious Missouri rally led by junior quarterback Warren Seitz to seal the victory. Stanford 34, Illinois, 19 STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Sophomore quarterback John Paye shot down Big 10 champion Illinois with 295 yards passing yesterday as Stanford pulled one of its biggest upsets, 34-19. Paye led Stanford on four touchdown drives and Mark Harmon booted field goals of 57 yards, third longest in the school's history, and 36 yards. Stanford's defense also shined, inter- cepting Illinois quarterback Jack Trudeau three times in the fourth quar- ter. Illinois, 2-1, led only briefly when it recovered a fumble by Brian Morris on the game's first play, and Chris White kicked a 28-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. Illinois made it 14-13 on a 25-yard field goal by White. With 1:34 left in the half, White missed a 45-yard field goal at- tempt when his kick hit the right upright of the goal post and bounced forward. Springfield downs 'M' stickers, 2-1 Special to the Daily SPRINGFIELD, Mass.-Rain and slippery astroturf played havoc with' the Michigan women's field hockey team as it lost 2-1 to Springfield College yesterday afternoon. It was the Wolverines' second straight loss of the season. They fell to 0-2 while Springfield evened its record at 2-2. Springfield did all the damage in the first half with a goal from Ingrid Gonesh at 32:49 and another from Deb- bie Sorg at 15:25. Michigan's lone tally came off the stick of Lisa Schofield at 28:23 in the second half.b. Jonnie Terry was busy in the Michigan net making 12 saves for the game. Alana McDonald has six saves for Springfield. The Wolverines will stay in Springfield one more day and meet Brown this afternoon. Hearns wins by TKO SAGINAW (AP) - Thomas Hearns, demonstrating his awesome punching power from the opening bell, knocked down Fred Hutchings twice and stop- ped him in the third round yesterday to retain the World Boxing Council super welterweight championship. Hearns, who scored both knockdowns in the first round when he nearly ended the fight, had Hutchings in trouble in the second and finished the match in the third when he had the challenger reeling helplessly from a barrage of head punches. Hutchings got in a few jabs in the third round, but-learns was in control and began the winning barrage with a hard right to one of Hutchings' eyes, followed by a hook. 'People are looking for a knockout all the time," said Hearns, the "Hit Man" from Detroit who has scored two straight KOs after going three fights without a knockout. Cubs 5, Mets 4 CHICAGO (AP) - Ron Cey doubled home two runs during a four-run first- inning outburst and Scott Sanderson and Lee Smith combined on a six-hitter yesterday as the Chicago Cubs posted a 5-4 decision over the New York Mets and moved towards their first National League divisional championship. The victory gave Chicago a 9% game cushion over New York. - the largest first-place lead in the East this year. It also reduced the Cubs' magic number to five games. The Cubs made it 5-2 in the fifth when Larry Bowa walked with one out, took second on a sacrifice and scored on Dernier's double. The Mets cut the lead to 5-4 in the eighth on a two-run single by Mookie Wilson off Smith, who held on to record his 32nd save. I I I I I It- THNE FREE Medium Soft Drink with any burger purchase coupon valid after 2 pm while supplies lost offer expires 10/17/84 UNION Ground Floor I . I. I I, ', Trudeau ... tosses three interceptions %.-. .......-- Doily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA Sophomore tailback Gerald White slithers through the Washington defense during Michigan's 20-11 loss yesterday. Despite a poor offensive showing by the Wolverines, White shined, gaining 73 yards on 18 carries. ..................... ................................. .......... - ....... ............ - X X X X X"', X: X, ........... ......................................... .......... ................. . . ... x"X: X X .......... , * , .", l " . I ::::: .: :::l- .-:-: -,: - ' :: :: :: : : : %: .............. .... .................... .. pitches Tigers to 2-1 win By JIM GINDIN Special to the Daily DETROIT-Milt Wilcox' brilliant pitching performance was almost overshadowed by Ruppert Jones as both players led the Tigers to a 2-1 victory over the second-place Blue Jays yesterday. Jones not only hit the game-winning home run-a line drive over the right-field wall to lead off the fourth inning-but also made two fantastic catches in left field, sending the crowd of 44,349 in Tiger Stadium to their feet each time. THE SECOND of those catches saved the game for relief ace Willie Hernandez as he leaped up and grabbed a Cliff Johnson drive hit over the fence with one out in the eighth in- ning. The fans who were chanting "Ruupe, Ruupe" as the game ended were also delighted with the near-perfect pitching of Wilcox. In the seven innings he threw, Toronto managed just a second-inning home run by George Bell and a walk to Willie Aikens in the fifth. Wilcox struck out seven batters in recording his seventeen- th win against seven losses. Hernandez earned his 29th save while allowing just two singles in the two innings he pitched. THE TIGERS jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Alan Trammell drilled a double down the leftfield line with one out. Trammell scored two batters later when Darrell Evans fought off an inside pitch for a single. Blue Jay ace Dave Stieb held the Tigers to just one more run, but only pitched well when runners were in scoring position. Stieb left a runner on second or third base five times in the game as his record dropped to 14-7. The victory lowered Detroit's magic number to four games. Any combination of Tiger wins and Blue Jay losses adding up to four will end the Eastern Division pennant race. The Tigers will try to halve:that number tomorrow afternoon as Juan Berenguer will pitch agianst the Blue Jays' Dennis Lamp. ONJOSTENS GOLD COLLEGE RINGS. SCORES MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY The MSA will be interviewing for positions for its wail r u'i u i mu vu ec ma gamg E r College Football Notre Dame 24, MSU 20 Wisconsin 35, Missouri 34 Kentucky 48, Indiana 14 Peinn St. 20. Iowa 17 Mississippi 14, Arkansas 14 Wyoming 26, Air Force 20 Major League Baseball Amrnl -aa- ~oo i>r Tcnctnc ronroconkdfix joI