0 SPORTS The Michigan Daily Monday, September 14, 1987 Page 12 NFL ROUNDUP 44 Vikings, Wilson rip Lions in opener, 34-19 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Wade Wilson, whose three interceptions put Minnesota in a 16-3 first-half hole, threw a 73-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Carter to spark a 21-point third quarter rally as the Vikings overcame the Detroit Lions 34-19 in NFL action yesterday. Carter was an even bigger culprit than Wilson on two of the interceptions, as perfect passes from Wilson went right through his arms and into the hands of Detroit defenders. But with Minnesota trailing 19- x 10, Carter got behind Duane Galloway, who had two of the Lions' interceptions, and Wilson hit Carter in stride. Wilson, starting in place of the injured Tommy Kramer, finished with 12 completions in 22 attempts for 248 yards and three touchdowns. Lions quarterback Chuck Long was 24-for-38 for 195 yards and a touchdown but was intercepted by Neal Guggemos three plays after Wilson's bomb to Carter. Guggemos' 26-yard return set up D.J. Dozier's 1-yard touchdown run, which put good with quarter. the Vikings ahead for 6:30 left in the third Patriots 28, Dolphins 21 FOXBORO, Mass. - New England scored twice within 50 seconds on Tony Collins' seven-yard run and Ronnie Lippett's 20-yard interception return to take a third- quarter lead, and the Patriots beat the Miami Dolphins 28-21 yesterday. Steelers 30, 49ers 17 PITTSBURGH - Rookie cornerback Delton Hall put BUSINESS Pittsburgh in the lead with a 50-yard fumble recovery return and Mark Malone overcame a nine-of-33 passing performance to throw a 2- yard touchdown pass to Preston Gothard as the Steelers stunned the turnover-prone San Francisco 49ers 30-17 yesterday. The Steelers, coming off their first winless preseason in 22 years, took a 20-3 lead by shutting down the 49ers' running game and pressuring 49ers quarterback Joe Montana into throwing hurried incompletions. Pittsburgh forced five turnovers and converted three of them into points. Buccaneers 48, Falcons 10 TAMPA, Fla. - Steve DeBerg passed for 333 yards and a team- record five touchdowns yesterday, leading Tampa Bay to a 48-10 victory over the Atlanta Falcons in the Buccaneers' debut under Coach Ray Perkins. DeBerg, who threw seven interceptions in the Bucs season opener a year ago, completed 24 of 34 passes as Tampa Bay set club records for points scored and largest margin of victory in the franchise's 12-year history. The Tampa Bay offense, which f'' P RE-MED ORIENTATION MEETING See CHIEFS, Page 13 -Associated Press Minnesota running back D.J. Dozier tries for a first down against Detroit in NFL action yesterday. 1NFORMATION & REGISTRATION COURSE REQUIREMENTS, ADMISSIONS, PREPARATION FOR MED SCHOOL, VISIT WITH UM MEDICAL STUDENTS. THURSDAY, SEPT.17 7 P.M. ROOM 170, DENNISON OW PRE-PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT A UNIT OF STUDENT SERVICES /. - C=2OMMOCIff! M 1 .r } } i Michigan Daily SPORTS 763-0376 Have you Considered Navy ROTC? C.e, Bd in. 540 E. Liberty (across from the Mich. Theater) 761-4539 1220 S. University (across from Village Corner) 747-9070 e)h Spn...lM p on Cbkg o e,, 6 flscoege 4 a iW * u .. r,..... . 1 ....._ ,.. ..,...s .,.,. ... ... r 0 t. I m m pin ,,in' imp Macintosh'personal computers have been getting quite an education over the past few years. Fm faculty members and administrators at colleges and uni- versities worldwide. And based in no small part on what we've learned in higher education, we proudly introduce two new classes of higher'technology: The Macintosh SE. And the Macintosh II. The SE is a direct descendant of the Macintosh Plus-the computer that's performing brilliantly in school even as we speak. Like all Macintoshes both larger and smaller, it's extremely simple to learn. point-and-click commands and pull- down menus. So once you've learned the basics, you can concentrate on learning all kinds of other things. Or teaching them, for that matter. And like the Macintosh Plus, the SE comes standard with a 32-bit Motorola 68000 microprocessor and a full mega- byte of internal memory expandable to 4 megabytes. But since SE is short for "System Ex- pansion,'you can a lot further You get your choice of either two internal 800K disk drives or one 800K drive plus an internal 20-megabyte SCSI hard disk So you can store tremen- old floppy disk shuffle. You also get a choice of keyboards. Either a Macintosh Plus-li' m figuration, or one complete with function keys for more-specialized applications. For an even brighter future, the SE has its very own expansion slot. So you can add cards that let you do everything from tie into the campus computer net- work to work with data created on MS-DOS computers. Now between the Macintosh Plus and the Macintosh SE, most of the fac- ulty and administration will find all the power and flexibility they may ever need-a condition technically known as "happiness" mance personal compute; we present the Macintosh ll. The Open Macintosh. It's the fastest Macintosh yet. With an even more advanced 32-bit Motorola 68020 microprocessor.As well as a 68881 floating point processor that gives you even faster processing speeds for heavy duty number crunching. (Yes, fans,the II has the capacity to run Unix:) You can expand its standard 1 mega- byte of memory up to 8 megabytes on the motherboard, and up to a chilling 15 gigabytes of memory throu ghthe slots. You can add an interna 20, 40 or 80-megabyte hard disk. Choose from two keyboards-one with and one without function keys.'Ivo Apple monitors- 12"B&Wor 13"color. Or other third party high resolution, large screen monitors.- And the Macintosh II has 6 expansion slots. So its open for just about anything the future may hold. Like an Ethernet interface card for network connections. A card for running MS-DOS software. An IEEE interface card to monitor and control laboratory instru- ments. Even an enhanced color graphics Yet powerful as it is, the Macintosh II hasn't forgotten its first name. It can still run most advanced Mac- intosh business and academic software. And it's still supported by all those great programs that made Macintosh a hit on campus. For example, Kinko's Academic Courseware Exchange, Apple's faculty journal, Whedsfor/heMi and academic conferences. So if your department is actively re- cruiting computers, we su ggestthat you review the qualifications ofany or the Macintoshes. Because our family is ready to make a huge contribution to'the college of your choice. _ i 0 A fII f_