M' explodes in third quarter The Michigan Daily-Monday, September 21, 1987-PageV1 Over $13 thousand raised in Big Ten Run (Continued from Page 1) the Michigan score. But Michigan wasn't through. Not by a long shot. AFTER FORCING the Cougars (2-1) to punt on downs, the Wolverines put another three points on the board when Mike Gillette booted his third field goal, a 32- yarder, to up the lead to 23-10. Just two plays following the ensuing kickoff, Michigan was at it again. Linebacker J.J. Grant stepped in front of Washington State's Steve Broussard and picked off quarterback Timm Rosenbach's pass at the Cougar 32 and returned it 14 yards. "We had a couple guys open on that play and I threw it to a wide open linebacker," said Rosenbach. The Wolverines went the final 18 yards in just over a minute. Quarter- back Demetrius Brown, who re- covered from a disasterous debut against Notre Dame with a solid eight-for-13, 174 yard performance Saturday, went the final 12 yards untouched on a quarterback bootleg. "I RELAXED a little more and just let things develop," said Brown. "The reason we lost (to Notre Dame), well, I played a big part in it, and I kept it in the back of my mind and said I wasn't going to let it happen again." "I'm happy for him," Schembechler said. "At least he can keep his head up." Michigan tacked on its final seven points of the quarter minutes later when Morris scored from the one. The 66-yard, six-play drive was kept alive by another personal foul penalty and included a nice over-the- shoulder catch by Kolesar, who got behind Hasty - again. "We got caught in man coverages (in the secondary) and you can't ask a cornerback to cover a man like a blanket all over the field when the quarterback gets time to throw," said Hasty. IN THE decisive quarter, Michigan gained 178 total yards to just nine for the Cougars. The Wolverines also dominated the time of possession, keeping the ball for more than 10 minutes in the 15- minute quarter. "We just wanted to improve,"' said Schembechler. "We were as low as any Michigan team had ever been to open the season... and we had to try to gain our self respect and start to play football like Michigan. That's all I wanted to do was to play like. Michigan and I thought in the third period, we played like Michigan." "We came out fired up in the third quarter and we decided we weren't going to kick any more field goals," said Morris. "We wanted to go out and score some touchdowns." Washington State's players, though, said their own offensive HELP WANTED $3.85 hr. All Shifts - Flexible hours. Apply at BURGER KING 530 E. Liberty breakdowns were the difference in the game. "IT WAS nothing they did defensively," said Rosenbach. "It was just us killing ourselves." Despite the 26-point final margin, it was a competitive game through the first half. And, in fact, Washington State took a 10-7 lead early in the second period. Using the short passing game on offense and an aggressive, blitzing style on defense, the Cougars caught Michigan off guard with their quickness. Rosenbach (30-of-49, 334 yards, two TDs) completed 17 passes in the half, including 10-of-11 during a first period scoring drive that knotted the game at seven. MICHIGAN got off to the 7-0 lead when, after Phil Webb recovered a fumbled punt, Brown found Kolesar (three receptions for 104 yards) in the end zone for 25 yards on a post pattern. It was Hasty again who was found in single coverage, as the Cougars sent both safeties in to blitz. "We knew the long pass would break," said Michigan offensive tackle John Elliott. "You just can't play defense like that and not have something pop open." Washington State, however, came back and would have entered the second half with a lead instead of a three-point deficit, if it weren't for a couple holding penalties that negated big plays. On the first play after a Gillette field goal that tied the score at 10, Rosenbach found Broussard for what appeared to be an 81-yard touch- down. But a Cougar player was flagged for holding defensive end Mark Messner, and the play came back. In all, the Cougars committed 10 penalties for 100 yards. "We had a lot of holding penalties that really hurt us, but we were not blocking any different than in our first two games," said Cougar head coach Dennis Erickson. "Obviously they (the refs) called it different. I'm not making any excuses at all... every place you go they call holding a little bit different." A wave of 1,700 runners filled the streets of Ann Arbor yesterday morning for the eighth annual Michigan Big Ten Run. The race benefitted the American Lung Association which received between 13 and 18 thousand dollars ac- cording to race organizer Richard Lampman. The event was divided into three distances of two, five and ten miles. A special category for children with asthma was also set up. "The asthma group was added to demonstrate that people with asthma, particularly kids, c an participate in sports like this and not get pushed to the back of the gym," Lampman said. The winner of the five mile was Craig Dickenson with a time f 25:19, and Len Purusky posted an impressive 51:49 to win the ten mile race. The results of the two mile were not available. -WALTER KO6 "Let Confidence Do Your Kicking!" KOREAN KARATE Trial Lessons $9.95 Bring a friend, no extra charge! At The Academy Achievement Center Master Keith Hafner The Academy 220 S. Main Ann Arbor, Ml °994-0333 Wolverines Jamie Morris and John Kolesar congratulate quarterback Demetrius Brown after his 12-yard touchdown run in the third quarter of Saturday's game. Before you choose a long distance service, take a close look. z-- You may be thinking about choosing one of the newer carriers over AT&T in order to save money. Think again. Since January 1987, AT&T's rates have dropped more than 15% for direct-dialed out-of- state calls. So they're lower than you probably realize. For infor- mation on specific rates, you call us at 1 800.222-0300. And AT&T offers clear long distance connections, operator assistance, 24-hour customer w. .. service, and immediate credit for wrong numbers. Plusyou can use AT&T to call from anywhere to anywhere, all over the United States and to over 250 countries. You might be surprised at how good a value AT&T really is. So before you choose a long distance company, pick - - -.---------up the phone. A p M 4- -7 a a ENGINEERING STUDENTS 1) There is NO shortage of engineers. This lie has been mouth- ed by the two groups that benefit from it: the college professors (full classrooms mean fat paychecks) and the corporate executives (increasing the glut of engineers means reduc- ing salaries). This nation is in a deepening high-tech depression. The College Placement Council reports that the number of job offers received by the engineering grad- uate class of 1987 fell by 35% from the number received by the engi- neering graduate class of 1986. And the number of job offers received by the engineering graduating class of 1986 fell by 33.5% from the number received by the engineering grad- ,12fna inc a 1mof1 -