4 Page 12 The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 10, 1988- Rush Delivery BY JEFF RUSH Gillette's TD run puts field-goal woes behind. This time, there was no close shave at the end, no blame to face for missing a field goal that would have won the game, no lack of skin to slap. Close shave. Face. Skin. Gillette. Mike Gillette. And from the look on the Michigan senior's face, this was no time for any word play using his last name. The only play for this time was a trick one: Gillette lining up to punt the ball, Gillette faking the punt, Gillette looking to see if teammates Chris Horn or Tripp Welborne were open for a pass, and Gillette running with the ball around the left end of his offensive line. AN INSTANT LATER, Gillette was 40 yards down the field, in the end zone. He then kicked the extra point for what became the final margin: Michigan 17, Michigan State 3. "I needed a good day," said Gillette, who has had enough of them to become Michigan's career scoring leader. He stands ahead of such famous Wolverines as Anthony Carter and Tom Harmon. Ironically, it wasn't an extra point or a field goal, but Gillette's first touchdown at a Michigan, that put him ahead of Carter. Carter and Harmon are good company. Carter, Michigan's previous - career scoring leader, is one of the most feared receivers in the National Football League. Harmon is Michigan's only Heisman Trophy winner. But Gillette played down the comparison. "(The record) means I've been here a long time, and I've had more opportunities than Tom Harmon or Anthony Carter," he said. And if Michigan coach Bo Schembechler heard Gillette say that Saturday, he smiled. GILLETTE hasn't always made him smile. Though Gillette converted 16 of 23 field-goal attempts during the first 10 games of 1986, his first year at Michigan, Schembechler benched him for the Ohio State game as a result of training violations. ; Gillette sat on the bench for the early part of the next season, watching teammate Pat Moons kick. But Schembechler called on Gillette in the Iowa game, and he responded with a Michigan record 53- a yard field goal in the first quarter and a game-winning 34-yard field goal as the game ended.M Schembechler smiled then, and he had little reason to complain about Gillette's kicking for the rest of that year and the next. This season, with punter Monte Robbins having graduated, Schembechler added punting to Gillette's place-kicking responsibilities. Gillette has punted beautifully this season, but he has not-kicked as . well as expected. He missed what would have been the game-winning field goal at Notre Dame, and he missed two field goals in a one-point loss to Miami (Fla.). SCHEMBECHLER wondered whether he should limit Gillette to. either place-kicking or punting, and some fans booed Gillette when he came onto the field against Michigan State.. As it turned out, it wasn't Gillette's place-kicking or punting that made him a hero-Saturday. It almost made him the scapegoat. Gillette lined up for a punt late in the third quarter with Michigan ahead, 10-3. Before Gillette could get the punt off, Spartan John Miller + got a hand on the ball, which bounced into the hands of Corey Pryor. ; Pryor ran in untouched for an apparent touchdown. But an illegal- motion penalty against Michigan State took away the touchdown and gave Michigan a first down. Six plays later, Michigan lined up in punt formation again. Gillette t had told Schembechler that he thought he could run around the left side if Michigan State lined up in a certain formation. When they lined up in that formation, Gillette looked to Schembechler for the signal, and Schembechler gave it to him. A referee was the only thing standing between Gillette and the end zone. "The referee stood right in the way and damn near tackled him," Schembechler said. "If that would have happened, it could have been a; different game." It was a different game. Last year, Michigan State won. KAREN HANDELMAN/Daily Wolverines Mark Messner and Alex Marshall have Spartan Bobby McAllister on the run. That's where he was most of the day - Michigan held him to only 71 yards passing. Michigan State had only 151 yards total offense. GET ON THE BUS! Q Monday, Oct. 10th 12:00p.m. at the Diag Breland gets win MCC (Michigan Collegiate Coalition) USSA (United States Student Association) VOTER PARTICIPATION RALLY WOMEN IN JUDAISM SERIES Letty Cottin Pogrebin "FROM MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR TO DIRTY DANCING: JEWISH WOMEN IN AMERICAN FILM" Tuesday, Oct. 11 7:30 p.m. Angell Hall Auditorium B Join Letty Pogrebin, an editor of Ms. magazine, in this evening's discussion of Jewish women in American film. Presented in conjunction with the Shanik-Fleisher Forum. Sponsored by Jewish Feminist group, DeRoy Foundation, U-M Program on Judaic Studies, JCA/UJA of Washtenaw County, Congregation Beth Israel, U-M Film and Video Program, Temple Emanu-El. 769-0500 Hillel BY JOSHUA RAY LEVIN SPECIAL TO THE DAILY Former WBA welterweight champion Mark Breland scored an easy victory over Ozzie O'Neil in front of a noisy crowd of 16,734 at the Palace in Auburn Hills Friday night. . The Breland victory capped a slate of eight bouts, only one of which went the scheduled distance. Breland (22-1-1), enjoying a six- inch height advantage, hit O'Neil (19-7) at will with stiff jabs at the start of the fight. A quick right to O'Neil's ear stunned him, and two Breland follow-up punches sent O'Neil down at the 30-second mark. O'Neil rose and swung an ill-timed hook at Breland, who countered and sent O'Neil back to the canvas. Once again O'Neil got up, and once again Breland dropped him, and the referee ended the fight. Breland barely broke a sweat in earning his 15th knockout victory since turning professional. When asked after the fight about its brevity, Breland said, "Hey, if he'd stayed up longer, I might have hurt my hands." In the other featured bout, Kronk light heavyweight Michael Moorer triumphed over last-minute replacement Jorge Suero, scoring a technical knockout at the 1:25 mark of the second round. Moorer (9-0) concentrated on the larger Suero's body in the first round, scoring several hard shots to his opponent's midriff. In the second round, Moorer trapped Suero in a corner and dazed him with a wicked hook to the ribs, causing Suero to wince in pain and slump to the canvas. Suero got up, and Moorer finished him off with a right to the head. The Palace crowd seemed unsatisfied by the easy victories for Breland and Moorer. The crowd favorite seemed to be Mike Dersa of Pontiac, who won his junior- welterweight professional debut over Detroit native Keith Baker with a knockout at 2:44 of the second round. L6 TOM ON INTERVIEWS "Interviews are a success for me." "I possess the. communicationr skills necessary tot perform well."s "I think quickly on my feet." "I'm not intimidated." "Where will the interview get me?k Chairman of the" Board." Where did it come from? "My experience... Michigan Telefund, of course." MICHIGAN TELEFUND A ALPA EyStLQJ PH A V,!V A A VA AA PsAyE V coo tud/ v AE.nts! Attention : Psychology Students! Cross-country team places .2nd BY JODI LEICHTMAN The Michigan men's cross country team placed second overa4 among 17 teams at the 33rd annul Notre Dame Invitational on Friday. : Central Michigan captured first with 78 points, remaining undefeated in all three of its meets this seasoi: Michigan, who last year placed firsk finished second with 91. Edinbor6 took third with 116, while Easter Michigan and host Notre Dame tied for fourth at 154. The meet's overall winner w* Central Michigan runner Bill Taylof, -who finished the five-mile course it 23 minutes 51 seconds. Michigan first finisher, senior John Scherer, took fourth overall at 24:0'. Wolverine senior Ryan Robinsoi; junior Brad Barquist, and sophomoir 4 Tony Carna finished 10th, 13th, an4 27th, respectively. Friday's meet was the first ths season for Robinson and Carna. Boo were waiting for summer grades to le recorded before they could compete. - "I think things are starting to look up for the team," said head coach Ron Warhurst. "We got off to pretty poor start this season, and ;4 think that from here on out we wiil improve and peak for the Big Ten Championships and NCAAs." I L I i Workshops on Graduate ns Process Admissio ii i ,