Page 12-The Michigan Daily- Monday, December 2, 1991 Redford CC loses state final PONTIAC (AP) - Repeating a state championship proved every bit as difficult as everyone expected in the Michigan high school football finals. Only four defending champions remained in the field of eight teams that played in the Silverdome on Friday and Saturday. And only two of the four - Frankfort and Muskegon Catholic - took their trophies home for another year. J.J. Lamerson ran for 121 yards and two touchdowns and all-state quarterback Derek Klein broke loose for a 43-yard touchdown run to lead Frankfort (13-0) to a 21-7 victory over Portland St. Patrick (12-1) in the Class D final. "They did what championship teams do," St. Patrick coach Chris Schrauben said. "They got the ball, and they didn't give it back." Paul Siembida scored three touchdowns to lead Muskegon CC (13-0) to a 34-0 victory over Harbor Beach (10-3) in the Class C final. "That quarterback did a fantastic job," Harbor Beach coach Jack Dil- lon said. "He has the ability to cut back, and that puts them in scoring position real quick." He should. Siembida was switched from halfback to quarter- back just before the season opened. The other two defenders - Red- ford Catholic Central and Birming- ham Brother Rice - played like champions, but lost. East Lansing (11-2) had a sur- prising game plan against Brother Rice (9-4) in the Class A game. In the first quarter, the Trojans gave the ball to guard Mark Langkos who ran for a five-yard touchdown. East Lansing went on to win the game, 14-0. "When I took two steps, I saw the corner (of the end zone)," Langkos said. "I said, 'I'm going to score a touchdown!' It was neat." Redford CC (11-2) looked like it would get into position to try for a winning field goal against Saginaw Arthur Hill (11-2). But Howard Foster, who earlier had scored on a 12-yard run, intercepted a pass at the Arthur Hill 34-yard line with just 30 seconds remaining to preserve a 13-12 win and the Class AA title. "The kids are disappointed, just like the coaches," Redford CC coach Tom Mach said. "But, life goes on." In Class BB, Farmington Hills Harrison beat Cheboygan, 34-7; in Class B, Monroe St. Mary Catholic* defeated Coopersville, 17-6; in Class CC, Battle Creek Pennfield downed Negaunce 14-8; and in Class DD, Mendon overpowered a road- weary Lake Linden-Hubbell team, 30-14. Roy Granger broke the all-class state final record for rushing with 295 yards and two touchdowns on 21 carries for Harrison (13-0). Howard Foster (center) celebrates his interception during Saginaw Arthur Hill's 13-12 victory Saturday over Detroit Catholic Central for the Class AA Championship. Pistons defuse Rockets, 94-87 Thomas becomes MERRILL LYNCH & CO. CORPORATE FINANCE ANALYST PROGRAM Merrill Lynch is currently seeking candidates for 2-year financial analyst positions in the Financial Institutions Group of Investment Banking at the Chicago office. New analysts will attend a training program at Merrill Lynch World Headquarters in New York City, then return to Chicago. A brief job description is on file at the Career Planning and Placement office. Interested seniors should send a resume and transcript to the address below no later than December 18, 1991: Brad Vander Ploeg Investment Banking Merrill Lynch & Co. 5500 Sears Tower Chicago, IL 60606 Detroit's all- time top scorerz. AUBURN HILLS (AP) - Isiah Thomas scored 22 points, leading Detroit to a 94-87 victory over the Houston Rockets, yesterday as he became the Pistons' all-time leading scorer. Thomas passed Bob Lanier as the Pistons' all-time scorer when he hit a free throw with 3:53 to go in the third quarter, giving him his 15,489th point. The Pistons led by seven at a>. ~ halftime and moved out bys10early Ai in the third quarter. Detroit led, 74- 64, with 12 minutes to play, but F Houston cut the margin to 78-74 with 8:23 to play. Joe Dumars was just one of eight from the field at that point, but he hit a jumper, buried a three-pointer, then made another jumper to up the lead to 11. The Rockets never got' closer than five again. Mark Aguirre added 18 for Detroit, and Dennis Rodman had 11 points and 17 rebounds. Otis Thorpe led Houston with 20 points and 14 rebounds. Detroit fell behind, 21-14, early, but William Bedford and Thomas helped Detroit outscore Houston, 12-4, in the last three minutes of the quarter for a 26-25 Piston lead. As time ran out, Lance Blanks hit AP a jumper from halfeourt to give Pistons' captain Isiah Thomas became the team's all-time leading Detroit a 51-44lead, scorer in yesterday's victory over the Houston Rockets. Stewart cashes in big at Skins Game 0 *IVERSITY * PPI --C III SE ()111 Com evisi ouir and si n up for tT e R r., P.Ter M1 L A LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) - Payne Stewart finished the Skins Game as a spectator, but a very rich one. Yesterday, Stewart won a check for $260,000, the biggest prize the U.S. Open champion has collected playing golf. That made him the big winner in the two-day, four-man, made-for-TV event. However, he was eliminated from the two-hole sudden death playoff for the last skin and was with Jack Nicklaus on the sidelines when rookie John Daly beat Curtis Strange for the last $40,000 of the enriched purse. "That's the nature of the Skins* Game," Stewart said. "I'd played real well, 2- or 3-under-par on the back nine, then I hit one in the water. That's the way it goes." Daly, the power-hitting PGA champion, finished the competition with $160,000 for the two days, and Strange won $120,000. Nicklaus, obviously distressed with a chronic back condition, was* shut out. He won nothing at all, for the second time in nine appearances in the Skins, and did not make a birdie at PGA West. "I'm disappointed in the way I played," he said, "but I guess I should just be happy I was able to play at all." Nicklaus added that he will play no more this year. He had tentative plans to compete in the season- ending event on the Senior Tour, in Puerto Rico later this month, but has changed his mind. "I'm not going to play. Not the way I'm feeling," he said. Stewart, making his first start in the Skins Game, became the biggest money-winner with a 3-foot birdie putt on the 14th hole. It came after the seven previous holes had been halved and the purse had built to $260,000. Newsletters Newsletters Newsletters Newsletters!