Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 396, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 November 1985 — Page 8

A8

The Putnam County Banner Graphic, November 11,1985

Sports scoreboard

National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pet. PF PA New England 7 3 0 .700 207 171 NY. Jets 7 3 0 .700 225 156 Miami 6 4 0 .600 241 211 Indianapolis 3 7 0 .300 187 238 Buffalo 2 8 0 .200 141 216 Central Cincinnati 5 5 0 .500 287 288 Pittsburgh 5 5 0 .500 219 181 Cleveland 4 6 0 .400 160 159 Houston 4 6 0 400 162 205 West Denver 6 3 0 667 219 181 Seatlle 6 4 0 600 248 205 L A Raiders 6 4 0 .600 230 227 San Diego 5 5 0 .500 260 265 Kansas City 3 7 0 .300 199 240 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East Dallas 7 3 0 .700 220 153 NY. Giants 7 3 0 .700 227 170 Philadelphia 5 5 0 .500 159 162 Washington 5 5 0 .500 165 181 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 186 232 Central Chicago 10 0 0 1.000 279 127 Minnesota 5 5 0 .500 200 207 Detroit 5 5 0 .500 173 220 Green Bay 4 6 0 .400 191 233 Tampa Bay 1 9 0 .100 200 272 West LA. Rams 8 2 0 800 210 151 San Francisco 5 4 0 .556 228 167 New Orleans 3 7 0 .300 176 262 Atlanta 1 9 0 .100 188 307 Sunday's Games Philadelphia 23, Atlanta 17, OT Cincinnati 27, Cleveland 10 Chicago 24, Detroit 3 Green Bay 27, Minnesota 17 Buffalo 20, Houston 0 New England 34, Indianapolis 15 New York Giants 24, Los Angeles Rams 19 Pittsburgh 36, Kansas City 28 Tampa Bay 16, St. Louis 0 Seattle 27, New Orleans 3 San Diego 40, Los Angeles Raiders 34, OT Miami 21, New York Jets 17 Dallas 13, Washington 7 Monday's Game San Francisco at Denver Sunday, Nov. 17 Buffalo at Cleveland Chicago at Dallas Tampa Bay at New York Jets Los Angeles Rams at Atlanta Miami at Indianapolis New Orleans vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee Pittsburgh at Houston Philadelphia at St. Louis San Diego at Denver Minnesota at Detroit New England at Seattle Cincinnati at Los Angeles Raiders Kansas City at San Francisco Monday, Nov. 18 New York Giants at Washington Indiana and Big Ten College Football Scores By The Associated Press Saturday’s Games Ashland 15, ValparaisoO Ball St. 29, Indiana St. 27 Bluffton 31, Earlham 0 Butler 18, Indiana Central 17 Defiance 6, Anderson 0 Evansville 35, Franklin 34 Georgetown, Ky. 41, St. Joseph’s 14 Hanover 46, Kentucky Wesleyan 7 lowa 59, Illinois 0 Michigan 47, Purdue 0 Michigan St. 35, Indiana 16 Minnesota 27, Wisconsin 18 Notre Dame 37, Mississippi 14 Ohio St. 35, Northwestern 17 Rhodes 31, Rose-Hulman 7 Taylor 42, Geneva 13 Wabash 28, DePauw 8 Major College Football Scores By The Associated Press EAST Pittsburgh 21, Temple 17 Syracuse 24, Navy 20 W. Virginia 27, Rutgers 0 SOUTH Alabama 14, LSUI4, tie Auburn 35, E. Carolina 10 Florida St. 56, S. Carolina 14 Georgia 24, Florida 3 Georgia Tech 35, Tn.-Chattanooga 7 Miami, Fla. 29, Maryland 22 N. Carolina 21, Clemson 20 N. Carolina St. 23, Virginia 22 Tennessee 17, Memphis St. 7 Tulane 27, SW Louisiana 17 Vanderbilt 31, Kentucky 24 Virginia Tech 41, Louisville 17 Wake Forest 27, Duke 7 MIDWEST Ball St. 29, Indiana St. 27 Colorado 14, Kansas 3 Illinois St. 26, Wichita St. 0 lowa 59, Illinois 0 Miami, Ohio 52, Kent St. 24 Michig n 47, Purdue 0 Michigan St. 35, Indiana 16 Minnesota 27, Wisconsin 18 Nebraska 49, lowa St. 0 N. Illinois 3, E. Michigan 0 Notre Dame 37, Mississippi 14 OhioU. 21, W. Michigan 15 Ohio St. 35, Northwestern 17 Oklahoma 51, Missouri 6 Penn St. 31, Cincinnati 10 Toledo 10, Cent. Michigan 7 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 20, Baylor 14 Hawaii 23, Texas-El Paso 7 Oklahoma St. 35, Kansas St. 3 Southern Meth. 40, Rice 15 Texas 34, Houston 24 Texas Tech 63, Texas Christian 7 Tulsa 45, Drake 15 FAR WEST Air Force 45, Army 7 Arizona St. 36, Washington 7 Brigham Young 44, Utah St. 0 California 14, Southern Cal 6 Colorado St. 35, S. Mississippi 17 Fresno St. 43, Pacific U. 37 Fullerton St. 21, New Mexico St. 17 Stanford 39, Oregon St. 24 UCLA 24, Arizona 19 Utah 58, New Mexico 49 Wyoming 41, San Diego St. 20 Top Twenty Fared By The Associated Press How the Too Twenty teams in the Associated Press college football poll fared: , No.l, Florida (7-1-1) lost to No. 17 Georgia 24-3. Next: vs. Kentucky. „ . N 0.2, Penn State (9-0-0) beat Cincinnati 31-10. Next: vs. K No4*Ohio State (8-10) beat Northwestern 35-17 Next: Bl hfo^'TwbUM-0) beat Illinois 590 Next: at Purdue N 0.7, Oklahoma (6-1-0) beat Missouri 51-6. Next. vs. Fla. (8-10) beat Maryland 29-22. Next: N ;?;5SSat Purdue47o. Next: atMin"nolO, Oklahoma State (7-10) beat Kansas State 35-3 N Noil!SyT(7-20» lost to No. 12 Arkansas 20-14. N No l2 B A R (8-10) beat No. 11 Baylor 20-14 Next: a No eX 13 S JSm (7-20) beat East Carolina 35-10. Next: at lfo°li 7< SS a (M-‘) beat Arizona 24-19. Next: vs. °^?5 S E£isiana State (5-1-1) tied No. 20 Alabama 1414 NoT« F^onT®^ beat South Carolina 56-14. N nl : iS?S'NO. 1 Florida 24-3. Next: vs N °NolfS™ Young <»M> beat Utah State 440 N S,9 B beat Memphis State 17-7. N KESm) tied no. 15 Louisiana State 1414. Next: vs. Southern Mississippi Indiana High School Playoffs Saturday’s Sectional Score Class A Sectional 39 Eastern Hancock 34, Indpls Park-Tudor 7

National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L.Pct. GB Boston 6 1 .857 New Jersey 6 3 .667 1 Philadelphia 4 4 .500 2*-i Washington 2 5 .286 4 New York 0 8 .000 6(4 Central Division Detroit 6 3 667 Milwaukee 6 4 600 (4 Chicago 4 4 500 I‘4 Atlanta 4 5 444 2 Indiana 2 4 .333 2‘4 Cleveland 3 6 .333 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Denver 6 1 .857 Houston 6 2 .750 >4 San Antonio 4 4 .500 2*4 Utah 4 4 .500 2'4 Dallas 2 5 .286 4 Sacramento 2 5 .286 4 Pacific Division LA. Lakers 6 1 .857 Portland 7 2 .778 L.A. Clippers 5 2 .714 1 Golden State 4 5 .444 3 Seattle 2 6 .333 4V4 Phoenix 0 7 .000 6 Saturday’s Games New Jersey 126, Milwaukee 123 Chicago 97, New York 94 Boston 124, Detroit 105 Indiana 127, Phoenix 105 Houston 115, Dallas IXO Utah 121, Cleveland 114 Atlanta 97, L.A. Clippers 94 Sacramento 98, Seattle 93 Sunday’s Games Philadelphia 105, Milwaukee 97 Portland 110, Cleveland 107 Golden State 117, Sacramento 111 Monday’s Game New Jersey at San Antonio Tuesday's Games Washington at Detroit Phoenix at New York Milwaukee at Chicago Denver at Houston Utah at L.A. Lakers L.A. Clippers at Golden State Sacramento at Portland Dallas at Seattle PHOENIX (105) Nance 6-12 8-10 20, Jones 5-12 3-5 13, Edwards 2-8 0-2 4, Davis 11-20 6-7 28, Humphries 5-10 0-010, Pittman 0-12-2 2, Adams 6-14 5-817, Pinckney 0-31-21, Foster 1-2 0-0 2, Sanders 1-4 4-4 6, Glouchkov 0-3 2-2 2. Totals 37-89 31-42 105. INDIANA (127) Williams 7-15 0-014, Kellogg 9-17 2-4 22, Stipanovich 9-17 6-9 24, Fleming 8-11 4-4 20, Stansbury 4-71-19, Richardson 1-3 0-0 2, Tisdale 5-8 2-2 12, Buckner 3-7 04) 6, Garnett 1-2 24 4, Martin 3-3 3-5 9, McClain 1-5 04) 2, Grav 04) 3-4 3.Totals 51-95 23-33 127. Three-point goals—Kellogg 2. Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Phoenix 54 (Nance 10), Indiana 63 (Stipanovich 13). Assists— Phoenix 22 (Nance, Foster 4), Indiana 33 (Stipanovich 8). Total fouls—Phoenix 30, Indiana 34. Technicals—Phoenix Coach MacLeod A—10,168. National Hockey League At A Glance Bv The Associated Press WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W L. T . Pts . GF.GA Philadelphia 12 2 0 24 69 39 NY Islanders 7 4 2 16 51 48 Washington 7 6 2 16 60 54 NY Rangers 7 7 0 14 52 47 New Jersey 6 7 1 13 50 53 Pittsburgh 4 8 3 11 50 61 Adams Division Boston 10 4 1 21 66 44 Quebec 9 4 1 19 60 48 Buffalo 9 5 1 19 60 43 Hartford 7 7 0 14 53 64 Montreal 6 6 2 14 60 60 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division St Louis 4 6 3 11 43 52 Minnesota 4 7 3 11 55 56 Chicago 4 9 1 9 53 66 Detroit 2 8 4 8 42 73 Toronto 1 11 2 4 42 62 Smythe Division Edmonton 11 2 1 23 78 47 Calgary 8 6 1 17 67 57 Vancouver 7 6 2 16 61 62 Winnipeg 6 8 1 13 62 74 Los Angeles 3 11 1 7 51 78 Saturday's Games N.Y. Islanders 3, New Jersey 2 Philadelphia 5, Boston 3 Hartford 4, Quebec 3 Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 1 Calgary 5, Washington 4 St. Louis 2, Toronto 2, tie Vancouver 7, Winnipeg 2 Minnesota 4, N.Y. Rangers 3, OT Montreal 6, Los Angeles 0 Sunday’s Games Boston 2, Minnesota 1 Buffalo 5, Calgary 1 Monday’s Games Chicago at N.Y. Rangers Detroit at Vancouver Tuesday's Games Edmonton at Washington Montreal at N.Y. Islanders Toronto at St. Louis IHSAA Cross Country INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Summaries of the leaders in Saturday's Indiana High School Athletic Association state cross country meets: BOYS I,Brendan Smith, Chesterton, 15.25.6. 2,Tim Cooper, North Newton, 15.32.5. 3,Brett Polizoto, Valparaiso, 15.35.7. 4,Brian Crumbo, Floyd Central, 15.37.7. s,Mike Mundy, Mt. Vernon, 15.38.7. 6,John Van Soest, Kankakee Valley, 15.39.4. 7,Cecil Franke, Jac-Cen-Del, 15.42.4. B,David Graves, Western, 15.43.9. 9,Jay Jontz, Carmel, 15.49.3.10,Tr0y Ward, Charlestown, 15.51.4. GIRLS I,Carol Gray, New Prarie, 13.52.3. 2,Marsha Grondziak, Ben Dlan, 14.37.9. 6,Lisa Cardwell, Tipton, 14.41.5. 7,Pamela Rhodus, Hagerstown, 14.42.2. B,Susie Stewart, Carmel, 14.44.1. 9,Debra Sauers, Columbia City, 14.52.0. 10,Mary AnnTonini, Floyd Central, 14.54.7. Team Scores BOYS 1. Valparaiso 79 2. Carmei 120 3. Indpls N.Central 129 4. Kankakee Valley 129 5 Portage 164 6. Columbus East 170 7. Manchester 199 8. Chesterton 210 9. Southport 228 10. FW Snider 237 11. Floyd Central 250 12. Norwell 257 13. Elkhart Memorial 270 14. Perry Meridian 294 15. Terre Haute South 326 16. Seymour 442 GIRLS 1. Carmel 57 2. Highland 107 3. Columbus North 128 4. Indpls Pike 133 5. Penn 138 6. Maconaquah 152 7. Indpls N.Central 213 8. Columbia City 239 9. Indpls Cathedral 242 10. Valparaiso 254 11. Crown Point2Bl 12. Floyd Central 290 13. Manchester 308 14. Bloomington North 336 15. FW Snider 342 16. Southmont 352 Weekend Sports Transactions By The Associated Press FOOTBALL National Football League GREEN BAY PACKERS-Activated Mike Butler, defensive end, from the injured reserve list. Released Mark Shumate, defensive end. HOUSTON OfLEßS—Placed Mike Akiu, wide receiver, on injured reserve Signed Herkie Walls, wide receiver. NEW YORK GlANTS—Activated Carl Banks, linebacker. Waived Larry Flowers, safety. WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Activated Monte Coleman, linebacker, from the injured reserve list. Released Chris Keating, linebacker. Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Presj Saturday’s Games Indiana 94, Czechoslovakia 74 Marion 108, Indiana-South Bend 78 Vincennes 78. Danville 72

Bears 10-0; Bucs get first victory

ByBOBGREENE AP Sports Writer Neither rain nor wind nor the Detroit Lions could stay the Chicago Bears from their winning ways. But the Tampa Bay Buccaneers tasted victory for the first time and the Philadelphia Eagles were just too Quick for the Atlanta Falcons. That’s the way it went on Sunday, Week 10 of the National Football League season. “The weather helped us more than it did Detroit,” Bears Coach Mike Ditka said of the blustery, rainy conditions in Chicago where the Bears stopped the Lions 24-3 for their 10th straight triumph. “It’s very hard to throw the football deep under those conditions.” In Tampa, the Buccaneers blanked the St. Louis Cardinals 16-0. “It was good to finally win one,” said Coach Leeman Bennett, who has seen the 1-9 Bucs lose six times by 10 points or less. Philadelphia lost a 17-0 lead, then watched as Atlanta kicker Mike Luckhurst missed a 42-yard field goal attempt with five seconds left in regulation that would have won the game for the Falcons. And when Atlanta was forced to punt in overtime, they pinned the Eagles on their 1yard line. But Ron Jaworski hooked up with Mike Quick for a 99-yard touchdown, the longest scoring pass in the NFL this season, to give the Eagles a 23-17 victory. In other games, it was Cincinnati 27, Cleveland 10; Green Bay 27, Minnesota 17; Buffalo 20, Houston 0; New England 34, Indianapolis 15; the New York Giants 24, the Los Angeles Rams 19; Pittsburgh 36, Kansas City 28; Seattle 27, New Orleans 3; San Diego 40, the Los Angeles Raiders 34 in

Patriots take advantage of Colt turnovers

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) They worked in pairs. The first would stun the victim with a solid wallop, and the second would sprint away with the loot. The plan worked perfectly, and the New England Patriots headed back to their locker room, leaving the battered Indianapolis Colts wondering why their pockets had been picked for the second straight Sunday. “Before the game, we talked about getting five turnovers and winning the game,” said Andre Tippett, a hard-hitting Patriot linebacker. “We’re just working hard. If we saw the ball being carried loosely, we tried to get it out. The opportunity arose and we jumped on it. ” The Patriots recovered three Colt fumbles and intercepted two passes. Four of those turnovers resulted in 24 points as New England defeated Indianapolis 34-15 and notched its fifth consecutive National Football League victory. The Patriots, 7-3, jumped into a firstplace tie in the AFC East with the New York Jets, who lost to Miami. The Colts, 37, absorbed their fourth loss in five games and eighth consecutive road defeat.

Bengals win third

straight; now 5-5

CINCINNATI (AP) Boomer Esiason starred in the opening act of the “Boomer and Bernie” quarterback show, but his supporting cast in Cincinnati Bengals stripes took the curtain calls. Esiason, a second-year pro from Maryland, guided the once-woeful Bengals to a convincing 27-10 victory Sunday over Bernie Kosar and the Cleveland Browns, completing an amazing reversal in the AFC Central Division. After stumbling to a 2-5 start, the Bengals have won three in a row to share first place with the 5-5 Pittsburgh Steelers. “That was nice,” said beaming wide receiver Cris Collinsworth, who caught eight Esiason passes for 135 yards. “It’s hard to feel any better about being a 5-5 football team than what the people feel in this room. It’s incredible.” “Our players deserved that win,” Coach Sam Wyche said, savoring the moment at his post-game news conference. “They’ve come a long way in the 1985 season. We’ve taken the good with the bad, and it’s time to celebrate.” The Browns also continued a dramatic reversal. The Browns, who once led the division by two games, dropped their fourth in a row to fall to 4-6, tied with Houston one game behind the leaders. “The record isn’t so much the problem as the fact that we were at 4-2 and now have lost four in a row, and there’s a sense perhaps of something lost. But there’s a lot of football left to play,” linebacker Tom Cousineau said. The season’s first meeting of the intrastate rivals was billed as the first meeting between two the division’s two highly touted young quarterbacks. But Esiason stole the spotlight with his nifty passing. The left-hander completed 23 of 33 passes for 262 yards without an interception, patiently whittling away at the Browns’ respected defense. “I don’t know if we picked them apart,” Esiason responded to a question. “If I had thrown for 350 yards and five touchdowns,

W!S

MARK DUPER 8 catches, 217 yards

overtime; Miami 21, the New York Jets 17; and Dallas 13, Washington 7. Tonight, the San Francisco 49ers, last season’s Super Bowl champions, travel to Denver. Bears 24, Lions 3 Bears backup quarterback Steve Fuller, who started for the injured Jim McMahon, agreed with Ditka. ‘‘The weather conditions were devastating,” he said. Walter Payton rushed 26 times for 107 yards his fifth consecutive 100-yard game and the 69th of his career. Matt Suhey came up with a 102-yard rushing performance. The last time the Bears had two backs going over 100 yards each was the same tandem in 1983.

The five turnovers tied a season high for New England’s defense and boosted its total to 30 compared to 24 for all last season. The turnovers also set up three Patriots’ touchdowns Sunday. It was the second game in a row in which the Colts lost three fumbles and two interceptions. Two fumbles led to touchdowns in a 35-17 loss to the Jets a week earlier. “I thought at the half if we mounted any kind of a drive at all, we’d be in it,” said Indianapolis Coach Rod Dowhower. “Not in my wildest dreams did I look for a repeat of the turnovers. “They took the wind right out of our sails. You look for a couple but not five. Give credit to their defense. They hit us hard and the ball popped out and they got it.” The ball started poping out early in the third quarter, with the Patriots still holding their 7-6 halftime lead. In a span of 10:47, they scored 24 points, 17 after turnovers, to claim a 31-6 advantage five seconds into the fourth period. New England, which began the game as the NFL turnover leader, gave up just one

'MTU %% f $Sg-. 1

BOOMER ESIASON One up on Bernie

that would be picking them apart. We took what was given to us.” Thirteen of his passes were to running backs or tight ends. The controlled-passing attack let Cincinnati hold the ball for more than 40 minutes, compared to less than 20 for the Browns. “I feel a lot better now than when we were 2-5,” Esiason said. “We are on a roll. We’re playing good football.” Kosar, the Browns’ 21-year-old rookie, was frustrated all afternoon by a Bengals defense making rapid improvement the last three weeks. He completed 16 of 32 passes for 229 yards with two interceptions, but those statistics are misleading. Subtracting a closing drive after the Bengals had put the game out of reach, he was just 8 of 21 for 139 yards. “We are getting close,” Kosar said of the Browns’ offensive development. “It’s not like we’re a mile away.” Coach Marty Schottenheimer said Kosar will remain his starter. “He did some things well, but our team just didn’t play well enough,” Schoctenheimer said.

Buccaneers 16, Cardinals 0 “This football team had battled every Sunday and really deserved to win some other games that we ended up losing for whatever reason,” said Bennett, who won his first game as Bucs head coach. “But I’m very proud of those guys that fought all year.” James Wilder ran for 120 yards and Steve Deßerg completed 11 of 27 passes for 196 yards as Tampa Bay won for only the ninth time in its last 42 games. Eagles 23, Falcons 17 Philadelphia wasn’t looking for much when Jaworski threw to Quick. “We just wanted to get the ball out and get some breathing room,” said Quick, who beat cornerback Bobby Butler and safety Scott Case on the longest pass completion this season. The Falcons had rallied for 17 points in the final period to tie the game with 2:32 remaining. Bengals 27, Browns 10 Second-year quarterback Boomer Esiason completed 23 of 33 passes for 262 yards and a touchdown, using his pro experience to outshine Cleveland rookie Bernie Kosar in Cincinnati’s victory. Kosar completed 16 of 32 passes for 229 yards and two interceptions. Packers 27, Vikings 17 Quarterback Lynn Dickey came on in relief to lead Green Bay to victory, completing nine of 11 passes for 135 yards, including a 1-yard touchdown pass to Eddie Lee Ivery to give the Packers the lead for good. Bills 20, Oilers 0 Quarterback Bruce Mathison, making the first regular-season start of his threeyear NFL career, completed 11 of 22

Sunday, a fumble one play before the Colts fumbled the ball back. On three of its last four series of the third quarter, Indianapolis lost fumbles that resulted in a 41-yard field goal by Tony Franklin, a 5-yard scoring pass from Steve Grogan to Irving Fryar and a 2-yard touchdown run by Tony Collins. “When you get blown out like this, it is usually the result of giving the other guy the ball,” Dowhower said. The Colts’ other series in that stretch ended in a punt that Fryar returned 77 yards for a touchdown to make the score 24-6 just 1:42 after his scoring reception. Larry McGrew forced and Marion recovered George Wonsley’s fumble that led to the first of Franklin’s two field goals and a 10-6 edge. Roland James forced and Johnny Rembert recovered Oliver Williams’ fumble that led to the second of Grogan’s two touchdown passes. Marion forced and Don Blackmon recovered Pat Beach’s fumble that led to Collins’ touchdown on the first play of the fourth period. Marion’s second-quarter interception, which he returned 36 yards, was knocked

CALL 653-5151 To place your classified

passes for 121 yards and ran for 57 yards, including a touchdown, to lead Buffalo, 2-8, to victory. Giants 24. Rams 19 Two second-half touchdowns by Joe Morris boosted the Giants from a 13-point deficit to victory over the Rams. It was the Giants’ fourth straight win. The Rams’ lone touchdown came on a 1yard run by Eric Dickerson, who gained 101 yards on 24 carries. Steelers 36, Chiefs 28 A 71-yard punt return by Louis Lipps scored the go-ahead touchdown and Gary Anderson kicked a team record five field goals as Pittsburgh downed Kansas City. Seahawks 27, Saints 3 Seattle quarterback Dave Krieg led a 17point fourth-quarter explosion and the defense throttled New Orleans in the second half. Krieg threw for 282 yards and a touchdown. Chargers 40, Raiders 34 Lionel James raced 17 yards for a touchdown 3:44 into overtime to lift San Diego over the Los Angeles Raiders. San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts threw for 436 yards and four touchdowns the sixth time in his career he has thrown for 400 yards, an NFL record. Dolphins 21, Jets 17 Wide receiver Mark Duper, returning from a seven-game layoff, caught eight passes for 217 yards and two touchdowns, one a 50-yarder with 41 seconds left, to boost Miami past the New York Jets. Cowboys 13, Redskins 7 Running back Tony Dorsett and quarterback Danny White teamed up for a 48yard touchdown pass play and Rafael Septien kicked two field goals in Dallas’ victory over Washington.

away from Beach by comerback Rod McSwain. Grogan hit Stanley Morgan with a 19-yard scoring strike two plays later. Indianapolis 0 6 o t—IS New England « ,7 17 10—34 Second Period Ind—Beach 18 pass from Pagel (kick failed), 1:48 NE—Moragn 19 pass from Grogan (Franklin kick>, 5:47 Third Period NE—FG Franklin 41,4:18 NE—Fryar 5 pass from Grogan (Franklin kick), 7:47 NE—Fryar 77 punt return (Franklin kick), 9:29 Fourth Period NE—Collins 2 run (Franklin kick), :05 NE—FG Franklin 30,8:23 Ind—Gill 1 run (Allegre kick), 14:04 Ind—Safety Fryar tackled in end zone by Randle, 14 :05 A—54,176 First downs 16 17 Rushes-ya rds 24-103 36-141 Passing yards 179 156 Return yards 24 164 Passes 20-36-2 13-22-0 Sacks By 3.34 7 . 4 g Punts 8-47 6-36 Fumbles-lost 3.3 2-1 Penalties-yards 6-55 5-25 Time of Possession 30:20 29:40 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHlNG—lndianapolis, Wonsley 9-35, McMillan 9-28, Cofler 1-23, Pagel 1-14, Gill 4-3 New England, C.James 18-02, Collins 12-42, Weathers 2-3, Grogan 3-2, Tatupu 1-2. PASSlNG—lndianapolis, Pagel 10-19-1-93, Cofler 10-17-1-134. New England, Grogan 13-22-0-190. Capers 543. Beach 4-57, Williams 3-50, Boyer 2-27, McMillan 2-15, Wonsley 2-8, Bentley 1-14, Butler 1-13. New England, Morgan 7-12 o! Fryar 2-12, C.James 2-11, Dawson 1 26 Starring 1-21 MISSED FIELD GOALS-None.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS 1 1887 best seller 4 Subside 7 Fuel 8 Zhivago’s love

DOWN 1 Legislator 2 Holbrook 3 Ennoble 4 Spread glee 5 Unfavorable 6 “The Mech-

-10 German city 11 Worship 13 Nigerian 14 Large barrel 16 Name (Fr.) 17 Composite photo 19 U-boat ! 20 Resident of (suff.) :

y anic” star 7“— Nome” 9 Stimulate 10 Chimpanzee in space 12 Live coal 15 Ripen 18 Prong 21 Affable 22 Condescend 23 Golf club

W T jjjjjif - *

21 By a (barely) 22 Thorn 25 Ship 26 Melody 27 So (Lat.) 28 Baseball great 29 Power 33 Native (suffix) 34 Have debts 35 Paddle 36 Danger 38 Hoist 40 Small brook 41 Church part 42 Elaine 43 Jamie Curtis

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTES 11-11 HRSNS’K VZHRAVQ KZ YZE BZNHFPWS F K F KEFWW PFVTNZWW.F PAQ ZVS AK FWGFJK AV CFVQSN.-GAWKZV EAMVSN Saturday’s Cryptoquote: THRUSTING MY NOSE FIRMLY BETWEEN HIS TEETH. I THREW HIM HEAVILY TO THE GROUND ON TOP OF ME. MARK TWAIN © IVBS King Features Syndicate Int

■pine Bapßon B.Aisl i ilßtials tle ESTMf !H|l|O t!a ETEByihILPT f e.r^etMtem| ■rom^e'a'r™ CABMCOLgVET ‘ amemloußsltLa N Q RM AMPIE CIOIR enterMelonb ■ mB u

Saturday’s Answer '"°

24 Meantime 25 To the word 27 Elt’s mom 29 Jack Benny's parrot

30 Racket 31 Instance 32 Before 37 Dock worker’s union 39 Imitate