Dallas goes 5-0 rrwn rrr» repons Dallas cornerback Ron Fellows' 58-yard touchdown run with an intercep tion helped make the Cowboys the only unbeaten team in the National Football League Sunday. The Los Angeles Raiders lost for the first time when Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann passed to Joe Washington for a score with 33 seconds left and a 37-35 victory. Dallas, developing a reputation as the Comeback Cowboys, spotted Minnesota a 24-12 halftime lead, then rallied for a 37-24 victory at Minneapolis, Minn. The Cowboys are 5-0, while the Vikings drop ped to 3-2. Minnesota gained its 11-point halftime lead on the strength of two touchdown passes from Steve Oils to Sammy White. Dallas cut the lead to 24-20 on Ron Spr ings' 5-yard touchdown run, a score that was set up by Ron Hill’s 37-yard punt return. Then came Fellows' touchdown return of the interception and an in surance score on a 12-yard TD pass from Danny White to Drew Pearson to climax an 84-yard drive led by Tony Dorsett, who rushed for 141 yards. Theismann's third TD pass at Washington boosted the Redskins to a 4-1 record. At Green Bay, Wis., the Packers had a league-record 49-point performance in the first half en route to a 55-14 win over Tampa Bay, now 8-5, which made the winners' record 3-2. Among the Packers' first half touchdowns were a 90-yard punt return by Phillip Epps, Jessie Clark's score on a 75-yard pass-run play and Mike Douglass' 35-yard run with a fumble. San Francisco boosted its record to 4-1 with a 33-13 mauling of the New England Patriots, 2-3, at Foxboro, Mass. Joe Mon tana passed for two touchdowns and Ray Wersching kicked four field goals in the 49ers' fourth straight victory. Orange 'kist goodbye by powerful Huskers From Associated Press Reports Top-ranked Nebraska's do-it-all offense did it again Saturday, with three touchdowns by quarterback Turner Gill and two by l-back Mike Rozier leading to a 63-7 college football destruction of Syracuse at Lincoln, Neb. Nebraska, 5-0, extended the nation's longest college winning streak to 15 and gave Husker coach Tom Osborne his 101st collegiatee coaching win. The victory may make jokes about top-ranked Nebraska be ing considered for a United States Football League franchise legitimate. Meanwhile, West Virginia staked its claim as the No. 1 college team in the East with a 24-21 victory over Pittsburgh at Morgan town, W. Va. In games involving Pac-10 teams: Down 26-3 at one point, the California Golden Bears rallied for four touchdowns and a field goal in the final 21 minutes to tie third-ranked Arizona 33-33 at Berkeley, Calif. Gale Gilbert passed for touchdowns of 80 yards to David Lewis and 61 yards to Andy Bark to lead the Bear comeback. Cal is 2-1-1, Arizona 4-0-1. In Pasadena, Calif., quarterback Steve Young threw for 325 yards and two touchdown passes to propel Brigham Young to a 37-35 win over UCLA, now 0-3-1. And in Columbia, S.C., the other Southern California team, USC, was shocked 38-14 by South Carolina. The Gamecocks converted four USC tur novers into 24 second-half points to im prove to 3-2 under new coach Joe Morrison. The Trojans' new coach, Ted Tollner, watch ed his club fall to 1-2-1. Washington beat Navy 27-10, Nevada-Las Vegas crunched Oregon State 35-21, and Arizona State beat up on winless Stanford, 29-11. Golfers stumble to sixth place at Nevada tourney By Blair Thompson Of the Emerald Oregon's golf team finished sixth in last week's prestigious Wolfpack Classic as bad weather washed away any Duck title hopes. The Classic, hosted by the University of Nevada-Reno and played at Edgewood-Tahoe Coun try Club, featured some of the Pac-10's best teams in USC, Oregon, and eventual champion UCLA. The Bruins won the tournament with a two-day score of 771, followed by University of the Pacific with 776 and Nevada-Reno with 783. Oregon came in with a 799. Scores were tallied based on five players. For the Ducks, it was not the tough field but the bad weather that proved to be the difference. Oregon was in command after the first round of the tourney, but then the rains came, forcing the entire round to be replayed. The replay turned a first-place lead into a second-place deficit. Still, led by Shell Joyner's 74 and 76s from John DeLong and Paul Weinhold, Oregon's opening 386 left it in good position for a title run in the final round. Weather conditions then went from better to worse, and along with them the Duck fortunes. Oregon ballooned to a second round 413. High winds wreaked havoc with the Duck golf games. As Oregon coach Jim Ferguson said,“The winds made it impossible for us to do well.'' The wind took away the high, straight shots that are necessary for Pacific Northwest golf courses. As a result, not one Duck golfer could break 80 in the second round. However, Oregon managed to hang onto sixth, with Joyner com ing in at 157 and DeLong and Weinhold at 158 to round out Oregon's top three. Ferguson offered mixed reviews for Oregon's first fall preview to the regular season. “We were in a position to win it, but we didn't play well enough in the wind," he said. That should not happen often, according to the 13-year coach. A veteran team with a desire to work hard on their games makes the 1983 Duck golf picture a bright one. “We have the potential to be the best golf team I've ever had. The talent is certainly there,'' Ferguson said with a smile. * . He's a Marine Officer Selection Officer. 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