I THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 17, 1968 Su.d.... November .,... 17.. . 16 I * ootball Saturday - teheran ago red pov By FRED LaBOUR "On Saturday morning I'd leap out of bed, and race to the ball game,,twas good for my head." Wilson Balloy Since football's gentle inception in Abner Doubleday's back yard in 1846, (an event only witnessed by two weeping nine year old urchins and a rooster with a broken leg) the game has grown notice- ably in size and stature. And not only has the game grown, but coincidentally so have the crowds. Crowds are now so large that occasionally, even a stadium with 100,000 seats is scarcely large enough to provide icy little benches for all of the partisans. Now, when you get 100.000 people together under any circum- stances, things are bound to be a little out of the ordinary. And when the 100.000 are drawn largely from a college community, it's even worse. In fact, college football crowds the world around have been called by one notable scholar "the most incredible freak show I've ever encountered, and I've seen 'em all." Yessiree, football Saturday is sort of like the biggest town meet- ing of all time. In corhe all the factions: the nyloned girls with tell- tale Jello on their chins, fraternity men with flasks under their tweed- ish coats, alumni ready to weep at two bars of "The Yellow and Blue," high school kids waiting to get in on the action next year, faculty members groveling with the common people for stimulation, and an occasional hippy in the end zone. In they come, separate people, islarnds, all of them. But then a miraculous thing occurs. They become UNITED! UNITED! They rally behind a common cause. They cheer together, they weep together, they drink together, they fight together, they pass each other up over their heads together. It's the kind of thing Richard Nixon must dream about at night. And if the teams are decent and the game is close, or atleast entertaining, so much the better. But even if it's one of the classic dull afternoons out there on the turf, there's still wine to be drunk in the stands, girls to goose, and fights to fight. That, after all, is what makes is all worthwhile. Then the game is over, it all breaks down and the citizens stream out the exits. Some of them might hang around to tap their feet to "a Michigan tradition, 'Temptation'," and others creep around looking for lost earrings. Then they're gone, strollirng off to the traffic jam, ready for an evening of drinking, not drinking, or anything else that seems ap- propriate. Their flasks litter the stands, and all of the kids run around looking for God knows what buried underneath the toilet paper. "I understand that a lot of people don't like football games, but for the life of me I can't figure out why." -Johnson Trail'ed 4 4 photographed by Sara Kruhcvich 0 l