Tuesday, October 31, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven -aat IResect4 Those boredom freaks.. . T ey're at it again john papanek IF A CERTAIN routund sports writer thinks that Saturday's 42-0 was a big bore, he should have picked up his royal hindness and moved. He should have left the warmth and dryness of the press box, and ventured forth to where the games are never boring-the stands. I don't know anyone who thinks that the game was as big a bore as he did, in fact most people thought seeing Michigan play the kind of devastating game it played Saturday was damned exciting. Of course a 42-0 game could never approach the excite- ment of a 20-17 win over Purdue, or a 10-7 squeaker over Ohio State. But if the people who come, come expecting to see Michigan blow out their weaker opponents like Minnesota, how can they be bored when their team does just that? As for all the people who began to walk out in the third quarter when the score was 35-0, well even as Bo Schem- bechler himself put it yesterday, "Hell, if it's 35-0 and it's raining, I'd walk out too, wouldn't you?" That's it, exactly. Those people who walked out saw just what they came to see, and by the third quarter, with poorer weather prospects ahead, they got up and headed for the exits. I'd call them satisfied, not bored. There is something about watching a football game from a press box that can make a writer insensitive to the emotion of the game, supplied partly by the crowd. Sometimes this is good; it allows a writer to write objectively and not be influenced by any fans' delerium. AP Photo DALLAS COWBOY running back Calvin Hill bursts through a huge hole in the Detroit Lions' defense last night in the game in Texas. Hill and his teammates moved almost at will against the Motor City boys' porous defense as the Cowboys won the game 28-24. 'Pokes ,rour DALLAS U)--Super Bowl cham- ground with Calvin Hill doing most I pion Dallas, struggling to stay of the work. But, when the march alive in the race to the 1972 Na- hit the Detroit 38, Morton lofted a! tional Football League playoffs, touchdown pass to Billy Parks to rode the passing arm of much- give the Cowboys a 7-0 lead with maligned quarterback Craig Mor- Toni Fritsch kicking the extra ton to a crucial 28-24 victory over point. the Detroit Lions last night. Detroit failed to move the ball Morton, who took over from and the Cowboys got the ball back Super Bowl hero Roger Staubach and again churned through the after the darling of the Dallas' Lions almost at will. Hill con- fans was injured during the, ex- tinued to be the workhorse but itI hibtion season, threw three touch- was Morton that executed the big down passes and set up the fourth plays. He rifled an 41-yard pass toc TD with his tosses in the national- tight end Jean Fugett before un- ly-televised game. corking another bomb, a 33-yard The victory kept the Cowboys TD shot to Hill behind the Lions'r within one game of Washington in secondary. Dallas was ahead 14-0N the National Conference East with at the end of the first quarter. t a 5-2 record while the loss dropped Detroit was handed a big breakf Detroit into a tie with Green Bay early in the second quarter. Hill at 4-3 for the lead in the NFC took a handoff but the ball was Central. kicked out of his hand by team- Dallas took the opening kickoff mate tackle Ralph Neeley, whot and began slugging away on the i was throwing a block on the line. Michigan np OU grabs fourth int pollc By The Associated Press Oklahoma blasted Kansas StateI Southern California, 41abama 52-0, UCLA turned back Washing-t and Nebraska held onto the top ton State 35-20, Texas crushed Ricet three positions in The Associated 45-9 and Penn State downed Westc Press college football poll while Virginia 28-19.f Michigan and Ohio State swapped It marked the first appearanceI the next two spots and Colorado of the season in the Top Twentyr dropped out of the Top Ten. for Missouri, Louisville and Texas The Trojans of Southern Cal Tech. They replaced Florida State, blanked Oregon 18-0 for their Southern Methodist and West Vir- eighth consecutive victory and re- ginia. ceived 41 first-place votes and 988 of a possible 1,000 points from a ::::::'. .......... nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Alabama, which ran its record to 7-0 with a 48-11rout of Southern 1. Southern California (41) 8-0 988 2. Alabama (3) 7-0 811 Mississippi, received three first- 3. Nebraska (4) 6-1 750 place ballots and 811 points while 4. MICHIGAN (1) 7-0 694 defending champion Nebraska 5. Ohio State (1) 6-0 629 whipped Oklahoma State 34-0 for 6. Louisiana state 6-0 558 its fourth straight shutout and 7.OkCLAhoma -1 7 earned four No. 1 votes and 750 9. Texas 5-1 301 points. (tie) Daily Libels (2) 7-0 301 Michigan, fifth last week, 10. Penn State 6-1 290 11. Auburn 6-1 238 climbed to fourth with 694 points 12. Notre Dame 5-1 196 following a 42-0 trouncing of Min- 13. Tennessee 4-2 122 nesota while Ohio State slipped to 14. Iowa state 5-1 112 fifth with 629 points after strug- 15. Colorado 6-2 92 gling past Wisconsin 28-20. 17. Louisville 6-0 20 Idle Louisiana State remained 18. Texas Tech 6-1 19 in sixth place but Colorado lost to 19. Air Force 6-1 17 Missouri 20-17 and skidded from 20. Arkansas 5-2.10 seventh to 15th. That enabled Ok- Ofthers receiving votes, listed alpha- lahoma, UCLA, Texas and Penn betically: Arizona State, Florida State, State to move up one spot apiece Georgia, North Carolina, North Caro- to the 7-8-9-10 berths. lina state, Purdue. Id daily sportsr NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD STUCK Lions' linebacker Mike Lucci re-j covered at the Cowboys 18. Landry rushed eight yards on a keeper, but then it got sticky. Four running plays made only eight yards before the running quarter- back slammed the final two yards for a touchdown to cut the Dallas lead to 14-7. Morton's brilliant first half con- tinued as the Cowboys stormed back with a 66-yard march to make it 21-7. Walt Garrison gained 23 yards in four carries. Then Morton hit Mike Montgomery with a 27- yard screen pass to the Detroit one. Montgomery, taking over for Hill, plunged the final yard for the score with 2:16 left in the half. Detroit made the final seconds count. Earl McCullough threw a 23-yard pass to Charlie Sanders on what started as a reverse play. Then, Landry hit Altie Taylor ,over the middle and the speedster shot to the sidelines on a 40-yard touch- down play. Dallas tried a 49-yard field goal in the final minute but Fritsch's kick was wide to the right. Detroit continued to nibble away up L onS at the Dallas lead in the third quarter. Landry and tight end San- ders hooked up on a 35-yard pass and the Lions moved deep into Cowboy territory, but the Dallas defense stiffened and Errol Mann kicked a 17-yard field goal to make the score 2117. As the third quarter ended, rain began pouring through the 1-acre opening in the Texas Stadium. The Cowboys put the game away with an impressive 76-yard drive in 10 plays in the fourth quarter. Morton hit Fugett with a 19-yard pass to set up his third touchdown pass of the game. He picked up a Lion blitz and found Montgomery open on the left sideline. The pass and run for the score covered 35 yards. Detroit made the final score 28- 24 when Landry passed to Larry Walton for 21 yards and a touch- down with 1:36 remaining on the clock. Season tickets for Michigan basketball and hockey seasons are on sale entitling the Univer- sity's faculty, staff and students to reduced rates for both sports. Although regular reserve ticket prices are $36, staff and faculty general admission tickets for the 18-game hockey schedule a r e $18, students $9. The sale of student basketball season tickets will be announced later. But it can be had, too. Especially when the writer has been in so many press boxes for so many games that he forgets what a large part the crowd plays. Especially at Michigan football games. It's hard to substantiate, but from traveling to other stadia, in and out of the Big Ten, nowhere does the crowd come to the games for pure enjoyment more than a Michigan crowd. In other places, they drink and maybe smoke some dope, but at Michigan, there is an interaction within the crowd and between the crowd and the people on the field that makes games in Michigan Stadium unique. Saturday, for instance, I was talking with Dave Pedersen, sports editor of the Minnesota Daily. I told him about the Home- coming celebrations: the sock hop, the bizzarre parade, the weird things that generally go on in the stadium, and he was quite amazed. At Minnesota, Homecoming is dead, he told me. They didn't bother to change it into something fun, they just let it die. Somehow, the sight of gymnastic coach and alumni cheer- leader Newt Loken being passed up the stands rump for rump with an attractive (in MCP standards) Minnesota cheerleader is a sign that the people in the stands are anything but bored. And sure Whiskey the dog got a big roar when she scored a 90-yard touchdown. After all, it's a DOG pushing a football with its NOSE! If that doesn't deserve a big cheer, neither does Jimi Hendrix playing the guitar with his teeth. Meanwhile, the "boring" accusations are starting to baffle Schembechler and his team. "My players think I'm nuts the way I talk about these other teams, and then we go out and beat them," Bo says. "When I see Colorado coming off that big win over Oklahoma and then losing to Missouri, I really get scared." So Bo makes sure that his players are ready for each and every game. "Our team has not gotten down by looking ahead too far," Bo said Saturday. "We use a goal system to keep the players up all the time." And this year's biggest goal,, which looms larger and larger every week, is a possible showdown for the mythical but ultimately prestigous National Championship with South- ern Cal in the 1973 Rose Bowl. That thought is far back in Bo's mind, but it's there. And he will never sacrifice a chance to be the best in favor of "enter- taining" the fans with some kind of wide-open bomb-throwing Come on. Being number one, now THAT would be exciting. Conference Standings Ivy Stanford 2 2 "0 5 2 0 Washington 2 2 0 6 2 0 Conf All Games Washington State 2 2 0 5 3 0 WLT WL3California 1 4 0 1 7 0 WLT WLT Oregon 1 4 0 2 6 0 Dartmouth 2 0 1 4 0 1 Oregon State 0 4 0 1 7 0 a i Harvard Cornell Yale Brown Penn Columbia Princeton 2 1 S 1 V f 0 I 1 2 2 Mid-American 1 0 0 0 1 0 I I 0 1 1 0 Kent State Bowling Green ! Ohio {Toledo Western Michigan Miami, Ohio w 1 1 L 1 2 2 2 3 1 4 1 4'1 1 4 3 2 1 3 1 3 'N L 3 4 4 2 4 4 5 3 4 3 5. 2 W L 5 1 4 4 3~ 4 5 2 4 3 3 5 1 6 1 0 0 (I 0 1 1 T 1 1 0 0 T 0 0 1 0 0 Texas Arkansas Texas Tech Saylor SMU TC Rice Texas A & M W L 3 0 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 3 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 w 8 s 6 3 4 4 1 L 1 5 1 3 2 3 6 Southwest a N. rti Atlantic Coast North Carolina Duke Clemson North Carolina Maryland Virginia Wake Forest B Nebraska Iowa State Oklahoma State Colorado Oklahoma Missouri Kansas State Kansas Have some lime on W L 3 0 3: 1 2 1 state 2 1 2 2 0 3 0 4 ig Eight W' L 3 0 2 1 21 3 2 1 2 1 3 0 3 T 0 0 1 0 U T 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 Southeastern W L T Alabama 5 0 0 LSU 2 0 0 Auburn 3 1 0 Georgia 3 1 0 Florida 2 1 0 Kentucky 1 3 0 Mississippi 1 3 0 Mississippi State 1 3 0 rennessee 0 2 0 Vanderbilt 0 4 0 W L 7 0 6 0 6 1 5 2 3 2 2 5 4 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 a T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 your hands?. Truck on Daily and +( ness Staff at 420 Maync down to the join the Busi- lard M-F 10-12, M-W-F 2-4, or Call 764-0560 I 'N 5 4 e L i I' 1 1 2 5 5 Pacific Eight Southern Cal UCLA WN L 5 0 4 0 W L 8 0 7 1 NOTICE TO ALL DISPLAY ADVERTISERS Due to space limitations, advertising clos - ing may occur prior to regularly announced deadlines. In all cases, advertising will be accepted on a "first come-first serve" basis. -The Daily Business Staff Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 r f Lf n ^A^r Haea flair for artistic writing? If you are interest- ed in reviewing drama, dance, film, poetry, and music, or writing, feature stories about the arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. FOR JUSTICE SAKu:E. . VNM1 A PROVEN JUDGE to the CIRCUIT COURT BENCH if you see news happen call 76-DAILY ELECT JUDGE f Edward D. DEAKE4 as one of your two new Circuit Court judges for Washtenaw County " 18 yrs. on the bench as Municipal Judge # 4 yrs. on the bench as District Judge * Currently presiding Judge, 14th District * Graduate of Univ. of Michigan Law School * An experienced lawyer 0 Member, Board of Governors, N. American Judges Assn. * Life-long resident of Washtenaw County Promote Judge EDWARD D. DEAKE TO THE CIRCUIT COURT BENCH NON-PARTISAN BALLOT-TUESDAY, NOV. 7 Paid Political Advertisement 0 SPECIAL ORDER A PIZZA TONIGHT and receive o To QKEEP AME 1RIA BRAUNFWL ty ENRY@IBSONt Because it's my country. And it's getting dirty. . "" That's why. - - t.1 *e /f FREE QUART of PEPSI i I. _. _ _._ I