Friday, lanu©ry 9, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page seven Friday, January 9, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page ~even Oran 0 W/:Zs The Sooners By LEBA HERTZ STRAIGHT from the Florida sunshine tree, strutting down Biscayne Boulevard, leading a battalion of flag bearing band members, America's own Anita Bryant heralded the opening of the King Orange Jamboree Pa- rade with her rendition of I'm a Yankee Doodle Dandy and It's a Grand Old Flag. And the crowd loved it. In the 42nd annual Orange Bowl parade, over 600,000 spec- tators watched as 32 floats and 25 bands glittered and shone in what was to be a prelude to the showdown between Oklahoma and Michigan and the National Championship. With such showstoppers as McDonald's Boston Tea Party, Burger King's Architects of Freedom, and Michigan and Oklahoma's marching bands, the crowds showed their approval with thunderous applause. W7HISTLES and hoots greeted Copverstone's float of smil- ing bathing beauties as it pass- ed the obviously excited crowd. When Michigan's band passed the grandstand, partisan fans waved homemade "Go Blue" annenrs and their choruses of "Hail to the Victors" drowned out the other bands. Oklahoma fans were no less ouiet. Boomer Sooner r a n g through the bleachers and the entrance of Big Red, super fan, riding in his vintage crimson car, sent the crowd into a fever pitch. Just as the parade was its usual sparkling pool of indul- gence, the Orange Bowl game also lived up to its hype. The momentum accelerated immedi- ately prior to kickoff, when Sooner and Wolverine fans real- ixed that mighty Ohio State was ,bo'it to be upset by the UCLA Bruins. Suddenly, the Orange Bowl herame a battle for the cweted National Championship. A S PREDICTED by sports an- alysts, the game became a d11f nsive strug-le. Quarterback ck Leach and running back Cnrdon Bell were stifled by the strong and quick Oklahoma de- fsn. At the same time, Mich- )'s bhivhl touted defense was --,ressivelv containing t h e S--r's nriaier runner, Joe W s' irngton. But a few big plays, highlight- Sbetter ed by a stunning 39 yard touch- The people of all ages who down run by Oklahoma's un- donated their sweat and blood heralded Billy Brooks, pushed seemed to breathe a collective the momentum over to the Soon- sigh of relief and satisfaction at ers. When the game was over, the extravanganza's end. An- and the confetti had floated to tiqu relics and 18th century the ground, there was no ques- uniforms were tucked away to tion as to who was the best be used for other Bicentennial team in the nation. celebrations. The parade's glittering patrio- But the greatest victory seem- tism and commercialism was ed to belong to the corporations revived and intensified during who sponsored their "spare no the half-time show. Continuing expense" floats. They had shone the Odyssey to Freedom and l-ke never before. All the maga- Bicentennial theme, the Orange zine and television ads in the Bowl Committee staged a half- world could not surpass par- time affair which could put the ticipation in the parade for pure Rockettes to shame, p.r. value. Beneath a cloud of American figs waving in the cool Miami (['LOAKED IN a tribute to air tutu clad dancers, baton '" America's revolution, the pa- twirlers, spruced up bands, rode and bowl activities were in fancy floats, and Uncle Sam reality an ovation to America's converged on the playing turf commercial past. America had in one cymbal-crashing, cannon- changed from the days of "Give blasting tribute to America's me Liberty or Give me Death." 2001h anniversary. The Bowl festivities were more interested in flaunting America's XND SO IT was-another pa- f u 11 e s t pagentry, and gilded rade, another game, another snlendor. Riding high above the year, and another heartbreaking parade and half-time show, defeat for a Michigan team overshadowing the simple fun which season after season just of a college football game, was can't seem to clinch the big one tie belief that money buys hap- to ice the cake. p:ness.