8 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, October 30, 1968 1 Field hockey now gaining popularity By DICK DEAN Kansan Sports Writer At one time field hockey was only popular in the New England states, but in the past few years it has gained popularity westwar1, especially in larger cities and on college campuses. Dolores A. Copeland, sponsor of the Women's Intramurals Association, is the coach of the KU women's team and has it entered in several meets with other colleges and field hockey clubs. Each team has 11 members who play two 30-minute halves with no substitutions allowed except at halftime or in case of an injury. The object of the game is to move a ball, with a hockey stick, the length of a football field and across the opponent's goal line. One point is awarded for a goal. The total number of goals scored in a single game is low, sometimes only one or two. There is no special equipment worn by the players with exception of the galee who has extra protection on the legs and chest. Tuesday the team travels to Emporia to play the Kansas State Teachers College. They are also entered in a two-day Kansas City Field Hockey Club tourney November 9th and 10th. KU will participate with teams representing colleges from Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. The Kansas State College at Pittsburg will host a meet with teams from Missouri and Kansas entered on November 16th. The following day the squad returns to Lawrence to meet the Kansas City Field Hockey Club in a game which will be played on the second lot east of Robinson Gymnasium at 2:30 p.m. Winning Underdogs NEW YORK (UPI) Only two teams which were not ranked in the top 10 at the end of the regular season have captured the NCAA basketball championship. They were California in 1959 and City College of New York in 1950. TONY'S 66 SERVICE Be prepared— get antifreeze! 2434 Iowa V1 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 A NEW TASTE! Cheese Cider and Donuts Drop in today and enjoy a delicious treat. Mister Donut® 523 West 23rd 842-9563 DALLAS (UPI)—The temperature was about 68 degrees warmer, but it didn't make any difference—there was simply too much Bart Starr for the Dallas Cowboys to handle. Packer's Starr masters Cowboys again "Starr was exceptional," sighed Cowboys Coach Tom Landry in the wake of the Starr-sparked 28-17 triumph by the old champ Green Bay Packers over the Cowboys in their nationally-televised "return bout" Monday night in the Cotton Bowl. Landry was plain wrong—it just isn't exceptional for Starr to beat the Cowbys. In fact, something Starr did once before was the big reason the Cowboys wanted to win this one so badly. Sure, they wanted to keep their perfect 1968 record going—but most of all, they wanted to show they had recovered from last year's National Football League title game in which Starr beat them on a last-second quarterback sneak. This time the Packer quarterback didn't even have to resort to last-second heroics. He merely tossed four touchdown passes, completing 17 of 25 passes for a total of 260 vards. If anything, he was more brilliant in the 55-degree weather of the Cotton Bowl than he was in the bonechilling 13-below at Green Bay in the title game. Starr returned from two weeks of rest to fire two TD aerials to tight end Marv Fleming, three yards and 32 yards, and also connected with a 26-yard scoring throw to Carroll Dale and a five-yarder to Boyd Dowler. The Cowboys, suffering their first loss after six wins despite taking an early 10-0 lead, scored on two touchdown passes by Don Meredith and a 16-yard field goal by Mike Clark. The two big results: ... The Packers climbed into a tie with the Detroit Lions for first place in the NFL's Central Division with 3-3-1 records. ... It continued the Packers' fantastic mastery of the Cowboys. Green Bay has beaten the cowpunchers in all six regular season meetings, two championship faceoffs, and five out of GOODYEAR TIRES Passenger Tires 25% Off All Major Oil Brands Wheel Alignment & Balancing Complete Mechanical Service Brake Adjustment 98¢ Grease Job $1.50 Motor Tune-up with Sun Equipment. Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 If The Shoe Fits REPAIR IT 8th ST. SHOE REPAIR 105 E. 8th 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Lawrence Lumber Headquarters for your Homecoming Supplies. seven times in exhibition play. 19th and Massachusetts V1 3-1341 For Dallas, this time there was the regret that quarterback Don Meredith was forced to play almost half the game with a broken nose—the result of a face-mask tackle by Willie Davis. "The injury was a freak thing," said Meredith. "I'm sure he didn't mean to." The key play in the game came with 10:20 left in the fourth period and Dallas, trailing by only 21-17, had just taken over on its own 22. With 74,604 fans sensing a Cowboy victory drive, Meredith handed off to Craig Baynham, who drove off left guard—and fumbled. Middle linebacker, Ray Nitschke recovered for Green Bay and two plays later, Starr pitched his fourth TD pass of the night to Fowler. Patronize Kansan Advertisers TRAVEL TIME LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Thanksgiving and Christmas Reservations now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 sua Presents- 1968 Away Games Bus Trips Kansas vs. K-State November 16 November 16 Cost—$9.50, includes game ticket Be there with the SUA bus trip to watch us kill Purple Pride Make your reservation in person at SUA office THE CRITICS' CHOICE HiFi/Stereo review "... the low frequency speaker has exceptionally low bass distortion ... the tone burst response of the AR-2a+ gave further evidence of its excellent quality . . . comes remarkably close to matching the AR-3." record guide "Clean, balanced and wide range . . . from under 50 cycles to beyond audibility this speaker will reproduce what is fed to it with clarity and with honesty . . . Its strengths lie in an unusual smoothness and lack of any harshness whatsoever." high fidelity "The bass line is, as we have come to expect from AR, exemplary: well-defined and clean. The highs are quite open . . . strong fundamental bass to just below 40 Hz. 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