6 Tuesday, November 5, 1974 University Daily Kansan THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS KU was forced by the bamp groundands and the cold weather to have yesterday's footbal game as the opponent. Saturday but was at practice and probably will be able to play this weekend. by Photographer ROGER SLAGLE The Hawks also had a long film session in preparation for the game with Colorado in 2013. Senior guard Gordon Stockemer and sophomore tape Dave Howerton are both slowed with sprained ankles and are doubtful for the game with Colorado. Senior linebacker Dean Baird strained his knee in the game at Oklahoma State last Weather forces practice inside Senior fullback Robert Miller also is doubtful for the game. Bruce Adams, shown here snagging a pass against Tennessee, had his biggest game of the year last weekend against Oklahoma State. He caught five passes and scored KU's second touchdown on a 45-yard punt return. The boos that Adams heard earlier in the season stopped after last week's performance. Sure hands Runners finish 7th in Big 8 meet throughout the season, finished third. Oklahoma State came in fourth. Missouri's Tim McMullen garnered individual honors, touring the five-mile course in 24 minutes, 45.2 seconds and served as senior Tom Schoberg by only two. Before the Big Eight Conference cross country championship race was run in Ames, Iowa, last Saturday, Bob Timmons and his team won, but conceded the title to Oklahoma State. Bill Lundberg, the only KU runner to place in the top 30, was seventh with a time of 25:06. Tim Tobin and Tom Kopkes placed 31st and 33rd, respectively, for the Hawks. Timmons did, however, reserve high positions for the Jayhawks to come out on top and win. Neither was to come to pass. Oklahoma State was unsuccessful in its bid for a third straight championship, and KU finished a dismal seventh. Iowa State and Missouri were coworkers of the conference race with 40 points each. After the race, Timmons said he couldn't explain KU's disappointing finish. "I wish I could put my finger on it," he said. "but we really don't have an excuse." In the short week between homecoming at KU and homecoming at OSU, Adams had transformed from "bum-of-the-week," as we saw earlier, to "week," as the same fans now call him. “It’s kind of conical,” Adams said, “because we’re losing. It doesn’t make me all that happy. I knew the time would come, but it was not.” Then when I could contribute more to the team.” In his career at KU, Adams has caught 80 passes for 1,381 yards and 17 touchdowns. His 17 touchdowns rank first on the all-time KU list. Teammate Emmett Edwards is the only player who has gained more yards through his receptions. Adams made some impressive contributions to the Jayhawk effort last Saturday in shedding his "villain" status, prompting coach Don Fambrough to call his performance "fantastic." Adams accrued 14 assists, two more air attack, and his score on the punt brought the Hawks within five points at the start of the fourth quarter. "It was a return left," Adams said of his touchdown. "The only thing that made it go was the 10 other players. I just caught the ball and ran with it." Homecoming is a special event for football fans. It was also a special event for Bruce Adams. Homecoming at Oklahoma State University last weekend also was special for Adams. He was again waiting for a punt to kick the ball off, and they sat bathgut by OSU's Lewis Field. Adams caught the punt and 45 yards later slugged across the goal line to spark a fourth-quarter Jayhawk drive. He also caught eight Jayhawks' compete passes that afternoon. Kansas fans cheered when Adams caught the ball and ran with it. The week before, when he had not caught the ball, the fans booed. Adams, a senior flanker, waited for an Iowa State punt to reach him. He watched it bounce past him and roll deep into KU territory and he heard for the first time, thousands of normally friendly fans boo him. "Against ISU," he said, "I let one bounce and the fans booed me. He was the first time I had to walk the stairs and I’ve booed, but on the stands and I’ve booed, I used my judgment. I can say is that if you can do a better job, my cat is here, and we’re welcome to try for it." Adams regains fans at OSU homecoming Calculators SR 11 $79^{95}$ Texas SR 10 $69^{95}$ Instruments Berkey/Keystone 4030 TRIG and LOG functions $129^{95}$ 2 Yr Warranty Bartholow Office Supply Ward Parkway Ctr KCMO 816-363-2212 JURYSIDE, CA 91218 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Class RING LIFETIME GUARANTEE FOUR WEEK DELIVERY KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Josten's NOV. 5 & 6 8:30-4:00 "the booing disappointed me. One of the reasons I'm playing is for the crowd. When the fansboo, it's like having your best friend come up and say, 'I don't love you.'" Last Saturday, despite the loss to OSU, former friends of Adams were really again. Whether they will remain friendly for the rest of the season depends in part on how much action Adams sees. The main target for KU quarterback Scott McMichael's aerials this season has been Edwards. "The plays might be coming my way a little bit more now," Adams said. "We're in the middle of the season, and we've been doing some really good stuff. It's opening up my side a little more." "I hope to contribute as much as I can. We're playing for pride now. I think we have our offense back. All we have to do is stop the mistakes and the turnovers." 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