% y 49ers’ 49 destroy MiaMarino in Super Bowl XIX Associated Press I STANFORD, Calif. — II there is a league higher than the National 'Football League, the Miami Dol phins will be glad to nominate |oe Montana and the San Francisco j}9ers for membership. Like a surgeon teaching his craft toa medical student, Montana made |*,i shambles of his quarterback show down with Dan Marino and the ll9eis demolished the Dolphins 38- 16 Sunday in Super Bowl XIX, leav ing no question that the 49ers are the TJFL’s Super team. ■ “Dan Marino is a great quar terback, but in mv mind Joe Mon tana is the best quarterback in the game today and maybe of all time,” said an exultant 49er Coach Bill Walsh. “Marino will have his day, but this was Montana’s day and this was a San Francisco 49er year.” “Without a doubt, this is the best football team in the National Foot ball League today,” Walsh added. “I think it’s one of the best teams of all time.” The record book will verify that. The 49ers finished with an NFL-re- cord 18 victories against one loss, and Montana, who entered the day as the league’s No. 2 quarterback be hind Marino, emerged No. 1. He threw three touchdown passes and ran for another and set Super Bowl records with his 331 yards passing and 59 yards rushing on five scrambles to win the MVP award for the second time in four years. He had exemplary help from Walsh’s bag-of-tricks offense; from fullback Roger Craig, who caught two TD tosses and ran for a record third score, and from a defense whose pressure on Marino exceeded anything a Dolphin opponent had been able to do in this record-break ing season. “Our team did not rise to the occa sion,” Miami Coach Don Shula said. “They’re a heckuva offensive foot ball team and we did not have the answer.” Marino was intercepted twice and sacked four times. In two NFL sea sons, Marino had not been sacked more than three times; he had been dumped only 13 times in 18 games this season and not at all in two play off games. “I think our whole offensive unit was great,” Montana said. “We were hearing all week long about Miami and ‘how are you going to stop them?’ I don’t think people were thinking about our offense. That probably helped us.” The game was portrayed as a dream contest between the NFL’s two best teams, but the 49ers were clearly better. And for this day at least, so was Walsh in his “genius” match with Mi ami’s Don Shula. In fact, the game was competitive only in the first period. Miami took a 3-U lead on the fust of three field goals by Uwe von Scha- mann, lost it on a 33-yard TD pass from Montana to reserve running back Carl Monroe, then got it back again on a brilliantly executed six- play, 70-yard drive engineered by Marino. But that 10-7 first quarter lead lasted only until Montana got the ball back. By halftime it was 28-16, by midway through the third period, 38-16. That was fine with most of the 84,059 fans in Stanford Stadium, just 30 miles south of the 49ers’ home base at Candlestick Park. But there were other heroes be sides Montana. His offensive line allowed him to be sacked only once and more often See SUPER, page 9 MMV Texas ASM _ « a The Battalion Serving the University community 81 No. 79 LISPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Monday, January 21, 1985 hanged Cold freezes outdoor inaugural fesitivities ecti'oro, of your irs?” ^imkI ula g out” isi i.u pronwi 'UidenM t hemsek e Corps t meet all it ps with« ng out to; hod <*1 fa major ai leu arestj mlnitmu l.isMTian! ■s him (to ppmgoW i hr modti llmg at 9 lc uhippit eals in Waco reversed the decision jy the District Court, thereby giving Texas A&M ownership and control over the licensing of the University’s service marks. Unless the court denies the mo tion, the Court of Appeals will have to t etry the case. In May and June, 1981, Texas A&M applied for and was granted certificates of registration by the Sec retary of State for the following set v- ice marks: Texas Aggies, ATM, TAMU, the seal of Texas A&M, Gig’ Em Aggies, the ring crest and Old Sarge. Registration gives the University authority to license the manufactur ers and exact royalties for their use of the marks, Associate Justice Vic Hall said. “The point is, the manufacturers were making money off of our name and we weren’t getting anything,” Genevieve Stubbs, Texas A&M se nior staff attorney, said. Several years ago. National Foot ball League teams began protecting their service marks. “In my mind; that really kicked it off,” Barry Nelson, manager of ad ministrative services, said. “Then the colleges came in.” UCLA and USC were two of the first schools to register their marks'. “You could find more UCLA and USC things in Japan than in Calif or nia,” Stubbs said. The license requires the manufac turer to pay Texas A&M a royalty fee, normally six percent of the total net selling price of the products, Nelson said. As full'owner of the marks, the University also has the right to main tain quality and tasteful manufactur ing standards, Stubbs said. i-• However' in August 1984.'Toeilf bookstores filed a suit in the District Court “seeking a declaration or find ing b\ the trial court that appellant (the University) is not the owner of the service marks in question, an or der cancelling the registrations, and an injunction permanently enjoining die University from licensing and collection royalties for the use <>l the marks,” Hall said. 1 he merchants claimed the marks belong to the state, not the Univer sity, that the licensing is similar to imposing a tax. and that business would be hurt because the prices would have to be raised, Stubbs said. On March 7, 1983, the trial court cancelled the registration numbers, except the University seal and the ring c iest, based on the trial court’s findings that Texas A&M is not the owner of the marks because it has not used (he marks, Hall said. “In trademark law, ii you don’t use it, you lose it,” Stubbs said. “The only way to take it away from us is by showing that we didn’t use it .” In fact, the University has been using “Texas Aggies” since 1920, “Gig’ Em Aggies” since 1931, ’’Old Sarge” since 1939, and “A TM” and “T AMU” since 1965. “They admitted that we used the marks,” Stubbs said. “And even if they didn’t admit it, w'e have enough evidence that, we did.” The reversal by the Court of Ap peals gives the University complete control over the service marks. Tims tar, the royalty has earned the University over $143,000, Stubbs said. I he money will go to student or ganizations that are not state fun ded,” Nelson said. “I don’t believe the majority, of the Aggies care if they pay a few more pennies if they know that the money is going back to them,” Stubbs said. Record lows set throughout Texas Associated Press A vicious Arctic cold front dropped temperatures into the teens and 20s over wide sections of Texas on Sunday — a stark contrast to the balmy, spring-like readings that graced the state earlier in the weekend. T he front arrived Saturday, dropping temperatures 30 degrees in a matter of a few hours. Howling w ind gusts up to 77 mph caused scat tered power outages between Dallas and Wic hita Falls. The National Weather Service reported wind chill factors as low as 55 degrees below zero as the front charged across the state. The themometer dipped to 10 degrees early Sunday in Abilene — breaking by one degree the record low for the date set in 1888. At the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, the mercurv dropped from 67 degtees to 36 between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. Saturday Shortly before 7 a.m., the airport reported an I I-degree reading, breaking a 22-year-old record lor the date. Bill Alexander, a weather service forecaster in Fort Worth, said most of Texas “w'on’t see anything above freezing before Tuesday.”