Word: fuzzing
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...damned game in the first place. Not like some of the guys, anyway. Christ, there was one dude who was convinced that every block he threw was a steppingstone to a contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Sure, the Pork daydreamed a little about getting past the last Fuzz safetyman and hauling in a nice, spiralling bomb just as he eased into the end zone at Schaefer Stadium...
...least. A few of the boys had played college ball at Princeton or someplace else where they don't consider football too important. But most of them were hackers, you know. Guys out for a little fun, for charity. It was a casual thing. The Freaks versus The Fuzz in a tackle football game in front of 50,000 people at a $5 top. All of the proceeds go to Project Turnabout, a halfway-house for drug addicts. Beautiful...
...word was that the Fuzz, coached by former Patriot Earthquake Hunt, were deputizing guys, giving them badges so they'd qualify on the surface, at least. Drastic revisionary measurer were needed, and pretty soon these guys from the Malden Colts began showing up at Sunday practice and observing the proceedings. A couple at first, but the number began growing, and after a while the whole damn offense was running through signal drills. A guy named Rick Furbush, who handed off to Ed Marinaro at Cornell for two years, was quarterback. Richie Szaro who sent Furbush home a loser two years...
...nonsense-accusation sequence is a suspect-baiting device Friedkin picked up from Detective Eddie Egan, the cop on whom Doyle's character is based, who plays the narcotics division chief to Russo and Doyle (Gene Hackman) in Connection and who is soon to star in a film vehicle called Fuzz. The incident goes under the generic title "police harrassment" and is, no doubt, only a generalized adaptation from many such episodes in Egan's career...
...course there was always the classic "You Keep Me Hanging On", a hit so big that they were never able to duplicate it. The new arrangements were made long and drawn out by the liberal use of a screaming, powerful Hammond organ and a perhaps too heavy use of fuzz box and wah-wah pedal. The songs were full of three part vocal harmonies and surprising changes in rhythm. But most of all they were psychedelic...