<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8801010134
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880102
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, January 02, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
8D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Chart
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
WHITE, MCALLISTER: PARTNERS IN GREEN FOREVER
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
PASADENA, Calif. -- They will see each other again some day, maybe 20 or
30 years from now, at a picnic or a party or an alumni function. Bobby
McAllister, the quarterback. Lorenzo White, the tailback.  They will laugh and
slap  backs, remember this story and that story. And maybe, when no one is
looking, Lorenzo will drop into a three-point stance and take a make- believe
handoff from Bobby and do a  juke here, a juke there, the way they did it back
at Michigan State, the way they did it this year, the way they did it Friday,
in MSU's 20-17 victory in the Rose Bowl, their last game together.

  Here was White, taking the ball and diving, spinning, gulping yardage,
dancing into the end zone, twice in the first half alone.  Here was
McAllister, dropping back, heaving a missile downfield, 55  yards to Andre
Rison, a beautiful pass, and slapping hands with White, who two plays later
took the ball in for a touchdown.  The ball seemed to be their personal
potato, tossed and handed and carried  between the two of them. White.
McAllister.

  Partners in green.
  The best parts of college are the memories you take away, and from the very
start, when McAllister and White were placed in the  same freshman dormitory
room, they began building memories. There was the picture of the Heisman
Trophy that White cut out and taped on their door, next to the photos of him
and McAllister.
  "One  of us is gonna win that some day," White said.
  There were the meals together, the consoling each other after bad
practices, the nights they spent just lying around, feet dangling off their
beds,  talking about how "one day we're gonna be the stars of this team."
  "That was all we talked about that year," said McAllister, laughing, a day
before the Rose Bowl.
  White's side of the room had  the posters of the running backs.
McAllister's had the posters of the quarterbacks. When White broke into the
lineup first, became a star early, gaining 172 yards in his ninth game,
McAllister was there  to congratulate him.
  And last month, at the MSU Football Bust, when McAllister was introduced --
finally the starter, finally a star -- and the room exploded into standing
ovation, White smiled.  His buddy, too, had come of age.
  "Actually," joked McAllister about that ovation, "I didn't know who they
were clapping for. I thought Lorenzo was behind me or something."
  Lorenzo behind him.  How many times in this magical MSU season had they
lined up that way? How many times had McAllister slapped the football into
White's belly, or White caught a McAllister pass, or thrown a block so his
quarterback could spring free. White, the tailback. McAllister the
quarterback.
  Partners in green.
  It wasn't always that way. They grew up as rivals at Florida high schools,
White at Dillard  High in Fort Lauderdale, McAllister at Ely High in Pompano
Beach a few miles north. Each had a nice legend going in his senior year. And
when their two teams met at the end of the season, it was a showdown.
  "We were both playing for Florida Player of the Year," recalled White. "We
kinda knew whoever had the better game would win it."
  "Yeah," added McAllister. "I threw for 235 yards and three touchdowns.  But
Lorenzo ran for 340 yards and two touchdowns. And his team won, 21-20."
  He rolled his eyes.
  "I don't have to tell you who won Florida Player of the Year."
  At that time, they knew each  other only as rivals. Neither was aware of
the others' intention to go to Michigan State. Neither dreamed they would be
sharing the football in Pasadena four years later. White was, and is, a
soft-spoken  young man, powerful with a football and content to leave it that
way. McAllister is more vocal, a more natural leader, quick to laugh, quick to
respond to criticism. They meshed in the huddle as comfortably  as they did in
that freshman dormitory. "Lorenzo's so quiet," McAllister said, "there was
never a problem with leadership. If I called a play, he did it, no questions
asked. And of course, he did it  great."
  White, the tailback.  McAllister, the quarterback. They were nicknamed
"The Florida Conenction" when they first arrived, and Friday, for the last
time, the Florida Connection lined up together  -- this time in California
sunshine -- for a crack at the mountaintop, the Rose Bowl.
  And this morning, it is over. College goes quickly. White, despite his
on-field brilliance, fell short in his  quest for the Heisman Trophy. He
finished fourth.  McAllister, with one year of eligibility left, jokes now
that "he must be the one who wins it."
  But that is the future. This is what has passed:  four years together,
former rivals, now friends for life, and for all the hype and melee and
screaming crowds, this, friendship, is still largely what college is all
about. Twenty years from now? Thirty years from now? At that picnic, when they
get together, oh, the memories they will share.
  "You know," said McAllister, eyeing his teammate, "all freshman year he had
to have the window open. He loves  the cold breeze. I don't know why. He'd
open the thing before he went to bed, then I'd wait 'till he was asleep and
close it, then he'd wake up and open it. Then I'd wake up and close it, and  .
. .  
  See what we mean?
Game by game with Lorenzo
Lorenzo White rushed for 1,572 yards in 12 games this season, an average of
131 per game. Here's how he did it.
1.  Southern Cal  111
2.  Notre  Dame  51
3.  Florida State  84
4.  Iowa    166
5.  Michigan   185
6.  Northwestern  187
7.  Illinois    67
8.  Ohio State  80
9.  Purdue    144
10.  Indiana    292
11. Wisconsin   92
12. Rose Bowl  113
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
MSU;ROSE BOWL;COLLEGE;FOOTBALL;LORENZO WHITE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
