Lake Oconee news. (Greensboro, GA) 199?-current, December 29, 2017, Image 4
A4 Lake Oconee News Friday, December 29,2017 Start the conversation Send us your opinions by Monday at 1 p.m. news@lakeoconeenews.us 11 i| .... trtgf UGA’s Rose Bowl victory and 1942 championship Throughoutthehistoryof college football there have been years of argument and speculation over which team should be named as national champion. In earlier times, the NCAA recognized a number of polls andachampionbefore final bowl games were played. There is still not a universally accepted play off system to settle on the national champion for schools in the largest division. There have also been those pastyears when teams named by the Associated Press as No.l and national champions were defeatedin their final bowl games. For example, Oklahoma lost to Kentucky 13-7 in the 1950 Sugar Bowl; Tennessee was beaten by Maryland 28-13 in the 1951 Sugar Bowl; Minnesota went down 17-7 to Washington in the I960 Rose Bowl; andTexas edged Alabama 21-17 in 1964’s Orange Bowl. Some colleges still claim questionable national championships. To add to the confusion, there are years when multi ple champions were named to include Alabama and Stanfordinl926; Nebraska, Texas and Ohio State in 1970; and Colorado and Georgia Tech in 1990 (to name just a few). And with all the talk about strength of scheduling, it’s not an easy task to determine the best team in all of college football. Maybe that’s why Hank Segars Lakelife Associate Editor the process is sometimes referred to as the “mythical” national championship. A “consensus” national champion is said to be a team selected by over half of the recognized polls during a specific year. Some polls gave votes to UGA in 1927, 1946 and 1968, but other schools won more of the major polls in those partic ular years. The 1980 team, however, is considered to be a consensus national cham pion and for good reasons. “With talents like Lindsay Scott, BuckBelue andfresh- man sensation Herschel Walker,” notes the univer sity’s athletic department, “the Bulldogs recorded a 12-0 season under head coach Vince Dooley. Georgia met Notre Dame in the Sugar Bowl and ran away with the crown after a 17-10 win. The Bulldogs ended the season as the only undefeated, untied Division I-A team in the nation.” SEE SEGARS » A5 Memories from Pasadena When the Georgia team arrived in Pasadena in December 1942, the travel ing party included enough team members for coach Wallace Butts to effect a normal scrimmage, but there were very few non-es sential personnel making the trip. A few of the coaches’ wives went along, includ ing Winnie Butts, the head coach’s spouse. It wasn’t just that there was a war going on; the athletic budget was bare bones, and there were few who could take the time off to spend three weeks on the trip, which is about whatittookconsideringthat Loran Smith Columnist the traveling party made their way west by train and returned the same way. Coaches were allowed to take their wives but not children. ‘We went to Milledgeville and listened to the game on radio at our grandparents’ house,” Faye Butts Jones, coach Wallace Butts’ oldest daugh ter remembers. “I was quite upset about it and still resent that I couldn’t go to Pasadena to this day.” One of Georgia’s most passionate fans is Allison Yeomans, Faye’s daughter, who will be making the trip to the game along with her husband Craig, her daughter Mary Cameron and her first cousin, Jack Murray. Jack’s mother, the late Nancy Murray, was a cheerleader for the Bulldogs, as was her older sister, Jean Jones, who lives in Richmond. A close friend of the Butts family, Frank Troutman, was 8 years old and did make the trip west with his parents, FrankSr. andMary. The younger Troutman was a longtime trustee of the Georgia Student Educational Fund, which preceded the current “Hartman Fund.” F rankwas a competent quarterback in high school, playing for a Butts protege, Wayman Creel, at Northside High in Atlanta. He says proudly, “It was Billy Payne’s father, Porter, who signed me to a scholarship.” Frank played briefly for coach Butts and Georgia. He later gave up the game, but SEE SMITH » A5 New Year's brings back memories It was many years ago - over two decades now - that I attended a writer’s confer ence in hopes of learning how to write a book and get it published. Since I was a small child of 4 or 5, I knew I was born to write and tell sto ries. As you may have read before, my childhood game of pretend was packing the family suitcase (I literally packed my clothes in it) and going to New York on “book business.” In this beloved childhood game, I was Ronda Rich Dixie Divas always warmly welcomed in New York, and the books I wrote were celebrated. I have no idea how a little girl on a farm in the Deep South could know of such things. Still, this is the unvarnished truth. I am grateful to the good Lord that I stayed the path. Years passed, the little red-headed girl grew, gath ered a couple of college degrees, chased adventure and worked some menial jobs. I was past 30 before I picked up the strands of my childhood heart dream and began, in earnest, to seekmy true calling. I signed up for a writer’s conference where New York Times best-selling author, Sharyn McCrumb, was keynote speaker. It was a day that fueled my hopes. I hung on every word. This I shall never forget. She said, “The best way to get published is to actually write. I meet people all the time whowanttobe authors but say, ‘I don’t write. I can’t find the time.’ Well, let me tell you, IhadMOREtimeto write before I was published than I do now.” McCrumb, at the begin ning, was working on a Master’s degree and raising afamily when she wrote her first novel. As she explained, “Now, there are so many demands on my time that came with the success of my books. Speaking engage ments, a publisher who wants more books, book signings. Ihaveto make time to write.” It’s funny how words that have no relevance to you at the time will stick like thick mud to your soul. Those words never left me. After the success of my first book, I found the truth in what she said. Almost 20 years and seven books later, I have found that each year, it is harder to squeeze into my schedule the creation of new books. Thus, I come to what my New Year’s resolution will be: I am bound and determined to return to the roots of my dream. Every morning I set out to do that, SEE RICH » A5 Lake Oconee News General Excellence Award Winner 2015-2016 GEORGIA PRESS ASSOCIATION President / Publisher A. Mark Smith Vice President Jo Ann Smith Vice President, General Manager Mark Smith Jr. Vice President, Circulation Matt Smith Vice President Michael Smith Executive Editor Josh Lurie Associate Editor T. Michael Stone Sports Editor Justin Hubbard Staff Writer Dave Brown Display Advertising Manager Vicki Parker Advertising Representative Anjie Brown Advertising Representative Tom Gorman Advertising Representative Michael Payne Advertising Representative Shannon Thompson Advertising Representative Daniel Harwell Eatonton Messenger Associate Editor Lynn Hobbs Lakelife Editor Beverly Harvey Lakelife Associate Editor Hank Segars National Advertising Manager Amy Hood Legal Advertising/Circulation Becky Meyer Graphic Artist Lindsay Pilcher Graphic Artist Mark Brill Business Manager Cassandra Fowler DEDICATION Battle B. Smith EDITOR AND PUBLISHER 1956-1988 Micky Smith EDITOR AND PUBLISHER 1989-2003 ADVERTISING, NEWS AND INFORMATION Lake Oconee 1106 MARKET ST. • GREENSBORO 706-454-1290 Fax 706-454-1292 Madison 195 W. JEFFERSON ST. 706-342-9833 Fax 706-342-9839 Call 706-485-3501 for subscription information Subscription Rates One Year Two Years Putnam, Morgan, Greene counties $35 $65 Other Georgia counties $45 $80 Out of Georgia $55 $95 Postmaster: Send address changes to the ,1106 Market St., Greensboro, GA 30642. Periodicals postage paid at Greensboro, GA 30642. The (USPS 024-046) is published every Friday by Smith Communications Inc., 1106 Market St., Greensboro, GA 30642. All rights reserved. Reprints by permission of the and individual writers only. State and Federal Elected Officials Gov. Nathan Deal (R) 203 State Capitol Atlanta, GA 30334 (404) 656-1776 Web/e-mail: gagovernor.org Sen. David Perdue (R) B40D Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 Phone: 202-224-3521 Sen. Burt Jones (R) 407 East Second St., Jackson, GA 30233 Phone:(770)775-4880 Fax: (770) 234-6752 Sen. Johnny Isakson (R) United States Senate Washington, D.C. 20510 (202) 224-3643 Rep. Dave Belton (R) 401-B Coverdell Legislative Office Bldg. Atlanta, GA 30334 404.656.0152-Office dc.belton@house.ga.gov Rep. Jody Hice (R) 1516 Longworth House Office Building Washington, DC 20515 Phone: (202) 225-4101 Fax: (202) 226-0776 Rep. Trey Rhodes (R) Room 612-B Coverdell Legislative Office Building Atlanta, GA 30334 404-656-0325 trey.rhodes@house.ga.gov The deadline to submit letters to the editor each week is Monday at 1 p.m. Send letters and other news to news@lakeoconeenews.us