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THE RED AND BLACK, FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1938.
Six
Junior Captain Expected
To Lead '39 Cage Team
The last preview of the ’3 8 Bull
dog k> id team was offered Wednes
day afternoon, as Coaches Hunt and
Butts chose up sides againat Coaches
Lampe and Sikes for an honest to
Koodness regulation game .... the
green line still the problem . . . .
highlight .... Jimmy Kordham's
sparkling run through the entire op
position .... Mims' Injury hurts
plenty .... but It's u good thing It
wasn't one of the linemen . . . .
they’re a lot scarcer than the backs.
Senior captains, shoved aside
once or twice before in University
basketball history, will have to be
side-tracked again next winter
with one of two Juniors—Cecil
Kelly and Alex McCaBklll—prac
tically sure to head the Bulldog
quintet.
Not a single Junior of this year
Is included among the seven letter-
men announced this week by Coach
Elmer Lampe. The letter-winners
are Captain Jack Farren, Olln
Thompson, Lee Richards, and Tom
Kennedy, seniors; and McCaskill,
Kelly, and Knox Eldredge, sopho
mores. Manager Paul Trulock will
also receive a major 0.
Frederiksen’s Conference Tourney Win
Recalls f the Good Old Days’ of Radutzky
Predictions .... that the Bulldog
basketeers will reach the (Inals of
the Southeastern Conference Tour
ney next year .... and that they
will be led by Cecil Kelly, the Ma
con swlfty .... that the Bulldog
football team next fall will disap
point Ignorant alumni who are ex
pecting too much .... but that start
ing In 1939 Georgia will enter u pe
riod of football prosperity that will
establish the University as n school
to bo talked about In the sanio breath
with Pitt, Alabama, and Notre Dame
And with these ruthor brash state
ments, we bow out—we hope, grace
fully .... leaving readers of this col
umn, If any. nt the mercy of Jack
Reid .... who will he, seriously
speaking, one of the best sports ed
itors the R. & B. has ever had . . . .
Jack knows the ropes, he's got his
own Ideas and he knows how to put
them on paper .... So long.
Baseball Aspirants
Hold First Practice
Under Coach Sikes
Soccer Title Taken
By SAE; Sigma Nu
Is Bowling Winner
By Mike Drane
Henry Frederiksen, classy little
lightweight of the Bulldog boxing
team, reached the pinnacles of col
legiate fistic success on last Friday
and Saturday, when he fought his
way to the lightweight championship
of the Southeastern Conference.
The winning of this crown marked
the first triumph of this sort for
Georgia since the days of 1935 when
Mickey Radutzky was spreading ter
ror among rival welterweights.
Frederiksen, three-letter star who
halls from New Jersey, considers him
self very lucky to be king of the 135
pounders.
“It was Just plain luck and that’s
all,” he said.
The comment of New Orleans
sports writers, however, gave the
Georgia star the edge on the best
boxers of the entire tournament.
In the course of victory, Frederik
sen fought three fights. His first
bout Friday afternoon was an easy
By Jack Dorsey
Under the direction of Jimmy
Sikes. Georgia's new baseball coach,
the first diamond practice of the
1938 season was held yesterday on
Sanford Field.
About 35 candidates, including
such veterans as George Stallings;
Richards and Carroll Thomas,
catchers; and Jim Davis and Wallace
Miller, pitchers, were on hand for
the initial drill.
On the other hand, the Bulldogs
lose several stars this year, and
Conch Hike's will he faced with the
problem of replacing such capable
performers as John Rucker, Alf An
derson, Coot Vandiver, Albert Col
lins, and Billy Mims. Rucker, out
standing third baseman of last year's
nine, was recently signed by the At
lanta Crackers; Anderson and Col
lins have graduated; while Mims and
Vandiver will be kept out of play by
football injuries.
Opening the season with a pair of
games against the strong Michigan
State nine In Athens March 28 and
29, Georgia will meet seven oppon
ents during a 21 game schedule
Other teams on the slate are Ohio
University, Cletnson. Auburn, Ogle
thorpe, Florida, and Tech.
The complete schedu'e is ns fol
lows: March 28-29, Michigan State
in Athens; March 30-Aprll 1, Ohio
University in Athens; April 8-9,
Cletnson at Clemson, S. C.; April 15-
lti. Oglethorpe In Athens; April 18-
19. Clemson In Athens; April 22-23,
Auburn at Auburn, Ala.; April 26-
27, Oglethorpe in Atlanta; April 29-
Sti. Florida at Gainesville, Fla.; May
6-7. Auburn in Athens; May 13. Tech
in Atlanta; May 14. Tech in Athens;
May 20. Tech in Atlanta; and May
21. Tech In Athens.
Golf Meet Interest
Continues to Mount
Fourth Annual Southern Intercbl-
legiate Golf Tournament, to be
staged under the auspices of the Uni
versity of Georgia over the Athens
Country Club course April 21-22-23,
is showing every sign of continuing
Its constantly growing appeal.
Three new teams—University of
Pennsylvania. University of Pitts
burgh. and University of Tennessee
Junior College—have already signi
fied their intention of entering this
spring's tourney and the 16 schools
competing last year are expected to
be back en masse.
Staging a whirlwind finish for the
quurter, 8. A. K. this week won one
major title nnd one second place In
the Intramural competition to become
one of the leading contenders for the
new Rivers Trophy.
The first honor for the defending
cup champions came Wednesday
when the fraternity soccer team tri
umphed over Lambda Chi Alpha, 3
to 0, in the tournament finals. Tony
Solms, Lester Lee, and Rex Saffold
crossed the goal line for the winners.
S. A. E. and Lambda Chl Alpha reach
ed the finals by previous wins over
Sigmu Nu and K. A., respectively.
Sigma Nu experienced little diffi
culty In copping the bowling trophy
offered to the intramural winner.
Tho champion trio consisted of Jack
Ezell, Harold Barron, and Jimmy
Griffin. In the playoff to determine
the winner of second place in tho
bowling competition. S. A. E. gained
Its second victory of the week by
downing Milledge Hall, 2 to 0, In a
"best two-out-of-three games” series.
Bill Little, Wadsworth McGInty, und
Croswell Smith compose the S. A. E.
team.
Director F. 11. Frost announced
that softball will he the first sport
on tho Intramural program for the
spring quarter. Play will probably
begin on April 4. Frost said.
Georgia Tank Star
Branded as Tarzan
In Bill Walters, varsity free-style
swimmer. Georgia can lay claim to a
"double” to Johnny Weismuller, of
movie and swimming fame. Because
of his remarkable resemblance to
Weismuller, Walters has become the
recipient of the title "Tarzan,” and
the name has stuck.
"Tarzan,” Incidentally, is the great
est freestyle swimmer in Bulldog
history. To date, Walters has not
been defeated in intercollegiate com
petition and is the favorite to cop
both the 60 and 100 yard freestyle
titles In the coming Southeastern
Conference meet.
Hunt CaBs Training
To Temporary Halt
Joel Hunt, Georgia's youthful foot
ball mentor, Wednesday checked off
six weeks of uninterrupted spring
football practice and immediately
began figuring the best time to con
tinue the spring drills next quarter.
“I am well pleased with the man
ner In which the players have ac
quainted themselves with the new
coaching setup and the new plays.
We have accomplished a lot of work
in a short time, but don't think for
a moment there isn’t plenty more
work ahead.”
The lone adverse note to Wednes
day's adjournment came when Billy
Mims, sophomore tnilback, sustain
ed two cracked transverse vertebrae
processes In a game-length scrimmage
which saw the first team defeat the
second stringers, 18-6. Other in
juries were of minor extent.
decision .over Biggers of Florida. On
Friday night he defeated Rosenthal
of L. S. U. and was pitted in the
finals Saturday against Long, of Mis
sissippi, who was doped to win the
lightweight division. It was the
Georgian's best fight as he side-step
ped, feinted, and Jabbed his way to
impressive win over the hard hitting
Mississippi fighter.
Forestry Club Elects
The Forestry Club elected the fol
lowing men as officers for the spring
quarter at a meeting Tuesday night
in Conner Hall: Clyde H. Bynum,
Auburn, Ala., president; Henry Wil
liams, Plains, vice-president; David
Dyer, Millen, secretary; William R.
Brown, Presley, parliamentarian and
critic, and Jack Loizeaux, Tonson,
Md., and Albert M. Elton, Newport,
Ark., athletic managers.
GLOYD’S
Announcing
The
Agency for
ADAMS
HATS
$2-95
Smart Campus Styles
for Men
GLOYD’S
Look lor YOURjm
Judge Willard M. Benton, Kansas
City, national president of the Alpha
Tau Omega fraternity, and Stewart
D. Daniels, Champain, III., executive
secretary, lunched with the Alpha
Beta chapter at its house on Hill
street last Friday.
SPECIAL DISPLAY
Ns. A9 SO
STANDARD . $1 00
CARBURETOR Si 25
STEM6ITER . $1.25
IMPERIAL . Sl.SO
VOUR dealer now
*■ hat this big assort
ment of 1938 Yello-Bole
styles — see it today.
Yello-Bole was made to
smokers of
25-501 pipes that they
can get more pipe-
picasurv if they buy this
honey-cured briar for $1.
We've increased pro
duction 8 times because
so many men find Yello-
Bole better. Starts sweet,
stays sweet. 500 styles.
BOLE
If it’s the newest thing in
Spring Suits you’re after—
See Muse's Tweeds!
They’re new .... they’re smart ....
they’re TOPS on every campus: See
Muse’s tweed suits--with sport back
and two pair of trousers. New her
ringbone patterns, new colors ....
and at least one tweed
suit for every college man!
Young Men’s Department—3rd Floor
George Muse Clothing Company
The Style Center of the South
• 10 O. I BAT OM
On All the Campuses Men Want
Bush Jackets
Bradleys Sport Informals
to Take the Place of Coats
Coot
Smart
Comfortable
I.V3
It’s a natural, this bush jacket style, because it combines com
fort and good looks so perfee^y. You’ll wear one without coat
or shirt—ou campus, to sport dances, for any informal oc
casion. Best when worn with scarf or neckerchief. They are
made of rough weave cotton in a light natural color; with
four pleated, button-down patch pockets. Full belt of the
cotton fabric fastens with metal rings. Small, medium, and
large sizes.
MEN S SHOP—MAIN FLOOR
MICHAEL’S