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PAOB TWELVE
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17. 1MMS
THE WAY I SEE IT
Students Discuss Game Officiating
By Burt McBurney and Harry Stathos
Freshman Not Only Admires
New Cars—But Designs Them
By Gene Owens
Officiating at Georgia’s homo games could stand some improvement, according to the majority of
students polled at the FSU game Monday night. Only two people backed up the men in striped shirts
while six criticized them in answer to the query, “What do you think of the referees at Georgia basket-
The modern automobiles with twin exhausts and full wheel cut-outs
may be chrome-trimmed dream cars to their owners, but there’s one
University student who not only admires them—he designs them.
IN THE WHOLE
WIDE WORLD—
LIKE CHESTERFIELD
C Lsactt ft Unu - — t „
Whitaker Gold
SARA ANNE WHITAKER, Har
lem: "I don't think we should criti
cize the referees. If everybody would
try officiating a same, maybe they
wouldn't complain so much.”
Professor Receives
Grant for Research
M. K. Fort, math professor, has
received a grant of $6500 from the
National Science Foundation, Wash
ington, D. C., for support of research
work being done In the University
math department.
The grant Is one of 120, totaling
$1,600,000, announced by the Foun
dation. The money will be used to
pay math assistants and defray trav
el expenses. It will also pay substi
tute Instructors when Fort Is taking
a leave of absence to continue his
research.
James Andrews and Dean Boswell,
graduate students in the math de
partment, will assist Fort In the re
search work.
The National Science Foundation,
a federal agency, nwards grants an
nually to Institutions which have
shown outstanding results in re
search. The main aim of the Foun
dation is to better educate and pro
mote the scientists of America.
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ball gamest”
Humphreys Blau
JANE HUMPHREYS, Macon:
"They were good generally, but one
was Just a little bit too quick on the
whistle. I sure hated to see Georgia
lose to the Semlnoles after coming
so close.”
JOHN BLAU, Lawrence, N. Y.:
“The referees this year have been
pretty poor. We ought to get some
new ones that are younger and more
efficient.”
JERRY GOLD, Patterson, N. J:
“The officials are pretty fair, but
they tend to slightly favor the home
team. They often listen to the crowd
on questionable decisions. That goes
for all the officials In the Southeast
ern Conference as a whole.”
Payne Reese
JEANNINE PAYNE, Gainesville:
I think that a few games have been
refereed well, but some of the refe
rees have missed some things and
have neglected to call some that were
obvious. I know it must be hard to
referee, hut I still think they could
do better."
HAROLD REESE, Atlanta: "They
allow too much roughness. They sel
dom ever call walking or double-
dribbling penalties on either team.”
ROY WILKINS, Dalton: “I think
they’re doing all right, although I
have seen better officiating even at
high school games. Like I say, it
could be better, but as long as Geor
gia wins the game, it’s okay by me.”
JEAN BRIDGES, Thomaston: “I
guess as a whole they've been okay.
Refereeing must be a pretty hard job
and I suppose people shouldn’t be so
hard on them.”
Wilkins
Bridges
Abe Goll, a freshman from Wee-
hawken, N. J., has attracted the in
terest of one of America's top three
automobile manufacturers with his
designs and plaster-of-parls models
of the car which he hopes some day
to put on the road.
Abe, a Polish-born American, be
lieves that automotive design as an
art is just coming into its own.
"Previously, companies designed
the working parts and then put a
body down over them,” he explains.
"But now they design a car and then
plan the engine and its component
parts to suit the body.”
Although he sees little to criticize
in today's American designs, Abe
thinks that some of the earlier mod
els have also shown considerable styl
ing merit.
Abe is a rear-engine enthusiast and
has a number of designs which are
characterized by long rear decks.
Whether or not this is the motif that
will fit in with the forthcoming gas
turbine and atom-powered engines
remains to be seen.
But if the prospective designer has
his ambition fulfilled, the University
campus parking lots may be sporting
some of his designs in the future.
enjoy FREE poOL
AT
COSTA’S Recreation Center
Two games for the price of one. You pay for first game, play
the second game FREE. No limit to number of games, either
snooker or pocket billiards.
COSTA’S RECREATION CENTER
Student Amusement Headquarters