Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
Z{je ReD anti Ulark
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 19.V5
Frosh To Meet Baby Fide;
Charnlev Out for Season
Passing by Young,
Garrard's Rushing
Harper Leads Bulldog Odense
On Long Touchdown .Marches
Lead Bulldog Team
* I When the going got rough with Alabama, and Coach \\ allace Butts
Georgia's freshman football team will take on Alabama’s Baby Tide Bobby Garrard, captain and saw t j lat t j, e c h ar .ri n o- Tide line wasn’t one to pass against, he called
tomorrow in Tuscaloosa in what will be the second game of the season fullback of the Georgia Bulldogs Qn Q uar terbaek James Harper. Immediately Harper led the Bulldogs
for each team. leads the team in total rushing of- 0|1 a 70-yard scoring drive.
The Bullpups. who tied Auburn In end. quarterback and fullback, will fense after eight games. He led four more touchdown drives Harper came to Georgia in' 1952
their first game, will be playing with- he at one of the flank posts. Garrard has carried the ball 81 be fore the final scoreboard siren after making All-Southern and All-
out the services of Hobby Churnley. Scouting reports rate Alabama tlmes for a net gatn of 349 yar <}g. went off American Honorable Mention in his
u’ooi strong in the middle of the line. ,, . , .
" es t" _ Quarterback Dick Young is lead-
‘especially at tackle where Don Owens
and Dave Sington operate. The Tide ’ nK * n ’* le Passing department with
line held Auburn to very little yard- 636 yards. Y'oung has completed 36
age on the ground, causing the Baby „{ 77 aerial attempts for six toueh-
Tigers to take to the air for their
quarterback from Atlanta's
minster High. Charnley suffered a
broken collarbone in a pile-up in last
Saturday's scrimmage, and will he
out for the remainder of the season.
Otherwise. Coach "Speck" Landrum scores,
says his boys are healthy and ready
to go.
Landrum said he will start three
native Alabamans in the game. Glen
Nunley, Huntsville, will probably get
Also, the Red Elephants have a
good offense led by Boh Jackson, an
All-American in high school. Jack-
son has been getting a lot of help
from Chuck Jackson who has been
the call at quarterback, Jim Butler, running from the right halfback
Huntsville, will open at center and
Jimmy Sealey. Columbia, who plays
EARL WILSON’S
SINCLAIR
SERVICE STATION
Specialized ft
Lubrication
Washing
605 W. Broad
position.
Ray Bush, t
horse in last
the llullpups.
week's practice.
'Dogs l’lay In Seven Howls
Georgia’s
participated
howl games.
football Bulldogs have
in seven post season
downs.
Ku-hlni:
No.
G
L Net
TD
Garrard. FB
81
353
4 349
3
Dukes, RH
28
175
6 169
1
Culpepper, FB
33
147
3 144
0
Tarleton, l.H
24
139
1 138
2
Davis, LH
24
109
0 109
0
Passing
A
C
I Yds.
TD
, Young, QU
77
36
7 636
6
Harper, QB
38
13
3 216
2
Comfort. QB
2
1
1 11
1
Receiving
No.
Y’ds.
TD
Orr, RH
18
337
3
Roberts. RE
6
94
2
, Tarleton. LH
5
108
1
Wilkins. LK
5
100
1
Dukes, RH
4
68
0
He led four more touchdown drives
before the final scoreboard siren
went off.
It was
Florida last week, when Harper ran
and directed Georgia on 70 and 68
yard scoring drives "He came into As a 17-year-ohl freshman
hi* own." said quarterback coach Georgia's second string quar er ac ,
John Rauch, "and during the last playing in the shadow- of the^record-
two weeks has played his finest of- setting Zeke
fenslve games."
.-i-. ”-rs:i e ,, h ,iVterc l o 1 So I s
uaolf a-han U^mfir ran lunicu
in order to fulfill his boyhood dream.
he was
In 1942 the Georgians played in
Punting
No.
Yds,
Ave.
11lie Orange Bowl and since that time
Comfort. QB
1
45
46.0
iliave played in the Rose Bowl, Oil
Pilgrim. L-RH
4
175
43.8
Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Gator Bowl,
Garrard, FB
31
1188
38.3
Orange Bowl and Presidential Cup
Culpepper, FB
3
103
34.3
! Bowl.
Orr, RH
8
265
33.1
JIMMY HARPER
Revives Bulldog Ground Gome
llratkowski. He stole
some glory from llratkowski the next
year by pitching for 50 and 30-yard
touchdown passes, and last year av
eraged 55 minutes per game as the
regular varsity quarterback.
When passing became Georgia’s
main offense early this year. Harper
sat out a few games, amid the boos,
but now that a powerful running at
tack has been unveiled, he’s back
Sat the helm.
Coach Butts refers to him as "one
of the most conscientious boys I’ve
ever had on a football team. Har-
reveals this in the way he has
swallowed the boos and insults. "I’m
only glad I could give them a good
performance in my last game at
home,” he said.
Harper, who is 6-1 and 175 pounds
is a business major averaging B-plus.
He gave baseball a fling in his soph
omore year and is kidded much by
roommate Cleve Clark about the time
he ‘‘set some sort of record by walk
ing 10 men in 3 1/3 Innings against
Tennessee.”
A Campus-to-Career Case History
"It sounded good to me”
Charles Poole, B.S. in Business Ad
ministration, Boston University, '52, is
working for New Jersey Bell Telephone
Company as a Traffic Su|»erintendent.
For a young man he has a lot of respon
sibility. And responsibility is what he
likes. He has three New Jersey ex
changes under his supervision — Dover,
Madison and Washington—which total
nearly 16.000 customers, and he man
ages a force of some 160 operators, in
cluding nine chief operators and fifteen
service assistants.
“It’s the type of job,” says Charlie,
happily, “where you can never say
you’re caught up. There’s always some
thing to do.” Each day brings Charlie
new problems, new experiences. .And
w ith every passing day his grasp of the
telephone business is getting stronger,
his value to the company is growing.
That spells the kind of future that
Charlie wants: the opportunity to take
an ever-increasing part in an ever-ex
panding business.
“It sounded good to me.” Charlie says,
remembering what he thought when die
telephone interviewer had finished tell
ing him about the company and its fu
ture. And, as you might expect, it still
sounds good to him.
Charlie Poole is typical of the many young men
who are building careers in telephone work. Sim
ilar opportunities exist today with other telephone
companies, and also with Boll Telephone labora
tories, Western Lleetrir anil Sandia Corporation.
Your placement officer has the details.
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