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PAOR TEN
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llarri€*r Meet with Mercer Cancelled
DRAWS PRAISE
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1985
CHARLES N. CLARK joined G.E. in 1949
after receiving his B.S. and M.S.
(in E.E.) from the University of
Wisconsin. He served two years with
the Navy during World War II.
Georgia's crons country meet with Mercer's Hears which was scheduled
or last Saturday was cancelled because of an epidemic of ptomaine poison- I
in# among the Mercer team.
The only remaining meet for the Bulldogs Is the Southeastern Confer- j
ence meet which will be run over the water works course in Atlanta Mon-1
day.
Each school in the conference will enter a team In the meet with Ten
nessee, Alabama and Florida being the probable favorites.
Runners on the Georgia team, which has won one meet and lost three,
will be Sidney Johnson, Melvin Charles, Earl Simpkins. Eddie Frasier and
Jack Holt.
Let's all go out
and have a tjjj/L j|
PARTY of!
CHARLIE WILLIAMS
PINECREST LODGE
PRIVATE DINING HALLS
Barnett Shoals Roatl Phone LI 6-0606
Dinwiddie, Smallest Guard in SEC,
Relies on Set Shot, Flashy Dribbling
Although the probable starting lineup for Georgia’s basketball team will average about fi' 3", it could
be llashy, little Morris Dinwiddie who will be the top Bulldog playmaker.
Last year the 5' 10" 165-pound
speedster was the first non-senior in
Bulldog cage history to average bet
ter than 15 points per game. Playing
In all of Georgia’s 25 games, he fin
ished the season with a 15.6 average.
His scoring total of 391 points
breaks down in 97 foul throws in
|!25 attempts for a 78 per cent aver
age and 147 field goals. In scoring,
Dinwiddie was second only to Mur
phy McManus, who average 20.1
points per game and was the second
Georgia basketball player in history
to have a better than 20-point game
average.
Dinwiddie, who calls Scottsville,
Ky. home, came to Georgia from
Chipola Junior College in Marianna,
Fla. In his last year at Chipola, ho
held the National Junior College free
throw accuracy record with 86 per
cent effectiveness.
The crew cut senior pharmacy ma
jor will be the smallest starting
guard in the SEC this year. His best
shot is a long two-handed set which
does much to loosen up the opposi
tion’s defense and with his great
speed and dribbling ability, Dinwid
die should be one of the trickiest
doormen in tlie conference..
Coach Harbin (Red) Lawson calls
Dinwiddie h i s “best all - around
clutch player. He makes up for what
he doesn’t have in height by his ag
gressive and spirited play,” said Law-
son.
Cage Hits ... In preparation for
the conference opener against Ten
nessee Dec. 1, four scrimmages were
held this week. “Bill Ensley (6' 6")
hit on 20 of 28 floor shots in one
game, and it looks like he and Din
widdie are my only two sure start
ers,” said Lawson. He pointed out
that there was an all-around 40 per
cent field goal average during the
scrimmages and seemed pleased with
the new players as they began to fit
into Georgia’s "deliberate style of
play offense.”
MORRIS DINWIDDIE
Speedy Bulldog Floorman
What young people are doing at General Electric
Young engineer
decides what colors
are best for
G-E reflector lamps
Which color of light makes people look nat
ural 1 .'’ Should a blue light be used more often
than a red? What kind of ellect does a violet
light have on merchandise?
In recent years, color lighting has become
so important in stores, restaurants, theaters,
and displays that General Electric developed
a line of new easy-to-use color-reflector lumps
for this market.
The man responsible for deciding which
colors are most effective for users of these
lamps is 29-year-old Charles N. Clark, Ap
plication Engineering Color Specialist for
General Electric’s large lamp department.
Clark’s Work 1$ Interesting, Important
In u recent series of tests, Clark made a
critical appraisal of literally hundreds of
color-lilter materials to find the ones that
produced maximum results hut were still
suitable to high-production techniques, prac
tical stocking and simplified selling. This
experimental work also had to take into
account all the information on human per
ception of color.
25,000 College Graduates at General Electric
When Clark came to General Electric in
1949, he already knew the work lie wanted
to do. Like each of the 25,000 college-grad
uate employees, he was given his chance to
grow and realize his full potential. For Gen
eral Electric has long believed this: When
fresh, young minds are given freedom to
make progress, everybody benefits—the in
dividual, the company, and the country.
■
Tennessee’s Majors
Pieked by R&B Staff
As Player of Week
Johnny Majors, tailback of the
Tennessee Volunteers, has been chos
en for the second successive Satur
day as Red and Black “Player of the
Week” and Louisiana State strate
gist Paul Dietzel has been selected
as “Coach of the Week.”
Majors, who is tabbed by many for
All-American honors, led the Vols In
their 20-0 trouncing of Florida Sat
urday. The 5' 10" 165-pound junior
scored one touchdown and flipped a
38-yard pass for another.
Dietzel, who at 31 is the youngest
head coach in the Southeastern Con
ference, coached the Tigers to a
3 4-7 upset victory over powerful Mis
sissippi State College Saturday.
• The ex-Army assistant coach took
the reins in the Bayou school this fall
and has developed a very successful
rebuilding program even though his
2-5-1 record does not show it. The
Tigers have lost three of their games
by one touchdown or less.
TENTATIVE 1955-56 GEORGIA
BASKETBALL SCHEDULH
Dec. 1—Tennessee, Knoxville
Dec. 7—Mercer, Macon
Dec. 17—Georgia Tech, Atlanta
Dec. 19—Vanderbilt, Nashville
Dec. 27—Gator Bowl, Jacksonville
Dec. 28—Gator Bowl, Jacksonville
•Jan. 5—Tulane, New Orleans
•Jan. 7—LSU, Baton Rouge
•Jan. 11—Tennessee, Athens
Jan. 13—FSU, Athens
•Jan. 21—Auburn, Athens
•Jan. 28—Alabama, Athens
•Jan. 30—Florida, Athens
•Feb. 4—Vanderbilt, Athens
Feb. 8—Mercer, Macon
•Feb. 11—Alabama, Tuscaloosa
•Feb. 13—Auburn, Auburn
Feb. 16—Georgia Tech, Athens
•Feb. 18—Ole Miss, Oxford
•Feb. 20—Miss. State, Starkville
•Feb. 25—Georgia Tech, Athens
•Feb. 27—Kentucky, Louisville
•Mar. 3—Florida, Gainesville
Mar. 5—FSU, Tallahassee
•Conference Games
Athens
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