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PAGE TEN
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956
FEW LETTER MEN RETURN
Tennis, Golf Co-Captains Elected
Both the varsity tennis and golf
teams this year have selected junior
co-captains.
Thad Willis, Daytona Beach, Fla.,
and Louis Smith, Athens, will head
the tennis squad and Jack Lumpkin,
Athens, and Jake Howard, Augusta,
were named co-captains by this year’s
golfers.
Willis wag runner-up In the South
eastern Conference number hIx sin
gles division last year. He is a law
student and served in the Army be
fore coming' to Georgia.
Smith is one of only two lettermen
who returned tills year from Coach
Dan Maglil's team last year.
Lumpkin, who was twice high j
school class A champion at Athens
High School, shows promise of de
veloping Into a first class golfer. He
is the son of Quinton Lumpkin,
Georgia's freshman football coach
and 1938 captain of the Bulldogs.
Howard finished third last year in
the Southern Intercollegiate and
Southeastern Conference tourna
ments.
Besides Lumpkin nnd Howard, the
only returning letterman on this
year's golf team Is Earl Bowden, a
Junior from Columbus.
However, Coach Howell Hollis,
who is in his 11th season as Geor
gia golf mentor, is depending on new
comers Hugh Royer, Columbus, win
ner of the Southern junior tourna
ment for the past two years, Billy
Baird, Marietta, Frank Brumby, At
lanta. and Dick Doetsch, Harrison,
N. Y., to help fill the holes left In
the team when Lester Kelly, Atlanta,
Archie Griffin, Valdosta, and Billy
Blair, Americus, were graduated last
year.
The golf team has 25 dual meets
on its schedule this year, plus the
nnnual Southern Intercollegiate and
Southeastern Conference champion
ships to be played here May 3-5.
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TEMPERS RAN HIGH Tuesday night in Stegeman Hall as a hail
of blows were exchanged by the Pi KAs, Kappa Sigs and fans on
both sides of the basketball court during an intramural game. No
one was injured in the fight, which lasted only a few minutes.
Allen Scores 48 Points
In Georgia Road Defeats
By Ed Ingles
Georgia fell victim of the same fate two nights running, when Au
burn broke loose with a second half rash of points to bury the Bull
dogs. !)ii-S(). at the Auburn Sports Center, Monday.
Auburn wasted little time In the
second half in setting the trend of
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the contest, hitting 59 points in the
losing half. With three minutes gone
in the final half, Bob Sturkie and
Jim O’Donnell .ripped through the
Georgia defense on driving layups to
extend a 48-41 lead to 60-43, within
three minutes.
O'Dohnell, who had 2 6 points, high
for the night, dropped in 18 of them
in the final half, and along with Ter
ry Chandler, who netted 12 in the
final go around, continued to slash
through the Georgians’ fortifications.
The clock winked out 3:50 to go
in the contest, and the Auburn side
of clock blinked out 90, while the
Georgia wing registered 66. Bulldog
Ray Allen waxed red hot in the wan
ing moments, caging four buckets in
the space of a minute to pace a last
minute surge by the losers, to bring
about the respectable final score.
Slayden was runner-u^> in the scor
ing department, scorfhg 22 points,
mostly on lay ups. Allen, current top
point producer for Georgia, gunned
in 20, 18 coming in the second half.
Henry Cabaniss followed with 18,
Curtis Gleaton made 18 on some long
range bombing, while Morris Din-
widdie and Bill Ensley, two main
stays of the squad, had 11.
Tide
Dogs,
Wallops
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Massive Jerry Harper, who lilt 34
points, and his cohorts ripped the
cords at a two-and-a-half points a
minute clip in the second half as Ala
bama romped Georgia, 94-69, Satur
day night.
The first half struggle was an en
tirely different story. Though the
Bulldogs were never ahead of the
league leading Crimson Tide, they
never trailed by more than two bas
kets.
When they left the court for the
locker room session, Alabama held a
slim 42-40 lead. Georgia’s ability to
hold Harper in check, and the fine
scoring and ball handling perform
ance by Ray Allen made for close
ness of the halftime margin.
A 58 per cent average from the
floor in which Harper hit the hoop
at a rapid rate, pulled the Tide stead
ily ahead shortly after intermission.
The overall shooting chart had Ala
bama hitting 50 per cent to Geor
gia's 35.4 per cent from the field.
Allen was high man for the losers,
ramming home 28 points, a mark that
he failed to come close to in previous
contests. Curtis Gleaton and Henry
Cabaniss followed with 17 find 10
points.
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