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Volume LtXA
Number 30
UNIVERSITY OK GEORGIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 5, I!>«:»
Hollis Plans Competitive Sports
Whites Trounce Reds
In Intrasquad Contest
By BILL SWAIN
A high-spirited White team, behind two young but prom
ising quarterback and (lie cheers of a highly partisan
crowd, soundly trounced the favored Red squad 17-0 in
Georgia’s annual (i-I)ay tilt Saturday in Sanford Stadium.
The roster and pregame feel- feel that the talent and ability
ing among the press box spec
tators indicated that the ex
perience lay with the Red
jerseys, but the Whites, led by
the excellent quarterbacking
of sophomores Preston Ridle-
huber of Gainesville and Ath
enian Pete Dickens, seemed to
Library Closes;
Craps II orbing
Students Inside
Two male students became
so engrossed in their studies
Friday night that they lost
track of time.
As a result, they spent an
hour locked inside the library
waiting for someone with a
key to resuce them.
According to W. Porter Rel
iant, director of libraries, the
students were studying in the
Carrel Room on the fourth floor.
They apparently didn't hear
the 10:15 buzzer warning that
the library was about to close.
The library assistant didn’t
notice them and it wasn’t until
the lights were off and the
doors locked that the men no
ticed their plight.
They tried to call Reliant but
couldn’t reach him. So they at
tracted the attention of a pass
ing nightwatchman, who called
William D. Landers, plant op
erations foreman. Landers
freed the trapped scholars at
11:30, an hour after the library
had closed.
"This has happened a num
ber of times,” Reliant said. “It
is unfortunate but if students
will try to remember the clos
ing time (10:30) and listen
for the warning buzzer, they
won’t get caught.”
lay elsewhere.
Rldlehuber, along with vet
eran junior halfback Fred Bar
ber and sophomore fullback
Marvin Hurst, ran their op
ponents to ruin as each gained
more ground yardage than the
Reds’ far-leading r usher,
junior fullback und letterraan
Frank Lankewicz.
Dickens, while not equalling
the accomplishments of Reds'
quarterback and two-year vet
eran senior Larry Rakestraw,
did net his cause 55 yards on
four complete of seven attempt
ed aerials. Rakestraw com
pleted eight of 18 attempted
passes for 82 yards through the
air.
The Whites also had to their
credit a line which succeeded
most of the afternoon in ma
neuvering the front forces of
the losing team wherever it
suited the victors to have them.
Outstanding in this depart
ment for the Whites were vet
eran tackles Ray Rissmiller and
Ray Maddox, and sophomores
Vance Evans, Pat Hodgson, and
Glenn Creech. Red linemen
having a good day were senior
Mel Crook, junior Joel Darden
and sophomore Sam Zets.
Other bright spots for the
Whites were juniors Douglas
McFalls and Gerald Winsett
for their impressive runbacks
of the booted pigskin.
Place kicking specialist Bill
McCullough, who did the lion
ors for both teams, launched
impressive kickoffs and had
good day otherwise, making
good on the two extra point
opportunities of the game and
one of three field goal attempts
by the Whites.
McCullough also caused a
(Continued on Page Seven)
Acting Athletic Head
Familiar with New Joh
By BOB ACKERMAN
Coach Howell Hollis said Monday night, that while he is
acting athletic ’director In* will do his best to see that the
athletic program at the University of (ieorgin continues to
lie competitive with other programs in the SEC.
Coach Hollis was named i dehted. He was the only coach
acting athletic director Satur- ever to produce bowl teams,
day. He will succeed Wallace I will carry on, to the best of
Butts, athletic director and my ability, to see that the over-
former head coach, whose res- all sports program at the Unl-
COACH HOWELL HOLLIS
IN EXT OIIAKTEK
Language Department
Offers Russian Study
A survey course in English translations of Russian liter
ature will he offered next quarter by the Department of
Modern Foreign Languages.
The course, Russian 401- I Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov,
601, is open to both undergrad-| und modern Soviet writers,
uate and graduate students Graduate credit will be award-
who have completed English
121 and 122 or who have 10
hours of credit on the 200
level in French, German, Span- ' j„
ish, or Italian. No knowledge
of Russian is required.
The course, to be taugld by
Mr. Henry Cobb, deals with the
works of Pushkin, Lermontov,
Gogol, Goncharov, Turgenev,
ed for the courses.
Students interested In the
courses can consult with Cobb
room 204, Moore College,
ignntion became effective Feb.
28.
President (>. C. Aderhold an
nounced tin* athletic board s
selection of Hollis on an in
terim basis and said that no
deadline had been set for the
appointment of a permanent
director.
Actually this is no new Job
to Coach Hollis, who has ar
ranged schedules for baseball,
track, basketball, tennis, golf,
swimming and wrestling teams
for the past several years.
He said. "I will have a few
more responsibilities, but not
many more than I have had.
Coach Butts has had to be
away a great deal the past two
years to look nftcr business
interests and just has not hud
the time to do all the work.
Consequently much of it has
come to me."
He said. "We nre going to
miss Wallace Butts at the Uni
versity. He mudo many con
tributions to the athletic pro
gram at the University for
which the University is in-
REI) ANI) BLACK
Jones Named Editor
Cor Spring Quarter
Larry Jones of Atlanta has been elected editor of The
Red and Black for the Spring Quarter.
Named to serve with him by
the publication’s Board of Con
trol yesterday were Tommy
Johnson of Macon, business
manager: Ren Boswell of
Register, managing editor, and
Don Rountree of Dawson, cir
culation manager.
Chosen to serve on the Tues-
Swuin of Silver Springs, Md.,
sports editor; Joyce Mosteller
of Athens, women’s editor, and
Phyllis Anderson of Macon,
society editor.
Editing Thursday's Red and
Black will be Margaret Smith
of Monticello, news editor;
Billy Mann of Athens, sports
day issue were Bob Ackerman editor; Jenny Lynn Morse of
of Atlanta, news editor; Bill [ Atlanta, women’s editor, and
Mary Luchesse of Atlanta, so
ciety editor.
Jones, a senior in the adver
tising-public relations sequence
of journalism, served as the
managing editor during winter
quarter. A former news editor,
he has been an active member
of the Ik'd and Black for six
quarters.
Jones is a memper of Alpha
Tau Omega social fraternity
and has served as treasurer of
that organization. He lists
membership in Phi Eta Sigma
freshman scholastic honorary
fraternity. Alpha Delta Sigma,
Sigma Delta Chi society of
journalists, X-Club, the Inter-
fraternity Council and was tap
ped this fall for membership
LARRY JONES (Continued on Page Five)
Gagers Win
Final Game
Saturday night Red Lawson’s
Bulldog cugers played their
final act In undent Woodruff
Hall and took their last bow of
the 1962-63 season by defeat
ing Florida, 79-77.
Sophomore sensation Billy
Rado took the leading role with
31 points, including the two
that won the game. That
equalled his previous high of
the season, 31 collected against
LSU in un overtime game in
the old basketball urena.
The "Barn.” as Woodruff is
often called, was built in 1925.
The Bulldogs will move next
season into the elaborate new
Coliseum on Ag Hill.
Georgia's three graduating
seniors, Carlton Gill, Chuck
Adainek and Harold Morris,
closed out their final season
by contributing a total of 30
(Continued on Page Five)
Literary Society
Selects Officers
The Demosthenian Literary
S Society elected spring quarter
officers Wednesday night.
They are Tommy Malone,
first year law student from Al
bany, president; Crawford Me-
| Donald, second year law stu-
| dent from Dalton, vice-presi
dent; Billy Evans, Tifton. sec
retary; Larry Salmon. Rome,
solicitor; Barnee Baxter, Au
gusta, sergeant-at-arms; and
Jim Pleasants, Tiger, custodian.
Ed Sell, first year law stu
dent from Macon, was elected
to the judicial council.
from 4 to 6 p.m. this week.
Cobb would also like to con
sult with students Interested in
studying the Russian language.
Beginning Russian courses will
be offered fall quarter.
Cobb points to career oppor
tunities in government work,
library work, scientific careers,
business, radio, journalism,
travel und translation.
The Russian study also of
fers much to the student of
humanities and social sciences,
Cobb notes. “The Russian cul
tural contribution in music and
literature is significant and in
further understanding in the
West, and knowledge of Rus
sian is obviously Increasingly
vital from the political point of
view,” he says.
Wieman To Give
Led a re 7 on igh I
Dr. Henry Nelson Wieman,
professor emeritus of philo
sophy of religion and theology
at the University of Chicago
and currently professor of
philosophy at Southern Illinois
University, will deliver a lec
ture on "The Religious Prob
lems of World Community” to
night at 8:15 In the Library
Auditorium.
The lecture Is another In the
Great Thinkers lecture series.
Dr. Wieman has written
more than a dozen books and
numerous articles on the philo
sophy of religion.
verslty continues to be com
petitive with other programs in
the SEC.”
Coach Hollis Is probably best
known for tho golf teams he
has been producing since 1946.
His teams have won the SEC
golf title eight times 1950-
61-62-57-58-59-61-62. This
amounts to a .500 average.
Hollis, a native of Buena
Vista, has been tho University's
(Continued on Page Five)
HKD EYES
Finals Begin
On Saturday
Finals are approaching and
with them come sleepless
nights, headaches, red-rimmed
eyes, und - - - - happy thought,
spring vacation. *
Scheduled ftnnls end on Wed
nesday, March 13, but make
up finals for students having
conflicting exams will be held
March 14.
Spring vacation will end
March 18. The next day, Tues
day, registration begins with
sophomores registering from
8-10 a.m., seniors and graduate
students from 9-11, juniors at
j 11, and freshman at 1 p.m.
Students of all classes with
work permits will report at 8
a.in. March 19 to the side door
of Stegeinan Hull. Those with
medical excuses, which must be
certified by Dr. Charles Young
at the Infirmary, will be ad
mitted at the side door at the
time scheduled for tlielr class
es to register.
Saturday classes are again
scheduled: the first March 23,
for Monday classes, and the
second March 30, for Tuesday
classes.
COACH RED LAWSON, left, and Assistant Coach Rex Frederick leave Wood-
rnif hall for the last time Saturday night after the Bulldogs retired the ancient
tarn with a 79-77 victory over Florida. "Windy Woodruff," for years the object
of criticism from SEC teams, will be raxed in favor of new campus development.
The Dogs open next season on the floor of the new coliseum. Saturday’s game also
closed conference competition for Georgia, leaving them in tenth place.