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WAS KEATS THE BOB DYLAN
OF HIS DAY?
Who waa th«* greatest of the Knglixh Romantic Poet*—
Byron, Shelley or Kent*? Thi* question has given ri«e to
many lively campua diacuaniona and not a few atahhings.
Ijet us today try to find an answer.
First, Keats (or The Iiouisville Slugger, as he is com
monly called.) Keats’ talent bloomed early. While still a
schoolboy at St. Swithin’s he wrote his epic lines:
If I am good I get an apple,
So I don't whietle in the rhapel.
From this distinguished beginning he went on to write
another 40 million poems, an achievement all tin* more re
markable when you consider that he was only five feet
tall! I mention this fact only to show that physical prob
lems never keep the true artist from creating. Byron, for
example, was lame. Shelley suffered from prickly heat all
winter long. Nonetheless, these three titans of literature
never stopped writing i»ootry for one day.
Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil
with the ladies, was exindled from Oxford for dipping
Nell GWynne’s pigtails in an inkwell. (This later became
known as Guy Fawkes Day.) He left Kngland to fight in
the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely and
well, but women were never far from his mind, as evi
denced by these immortal lines:
How eplendid it is to fight for the (ireek,
But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to
cheek.
While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley stayed in F.ng-
land, where he became razor sharpener to the Duke of
Gloucester. Shelley was happy in his work, as we know
from his classic t>ocm, Hail to thee, blithe ntrop, but no
mutter how he tried he was never able to get a proper edge
on the Duke's razor, and he was soon banished to
Coventry. (This later became known as The Industrial
Revolution.)
One wonders how Shelley’s life and the course of Kng-
lish poetry would have differed if Personna Super Stain
less Steel Blades had been invented 200 years earlier. For
Personna is a blade that needs no stropping, honing or
whetting It’s sharp when you get it, and sharp it stays
through shave after luxury shave. Here truly is a blade
fit for a Duke or a freshman. Moreover, this Personna,
this jewel of the blademaker’s art. this boon to the cheek
and Isiunty to the dewlap, comes to you both in double-
edge style and Injector style. Get some now during "Be
Kind to Your Kisser Week.”
But 1 digress. Byron, I say, was in Greece und Shelley
in Kngland. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to
grow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric:
Although l am only five feet high.
Some day l will look man elephant'e eye.
But Kents did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron,
touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This
too failed Then Byron, ever the ladies man. took up with
Lucrezia Borgia. Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley.
Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed home with his wife
Mary and wrote his famous poem
/ love to etay home with the missas and uwite,
And hug her and kite her and give her a bite.
IWv-u- , |i
Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that
»he went into another room and wrote Frttnktiutnn.
I'pon reading the manuscript. Shelley and Byron got no
Ac a red they immediately booked paa.age home to Kng
land Keats tried to go too. but he was so small that the
clerk at the steamship office couldn't see him over the top
of the counter. So Keats remained in Rome and died of
ahortneas.
Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together com
posed this immortal epitaph:
Good old Kealt, kt might have hern tkort.
But hi uvieagreat American and a keek of a good sport.
# • • # Mat —— *— n
Truth, nut poetry, is the concern of Pertonn.i. and «re
IrU you truly that you'll not find a better shoring com
bination than Penonna and IturmaShare. regular or
menthol.
Bulldogs Score
‘Greatest Win’
Photo B f Butch Scott
NOVi Vk III HP DID I H \ i D\ltN ll\l I Gl I Oil TO V %
(.forgin'* Sam hitler uppeurn in hare■ allowed the peaky
pellet In pound him on the noggin on he relnrnn on
opponentamnnh.
BY KATIIY MORRIS
This is the finest victory
Georgia has ever scored in Ath
ens Commented Bulldog tennis
coach Dan Magill after fus net
men had calmly demolished
Georgia Tech. H-l. Tuesday after
noon.
In the toss-up match between
the two arch rivals. Georgia cap
tured all six singles matches and
swept to victory in two of the
three doubles encounters
Magill said he couldn't single
out one particular outstanding
player in the- match "All the
boys played equally great and all
points were valuable the Bull
dog mentor said
DKFKATING TK( H was the
high plant in the season, for the
Yellow Jackets have won all the
big rival matches for three
straight years
Bill Shippey made short work
out of Tech’s John Gilhart in the
number one singles match, 6-2.
6-1 Tony Ortiz ami Mike Cymalo
were carried to three sets before
triumphing in their singles
matches Norm Holmes. Brant
Bailey and Sam Fuller won their
encounters in two straight sets
SHIPPKY AND Ortiz walked
away with a hard-fought 6-2, 3-6.
| 7-5 win over Gilbart and Chris
L
Calhoun Post
The Bulldogs have lost the
services of shortstop John Cal-
boun. probably for the remain
! der of tin 1 season
Calhoun, freshman from De-
, catur. injured ligaments in his
I left ankle while (‘ompleting a
rundown in a practice session
I last week The lanky infielder
I has a cast on his left foot
"The doctor says it'll Ik* five
; weeks before I can get this cast
: off." lamented Calhoun
l.4mar Lewis will shift to
; short for the Bulldogs, while
Mike Smith will move in to till
I/CWis' vacated post at second
I hast*
v- c Yet? > «4&«
’Dogs Risk First Place
Against Strong Gators
BY PAT ROGERS
Sports Editor
F irst place in the SECs East
ern Division hinges on the out
come of Georgia's crucial two-
game series with the Florida Ga
tors this weekend
Coach Jim Whatley's Bulldogs
currently lead the pack with a 5-
1 record in SEC play The Gators
are breathing right down Geor
gia's neck with a 5-2 SEC slate,
sharing second place with Au
burn. also 5-2.
1 The Gators come to Athens
I with an 11-7 overall record, com
pared to Georgia's 8-4 mark The
Sunshine Staters wiM be trying to
break out of a midseason slump
! that has cost them four losses in
I their last five games
Richard Trapp is the leading
Gator hitter. The two-sport star
i he is also a flanker back for the
football Gators i is batting at a
540 clip Centerfielder Nick Nico
sia was rolling along with a phe
nomenal 576 average before
fracturing his shoulder in a game
with Miami Monday The little
sparkplug's absence may have a
marked effect on the Gators'
play.
Don Clark and Jim Simpson
lead the Bulldogs at the plate
Clark is batting 367. while Simp-i
son has slugged two homers.
Dogs also have four games
scheduled with Auburn, two at
home and two away. The race is
still wide open.
Game time F’riday at Foley
Field is 3 p.m Saturday's contest
is scheduled to get underway at
1:30 pin
1*
Photo By Butch Soctt
Bulldog Iony Ortiz nmonhen bark lob shot from lech
net man on number one double* partner Bill Shippey look*
on. Bulldog poir li tom/died in three net*.
Brown in the number one clou
bles.
The Bulldogs only loss of the
day came in the number two
doubles, as Bob Speicher and
Steve Menke defeated Holmes
and Cymalo. 7-5. 4-6. 6-1 "Cy
malo had a pulled muscle that
hindered him greatly as the dou
bles match wore on said .Ma
gill That's tin* reason he and
Holmes were so soundly trounced
in the last set."
GKOKGIA'S WIN Tuesday over
Tech,coupled with a !M) white
washing of Auburn Monday,
gives the Bulldogs an 11-2 record
for the spring
follow up Saturday morning (vs
Mississippi State i and afternoon
(vs Murray Statei matches in
the Srnokv Mountain city.
Georgia will make up a rained
out match with Georgia Tech
Tuesday (April 231 in Atlanta
Tl»e following weekend the Bulld
ogs host the Georgia State Col
legiate Tournament (April 26-27'
Oglethorpe College of Atlanta,
along with Tech, will pose the*
biggest threats for the Bulldogs
But Tech will be the major
throat, according to Magill
"And," stated the Georgia coach,
"They're capable of beating us!"
Weekend
Sports Log
BASEBALL
Friday — Florida. Foley
F’ield. 3 pm
Saturday — Florida; Foley
Field. 1 30 p.m.
Tuesday — Georgia Tech.
F'oley Field. 3 p.m.
TENNIS
Friday — Tennessee, at
Knoxville.
Saturday — Mississippi
State (8 30 a m Murray
State (2 p.m I, at Knoxville.
Tenn
Tuesday — Georgia Tech, at
Atlanta
TRACK
Saturday — Dogwood Re
lays. at Knoxville, Tenn.
GOLF
Monday — Auburn. Georgia
Tech and Alabama (quadran
gular matchl. at Auburn. Ala
Buddy Copeland and Doug
Tucker are probable starters for
the Florida series. Copeland. 3-0.
fired a one-hitter in his last ap
pearance. against Vanderbilt
Tucker, though knocked out of
the box in his last three starts,
sports a 1-0 record
Two victories over the Gators
would give the Bulldogs a little
breathing room atop the stand
ings Georgia still has to play
F lorida twice at Gainesville. The
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Dealer Inquiries Invited
Elect A Candidate Vi ho Relieves That
Students Are Citizens
And Should Have The
FREEDOM
To Make- Their Own Derisions! Now!
Elect
JACK BR00KNER
Student Senator f rom Graduate School
“Won’t Sell Ytiu Ottl"
The Bulldogs play Him' oul-ot
town matches Hus weekend in
Knoxville. Tenn F’ridav they
tackle the Tennessee Vols. and I
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Georgia Golf Team
Captures 15th Win
It was the same story Monday afternoon at the Ath
ens Country Club Coach Howell Hollis' Bulldog linksters
racked up three more victories, running their siring of consec
utive wins to 36
t II till,II YOI Mi uml III IIIIY KKSI.KK
Georgia Tech. Auburn and
South Carolina were the victims
in the quadrangular match The
Bulldogs texik Tech, ll‘x-6 1 2:
Auburn. 12-6; and Carolina.
IlG-fi'i.
low scorers for Georgia were
Alk'ti Miller and Gary Hollo
man Each toured the course in
73 strokes, one over par Al
Tyre shot a 74. and Terrv Diehl
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The desperate hours
and how to survive them.
iZC7
NoDoi /
logged a four over par 76
Bill Huggins and Pete Davi
son rounded out the Georgia I
field with a pair of 80 s
Auburn's Bill Lovett garnered j
low medalist honors for the
match with an even par round I
of 72 Gusty winds created I
pmblems on drives throughout
the match, preventing several
| of the linksters from breaking |
ixir
Auburn captured two victories
iover Tech and Carolina)
against the one setback at the
hands of the Bulldogs The I
Gamecocks won once (over !
Tech I while the Yellow Jackets 1
from Atlanta finished 0-3 for
the day
Georgia, now 154) for the sea-
sun. will take part in another
quadrangular match Monday at
Auburn The Tigers play host to
the Bulldogs. Georgia Tech and
Alabama
CAN A GIRL
FROM GEORGIA
FIND HAPPINESS
AS
A STEWARDESS?
We think so. And we think
you'll think so In foct, we've
got umpteen reasons why
flying with the world's largest
airline is a happy thing to do
•f you're looking for a ca
reer So be sure to see our
interviewers when they arrive
on campus Whot have you
got to lose? A little of your
time And perhaps a big
Opportunity.
Interviews at Georgia will be
held at the placement office
on April 30th
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