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< » Th« Red and Black • Wednesday, October 31. 1990
FANFARE
It's great.. to be .. a Gator hater... If you have a ticket. The win
ning ID numbers for the Georgia - Florida game In Jacksonville,
will be listed at the Coliseum today. If you weren't one of the
lucky ones, then happy scalping.
Arnold near qualifying in Volvo tourney
By RANDY WALKER
Sports Editor
Georgia’s Patricio Arnold came
within two matches of qualifying
for the main draw of the Volvo
Tennis Collegiate Tennis
Championships Tuesday with two
victories in main qualifying at
Henry Feild Stadium.
After defeating Chuck Coleman
of Notre Dame 3-6,6-4, 6-1, Arnold
edged Dan Kronage of Ball State 7-
5, 4-6, 6-4.
Arnold will face Fabio Silberberg
of Tennessee Wednesday at 9 a.m.
Leading Kronage 7-5, 2-2, the
match was forced indoors due to
darkness, where the Buenos Aires,
Argentina native lost four of the
proceeding six games to concede
the second set 6-4.
“I lost my concentration and let
up," Arnold said. “I relaxed when I
should have stayed on top of him.”
Both players won their service
games until the 10th game of the
final set, when Arnold forced the
action and broke Kronage’s serve
to win the match.
“Dan was playing lights-out
tennis in the last two sets,”
Georgia coach Manuel Diaz said.
“In the third set, the odds were in
Dan’s favor, all things considered.
It was an outstanding win for Pat
ricio.”
Arnold said that in the second
set, he concentrated too heavily on
Ling the Ball State player’s
when he should have been
breakii
serve when he should have been
thinking only of holding his own
serve.
“My serve wasn't working at all
in the second set and I put too
much pressure on my returns,”
said Arnold, who hit 25 winners
during the match. “In the third Bet
I concentrated on my serve. I just
didn’t woiry about breaking him. I
just worried about holding.”
Arnold will face a stern test
today in Silberberg, who played
No. 4 singles last year for the Vol
unteers, the 1990 NCAA finalists.
The Sao Paulo Brazil native turned
in an impressive 31-6 singles re
cord last year which included 13
consecutive victories from March
31 through April 22.
“Fabio’s got a great forehand
and a good serve,” Diaz said. “He
also is exceptionally quick on the
court. He and Patricio should have
a good match.”
If Arnold defeats Silberberg, he
will face the winner of the Ellis
Ferriera (Alabama) — Luciano
D’Andrea (Virginia Common
wealth) match at approximately 1
p.m. The winner of that match will
advance along with three other
players from the main qualifying
tournament into the main draw,
which starts play Thursday.
Georgia’s A1 Parker and Ivan
Baron have both qualified for the
Volvo’s main draw.
racy Stenberg/The Red and Black
Patricio Arnold: Had two victories Tuesday.
Young hurlers show
talent versus Dekalb
By ERIC GARBER
Sports Writer
The Georg
The Georgia pitching staff
found a way Tuesday night to Bi-
lence the doubters who thought
the departure of World Series
MVP and All-American Dave
Fleming left a gaping hole in the
rotation.
The staffs solution included
pitching 15 consecutive scoreless
innings, striking out 15 batters
and allowing just two runs in the
team’s doubleheader exhibition
with Dekalb Community College.
The Dogs came away with 7-0
and 8-2 wins at Foley Field.
Georgia is now 3-1 on the fall
season’s six-game slate.
“It’s exciting how we are
coming together," freshman
pitcher Jim Musslewhite said.
Mu8sclwhite pitched the third
and fourth innings of the first
game and allowed no runs while
striking out three.
In all, 10 Georgia pitchers
shared duties on the night in
cluding three freshmen and two
junior college transfers. The new
crop allowed just two runs on
eight hits, something that under
standably pleased coach Steve
Webber.
“It’s early, but I saw a lot of
things I liked tonight,” Webber
said. “Our young pitchers are get
ting better. The main thing right
now is to get them work on the
mound.”
Musselwhite, a New York
Yankee draft pick last spring
whose fastball was measured in
the mid 80s in high school, feels
this effort is only the beginning of
what he and his pitching cohorts
can do for the team this year.
“Though we’re not playing Di
vision I teams right now in the
fall, I think that I and many of
the new players here can be de
pended on,” Musselwhite said.
Musselwhite and senior
transfer Mike Curry combined to
pitch three scoreless innings in
game one. Freshman Alex Bar-
ylak tossed in two scoreless in
nings in the second game.
In addition, the Diamond Dogs’
probable three-man starting ro
tation for the regular season —
Stan Payne, Tom Zdanowicz and
Tracy Wildes — accounted for six
scoreless innings and allowed
three hits.
Senior Doug Radziewicz was
three-for-four in the first game
with an RBI sacrifice fly in the
first inning.
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BULLOCK
WOGGLES
From page 1
still hurts. So he puts himself out
there and plays that song from
right out of his soul. 1 don’t feel a
lot of music today expresses that."
Given Manfred Jones’s patent
diatribes against commercialism in
music and in society in general, it’s
ironic that he used to be in the
business school at the University.
He gave it up to get into broad
casting.
“I just didn’t want to pursue the
business world,” Jones said. ‘The
school is geared to turning out
people who do what they’re told
and don’t really think. That’s the
nature of business. Like those
standardized tests, it’s very much a
choose-the-bubble mentality."
Unfortunately, he doesn’t see
the broadcasting field as being a lot
better.
“I have n love/hate relationship
with music and broadcasting,"
Jones said. ‘There’s a lot of hypoc
risy, a lot of justification of second-
rate music as ‘product.’ I feel very
emotional about music and that
just....
“Look, people don’t seem to un
derstand that more tracks on a re
cording doesn’t mean better music.
if wavs,
pending to fit the light shows.
Technical virtuosity means
nothing. It’s about how you feel."
It’s not so much that Manfred
Jones and the rest of The Wogglee
ignore all modem munc in favor of
the older stuff. Ae Jones put it, itfe
just that the things they admire
“take the beet from the past and
put a personal stamp on it."
Even the songs thsv cover in
concert or play on their oldies
■howe are not the Z-93 brand of
endlessly recycled “classics."
“Classic Rock formats ars deter
mined by surveys of people who
pick exactly the earns songs they've
always heard," Jones complained.
Tt’s so cold. I like heat. Fm talking
degrees Centigrade. Degrees
Kelvin. F-U-N-N. R-A-W-K and
roll! Is that right, my friend!"
Okay, to how does all this tit to
gether - Manfred Jones on busi
ness, Manfred Jones on
contemporary radio and so on?
Jeepers, we don’t even have time to
discus* hie opinions on the envi
ronment, capitalism and the sham
of CD tecnology, yet we now have
to come up with some key to Un
derstanding The Wogglee.
Maybe what we're talking about
here is authenticity. When you go
to a Wogglee show, what you get is
‘Classic Rock formats
are determined by
surveys of people who
pick exactly the same
songs they’ve always
heard. It's so cold. I
like heat.’
Manfred Jones
five guys who want to entertain.
Listen to their four-song 45 (and I
heartily recommend that you do)
and you get five guys who are pas
sionate about what they are doing,
which is sssentially having a good
time.
It’s not so much that music died
after 1963, but that the eoulforce of
The Wogglee thrives there, and you
gotta go where you’re called.
As Jones said, “If I had more
arms, I’d have more thumbs up.”
The Wogglee art opining up The
Cuee-Tunt ball tonight for tile La-
Brea Stompere at The Downetoire.
Tonight at Hoyt St.
for CEO
THU 0\L Y CASDIDA TE »ITH -1 BiSISKSS RICKGROL V> » HO HAS
' mmset: as as elected officiai is both city lsdcol stycohrsmi st:
I tor hv I he C nminillcc to I led bullock II O. C harlic Burch, I rc-ivurer. I't) li.n 411. Mlwn-. < < \
THE MISSOURI REPERTORY THEATRE
PRESENTS
OODY GUTHRIE'S AMERICAN SONG
Nov. 6,1990; Tuesday 8:00 p.m.
Fine Arts Auditorium
Tickets: Tate Cashier Window
$5 - Students
$10 - Gen. Admission
This program is presented by The Performance Arts
Division ol the University Union
For any other info, please call 542-6396,
Viktoria Young, David Mendoza
This program is made possible in part through a grant
from the National Endowment lor the Arts through the
Southern Arts Federation, of which the Georgia
Council tor the Arts is a member.
Halloween
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$1 Witches Brew Punch Tori Pater
Thurs, Mercy Land
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Spankys
Halloween Costume
Extravaganza
In the Catering Hall
1st Place Prize $1000.00
Lots ot other spooktacuiar prizes
entertainment by
“ Water.
E.T.'S HANGAR
HALLOWEEN
GROUP COSTUME CONTEST (2 or more)
^ Grand Prize GA FLA Weekend lor two .
* * Tickets, Accommodations & $100 cash *
JOHN BERRY to entertain all evening
Sponsored by
Budwieser
® | r S J T r*\
E.T.'s Hangar [ j
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’ r J
1 A r f r \
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120 I Washington 51
local theatre. Next time, it could be you!
This week s
W1MERSI
Viktoria Young
Rob Pluta
Nadia Al-Azawi
Derek Peterson
Penny Zi.ka
Javier Gomez
Congratulations to alt, and thanks to
everyone who entered. Watch for it next
week to WIN!! Any one submitting more
than one entry even with a different name
will be dlsQualifled.
Tickets, courtesy ol your locaTtheatres, must be claimed by listed winners by
5PM today al The Red And Black offices: 123 N Jackson. Valid ID required