Newspaper Page Text
Don’t let the bed
bugs bite.
Page 2
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Richt to blame,
not scapegoats
It’s time for the Mark Richt era to end
at Georgia.
There are no more scapegoats.
A. J. Green’s return was supposed to be
the antidote for Georgia's issues. He
wasn’t.
Green’s return
did help the
offense, but once
again, Georgia p|HM llitk
lost ... for the *<£>* n,*™
fourth time in a ’ i, *,'/ r ARKER
row. And not to
an SEC program r ~-
this time. ——l—
to a
program that has become a Big 12 cellar
dwellar over the past couple of years and
endured a 52-7 loss to California just three
weeks ago. But on Saturday, even
Colorado fans felt better about their pro
gram than Bulldog Nation, taking a min
ute away from questioning their coach to
storm the field in jubilation over beating a
Georgia program that is now just 1-4.
This was supposed to be the year that
Georgia surpassed expectations, not gross
ly underachieved like the two previous sea
sons under Richt. The dismissal of Willie
See RICHT, Page 6
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EMILY KAKOL I Tn ft • Buck
▲ Packway Handle Band guitarist Josh Erwin (can
tar) and fiddler Andrew Heaton play Muegrau.
sunny.
v High 681 Low AS
Miksy’i calendar it
clear again today,
and we don't blame
him. After Saturday’s
loss, we're
embarrassed to be
#.,/ on campus, too
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Red&Slacky;-:
An independent student newspaper serving the University of Georgia community Mfe
ESTABLISHED 1893, INDEPENDENT 1980
ONE AND F
INSIDE: Instant Replay football coverage on page 6.
NEW RANKING
• Find out where
the University's
anthropology
department
ranks in the
nation. Page 3
Index
■ 111 mr _
PHOTOS SV MCA CAN KELLEY Tnltcißur.
Georgia fans (top) and coaches (above) were visibly
frustrated Saturday night during the Bulldogs’ 29-27
loss to the University of Colorado Buffaloes.
Packway Handle Band bettered by competition
Telluride losses
shape show style
By SHAWN JARRARO
The Red & Buck
Packway Handle Band knows
that in the music business, the
grass isn’t always greener on the
other side sometimes it’s blue.
"The standardization of what
one would expect from a normal job
Is not the same," guitarist Josh
Erwin said. "I guess I didn’t really
expect that, And that makes It
appealing also, because it’s not this
straight job. It’s a total ‘it is what
you make of it’ sort of thing."
Alongside Erwin are Tom Baker
on banjo, Michael Paynter on man
News 2
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Monday, October 4, 2010
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Page 5
Team still
straggles
to finish
By MICHAEL FITZPATRICK
The Red & Buck
BOULDER, Colo. The
return of A'.J. Green to the
lineup was supposed to be
the cure-all to Georgia’s
offensive inadequacies this
season.
With arguably the top
receiver in the country
back in the fold, Georgia’s
passing attack could be far
more aggressive.
Teams would be forced
to pay more attention to
Green, loosening the cov
erage on other receivers
and allowing more running
lanes for the Bulldogs’
rushing attack.
Yet after Saturday’s
29-27 loss to the Colorado
Buffaloes at Folsom Field
in Boulder, Colo., those
inadequacies on both
See LOSS, Page 6
dolin, Andrew Heaton on fiddle and
Zach McCoy on bass.
“We started playing in 2001, and
actually the very first gig we played
was an open mic battle at the
Steverino’s,” Erwin said. “We’d
never played out live before, and we
played that and we won."
That first win turned out to be
the beginning of a trend that saw
the band repeatedly placing In com
petitions.
“Prom there we kind of entered
contests,” Erwin said. “We won a
battle of the bands In Athens in
2002. That printed our first album,
[which] was one of the prizes.”
Later in 2002, Paclcway Handle
made its first road trip to Colorado
to compete in the Telluride
Bluegrass Festival.
“We would treat It as like a sum-
Variety 7
Sports 6
Vol. 118, No. 35 | Athens, Georgia
Ml BLANKENSHIP | T. Rib * Bun
▲ Caesar Dawgustus
sat downtown for seven
years. Now he’s moved
to anew local venue.
Doggone:
Statues
find new
locations
Art benefits
local charity
By DALLAS DUNCAN
The Red & Buck
Outside the Starbucks
on the comer of Clayton
and Broad, there is a patch
of concrete and dirt the
only sign a stately down
town symbol once stood
there, proudly watching
over cars and passersby
entering the Classic City.
Caesar Dawgustus is
gone.
He, along with many of
the “We Let the Dawgs
Out” fiberglass bulldogs
stationed on public right
of-ways, were either auc
tioned ofT on eßay or
bought by their original
sponsors. All proceeds from
the project went to benefit
AIDS Athens.
“Caesar Dawgustus was
bought by Phil Hughes
Honda,” said Julie Walters,
an Athens-Oconee Junior
Women’s Club member
who was co-chair of the
project when it began in
2003. “We put the dogs out
on display and we had to
go out in front of the city to
put them on the right-of
ways."
Walters said new homes
for the dogs had to be
found before the club's dis
play contract with the city
ends on Dec. 31.
“We chose this past
weekend [to move the
dogs] because it wasn’t a
home game,” she said, add
ing the volunteers were
See DOGS, Page 2
PACKWAY HANDLE BAND
Whsrs: Ashford Manor
When: Tonight at 6
Cost: sls
mer, almost a vacation in a way,”
Erwin said. “And we were doing this
stuff, driving in the van like 18
hours, driving all night playing and
then driving in the middle of the
night going back, crashing all day.”
The band placed fourth in the
competition, and returned to
Telluride in 2003 and 2004 to com
pete again, finishing third and sec
ond respectively. Much of the allure
of Colorado had to do with the
See BAND, Page 7
NETHERWORLD
To fear, or not
Wf t 0 fear? Find
jfo, ffF,. out more
. about the
Jfi No. 1 haunted
house. Page 8
Crossword 2
Sudoku 7