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Athens Focal Point Of Dixie Grid Interest Tomorrow
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Yep! That’s Sanford Stadium above — but maybe
vou just don’t recognize' it in that state. This picture
was taken just before it was dedicated prior to the
famed Yale game. Since that time the seating capacity
has been increased to nearly’ 50,000, while the sur
CELEBRATIES TO WITNESS GAME
FROM HUGE 'PRESIDENT’S BOX’
The official ggesf list for the President’s box. during the game
includes some of the state’s mosi outsianding people. The box is
located in the center of the North Stands at Sanford Stadium.
The list includes:
Governor and Mrs. Herman Talmadge, Mr, and Mrs. John L.
Conner, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harris,
Dr. and Mrs. Bryant K. Vann, Mr. and Mrs, Roy N. Emmett, Miss
Emily Woodward, Judge and Mrs. Price Gilbect, Mr, vand Mrs.
Samuel 1. Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. James Peterson, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Hardy, Mr, and Mrs. J. J. McDenough, and Gereral and
Mrs. Sandy Beaver. - ; 5
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Bird, Mr. and Mrs. Hughes Spalding, Mr.
and- Mrs. Rutherford Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Smith, Mr. and
Mis. Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Braswell, Dr. and Mrs. Lombard
Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Wingate, Mr. and Mrs. Miller Bell, Mr.
and Mys. Paul Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Black, Dr. and Mrs.
R. R. Paty, Mr. anders. Charles Sanford, Dr. and Mrs. Harmon
Caldwell, and Mrys. L. D. Caldwell.
Mr, and Mrs, Williain McChesney Martin, ir., president of the
Export-Imgort Bank, and former president of the New York
Stock Exchange; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Sunderland. vice
president and general councellor of Standard Oil Co., Indiana;
Mr. and Mrs. Augustin Legoretta, vanker of Mexico City; Mr.
Sheridan A. Logan, New York City, executive secretary of George
F. Baker Foundation in New York; Mr. Smythe E. Gambrell,
lawyer and vice-president of Eastern Air Lines, in Atlanta; Miss
Mary Richard Cclvin of Atlanta.
These guests will watch the Tech-Georgia game irom the
President’s box and will be entertained at a buffet luncheon be
fore the game at the Caldwell hcme.
SOUTH'S NUMBER ONE GAME GETS
TOPS IN RADIO, PRESS COVERAGE
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DR, HARMON W. CALDWELL
Given Farewell Dinner. . .
Athenians, Leave Yours Home
25,000 Automobiles
Are Expected In City
\ Police Chief Clare-fice Roberts has announced the traf
fic pattern to handle an estimated 25,000 automobiles ex-l
pected to jam their way inte this city tomorrow for the
Georgia-Georgia Tech game. > l
The police department, and its
special traffic division headed by
Captain J. H. Porterfield, has done
an excellent job at recent games.
“With the continued coopera
lion of local motorists, we can
handle this large amount of traf
fic satisfactorily,” ‘Chief Roberts‘
asserted, |
All local citizens are urged not
only to. leave their cars at home
but park them off the street,
therebg'o offerin * parking
space to the visi: -
Some 35 state patrolment and 25
out of town policemen will aid
the local officers in handling of
the game traffic. The: well laid
Parking plans are as folows: -
All traffic coming north. on
Lumpkin Sireet wilk-be reguesied
Some 150 Press, Cameramen Present,
Plus Radio, Newsreel Specialists
BY GEORGE ABNEY, JR.
The [Georgia-Georgia Tech game tomorrow afternoon
will probably be the best covered football game in the
nation.
*There will be 85 photographers, both motion and still,
taking pictures of the tilt from the press box and field,
and 56 pressmen and sports reporters will fill the press
hox when the starting whistle is hlown.
Writers from nearly every daily
paper in the state and many news
papers in other parts of the nation
vi/ill be here to gover the grid bat
tle,
Geri’s Relatives
There will even be an editor and
a cameraman from Phenoxville,
Pennsylvania. The editor will be
none other than Joe Ujobai, broth
er-in-law of the famed. Georgia
halfback, Joe Geri, who is leading
the Southeastern conference in
scoring and bids well to break the
conference all-time scoring mark.
.- Bill Strudell, University of
Georgia ‘athletic publicity director,
to park at lots on Ag Hill. They
will leave the city via the same
route.
Traffic coming south on Lump
kin will be parked on the track
field, while all cars coming into
Lumpkin from Baxter will be
routed to the parking lot near the
'stadium. All traffic will leave the
‘stadium area the same way in
|which it arrived, thereby elimi
| nating any crossing of traffic lines.
| Incoming east traffic will be
{routed to parking lots at the inter-
Y section of Jackson, Cemetery and
|| Baldwin streets. |
| At the beginning of the fourth
l qu%bter in the game, all traffic
will be blocked off on Lumpkin
|}street from the. YMCA to Five
i'?‘a‘i‘n‘fi' - ;u;;;..;.,,.:a.._« oo oD ‘
rounding hedge and end zone secats have been put in.
Also in the foreground now stands the modern main
gate entrance. But it was on this field in which the pro
longed Bulldog jinx over the Yellow Jackets was born.
The Engineers have won only once on this field since
Bulldogs, Jackets
In 43rd Meeting
. Away back in 1893 the first game beiween Georgia and Georgia
Tech was played. The Jackets won that game, 22-6.
Ircluding that ’93 engager, the two. state institutions have met in
battle 42 times. Georgia has been the victor 21 times, Tech 16, and
there hase been five: ties, three of which were scoreless. :
S T g
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GOV, HERMAN TALMADGE
Here for Big Game
is literally swamped with mail
concerning the game coverage. The
floor of his office has numbers
of mail bags plus packages and
papers piled all over it. His desk
is full of letters. He worked
Thanksgiving Day to finish up de
tails on coverage of the game.
Writers In Stands
Besides the full press box there
will be ten to twelve sports writ
ers sitting in the stands. The writ
ers that don’t need to use type
writers because they don’t have a
Sunday paper are placed in the
stands. There will be Western
Union men in the press box be
sides the pressmen.
The game is being covered by
at least five newsreel services said
Mr. Strudell. The Fox Movietone,
Universal, Paramount, M. G. M,,
and Southland newsreel services
will be on hand.
Covering the game by radio will
be the Georgia Sports Network,
the Georgia Techh Network origi-!
nating from WGST, WMGM (Me
tro-Goldwyn-Mayer on New York
State hookup) giving a direct
broadcast, and CBS which is car
rying a round-up of four or five
games. CBS will tune into the
Georgia-Georgia Tech game about
four or five times a quarter,
The New York Sun, daily news-i
paper, has requested a detail play
by-play account of the game to be|
sent them by the Athletic Publici
ty Office directly following the
game.
All-in-all this means the Geor
gia-Georgia Tech game will likely
be the best covered game in the
nation.
CUB COACH BOASTS ‘
THREE GRID ACES
~ HOUSTON, Tex.—(AP)— Rad
ford Byerly coaches a Cub Scout
football team in Houston.
He’s been tutoring the little fel
lows ior some time. When he lived
in Dallas he coached the Southern
Methodist Mustang Midgets. .
On his teams at Dallas were
thelatbave: .. .~ .0 1
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GRORGIA
Since 29, when the Bulldogs be
gan playing in their present ball
park — Sanford Stadium —a jinx
has handicapped the Yellow Jack
ets’ chances when playing here in
Athens. Only once have the Tech
sters defeated the Bulldogs on
Sanford Field, that being in ’44
when the Atlanta ciub was loaded
with V-12 trainees and the Geor
gia team had only teenagers.
Tomorrow afternoon the Tech
club will be trying to break the
Sanford Field jinx. They will be
slight underdogs in the game. Will
the jinx work again?
During the last decade, Georgia
has won five games, Tech four and
‘there has been one tie. The tie,
0-0, began the ten-year span in
1938. Only the year before, 37,
Bill Hartman — present Georgia
backfield coach—returned a kick
off for 98 yards and a touchdown
to give the Bulldogs a 6-6 tie.
Past Stars
There have been many stars
through the past in this inter
state rivalery. Bob McWhorter, a
local citizen and an ex-mayor of
the city, is a Georgia immortal,
playing for four victorious Bull
dog elevens from 1910-1913. Play
ing halfback, he sparked victories
of 11-6, 5-0, 20-0, and 14-0.
In more recent years, the Bull
dogs have thrown such standouts
as Spud Chandler, the great Yan
kee pitcher, Catfish Smith, Red
Leathers, Vassa Cate; Jim Ford
' ham, Heywood Allen, Frank Sink
wich, Walter Ruark, Charlie Trip
pi and Johnny Rauch at the Jack
ets. All have contributed their tal
ents to the cause of defeating the
arch rival.
Tomorrow the two clubs meet
for the 43rd time. Georgia will be
trying for the Southeastern Con
ference Championship and a bowl
bid. Tech, losers of two ball games,
won’t have any conference crowns
or bowl games at stake — but
there’s a jinx to be reckoned with.
Bobby Dodd’s crew would like to
break the Bulldog stronghold in
Athens. What’s your guess? Well,
perhaps you're right.
Network Football
Army vs. Navy at Philadel
phia—MßS: 1:15 p. m. Also
televised over NBC-East Coast
Network f{rom 12:15 to in
clude pre-game ceremonies.
Football roundup—CßS 2:30
fourth weekly summation of
multi-game play, to include
direct pickups from Army-
Navy, Washington - Notre
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LEADING THE CHEERS of the Georgia fans tomor
row wiil be cheerleaders, left to right, Cliff Collier,
Vienna; Marcia McKinney, Atlanta; Baxter Webb,
Atlanta; Pat Turner, Tampa, Fla.; “Sleepy’” Camp,
Atlanta; Jo Lane Cheves, Atlanta; Bud Taylor, Aclan
ta; Maxie Cherry, Donalsonville; Baxter Webb, At
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‘Love, Athens.—(Photo.courtesy The Red and Black.)
its dedication—that being during the war years. The
ghosts still haunt Sanford Stadium. It's one of the most
amazing jinxes in big time football.
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WALLACE BUTTS, University of Georgia
* * +
GALA CAMPUS
BREAKFAST
PARTIES SET
Numerous parties 1::ve been
pianned by various campus
organizations for the home
coming weekend. Breakfast
parties to be held Saturday
morning from 1 until 2 a. m.
are: Kappa Sigma fraternity,
at Snack Shack; Alpha Epsilon
Pi, at house; Chi Phi, at house;
Chi Psi, at house; Fhi Epsiion
Pi, at house; Tau Epsilon Phi,
at house: Sigma Chi, at house;
Pi Kappa Alpha, at house;
Delta Tau Delta, at house;
Lamda Chi Alpha, at house.
Also on Friday and Satur
day nights Alpha Epsilon Pi
will sponsor a house dance
from 10 until 12 p. ™.
Dame, North Carolina-Virgin
ia, Mississippi State - Missis
sippi, and Georgia Tech, Geor
gia.
Southern Methodist vs. Tex
as Christian at Dallas— NBC
2:45.
Mississippi vs. Mississippi
State at Oxford, Miss—AßC
2:45.
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Line Coach, Georgia
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i BILL HARTMAN »
| Georgia Backfield Coach
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Art Museum Open
For Game Visitors
The Georgia Museum of Art, lo
cated in the General Library
Building at the University of
Georgia, will be open for visitors
on Thanksgiving Day from 2:30 p.
m. to 5:30 p. m., Alfred M. Hol
brook, curator, announces.
The museum will also be open
Saturday following the Georgia-
Georgia Tech football game from
6 p. m. to 9 p. m. Regular hours for
the Museum are from 9 a. m. to 1
p. m., and from 2:30 p..m. to 5:30
p. m., week days. It is open on
Saturday morning and Sunday
afternoon. : i
Currently showing are paintings
from tih:l fiévxla‘ Ugéerggldé !;;;zlg{iook
Memerial Collection and paintings
by distinguished Southern artists..
i.A 3 :
rid Finale Promises
Thrill-Packed Weekend
By ED THILENIUS, City Editor ‘ §
All roads lead to Athens tomorrow—paved or uhpave |
steel rail and skyways — to Dixie’s football focal poin
where the scent of orange blossoms. and the aroma o
sugar cane will be sniffed by 50,000 pigskin partisans,
gg‘efient for the final act of “1948 Grid Fortunes in the
§ 3 ‘.,) fi
The finale has more interesting angles than * Miss
Hexagon of Any Year'—namely— (1) —the South’s most
bitter grid rivalry of Georgia vs. Tech; (2) —Homecom
ing with Charlie Spivak; (3)—Bowl Bids galore; (4)—
a farewell party for Chancellor Caldwell; and (s)—a
barbecue for the entire State Legislature. ¢
The outcome of the classic ie about as certain as Gal
lup’s latest poll. The odds fraternity says Tech and seven
points—the weatherman as of now says “fan
Put 'em all together and you have 2 gridiron menu
loaded with chills, spills,, thrilis, and most begrudging?iv
—pills (aspirin). '
No Tickets — No Space :
~ You can’t beg, borrow, steal, or buy a ticket or get a
hotel room. If you were smart enough to put your order in
last January or thereabouts -— you may have an ingide
track on these two essential iterus.
Transportaticn officials have been checking well laid
plans for the problem of getting the inasses here and
back home again. Special trains will start arriving here
early tomorrow morning from distant southern points, as
well as from Atlanta. Special® fleets of buses are being
held in reserve at nearby key points in the event they are
needed in the travel tidal wave.
Heading the list of celebrities expected to be present
for the week-end are Governor Herman Talmadge and
Ihis wife Bettty, plus the entire State Legislature and other
distinguished guests by the dozen. b :
Clarke county legislators will serve as hosts to the
solons at a barbecue to be held at noon tomorrow at
Woodruff Hall. Open house will begin at 10 a. m,, and
an attendance of over 500 is expected. The ’cue is epon
sored by the University, Clarke’s representatives and the
| city. ,
. Pep Rally Tonight ity
Tonight at 7 p. m., members of the University faculty
|Will honor Chancellor Harmon W. Caldwell in a farewell
dinner party at the Coordinate Dining Hall.
| - Also planned tonight is a giant “Beat Tech” pep rally
| with accompanying bonfire at the University track fieid
at 6:30 p. m.
‘ First in the series of homecoming dances will also be
held tonight in Stegeman Hall with Charlie Spivak, his
lgolden trumpet, and band providing the music. Spivak
will also stage a concert Saturday morning in the Fine
Arts Auditorium.
The bands of Georgia and Georgia Tceh will provide
the music for the game with colorful halftime ceremonies
planned. Miss Sis Stribling, of St. Simons, who earlier in
the week was chosen as “Miss Homecoming,” will be pre
sented during the ceremonies, along with- members of hei
i court.
‘ Also during the halftime period, seniors will stage theis
annual parade around the playing field.:¥a i 241
Georgia 21, Georgia Tech 13 |
M B
If a fellow can look at a jar of peas and guess that there
are 4,308 peas in that jar — and be exactly right to the
pea, he should be able to predict a little thing like the
score of the Georgia-Georgia Tech football game.
WSSE Drive
To Precede
Game Kickoff
Immediately preceding the
kick-off at the Georgia-Georgia
Tech football game in Sanford
Stadium Saturday, a collection
‘wlil be taken for the World Stu
dent Service Flnd, This drive is
being jointly sponsored by the
‘University of Georgia and Geor
gia Tech.
Just before game-time the
bands of both schools will march
across the playing field, forming
the letters WSSF. Following a
brief anncuncement giving the
purpose and function of the
WSSF, approximately 160 stu-~
dents from the University and
Georgia Tech will pass the col
lection plates. through the stands.
This drive is being conducted
through the zourtesy cf the Ath-~
letic Association of the Univer
sity, Cecach Wally Butts, and
Chanceilor Harmon W. Caldwell.
At noon on Saturday leaflets
publicizing this drive will be
dropped by plane over the city
and campus. @ e g
TROY HONORED
AT RECEPTION
Jack Troy, author of “Leading
a Bulldog’s Life,” will be honored
with a reception Friday afternoon
from 3:30 to 5:30 in Michael’s Book
Department.
Troy, former sports editor of the
Atlanta Constitution, will auto
graph copies of this, his first, book,
which is a history of football at
the University of Georgia.
o s
Planetoids, also called aster
roids, are tiny planets revolving
the sun, mainly in orbits between
Jufiiter an WS 7 v
PAGE SEVEN
And 1f another fellow can come
within one ounce of guessing the
weight of a 114 pound, seven
ounce rock, and still another
locks into a container and ccmes
within 29 bottle tops of hitting
the correct number (45.456) they
too should be able to guess a foot
ball score, or not miss it far.
The Banner-Heraid has taken
winners of such coatests, which
were held at the Athens Agricul
ture Fair a few weeks back, and
asked them 1o predict the scorz
of the Georgia-Georgia Tech game,
:nd the three have guessed—with
out knowing what the others have
‘progncsticated — almost identical
scores! {
Herman Nash, Jr., a high school
studeni who resides at 510 Holman
Avenue, was the winner in Gal=
lent-Belk's rcck-guessing contest,
and he says Georgia wiil be the
victor tomorrow afternoon in San
ford Stadium, 20-12. £
J. H. Woods, an employee of the
Texaco Oii Company hers in At
hens and & vresident of Colbert,
won the Dr. Peprer contest at the
Fair, and he believes the Bulldogs
will take the tilt, 21-13. Ik
And Eugenc Powers, a college
students wthio resides at 1075 Prince
Avenue, was the gentleman who
guessed the exact number of peas
that the Tanner Lumber Company
had ina jar at the fair, and Powers
says the Red aad Black charges
will come out on lop, 21-14.
Yes. sir, the three bave predi
cted almost ine same score, with
an extra’ point here and' there
being the only difference. Perhaps
this means something, for legn
three good heads get together, the
results are usually similar—this
is, if they are men. g
Acenrding to messers Nash,
Woods, and Cowers, the Wally
Butts-led Bulldogs will score three
touchdowns tc Bobwy Dodd’s two.
Check after the game and m}x@w ‘
close thev nave. = 3
Cakes should be stored ini closed
mmm nos air is need
ed to keep cake from acquiring a
4.1 jign b MR ERY