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Page 14 text:
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10 Opening From 1911, when Herty Field back of New College was abandoned, until 1929, when Sanford Stadium hosted f Yale in its inaugural game, Sanford Field served as Georgia ' s main inter-collegiate and intramural playing field It was named for Steadman V. Sanford, a professor of English who served as faculty chairman of athletics and in 1 932 became president of the university. Designed primarily for baseball and football, its main stands followed the foul lines of the baseball diamond. These football players from 1903 did not have the silver britches th goes along with Georgia football today. They were an innovation of Coach Wally Butts (1939). Through tin years, fans referred to the Bulldogs ' silver britches in their chants and on banners, but the phrase really caug on in the early fifties with a cheer, banners, and colorful vests that proclaimed Go, You Silver Britches! I
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Page 13 text:
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The Chapel, 1999 If you walk under the Arch while you are a freshman, legend has it that you will never graduate. History points to a UGA alumnus, Daniel Huntley Redfearn (class of 1910), as the originator of the legend. The Arch was pattered after the one on Georgia ' s Great Seal, which appears on the modern state flag. The Arch itself represents the state constitution, and the three columns supporting it represent wisdom, justice and moderation. Originally, the Arch held heavy gates that were closed to secure the campus, but they disappeared sometime around 1885. In 1946, two electric lights were added to the top of the Arch and it was moved about six feet away from the street. Now it is incorporated into the official UGA logo and its image can be found on just about anything from T-shirts to UGA staff business cards. Opening 9
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Page 15 text:
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Besides Silver Britches, many other Georgia sayings have been born in Sanford Stadium. How ' Bout Them Dogs is a slogan of recent vintage. It first surfaced during the mid to late 1970s. It gained national attention and exposure when Georgia won the national championship in 1980. A major wire-service used the phrase in its story of Georgia ' s victory over Notre Dame and many newspapers picked it up in glaring headlines across the country proclaiming, How ' Bout Them Dogs! Another is Between the Hedges, which is a reference to Sanford Stadium dating back to the early 1930s. It was natural for a clever sports writer, referring to an upcoming home game, to observe that the Bulldogs will have their opponent ' between the hedges. ' Opening 11
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