Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 21, 1958, edition 1 / Page 15
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Althea Gibson Upset .As British Cop Wightman Cup ‘Finest’Choral Group is Recording ‘Porgy’ I HOLLYWOOD (ANPi One | of the finest choral groups ever as- j sembled for a motion picture last week began recording songs from the Gershwin world acclaimed "Porgy and Bess' for the Samuel Goldwyn production of the musical classic at the Goldwyn studio. Composed of 75 selected vocalists the choral group is singing a total of 17 songs from “Porgy", under the direction of Ken Darby, associ ate musical supervisor. The group will require seven weeks to com plete their work. The singers were Moore Fails In Bid For Ring Record; Defeats Foe In 10th SACRAMENTO. Calif <ANP>--: Veteran light, heavyweight champ ion Archie Moore failed to estab-1 lish a new ring record when he! was unable to stop Howard King l in a 10-round bout before 3,500 j fans here last week. Moore, weighing 1961 pounds! to King’s 194. was shooting to j bet ter the record of 126 knockouts Yankee Stadium Next Stop \ For Indianapolis Clowns HOLLYWOOD. Fla. <ANP) —, Pollock’s Indinapaolis Clowns this! week head for New York City and a Sunday afternoon engagement j with a leading independent club i at Yankee stadium. Advance notice indicates the Clowns will have one of their larg est crowds of the current base i” - Mgk \ \\Lim GRIP ON COURAGE—ArmSees Ore' orio Teribio, 3, ploys wish a toy car while sifting on the kip bi his mother, Mrs. Frcm cieca Torihio, cdter their arrival ert the Kessler Institute in West Orange, N. J., from Panama. The youngster born deformed, will be fitted with artificial arms at the famed abate. (Newsgprpss Photol. . .„*®^. U ® BABIES ~ Spencer Scott, left, Is congratulated by Warv Schultz after the former signed • h'V. ' bomm wmtract with the Chicago Cubs at Ml. Pleasant, Mich., on June 12. Earlier in the week, rnuitz was signed to a $25,000 bonus pact with th Cincinnati Rcdlegs. The youngsters, both from Hatn ramck. Mich., were standouts with the Central Michigan College Chippewits this Spring. Scott is a tvphomore and Shulls a freshman, (UPI TELESTIOTO.). | .‘elected from over 400 auditioning i ! for the choral group, i The 17 songs include: "Summer- : time": "I Got Plenty ONuttin”; i •Oh Lawd. I'm On My Way"; “It i Take A Long Pull To Get There", j "Crown Cockeyed ■ Drunk"; "A Wo- I man Is A Sometime Thing"; "He's ! A-Uonc"; “T h ere s Somebody i Knoeki' At De Do"; “De Lawd 1 j Shake De Heavens”; “Clara. Clo- I vu": “Good Mornin* Sistuh"; "It 1 Ain't Necessarily So": “My Man's i Gone Now”: ‘Oh 1 Can't Sit Down'. | Reuben Mamouiian is directing \ ! Ir.e Goldwyn production. : established by the late Young; Stribling. i However, the goatred champion i * had to be con ten* with an unoni-j mous decision, although he hao j King on the deck three times j twice in the seventh, and for a 1 nine count in the ninth. It was the fourth straight vie | tory for More over King, who hails from Reno, Nev. j ball season. They have been on j the road 29 years and still rank I as baseball’s top diamond attrac | tlon. The game will be highlighted by 1 the Rock ’n Roil Funshow feat uring King Tut, team veteran and head of the laugh-producing de partment. Tut teams with his ƑDSFD THE BEGINNING OF THE END Mrs. Alberta Akins, left, mother of the new welterweight champion of the world. VirsV> Akins, shows the champ's wife, Mrs. Ida Akins, the punch that started the downfall of Vince Martinez in St. Louis recently. This Beating The Gun BY BILL BROWER FOR ANP 1 Before the New York Yankees abandoned their lily-white player policy, the conjecture was that i ohee the perennial American lea j gue pennant winners felt- the need iof some transfusion at the gate | there would be no reluctance to ae i quire St tali player. It might be of some signiti eance, however, that the color bar was not dropped finally until the Cleveland Indians broke the Yankees’ phenome nal run of league champion ships in 1954. The following season, Elston Howard was giv ■ en a full-fledged chance and the Yankees today are glad to have him around. Oddly enough despite the in- I creasing prevalence of tan players ! in the majors, the two teams reso ; lutely held out. Now she number i has been reduced to one—the Bos | ton Rod Box. The Detroit Tigers made the i move last week. In last place in the AL, the Tigers called up Ossie , Virgil, third baseman with their Charleston farm club in the Amer ican association. The Tigers had been the target of criticism this season because its, roster remained pure white. Dur ing the off-season trading, the team acquired Virgil and a first baseman, Gail Harris, in an inter league trade with the Ran Fran- I half -pint counterpart, Midget Be bop. to produce one of the big , gest drawing cards in diamond ! history. Before the game and between! the tnnnings, the two touch oifj ! hilarious cornedv with a variety of tricks and acts that are keep-; the fans in stitches. Sting nematodes, which attack ! peanut plants, also attack other! crops, including corn and cotton. A good plant rooting mixture can be made from equal parts peat moss and sand, well mixed. Cutting excess forage not only provides extra li w ‘ stock feed, it also reduces the severity of attacks by plant diseases. I cisco Giants. But Virgil was imme diately assigned to the Charleston i team. With the team, which was expect• ; ed to challenge the Yankees in the | curren pennant chase, floundering, : the Tiger management decided that help was needed badly enough | to break a precedent. Virgil had been going well with the Charleston club, which was in second place in Use association. Ossie also had spent a fut! season with the Giants before the tram shifted to San Francisco He Is a good hitter and an excellent, fielder. Detroit was needing help, espec ially at third base. That’s where Virgil came in. He arrived in the majors with a 294 association bat | ting average, with 34 runs batted ; in. He has power and should find the 340-foot distance to the left field barrier at Briggs stadium in Detroit an inviting arget. It has been contended for a long time that if the Tigers signed a tan player, it would be a shot in the arm for the box office. During early years of Larry Dohy and Luke Easter in the AL, Negro fans flocked to Briggs stadium whenever the Cleveland Indians appear ed in Detroit. Recently, the Indians were sche duled for a night game with Tiger* and Jim (Mudcati Grant, Cleve land’s rookie righthander, was an* j bounced as one of the pitcher. The j Tiger front office conceded that ; this announcement was worth 5.000 ! additional admissions. Billy Harrell, 3rd Baseman, Seeks | Permanent Berth With Cleveland CLEVELAND (ANP) “lf ; ! the American League season were \ to open tomorrow, Billy Harrell probably would be at third base , for the Indians.’'—from a March 14, 1957, issue of a Cleveland paper. "If the Indians were to open the American League season tomorrow. Billy Harell would | CBS Radio i To Aircast Jazz Fest NEW YORK - fANP) CBS radio net work will broadcast ex clusively four consecutive jazz concerts from the fifth annual Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island on July 3, 6 at 8:00-9:00 PM, EDT Mitch Miller will serve as host for these programs which will have such stars as. Duke Ellington orchestra: Marian Macpartland trio; Dave Briibeek quartet; Hex Stewart and All-Stars; Gerry Mulligan S quartet; Jimmy Rushing; Jack Teagarden and And All-Stars, including Georgia Auld, Jo Jones and Pee Wee Russell. Maynard Ferguson orchestra; She Ray Charles singers: | Mahalia Jackson; “Big” May- Ij belle and Joe Turner, Kansas City j blues-shouters: Pete Johnson; George Shearing and group; Jim ! my Guiffre and Trio, j Chico Hamilton - * group: Mas i Roach, Don Elliott, Urble Green, | Terry Gibbs, Dinah Washington, j Bobby Hackelt and Anita O'Day; hand Herb Pomeroy's orchestra, an highly regarded musical organiza tion from Boston, comprised of I business men and former eeiebrat- I ed jazz musicians now engaged in I other fields. | Delay in cutting forage or grar | )ng permits disease organisms to || build up, causing severe leaf spot j ting, stem blighting, general de li foliation and stand depletion, i Control Johnson, Bermuda or •; quackgrass with dalapon. )| Other ways to serve prune juice i and milk, chilled or heated. left hook was the beginning, htii not shown is the sizzling right that Virgil landed iu Use fourth round that ended the bout, (UIT TELE PHOTO). - —— ™* , _ I . SUBJECT S M-O-N-E-Y—Sugar Bay Roblnaon holds hi* *cr- Ray, Jr„ aloft tc look at crowd of fans at New York'3 Inter national Airport, shortly before the middleweight king took off for Los Angeles, Looking on is Mrs. Robinson, The Harlem belter enplaned to the West Coast to discuss a fantastic $1,000.- 000 guarantee, offered him to fight heavyweight titleholder Floyd Patterson. The fight, if contracted for. would be fought in Lok Angeiea. (tie wsprsss Photo). i have to be 34 third base." from the same paper, March 19, 1958. If Harrell didn't believe t*> writer of these lines, you can’t blame him, It looked like he would never earn a starting po sition with the American Lea gue team. Harrell had been knocking a bout in the Cleevland chain since 1953. He had been up several times with the parent team —last season and spring trials—but. seemed nev er to hold a charm for any of the Cleveland managers. Last year, for example Harrell was a standout In spring training at Tucson. His fielding and hitting were topnotch, but Kerby Farrell, then the Indians’ pilot, contended | that the infielder couldn't put the i ball. Eventually. Harrell went to | LraJl. C-VtfJJLUiIA*J« riaifc-u w *s. vv dim; n; ittrr t-'fis:. Make Sure Your Car is Safe for Happy Vacation Driving I Install a Safe. Silent nuDAS’ MUFFLEK i Moro S«My Wlti^ Iht Muffler Designed m For Quiet Comfort 4011 mm Fre« Installation And the Mida* Muffler Co*t# No More Than An Ordinary Muffler. * Fast lorvi<s»*WbU« Yea We«oh « Muff lor*. Tailpipe*. Dual JEahau*** 1,1 w.davte sst. TE 2-1728 ™ W«l»» Srta»* Y-* -MW, K.W tta Tut Hour O. Y»; NBC ««•!.- , San Diego of the Pacific Coast ' League. This year, it /was an on-again, ; off-again proposition until Harrell 1 finally was given a shot at short stop and he appears to be in the lineup now to stay. The 29-year-old Siena Col lege alumnus has been ream ing for afieid a* short for the Indians and has been hitting timely. His latest exploit was a 2-run home run that touched off a 4-rim 10th inning for the Indians that gave them an 7-to -5 victory over the Red Sox in Boston. That was Harrell's fifth home ;un of the season. Most of his drives tor four bases have gone to ! left field, disproving’ Ferre'l'.- j contention that Billy would never lie able to null the bail. TJSE CJIBOUNZJUf * ’ifjf WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JUNE *l. 1»«* Schoolgirl, 17, Defeats Althea; Ist Since 1930 WIMBLEDON, England Tennis Queen A! then Gibson was over powered Saturday by 17-year-old Christine Truman, a ‘school girl. Miss Truman of Britain smashed America's 28-year old Miss Gib son on the Wightman Cup, four ■ matches as compared to three, The honor of clinching Bri tain's first cup championship since 1930 went to Miss Ann Hayden, who scored her fouu try’s fourth point in the next, to last match of the seven match, two-day competition with a C-3 5-7, 6-3 ‘single* vlc- I tor.V over Miss Mint) Arnold of Redwood City. Calif. America goi its last point in a ' meaningless concluding doubles match as Miss Gibson and Mias Janet Hupps of Seattle defeated Miss Ann Shileock and Pat Ward. t»-4. 3-6, C-3 The six -fool. 170 pound Miss Tru | man. who swept both her singles ; assigmnets shared in a third point | in doubles, triggered the upset, Livingstone College ‘Clears’ Policy Stand SALISBURY At a meeting , ! last week of the board of trustees j ; of Livingstone college, cognizance , ; was taken of the general misun- < I derstatidmj( of a policy statement j ! issued by the board of trustees' at j ! its February meeting. 1 It was believed at that time, fey i the trustees, that top administrs- ! live officers of the institution I should be nu mb- rs of the AMF, ' Zion church the denomination that - supports the college. This policy ! j was reiterated at the meeting in I February. The board now makes it clear \ I that this policy does not apply to the faculty or the heads of any academic divisions or departments 1 ~-f the college that the criteria for filling the faculty positions sre still a* they always have been, the , competence and training of the ; teacher and an evaluation of his po tential contribution to the develop inen of the program of a church related school. Victor J. Tulane, secretary of the ’ » * Straight \ \ Kentucky Bourbon a- H 2 75 i f I Old ff| W ff; ST&AICaT &ESTOCKT Kigia^Oj I STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKEY, 86 PROOF ANCIENT AGE DISTILLING CO„ FRANKFORT,, IDs/ # I i howevai*. Mis* Trtunm. f«4l©wiup her brilliant play in Friday’» opening program, shrugged off a first set !o*s and simply overwhelmed Mias ; Gibson, the defending Wimbledon i and United State* champion, 2-6 j C-3, 6 4. Miss 'l'uuwd's victory came at the crucial point In the ser ies, Veteran Mis* Dorothy Mead Xnode of Forest Hills, N. y , had moment* before ctquar ! cil the competition at 2-2 with a surprise triumph over Mis* Shirley Bloomer in the open™ ing singles. The shocker by Miss T rum ay made it 3-2 for Britain and Mis( I Haydon, only IS and better knowj j as a table tenuis star, took it fro« ; there tor the clincher in a ragged!! played match with Miss Arnold. The clinching was anti climax f* the crowd of 5.00 C, which roare* throuhgout the thrilling Gibson* i Truman battle. i board issued a statement on lav i inp, stone's "hiring policy.” I) Saigkim **rka<F* tfws twwnbl* with cNoptae inflatk>»--pop* «ut in tJva tr*oes? *H9ins j imaginatlsHt &&d ’ 15
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 21, 1958, edition 1
15
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