Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 29, 1958, edition 1 / Page 15
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St. Aug. Defeats Del. State, 26-0 For Sixth Victory Maryland Hawks Dampen Shaw’s Homecoming, 30-8 Bears Suffer 3rd Loss As Hawks Run Rampant A saddened hotneioming crowd | cf 6 000 persons watched Saturday j afternoon as the Shaw University I Bears were defeated by the Hawks of Maryland State College, Prin cess Ann, Md.. by a score of 30-8. The game was played at 4 p. m. at Chavis-Park, folowing a gala home coming parade. •.Maryland State scored in the first -rju«i ter when right halfback MiJJor capped a 35-yard drive. | Gjflyr scored the extra points to ln*ke it 8-0 dray also swed the Hawks' second.TD on s 50-yard pass from Joe Robmson. Miller scored the i NCC Changes A&T Game Site To G’Keily Field On Campus DURHAM --- A -students’ petition 1 of'Stmiif' 1.000 names filed through | groper channels" has resulted in ; @ - change of the North Carolina i Cpltege vs. A and T football j gjme on Thanksgiving Day from i Dtirhara Athletic Park to the KSgies’ O’Kelly Field. Kickoff tifne ts 1:30 p. fn, ■iOr, I, G. Newton, director of ath ftjhcsi at NCC, announced the change Thursday night. “I am in formed that the fcoilege'si Execu te's. Committee voted to bring the g|me back to the campus.” New tan said. t Member* of the college's 'Executive Committee, whose -chairman is NCC president A5- r ?on*p Flder, are Dr. W. H. j*rovm, dean of the graduate -eu-hool; Dr, Q. T. Kyie. dean of She undergraduate school; Dr. J. H. Taylor, director of the Summer School; Dr. A. L. Tur ner, dean of the Law School; and Mrs. France* M. Eagleson, registrar, who also serves as secretary. The contest was orginally slated for O’Kelly Field. On Nov. 13. however. Dr. Newton advised that j a -shift had been made to accomo date 4 larger number of fans.” O’- j Kf-lly Field’s stands accommodate i 8.000. Durham Athletic Park nor- i Al Vann “Kicked” Off: Coach Ousts Tan Eager TOLEDO, Ohio (ANP) Ai \4.nn, co-captain at the University ai Toledo basketball team last sea - sijn and considered a mainstay for tije coming campaign, was abrupt ly kicked of t tbe squad last week for what his coach described as disciplinary reasons. The action so incensed some members of the •University student body that within 24 hours after the nation was announced basketball egach Eddie Melvin was hanged in offigv. Van#,- a senior from Brook- Tm.N, ls„ said his ouster sur prised -him/ He said the coach gaye generalities for the rea sons and that he (Vann) could not accept them unless they were more specific. -'But it appeared last week that the a<tio® was irrevocable. Melvin declared. r-[ Jsie3 to do ft. but we have a iuod, ictiar.ee of winning this year, and I felt that Vann’s attitude was detrimental to the team,” Melvin sgidt “T had discussed the Import ance of keeping training rules with Vann -is earnestly as I knew how op previous occasions, but appar ently ivsi unable to make an im prr-s»ior. .on him.” .“He wss co-captain last season, and could have been one this sea son, too.” MSelvin’i Job is at stake this sea son. It is generally understood that topless he produce* a winner he Plight be cut as the Rockets’ cage coach Observers said that his dras tic decision to oust Vann prob ably was aimed at baiting any Inflence the player might LAIRD'S APPLE WINE 80 c Li Per 4-5 J*”! Quart fe~- . J M Urns! /jP®/ USSD & CO, hsßgß I scosmuu. m. J- Lctjitby J WOdTM CAtOrW.. VA. j extra points this time to make it, j 16-0 at halftime j The opening kickoff was rcceic • ed by Miller in the second half and he raced 80 yards for a touch down. Robinson scored the extra points to make the score 24-0 The Hawks scored again in the final period when Gray .scored from nine yards out to cap a 54- yard drive to make it 3-0 The Shaw Bears got their only score in the fourth quarter when quarterback Calvin McDowell cut off right tackle to score from three yards out. Hammonds scored the extra point? ! This was Shaw’s third defeat. | inaily accommodates around 5.000, | but extra bleachers can swell that ! number to around 10,000. Newton and athletic admirustra i tors William Jones, business mar.- | ager, and H A. Hudson, assistant athletic business manager, said Thursday “Steps are being taken to accommodate comfortably the thousands of fans who are expect ed to see the game.' Student leaders, who have valu able concession rights a; O’Kelly Field, and the football team, which hasn't lost a contest on O’Keliy Field since 1953, objected to the shift in game sites as soon as it was made known Newton, who was credited with the decision to change was hanged in effigy by 85 X CC men on November 15. The effigy was laier impaled in front of the cafeteria all day on Nov 16 and burned amidst clamors for a return to O Kelly Field that night. Throughout demonstrations were orderly, Jerome H, Dudley, president of the NCC Student Government As j sedation, wrote Newton asking for st clarification of the situation as- I ter the effigy incident He denied I Student Government participation I in the effigy episode. have with two other tan mem bers of the team, Willie New son and Barney Cabey, both New- Yorkers. Vann was an outstanding de fensive player and was second highest scorer on TU's team with an 8.1 average as a so phomore and a 14.3 average as junior. He said last week that he plann ed to remain in school. He is ma joring in business administration Jim Brown Sets NFL Record WASHINGTON (ANPt - Jim my Brown established a new Na tional League rushing record when he gained 152 yards from scrimm age against the Washington Red skins as the Cleveland Browns re gained undisputed possession of first place in the National Football League, with a 20-10-lQ victory in a game here recently The 228-pound fullback pushed his rushing yardage for the season to 1,163 yards, breaking the form er mark set in 1941 by Steve Van Buren for the Philadelphia Eagles by 17 yards. Brown also racked np two touchdowns, putting him with in one of Van Boren's record of IS. It gave the Brown’s full back 102 points for the season and left him a chance to reach the ail-time NFL scoring re cord of 138 points. He needed six touchdowns to reach it. The magnificent runner would have achieved the Van Buren touchdown record except for an unfortunate clipping penalty in the fourih period which nullified a streaking 62-yard touchdown run and cut his gain to 15 yards. Brown carried the ball 27 times against the Redskins. Altogether, he had carried the bail 177 times this season, giving him an average of 8.1 yards per carry The Old Tcm&t. iw* A real man is always wilj jng to face the music, even if j H « a wedding march.” & ... s- . -l-lr'ui&mak %&t . * SjSb.jL- jiff (.'LOSE, BUT NO GOOD—Leaping skyward for » pass in the Lions at Detroit, Michigan recently. Covering on the play i- !>e end zone. San Francisco end R. C. Owens clutches the ball to his troll's Jack Christiansen (M>. Detroit won the game, 35-ii I ri : chest—only to drop it on the way down—in the game against the TELEPHOTO). Jeter Hears Thousand-Yard Mark As ClAA’s Offensive Leader; Va. State Team Offensive Leader For 3rd Week DURHAM (CIAA News Service) —Virginia Siate College's tripie threat quarterback, Do Wayne Je ter. continues to be the ClAA’s total offense leader for the fourth consecutive week today according to statistics released by the CIAA News Service. The Troians also continue as the loop’s team often Prairie View Wildcats Oppose FAMU Rattlers In Big Classic TALLAHASSEE, i.—The un beaten Prairie View Wildcats have been named opponents for the Fla. A&M University Rattlers in the 261 h annual Orange .Blossom Class ic. The classic, largest Negro grid attraction and ranked fifth of all gowl games in the nation in at tendance, will be played under the arch lights of the famed and spac ious Orange Bowl Stadium in Mi ami Saturday night, Dec. 13, 1958. An estimated crowd of nearly 50,000 is expected to see these two grid powers clash for the National Negro Collegiate Football Champ ionship, The Raltlers are the cur rent national champions. The announcement of Prairie Knicks’ Tan Players Aid Title Hopes (Editor’s Note: This is an other in the series of storier Basketball Association teams on the prospects of National and their prospects for the current season). CHICAGO (ANP) - TTie cur rout professional basketball cam paign is in its infant stages, but it appears that the New York Knickerbockers have corne up with its strongest team in several seasons. The Knicks so far are leading the vaunted Boston Celtics In the eastern division and (at this writ ing* are the only team in botSi divisions which hasn't Just more than one game. The Knicks, who finished i out of the money in 1957-88, nevertheless were the highest scoring team in NBA history, averaging 112.1 points a game. The team scored at the rate at 2.4 points per minute. They made 10b or more points for 37 consecutive games, break ing the old mark of 12 held by the Celtics. Two of the key performers to this scoring binge were Willie Naulls and Hay Felix the only tan j members of the Madison Square Garden cage represcitatives. But for missing four games late season because of illness, Naulls might have led the Knicks ! nscor ing. He finished with 1,228 points, 114 points behind the team’s high-- j est scorer, and averaged 18.1 j points a banie. Naulls led the | Knicks ir, rebounding with 79ft. This is his third season with the New York. five. The 24-year old former UCLA star was drafted in 1958 by the St. Louis Hawks. ; After 19 games, he was traded to < '-he Knicks despite the growing i Louis. With 879 points for 12.2 average, jhe war, the team’s fifth highest score for 1857-58 and had the best field goal percentage on the club, A 42. sivc leaden for the third straight > week. Jeter has amassed a total of j SOB yards in 8 games, lie gained \ 15? yards rushinfe and 751 yards ! | passing in 121 plays. The Virginia j i State junior signal-caller needs j | only 92 yards before he joins the | select 1,000 yard group. Bill Lawson's Troians are aver- j j «ging 304 1 per game in 8 tilts ; View’s selection was made in a joint statement by university president George VV. Gore, Jr. and athletic director anti head football coach A, S. (Jake) Gat ther. The Rattlers, defending national Negro champions, have won six consecutive games during the ’SB campaign to extend their winning streak to 15 straight over a two year period. They meet strong once-beaten Southern University in Baton Rouge, La., Saturday night (November 22), Their final game prior to the Classic will be against Texas Southern University of'Hou ston in Tallahassee, Nov. 29 Prairie View, a perennial south west and national power, ha: only a M-14 opening game tie with Jackson (Miss.) State to mar an otherwise unblemished record of six wins and one tie. The Pan thers have two games remaining. They meet Wiley College this Sat urday (November 22) in Marshall, hometown of the Wildcats, and collide with Southern on Novem ber 29 in Houston Negotiations were completed be tween officials of Flordia A&M and Prairie View a few moments ago," President Gore and Gaither said in a statement made to university GIL TURNER. Philadelphia, ducks blows of Bel Flanagan, St. Paul. Minn., during an early round ai« e ?Hofe r r %hl b " Ut ** St ,I,UI laHt WCPk F,i ** , *** w w *" > th<> leu-rounder on a unanimous decision. They used 554 plays io gain s to tal of .2433 yards. Shaw University regained its ti»p spot as the loop s no 1 defensive team. The Bears, un seated last week by J. C. Smith for the first time this season as the C-lAA's top total! defen sive club, have yielded only 158.8 yards per contest in 8 outings. Clinton Anderson’s press information officials. The statement also included the foi lowing, "Florida A&M always seeks to select an Orange Blossom Classic opponent thal has the best possible record at the time the se lection is made. Prairie View’s re cord to date of six wins and one tie stamps them as the most wor thy Orange Blossom Clasie oppo i went, in 25 previous Classic game: A&M has won only 13. while drop ping 31. One game has ended in s tie. These figures certainly indicate that A&M selects only top oppo nents." The December 13 meeting be tween Florida A&M and Prarie View will he the fifth gridiron flash between the two powers and the third. Orange Blossom Classic date for the Panthers. In their only Miami appearance the Texans won a 33-27 thriller from the Rattlers in 1933. Til ft y gridderes <> 0 in the 1935 Classic played in Jacksonville. A&M edged Prarie View 10-7 in 1952 in a game played in FSILs Doak Campbell Stadium that still has fans talking. Bouncing back from the 1653 Classic defeat at ihe hands of the Panthers, the Rattlers journeyed to Texas to trounce them 19-R, gridders have allowed only 1271 yards this season. Heading the individual scorer i for the eighth straight v. eek v play is Joe Buggs of Elizabeth : City. He has registered 12 touch | downs and 3 conversions for a to j tal of 78 points. Virginia State's George Moody | retained his rushing lead for the | third successive week, although he was out of action last week with | an ankle injury. The Trojan half back churned out 474 yards on 62 rushes in 9 games for an average of 79.0. Morgan State's Jack Den nis continued his dominance as the loop’s top passer for the sixth straight week. He has connected on 27 of 48 passes thrown for a 56.3 per cent accuracy. In all. the j Bears quarterback’s tosses covered | 503 yards. 4 of them scoring mark j ers. North Carolina College's Ike i Gatling still tops the conference ! with the most TD strikes throw. ! The Eagle quarterback, has tossed | 8 scoring passes. Shaw’s Glen Knight over took Elizabeth City’s Billy Carr i as the ClAA’s leading pass rr ri-iver. Knight caught 4 passes last weekend to give him a to tal of 21 catches for the sea son. Bis receptions have cov ered a total of 307 yards, two of them for scoring tallies. North Carolina College’s Regi nald Pryor continues as the con ference’s top hooter with an aver age of 42.0 per punt. The Eagle punter has punted 18 times for 759 yards. Si. Augustine’s College this week surged forth os' the conference’s top rushing dub. The Falcons, un i malted last week piled up a total of 1711 yards in 7 games for an average of 244.4 per outing. Morgan State regained its hold on the team passing lead, coinplel j ing 32 of 63 passes for a 50 percent j accuracy. In 7 games, Eddie Hurt's | Bear* nave racked up a total of j 660 yards for an average of 80 j yards per contest and have thrown i 4 TD tosses, THE CAROLINIAN WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. NOVEMBER S#, Falcons Close Season With Impressive Wins The r>t Augustine's College Fal- . eons rolled lna a 26-0 win over De- j laware State College’s Hornets at i Chavis Park last Saturday after- I noon. The game got underway at I 1 p. m. This was the falcons sixth straight after losing their two open ing games to North Carolina Col lege, Durham, and Shaw Univer sity, Raleigh, respectively. The game ended St. Aug's foot- I ball season. Plunging over for the Falcons' j first TD was Marion Broun His ! run capped a long drive in the j Colts’ Defense Stops Bears; Carolina, Galimore In Action CHICAGO <ANP*—Neither Wii <!' Galimore-. fc.yiwi Florida A&.V ace. nor J, O Caroline, University of llinois sensation a few years j ago, made the Chicago Bears start j mg lineup n last Sunday's rough, ! tough pro football battle in Wrig- , ley Field. The Baltimore Colts, I fighting to protect their Western j Divis ion lead, stopped the Bears i cold. 17-0. before a capacity crowd j of 48,684. Galimore, noted for his broken i field running, tva.- used only in j spots, and Caroline, although used ! both on offense and defense, saw j action as s übstitutes Galituore, once it sensation wiih the Bears when be played regularly, carried 10 times but gumod only 22. However, be j put the Halasmen in scoring position in the second quarter when he returned a punt 66 yards to the Colts 33. there the • rally fizzled on a fumble by Merril Douglas, subbing for the injured Rick Casaies. Lenny Moore figured heavily In | the Colls victory. George Shaw, i 'he Colts quarterback, hit him j twice, or.ee in Baltimore®' first touchdown strike. Actually, the Colt* won an air j tight defense, which shut out the j Boars for the first time since 1946. I Meanwhile, Moore and Alan Am*- : die. former Badger star, were cut- ' Straight Kentucky Bourbon Ilp|f $435 KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY . 86 PROOF ©ANCIENT AGE DISTILLING CO., FRANKFORT. KV % ' : first period James Bridges passed j for two extra points. l-es-ter bperse broke loose and ! raced 75 yards for a second Falcon ! score in the opening period, also. ; James Higgle is responsible tor i a third St. Augustine’s score a* he icceived a pass of 40 yards in the second quarter A five-yard plunge by Donald > Thompson wound up the scoring. 1 The Falcons gamed 31!) yards by | rushing to Delaware State's 38, St, j Augustine s had seven first downs ! to the Hornets’ 3 first downs. ting (.hunks in the Chicagoans line. !» had been anticipated llyat thi* Bears might win because of the sidelining of Johnny Utti tus, the Co its first string quar terback. As it turned out, how ever, Shaw, was in rare form, connecting with ift of 23 passes, nine in succession, for a total i of {3l yards. The Colts scored both its touch j downs in the second period, then j ’added ;, field goal in the fourth | Moore figured in both the touch | down.- Ora >h< second he was at i tempting to share a long lateral | from Shaw when Bears linebacker, i Wayne Hansen, interfered. Tire of ! ficials then ordered the ball placed ! °n the Bears four-yard line, from i where Amache scored. The game had been sold out days ! in advance. However, scalpers did | lively business at the gates. One J scalper. Abe Nieder. 57, was arresi - j cd after he was nearly mobbed for • selling phoney tickets to a group i of funs anxious to see the gaine' S ii It Pays To ADVERTISE 15
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Nov. 29, 1958, edition 1
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