,--I '> ) ‘ Wl -CAi^§LlflA TIMES NiH JULY 1, Mi ' ouAhav, ;;. c. N. a OPEN STARTS FRIUW Ashe Expected To Play in Durham Net Tourney Arthur Ashe, Jr., the 18-year old Natiooal InterschoUstic Ten nis Cfaampioii aiid American Ten nis Association singles champ, is expected to participate in the 29th Annual North Carolina State Ten nis Open Championships in Dur ham on Thursday and Friday. Ashe *distinguished himself last week as undisputed National In terscholastic champ by downing all three of his opponents in the USLTA Tournament in Charlottes ville, Va. A native of Hichmond, young Arthur is holder of such junior titles as ATA, USLTA, New York, New Jersey, and Middle Atlantic. In the two-day tournament held on the Mickle Center Courts Joe Williams of Durham, last year’s men’s singles champ, will be vy ing for his second consecutive title. Expected to produce some strong competition will be Donald Char ity of Richmond, last year’s run ner-up in the men’s singles, Hor-' ace Cunningham also ,of Rich* win in the Senior Men's singles, tqond, John Mudd, E. Orange, N. Top contenders for this crown are J., Edgar Lee, Ernie Ingram and Dr. Theodore R. Inge of East ‘Flip’ Jackson all of Washington. Orange, last year’s runner-up; Dr. Walt Onque of Newark will be R. Walter Johnson, Lynchburg, seeking second consecutive Va.; John McGriff, Portsmouth, Va.; and Bill Jones, Baltimore. In the women’s singles, Mrs. Doris Garrett of Durham will be defending her title against such stalwarts as Carolyn Williams, Portsmouth; Judy Prince, Hawk ins, Tex.; Ethyl Reid, Lynchburg; Brenda Page, Norfolk; and Caro lyn Archer, Winston-Salem. Dr. John McGrlff and Albert Dixon will be defending their senior men’s doubles title and George Simpkins and Josephine Kelley will attempt to retain their mixed doubles title. In the small fry class, Bonnie Logan of Durham, girls ATA champ (under 13) wilk vie for some honors, and she and Beryl Sanson also of Durham will at tempt to take the honors in the ASHE doubles. Harry Jefferson App^ed GAA Commissioner PETER aURG, Va — Harry R. Jefferson, former football coach at Hampton Institute and Virginia State College and currently dor mitory counselor at VSC, has been appointed commissioner for the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association. This is the first tim^ that a commissioner has been ap pointed by the CIAA. Jefferson will assume his new position on July 1 and his office will be on the campus of one of the Virginia colleges. He was elect ed unanimously by the CIAA at a special meeting held recently at Virginia State College. Jefferson has had a long and varied career as a high school and college coach of football and bas ketball. After graduating from Ohio University, his first coach ing job was at Kelly Miller High School in Clarksburg, West Vir ginia. He has coached at Bluefield State College, Bluefield, West Vir ginia; Wilberforce University, Xeni^ Ohio: North Carolina A, .sons. WILLIAMS and T. Collegfc, tJic^ensboto, N. C.; Virginia’Stale College, Petersburg, Virginia and Hampton Institute, Hampton, Virginia. He is an active member of the American Football Coaches Association and a mem ber of the Rules Committee and Injury Fatality Committee of that organization. He is married and the father of McLendon, Broyles Higlilight Star‘^Studded Coaciiing Clinic TALLAHASSEE, Fla.—The type of season you- have and the sys tem you use in playing football de pend to a great extent upon the type of personnel you haye avail- . ^le^.sMmad to . haUt Z heei and a football to personally dem onstrate every ^ove. He advocated straight football plays as the best offensive strength.. prc{^|e8 c;pntended that Two A?A Girls Score in Penn. Teflois Meet HAVERFORD, Pa.—The Ameri can Tennis Association players made history on the courts of the Swank Merion Cricket. Club here last week. Carolyn Williams from Ports mouth, Virginia and'Judith Prince, Hawkins, Texas won their first round matches on grass, the first time they had ever seen ■ a grass court. Judith defeated Constance Kressman 6-0:6-2 but lost to Lena Vosscas (seed no. 3) 6-0:6-3. Carolyn in the first round, de feated Marion Clement, Philadel phia 6-0:6-2 also beat Bobbie Lan- verth, Philadelphia 6-0:6-0 and beat Barbara Edwards, p'tuladel- pbia seeded fifthf iti a, t)iree set thriller 6-3:4-6:6-0 matches rained out today but Carolyn will play Elizabeth Hotshkiss, Philadelphia, fourth seeded when weather per mits. Judith and Carolyn won theii first round double after being downed 5-2. FREEDMEN'S GROUP HAS SUCCESSFUL GOLF TOURNEY Dr. A. K. Robarts, Washington, standing centar left, was winner of golf tournament held by Vhe Assocaition of Former In'arns and Residents of Freedman's Hospital during its rtoant an nual convention in the Nation's Capital. Runners-up in the Car nation Cup evant were Dr. John Lawlah, right, former dean of Howard Universi'.y Col!«ge of Medicine, 2nd place, while Dr. C. Mason Quick, center, Fayatte.* ville, was third. In lower section of pansi from left are seen Dr, Cleveland Smith and Dr. Robert Lee, D. C., 2nd and 3rd runners- up In second flight, and William Gibbs, Arcum Pharmaceutical Corp., D. C., who won Coca- Cola spnosored flight tor exhibi tors and Invited guesfa. Moai H. K«ndrix, Jr., and Dr, Thaddeus Mumford, D. C., dentlat, Were 2nd and 3rd In Iftis event. Other winners were Dr.' Stni4wiek, 2nd flight, and Dr. J[o* Dodson, Dr. Frank Jenee and Dr. Ben Jonts, D. C., lit, 2nd and 3rd, tion Milk Company, Los Anieles, reipectlvely, 3rd flight. Carna- and The Coac-Cola Company, Ailanta, donated trophies for the tournament. In left photo, Mrs. Madeline Pullen, Carna tion Company consumer consul tant, Baltimore, presents trophies to Dr. Charles Ireland, right, Washington, while James "Bud" Ward, account, associate for Car- naMen Company, The Mess H. Kendrix Organisation, looks on. MHKO's Miss Jdy^e Bryartt, right phofo, aseisterf Moss H. Kendrix, Jr., left, makae trophy donations for Coca-Cola to Dr. J. Harold Nkkens, Tournamof«t was held at Langston Pork OolF Course with awards being made during AssociaMen's annual pic nic at Maryland farm of Dr. Wei>st«r Sowell. JTlh a UiiivecsitV ■tfdr Basketball ' Coachinalf^h^jre c hM« last week. lecturei „ •iNiet ^ dfkmonstrations «eard in football and ah ffti e baokeiball tional seven hours in basket- Birth Control Pill For Men May Be Available Soon NEW YORK—^Following close on the heels of the recently develop ed birth control pill for women, a similar oral contraceptive for men is now in the final stages of ex- perin\entatioi^. ly h«nk Broyles of Arkansas is a young coach with some very strong co^^victio^s about the proper way of doing his job. This the Arkansas Bazorback gridinm bosa proved to 125 high school and college coaches who attended the clinic. . Making his seventh appearance at the cUsic, Broyles outlined in detail wmft and means of accom plishing his objective, using a bladcboard to diagram every play bnd/vrith seirtion whidh featured John Bi McLendon, head coach of the Cleveland Pipers pro fessional basketbfill team. McLendon stressed player con dition a the key to basketball suc cess. McLendon stated that while he was the coach of the Tennessee A. and I. State University Tigors he played the same five players most of the time during the NAIA tournament, which he won an un precedented three successive years. He is just back from a three itEWOv» " Drag SlorM . W att Im yovr iacalily Mad 2 mmlh't wyply If. SMAVIfia rowoicc JfA §0X^MS7C SAVAHNAH, Ga. guinea ' pigS tMfi ,'suiifitoBr, taking an odorless, tasteless asprin-sized tablet. Already, in preliminary studies,, the pill, taken daily, has; 1. halt ed dramatically the production of sperm cells in the male sex organs; week tour of Russia. An All-Star team from the National Industrial Basketball League played eight exhibition contests while in the Soviet Union and won them all. The (Seveland team won the I960- 61 NIBL championship. McLendon learned basketball from the inventor of the game, Dr. Jamos Naismith, at the Univer sity of Kansas. Ninety hi^ school coaches at tended the basketball session, the mot since the clinic was institut ed in 1945. The seventeenth edition of the Florida A. and M. clinic featured Broyles, McLendon, Hugh ‘Duffy’ Daugherty at Michigan State, Paul Bryant of the University of Ala bama, Marvin Bass of the Univer sity of South Carolina, Ray Graves of the University of Florida, Bill Peterson of Florida State Univer- - -sity, Pat Javies of the University of Alabapia, P^^r Bodgers of the University of Florida, Gene Ellen- son of the University of Flocida, Satn LanUord of the University^ of Florida. Jake Gaither and his iiMt tioM, I Three Atkins Hi Gridders Cast Lots With NCC Head fqp\]j)^U ^^^rman H. t Riddick disclosed hej^^ recently ■ that three Atkins High,,^chool oi . Winston-Salem footlj^l)ers had signed athletic scholar^,ip grants . to attend North CaroH^a, College f in September. )i.i The three outstanding^ gridders signed were Aldine Al^ed, quar terback. James Price,, tackle, and Robert Moorman, guard. Riddick said here t^t all three of the scholastic playefs figure heavily in the 1961 season’s at tack. “I am particularly pleased at being able to get '^th Price and Moorman,” he added, “both have the size and abilty to fit right into our system here. With the lost of three key men in our line, they will be a welcome addi tion in September,” Price, a 6-4, 241-pouhder, and Moorman, a 6-2, 235 pounds, were standouts on Atkins High’s unde feated football team two years ago as juniors. Alfred, a 6-1, 180- under, is rated as a top prospect at quaterback and as a defensive halfback. They will report August 31 for the beginning of fall drills on September 1st. / ALFRED 2. had no serious side effects; 3. allowed full recovery of fertility within roughly 100 days after dis- .continuance of dosage; '4 j^omlsed to be considerably cheaper than contraceptive pills for women. The greater reproductive poten tial of the male helps explain why scientists are interested in per fecting a male pill, says Coronet, event though a successful female pill was placed on the market last fall. Regardless of the medical men, religious groups who oppose birth control are not expected to be any ib^-i^e^tive to iljale. birth spokesman fof the’ CaAlfo' lie Church told Coronet; *“Any member of the Catholic faith who employs a chemical, in pill PRICE Ashe is Seeded No. i in Grambling College Takes NAIA iekling and Batting Honors LYNCHBURG, Va. — Arthur Ashe, Jr., transplanted student from Maggie Walker of Richmond to Summer High of St. Louis, is seeded number one in the USLTA blue chip tournament. This marks the first time an ATA player has «ver been seeded in this tourna ment. Dr. R. Walter Johnson, vice president of ATA, desperately try ing to win his first tournament at Charlottesville in eleven years, had Ashe transferred to St. Louis where he could get year-round play and better competitiiui. The shift has paid off. Ashe won the USLTA National Indoors beating Fred Froehllng in 5 sets. Froeh- llng is the number two Junior in the nation. The Junior Development team, with the exception of Joe Williams and Ashe, are all new. Whirlwind has put his hoj^ in a younger generation of players that includes Louis Glass, New York, and Len- 'wA'S Sittipioh,'WllmWlgtoh, N. C., and says ji he does not win it this year he will win it in four years. First round winners; Ashe beat Don Green of Wichita Falls. Texas, 6-2; 6-4; Joe Williams, ATA, de feated Chas. Froukel 6-2;6-3; La ma r Williams, Norcom High, Portsmouth, Va., defeated Mike Star, -Thomas Jefferson, Richmond, Va., 6-2; 6-3; Joe was defeated by Hal Lowe, '^cson, Arizona 6-4;6-l (6th seeded). Sanfoi^i Howie, At kins High, Winston-Salem, ATA national Interscholastie champ, was slaughtered 6-1; 6-1 by Bron son Van Wyck, Montclaw, N. J. Orson Kirk, Hillside High Dur ham, had a real mara^h^n match but lost to Jim Causey, Middle- burg, N. C., 2-6; 7-5; frO. By COLLIE J. NICHOLSON KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Grambling attained a relative rare distinction of winning both the team batting and team fielding championships lof the NAIA, according to final small-college statistics released by NAIA publicity director Joe Axelson. Inconspicious when the season started, the Tigers 2-5-5 demon strated sufficient exuberance, speed afoot and batting power to gamer team hitting honors with a .362 average. They collected 368 hits in 741 times &t bat. Colorado State, Greely, finished second with a .352 average. Grambling’s SWAC champs com mitted only 27 errors in 528 put out for.a .974 fielding average. Pacific Lutheran, Parkland, Wash., finished in the runners-up spot with .969. An impressive addition to tis^m honors were the individuai titles won by pitcher Clyde Parquet «nd leftfielder Perry McGee. Parquet, a righthander, sou^t by at least eight major lea|ue clubs, had the nation’s lowest earned run average—0.66. "H e fanned 98 batters in 86 innihgs for 16.1 strikeouts per contest. McGee, a freshman, finished in a four-way tie for first place in three-base hits with six. Slugger Tommie Agee finished third in hitting (.5(X)) and third in homers with seven; Jesse Johes stroked six four-masters to grab the^forth spot; and Charles Harris bedeviled the opposition with 20 stolen bases to rank fifth nation ally. Agee, Harris and catcher Mel vin Bell were named to the NAIA all-star team. plays. Cliff .flu^ltz in or efty ,dtheE!iormj pose of preventing conception would be committing an immoral ill foijm act.” Coaching Clinic EAST STROUDSBUHG, Pa.— Coach Jake Gaither of Florida A. and M. University delivered four lectures and ai^ared on a panel here at the 19th annual Eastern Penrtsylvania Scholastic Coaches Football and Basketball Clinic last week at East Stroudsburg State College. Coach G«i^her, fresh irom his own clinic in Florida, ^oke on “Scoring Powar of the Fabulous Florida A and M. Split Line T,' “Building Confidence in Your Of fense,” "Meeting the Jumping De fenses,” and “Mental Condition ing in Football.” The panel was held on Wednes day with Co4ch«s Jerry B«rns of Iowa, Wayjofi Hardin, Nn,vy; Bob Blackmaq, Dactmouth; PMl Ma rion, Ridley High SchooU Frank Kavanagb, Cornell; and Jack Gard ner of Utah appeared on the panel with Coach Gaither. I The FAMU football coach ap peared on the “Coach of tht Year” clinic in Grand fiapidt, Uich., in February and wUl d^ect the Ga. bigh schMl fiUpip in Atlanta in August. , Harriet Tubman YWCA Schedule For the Summer “Summer Holiday” at the Har riet Tubman Branch YWCA. Reg ister now for the following activi ties: Play Days for Children—ages 4 6 years, Harriet Tubman Branch YWCA, Monday-Wednesday and Fridays, June 19-30 (2 weeks), a.m.-I2;m Games Singing - Story telling and crafts. Thursday, June 15-July 20 Play Days for Children McDougald Terrace Community Center 9:30 a.m.-12;30 p.m. FUN FOR TEENS Pre-Teens 5th and 6th grades Tuesdays, June 20-July 11 Discussions — Recreation—Arts ^n4 Craft IN HOUR e Ri 9:0 uly R ifIG 14i^^ Jul^pf, High 0 Oaijte Boopi Recreation FOB YObNlQ ADULTS Dramatics—Join the Y-Play- , makers, Tuesday, 8:00 p.m. STARUGHT NIGHT ' Wednesdays, June 21-July ID-*- Weekly. 7;00-10;00 p.m. Ping Pong -. Table pames - Cro quet. ' “Dahclng uniitir the Star*” SATURDAYS TOWNHOUSE 8;00-ll:00 p.m. "Record Dances” 8:()0-ll p.m. “Record Dances” Swimming Classes for Adults (18 years and up) Daily or ly; Hillside Park (10 lessons), beginning June 19, 6;00-7:00 p.m. Instructors: Clarke Edgerton and A. P. Lawrence A TOUR FOR YOtT See' HORN IN THE WEST Boone, North Carolina, Juno IS* 16, A dramatic story of Daqjitl Boone and the breath of Amsri- ca SUMMER MUSIC STUDIO | ' Piano Lessons (AU Ages) 10 Weeks (Beginning Thursday, June 15- August 17, 5;00-9;00 p.m., Jub( 19-August 21, 9:00 a.m.-}l;00 p.m. ' ,, ^; . ' -' I V ■ •: i tostructor; Miss 'e#Uo^7"3IW«J^ ortl? .&rdlin ' For further infomurtion, puM -all 'He YWCA, 684-dl9t.T, Calvctrt LONDl>N DRV (jtn tvaS'fUT PIS>T(UINC CO Calvert DISTILLED LONDON DRY Ciu 90 PROOF $^30 0 4/5 QT. • ••••••••••• piHjt mililifl fMM 100% AMEKtOAH 6RAUI. CALVE8T IH». CO.. H.V.C.

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