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LINCOLN HOSPITAL STUOCNT
Nurses were n>w»rs-uf» In
Bull City Basketball Lii(M 8W
son's Women'* divisipii foe WIU
-65. They were also Bull City A.Sat
gu? Tournament runrters-op
the 1964-65 season. The winner •(
boih the Season and the twmt
merit Championship* were the
Nicks. The Toui-nameHt finals
were held »t Whitted jr. Ni«h
f!orth Carolina College Tennis,
Team Releases 1 S-Match Schedule
North Carolina College's tennis
team has released a tentopijfc Js
- schedule beginning''Aprit *
when the Eagles meet Livingstone
College in Durham.
Other matches in April are: 2
—*Fayptteville State College, Fay
ettqvjjie; 5 Tuskegee Institute.
Durham; 8 Hampton Institute,
Hilton; 9—Morgan State Col
lego, Baltimore; 10—Howard Uni
versity, Washington; IS—Morgan
More Than 3000
Attend Food
Festival in D. £
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The Bro
therhood Food Festival held _F.fi)>- (
ruar£22, at the Presidential Arms i
Hotel in Washington, D. C. at
trartod more than 3,000 people
who enjoyed foods prepared by
more than twenty-five foreign Em
bassies and local organizations. -
The first place award for out
standing food displays projecting
the theme "Democracy At Work"
was presented to the Republic Of
Malasgasy who served Varanga,'
Andrianampoinimernia and cakes.
Othfcr winners in the EAibasiy
category were Israel in, seoend ;
place and third
Friendship Council of the Ver
mont Avenue Baptist Church. The
church group served a variety of
salads. Placing second was the
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority mark
ing the second straight year that
they have placed in the competi
tion. The third place ribbon went
to Madame C. J. Walker Beauty
Culture School.
Other programs included* i a
fashion show by the National As
sociation of Fashion and Acces
sory Designers, Inc. An outstand
ing segment of the Food Festival
was a Round the World Jewelry
Mart which featured jewelry ac
quired by famous personalities
during their travels arountf-tye
the world. The famous donors in
• eluded Barbara Stanwyck, Mrs.
Dean Ituak and Lena Home.
'SAIM&
GIN
'
Gym on Vferiheaday evening. The
final score was 46-21.
- Tfct_ Nurses were o#p
j'WiJ-by MH»' llitMni# Ruth Gore
VlOSfcA' Other students parti
cipating were: Thelma Wither
Spoon, Delamar Davis, Mary klch
ardson, Ribecca Mitchell, Beverly
Miller. Betty Dalton, Polly Col
elWfft, Gloria Taylor, Shirley
Oliver, end Barbara Hemans.
State College, Durham; 15—Wins-
IbifrS&tem State CoUfege.. Durham;
Durham'; 23—Delaware State Col
lege, Durham; 29—Johnson C.
Smith University, Durham; 30—
Fayettevifle State College, Dur T
ham. *,'
' ' s—Johnson C. Smith
University, Charlotte: fl—Living
stone College, Salisbury; 7—Wink
t'on-Salem State College, Winstoa-
Salem.
James W. Younge is' coach Of
l&S Eagle , netm&n whose sole 1964
Ust in 14 outings was at the hands
of!. Hampton Institute with whom
Jhe Eagles, tied for first place for
visitation honors. In the Central
Athletic Associa
'fjon Tournament the Eagles also
logt_ U>' Hampton—which won the
championship—and ended in see
-iW'_ piirt, " t1 A
The 1986 CIAA Tournament is
planned for May 13-15 in Hamp
ton. »« T •
rjjfrnfit fl—' fi r i_i«"
i\vg-»* *>*'.. V ' *
Hillside Hornets
Sting Merrick-
Moore Tigers
By KARL MASON
Thomas Long led a second-half
rally W Hillside High Hor
nets that, lifted the team past the
Merrick-Mooi? }iigh Tigers. 7^60,
John Bullock, who hauled down
16 rebounds, canned a lay-up 22
s£ceptd before the intermission to
give Coaph Carl Easterling's cagers
the lead 1 for keeps at 37-35.
After U-ailing 19-18 at the end
of the firat quarter, William Har
ris rattled the scoreboards for 10
points in the second period to
bring the Hornets from behind.
M-M fought back gallantly in the
■third but ewild dot 'get
closer than three points at 40*37
with-4:40" remaining in the period.
Harni.v added 15 points and Bui
lock 12 to the Hillside attack.
The Hillside jayvees raced to a
74-32 win, aver Merrick-Moore's
Baby Tigers in the preliminary to
thJk&V 'rfawial mark to. a
perfect ie-Olr : ! *T:~:
VARSITY GAME v
Merrick-Moore (AO) HillsMe (73)
Davig l Long 2c
Reddish Ouffiw 9
Turrentine 14 Bullock 12
Back 18 Harris 15
Moore 8 Hayes 5
Subs: Merrick-Moore —Pollard
J. Hamilton V, Jonaa, McCJeod 2,
Holloway % Evat*,' r>ay¥/Hillside
McLaurln,
M halfi Hillside W, Mer
VAUSITY .
2 A.. 12
MMtkMtm* f32) HillsMe (7*)
' r ~
Mcicuiitt> U i4
I'MW, Jfoftdclt Mfeore-Harris 4,
* TS» OW JY^ L ' RTON *■ TUR "
Jayflel, Haynle's;
JtSbJi ' h, 'f ; *°- Mer-
> The teem was coached by M. M.
Fisher, 111, Chaplain-Counselor for
Lincoln Hospital School of Nurs
ing. Left to right, standing: Betty
Dalton, Mary Richardson, Rev. M.
M. Fisher. 111, Coach; Rtbecca
Mitchell and Thelma Witherspoon.
Sitting: Gloria Taylor, Dellamar
Davis, Jimmie Gore, Polly Col
dough, Beverly Miller.
Pepsi-Cola Host
To CIAA Cage
Tourney Officials
GREENSBORO Pepsi Cola
proved the genial host at the
20th annual CIAA Tournament
held here, pver the weekend, it
not only operated the "Hospitality
Room'' (n the War Memorial Audi
torium, where the games were
played, and served Pepsi products
to the coaches and newsmen, but
it had facilities in a suite of rooms
in Holiday Inn, South, where
Pepsi products and services were
dispensed.
The high point of the three-day
meet, on the part of Pepsi Cola,
was a luncheon, held Friday,
where college presidents, coaches,
CIAA officials and newsmen met,
greeted and ate of the delicacies
offered by tfte national drink firm.
The basketball extravaganza
brought to Greensboro top people
from Pepsi. The contingent was
-led by Charies Dryden, manager,
Special Markets, Pepsi-Cola World
Headquarters, New York City;
Dave Liston, area supervisor, with
offices in Atlanta, Ga.; Ernest
Humbles, manager. Special Mar
kets, Washington Area; J L. Cam
eron, in charge of Special Mar
kets for North and South Caro
lina; Elliott Franks, PR represert
tative, Columbia, S. C.; .Julian
Swanson, Special Markets, Dan
ville, "Va.; J. D. Lewis, Jr., Special
Markets representative, Raleigh,
and Abner Haines, famed pro
fooffiall player and in charge ol
Special Markets, Dallas, Texas.
XTE
CAPTURES CIAA
TOURNEY TITLE
GREENSBORO—NorfoIk State's
Spartans, displaying a blazing
basketball team, swept the 20th
annual CIAA Basketball Tourna
ment here Saturday night by scor
ing a 100-87 triumph over A. and
T.'s Aggies before 7,308 fans at
Greensboro Coliseum.
• Behind, 43-42, at halftime, Nor
folk State ripped the Aggies apart
in the second half, holding a 13 ;
point lead of 68-55 with 12:41 to
«L*. '
A. and T: cut the kM to eight
points 4J 74-56 with. B:JW to go,
but long* shots, a steal by Ernest
Bfftdley" and a tremendous fast
break lent A. and T.
This is* the first time that- Nor
folk State has captured the CIAA
crown, but the Spartans joined the
league only three years ago. The
victory earns them a spot in the
South Central Regional Playoffs
of the NCAA College Division
March 5-6 at Louisville, Ky.
- Wiftstoß-Salem State -«on the
consolation title, 01-58, over John- 1
son G. Smith of Chairlotte.
James Grant, ft-foot-3 freshman
fof fJorfolk State who; Vta* chosen
the outstanding player in the*
tourney, swished 36 points and,
Richard Pitts, 6-foot-5, 225-pound
Junior center, canhed 28 to lead
the Spartan charge. '
Leading the A. and If. scpring
was Sylvester Adams, 4 a-«4bot- i
1/2 freshman who scored 30 points
in a sub role.
-JT
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latest Crowdilfi History Attends
North-South Mf Tournament
M»AtoT. Florida—A Ft. BitonWg
private on furlough, a Wlh
nor and a national women's illUhv
p'on -,on the thrve top tiiW.flon
titles in th? V2th Annual "#)rth-
Sc.uth' Calf tournament at 'Wibmi
Sprint; 4flMlo ,
Additional highlights weW fhe
scoring pf three j
in.K the Fob. 17-21 event whfHi'irt
tracted the largest field in fts'llli*
torv.
The 54-holo medal play
drew R1 pros. 194 amateur r £jiflen)
and 31 women. ( flj 1( |
Nathaniel "Little Face"
a pro ending a two year
h'tch in Sept., finished
18 holes with a 38-37-75 t)we^ n p
rain-soaked course for
score of 68-70-75—213, ati(d top
money of SBOO. lor|Jl
Jackie Robinson, of
fame, regained his amatettr title
(1902 winner) with rounds oil 7'*
78-81 for a 234 aggregate, five
better than Cleveland'a Jimmy
Woods followed by Alfred Gj-eer\-
of Annapolis, Md., at 340. - • t
Ann Gregory of Gary, Ipd.,. play
ing in her first Miami tournament,
led from start to finish to Wjn the
w'dmen's cro*n by 16 strokes with'
a 86-84-88—258. Jewell Martin of
Detroit finished second.
Cliff Harrington, staff sergeant
from Ft. Campbell, Ky., lpß9 pto
winner, scored a hole-in-one on
the 2!so-yard third hole with a 2-
1/2 wood. He tied for eighth place
with 75-74-77—226. -
On the 153-yard seventh hole,
Dr. Charles Ireland of Washington,
D. C., and Charles O'Neal, Spring
field, Mass., scored aces. Both
used eight irons.
The 145-pound Starks who was
tied with the pre-tourney favorite
Sam Harvey of St. Petersburg at
the end of the first day's round
with a 68, won by two strdkes
■W|«|M
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FLASHING a winning tmlle, Na-|
thaniel Starkes sigrts hit icore!
card after winning KM 13th
nual North-South golf UuinmnW]
•t Miami Springs. Th
pro from Ft. &enninf,, 0» v wool
the event by carding a 6#-70-7s-^-|
- •
Boston Celtics Basketball Team
Heading for Garttes Won Mark
NEW YORK—The Boston Cel-,
tics who clinched their ninth suc%
cessive Eastern Division crown in
suring them of the $12,000 award
Which goes to the first team ini
each division and the $2,000 bonus;
for finishing with the highest per
centage, will create a new League
won and lokt record for the year,
if they win four of the remaining
ten games on their schedule.
The present record of 60 games
won and 20 lost was established
by Boston during the 1961-62 cam
paign. '"ill
Wilt Chamberlain of the Phila
delphia 76ers continued to iflfrtH-'
tain the League scoring,
Oscar- Robertson--of CiAcirfltJrtfc
who has been scoring points
sizrling 37 plus per game, the papt
fifteen outings, second with ,£h
tallies and only a mite
club record of 81.4 set dak yftpr.
Jerry West of Us Anfcle*,fc
the other NBA scoter averqglofe
over thirty points a game
IMB tallies for a 80.8 average.
Robertson also has a good qft
portunity (I) break his Leaguft/As
sists per game average recorded.
With 711 feeds, be Is tveragieg
M ftk/> . j
4
over Lee Elder of Nashvill?.
Behind Sorter, Who picked up
j !tst)o came Chieo Martnh, M'ami
j brach, and "Babe" l.lchardlus.
! Hlttsiile. N. J., at 218 and $337.30
each; Sam Harvey and Willie
: llrown, Houston, tied for fourth
at 220 $220.50 each; Willie Greer.
: Nashville, fifth, 222 and $l5O
Ted Rhodes, Chicago, sixth, 224 j
ahd $110; Raymond Massey.
Miami 225 and $80; Moset
ftrdOks, Pallas, anr' Cliff Har
Hrtgton, Ft. Campbell, Ky„ tied
| for eighth at 22H and $00; Noali
Wheeler, Miss., Geo.
1 Tohnson, Columbus, Ga., and 80l
! Shave Jr., Cleveland, tied foi
ninth at 227 and $25.
Flight winrnr among men in
putted. Arthur Brawn, seniors.
24T; Phillip Smith, New Orleans,
flrat flight, 237; Thomas Foster
Detroit, second flight. 248; Earl
Jackson, New York, third flight.
WS; Roy Strickland, New York,
fifth, 248; Frank Dubois, Miami.
Bi8; Dr. S. H. Preston, Cle
veland, seventh, 275.
Betty Sullivan of Detroit won
ttate Jtdies first flight with a
total. Claudia Robinson, Spring
field, Mass., finished second.
joe Louis, the Brown Bomber.
Withdrew after the second round
suffering from a virus infection.
He was defending amateur cham
pion:
\ X swim and fashion show, golf
tlinic, treasure hunt, picnic and
,a trophy ball were the event's
social activities for contestants
and guests.
Because of increased interest
in the mid-winter tournament
plans are already underway to
SBCUrfe the use of additional facili
ties for next year's contest.
A hike in professional prize
money has also been proposed.
- jf -. \ v ; • " . — : i
I*l3, :**# strokes better than de
fendthg titlht and second place
fjnhMr Lee Elder Of Nashville.
to teek PGA approV
ijv after finishing hit army hitcfc
iter *hu
11.3 assists, Just a shade below hw
1961-62 recofrd of 1i.4. He is well
ah oef dg cttOJeh mtm mtramtn
ahead of Guy Rodders of San Fran
cisco, who Has set up 485 scores
Walt BelWmy of Baltimore leadf
the loop in shooting percentage
with a .508 and Is the most accu
rate shooter in League history
with a .517 mark for his first 2
years of play. Jerry West with
.506. Wilt Chamberlain with .504
and. Bailey Howell of Baltimore
with .502 ate the others who art
batting over tIM .500 mark.
There was no change among the
otfar individual scoring leaden
Uiu past wiek: Larry Costello of
Philadelphia -frith $43 successful
foul attempt* out of 277 trirs ond
a .877 aver Age, continues to lead
An that department, while Adrian
tynith of Cincinnati with a .845
irirqdins in the runner-up posittoh.
'Bill Rusaetl of BosttM maintains
hj* lead in rebounding with a
total of 158t for a 23.3 pfer game
afef-age while Wilt Chambelain
has 1414 in fcevett less games ahd
is a shade Under Bill lh average,
with 23.2
| "
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WOMEN'S SPORTS DAY PARTI
CIPANTS—Mrs. Jennie D. Taylor,
center, instructor of physical edu
cation at North Carolina College
and president of the Women's
Sports Day Association, is shown
"P VI,S ««vw.*...v.. ( , 9 I - "
Girl Scout Week to Be Observed March 7 Thru $5
Orce again, Girl Scouts of the
U. S. A.—almost three and three
quarter million of them—are cele
brating their Week.
Girl Scout Week 1965, March 7-
13, has as its theme, "A Promise
in Action.'' Actually, the "Prom
ise" has been very much in action
and in, evidence for 53 years. It
was March 12, 1912. when a group
of very young ladies formed the
first Girl Scout troop in the U. S.
and set the pattern for more than
20 million others by making the
Girl Scout Promise: "On my hon
or, I will try: to do my duty, to
God and my country, to help other
people at all times, to obey the
Girl Scout Laws."
This year, Girl Scouts are em
phasizing what they call "bridges."
They refer to a continuity of pro-
Igr a m activities which become
more complex and challenging as
girls grow from seven through 17.
They refer also to a plan where
by girls in one age level introduce
girls of a younger age to what
lies ahead for them when they
progress to the next level in
WANTED!
* .
100
, • " - I .* \
'n, Cif • 1 ' '■
AGES 10 TO 18 IN NORTH CAROLINA TO ENTER (
The Carolina Times 'I
NEWSBOYS AND GIRLS CIRCULATION CONTEST 1
NOW OPEN J||
FREE PRIZES I
AIRPLANE TRIPS, BICCYCLES AND OTHERS ',! I
For Information Phoni 682-22913 or Write Circulation Dept., I
! Carolina Times, Durham, N. C. I
M
■m..
with a group of students she ac
companied to a sports day com
petition «t South Carolina State
College, Orangeburg# Fob. 26-27.
Frotn left are Mary Felton of Eli
zabeth City; Emma Stephenson.
Girl Scouting. There are four age
leveln • Brownies, Juniors, Ca
dettes and Seniors.
In a larger sense, however,
GirJ Scouting really is a bridge to
the futur*. For the Girl Scout
program is concerned with helping
girls grow into happy and re
sourceful citizens. By inspiring
girls to live up to the Girl Scout
Promise and the Girl Scout Laws
of loyalty, honesty, courtesy,
cheerfulness, usefulness, kindness
and thrift, Girl Scouting can make
the difference in the kind of wom
an 3 girl becoip.es/
And the kind of woman—the
kind of human being—a girl be
comes can make the difference
in the world of the future.
The Girl Scouts in this area are
served by The Pines of Carolina
Girl Scout Council, headquarters
in Raleigh.
Durham Girl Scouts and Adult
volunteers, under the leadership
of Mrs. Lucille Z. Williams, neigh
borhood Chairman and Mrs. Jessie
L. Pearson, Field Director, will
observe the 53rd Birthday ol Girl
Washington, D. C.; Audrey Bow
den, Charleston, S. C.j Mrt||Jay
lor; Fay Areher, Winon,-» bJ*n
dolyn Seller*, Denmark, S. end
Williette Hamlet, R#idlvilfiA>
> .0)11
Scouting during the
March. h| 4
On Girl Scout Sunday,
all girls will attend reliyjpus
services in uniforms.
Some activities planned (( qre:
Junior Troop No. 714, sported
by C. C. Spaulding Seho9| M /,*Hl
present a skit, "Gala }n
dn March 9. Mrs. Nancy ft; JtyW
land, leader. - r. ,no
Brownie Troop No. 127, #®P n '
sored by W. G. Pearson Sflhqo'-
will present, "A' Brownie
on March 9. Mrs. GSorgtkta, ,Yiel
lock, leader. ~ . notel
Junior Troops No. 672 311(11,073.
sponsored by W. G.
School, will have a "Scout's-
March 10. Mcsdames Julia D.
Gamble and Hattie Crews, lead
ers.
Brownie Troop No. 169, Mrs.
Christine Barbee, leader.
Junior Troop No. 137, Mrs. Jes
sie Davidson, leader.
Cadette Troop No. 94, Mrs. J. S.
Carrington, leader. All sponsored
by Mt. Gilead Baptist .Church, will
Continued on page 3B