B^- i Jk - j^r &?|K: ^ ^BfcV Z 4? gBHiB^s!^^^*^ 'r^vvy1 ?^^^su-Z %S& ^HBS. ' Jj^WsSfe V , - -j# B *w tt^^HpNUp ^/fTl^^KLp^^^^iiTH ^iraGWraKBE gwtwt Fort Bragg when th Sept. 6 with a crashing 45-0 1? IPCIT ?H..?. U.. fit Pirates 12, Bears Hampton The Shaw University Bears lost their second game this season in a 12-8 battle with the Pirates of Hampton Institute here Saturday. A IS yard touch down pass 1 _ A _ i.1 * L?- i. * laie in ine iourui quarter irom quarterback Dwight Joyner to tight end Mike Blackman gave Hampton the come from behind win. The score was set up by a pass interference call against the Shaw secondary when Joyner tried to go deep to wide ^receiver Reggie Midgett on the Shaw four yard line. Shaw started the scoring Midway the first quarter when middle linebacker William "Hard Rock" Artis trapped Hampton's Larry Brooks in his own end zone for a safety. On the next series the Bears moved to Hampton's 25.yard -line only to be pushed back by penalties. After an exchange of punts, Hampton moved to the Bears' 15 yard line, but Joyner's pass was picked off by Shaw free safety James Smith. Bears Bi Last year Livingstone College (Salisbury, N.C.) had the top defense in the CIAA. This year it looks as if the Fighting Bears just might do it again. The defense gave up only 11 yards rushing, 48 yards passing and no points in last week's romp over Ft. Bragg, 48-0. Livingstone Defensive Coach Fletcher Jones took it m/vlAcftu IV/V?V >JVI J "I thought the defense looked pretty good out there," he said, "with a little more work, we just might jell." But while the defense has been the talk of the campus, ** |BV 1^%&<* - a j^jwrnm it F M r-JP*i tllrt^WTTlX Mfe "*%&& "T^ ; .< ^B ^^jlKML^^MMBOfoj% i jW^^cPrlWy \ ^^Sj^BpB^C je Fayettevffle State Unhmtty Br I victory over the Dragons. Godwfa i 15 Squeaks Pi Early in the second half, the Pirates drove to the Bears' 21, only to fumble into the hands of Shaw linebacker Milt Simmons. But after those errors, Hampton finally put a touchdown drive together. Prince Macon got the tally on a 15 yard run to give the Pirates a 6-2 lead. Shaw, under the direction of quarterback Cecil Alexander, then moved the ball downfield behind the outside running of backs Bobby Landers, Mike Oakley and Lionell Jackson. But penalties forced the Bears back deep inside of their own territory. Then on a third down and 35, Alexander found freshman wide receiver Talmadge Darden on the Pirates three-yard line. Two plays 1 At s? a ^ laicr nicAanuer scored rrom the two to give Shaw a 8-6 lead. Shaw meintained its lead until late in the fourth period when Joyner connected with Blackman for the go ahead and the game. iry Bragg the coaching staff has been a little worried - about the offense. However, on the fourth play of the game, wide receiver Samuel Branch outraced Ft. Bragg defenders to take a pass thrown by Livingstone quarterback Randy Nichols to what amounted to a 57-yard touchdown. "Fort Bragg just double teamed the wrong receiver, Nichols said. "They left Samuel (Branch) one in one with their safety." Nichols was disappointed in Livingstone's first-quarter play, he said. "i1..- ~"~?l?^jfc'*' ' y L 2^ _^fl jjr HF*?j^^^B^^HH|^^L ^^Hffv.,'' 4PF j?< >Sodwta pfcfcs ap yardage MM opened their season i rushed for 94 yards In 10 ast Shaw The win gives the Pirates a 2-0 slate in the CIA, while the D 1. t?A j - ocars nave iusi iwo games in a row. They are 0*1 in the CIAA. The Greatest Fic I See I Even i If* CLOS WIN MEMO! Tuesdt Tickets I e Day | Ti( I Sept. 15 At: I Coliseum; Rea Ali-Frazier Fight "Saga Our I Muhammad Ali, heavyweight champion of the world, torm?iter, ird -and decisive confrontation in the ring of the domed, air-conditioned Philippine Coliseum in Manila, Republic of the Philippines, on Tuesday i/vk under the promotional aegis of Don King Productions, Inc. September 30th is the date onwhichthis "Saga of Our Lifetime" will be beamed via closed circuit in the United States and Canada and via satellites throughout the world. Starting time for the telecast is 9:30 p.m. (E.D.T.), with the main event scheduled to begin at 10:35 p.m. (9:30 a.m., October 1st, in Manila, with the Ali-Frazier at 10:35 a.m.)- It can be viewed locally at the Winston-Salem Memorial Coliseum. For their respective efforts HE JUST IS Ml! jhter Ever - If yoo < For Your Yourse f you know don't r 1UHAMME1 ALI ft. JOE FHAZIEH ED CIRCUIT TV A1 SION-SA RIAL CO! ly Septemb< 9:30 p.m. a Advance of Fight ckets Will Go On \ RecordBar in Har inick's at Thruwaj Page 11 Billed Of Lifetime"? in this mammoth production, Ali and Frazier both have the iinjljl Fin inn initj tiiiilii biggest single paydays but the most lucrative off all time ever received by an athlete. Muhammad is guaranteed $4 and'/i million against 43% off all tevenue, and Frazier received 52 million against 22%. A top notch fight will be added to the television program. The Ali-Frazier fights were both classic and controversial. On March 8, 1971, culminating more than three years of ring exile, Ali lost what was billed as Super Fisht I in Madison Square Garden. Frazier dropped him with a tremendous left hook in that fight for the world title. On January 28, 1974, they met again in the Garden in Super Fight II, this time with no title at stake and the distance 12 rounds, and Ali emerged the winner. don't believe it, I niss... I ^jjj^ r THE I LEM I LISEUM I er 30th I $10.00 I $12.50 I saie tea Mall; I f & Downtown I t