Newport Dumped at Kenansville ; Lose First Game to Nakina, 67-64 Newport's Hawks played their sorriest contest of the season Monday night at Kenansville in the district play of's and were eliminated by Nakina, 67-64, in a game which was never very close. Coach Bob King was disappointed with his boys as they aid a most inept job of guarding-* their opponents from Columbus j County. Nakina, winners of their 28th straight victory, didn't look like a serious contender for state honors at any time in the game, though they held varied leads of 12, 13, 16 and 17 points. Two Boys Star Two boys shone for the Nakina I team, coached by Paul Weatherly. j They were Red Formyduval, a diminutive guard, and Fred Ezzell, tall forward. Each of the boys tallied 20 points. J. D. Gore, other guard on the j starting five, also popped in 14 markers for the winners. Berlyn Temple was high scorer for the Hawks with 16 markers, with 10 of his points coming in the final canto. Al Wallace had 13, James Small 11 and Gil Gar- j ner 10 for the losers. The Hawks played the game strictly in spurts, and for the most j part of the contest they weren't in the game. The game was tied at 2, 4, 8 and | 12 in the first quarter with Nakina 1 taking a 15-12 lead at the end of j the initial stanza. Edwards Narrows Gap Eugene Edwards hit on a jump, shot to start the second period and narrow the gap to 14-15 at 7:32, but a conccrted drive by the Nakina quintet, with Ezzell as the spearhead, gave them a 32-20 lead at 1:24 In a minute and 10 seconds the Hawks tallied 8 points on a drive by Temple, two layups by Small and Edwards successful conversion of a pair at the charity stripe. At halftime Nakina led 32-28. The third stanza saw the Hawks get as close at 32 34 at 6:13 but for the remainder of the period it was all Nakina as they moved , out to a 55-39 lead and at the end of the period led 55-41. Newport trailed throughout the final quarter and with the score at 66-57 against them, the Hawks came to life at 2:03. ! Small made good on one of two at the free throw line and at 1:10 Garner hit on a pop shot. Formy duval tallied at the free throw line at 0:58 to make it 67-62, and with approximately a second left Gar ner pumped one in to make the final tally 67-64. Tie For Field Goal Honors Both teams were tied in field goals with 25 apiece but Nakina won the game at the free throw line as they made good on 17 of 28 as against 14 of 21 by the Hawks. Red Benton, reputed to be an able official, was anything but, and Newport wasn't given a break in the game. Three members of the Hawks* starting lineup fouled out in the final period. Al Wallace left the game at 2:15, Temple at 1:16 and Leston Gillikin finished off at 0:23. NEWPORT BOYS. fg fta ftm pf pts E'lwards, f 1 5 4 3 6 Temple, f 6 6 4 * 16 Gillikin, c 3 3 2 5 8 Small, c 5 2 1 0 11 Garner, g 5 1 0 1 10 Wallace, g 5 4 3 5 13 Hardison 0 0 0 0 0 Lilly 0 0 0 0 0 Totals .25 21 14 19 64 NAKINA BOYS tg fta ftm pf pts Chestnut, f 3 5 14 7 Ezzell, f ? 4 13 12 4 20 Ray, c ...3 0 0 0 6 Formyduval, g .9 5 2 4 20 J. D. Gore, g . 6 5 2 2 14 Totals 25 28 17 14 67 Seadogs Trounce Pirates Wednesday , 59-42 Beaufort's Scadogs put on one of their best scoring shows Wednes day night at the conference tourney to trample the Swansboro Pirates 59-42. Coach Tom McQuaid's quintet had the game well in hand after being tied at 6 and 9 early in the first quarter. The Seadogs led at the end of the initial period 19-9. Beaufort extended its lead to 32 16 at halftime and at the end of the third stanza they maintained a 45-28 advantage. The entire Beaufort squad saw action as did the Swansboro crew. Both coaches were getting a line on what would be available to them next season. Jimmy Davis !<'d the scoring pa rade for the winners with 19 points as Terry Nance popped in 17 counters. Dick Kellum was high for the Pirates with 9 points as Ronnie Ross tallied 7 markers. For the spectators who waited until 10:30 p.m to see the final game of the night, it was a fine display by the Seadogs, and a good line was obtained on material avail able at Swansboro for next season. The lineups: Beaufort (59) ? Davis 19, Nance 17, E. Willis 7, Owens 6, Kirk 6. Martin, Moore 2, r> Willis 2. Copeland, Gillikin, Windley and Smith. Swansboro (42) ? Kellum 9, Ross 7, Kozma 2, J. Dudley 4. R. Dudley 1, Holt 3, Riggs 6, Casper 6. Guthrie 2, Lisk 2. P. Dudley and Odum. The score by quarters: Total Beaufort 19 13 13 14?59 Swans boro 9 7 12 14 ? 42 Wrestlers Clubs Furnish Hospital Entertainment Holyoke, Mass. (AP) - Thomas A. Mortimer, president of the In ternational Wrestlers' Sportsmen's Clubs, says the organization has 3,616 members. The group in cludes wrestlers, promoters, sports writers and radio and television announcers. Members pay no dues and meet ings arc held through the mail. One of the purposes of the club is to furnish entertainment through tape recordings for vet erans and patients in hospitals. Nick George of West Palm Beach, Fla., is vice president. Tom-Tom for Prof Oklahoma City (AP) ? James J. Hayes, Oklahoma City University professor, followed the school's basketball team to all games for 25 years. In recognition for his inter est, his English class gave him a real Indian tom-tom for his birth day. C YEARS OLD 86 PROOF Old , SettierI $035 pint *3"% or DISTILLIRY. IKHMIiTK Bearded Hoop Stars The House of David, one of the most colorful tour ins pro basketball organizations, with all members i sporting beards, will play at the Morehead City gym vs. the County All-Stars Friday night, March 16 at 8 J p.m. The game is sponsored by the Morehead City Jaycees. Players of the House of David are, loft to right, Joe Mathis, Don Walters, Bobby Roth, Big Man Clark and Rou Weaver. ] Surveying the Scene with Hal Shapiro ? In the name of sports many crimes are committed by officials, but the most heinous crime ever perpetrated took place Monday night at Kenansville, when Red Benton practically gave the district play off contest to Nakina. Red, reputed to be one of the best schoolboy officials in the state, looked terrible on the court. His calling was reminiscent of the days of "homers" back in New York Slate. A "homer" is a referee in a basketball game who hails from the same town as one of the contesting teams and usually calls them in favor of the home town aggregation. Prior to the start of the game I overheard him tell the coaches of the teams contesting that he'd let the boys play basketball, and un less it was exceptionally rough under the boards he wouldn't be using his whistle. He didn't use his whistle to call fouls against Nakina, but he cer tainly did rdise fits when a Newport boy was under the boards. The worst part of his calling was that he was anywhere from 15 to 20 seconds late on his calls. This was especially evident on several 'walking' violations against Newport when fans from the Nakina root ing section had to holler that the violation had taken place. Tom Davis, his fellow official, seemed to have some of the same failings as Benton, but in his case, as a Newport fan commented, "It was just that he (Davis) was being considerate of the old man (Benton) and let him have first crack at the calls." Newport didn't play a good ball game and against a truly good op ponent would have been beaten by at least 20 points. With the assist ance of the officials, Nakina, a fair-to-middlin' quintet, took a three point decision. ?With the play of the finals of the Seashore Conference tourney to night at Swansboro the 1955-56 campaign will come to an end. It has been a most interesting year in the county and in the con ference as well. Newport's Hawks took the honors in both the conference and coun ty, only to be eliminated in the first round at Kenansville. Morchead City's Eagles wound up in the runner-up spot in both the conference and the county after four hectic games against the Hawks. The All-Seashore Conference team found Carteret County leading the pack for the second straight season, with two boys from Newport and More head City each making the honored five and the filling out of the squad with a member of the Beaufort quintet. Carteret County should be very proud to h&ve ballplayers of the caliber of Wayne Cheek, Berlyn Temple, Craig Home, Jimmy Davis and Leston Gillikin. ? Paul Hahn, one of the best trick shot artists in golf, will give an exhibition at Wilmington's Cape Fear Country Club March 28, the day before the opening of the Eighth Annual Azalea Open Golf Tournament. The trick shot star, who has been in a number of movie shorts, has a repertoire of more than 40 incredible shots. He combines a serious golf clinic and his trick shot exhibition with a aeries of hilarious gags written especially for him by Hollywood gag writers. Hahn considers the "double action" shot his most difficult. In this shot he hits a series of 12 balls all lined up, with a club in each hand, alternating right and left handed shots without stopping. Other shots include hitting three balls at onee, one goes backward, oae goes forward and the other goes straight up. He catches this last one before it hits the ground. His 90-pound bag is the world's largest and contains the weirdest assortment of clubs in captivity. While some are orthodox, others are not, like the regular driver with a garden hose shaft. Hahn has hit a golf ball 230 yards with this one. Hahn has appeared at the Masters Tournament, the PGA cham pionship* and several times at Yankee Stadium. He has toured 45 ?f the 48 states, throughout South America and in Australia. ANN STREET ESSO SERVICE GAS, OILS, AND COMPLETE LUBRICATION WASHING A POLISHING We Call For and Deliver ALSO ROAD SERVICE 815 Ann St. Phone 2-5371 Beaufort, N. C. | Mrs. Gene Markey of Calumet 1 1 Farm and Alfred G. Vanderbilt | take pride in naming their own I raee horses. They plan to raee at L Hialeah this winter. ' ; Eagles Slaughter White Oak In Tourney Opener, 104-42 Top-seeded Morehead City found their first round op-* position easy pickings in the conference tourney Wednes day night at Swansboro as they rolled up a 104-42 victory over the White Oak <|uintet. Coach Gannon Talbert used his entire bench through out the contest and they all helpeiH out in the win. The Eagles took a 39-2 lead at (he end of the first canto and ex-, tended the advantage to 55-21 at halftime. At the end of three quarters Morehead had a 90-31 lead and they finished up the game with ' their highest scoring mark, 104-42 j The Eagles took a 15-0 lead in the first stanza before the White Oak team was able to score n pair of markers from the free throw line. White Oak didn't score a field goal until 6:32 of the second quarter. From the viewpoint of the spec- J tators it was a mighty poor game. | The Eagles had no opposition what- 1 ever. The game started a half hour i late, and meant that the final game of the evening didn't end until I close to midnight. Wayne Cheek led the scoring pa rade for the Eagles with 32 mark ers as teammates Bradley Mcln- j tosh 18, Kent Brown 16 and C'raig j Home 14, also hit for double fig ures. Glenn Dickerson was high point maker for the White Oak team with j 14 markers as Coston tallied 8 Three members of the White ! Oak squad fouled out and oncil member of the Eagles in the final 1 canto. A. Banks at 7:08, Don Jones h at 3:37 and Coston at 2:18. Jimmy ? Parker of the Eagles left at 1 57. j J. W. Long twisted his ankle at j 1:12 of the final period, and it i j isn't likely that he'll see any more iction in the tournament. The lineups: Morehead City , (104) ? Home 14. Mcintosh 18,', "heek 32, R. E. Willis 7. Brown I ' 16, Long 8, Phillips 4, Rich 3. Par- 1 cer 2, Eure, Simpson and M. Willis. 1 White Oak (42) ? A. Banks 3, M Dickerson 14. Coston 8, B Banks 4, 1 ferry Riggs 7, Jones 5, Mallard 1, 5 ind John Riggs. 1 1 Smyrna Beaten By Dixon, 65-41 In what was a close contest for ' three quarters, at the conference , tournament Wednesday night at ' Swanshoto. Dixon came up with a hot final stanza to take a 61 45 de- 1 cision from Smyrna Dixon led at the end of the first 1 canto 12-10, but Smyrna took overj' the advantage at 22 20 at halftime. j; Dixon once more held the lead at j the end of the third stan/a at 35 31. and in the final quarter Dixon poured it on to win going away. , 1 The game was knotted three ' times at 18. 20 and 27. and Smyrna ' was as close as two points behind ! in the final quarter at 7:42 when 1 Terry Gillikin laid one in to make 1 the score 33-35. Davis, Parker and Smith were]' the big guns for the Dixon quintet I in the final canto. .< Terry (iillikin was high scorer ' for the Smyrna team with 12 J 1 points as teammate Ron Styron 1 tallied 11. Afton Parker was the high point- , ' maker for Dixon with 18 markers, is Smith tallied 14 and Davis 13. Sonny Davis fouled out of the ' game for Smyrna at 4 53 of the Final quarter. | The lineups. Smyrna (45) Sty- j ^ ron 11, K. Davis 8, Gillikin 12, ^ rhomas 7. S Davis 2, R. Arthur 1 >. G. Arthur and Guthrie. I Dixon (61) Parker 18, Smith jj 14. Davis 13, Pelletier 8, Yopp 4] rnd Grant 4. The score by quarters: Total i <: Smyrna 10 12 9 14 45 t Dixon 12 8 15 26 61 I r Pamlico Wins From Rockets Pamlico County's Hurricanes came from behind against the Jones Central Rockets in the con ference tourney at Swansboro Wed nesday night and emerged on the long end of a 38-35 tally. The Kockets moved out to a 9-7 lead at the end of the first quar ter and extended the advantage to 23 16 at halftime. Coach Lynn Parker of the Hur ricanes gave his club the word at the intermission chat, and the team came buck on the floor ready to 140 all out. The third quarter saw the Hur ricanes put on a spurt that had the game tied several times, with the Pamlico quintet enjoying a 31 29 advantage at the end of the stanza. The final quarter was the low est scoring one of the contest as ? the Hurricanes maintained their >light advantage and held onto the ball. Larry Prescott led the Hurri canes in scoring with 16 markers is brother Jerry tossed in 10 narkers. Carl Spann, pint-sized guard of he Rockets was high scorer for lis team with 10 markers as Jerry Kerns came through with 8 points. The lineups: Pamlico County L Prescott 16. J. Prescott 10, Buck 2. Lee 7, Warren 1 and ludson 2 Jones Central (35) Kerns 8, Mallard 7, McCoy, West 6. Barbec \, Foy, Spann 10 and Harrison. The score by quarters: Total 'a ml ico County 7 9 15 7 38 'Ones Central 9 14 6 6 35 Having a deer in possesion with >ut a locked tag in Arizona consti utes . unlawful possession. The ninimum fine is $100. FIRST choice in gas and oil... Your car's a working partner! Give her the zip she needs, with Esso Extra Gasoline for 56. It contains D-FROST*, a special anti-stalling additive developed by Esso Research. Try a tankful of Esso Extra today ... you'll enjoy its smooth-flowing power. LAST word in dealer service... 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