Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 21, 1969, edition 1 / Page 18
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16 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C.. SATURDAY. JUNE 1, 1961) LEWS PICKS UP ‘SHEEPSKIN’-Ww. v• 1. Cali;.: IDs not hard to pick UCLA Basketball Star Lew A lei m lor r oft•: t ee row' I. especially when he is among gel low students. The 7-foe i 1 2 in -h athlete marches in front of Pauley Pavilion, the campus soon .- a■: n. on his way to commence ment exercises held at the new UCI. \ ' 1 field stadium. Following graduation, Alcindor will play b. 11 c la Milwaukee Bucks basket ball team. (UPI). EXHIBITS BIG GLOYE-New Yori weight champion Joe Fra/.iei > xh rigid hand that he’ll throw at -uvi ■. w, in their June 23 heavyweight title bout ;t M son Square Garden. (UPI). VSCBisebdlersMaks AII-ClAA2ndTiii^ PETERSBURG - Two players on Coach William B, Bradley’s Virginia State College baseball team have been chosen for the second team of the all-CIAA selection for 1969. Despite the Trojan s disap pointing final record of 7-12, several players turned in sparkling seasons, although VSC’s two returning all-CIAA selections from 1968 were not repeaters this year. The two Trojans picked for the second team this year are sophomore second baseman Raymond Wilkins ana junior outfielder Joe Hollman. Wilkins was VSC’s leadLng hitter among the regular-play \bu should get to " * i<( ' know Tia Maria liiiEjl McLEOD WATSON I open™ or K ew I o ¥ H irn *; evenings BANKAf.‘ER!CARO $ 'TiL9’P.M. MASTER CHARGE <[ , :■: 209-2 I I Foyettevi • s*. ing Trojans with inala. Os .418. The stock;- Wilkies, from Adsit, Va. tied for the club lead in RBI- 5 10, col lected the mos (23), led in tot and struck out onl\ fom tinr in 75 at bats. Hollmdf w’l 1 home run duriu- the sc-ason, finished with a .354 - •» ra m.lie led the squad m stoLu liases with 13 and v. a- one of the team’s most i oliaModutc! Ut ters. A resident of chi .• t<-i Pa., Hollman was a Iso ;a q.-ntly names to the District 2’ -ill- NAIA baseball squad, Con -h Bradley said. Vhe Sports Parade .. . N. GKO PRESS INTERNA TIONA! ‘GREAT ONES” CUR AGO-At least fans of i •<• ; . Cor league teams think v .’ t ir stai Black players . : n - greatest ever.” Fol of the Chicago Cubs . rn i e Banks as the • •: t cut-., while those of the Braves named Henry “Hank” Aaron as theii top choice. Hi- xns AT I AST Pi HTORIA-F inding itself -hunted aside in international competition, South Africa d< cio->d to bend a little and it i its “no-mixing policy” •su sports category. Last ■i;, 1 .o suite South Africa 1.,. '. Tennis union accepted 1 id ic.k South Africa National Ts unis union into full i. .nib ; ship, in a bid to met. h ior.s that it does not fully -•■ present all the races in South Vfrica. LIKE A WOMAN??? MONTREAL-Maury Wills, tuo Expos’ recent acquisition from the Pittsburgh P. rates, might be accused of being like a woman when it comes to mak ing up his mind. Wills, at 36, ■ announced his intention to retire from the game, but two later, changed his mind mo decided to continue play ing. GOOD PUNCHER, TOO LOS ANGELES-If what Den ni; Grey of the Los Angeles Starr claims is true, Lev/ Al oindor is as good with his fists he is handling a basketball. Grey, who underwent surgery last week to repair a broken :;■ w, claims Lew hit him dur ing a game played at Hamil ton High school between a cage squad led by the UCLA great, and Gr< v’s team of ABA stars. POTENTI \I. COLLEGE GREATS LOR M AN, Miss.-Alcorn col lage’s track hoped took a de cided upswing recently when four top Mississippi high school track sta.- - accepted grants-ln aids to attend the school. New comer.-- are Willie Mages, co- Farrow. Reid And Lucas Win In Greensboro <)pen Tourney BY M.ALLAN GREENS BORO-Playing in the Severn Annual Greensboro In vitation Tournament, la id re cently, Negroes won all singh s championships. What a differ ence seven years have made. Juan Farrow, Lynchburg, Virginia, defeated stew ,-t., 1 y, i . V V He IMI THE ‘CAT’ AND HIS • KITTENS’-SI. Louis: St. Louis Cnrdinil’s new reliever. Jim (Mud cut) Grant draws the he.M oj a kitten on his shower clogs instead of hi Uniterm numlier be fore Cards-Houston Astros ganu . .June 13, Mud cat explained, “I used to dr.ov tin number in stead of the cat’s head until ! skirted getting traded so much and my number changed. “Originally with the Cleveland Indians, Mud cat has played also with the Minnesota Twins, Montreal Expos, Los Angeles Dodgers and now the Cardinals. He was oboiinetD root the Dodgers to bolster the Cards’ bull < a,. . PI) Howard I>ieket 'Team End s L nbeaten Season WASHINGTON, D. C. - Howard University’s cricket team fought from behind to ow. (ukt the Guyanesse Cricket ■; i- oi Newark, N. J, last ve<-k. .51- 87, to conclude an unm feateii 13-game season. Bison coach Ted Chambers, a veteran of 25 years oi coach ing, celebrated his first un beaten cricket season. “You could say we’re the un "Tidal national champions,” Chamb ers beamed after the game as he congratulatedhishappvplay ers. Playing mainly a sc! < dull of cricket clubs that have the advantage of playing tor.-th--r longer than schools, Chambers* charges reeled off eight v!< tories wherein the victory urn ■■- gin was fewer than four points. For instance, Howard squeak ed by a strong West Indian Cricket Club contingent, 61- 79, and later nipped top lege opponent, Penn State Uni versity 152-149. The only mar on the Howard’ holder of the National High school record in the 100 and 220 yard dashes; /obedee Barns winner of the state hig school record in the 44 -no 220 yards dashes; and Big Eight and state championsCindt Bill ingsley, 220-yard dash; ano Amanda Hornesbuiyter, -n, . and 100 yard dashes. DEMONSTRATES PATRIOTISM-New York: Olympic gold medalist Heavy weight boxer George Foreryinn, ill set for Flag Day June 14, makes sure some othei Americans are too. as he hands out miniature American flags to passersb> (R) near Madison Square Garden June 13. Foreman won wide acclaim at the 196* Olympic Games when he proudly displayed a small r. S. Hag during medal presentation ceremonies (L). Foreman battles Don Waldheim (of Sew York) at Madison Square Garden June 23 prior to heavyweight title bout between ''hump Joe Frazier and Jerry Quarry. (I PI). lianiz, Greensboro, 6-1; 6-2 for Hie under 12 year old champ ion ship • -at lost to Horace Reid, ■p' N>l No 1 in three sets ■l-u; 6-3 6-3 in the under 14. 1 arrow is picked by Dr. “Whirlwind” Johnson to win the finals of the USLTA Under 12 National Championships, the record vas a draw in an early rn r e ,vit! i: powerful British ricket Club. Inward avenged that blemish by defeating them in a defen sive rematch, 42-41. Art Hazlowood, a junior from Guyana, South America was the It de in batting for the Bi son. scoring 216 runs on the is-mi. Hazlewood set a school coord against Penn State as he scored 72 runs. Ca. Uon Martin, a sophomore from Jamaica, W. 1., was run ner-up in batting with 158 runs scored. Martin, a two-letter man, is also a standout soccer player for Coach Chambers. Earl Buchanan, another West lit Han. ed ti e team in bowling. Buchanan, a junior, had 17 outs t; ids er-'dit. Team captain Pe r Stephens of Guyana was 12 outs. Stephens in also a junior. Freshman Perr y Springer was voted the honor of the t.-im’s outstanding bowler, for .is ••• itt pi rformances under pressure. Springer, the small est man on the squad at 5- ioot-4 .it:ii 135. pounds, retired the side against Penn State to protect a slim lead. He had . total o; U outs for the year. “Thi lus got to be one of ti • fin st teams Howard has fielded in ain sport,” i : ■ - Id lin final salute. first for Negroes since Arthur Ashe turned the trick. Horace Reid, Atlanta, Geor gia, defeated Chuck Cloninger, Shelby, 6-1; 6-2, the defend ing championship to win the Under 14 Championships. Jo'nnte Lucas, Durham, won the 16, 18 Singles Champion ship. Lucas defeated BobKoury of Burlington 6-2; 2-6; 6-2. Lucas had reached the finals by upsetting Carey Browder, Sweetwater, Tennessee in another three setter. Browder won both 16 and 18 last year. The 1969 Junior Development Teams’ next tournament will be the tough Southern Boys Cham pionship in Davidson College, Davidson. The large number of Negro players Ln the Greens boro tournament was a pleasant surprise. Phototimer Part Os Track History KNOXVILLE - The NCAA track and field championships at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, Tenn., will have a history-maker helping the officials during the three-day meet on June 19-20-21 with the presence of the Bulova Ac cut ion Phototimer. The Phototimer has been of invaluable help to the officials judging and timing races for the past 21 years. The first version was introduced by the watch company in 1948, after Harry B. Henshel, now presi dent of the company, suggest ed that a great help to track racing would be a photo finish camera similar to those used at the racetracks, but with time added to it. Engineers went to work and the two units being used at the NCAA championships represent many months of work, and some $200,000 in costs. Every NCAA championship lias found the Phototimer a life saver in unsnarling one or more photofinishes in which the run ners were bunched so tightly together that the hand timers caught most in.the same time. Even the longer races need the Phototimer, as was proved in the very first appearance of this equipment at the Nation al AAU cross-country cham pionships of 1948 at Detroit when only the camera separated Bob Black and Curtis Stone at the finish. The Phototimer showed that Black finished l/100th of a second ahead of Stone. Because human races are determined by the torso rather than the nose, as in horse races, tracks and field is even harder on the officials than other sports, a change in the defini tion of the torso starting May 1, in which the neck no longer is included in the judging, has made it no easier for the of ficials. But the phototimer judges all races the same way, regardless of which part of the body is the determinant in the outcome. It can do so because of the way it is designed. First, as disting uished from regular shutter principle cameras, the Photo timer is an open-slit camera. Bulova operators appear at the track many hours before all other officials, so they can place the cameras exactly on the finish line are photographed. The pictures you see may look like one shot of many rummers, but these are prints from a moving roll film which goes horizontally right to left or left to right, according to the direction of the race. As each runner crosses that line, he is photographed, along with the time in which he ran, which appears above his head. Each Phototimer picture also provides the information which identifies the race and meet and the position of each runn er in relation to the others. ’pi''"' WIT.! S 1 \GS AGEE - Lot evii-s. Los An geles Dodgers short-stop Maury Wills appears to be playing a game of hop, skip and jump as the New York Mets Tommie Agee slides into second during the eighth inning of game at Dodgers Stadium. However, Wills was faster than Agee and made the tag to retire the inning. The Dodgers defeated the Mets, 3-2. (UPI). Private Foundation Named For Ex-Heavyweight Champ Charles CHICAGO-(NPI)~A newly or ganized foundation lias been named in honor of Ezz a r d Charles, former world heavy weight boxing champion, it was announced today by Anna L. Owens, the foundation’s sec retary. The foundation will provide funds and supervision for pro fessional training and rehabili tation programs for the under privileged and disabled, with particular emphasis on youth advancement. Miss Owens, who is in the Inheritance Tax Division, Illi nois State Treasurer’s office as executive appointments sec retary tc Adlai Stevenson, 111, said that, “for a foundation that is devoted to helping young people meet the requirements for jobs that offer potential advancement, and to also as sist those who face the extra ordinary personal adjustments of rehabilitation, the naming of this foundation for Ezzard Charles is particularly ap propriate.” Charles has continued to ac iasebaii Joins The Computer Age DnsßßEnncssorjißcossi* i rsc»*. XTfiicttxunrfjurrtKtzicnCf Sßtrxtu* < 100 so)*si’ io o** £2 cilL* *-:* 51 ci e>f* Baseball has come a long way since its early years. With professional baseball now celebrating its Centennial Anniver sary. Abner Douhlcday. baseball's inventor, would certainly be amazed to see that his game has been computerized. It was not until I 944 that the first computer was built at Harvard Since then, great st titles ii4yc been made in computer technology. By using their knowledge of computers arid computer circuitry Electronic Data Controls Corp. a prime supplier to the data processing 'industry. has developed” a brand new game for baseball fans - Computer Baseball Played like a real game. Computer Baseball is programmed to provide the thrills. excitement and suspense of the regular game The fielding team chooses its pitch and the team at bat decides whether it should hit. 101 PROOF-8 YEARS OLD— e STRAIGHT BOURBON AUSTIN, NICHOLS 4 CO., INC., N. V.. N. Y. tively work on young programs in Ohio, his home state, and Illinois, even though he has been disabled for several years. He won the world heavyweight championship by defeating Jer sey Joe Walcott in 1949, after the retirement of the legend ary Joe Louis. He then gained undisputed recognition of the championship the following year by defeating Louis, who chal lenged to regain the title he had previously held for twelve years. Charles held the title until it was regained b\ Wal cott in 1951. The foundation has received an Illinois charter as non-pro fit corporation and now expects to obtain funds from both pri vate and corporate sources. W. Mauldin Smith was elect ed as general counsel for the Foundation, which will have of fices at 919 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 3204, Chicago, 60611. * * * Low-cost disability life in- k surance is available to quali fied disabled veterans, re minds the VA. I : steal or whatever other j strategy is needed, and the | computer works out the results Each play presents the same percentages and odds involved in actual [ games. | Computer Baseball is just one ol the new computerized games from Eieetronie Data ; controls Corp. Others arej Computer Football, which is now in the hands of coaches of all pro football teams, and Computer Basketball and Hockey. Flayers who apply themselves will find their j imagination. sktb and ingenuity con s t a rt t! y ' challenged.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 21, 1969, edition 1
18
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