Newspapers / North Carolina Central University … / Oct. 28, 1960, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of North Carolina Central University Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Friday, October 28, 1960 THE CAMPUS ECHO Page SeTen k m Eagles Bow To Maryland State That oughta hold ‘em! The faces of these coeds show approval of an Eagle effort during the Allen-NCC tilt on O’Kelly field. The pay incidentally, was not a touchdown, but an extremely long punt by Pryor, which left the visitors struggling underneath the goal posts. The Eagles won 22-0. NCC Eagles Score Victory Over Trojans The North Carolina College Eagles overcame a 14-7 half-/ time deficit by scoring three times in the final half and whip ping previously unbeaten Vir ginia State, 27-14. NCC scored first on a pass in terception when James Brew- ington blocked a Virginia State pass and knocked it up in the air. End Charlie Cox snatched, the loose ball and scatted 25 yards for the Eagles’ first score. Pryor kicked the extra point. Virginia State struck back Avhen two passes from Dewayne Jeter to end Charles McGuire set up the Trojans at the NCC four-yard line. Fullback Ernest Turner carried it over from the two and Jeter kicked the extra point to tie it at 7-7. A 34-yard pass from Eddie Parham ta brother Sam, a pass from Jeter to Sidney Swann, and a bootleg play by Jeter scored V-State’S second tally. Jeter kicked tha extra point to put Trojans ahead 14-7 at intermission. The Eagles came back strong in the second half. A bad snap from center set up their second touchdown when they took over on the Trojan’s'41. Quarterback; Hicks galloped to the four, then sneaked over from the one. The kick failed and Virginia State still led at 14-13. We make larger loans on type writers, watches, guns, radios, jewelry, musical instruments, luggage, cameras, suits and overcoats. FIVE POINTS LOAN CO. AT FIVE POINTS 4-567 1 DURHAM, N. C. But the final quarter saw the roof cave in on the Trojans, as North Carolina College scored twice. The Eagles gambled on a fourth down play from their own 40 and made it, then drove to the Virginia State’s one where Richard Wilkins bulled over to put them ahead 19-14. Then, Browning picked off a despera tion Virginia State pass and ran 30 yards to ice it 25-14 for the, Eagles. Edmonds Named (continued from page 1) turer and writer. Dr. Edmonds is a graduate of Morgan State Col lege and earned the Doctor of Philosophy degree in history at Ohio State University. Also an author, she has three books to her credit, The Negroi and Fusion Politics in North Carolina, A History of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, and an^ other about her experiences in, West Germany. Both of the lat ter works are scheduled ton early publication. Maryland State College un-:- veiled an array of speedy backs and legged out a 27-8 decision over North Carolina College Eagles Saturday, October 21, on O’Kelly Field. From the opening moments the Hawks displayed their tre mendous speed, but could not maintain early scoring drives against the rock-hard Eagle line. The first period was a scoreless see-saw, but a last-second fum ble by Hicks on his four-yard stripe set up the first Maryland touchdown, as fullback Johnny Holmes opened the second quar ter by dashing the six yards for the score. The extra-point kick was good for a 7-0 Marylan^ lead. Following the kickoff, thq Eagles found the Hawk line somewhat stubborn. The defen ders rushed in to deflect a pass by quarterback Hicks deep in, his own territory. Maryland’s Hobbs snagged the loose aerial and trotted into the end zone with the second marker. The| PAT was blocked and the visi tors led 13-0. Later in the period fleet half-, back Danny Miller maneuvered past the Eagle line and swept fifty-five yards down the side- WHILE IN DURHAM We invite you to use the facilities of MECHANICS AND FARMERS BANK TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 615 FAYETTEVILLE STREET AND 116 WEST PARRISH STREET • RESOURCES OVER $7,000,000.00 MEMBER F. D. I. C. WANTED PERSONS TO WORK PART-TIME AS WAITERS IN TAVERN. Must be able to sing, dance, or play musical instrument. Work hours: 6-11:30 p. m. Contact Steve Snider at Stevens-Shephard Men’s Shop from 12 until 5:30 p. m. Phone: 6-2882. SERVICE PRINTING COMPANY SERVICE FIRST SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Printing - Engraving PHONE 9-2039 504 EAST PETTIGREW STREET DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA I SPEIGHT’S AUTO SERVICE “A Business With A Sonl” PHONE 6-2571 Theodore and Charlie Speight, Props. * ROAD SERVICE * STEAM CLEANING SERVICE * RECAPPING * WHEEL ALIGNMENT AND BALANCING CORNER PETTIGREW AND FAYETTEVILLE STREETS line and into the end zone. Van Ness’ kick was good for a 20-Q halftime lead. In the third quarter the Ea gles, plagued by penalties all afternoon, got going on a Hicks- to-Woods pass that was good for fifty yards. Halfback Wilkinsl capped the drive with a six-yard plunge through the Hawk line. Hicks found a hole for the 2- point conversion. Third quarter score: Maryland ,State 20; NCC S. The Hawkf picked up an in- surance tally in the final period when Miller intercepted an) Eagle pass and galloped 70 yards, going into the end zone on his feet. The extra point at tempt was good and the visitors led 27-8. The Eagles approached pay dirt again in the final period on a brilliant combination of short runs and short passes that brought them into the “goal to go” area. A long penalty, how ever, carried them back to the Maryland 25 and there the drive ended, as did the -ball game. The next home game is sche duled for Saturday, November 12, when Virginia Union Univer sity invades O’Kelly field for the homecoming celebration. Kick-off time: 1:30 P.M, Eagles Blank St. Aug., 22-0 An alert, hard-charging de fense, coupled with some su-» perior punting, carried the North Carolina College Eagles to a 22-0 whitewash of the St. Augustine’s Falcons on Satur day, October 8 on muddy O’Kelly Field. Held scoreless throughout the first quarter by the scrappy Fal cons, the Eagles began rolling toward their first conference win early in the second period when end Bob Currington moved in to block Falcon Bob Headon’s punt and recover it himself on the St. Augustine seven-yard line. Two plays later fullback Ray Nobles bulled fouC yards for the score. Quarterback Reginald Pryor’s extra-point kick was wide by inches and the Eagles led 6-0. The visitors, kept deep in their own territory by Pryor’a long kicks, suffered anotheij blocked punt in the same quar ter as tackle Nick Jeralds broke through to slap away Headon’s try frqm the Falcon two-yard stripe. Defensive back Bishop Harris buried the rolling ball in the end zone for the second Eagle touchdown. Halfback; Rossie Barfield sped into the end zone for the two points and a, 14-0 halftime lead. In the third period the Eaglel defense continued its Spartan performance as giant tacklei Elmer McMillan blocked a St. Augustine punt from the one- yard line of the Falcons. Fresh man guard Bobby Gardner re covered in the end zone for the third Eagle tally. Quarterback Richard Hicks stole around the right side for the extra points and a 22-0 score. In the final period the Eagle reserves thwarted every attempt of the desperate Falcons to get into the scoring column, and the final gun ended a dismal after noon for the Raleigh club. FOR ONLY 10c We will rush our new 1960 Christ mas gift ideas to you. It is packed with over 200 Christmas ideas. The Way-Out Shoppe Dept. E-1 1113 BERGEN STREET BROKLYN 16, N. Y. Union Insurance and Realty Co. REAL ESTATE—RENTING—INSURANCE Including Automobile, Fire, Theft, Collision, Public Liability And Property Damage. Telephone 3-6521 " 814 Fayetteville Street Durham, N. C. DSC Durham Sandwich Company Sandwiches • Cakes • Pies 3026 RGXBORO ROAD DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA /
North Carolina Central University Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1960, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75