St Aug. Falcons Dump Morris College, 18-0 Herei
Little Blues Trounced 34-0 By
Elizabeth City's P. W. Moore High
ELIZABETH CRT— The Little
Blttct of Raleigh's John W. Ligon
High School, h»«wi« t in two
Straight gridiron victories, were
soundly trounced here Friday night
IT the P- W. Moore High School
fsothall team, 34-0.
rMled*ta the second
Salt to whip the Woes by seer
log tt points. The halftime
High School Grid Standings
EDITOR’S NOTE: The fol
lowing standings were released
hr the Office of the Commis
sioner for the North Carolina
High School Athletic Confer
ence for (ho week ending Sep
tember it, INI:
H. C. H. 8. A.
CONFERENCE FOOTBALL
STANDINGS
«A District No. 1
W L T
Washington, Rocky
Mount 2 0
Smith, Fayetteville 1 o
Darden, Wilson 2 0 1
Hillside. Durham 0 1.
Adkin. Kinston 0 l
Dillard. Goldsboro 0 2
District No. 2
Barbar, New Bern 2 0
Ligon, Raleigh 2 0
Georgetown,
Jacksonville 11
Moore, Elizabeth City 0 l 1
Eppes, Greenville 0 2
Willis ton, Wilmington 0 2
2A District No. 1
Merrick-Moore,
Durham 2 0
Lincoln, Chapel Hill l o
Johnson, Laurlnburg 1 0
Carver, Mount Olive 0 1
Riverside, Loulsburg 0 1
Mary Potter, Oxford o 2
District No. 2
Jones, Washington 1 0
Nash Central Nashville 1 0
Queen Street,
Beaufort 1 0
Green Countv,
Snow Hill o l
Waves. Willtsmston 0 1
Southwestern, Windsor 0 l
2A District No. I
Chatham, Siler City 2 0
Wicker, Sanford 1 l
Ktngville, Albermarle 11
Pinckney, Carthage 0 1
Peabody, Troy 0 1
District No. a
Morrison, Hoffman a , 6
Monroe Avenue,
Hamlet t 0
ftnirr— Clinton 1 0
Faison, Wadeaboro 0 1
Barnett, Dpnn 0 1 .
Hayeewood, Dumbarton ft a 1
Southslde, Roland 6 a
Dtotriet No. i
Jones, Trenton 2 0
PatQlo, Tarboro 1 0
King, Morehead City 1 0
Dußota, Wake Forest 0 1
Suggs, PsmwlUe 0 1
You Can Always
DUNN’S 9
Toon find that when you drive W
into Dunns Esso Service you -*-
reive the seme consideratioc ..
whether you just ‘ill up your r»- Bh i
diator or have your -ar ffreasen BTVk fj'.l,
We tike to feel that were helping
you ret more enjoyment out -■^V r
ytv ear. Why not rive or » trial T
Our Service Always Has A Smile!
DUNN’S ESSO SERVICE
MS 8. BMOPWOMB ST. rMOJtWt Tt MW
WF <*“ I^9
• ; f r /7 -■ .iP $£ r M i
REAL GUSTO
IN A GREAT JJGHT BEER
MM
Distributed In Releigh By
FISHER WHOLESALE CO.. INC
assn was M.
Scoring twice for the local
team was Johnny Jackson, who
went able and thirty yards for
potato.
Dashing 47 yards for another
touchdown was William Griffin,
and he also blocked a hick to set
up another touchdown, which team
mate Roy Hider got by failing on
Harrison, Selma 0 3
District No. 4
Vann. Ahoskie 2 0
Walker, Edenton 2 0
Brawley, Scotland
Neck i i
Brown. Wlnton 0 1
Chaloner, Roanoke
Rapids 0 l
Perquimans, Winfall 0 1
Dubois Lions
Walloped By
Trenton
BY CHARLES A. MASBENBURG
WAKE FOREST The Dußois
Lions of Wake Forest wore defeat
ed by Jones High of Trenton, by a
score of 34-6 Friday night in a
game played at Trenton.
In the first quarter, Trenton scor
ed three touchdowns which made
the score, 22-0. At halftime, the
Lions still had not scored, but in
the third quarter things began to
improve. >
Roger Shackleford, Horace Al
ston, Samuel Caudle, Richard Har
--■» tt-- 4 ? J- VPJ
die Kittrel and Arthur Jefferies
■ -- • • • ,i
great improvement in the Lion de
fense. Quarterbacks Edward Wil
liams and Alexander Massenburg
began to move the team toward Its
lone touchdown of the game.
The extra effort by the LIMB
pushed offensive end Frankie Lu
cas on to make the only touchdown
for Wake Forest However, the last
quarter gave Jones High another
touchdown.
The Lions are expecting on ex
citing game wheq„tbey moot Ow
ner Consolidated High -School on
the Dußois Field. Rridey, October
2, at 8 p.m. There has always been
great school spirit shown by both
teams whenever they have mot
This is Garner’s first football sea
son.
the ball in the end sqm.
Four of Ligonh Coach ‘Byte’ Wil
liams’ charges' tumblos Wore re
covered by Elizabeth City. Throe
of thaoe led to Moore touchdowns.
The Little Mom wore aoobli
Unncnte meh ws ml*
ting only os far as Ho Elisa
beth City 48-yard-ltae an one
aeration
Moon tamed « petals la He
first qotrtar. at ta Ha Mrl as*
8 potato hi HO final ported of
Ironically, Ho Ligon Little Blue
will play their homocoming game
Friday night in Raleigh's Chavis
Park against the J. T. Barter High
School team of New Bern, which
defeated Elizabeth City two weeks
ago.
NCCEagles
Whip Allen
Squad, 25-12
DURHAM—The North Carolina
College Eaglet spotted the Alloa
University Yellow Jackets a 8-0
load in the first quarter of their
opening game at OKelly Field Sat
urday before coming from behind
to defeat the visitor non Columbia,
S. C., 28-12 in an tntersoctional
thriller at Durham.
Allen’s Nathaniel Boston powered
over from NCCs 18-yard lino to
start one of the two touchdowns
scored by the visiters. Tin Yellow
Jackets halfback scored with less
then three minutes having elapsed
on the dock. After an exchange of
punts, Allen got the hell, and Bos
ton climaxed a 62-yard drive with
hia plunge, yielding Ho only score
in the first half at Allan lad 6-6.
In too second holt Coach Har
man Riddick's NCC Eagles came
back Strong, searing four touch-
I sowl»' to queii
I Yellow Jackets.
KCC guhiu Velvet*
started the Eagles rolling with a
dramatic interception of o peas ,on
the Allen 30-yard lino. Allan quar
terback Clarence Jackson throw
too pass, intended for his end, John
Singleton, which fell Short of the
target and into LeGrande's arms.
Where They
Piny
EDITOR’S NOTE: Following
to » list »f toe major Negro
college football gomes to be
ployed around Ho nation on
Saturday, October S:
Livingstone at St Augustine's
Shaw at Fayetteville
Rust at Alcorn AAM
Allen at S. C. State
Bluefield at W. Liberty
.Cheyney State at Mansfield Stale
Claflin at Morris
DeL State at Hampton (Homecom
ing)
Dillard at Southern U.
Eli*. City at Winston-Salem
Fie. A&M at Lincoln U. (Mo.)
Fisk at Tuskegee
Grambling at Prairie View
Drtxel at Howard U.
Jackson at Ark. AlUdf (Homecom
ing)
J. C. Smith at ART
Ky. State at Knoxville
Lone at Mias. Industrial
Md. State at Vo. Union
Morgan at N. C. College
Prairie View at Grambling
Morris Brown at Tenn. State
Tex. Sou. at Lackland (Friday)
Central St (O.) at W. Vo. State
(Homocoming)
Wiley at Bishop
FALCONS DISCUSS SATURDAY'S GAME - End E4-
wsrd Chester, tstt, end Center Theodore Brown stopped discussing
timer iorthbstmng gems with UrinQUrms CoOegs, October l. et
Cheek Port, bag mnugh ri pause Idr m picture. Chester led the
conference resend sanes lass sseson in pees fetching. The St Aug
reacts Pekom fafa atari Meeris Cottegt in their lint geme et the
seeeeh by m seen el 114
I--) .-iws.v-.. of LIGOft'S LITTLE BLUES —77 mW. Ligon Little Blum Football
team is shown from hit to right: first row, William Yatm, Michael Chavis, Ardo Halt, DonaM
Pooh, Gregory Sledge, James Smith (Co-Captain) Alfredo Hicks (Co-Captain), Isaiah Groan,
Bruce Lightner, Xavier Artie, J ernes Rudolph Hinton, Jimmie Robinson. Second row, Jamm Ev
ans, Larry Graham. Robert Watson, Henry Perry, David Alston. Michael Ridley, Jamm Goode,
Robert Dreheford, Quether Wilkins, Ralph Pope Harold Allen, Michael Avery. Third raw, Herbert
Wright, Alphonxo Bream, Joe White, Aredie Williams, Anthony Perry, David Moot, Larry Mit
chell, William Williams, Albert Lee Jones, Charles Grimm, Charhe McNeil. Fourth rear, Michael
Montague, William Thomas /ones, William Watson, Robert Mitehner, Robert Sapp, Raymond
Powell, John David Learie, Ronald Williams, and Willie Pulley.
Cleveland's Jim Brown:
Says He Is Not A Muslim, But
The More Commotion, The Better
NSW YORK t Cleveland’s star
fullback Jimmy Brawn declared
last week that he is "all for" the
Black Ipkßßa.
In a signed aritele la the enr
real tome es Leek IfefHlMii
which he diaewssed the Negro's
nffiw Wk tqaainy, wwb bv*
ad he Is aet a Marika, "yet rm
all fw them beeaaes we need
wify paißftMa okBMl fitaf
Faa «td wutra ditlHWt hffnvi
Ike belter/’
£. *, •, ye , « «»»t . J**. -V «r...
Urn’s basic attitude toward whites
shared by almost 99 per cent of the
Nggro population," Brown warned
that ft# Negro’s mood is “explo-
Changes Made
In Jackson’s
Tiger Lineup
JACKSON. Miss. Coach Rod
erick Paige of the Jackson State
College Tigers made several
changes in the Tiger lineup this
week aa the Tigers prepared to
take on the bustling Mississippi
Valley eleven Saturday, Septem
ber 36.
The Tigers did "lee many
lasing Mings" In dropping a Sa
il home opener against a mere
experienced Prairie View ABM
team last Satardsy. MseMPan-
Ceeck Douglass Porter es
Mtastaslppl Valley wtU bring e
kepafah ef*gstUag tote toe win
cabman age tori toehr arch stole
rtvriri far toe first Mass since
ISM when they defeated toe
Tigers 19-6.
Sports lever* era still talking «•
bout the Tigers' near minds win
in 1963. The Tigers showed a lot
of Pretoria, defensively, to Satur
day's gems. If the nk sugar the
coaches made result In an offense
to match toe defense, the Tigers
will become a reel threat s l
•too" and "the white man had hat
tar start trying to understand Mm.*
Re expressed skepticism of Ne
gro loader Martin Luthar King*
philosophy of "turning too other
cheott* aad gaining oquality
through “love."
“Personally, I eannot hallovo
that freedom will ha wpn through
love. I cannot love a man who
clouts me," Brown mid la Lack,
addlnr
“I hops wa can win freedom
hut TV" Greet
SPORTS INTERNATIONAL
BY A. i. (DOC) YOUNG
Just about everyone in profes
sional football will toll you that
Cleveland star Jimmy Brown la "tha
most" ... the most fullback in his
tory, the most-highly paid player
Ja the fame, the meet beautifully
built athletic here today.
Jim Bream is alee one of
Integration's meri pe kite teed
predneta. And. largely an as
count of that whet he soya
vs ratal yarns eve rte earns eat
es girts.
In an adaptation es his Sartb
coming book. "Off My Cheat"
Brown runs e broken Bald offsets,
feelings, philosophies.
Leaving his reader often eonfueed
as to his basis motivations, Brown
nevertheless manages to make a
glorious ftatf—tH oa of
America Citizen, Negro) lead sup
port to the Black Muslim position,
and beet beck to life the "dead
horse” involved In the 1969 firing
es hie old coach. Paul Brown,
Brown, assisted by Myraa Cape,
writes angrily and bitterly but de
nies anger end bitterness. While
cheering the Black Muslims, though
denying membership, he critic! res
Dr. Martin Luther King and toe
“non-violent* ideal.
toe Mgbmt grid to!
gra eyrie figure alive, yet ha
pasMea es toe Iserisri share
snapper. Oa aae head, he eaa
teases that he ease eeaght Paal
yet he denies say reel tatacset
to memradwie with Peases
Jim Brown's tamo has base en
hanced through integration tram
childhood an. He was a star to an
integrated New York high gshooL
at* integrated Syracuse University,
and, «frme 1998, has besa the Mg.
taUboddng wheel in the Integrated
National Football league.
Jim admits that he plays golf at
ceurass which bar other Ism known
Negroes. He says he has no special
hankering to live to an Integrated
neighborhood, "but if some day wo
(he and his family) want e bigger,
house, e nicer house, and tt lies in
an all-whie neighbor hoed, we went
the right to buy it Se again I my.
the ben with the integration—just
don’t segregate me."
The tang riery sas part es
e serial—ls basically a spto eff
Otoveiead* ta
Brawa,"mL"ef fT torihs l |{? r su
ed* has yet to pobUety Meet
llalksjniiJim Brawn^hee
What BA toeee gjeyma has* e-
It mens that he was tea frigid
toJUs esnebtogjpetfaeda, aloof
erhe^md^besariowadV'MW
veiopmonte to toe game which,
tar ode reason or another, he didn’t
latch onto I imp mUstler
jJaaygjT l sf l sSi Jtts
battles far freedam have aaldom
WVR pndlUji N
(too of the high sol paid ato
lotao to B»a*s—lsml aparta,
Brawn patatod oat the
astro caeoootel a Negro la too
more difficult tt boctaooo far
Mss to aeeapS toissi stoat
“Con anyoM think," Brown
wrote, that ft does my heart good
to aim 80 autographs in a hotel
lobby and than be turned out of
♦he hnfel dtrihir iwimV
agate, ho makes a half-apolagy
far hovtag ted 8a taka too
draaMo aeMaa ho leak. Msec
tola tomm flared Into tead
linea more than a year ago, end
was owteaotad at that time as
' all Jte aseaalngfol aapoata, ant
wte spMomlo* tee
passe e t snfsrosd retlreawnt, or
semi-rettremeat In La Jolla,
Calif.
Thors eon hardly be any "good"
purpose to this part of the story
Seagram's
Seven £&onm f
I BLtXDED WHISKEY 1 1
4 4 -sqt. I #**#***>l
I euwasssruie •» joss-ml ssMmosms
_ imm^mwm . uimm ' m J
Wte Butaw wiiw wßiffnKjmm
RALEIGH, ML ft, IATURDAY, OCTOBKft t, Ml 1 *
Halfback Wtfter Jacksorf
Scores 2; King Sparkiest
Whiter Jackson, left baUteak
from Miami, Florida, ooored two
touchdowns in the opening
mlnutoo of the gams to five the
Falcons an early 12 point lead ov
er Morris College of Sumter, a C„
last Saturday afternoon.
Jaekaon scored on haadoffs
Dam Quarterback Slade*
King from the 6 and 18 yard
Hues respectively to grab the
lead for the Falcons. King
completed a 86 yard pan to
ted Matthew Fisher who
rushed Into the end sons to
odd the final six points of the
game which forged the Saint
Angnstlno'S Falcons ahead of
Morris College, 18-6.
The town from Sumter threat
ened to wore from Its 10-yard
line in the early part of the sec
ond half but lacked sufficient
punch to cross the goal line.
The Falcone played a defensive
other than magazine foes and book
royalties which—-wince Jim is
making so much money—can hardly
amount to a greet deal enoe the
tax-bite boa been made.
In his dealinga with Paul Brown,
2nd In thia article, Jim Brown dis
plays a keen yearning for recogni
tion aa a thinker aa well aa a
physical men. Ho oooka dignity
end seems to fool that, in spits of
his money, his fame, his position,
ho hasn’t yet achieved it “I have
no desire to discuss ‘the role of the
Negro to sports' or some such nice
ly-limited topic," Brown says. “I
shell go beyond sports into traps
where some may challenge my
FOOTBALLikI
A&T AGGIES VJ
NORFOLK gna RTS iiv m
state or An I Alia O |
M Sat., Oct. its
FWf Kickoff 1:80 P. M. %
K GREENSBORO!
mj mem. stadium
MB Ikm
9 Admission • • • • • $2.00
< i
gum* for tei majority of MM *pc
and half, putting on a vMou*
r-—g attarir in aulwtel
at the gam* but failed tp-Mtu?
additional points.
St. Augustine *■ will moot the ...
Bean of UvtagutoM College* '
5*2 pm. taSSr'
Park.
SAINT fWgp—i .
3*3? S?..I!!!!!!!w-
Intoroopttoai I
lad ........w
Punting— 2-16 average
•wmo —>y»
MORRIS OOLLEGIt
Paosoo Completed 4»M
Yards gained « W a»w M
Interception* -
Rushing a o e»|a •••tMONimt” M
Loot MMMUItHtI H
First Down* ...
Punting—7-19S avotagu tti
s , < * V
15