Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 19, 1964, edition 1 / Page 17
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Grid Ass’r Drops Ban On Negroes NEW ORLEANS (ANPI) The Sugar Bowl Fbotball Association's inng-ota Tiding practice of occluding any teem with Negroes in its line up from participating in the local annual grid classic went by the ' hoards with the announcement this week that this custom would no longer be observed. * Selection of the Syracuse Uni versity eleven from New York as the opponent to Louisiana State U niversHy’s team completed the fragmentation. The Syracuse squad contains eight Negro players. Negro p layers wO also be ea view in the Reee Bawl the Cat ten Bewl and even In the Blue bonnet centeet where the Cnl gre players an the Talaa team. That ene takes place in Hons- None of the teams in bowl games have ever publicly expressed ob jections to playing against Negroes. Nor is there any record of any in dividual southern player objecting to being named on an All-American eleven upon which a Negro has also been placed. j THRIFTYS GREAT!D£A 'I \department-a bond \JN EVERY STOCKING IMONEV BY MMLI I KlcMfiß fisStjsTsiifi^""^ ■ r pjyj^wS^Tw’STys^ i Tsrr^ m *-*~- ita wrt. TO STSi Mjlt«rti*l« tw > atmm d »w» tea*. d»sß*a*» «■*■ ■ fgfe-SES&r 3 ksr,*s scP«arar-*a 3S**» * 3* jbsk.-bss-m'sss r-« us U S U S «•- SS SS 53.90 39 18 £* Irao 48 56 39 05 33 48 $f ||M 94.97 44.07 37.5 S * •■■ »T 9» (lim MiMti Indus* ntSHar Usu foSF*» l®®*^ A ■MBMWi MQMW MLOW STJM« m MMKtf ** """" fe *m* mfnm aj^TT t mlf * —anoYED Bt..— —— ?wlom ssiAirr ffMcurimoii ;.1K Os 9MW YOU WSH TO fKI Z~ 1— 1 u* t - " t -—-*■*—*- £ IMuMdeek I - 90X969. porua «u»r. mssotwi * "QP* - • • **& r , W &■■ wt *.t*i “• \**'" x it - i*tyfw ll A i "~r‘ • ! - • irf^#'4fejsßr y V ■. /i *•■,•*> - "• •+'W*z + REAL GUSTO IN A GREAT LIGHT BEER Distributed In Raleigh By FBHER WHOLESALE CO., INC. Edge Gamer, 68-64: Ligon Wins Fourth In Root by RICHMOND STEWART The J. W. Ligon High School Little Blues overcame a one point halftime deficit and used their height to an advantage in main taining control of the backboards to go ahead and defeat a fired up W 1*0»• I £> fcj m i Jgj If a Hktr is jH v -.a* . > 1 HE. jH, AGGIE SCORE Dewey Williams (50) center for the Ah T Collets, scores a layup in the tame played last week afainst Hampton Institute. Hampton’s Marvin Brandon, left, and Bill Fuller (23), await the rebound which never came. AteT won the ball tame, 73-60. NAIA Champions To Play: Big Tourney Slated For Winston’s Coliseum Soon WINSTON-SALEM— Four great teams that have lost only one game among them after the first week of. the, 1964-05. basketball season will compete in the Carolina Class ic Friday, December 19 at the Me morial Coliseum in Winston-Salem. The two host quintets are the Winston-Salem State Bams, con tenders for honors in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association, and High Point College, a favorite in the Carolinas Conference, t Both teams are undefeated. Win- Ston-Salem has won one CIAA game and has won the Georgia In vitational Tournament in Atlanta, Ga. The Rams’ Ted Blunt was vot ed most valuable player in that tournament for the second straight year. Teammates Ted -Ratchford and Earl Monroe were elected to the all tournament team. Blunt and Monroe are two Phila delphia. Pa. stars. Monroe is sopho more. Blunt is a senior who was rated all-CIAA last year. High Point ia unbeaten. The two visiting teams are the Rockhurst Hawks of Kansas City, Missouri, national champions ot the NAIA (National Association of In tercollegiate Athletics), and the North Carolina College Eagles, rat ed a top team in the CIAA. Rockhurst is unbeaten in three games, including its own Blue Rib bon Tournament NCC is unbeaten in two CIAA games, but has lost one non-conference tilt Garner High team. 88-84, Friday I night In Garner. . t The Blue*, who might have ■ thought it would be an easy game ■ because of having won handily > over the same team two nights be > tare, by 23 points, warn seen made Doubleheaders will be played each night Winston-Salem State will face. Rockhurst at 9 p.m. Fri day, December 18 in the second game. High Point will play NCC at 7 pm. in the opener. On Saturday night the Rams will play NCC in the first tilt and High Point will battle Rockhurst in the nightcap. This will be the second straight year Winston-Salem State has fac ed a national small college cham pion in a home contest. The Rams played Pan-American. 1962-63 NA IA champs, a year ago at the Coli seum. The twin bill also will maka history because it will mark the first time two North Carolina teams will have competed against each other in an interracial basketball game. Grambling’s Eddie Robinson “Coach Os Year” For Oistrfct GRAMBLING, La (Special) Glum Eddie Robinson, the astute football carpenter who did a titanic rebuilding Job at Grambling Col lege this season, has been named NAIA “Coach-of-the-Ycar” for Dis trict 30. Kebtnoen commands the NA IA reetram despite a 46-15 set back by Florida A4N In the Orange Blossom Classic recent ly In Miami. The coach admits that the Flori da memories spoil things some what, but he feels that the lessons learned will aid and abet the Gram » - TO TRADE FOOfBALL GEAR FOR TRACK TOGS EMn Bethea, Trenton, N. ).. who this season broke into the starting football lineup of the championshop AtsT College Aggie*, has i begun training lor competition in arbiter indoor *rack meete. He hold* national high school champ ronship* in both the shot put and discus throw He standi with Mel Groomee, assistant football &oach at AUT, also of Trenton, who last summer invited Bethea to join the Aggies. aware they were hi for a battle when the scrappy Gamer team traded them basket far basket at the opening whistle This was the fifth straight wta far the Harvey HearUey s rerage per game te DU. Lar ry Spams, as f Jwnier, psasp ed ht M paints far UgmwhD* markers. Ther'alse pnIM h ane half Mwwtwrii Mrjfro George Hollewsy and Tyrant Bailey shewed vast improve meat else. Theywore »bhj» plays hs mettena, and aleng wIU a well-balanced team effort. A , greet deal of credit for the victory should ga to Robot Drake ford, who earns off the bench to score eight needed points when one of the starting players hit * “cold spot” Heartley, who Is imsrvsd In re vealing his opinion as tp what the team might do this season, did ad mit that the Bluet are In trouble'lf the branch is not strengthened or the defense does not improve with out so many foul violations. The Junior Varsity Team, coach ed by George Jones, also picked its fifth straight win without a lorn and stretched its winning streak to ten games ever the two seasons Shaw Bears Drop Two Cl A A Tilts BT BPENCEB BALDWIN The Shaw University Baers drop ped two conference games in their week's activities, tint to the Panth ers of Virginia Union 79-88, Thurs day, December 10, In Richmond, Virginia, and the fcagles of North Carolina, 110-100, on Saturday, De cember 12, in Raleigh. In their game againts the Panth ers of Virginia Union, the Bean grabbed the lead in the first half and stayed from tour to five points al *d of the Panthen for the first halt with the half-time scoreJ>e% ing Shaw, 34 and Union, 30. However, la the second half, tbo Panthen returned to give the Bean a hard way to go. With 4 minutes left In the game, the score was «3-®I In favar of Union and they bad possession of the ball. At that point. Art Nlleo and John Pajrno, who had 19 pointo each, load a Union apart that moved them te,e final score of 79-18. In thejr second game of the week, the Shaw University Bean were out-flown by the “Flying" Eagles of North Carolina College of Dur ham, by a score of 110-10®. The Eagles tied the game at two all, with 18:11 to go in the first half, and commanded the game from then on, with the exception of a hot spurt by the Bears in the final minutes of tbo game. With 11:31 to go In the half, little (5’ 8”) Ous Jonas lead a hoi spurt with his shooting of SO and 30 footers. Also In on this hot spurt for the Eagles was big 6* 4", Ted Manning, NCC’s great forward. As a result of this spurt, the Eagles were ahead 48-31 at half-time. With a 22 point lead and 14:28 to go, the Eagles were then attacked by hard-hustling Shaw Bears. Ira Mitchell, little 5' IV guard for Shaw, led this drive Mitchell was bling program for the 1965 season. Robinson has wen 146 games, lost 56 and tied 10 in 29 seasons at Grambling. He is second vice-president of the NAIA Football Coacfaae Association Never perk In the hot sun if you can avoid it, the Catholic Digest advises, because geeollne evapo rates very quickly in the heat IN LIFE, as in Action, wo all look forward to a happy ending and art resentful if H turns out otherwise. UQOITS HIGH SCORER Shown above Is Larry Spence, who scored 25 points last Friday night aa the J. W. Elgon Little Blues whipped Garner, 68-64, lot their fourth straitht victory a iainst no deteats, and the second win over the Garner squad. (See etory). John Bacon Plays Here Vs. State John Bacon, the only Negro on the Southern Callotrnta basketball team, was the ace-net tar for the Trojans in a game between the North Carolina State Wolfpack and the Southern California Trojans at the Reynolds Coliseum Saturday "night He is a 1961 graduate of the Ov erbrook High School In Philadel phia, Henna. He followed such no table basketballers as Wilt Cham berlain; Walt Hazxard and Wally Jones to Overbrook. Bacon attend ed the Antelope Vellsgc Junior College for two years, earning All- State honors. Southern CaTs coach, Forrest Twogood, says his success this sea son depends on Bacon for the baekeourt Although the Trojans were de feated by a 9-point mragln. they fought back gamely with leading scorers Bacon and Zarraro to put the preeeure on the Wolfpack in the late minutae. The Trojans were nigged physically and had a 46-42 in rebounding. terrific on his drive shots, and on the free throw line, where he col lected 9 out of 9 shots. Mitchell finished the game with 24 points, all of which came in the 2nd half of play. Also in ea this Shaw drive wee George Gerald, freshman forward, and Joe Byers, who finished as high point man for the Bean with 24 points. With the NCC lead still dwindling, at 1:59, the Eagles lead was eat to five points st96-9L However, the hot-sheeting of big Tod Manning proved to be the de riding factor of the game, en abling tthe Cagles to eleee oat with a 116-166 victory. Man ring, was setaslly the story of the sane, with Ms great jump ing and phenetrial sheeting. Ho finished the game with 46 prints, 99 of which came In the ted half. The Bean close out their pre holiday schedule with two games this week. On Wednesday, Decem ber 16, the Been will be at Elisa beth City State. 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The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 19, 1964, edition 1
17
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