I 11 I'M I I I 'M n I I H
THE SPORTS
BAZAAR..
By Wm. A. TUCK
4 IIII i IIIIIIIII I'M'I III II11 'l'-l"H"l 11 I f’H I' 11 K I >♦
SPDBTIMG WORLD
OP NORTH|On
upwtlthe Hill»ide-Peter»burjf g»ra« h«r* I
tSie hwndbilli that advertissd
THOSE EAGLES
CAROl^INA COLLEGE
Mveral bucket* of dop^ last Iwt Friday ni^ht. Those words
Saturday ni*iit in Winaton Balemjwere: “At last Hillsido has some
irlicn they made the “Bijf Blue*” icompetition" and that tamed oa1>
of Bluefield look awfully IttUe. !to be mere truth than advertig-
Therr can be no doubt that the ing. Durhamites have never seen
Ea^es had the wjperior team or. 1he Hornet# in as much trouble
the field that Uie E«g]ei had t]i« as they were in ait times laA Fri
snperior team on the field that day nifrht; they spent the firat
night; they weit* smart on nil half trying^ to keep PeiheTwburgr
aides. Everythinf seemed to have from scoring and most of th« se*
flicked just at the right moment, iond half cloeing up (the gap in
from the mcanent Moore, right the acore after the visitors scor»d
end for the second M^rin^t. nv-.first.
covered a blocked kick behind | These teams were nott as even
the f«al line for the first toueh- ly matched as the scrfre shows,
down untH in the last minutes This may be judged by the slta.tis
of thega me when Peerman was tic* which show that Hillside
in the right spot to reach into made 9 first downs in comparifioTi
Peabody High Ties Hillside Hornets
to 3 for Peabody. However, both
teams showed respect for the
other’s line in keeping th^ bail
in the air most of the tim«. Nei*
Burghardi Switches Team
At Will As CIAA Title
Drive Is Launched
the air and get McPharland’s
pass the other touchdown.
This game, along with others
of the week end, almost settleJ
tihe question as to which state
(North Carolina or Virginia) will
bo«st of the winner of thejresult was that each team scored
CIAA title this year. To make a with passes. i
prediction now would be stick- Savior of the trame for Hill
ing the old netk a long way out, side was Blount, »he quarter- ^te Te'achera College
but ttnless a miracle happens back and co-captain who w al s
and football teams seldom pulls being held on the bench because
BY "BILL” TUCK
Winston Salem — "nie North
Carolini Colligee Eagles really
itiher team scored until they their own as contend-
gan to let the passes g« and th^i^^ ^lAA championship
Iritle Satunday night in Winston
Salem’s Bowman Grey Memorial
Stadium when they tpouinoed the
13-0 before more than
fans from ell sections of
and West Vir-
Durham — The Horneits of the
I i5,000
miiwcles the conference crown jof a bad ankle. He had to be Canolina
will come right down here in pressed into servico because . . j « , »#. t i i
(Nbrtfe CfcroWna to Johnson C. .fter Peabomy scored, the team complete teams ofTliHside Park Hi«h School had regular backfield, sparked by
Smitli, A and T, or the Eagles of seemed to do everything wrong;' ^ ^ # *1. i j •
When he eritVred the game, giving- evidence of the ing from behind here last Friday'of Co-Ctep^ain Blount and
' kind of reserve material whieh is night to tie the chanupJon eleven running of PlumTOer and
see and
North CaaroHna College. These but tirhen he
are all great teams who have not jeyery spectator could
jpist dropped, a conferene gamt*. feel that the Hornets had new
ISveryone knows by nowr that ijfe and would not stop short of
Smith gave the Va. State Tro- a touchdown, Plummer amd Lee
Iwfts tbeir second licking of the.were also fin tihe injured list bu
PEABODY THREATENS
HILLSIDE RECORD
IN 7 - 7 TIE
BY “BULL” TUCK
(Sports Editor)
Riiddick sent his semi injured re
gulars into backfield and a
spirited drive for a .touchorwn
was immediately launched. • The
the “thrilling” experience of com,the quarteilbacking and paswng
the
Lee,
from Petersburg 7-7. Both teams'drove the ball from midfield in
on hand this jrear.
iDiuring the first quarter of'were Koreleas and most of the [to sconfng position. It was on the
this gamie the ball stayed in the'action took place in the middle'30 yard line that Blount faded
air most of tihe time eiither by|of the field until early in the back and let go one ctf his “dead
season in Charlotte at the same went into the game long enoug'i «*chan?e at punts or by passing, fourth quarter when Salter of ^gure” passes to Lee, and l«e turn
time that NCX: was piling the to keep Hillside o^n th euivbeaten,®®^^ of PetersibuTs: took a pass from Ford;ed on the steam to cross the goal!
Blues in Winston Salem. A andW. [ ntercepting and batilting down and ran J15 yards for the toch- line untouched. ,
It pot the Hsn«»«nn Pirates ‘nj Cowh Ridditfk had stated be-the ball change ^wn. Hilf kicked the extra point. Kollock kicked for the extra
•eir pl«ee, but Shaw had to letlfore the gaqie that if there was over and over again. To*]‘ At this point in the game the gjoint which tied the score and
North Carolina down with a 13-2 any powiible way of keeiping these quarter Hornets seemed’ to be in really kept Hillside in the no game lost
hw to Howard. men out of the game and savel^***^® Blefield passed to Mill-'great trouble, *>ut Coach Herman I column.
jjg'er who carried’ the ball to the
When Morgan trampled Union
tSatnrday, Durham and Hillside
were represented on Ijie Moi^an
team by Marvin Tuten, all State
end who played here last ye.ir.
*T1s said that he made a fairly
good shoiwin^ as substitute end.
Traer words were never spoken
than the ones that were printed
them for N. C. coimpetiticfn, he oamea tne t>aii to
would do so, hut everyone knows NCC 2 yard stiripe but at this
that if he had not been thought [Point the Eagle forward wall
ful and resourceful enough to stiffened and the Blues were
use these men when he did, ithrown for losses each timie the
things might have been so differ-was snapped. Bluefield fia-
ent. attempted a field goal whijh
It’a (Joldshco-O there for the;failed itto cross the bars.
Homeitts this week.
4'H I' l'»'H' i-n m-l 'l-H-M 1 I I- I
Football Results
■11''"14 "i-t-i-n-
+++++■
North Carolina College —
.. 13
Union ,. —.. — 0
Bluefield .. *. .. ..
.. 0
Hillside 7
Howard University — —
.. 13
Peahody , .. 7
Shaw Uoivernty
.... 0
WHERE THEY PLAY
Johnson C. Smith __ __
.. 13
Bluefield at Hcunpton
Virginia State .
. — 0
St. Au^stint ait Elizabeth City
Vt. Aigofltine’s
. .. 27
M'organ ait Lincoln
Miner CoHege ..
-.... 7
Union at A and T'
Lane College
OMe
20;
. 7
Xavier .7
LeM«ome .. .. — — 2
A and T 14
Hampton • 2
Ifociraa
22
N. C. College at St, Paul
Howard at Virginia State
Hillside at Goldsbwio
Gai. State at Tuskegee
Talladega at 'Alabama
Mlorehouse at Morris Brown
Fudiies Costly As
S. C Uses To Lane
Ozmngebof;g, S. C, — A costly
fumble by £outh Carolina Stato
A aad M College after a beginn
ing second half comeback to tie
the 7-0 fint half lead, spoilftd
tbc BuUdqgs fighting spirit when;7-7.
Jisk CHtwom, All American half
bide, tm, ran wild for Mooring
t^d xwm^ 00 tmof breaiks, giving
tte L«Be-Dri^nB the game 20-7
iB #^tc College Btaddum
ftlie openinf home game.
bMC the first touch-
in the first quarter after
60 yards making five
4I19I .00 12 plays. Perry
ovar for the iinl
0^ SsUowel msktng the
the «xt«a point.
SUtU finally
‘a* M;iia}f attmk of
^-ffks tni mmm ia dti^er-
te MlJu
South Carolina State came back
In the second half and started a
march from the 15 yard line
with a running and aerial attack
scored a touchdown at the be
ginning of the * fc(urth quarter
when 'Stanley, end pulled down
a long pass from Gillom for the
touchdown. DeLaine, end scored
the extra point on a pass frosn
(lillom to tie the first half lead
It was in the seoo'nd quarter
that the Saglcs registered the
first 7 points of ithe game. Ten
new men came into the game for
Norrth CSarolina Colley at the
beginning of the quarter and
they were sparked by McPhar-
land ati quarterback which Duck-
wiWer doing the long range kick
dng. Before the quaretr was very
old, NOC blocked Bluefield’s kick
in the shadow of the goal and
Moore, rig^ht end, recovered the
ball f!c|r the tooichdown.. Mchar-
land drop kicked for the extra
point.
As the half ended the Eagles
were staging another touchdown
drive which fcegan when George
Mack intercepted a pass and
Iwter called itio Hall to bring ths
ball to the 36 yard stripe. John
son then advanced the ball tc| the
3!0 wnd i^aased iJlq IPeeimilan'
the 10 yard line as !the gun ended
the half.
The second half featured a
k>i«king and passing duel in
whi«h N. C."* State seemed to have
a slight edge; however, everyone
got new tcnaeneag when durin,?
the laetb three minutes of play
1'5 yard penalty gave the Eagles
the ball on the Bluefield 2i5 yard
yand line. MoPharland ran the
ball four yards from
Gold Rush
Takes LeMoyne
By Charles L. de Lay
. . the (Sold Rush taking the
th® Po^*^* balls on downs,
and laiter,, when there was one
New Orleans, La., — More
than 3OOO fans witnessed the
thrilling contest which found the
Xavier Uninrersity! Gold Rush
of Louisiana on the top gide of
a 7-2 score, defeating the vaunts
ed LeMoyne Mad Magicians of
Memphis, Tenn. LeMoyne’s great
backfield star. Hall, carrying the
brunt of the attack for the visi
ters with Lavalle, his equally
capable mate in the backfield,
gaining considerable ground
also.
Starting slowly as they did in
their first contest with Tuske-
gee, the Bavierites found them
selves “backs to the wall” with
LeMoyne carrying the play in
Rush territory throughqut the
first half. LeMyone’s only scorj,
like last year, came in the second
quarter when Tommy Mills, Los
Angeles, Calif. ba«k field ace
for the locals, attempted to| kick
the Rush out of danger,
punt was blocked, the ball
ing in the end zone for an auto
matic safety. The visitors had
carried the ball to the Xavi3F
six yard stripe qn a sustained
drive via aerial and ground
INorgan Gets
22 - 0 Win
Over Union
BaHimore — The Morgan State
CSollege Bears won from the
Virginia Union University Pan-
therts in the Morgan Stadium
Saturday, 2*2’ to 0, a an enthusi
astic crc(^d of over 2000 fans
cheered. This was Moiigan’s first
CIAA encounter this seasion. It
was apparent that the Bears
have regained some of the former
punch ''vhieh they possessed a
few years ago when t^y played
64 games without defeat, cover
ing a period of six years.
The Union eleven was led by
itiie all CIAA back, Pred Coopcc,
who played a superb game and
who merited the applause of the
crowd when he refused to give
up even though he was at the
'poin^ of near exhaustion. It vas
only his courage that ke(pt him
on his feet as he repeatedly 'ac-
ed the stnong defense and offense
His.of the Morganites.
fall-
The TocnxALt.
»5 ‘THfc
6IG€)€©T NUT
Of ig/A ALL
ASAIN
THfe PRe-CA/AC
coMcs tmo
« % V#
The Bulldogs looked good for
a few minutes after the touch-
dc(vra and had the ball on the 20
yard line when a fumble was re
covered by Lane. On the next
play Jack Gilmore ran around
left end for the goal. Hollowel
placement for the extra point
was no go^. Lane leadg 13-7.
Lane made good another break
when liane intercepted a pass on
State 40 ‘and ran to the 20.
After a first’ down had been made
in three plays, Ja^k Gilmore
again went around left end for
touchdown. The pla;ement
WM . gqod by H«llowel. Lane
minuitie left in t^e game, passed
to Peerman in the erfd zone for
another clinching touchdown. He
missed his first drop kick in weeks
to tioBe the extra point.
L
READING THE ADS
The Xavierttes carried t h e
fight to the Magicians in the
final half William Pryor, Xavi
er’s ^15 lb fullback from Phil
adelphia, gwning ground at will,
Claude Patton, Xavier's triple
threat half from Long Branch,
N. J., and Johnny Gravely Rush
ace from Fairmont W. Va., al-
t«|mat!ing with decejpltive play
to* confuse the opposition. Only
heroic effort on the part of J.
Turner, W. Mitchum, E. Craw
ford, E. Moore, Johnson, Hies,
and Paschall of the LeMoyne
line staved off the inevitable
Xavier score in the third quarter.
Driving to the fifteen, ten,
and twelve yard ittipes in the
fourth quarter, the Xavierites
finally, through superior powar,
scored via a fifteen yard pass
by Mills to Paxton in the end
Morgan
Scores Twice
Period
Pirtt
Kee was standing on his own
2|5 when he received the ball
from Mosby. He faded back to
the 10, spotted hi« receiver and
with precision, he threw the
pig skin 60 yards to Bowie.
iBoth attempts fcir extra jwlnt
were unsuceeesful. 'Rie second
quarter was scireless.
A Thrilling Third Quarter
Oscar Givens, freshman romp
ed 25 yards for the final touch
down after George Gittens and
Unk Campbell had music made
^beautiful long runs which placed
the ball within scoring distance.
An answer to a linesman’s
prayer was experienced twice by
the Bears in the third quarter.
First, when a bad pass from cen
ter sent Cooper back intio the
end zone to retrieve the ball, and
Bo,b Porter* fresh tackle, smear
ed Ccktper behind the goal line
for two points. Seoond, when
Preston Grimsley, first year right
guard, chalked up two more
points for the Bears under simi
lar conditions as in the fir.«t
safety.
The fourth quarter was soore-
SAINTS UPSET
MINER 7-0
Raleigh — Dope to lose by 14-7.
The firat toiucbdown was made
early in the firsti qaurter as
M'Oaby^ on a fake spinner through
center, tossjed a lateral to Bur-
dnell who skirted right end,
dodged would be tacklers, and
creased the goal line.
The second fieop-e for the first
quarter was the result of a 60
yard 4>as8 from C|o captain Hor
ace Kee to Bowie who ran 30
yards down the sidelines for a
touchd/own before the fans could
ima^ne what had taken place.
ne. Gravely converted via a
line plunge to end the scoring,
in the liist two minutps of play.
“Stingaree Butch” Mitchell,
Kansas City, Mo. tackle, Ben
Mourning, Fort Wayne, Ind.
guard, Josua Williamson, At-
lantic. City, N. J. end, Allen
•‘Chuck" Summers center, Carh,
III., and Eugene Griffin, Okla
homa City, Okla. were cutstapd-
ing as lineman for the Xavier
aleven.
two touchdowns, the Saints came
from behind to n:ut Miner’s
here last Saturday by a 27-7
score.
Unleashing unexpected power,
the Saants ran, forward passed,
and lateraled the Miner’s boys
Into submtesion.
Miner’s gtarted strong. Thfiy
kicked off, blocked a punt, aid
tWo minutes after the kickt»ff
led by a 7-0 score. But their joy
was ahort lived.
After an exchange of punts,
Johnson made it a ^irst dowi
f((r the Saints, and then passed
to Pullen for about 47 yard* ' to
put the ball on the Miner om.
Three plays later Pete White
evened the count up lot the
ISaints.
Minutes later, Harrington rac
ed aropnd right end to icore
standing' up. The converaion was
blocked hut St. Aug. recovered
From here the teams battled
in mid field until late in the
laft quarter. Then Miner’s
threatened when a first ^w.
plus two: fifteen yard penalties
agadnst the Saints put the' bull
on the 6. Two line plunges plus
an end run and incomplete pass
gave the ball to St. Aug. on
thiir own 8.
Now the Saint took coynmand.
They punted out, intercepted a
pass and Harrini^n skirted' left:
end for i5|5 yards to goore. The
conversic(n was blocked. Half
nainute later the scene was
duplicated. Barry Johnson again
Intercepted a pass and again
Harrington sJcirted end for BO
yards to score the final touch-
doWn. The final conversion was
good.
. The »tory in «ne word was
Harrington” but he wa^ ably
aided by Foxwell, Sellers, P^r-
across the goal line to lead kins and Johnson.
HO-HUMMM!
What This Place
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A Few Good
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SAV]|W6S
SAINTS TACKLE
ELIZABETH CITY
By Robert L, Clarke
Saturday, St. Augustine’s f»:r
its second game of the seas>n
will be the guests of the Eliza
beth City eleven.
The Saints are naturally iaW-
lant over over their upset ricto^y
Miner’s but they also remember
tH« lough game with the Teach-
«rs last yeaT.
Coach Weatherford expects to,
iron the miatakss he saw in tho
last game..!'. His veterans played
true to fo'rm and several neW-
ctomers exhibited ability worthy
of special notice. But the coach
ig still pessimistic as the Sai^is
go gunning fc.r itheir second vi«^
Statistics explain many thinffi
but nobody can explain a'sta
tistician.