SIX CAROLIIfA TIMBS SATURPAY. OCT. 22nd. 1949
N.C.C. Eagles Claw Trojans, 19-14
OUT OF THE
ADAM HAT
THE FlUrr 2 TIMfS
4 Lou LlTTLfS COLUMSfA TfAM*
T mr STANFORD TXijf wiRi rm Binmo
UNOIROOM AND BAOLY^ OVrwemtO. §UT
THIV WON
i
*
BOTH
®^M«S BY
THfi SAMI
SCOM r>o)
*l«ED
• fHIN IN
„ iACW
fiAME
KiAKSMLLI TIACNf AS' CSLLWI
W«SOU».l, C0MW.6TBD ITS
36 SfAiON WITH 7 WINS
AND NO Losses, $IVrN9 IT A
MCORO Of 42 VlCTo9i65 OUT
OP 43 CAM€9.
Iwm* THg MEAT Sammy Bauoh was Pwwwa wr iixas chi»istian,
I Me ONCB THBiW l8 CONSeCUTIV* PA«*eS without MAVW0 even
i ONI 9iteoii©ec»,AaA(N$T «)«('!• (rfWi COMW.ITID, 2 iNTE«esPTeo;. -
S PORTSDUS T
.With McLendon
AROUND THE FIRST TURN IN THE CIAA DERBY
And aromid the first turn its A. arid T. and Morgan (each
with three wins and no losses) in front and moving to the rail,
but with West Virginia State, the favorite, close in on the inside
with a light load and few challengers, and half-a-length behind
is Winston-Salem, stumbling under the handicap of Shaw Univer-
■itr to face and fading fast. Biuiehed and fighting for a position
is Smith inexperienced and short-winded, Virginia State ambitious
and stout-hearted, St. Augnsthie surprising and exciting, and
Lincoln TJniversity with an outside chance, but up on the outside
with a rush comes North Carolina College, with power enough to
challenge all front runners A length back is Delaware State,
battling for an opening to eut off the Carolina entry, finding-the
going tough. And going for the whip so early in the race we
have Shaw Fniversity boxed in tight with Howard, spurred and
crop-beaten, blocking the drive. Fading fast but holding on we
have Blucfield then Hampton and in the rear far back struggling
desperately to stay in the big race is Virginia Union and St. Paul.
SPORTSDUST JIATING SHEET
Team Standings Through October 15
(Conference Games Only)
St. Augustine Swamps
St. Paul By 37-0 G>unt
KALKIOH
Scoring in every (juarter the
St. Auguistine's Faieons j>iled
up six touchdowns and one eon-
version to .swam]> tlie St. Paul
Tigers :!7-() in a contest j)layed
tnuler the lights in Chavis Park
Oetobef' ir>. Tlie F’alcon's second'
and third team w»w plenty of
H(;tion.
St. Augustine's kicked off to
St. Paul’s. Unable to gain the
Tigers kicked. Within three
minutes Quarterback Roland
Miles had sent his backs
through offensive maneuvers
which had the Tigers baffled.
A long paas, Miles to Jesse
Clements, clicked for the first
touchdown,
St. Paul'M failed to gain after
receiving the kicknff, ISurt got
off a long ptiiit, but the Falcons
got rolling from deep in their
territory. Cfarence -Jones scored
the second touchdown on an olT-
tackle sniHsh. Middleton ^on*
verted. In the last minutes of
the imrtrr, with the rew'rves
predominating in the Saint
Augustine lineup (teorge Clem
ents pitched a 20 yard pass to
“Catfisli” Sinmmns, right end,
who .scampered 30 yards to
score. The half ended witli the
Faletnis in jMissessioii on the
Tigers' 5. Score: — !^t. Augus
tine's 19, St. Paul's 0
St. Augustine’s received the
kickoff on their own 21, and
immediately launched a drive
down ihe field with alternat
ing handoffs and passes from
the T formation. A pa^, Miles
to J. Clements, was good for
9 yards. Clements lateraled to
Bobby Clark, who ran the re
maining 10 yurdt to the goal
line. The next scoring play
came when Miles faked a pass
on St. Paul’s 30 and ran the
ball to score standing up.
A beautiful jtass from Quar
terback Ernest 111‘ks ii> Stat
ham, riglit end, was good lot
3.') yards. Bobby (Mark took tiu
ball over for the final toneh-
down on a 14 yard jaunt.
Hicks and Miles alternated
at sparking the team. Hicks,
playing his last year, com
pleted five out of six tries
with long and short jump
passes for a total of 81 yards.
St. Paul's got the ball into
St. Augustine’s territoiy twice
in the last'quarter, but lost the
ball repeatedly on intercef>tiojiii
and t eing held for doAvns. The
Tio-i -^ failed to make jn ogress
against the Falcons’ forward
line, making a net gain of only
21 yards against the Falcons'
271. Augustine gained 142
yards through the air to Saint
Paul's :TO. The visitors co!ieetel
only 3 first downs while Saint
Augustine’s made 14.
M i* *
Homecoming Fans
See 15 Year-Old Jinx
Broken By NCC Team
Aggies Eke Out
7-6 Victory Over
Shaw In Thriller
Team
W
L
T
Pet.
GTG
1st—A. and T. College
0
0
,1000
3
2nd—Morgan College
3
0
f>
.1000
4
3rd—West Va. State
2
0
0
.1000
4
4th—Winston-Salem
0
0
2
.750
4
5th—J. C. Smith
2
Q
0
.666
5
6th—Va. State College
2
1
0
.666
f)
7th—St. Augustine’s
2
1
l»
.666
3
8th—Lincoln U.
2
1
0
. .666
g/yw
.TJtKT
3
9th—N. C. College
I
1
■““-fr-
10th—Delaware State
1
2
1
.416
5
11th—Shaw University
1
2
0
.333
6
12th—Howard University
1
2
0
333
5
13th—Bluefield
0
2
1
.166
3
14th—Hampton Institute
0
2
0
.000
5
15th—Va. Union
0
3
0
.000
4
16th—St. Paul
0
3
0
.000
3
SPORTSDUST SCOREBOARD
CONTEST FINAL
For October 29, 1949
No. 05
Game Team
1948
Sportsdust
Score
Says
A. and T. vs. Morgan
6-0
Detour
Hampton vs. Lincoln
12-0
Big Jeff
*Shaw vs. Howard
6-14
Smiles
Big Fight
Va. State vs. Va. L'^nion
7-0
Trojans in
J. C. Smith vs. W.-Salem
0-12
win again
Dead Heat
Delaware vs. St. Paul
58-0
Delaware in
a walk
West Va. State vs. Bluefield
39-0
West Va. by
N. C. ('. vs. Tenn. State
7-6
a mile
Tnterseetional
clash
Ouesji score of Shaw-Ho%vard Game. Winners of others.
BIG TWO IN CRYSTAL BALL CONTEST
1st—Robert F. Hill, III
.838
2nd—Miles M. Fisher, IV . „
. .819
(i KEEN'S )RU
With goal dust in their t‘yes
:nul championship ambitions in
their hearts, an undefeated A.
and T. Aggie eleven nipped a
stubl)(n-n Shaw Fniversity foot
ball team 7-t; here last week be
fore H.oOO highly jiarlisan fans
ifter trailing until the ebbing
minutes of the encoiniter.
The slim margin of differ
ence was Bill Blakely’s point
after the touchdown for the
Aggies.
After a scoreless first half
which highlighfed tlie two
evenly niatched front walls and
the well timed aerial attacks of
both teams, Shaw scored on a
five yard throw from Jiinm.v
Jackson to .Tames Brown, elong
ated end from Philadelphia, I’a.,
after getting pos.session of the
ball on the 10 vard line on a
bobble by William “l?ed”
•lackson which was recovered by
Tjeroy Way.
With the last quarter almost
spent, the Aggie grid mach
ine was set into motion by
Robert “Stonewall” Jackson,
who conspired with Milas
iCelly, senior quarterback
from Media, Pa., who spark
ed a sensational 93 yard sus
tained drive for the lone Ag--
gie TD.
This spectacular show of pow
er and strength came ab()Ut
mid'S'ay of the last quarter af
ter Ihe Aggies had been punted
to out of bounds on their own
7 yard line. Bill Bl:ikely con
verted.
The victory drive was
climaxed by a beautiful south
paw pass by Athie Garrison
to Red Jackson from the 18
which he took over for the
tying tally.
Defensively, both te.'ims were
evenly matched but offensively,
Shaw excelled in every depart
ment of the statistics except the
scoring. Twillie Bellamy won
individual honors hands down.
Ilejvas little short of sensa-
tiimai.
Butler “Blue Juice” Tay
lor, a Virginian from New
port News, helped the Eagles
foil the Virginia State Tro
jans for the first time since
19 4 last Saturday at 0’Kelly
Field before a pleased crowd
of Homecoming fans. Taylor
literally ran and passed the
Virginians ragged, scoring
two touchdowns himself and
passing for the O'ther. The
Eagles defeated the Trojans
by a 19-14 score.
By Ronald C. Foreman, Jr.
Virginia State's Trojuuii al
most netted two yards rushing
here last Satunlay, but had to
content themselves with a brace
of fourth period touchdowns, as
a stroug iSorth Camima Coliege
eleven treated y,uOO llomecoui-
ing fans to a 19-14 victory, the
first Eagle win over the Trojans
since 1UJ4.
Coach Herman H. Riddick’s
Eagles kept Virginia Slate’s
dangerous backfield bottled up
most of the afternoon, while
engineering a tally in the sec
ond period and two more in
' the third quarter. After quar
terback Willie Bradshaw hit
end John Hunter with a 22-
yard pass to the Trojan 21
and completed another aerial
to halfback Welmon Britt, to
the seven-yard stripe, half
back Butler Taylor went the
distance to score.
The Engles’ second touch
down drive started on Virginia
State'? 47-yard line, when line-
biickrr Edward Darden inter
cepted a Trojan pass. Taylor
.i)ul freshman fullback McClel-
'an .M.^tthews, from Hampton.
Va., divided ball-carrying chores
ns far as the 26. After two line
bucks had failed to gain yard
age, Taylor flipped a pass to
Hunter to the 13, powered his
way to the seven, two plays lat
er, a n d then completed a
school’s-out toss to Britt. Sev
eral moments later halfback
Otto Fuller, from St. Peters
burg, Fl«., ran a 20-yard Trojan
kick, to the visitors’ four, and
'J'uylor swept right end ou the
next play fof the Tar Heels’
fiu^ TD,
Both Virginia State touch
downs came in the final period
on passes from quarterback
back Barnes to halfback Ray
Crittenden. The first touch
down play covered 54 yards
from the Trojans’ 46-yard
line. The Old Dominion Stat
ers tallied their second six-
pointer after a desperate pass
ing attack had placed the ball
on North Carolina’s six-yard
line. Fullback Willis convert
ed both extra points for the
Virginians.
The Eagles made 14 first
do«ns, 1C5 yards rushing, 74
yards passing and completed
five of JO passes. Virginia State
netted minus two yards rush
ing. i7>8 yards passing, made
nine first downs, and completed
nine of 17 aerials.
Score by Periods
NCC ,6 0 13 0 — 19
Va. State 0 0 0 14 — 14
North Carolina Scoring; Tay
lor, 2 touchdowns. Britt, 1
touchdown. Extra point, Mat
thews, 1.
Virginia State scoring; Crit
tenden, 2 tonchdowns. Extra
point, Willis, 2.
#/'
The Zebra
it
Panthers To Meet
Ky. Thorobreds In
Dominion Classic
Bisons And Lions To
Clash For Turkey Tilt
Definite announcement that
the annual Lincoln Howard
Cfassic, traditional Thanksgiv
ing Day encounter, will be play
ed at Temple Stadium, Phila.,
on November 24 was made to
day by Professor Harold F.
Grim, Chairman of the Athletic
Committee at Lincoln.
The Lincoln-Howard classic
is the oldest standing rivalry
between colored teams in the
United States. The forty-two
games series dates from 1894,
when Lincoln defeated the
Howard squad 6-5. Since that
date, Howard has won 19
games, Lincoln 11, and there
have been seven deadlocks.
Lineon Fniversity is the na
tion’s oldest school for colored
Americans, having been found
ed in 1854. Howard is the na
tion’s. largest Fniversity for
colored stndents, and is the on
ly school anywhere in the coun
try supported by the federal
government.
Temple Stadium was the
scene of the classic two yearg
ago, when Lincoln took a 20-0
defeat. Last year Lincoln was
defeated at Griffith Stadium,
Washington, D. C.
Not iiiifike th(' great (jcneral
Ciraiit who attained historical
IVli!.' when he m(»v(‘d in to take
Kii'litiiotid. so the Old Dominion
(’lassie is triaking current his
tory as it movi's in t» t:ik the
sani(‘ city « itb the greatest foot-
)all .spei'taele to sho'.v in the
Tidewater arefi or in any of the
ein'irons of ole Virginny.
The mighty thoroughbreds
Kentucky 3tate, powerhouse
grid eleven of the Midwestern
Conference will test the speed
and endurance of a fast pack
of Union University Panth
ers the night of October 21 at
Richmond Stadium.
Uridiron fans will be amazed
at the color, brilliance and
downright pageantry that will
dress up this first football clas
sic expression in the city of
Richmond.
ON TO RICHMOND are the
words sounded off by the
Grand one himself, J. Finley
Wilson of the I. B. P. O. E.
of W. who has given the green
light to the Elk hordes in the
entire state who will converge
on Richmond en masse.
i’rior to the game tbe Old
Deminioii- Classic parade w’ill
swills': through the streets of
Kichmond featuring bands,
ieiirvaciouM drum ma.iorettes
cukewalking and prancing to
spirited band music. Dr. Mar
shall Shepard, Recorder of
Deeds the District of CoUtmbia,
Attorney and City Councilman
Oliver Hill and other eitv
dignitarie.s will b* on the re
viewing stand as a parade chuck-
full of swank rolling sto‘k dec
orated with eye-pleasing grid
iron and sorority 'queens, be
decked floflts, and all manner
of niarehing groups.
Every moment in Richmond
at the Classic affairs will be
charged with excitement,
pleasure and entertainment.
The po&J-game dance at
Strawberry Hill featuring the
swingeristics of Eddie Wilcox
and his Jimmy Lunceford
band shapes up as a four-star
affair — a great day and
night for Richmond.
SMITH "BULLS" TO MEET
"RAMS" OF W. S. T. C, IN
HOMECOMER OCTOBER 29
'FORCE STATE
PUT THE SKIDS
UNDER TIGERS
CHICAGO, ILL.
The Wilberforce State Col
lege fast eleven put the skids
under Tuskegee’s Golden Tig-
to the tune of 22 to 7, Fri
day ^veninf' under lights at
Park before an
estimated crowd of approxi
mately ten thousand.
Wilberforce, the agressor
poundered their way through
ed itself to victory with a lone
tally in the second quarter, a
safety, two touchdowns and a
conversion in the final stanza
of the game.
Blessed with speed a plenty
and bountiful bits of good
pounderd thei rway through
the Tigers’ forward wall time
after time and wounded up
with a well-earned victory.
CHARLOTTE
The Homecoming Committee
at Johnson C. Smith University,
which is headed by J. Gerard
Benson, is making preparation
fftr the return of alumni, form
er students and friends on Oct.
2f).
The activities of the day will
begin at 12:30 P. M. with a
motorcade, composed of beau
tifully decorated cars, the
leading one bearing the Home
coming Queen, Miss Iris Peeb
les, a junior, who hails from
Raleigh. In the parade will be
several bands.
At 2 P. M. the ‘Golden Bulls’
of .Johnson C. Smith University
will meet on the gridiron with
the “Rams” of Winston-Salem
Murray—
(Continued from Page Three)
10th Congressional District of
Brooklyn. A. Mark Jjevien, Tii-
beral Party noivinee for Dis
trict Attorney, Kings County,
Mrs. Maude B. Richardson,
editor of the Bedford Pres.s,
Mrs. Maida Stjiringer, business
agent of Local 22. Dressmakers
Union, ILGWU and campaign
manager for Pauli Murray, Abe
Roth, executive director of the
Kings County Liberal Party
and Sam Colten, director of the
campaign for .Tules Cohen.
Miss Murray is the only Ne
gro woman candidate for City
Council in the forthcoming elec
tion.
IlSi
iswia
^ t*
Teachi ts’ College at the Amer
ican Legion Stadium. At half-
time the Homecoming Queen
will be presented with her at
tendants who are Miss Mary A.
Minms, a senior, Alta Vista,
V.; Miss Harriet Imogene Fri
day, a .senior, Charlotte; Miss
Barbara Goudlock, a junior,
Asheville; and Miss Helen B.
Lawson, a senior, Columbia, S.
C. Also at half-time, the young
women of the freshman class,
under the leadership of Miss
Joan Daughtry of the Phj'sical
Education Department, will
present stunts and drills.
Thje final event of the day
will be the Homecoming Dance
to be held on the campits begin
ning at 8:30 P. M.
II
Tops'
In Homecoming Attractions
W.-S. Teachers' College "Rams
— vs. —
Shaw University ''Bears"
BOWMAN GRAY STADIUM—Winston-Salem, N. C.
Saturday, October 22,1949
Kick-Off 2:30 P. M.
Advance Sales $1.50 Until Oct. 1 t The Gate $2.00
OTHER ATTRACTIONS:
“Miw Alumni*' Ball Friday Night
Mammoth Parade—Saturday 11:00 A. M.
Dance After The Game With Max Westerband
Twillie “Zebra” Bellamy,,
Shaw will-o’-the-wisp half
back, is upping his all-CIA A
stock each time Coach Brutus
Wilson’s Bears take the field.
BellAmy, leading ground gain
er in the CIAA loop in 1947
was a thorn in the Aggies’
side all last Saturday iHght
despite the fact the A. and T.
eleven defeated the Bears,
7-6.
FOOTBALL
N. C. COLLEGE EAGLES
—VS,—
DELAWARE STATE
SATURDAY, OCT, 22
^ O’Kelly Field
2:00 P.M.
'The Eaglet Fly High"