aATUBDAT. OCT. W. im TME CA«OLDU
Eagles Subdue Virginia State, 33 To 13
Shaw U. Outclasses
Elizabeth City, 19-0
HXIZABKTH CITY
The Shaw University Bean
took the measure of an outclass
ed Elizabeth City football team
here last Saturday and scored a
19-0 victory over the Pirates.
The Bears tallied once In the
first quarter, and once in the
third and final periods.
Except lor the lone Shaw
touchdown midway the first
quarter, the Elizabeth City Pi
rates played the visiting aggre
gation from Raleigh on fairly
even terms. The Pirates throt
tled most of the Shaw offensive
efforts in the first half and
pretty well kept the Shaw team
from mounting a serious scoring
threat after its initial touchdown
drive.
But, the Bears broke loose in
the second hall for two touch
downs, largely ofi the strength
of the fine running of halfbacks
Leveme Him ter and Homer Kil
lings.
The Shaw offense monopoli
zed play throughout most pi the
game, never allowing Elizabeth
City a real opportunity to put
together a scoring drive.
Hunter tallied the first Shaw
touchdown on a one yard smash
early in the first quarter. Short
bursts through the Elizabeth
City forward wall by Homer
Killings, coupled with a fine 22
yard run by quarterback Don
ald Couihs, had placed the Bears
in scoring position on the PI*
rates’ two.
Two brilliant runs by Laveme
Hunter in the third quarter, one
of 21 yards and another lor 63,
set up the second Shaw touch
down. Counts went over from
hi* quarterback position at the
one yard line lor the TD.
In the linal quarter, a host ol
freshman backs engineered
Shaw’s third touchdown drive.
Leroy Alexander put the clin
cher on the drive with a 12 yard
sweep aroimd left end.
Lotiis Hagler booted the ex-
Lincoln High Beats Warrenton
For Fourtii Conference Victory
WARRENTON
The rampaging Lincoln high
school Tigers turned a game
with Warren County Training
school into a complete rout here
on Friday, October 5, and buried
the Warren gridders under a 40-
0 score.
Freshman coach )yuiie Brad
shaw’s eager charges scored
twice in the first quarter, twice
in the second and kept up the
pressure for two more second
half touchdowns to win in
a “walk.”
The Tigers scored before the
game was 30 seconds old. On
the first play of the evening,
All-State end candidate Bobby
Norwood raced 50 yards on an
end-around play for the initial
touchdown. The conversion at
tempt was missed.
After the Warren County
Training school got off a poor
pimt, the Tigers found them
selves again in scoring position.
This time, quarterback Wini
fred Johnson passed nine yards
to Norwood for the second
score. Braxton Foushee booted
the extra point.
In the second quarter, Lin
coin’s potential all-state full
back James_ Atwater scored his
eighth touchdown of the season
by returning an Intercepted pass
SO yards across the double
stripe. George McNair booted
the extra point.
Minutes later, McNair him
self raced int(»v the Warren
County end zone with an inter
ested pass for another Lincoln
touchdown. The conversion at
tempt was missed.
tra point following
Shaw score.
the last
FOOTBALL
Winston-Salem Teachers College
“JUMS”
VS.
^ A. and T. College
“^CG/£S”
Saturday, Oct. 20th
2:00 P. M.
BOWMAN GRAY STADIUM
WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA
GENERAL ADMISSION $1.50
STUDENTS . _ 50c
HOMECOMING
J. C. SMITH UNIVERSITY
VS.
SHAW UNIVERSITY
Half-Time Presentation
A WEEK-END OF FELLOWSHIP
GATHERINGS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20.
KICK-OFF 2M P. M.
6mpus Atliletic Held
Charlotte, North Carolina
General Admission J2.00
Advance $I.50|
In the third period, Cleavon
Atwater scored on a plunge
through the middle after John
son had put the Tigers in scor
ing p>osition with a 19 yard gain
on the option play.
With four minutes left in the
game, the Tigers came up with
their favorite offensive strate-
gem, the end around, to score
the final touchdown. Fred Wea
ver carried the leather.
-Tiie Issue-
(Continued from page 2)
ing away with this foolish mili
tarism, Mr. Stevenson is pro
ving himself to be definitely a
man for peace. The people who
are for peace in the modem
world are the people who are
willing to bring forth actions
instead of words in favor of
peace. Mr. Stevenson evidently
believes, as we do, that at the
present state of human progress
war is a crime against civiliza
tion and that there are no dif-
fereiipes among nations, includi
ing those between the United
States and Russia, which cannot
be settled justly without th^
threat or use of force. We hope
and pray that Mr. Stevenson
may be able to convince enough
citizens of this country that this
proposition is common sense to
elect him as the next president
of the United States so that
Eisenhower may retire to his
farm in Pennsylvania aft db eer-
lieved of the responsibility of
trying to lead this nation back->
ward into the destruction which
has been the lot of all great mili
tary powers in the history, of the
world.
Dr. A. H. Gordon
Morgan Beats
Howard, 41-0
In Homecoming
BALTIMORE, MD.
Stroking for single touch
downs in each of the first two
quarters, and then stepping up
the tempo to tally twice iii the
third and fourth periods, the
Morgan Bears cr’Tiaxed a color
ful homecoming festival by
routing the Howard University
Bisons, 41-0, before approxi
mately 5,000 spectators who
thronged Hughes Stadium for
the event.
Jerome McArthur, Morgan
candidate for little AU-Ameri-
can honors, tiad a field day,
reeling off touchdown gallops
of 56 and 24 yds. in addition to
electrifying the crowd with
4S-yd. dash of the non-scoring
variety, and coming within aft
eyelash of breaking away again
on a 41-yd. punt return.
The parade before the game
featured the appearance of seve
ral high school bands from all
over the state of Maryland,
while the halftime activities
centered around the making of
awards and presentations to Dr.
George H. Spaulding in honor
of his twenty-five years’ service
to ills alma mater as a teacher
In his undergraduate days the
Chemistry department head was
an outstanding track and foot*
ball star.
Lincoln Tops
Kentucky, 2M5
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.
As a prelude to its game next
Saturday against Langston Uni
versity in Kansas City, the Lin
coln University (Mo.) Tigers
dumped Kentucky State 27-15
in a penalty ridden Midwest
Conference game. The loss was
the first for Kentucky.
Kentucky State gave up a to
tal of 162 yards in penalties
while the winners from Jeffer
son City, Mo., lost 70 yards in
penalties.
GRAND
OPENING
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W. T. “BILL" DOWNEY
Owner and Operator •
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OLD
HICKOBY
•I noor-OLo hickry distiueii company, Philadelphia, pa.
Lee Calhoun, North Carolina
College Junior, and Joel Shan-
kle, graduate student at Duke
University, wave goodbye to
well wishers at the Durham-Ra-
leigh airport as the pair pre
pare to embark for California
where the 16th U.S. Olympic
team began gathering this week.
Calhoun and Shankle are two
thirds of the UnitedtStates' 110
meter high hurdles squad. Lt.
Jack Davis of the U.S. Navy i*
the other member of the high
hurdles squad. The U.S. Team
is scheduled to leave for Aus
tralia, site of the Olympic
games, sometime late this
month. Members of the team
will be put through finishing
Smith Named To
National Body
Lee W. Smith, director of
John Avery Boys’ Club in Dur^
ham, has been appointed to the
committee on Intergroup rela^
tions of the National Boys’ Club
of America, it was revealed this
week.
Smith was notified of the ap
pointment by a letter this week
from Alex A. Maleski, assistant
director of the Program and
Personnel Service of the Na
tional Boys Club.
The Intergroup relations com-
mitte is a newly created agency
of the national boys’ club. Ac
cording to Maleski, its purpose’
will-be to “meet the need for
better human relations program
in the Boys Clubs’ and to de
velop aids and programs which
will give boys guidance in good
human relations.”
and LIVE
HOMEOWNERS
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paces in California for the next
few weeks before they embark
for the "land down under."
pvmmuKO. Vs.
Tb« hifhly tooted Jfcrth
Carolina CtdtagK oUtam^ mm-
able to cet off tiM ^oao* Im
its first thrc* aaOagt tfala *M'
son, finally tMiad Into Uib
gear h«re kwt SaturduY to w*'
due the Vlrstnia aiKte TraJsM,
33-13. .
Playing before an wHiiMrt**
3,900 spectators st Bogm 9I»>
dium on the Virghiia State cm-
pus, the North Carolhri—
leashed a powerful air and Imd
offensive which talltwl tcoch-
dowTu in every quarter, iMHrt
ing twice in the third period.
The two-way iTanW was
spearheaded by the fin* paarfnf
of quarterback A1 Hontcomarjr
and the running of fullback Cliff
Jackson. Montgomery’s pas^wg
set up two NCC touchdowns and
the Gastonia senior sprinted 58
yards for another.
Perhaps the outstandii^ thrlU
of the afternoon, however, waa
the scintillating 100 yard se
cond half liick-off return by Vir
ginia State’s sophomore had-
back George Moody. It proivldied
the partisan Virginia roosters
with one of their few ctaancea
to cheer.
Turner opened the scoring
for the Eagles with a one yard
plunger midway of the first
quarter. Montgomery’s 39 yard
pass to end Charles Baron bad
placed the NCC team in scoring
position. ^
(Please turn to page 10)
-HOMECOHING-
A. and I. Aggies
VS.
Morgan State Bears
SATURDAY, OCT. 27-2:00 P. M.
Greensboro Stadium
GATES OPEN AT 12:00 NOON
Two Great Teams, Mile-Long Parade, Music by the
famous, 120-Piece A. and T. College Marching Hand,
Complete Half-Time Show, Pre-Game Entertainment,
Post Game Dance — Two-Top Orchestras.
ADMISSION $2.50 •
Straight
Kentucky
Bourbon
6
years
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