MORGAN'S HOLD ON TRACK TITIE THREAnNED
WIN KNOTS aAA RAQ
J . The A
tightened
GREENSBqRO
& T College -Aggies
up the CIAA baseball
race last Thursday with a 9-3
win over Maryland State Col
lege, defending champs and pre-
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viously undefeated.
Big Joe Cotton, the basketbaU
star, who pitchcd a brilliant no
hitter last week, was the hero
in the contest. He came on in
the top of the third with the
bases loaded and one out to
squclch a Maryland uprising.
They scored two-runs in that
frame, one off of starter, Theo
dore and another on a long fly
on Cotton. This closed the gap
to 3-2 in favor of the Aggies.
After that Cotton was never In
real difficulty. The losers got
one scratch single off of Cotton
and that in the sixth which de
veloped into the ope-run charg
ed to him.
Kairl Miles, Aggie catcher.
Who hails froA t’rincesi Anne,
home of tlie Maryland Club,
helped his team with a homer,
with none on in the-second and
a double in the eighth-inning
rally.
«
Wiliio Wyatt charged with the
loss, was relieved by Joe Brown
in the eighth.
Tho win gave the Aggies a
6-1 record for the season .
Maryland Holds First Place By
Narrow Margin After N. C. Action
were upset by A and T at}
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Maryland State College de
fending baseball champion is
leading the CIAA baseball race,
with an 8 to 1 record.
The defending champions
n
1
I NATIONAL
INSURANCE
WEEK
May 12 - 17, 1958
Sponsored by the National Insurance Association
•fSS Million la '58"
Ask Your Agent About North Carolina Mutual’s
FAMILY POLICY
The whole family covered under one policy
I
Aho Plans For:
Hospitalization, Mortgage
Rodemptlon, Education/
Retiroment/ Health and Accident
*‘No Home Complete Without
North Carolina Mutual Pof/c/es”
DISTRICT OFFICE
W. L. Cook, Manager
, TELEPHOINE 2-1541
STAFF MANAGERS
J. S. Bolden • W. W. Bolden • C. R. Rivers • N. L, Donaghue
CLERICAL STAFF
Mrs. Janet Marchena • Mrs. Beulah Williams'
Mrs. Dorothy Vaughns
Miss Mabel White, Fayetteville
SPECIAL ORDINARY AGENTS
Thomas E. Lambeth • Clarence M. Palmer
COMBINATION AGENTS
Herbert Barbee
Leavy Barbee
Wade Blake,
Wilson Barbee
David Carrington
Charles Cates
JdhnClark
Walter Crawford
Walter Frye
Harold Hayes
James Holeman
Ervin Hester
Frederick Lawson
Junious Loftin
John Madkins
Mrs. Pearl McDuffie
Wafyne Pen-y
Clarence Phillips
James Rogers
Gjeorge Shaw
Lester Shaw
James Simpson
Willie Stubbs
Charlie Torain
Andrew Wallace
Charles WilHama
Charles Williams
Prentiss York
Greensboro by a 9 to 3 score for
their only defeat. A and T was
defeated earlier by Winstn-Sal-
em 10 to 7. Maryland came bacii
following the lose? to A ahd T
to upset undefeated Winston-
Salem by a.J2 to 7 score at
Winston-Salem. The'^ Maryland
state team completed the three
game road trip with a 6 to 4
victory over Shaw University at
Raleigh.
Howard won over its arch ri
val, Lincoln University, the on
ly remaining undefeated CIAA
team by a 4 to 0 score at Wash
ington.
Elizabeth City, invading
Washington and Delaware, lost
to Howard 5 to 4 and split a
double header at Dover, Dela
ware losing the first game 10
to 5 and edging Delaware in the
night-cap 6 to 5. ;
CIAA BASEBALL STANDINGS
INST. GB
Maryland State —
A and T
! Winston-Salem 2Vi
Shaw * _ 3Vt
Howai'd 3 ’.fa
Lincoln i r-r-—^
4%
Elizabeth City
Delaware
Fayetteville
Bluefiled ; i-
iVz
4
5
Fight, Floyd
NEW YORK
Regardless of the poor show*
ing Eddie Machen and Zora Fbl^
ley made in their ring engage
ment in San Francisco on April
9th, and no matter who you
think really wont the tussle, the
Henderson And
Asheville Lead
High Schools
ROCKY MOUNT |
The following standing ofj
Schools playing baseball in the
North Carolina High Sciiool
Athletic Conference were an
nounced through the Commis
sioner’s office. ;
The Commissioner also an
nounced that the season would
closc May 15th., and that the
championships would get under
way May 20th. I
Eastern DivLfion Pet.
Henderson Institute - 1.000
Cooper 1.000
Bond 1.000
Carver 1.000
Wiiiiston 1.000
Ligon I .750
Person County .333
Creecy 000
Edonton u- i— .000
Inborden .000
Lourinburg Inst 000
Lincoln - .000
Nash County — .000
Pattillo .000
Hare, t. .000
Person I 000
Hawley ,000
Potter - 000
Western Division P|t.
Stephens-Liee 1.000
Washi^lgton .800
London 750
York Road 666
Atkins 666
JorJon Sellars .666
Net Play Delayed
Qualifying round for the state
high school tournament in the
eastern and western division,
called off because of rain last
week-end was scheduled to bo
played Thursday at Hillside in
Durham and Atkins high in
Winston-Salem.
The qualifying rounds are the
prelude to the state champion
ships which are also set to be
reeled off this week-end in Dur
ham.
Play in the tournament is ex
pected to get underway on Fri
day with semi-finals in each of
the western divisions. On Satur
day, eastern and western win
ners will clash for the state title.
WSTC, NCC Strong Contenders in
CIAA Championship This Week-End
Graham High
500
West Charlotte - 500
Sccond Ward ,—.— .5001
Yanceville - .5001
Madison . .000*
Lcaksville 000 ‘
Pittsboro 000
Reid, Belmont - .000
The familiar saying “A-1” ori
ginated with the famous in
surance firm, Lloyd’s of Lon
doji. The Vyorl4 Booli En
cyclopedia states that Lloyd’s,
ratied ships according to how
safe they were. If a ship was
considered a good risk, Lloyd’s
rated it “A-1.”
Strawberries, apricots, apples,
raspberries, .peaches, cherries
are all members of the rose
family.
current issue of Sport Magazine
fervently wishes Floyd Patter
son would meet one of them
with gloves on.
DON’T RISK IT‘FISK’ IT
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Stephens-Lee
Drops Concord;
Still Unbeaten
ASHEVILLE
The, undefeated Stephens-Lee
High School baseball team con
tinued its winning way by de
feating the Logan High team of
Concord 7 to 1. Joe Boseman,
pitching for the Stephens-Lee
Bears, limited the Logan boys to
four scattered hits in getting hia
third striaght victory.
TTie Bears came back to make
it two in a row over Logan High
defeating the team 8 to 2. Rose-
man relieved Worthy in thei se
cond inning after Logan had
taken a 2 to 0 lead.
The Bears moved ahead when
Roseman followed Earl Thomp
son who had doubled, with a
387 foot homerun over the cen-
terfield wall. The boys from
Asheville garnered 12 hits in
registering their seventh straight
victory.
Archie Moore
Overweight, Says
He'll Get Slim
LOUISVILLE, KY.
If hefty Archie Moore wants
to scale in without a problem ab
his next fight, he’d better taper
off five pounds for the Mtfy 9th
bout in Vancouver, B. C. — but
meawhile he fought German
Willie . Besmanoff in Louisville
with the weight problem. Moore,
who has been enjoying his good
living, has been gradually gett-
ting, says he’ll taper down even
it affected the light-heavy
champs’s punches.
Archie meanwhile, who got in
the fight game late but hopes to
make a real killing before quit-
tin, says he’ll taper down even
more if he can meet Sugar Ray.
And more still to fight Floyd
Patterson. »
At the Louisville fracas,
which showed Archie as a tired
and overweight boxer, the
champ weighed in at 196 1-2—
his opponent, 191.
BALTIMORE, MD.
Will Winiton-Salem Taecher*
College, triple championship
winner at the Penn Relay, de
throne Morgan State as CIAA
track champ?
That question will be answer
ed when the thirty-seventh an
nual CIAA Track and Field
Championships arc held May 9-
10 at Morgan's Hughes Stadium.
Morgan will be defending the
title she’s won nine years in a
row, and for the first time. Bear
chances of holding on seem ser-
iosuly threatened.
The eighteen CIAA schools
and approximately 15 high
first in the college cIsm mite
relay. North Carolina won th*
freshman mile relay.
The Eagles’ freshman mile r»-
lay foursome annexed the Penn
Relay* frosh crown to their
claim as the best first-year mite
relay aggregation on the East
cost.
Coach Leroy T. Walker’s prize
frosh foursome was clocked in
3:18.2, and finished at least 12
yards ahead of its nearest rival,
Manhattan College, followed by
Morgan.
Ken Riley, Jamaica, N. Y., o-
pened up as the lead-off mai\
for the Eagle harriers, followed
schools will enter teams in the I by Neville Christian, also of Ja-
two-day meet, .\ction gets un- maica, N. Y. Ralph Bass, a
derway on the afternoon of Fri-1 highly touted quarter - miler
day. May 9 with one final, the from Broooklyn, N. Y., ran the
sprint medley relay, scheduled j ^jjird leg of the relay before
for that tune. The other finals passmg the stick to anchorman
will come on Sat. afternoon.
Walter Johnson, a strong New
Haven. Connecticut, numer who
broke th tape '!n winning time ot
'3:18.2.
The Eagles did not fare so
well otherwise on the cinders
“1 honestly don't see how we
can win it,” Coach Eddie Hurt
said, pointing to the magnificent i
performahces of Winston-Sal-
em's Rams and the North Caro-1
lina College Eagles at the Frank- track extravagan*a.
lin Field Carnival. Running without the^ top-
I notch lead-off man, William
In that meet. Morgan came in Merritt, the Eagle thinclads
second in a thrill-packed mile | could do no better than fifth
relay, pushing Villanova to a' behind Abilene Christian, North^
new 3.11,8 record, Bobby Gor-, Texas State, Morgan State, and
don placed second in the yard Indiana in that order in both tl*e,x5|)
dash and the Bears garnered, 440 and 880 sprint relays,
thirds in the freshman mile re-1 George Hem. replacing Mer-
lay, the quarter, half-mile re - i ran along with regulars Bob
lays. I ritt in the 440. and Johnson re
placing him on the 880 team,
Dobbs, Newport News, Va., Lou
is Seaton, Jamaica. B.W.I,, and
But the Rams set a new rec
ord of 58.8 in the 430-yard shut
tle hurdles, won the 120-yard „ . , »r . tr-
. Robinson, Norfolk, Va..
high hurdles through the skill
t /- II . J , lail sophomores,
of Elias Gilbert, and came in i
I In the mile r-3lay, NCC finish-
j ed a shade behind Winston-Sal-
of Florida State, Bob Woodruff t>m Teachers College with a tim»
of the University of Florida.' of 317.4. Running on this quar-
Gene Ellenson of the University tet were Captain James Lane,
of Miami, and trainer Sam Lank-1 senior, Brooklyn, N. Y,, William
ford of the University of Flori- Ward, junior. Linden. N. J,, a-
da are included in the top list long with Riley and Johnson.
1
of consultants
clinic.
for this year's
Woody Hayes, coach of tho
year for 1957 and head coach
of the Rose Bowl champions of
Ohio State University, heads the
out of state coaches to appear
here for the five day confab. The
football section will be June 9-
11 and basketball, June 12-13.
NCC’s stellar high jumper,
Charles McCullough, finished a
disappointing 3rd, far off his
Penn winning form in '58. Me-'
Cullough cleard the bar at 6-4
to tie with Henry Fields of E-
lizat)eth City.
Phil Reavis of Villanova won
the event with a leap of 6-8. fol
lowed by Don Stewart of SMU,
with a jump of 6-6.
OSU's Hayes
To Take Part In
Pigskin Clinic
TALLAHASSE, FLA.
Three Florida University coach
es and a trainer have Ijeen nc.m-
ed as clinicians to the 14th an
nual Florida A and M Coaching
Clinic to be held herQ June 9-13.
Clinic Director Jake Gaither
says that Coaches Tom Nugent
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