THI CA»01.I,NA;,T.I »MI MAMM 11 mi ) Edge Smith For Overtime, 106-103; Hill is MVP By JOHN A. HOLI.EY WmSTON-SALEII—OAA News Kcrvice)—Winslon-Salem Teachers College fought off a det>nnined Juhnson C. Smith University quint ft> edge th« Golden' Bulls in a b>reathtaking 106-103 overtime to btiBi; the Rams their sH;ond suc- Cfssive CSAA Tounument basket ball championship. I'rcsluaan Uchard Glover, a 6-S sttlirart from Newark, N. J., pro- Ail-Star Foes For Gloi)etrQtters Being Selected ClflCAGO — The directors of the World Series of Basketball are bnsilv eneaeed this week rompil- )ri^ the names of the nation’s out- .ttandin^ iKiIlege players who have brpn nominated bv scouts and ersches as notential members of the 1961 iMl-Star squad. The team, when finally selected, will meet Abe SaoMStein’s fahn- lens Harlem Globetrotters in the , tenth annuSI World Series, be^in- ino April 2nd at the Chicago Sta dium. The two star-studded teams will ten plr-v in the followint! cities on giie^ecMve ni«hts—Milwaukee. De- t»-oit. Heveisnd, Buffalo. Hershev. P^i. rhsrlotte, N. C.. Cincinnati, St. Paul. B(wem«n. Mont.: Soolf!>ne. Washinotofi : rnrvalHs, Ore. fOre- pon State rolleuei; San Francisco, I es Angeles. I,** Ueoas, Tiiciton.’ Abiin"erque, N. M.: Denver, Kan- s-.? ri»T and Wichita. The serie,' on April 21. C*)nor;f''in f"r thi^ niitionallv f;i*noi>^ series while on tour throuph the e»«t “Pv the time our regular •*^ds " the (ilvner und pooeTi of thi world’s most celeh«it«d profeoci. team savs “III have this ritth n»-!n»e>1 prul re»>fv fnr thif World Series. We have to fimetinii porfeMiu if we expect to beat the All-Stars,” » vided the Rams with their margin of victory with 1:02 remaining n the overtime period. Glover turned toward the basket, wept up, hooked the ball in, drawing a foul as the ball dropped through the hoop. Very calmly he stepped to the frele throw line, arced in the charity shot to give the Rams of Clarence '“Bighouse" Gaines a 104-103 advantage. Moments later, Bobby Williams sank two free throws on a “1 plus 1” situation to give the Winston-Salem quint their fourth CIAA tournament title in the last 9 years. A crowd of some 7j000 spectatofv crammed into the Memorial Coli seum h'!re to witnem the Rams and the Golden Bulls in what turned out to be perhaps the most exciting championship contest in the history of CIAA tournament. competition. Gr>ines charges hopped out in the lead, 14-2 as Starting five of Cleo Hill, Charlie Riley, Tom mie Monterio, Richard Glover and George For6e hit on six successive shots from the floor before miss ing. Smith’s Golden Bulls bounced up off the floor with a brilliant performance of outside shooting as Freddie Neal and Jimmy Hester paced an assault on the hoop that sj"v Smith come to within three nnints of the Rams, 44-41, with ”11 showing on the clock to play in the first half. The Bulls, trving to come from behind to win fnr second time-in the tourney, rallied to within 3 of the Winston-Salem five at half- time, at 52-49. With 5:45 to go in Ihe reeula- ^ion time, the R;ims lost Rilev by the' personal foul route. Hill followed shorty afterward, com mitting his fifth personal with 1:02 to play ij^ the regulation time Without 'Hilt, .and SiHv. the Hnms, moving into the finals by virtue of their win over Delaware State in the firrt rniifd hjf a score of 91-84, and an 82-72. semi-final win over A. and T. College de pended oh their tall pair of George Foree and Glover to do the job. y r $ GIVE YOUR YOUNGSTER A FLYING START! With an Educational Pcriky A Nortfi Out>litui Mtrtwd CMf« Educational Ea-_ imwmmt Poikjr i* jroor gwriuitea of Amds to aieot tlw laaduig jroor child to coUege. Sm die HUadi CmmUm itotval Man for rnaaplatB inforawtian uriOtam >1 M S ^ \ ' ' ' //■ t ;OME TO PAPA . . . seems to ba what Wlns^on-Saliem forward Tommy Montarlo is saying as ha battles to oiitr»t rcoound dur- ifi hectic sanii-final gama ba- twean arch rival Winston-Salam Taadwra C«H«ga and A. and T. Collage in '.he 16th ClA^^^^ur- namtent in Winston-Salem rial coliseum last we^«nA Rams Cleo Hill looks up appr^ hisnsively as Tommy 'aqi| the ball get loge tber. Thankk to som« fine prasstire foul' shaottng by Montarlo in Hie last maments ol the iMma, l4ie Rama fd^ed A. and fA2.-72, In the setiiMinals and wei# on to’capture Hie tour nament (Phoia courtesy CIAA News Stfrvlce) I Like Quick, LHhe Backs, Says Florida A&M's Jake Gaither GRAND RAPrpS, Mich. — Eye brows, 1,800 of them, were lifted here when Jake Gaither qf Florida A. and 'M. tyniver.^y told coaches in attendance ^a^t. the Cc«eh-of-the- Year clinic what makes his Rat tlers tick. ■ . ■ -'W ■ He spoke on the split-line T offense and was the most sought- after dintcian at the clinic dur ing the question and answer per iod and during breaks. "The reason wa, score so much is our offenae. We move the ball a lot because wa sp(it a lot and use. fast backs. I like quick, Il4iia backs. I've gol;,six of them can ;jio rAe und|ii| V>. tSm ,ha», fUey aseifea *| ,, .'■I'--’' gang-tadcling and go all n*!aton without iln ln|ury. I ein't sand I'hls site boy into* 22d-pound tacRles, so WiaT Kipp*hiT get daylight and . . . whoth . . We're gone." Gaither told the groui^ that boys grow fast in Flori(^a and we don’t have much trouble recruiting play ers.-Eight Rattlers from the ’60' team will enter pro ball this sum mer. Three of Gaithers' best were halfback Willie Galimore and tackle Willie Lee of ,th^- Chicago Bearsi and tackle Willie McClung of the Detroit Lions. Gaither feels he might have an adv|ij^^1n Florida. He tel jhcyfc t^py can ^ga ps far ih you show, GoNen Ass'n Ptms Confab bi Cincinnati CINCINNATI—Members of the United Golfers Association will as semble here ^March 24 26th as "UPS'S of the Greater Cincinnati Golfers. Inc., for the 106} UGA '■onvention. Lonnie Jones, conven tion chairman annouced the Shera- (on-Gibson as the convention ho tel. , Convention aeenda will include nlans for the 19ffl) UGA tourna ment set for Aut^ust at Boston, Mass. Mrs. Paris Brown, Washing- on. n. C. is tournament director, spd Frank Lett. Detroit, is chair- ■^an> of the nationd tournament committee. Other officers are Howard An derson, Toledo, president; Max well C- Stanford, Philadelphia, exe- utive. vice president; Miss Evelyn T. W.ijliams, Wa.shihgton, bi C., general secretary: James Morrow, i^ew York, financial secretary, ^ind William D. Jones, Dayton, Ohio, treasurer. Regional vice presidents include Nathaniel Jordan, St. Louis, Cen tral; Maxwell Standford, Eastern; LeBron Simons, Detroit,' Mld- ivest; H. L. Bokin, Dallas, South western, and James Keyes, New Haven, Conn., New England. Crown Sports At A Gl^fice By JOHN GIBSON Fla. Baseball Team Opens With New Head Coach p^tlbn 'people &ie coloJ o% TftlB.’' He said: “You take W*s probably Worth 'if jbar. This, my frtends, U to other boy* who' fol low Kim "at Florida 'A. and M.” J|ilther was book^ iq ^pp]e fast clinical company includ- In* J^ch Miwiray Warraathi' raach pf: the at Miimesota;« Coach D.';nny Dev^e of the Orangd Bowl tJ^ivers^ of Missouri - team; CoAA Ellitt, Uiriv^ri^ty of 5*icl»ig8ij, Cqach Bsnd Wilkinson, University of' Oklahoma; Coach Duffy Daugherty, Michigan State University, arid Coach f^sty Fer- i3)e«a,' Northerh Michigan. , ilt[.. “The: n\ore ^roduct|bn v,”^'he says'! "the less at- TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida A,, and M. University base ball nine will open the 1961 sea son under a new head coach whep they plan an exhibition game af^ainst the Tampa ^-Stars here on^Marcb. ^/ . „ lie’s -Gosta iit^«i, a fornjer catcher for 1.he Rapiers and a graduate of Florida A. and M. He received the master of science de cree' in physical, education from Ohio State University and hate done further study at QSU. The newly nam^ coach served fls assistant coach to Dr. Oscar A. MnoVe wlio was TTPM pnacti frmn 1A47 until he resigned last spring The Rattlers finished s»cond last yerr In the STAC to Allen Univer sity of Columbia, ”S. C. “Our team prospects look good,” remarked Kittles. “Our pitching and fielding have b»en coming aloag fine. We plan to do more offensive wt>rk and base running before we qpen the sea.son.” The Rattlers have 13 rjeturning lettermen from the 1960 squad which had a 20-5 season record The leading-pitchers who are ex- p^ted to 4&ry the load are Earl Wilson, Ben Pratt, and Johnny Davi^. SUGAR RAY ROBINSON lost to GENE FULLMER Saturday in Las Vegas, Nevada. I belie.ve that the referee showed prejudice against Sugar Ray. In the 14th round \jith 15 seconds to go Sugar Ray had Fullmer against the ropes Fullmer was liurt and hung on to Robinson while the referee re fused to separate them. Except for the third round, I think it was Rtobinson’s fight all the way. _ FLOYD PATTERSON will meet INGEMAR JOHANNSON, Monday, March 18, in Miami, Florida. Tliis will be their third meeting in the ring. As.it stands now, they are even at one . a piece. Do you think Patterson plans will work again on Johannson in faking like he is hurt and wait for Johannson to come in wild for the kill, or will he get knocked down or out him^ self? Other sports writers feel thar tngemar is iwt ready, and hey think Floyd is rough as ever. This fight will not g'o^the distance. Winston-Salem won the CIAA Tournament Saturday in the Win ston-Salem Memorial Coliseum. Hiey out fought the well organized Johnson C. Smith quint. A crowd of 7,000 or more saw the score change hands several times before T. C. pulled it out oft he fire. At the end of the regulation game the score was tied at 95-all. In the closing minutes of the overtime, T. C. led by one point, (104-103) before^T. C. was entitled to 1 plus 1 free throw. \ ■; A. and T. won the Cnnsolatior crown by edging out Virginia State 73-71, WiOi 3 seconds to go. Soph Hugh Evans scored on a one plu.*; on^ which put A- ^t^d T. ahead 73-71 to clinch the game. Pro scouts Earl Lloyd of the Detroit Pistons and “Red” Holz- man of the New York Knicker bockers were seen Retting a “good look” at the CIAA’s cage mogul at the tourney. The Women Athletics Associa tion held a meet at NCC March 3, 4 end 5. Schools participating in these events were: Hampton, Virginia State College, Bennett College, and T. College, Living stone College, South Carj^na State College and NCC as h|pe«s. Bull City Baskettoll Standings and Tournament Schedule MEN Team Boy’s Cluij' Dur. BUS. Col. Chapel HiU. ^ S. and W. Cftte St. l^k Creedmoore Bull City B. C. White Rock Fire Dept. Satellites Pet. 1.000 .8^5 .777 .777 .500 .400 .333 .285 .100 .000 WOMEN Dur. Bus. Col. 8 2 .800 DeShazor’s 7 3 .700 Lincoln 5 5 .500 Southeastern 0 ft .000 TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE MARCH 13, 1961 Winner of Lincoln and DeSha zor’s game vs. Dur. Bus. Col., 6:15 p.m. Winner'of D. B. C. vs. S. and W. vs. Boys Club at 7:15 p.m. MARCH IB, 1961 Winner of Chcpel Hill vs. St. V(ark vs. Winner of came No. 2, March 13, 1961 at 7:15 p.m. THE MAVE .BUttt lohween | tliMis along i#ie fron^ rail a« C. SmIMi olajwrs Rufus Davis, I they retorn tin fiMr aft€«' WIMiam Oabney Mid - JMterf I haifthne intermiulon during Paris 00t hem Bulla ««r- I final g»nw with WMPtnSttitm CtM tMrtlAmeitt'* Aljp tame toUh WlnM^SaliaMi Tea^r* CtiUege. Ill* iivlB fin ally lo«t contMt, 4n m-stm': thne. Note the Wlnt^on-^alam cHeerlaaders wearing Indian bon- nefa In lower right. {Pheto cour>- Isay IAA N»wa fanrlok) 3 95 FIFTH 2 C^RESpiVfe lair ' SCHEPUB, M, MtSNO-TJaK^^ t tnmiKisuu. MD WMK BUI. GO. at. ■ IUilW.pi# ln«TI