Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 25, 1964, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
■ fflOlASIIC SWRB SCOPE HOLMAN r. PETTIFORD Ihe iiigli athool basketball I rently sport a ^ 3-3 conference Bcnedule seems to get more in- slate and a 5-5 worksheet for terestlng eicW week. If this trend • the season while Ligon is 5-5 i9‘maintained, the climatic .tour- also. iMnwtits in Vate February and Thomas Long was the key to early* search will be something i the Hornet victory in the con- to behold. test against Darden Friday even This week brought the first ing. He f>aced all scorers with clash* of Hilla^u's stinginy .Hor- 20 counters while George Out- ntti with Merirlay; sct^p | law dumped in 14. Long’s two ptag^ Tigers, K#^t«viil«'sxE .E. | chairty tosses and clutch jump Smith at Ralegh’s (.igon. ,Elm,shot clinched the margin for the Cify's Douglass at Roeky Monirts’' Durham quint. Bill Farn»er fiooktr T. Washington, South-1 paced the Darden quint with 16 WBst at Beaufortls Queen Street | points. Olaytonr Cooper^at Berry O’Keily i HILLSIDE’S J. V.’s behind the of’Raleigh, State ScaooJ at IjOck- scoring efforts of Frank Brown hart Riley HiH, S«'lmH Harrisou (-15 points) .turned back the junl- 8i Garrer Consolidalt'd, WaJce i or Trojans 57-37 in the prelinin- Forest DuBois nj Ap(';{' Consoli ary. dated, Zebulon Shepard nt ^ HILLISDE-MERRICK MOORE SprinwfiHd, Garner Coi’snlidatcd | GAME A TOSS UP at Wake Forest DuBois. Raeigh’s: When the Hornets host the Ligon at Fayetteville’s E. E. Tigers ir\ the Hornets Nest Fri- Smith, Elizabeth City’s P. W. day evening, historians can Moore at Kin.ston Adkin. Mclver ! throw thp book away and start at Elm City DouKlass. Wilson writing a new volume. Past re- Darden ait Grpenvllle C M Epps. 1 cords mean, nothing and past Winf a I I Perquimans County j games have only been the pre "Ijnion at Southeastern, Berry i liminary to this main attraction. O'Kelly at Apex Con.solidated, Coach Harry Edmonds will take State School at Clayton Cooper, j out his file this week and have Fuquay Consolidated at Sanford i the Tigers’ claws good and Wicker, Zebulon Shepard at i sharp by game time. However, Lockhart and ElizabaUi City >P W. Moore at Rocky Mount Booker T. Washington. HOBNETS NIP TROJANS The, Trojans of Dard«nM-Tij»h Si^KMl of Wilson startejJJhe sec onB hjllf of th^lr current ba.sket- ball Aa.son with a perked 10-0, , ^ ... x, • . j record. However. HillsWe* sting- merUon mastemind Hornet coach , Carl Easterling won't be sitting idle while all this is going on. He plans to use a new device to whet his cagers’ stivers to a fine mettle. This game will go right down to > the *rire with some of the finest baskoibaU of the season in -focu^ Trial of Accu^l* Slayer of Even Sel for Jan.. 2T Ing Hornets halted the string with a 60-58 decision in the Hor ' nets Nest last Friday evening in a hard fought contest that went right down to the wire.! The victory gained revenge for ^ the coach Carl .EJasterling’s Hor net* for th* 65-59 defeat handed i them in Wilson earlier this sea-j r After the game Friday night Darden coach S. E ^ » J I evening in a cross county dtib- ^ ^ ibip derby. Held to « tight first Uiat the toughest part of h.s,^^,, _ 3,^7 intermission - schedule still remained to be A FLYING EAGLE — Ted Man-, huiiUng Panlheri oY*rc«m*'-a IB niing, No^lh Carolina Coll#®*^ I point flnf half deftcft'lo'knal leading reboundor eaps high! the icot* 66-«I1 at game'fc-end and "dork*" a score in t h e, pushing the contest into an oret Eagle's recent 83-76 win OTer th* lime period. Virginion Union Panthers. The' —NCO Photo A&T College AdmittiBd to Mean! Association of University Women GREEiNSBORO — A. and T. Dr. Proctor hailed thp AAUW College has been admitted to ^ membership as another in a sons worksheet with a 71-58 de j corporate membership in the^ growing list of recognitions cision over coach Harry R. Ed- American Association of Univer-■ which have recently come to thj college and as e\^enoe ^ Tfi- creasing opportunities for serv ice by X.- and T. alumnae. ing of both coaches. Sports lov ers of the Durham area are look ing forward with wild anticipa tion to this attraction. LITTLE RIVER PINS MERRICK-MOORE Coach Ervin Johnson piloted his Busy Beavers to a 15-0 sea- mond’s scrapping Tigers- Friday sity Women Announcement of the high honor was made this week by Dr. Samuel D Proctor, president the heavily Beavers rallied be-1 of the college, j^yed. Gray further stated '"“t | ^ Medford Hawley's 25 points Hp said that the college had Hie Eastern 4-.\ schools ar^ *o j Bobby McCall 13 poirtrj earlier been placed on the well telanced that any one j jq insure the win late in i qualified list of the AAUW. A fix schools could end up in the| fourth and final stanza. Lit-1 statement released recently by tOp>! Une.f spot in the con-feronce. In for top lionors in his estimn tlor* were Hillside. Ligon, E. E. SmWv Willkon of Wilnii,ngton. afteis their 16 th. stralfht Hocky Mourrt B. T. Wasbingtoft-■ *nd :hls own Trojans HORNET J. V. BOWS y TO LIGON ; _ Coash Willie Bradshaw's Mue and whit(^ clad baby Hq2]l$f^'put up an awful scrap before'bow ing ito the Ligon J. VXIS-38 iS. Raleigh last Tuesday' evening. '^^iram Harris and *^Xfi£n£ 'starts to the talenUd Washing' Ifayes produced 11 couM'ers apiece In an effort to stave off tie Raver's next encounter was i Dr. Blanche H. Dow, Washing- with Person County High of ^px' ton, D. C., national president of boro Tuesday evening as (Wv Merrick-jtfoore’r J. V. pinned Ji'ttio R^ver 45-31 In the prele- >minary WHITTED" DECISldHED WY WASHINGTON JR. «GH .A. Whitted Junior High’s Vikings dropped their first game in three ton Junior of Raleigh 53-52. Dav the organization, stated that women graduates of A. and T. C?t>lieg^, iffcTuiiing*' those ‘ "-^ho graduated with a recognized bac calaureate or higher degr*e prier to thg AAUW listing, are DRIVER COURSES TO BE OFFERED AT SHAW UNIVERSITY RALEIGH—Dr. Nelson H. Hsrri‘ Head of Department of Educatior has announced thai a course ir Piriver BMucation A^ill begin a' Shaw University on Saturday, Feu ruary 1. Persons interested wil' meet with William Spann, it' structor, in Science ftall, Rocii now eligible for membership inj^ the Association. addition, courses wlH be " Final details cormected with full corporate membership by the college have been completed. Mrs. Lucillig Jewell, a mem ber of the A. and T. faculty i’’ defeat wihile Melvin and Branch | 20 points w+iile Stone had 27 for had a 12 and 14 Doints spree for ; the winners. Coach Leondra! is oaced the Vikinss cause with lacuiiy 1 Department of English an^ a long time membeP^of th» A»- the encounter. The junior Hor nets are 9-1 on the season. The nightcap found thp Var sity game a nip and tuck affair with rreither team able to gain a substainrfial noint soread. After traili’'? 27-20 at intermir Sion and 38-33 at th« outset of the firval stan'za. the Hornets oiit the rount ito 49-46 with 1:19 left In the contest. Coach Carl East erling got his rharees off to a R-1 Uad but Ligon’s William.' ;wer't :to Work to er&>'tl^ deficit and find the ^rai^ ^ for 20 and 10 countM# respectively. The Hornets cur- Williams had his crew ahead at imtermission 29-23 but was un able to keep up the pressure un til (he final gun. The Vikings currently possess a 2-1 slate. LINCOLIf TRIMS SHAWTOWN Galni"* its fourth victorv sociation, was named by Dr. Proctor as liaison offifP'- ’’“tween the college and ‘he AA^JW. Moore dropped Lincoln 3‘*-38. CENTRAL HIGH SCORES WIN) OVER MARY POTTER Central High of Hillsboro’s against five losses. Lincoln High | ing 107-60 win over Mary Potter of Chapel Hill dumped Shaw-1 dumped in 49 points Friday even town Ifigh of Lillington 73-52 | ing to lead his team to a smash- Friday evening in the Tiger’s ■ Ing 107-0 wi” over Mary Potter’s haunt. Fred Baldwin’s 25 points j Rams in t.h .e Oxford School’s and James Davis’s 20 sparked =-'■•— eoprh.W.- D. Peerman'* cre'w. Wijli»m hit tito earts ^>f>'& Ji* thp ettort. In a Tuesday night battle Merrick Basketball HORTH itmm A&T COLLEGE "AGGIES —VS— NORTH CAROIIMA COLLEGE "EAGLEr febru^ 6,1964 8:00 P. M;- McDougald Gphisium GENERAL ADMISSION H'OO courses made available to Hllgh School graduates who find \ imDossih'f to matriculate on a luil-time ha sis, as follows; Frbshmen Eneli?»h -arrt W ■st'-’-n Civilisation. Courses for in service teachers Nvill be made availanle accordin” to need in such ar^^is as Educa tion, English and the social sci ences. Persons interested in the abovr aress are requested to meet with Miss Madelyn Wat.spn. Wednesday February 5, in Science Hall. Hoorn 3, at 6:00 p.m. Aggies Nge tiflrfolk. State lir Cliff Hmger GREENSBORO — The A. and T. College Aggies last week avenged an earlier defeat by edging the Norfolk State Col lege Spartans, 51-50, in a *CIAA basketball game here at the Charles Moore Gymnasium. I More than 3,000 fans witness ed the- cliff-hanger, a tight de fensivp struggle which saw the 'lead change hands 11 times i~ the final seven minutes of play. ^The low, total score teams was a,sort of record for Moore Oymnasium. Not since the emporium was built 10 years a^o have the Aggies and their op ponents scored as few as 101- points. The fired up Virginians, who had defeated the Aggies in Nor folk the week before jumped off to an 8-2 lead and held it through most of the first staftza. A. and T. mustered a scoring rally and closed the gap to two points at the end of the half, be hind at 22-24. Knotting, thg count, 24-aU on the first play in the second per iod, At and T. played catchup for the next H-minutes. The Aggies went ahead for good with 3:50 left in the ball game, as Warren Davis bucket ed a layup and Adrian Sanders a frep throw shot, resulting in a 3-point lead, 47-44, the biggest edge the locals had all night. In those final minutes A. and Church._Mrs. Char JACKSON, Miss. — The trial o, Byron do la Beckwith, accused as- assin of Medgar JJvers, NAAOP 'ield secretary for the State of Mississinpl. is sch.' le- ttf open ’lere. Monday, Jani.c / ^1. Thi* trial date w.>. set bv Cir 'uit .Inrloe Leon Hendrick on Nov. ■’5, followin'; i;h» return of the nccuseri ropn to Hinds Conntv iail here At that time District ^A^tor- "»v R'll Waller asked that 12 trial d»i’! h« set aside for the case. Mr. Evers was shof ln the had 'rom ambush on' the night of June U as he was about to enter his home after attendin'? an NA.ACF -nllv iif*The citv. Taken to the 'Tniversitv Hospital in Jackson, he Hied within an hour. The NAACP nromntiv offer^ a reward w *10,000 for the arrest and' convici •ion of his slayer. Other oreaniza- tions. including the- City of Jack sonville, also offered rewards. On June 24. FBI 'nvesti9ati>!is led to the. arrest of heckiVith who was indicted and charged with th° murder. Subjected to psychiatric tests, he was adjudRed mentdlly competent to stand trial. LOCAL NAACP MEETING. MEET The regular monthly meeting of the Durham Branch of the NAACP will be held on Sundav Jan. 26, at 4 p. m. at White T. was held to four-free throws, while the Norfolk club dumped in three-field goals, the last coming at the buzzer. Johraiy Morris and David Brown, both of State, led all scorers with 16-points each. Jim Jackson, with T4^points, was best for the Aggies. ^ lie K. Swift, Supervisor of Re location and Redevelopment Com mission of the City of Durham, will be the principal speaker for the occasion. Rev. J. A. Brown, local NA ACP Pi^.sideirt, is urging every- Mis.l^iiri >^0113 to Vtend the ineeting and | Cassius Clay is the Louisville Frn support the NAACP. That Sonny Liston i.! gonna whip' AliBBfiDlCTKm (W?TOBUI8TON- FIGrtlS By BRUCE Gr BIMOGU; 'lay is. going to lai« that fiaht. I.irtJ'B's poin* tp hit him with a. mighty right! 7lav want* to be the chamo Bi»t the outlook , is nrettv damn! Clav .*vs he’il get- Liston in or five, Tf he does. “Man Alive!” Clav thinks he is a Dowerhouse *^ut to Mston he's just a mou.ie! H» hBs floored those other euvs. . But when he fights Li.ston. he’s in | W. B. Nivens n for a surprise! I “ Petition for Habeas Corp\is to Get hond s-^t Clay is just a. loudmouthed drip 1 for Mrs. Msilory. Tnis applicalio'’ And will never win the heavy- I for bail was made to .Tames t' weisht championshin! ; Farthins. a JudBe of the .Superior He claims he ha.^ a beautiful tan,J Court of North Carolina. Her tria' But he's the ugliest pny all ovei this land! Liston is as strong a a bear. Where Clay’s, strgngth.is, . I know not where! Clay may have a body of endur ance. j But before he fiffht’s Liston. he’( | better increase his inSui'anee! 1 Does Clay know in Liston’- I fists? I ’ ■ More than ChuK-y ''.i ecker had in ' NORTH CAROI.INA th„ nuRHAM COUNTY the twist , AOMINWTRATr.R’S NOTICE TO Not Ions after Clay hear th'| CREDITORS bell ring, I Having qualified as administrator Around his head birds will sin^! ! of ‘he estate of Galatia I-Jayloi Cto 1. ..,y m.eh ^ | Liston .vill win 1 m QUite sure. per.sons havin? claims ajiain.';' When Liston lands that mishtj | the estate of said deceased to ev hibit them to the undersisned a' 2106 Fayetteville Street, on ur be fore the 4th day of December 1965 or this notice will be plead ed in bar of their recover^'. All persons indebted to said ‘(ostalc will please make imnfedifitn, pay ment. This 4th day of January; 1084. JAMES T, TAYLOR, Administrator of Galatia L. Taylor e. O. Pearson, Attorney i Jan. 11, 18, 25; Feb. 1, 1964. MONROE — Mrs M«e Mallorv was released .Tanuan' 18. at IO:Hi -n a $10.ofl®,00 csih bond nostei by the Monroe Defense Commit tee Clareace Seniors, rhairm.i of MDC. met -.vith tne Sheriff nn^' Dosted bend with him since the County vClerk died two davs nPo. On Monday. Janu^rv 13. Atlor Charlotti- Writ of is scheduled for Moiid’') . Ki'hrunry 17. She will be represented liv weP known Civil^ Rights Attornf Len W. Holt. ■ Mrs. Mallory fli’Pr he tried fii “kidnappin'j,” alen'/ with' thre others; Harold He»oo. 't'fh.'irt Cfpwder, iind .lohn I.hwry, The in cident arose out of ; nti-scj;re)',a- tioiv demoTTstratinns in ;/.«nr(n- iii August, 1961 blow. To .the floor Clay will go! Clay says Liston isn’t fast Just how long will this kid last'. Cassius Clay is not mighty enough Te whip Sonny Liston he’ll have to be tough! To conclude this story I wculd say: "On-the-Job” gVmna.siiim-. 'ffie vlsitorsit' ove» at the opening whistle moved ,)o a 51-24 halfUme ad vantage. ThompMrr was ably as sisted in the rout by teammate' James Chavlous w4io contributed^ 23 counters. The Rams naced by John Davis with' Ut The Rams now stand 2-7 for the season. HAS THOMPSON SET A RECORD This corner does m>t recall the evervt when a scholastic eager had a one game point piroduetion equal to th„ Thompson outdut. It is therefore, worth establlsh- inrg with the North Carolin High .School Athletic Conference , the fant that this may be a record In this area. Such a performance certainly merits consideration by Cnr»ference officials and agno mination to the All-S(aite team for Thompson, MEW APPROACH TO PIQJCIKC ALL STATE TEAMS HfiCTeD An Improved method of pick ing AU-Stat« teams In ,the NCH- SAC would he bv sections and elBssificatlons.''Very few 4 A eon rhe* get a ctiance to observe li rinw A performer in acti«nx>r 1 class A coach can seldom ob- ••rve a 4 A player in action. ■Therefore, it wflwld he a wise d»cision bv the NCHSAC to "dopt a noHcy of *electin*,plav- »rs bv classification in the Pa«t n^d in the West. After such selections havj, Ijeen made, the ’niavewi r*re|vini> the mo*t'vnter In e»ch dassificatiAn would then b,' nl»»>ed on the AH-*t«t« Tbam rwn-dless of elasdifleitlon or ***’t|em. Heretofore, the m*,lor- Itv of the^ team has come from ■Owtral aa4 WMam 3- A. schools. for GTON — Opening* '-^he job” tT9i''iag of dlB- vieterahs^llMB baing sought by the Veterarrj Administration ai the surest way 4A obtkia per- mar>ent employmMt for the vet- erair when his training, is com pleted. Merely tO'trairr v^enm-iR vt> eational schools or colleges as- complshes only a* part of the task — they are still unemploy ed. Thalr handicagv rathar than ■their abilities niay loom large In a prospective employer’* eye.s. On the hand, VA officials have learned, if an employer traias the disabled veteran tn his own •hop, there is stroagi aasimwiee' thait he will retain the tralrred veteran as a “tailor-made" em- filovee. The VA asks the aid of the veterans groups, emplojrment agencies and the busfAets world Ir general 1« lor«tinv employers who will offer disabled but'am- bitloiis veterans a' chance to teko trsinlne In specialized lines of work with a goal of permanent emoloyment. Cofitinued frpm page 8«B «noimnt^ W the A. sn(*'T. Called ren«ral Aliimol Asociatioa. In ch«r«eof armavemanti In tension Committee, beaded by O A^niiacae..ia4iKl|igl i^tili^-Swi# son High SchoM, CUntm.'l T Is He All Right? Happily, this time, the answer is yes. But 250,000 times each year across this country, the answer is a heartbreaking, fearful no. (Why ^oes sonothing go wrong when these tiny bodies are being 'formed? Why is a seriously defective child bori> to one out of every ten American families? ;Caa more of these children be helped with present medicatj knowledge? What more do we need to know to prevent this from hap{lentn, to babies not yet born? 1 Anawers to these questions are being sought in nation-wida programs supported by your contributions to The National Foundatlon-March of Dimes—the largest single source of prU vate support for birth defects research and care in history^ These answers will help prevent birth defects, a problem wlflch concerns every family everywhere. Franklin D. Rooievelt, Founder Bft A- GOOD OinZEN — REOISTEK AND VOTE GIVE FOR VIGTQRY OVER CRIPPLING DISEASES Pte Ssf nies" te the New MUtCHOF North Carolina Mutual IJFEI INSI^IBAiNCB COMPANT,. Durham. Noz^ CtooUxia
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 25, 1964, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75