I """1 I I 1 I I J I SPORTS I T K^-f^P 5 ■ ! Us' *> TAKE FIVE— (New York)— Knickerbockers' Walt Bellamy (8) puts five fingers in the face of Philadelphia 76ers' Wilt mk ■ •' I w~aik v mm Wjvvu v. I. JB M Ky HflV Kh EiJ9 Rf jKj#r* ■« 2 FOR 22 (Royalsßulls-Chi- of Chicago Bulls' Guy Rodgers, cago) Happy Hairston (22; j during first half action of Cincinnati scores over the head | ball game. Watching the action [ Central Michigan Squeezes by Albany State by Score 71-70 KANSAS CITY, Mo. loth : seeded Central Michigan scored the winning basket on a five footer by Bill Yearnd with :09 to vlayi squeezing by Albany Sta«* College 71-70 in the first round of the National Associa tion of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Basketball Tournament here at Municipal Auditorium on Tuesday afternoon. The loss was a heartbreaker for the Rams who made a seri ous bid for an upset as they streaked to a si* point mar gin, 58-52, with 7:15 to play. Willie Iverson, a 6-0 junior guard, put the Chippewas back in the game as he scored six of the next seven points to narrow the Rams' margin to one, 60-59. With 4:06 left, Yearnd put the Central Michigan five in lead, 65-63 and moved four points ahead of Albany State with 2:38 to go as John Be rends potted an easy layup, sneaking in for a pass from Iverson under the basket. The Rams' Wilbert Jones hit two straight long jumpers, one from 30 feet out from the cor Chamberlain during their Madi son Square Garden game, re cently. Chamberlain calmly keeps the ball at arm's length ner and the other a 35-footer from way outside, narrowing the margin, 69-67. With 1:05 showing on the clock, Melvin Jones, fouled by Greg \rosse kuil, sank a free throw and Wilbert Jones sank another long one, this time from way out front, some 40 feet, with :27 to go, giving Albany a 70- 69"lead. Central Michigan promptly tossed in the ball, called time out and set up for what was to be the last 3hot Moving the oval around, the Chippewas worked inside for a five-footer by Yearnd, going ahead 71-70. The Rams with one lust ditch effort, aimed one wilh :04 to go but thp ball off the side in the waitingfiurms of a Chippewa as the sound ed the end of the jMfIW- Berends was hiA 'for the Chippewas with 17, While Iver* son scored 16 Character is the real foun dation of all worthwhile suc cess —J. H Hammond as he surveys the situation. Philadelphia won, 131-120. (UPI Photo) are Jerry Lucas (16) and Adri an Smith, both of the Royals. Cincinnati won, 133117. Verga Makes Coaches Team; L&M Also Cited Bob Verga, who set a new season scoring average of 26.1 at Duke, was named first team All-America by the National As sociation of Basketball Coaches of America. The Duke senior's average was a tenth of a point higher than the one Dick Groat had during the 1952 season. The squad is headed by phe nomenal Lew Alcindor, who made everybody's All-America. He scored 1,867 points in the annual balloting of the nation's coaches. Others on the first team are Providence's Jimmy Walker, (1,772) Louisville's Westley Un seld (1,459), and Elvin Hayes of Houston (1,205). Verga got 653 points. Named on the second team are Carolina's Larry Miller, Mel Daniels of New Mexico, Clem Haskins of Western Ken tucky; Bob Lloyd of Rutgers and Sonny Dove of st. John's. Third team selections include Carolina's Bob Lewis, Ken tucky's Lou Dampier, Texas Western's Dave Lattin, St. Jo seph's Cliff Anderson and North western's Jim Burns. Walker is the only repeater ifrom last year's squad. Like j Akindor, he is also a 30-point a game scorer. Globetrotters' Freddie Neal Says He Never Gets Tired Imagine playing 329 basketball games in 365 days. Unbearable, eh? For most teams, yes. For the Harlem Globetrotters, no. These basketball bugs have been circling the globe for almost four decades, and young Freddie Neal enjoys every minute of it. That's excluding some of those lons, bumpy bus rides, missed meals, and lost sleep, of course, but Neal knows that's as much a part of the game as the behind-the-back pass and the half-court hook. For the Globetrotters, those kind of maneuvers are routine, you know. "I never get tired of basketball," insists the ball-handling magician, who has already dribbled around , the world once and to Europe four times. Nicknamed "Curly" for the same illogical reason any body else who has little hair might be named "Curly" Neal can perform more tricks on a basketball floor than Houdini ever dreamed of. He dribbles behind his back, between his legs, ind whir* deft passes, but that's really "kid stuff" for Neal, because he's been doing it since he was a kid. Learned How To Slide In fact, you could say he has always had a little ' Globe trotter" in him, which dates back to the time he was swish ing baskets on the Greensboro playgrounds during his child hood days. "I was sort of a fancy dan," smiled Neal, a hero at Greensboro Dudley High before starring at Johnston C. Smith University. But if Freddie was a "Fancy Dan'' then, he became a "Fancier Dan" when he joined the Trotters four years ago. He had to learn a special act. "They wanted me to learn this slide," Explained the 27-year-bld Neal. "It's kind of a baseball-style slide, where I dribble the ball when I'm down on the floor. "I had to learn to keep the ball low, and to create speed." Needless to say, Neal responded to the challenge faster than Pavlov's Dog did to that ringing bell. But while Freddie blends perfectly into the Globetrotter system, he is really a serious guy at heart, a vicious com petitor. "I like competitive basketball," continued Neal, relaxing in his motel room a couple of hours before game time last Wednesday night. "I still think of -it as a competitor, but the comedy helps, too." How did Neal become a Globetrotter? "When I was at J. C. Smith and playing in the CIAA Tournament, they offered me a trial," he explained. "So I went to their training camp and was one of the four players picked from a group of 75 all over the country." It was, perhaps, Neal's happiest hour, because he had aspired to play for the Globetrotters as a youngster, when he watched them on television and imitated on the playgrounds. University of North Carolina Tarheels Among Four Teams Left in '67 Basketball Derby When only four teams are left of an original field of 22 of the best teams in the nation, the competition obviously is most difficult. Carolina will find it that way when it carries the Atlantic Coast Conference banner to Louisville this week. The ACC has a team making the trip for the fifth time in the last six years. Only once in the prcviouCs four trips did the team get to the championship game. Wake Forest went in 1962 and had to meet the great Ohio State team for the East cham pionship. That was the Buckeye power that featured Jerry Lu cas, John Havlicek, and Larry Siegfried, all of whom became professional standouts. The Deacons were beanten, 84-68. The next year it was Duke's turn. The Blue Devils got off to a wretched start against Loyo la of Chicago in the game for the East title and lost, 94-75. Duke returned in 1964 and de feated. Michigan, 91-80, but then lost, 98-83, to UCLA for the na tional championship. Shaw Bears to Play 18-Game Baseball Slate RALEIGH —The Bears of Shaw University have sche duled eighteen baseball games for the 1967 season. Second runners-up during 1966 in the Central Inter collegiate Athletic Asso ciation's ratings, Shaw was CIAA baseball champs du ring 1964 and 1965 seasons. The schedule follows: April 1, Hampton Institute, home; 4, Howard University , home; 7, Saint Augustine's College, home; 8, \Wnston Salem State College, away; 10, A&T College, away; 15, Fayetteville State Col lege, away; 20, Delaware State College, home; 21, Norfolk State College, home 22, Saint Augustine's home 24, Hampton Institute away. Other games include, April 25, Norfolk State, away; 27, Maryland State, home; 29, A&T ColI«ge, home; May 3, Howard University, away; 4, Delaware State, away; 5, Maryland State, away; 10, Fayetteville State, home; and 17, Win ston-Salem State, home. All home games will be played at Chtfvis Park, be ginning at 2 p.m. Veterai coach of the Shaw basoballers is lames E. Lytle, while Willie E. Jones is team captain. Just a year ago at College Park, Md., the opponent for Duke was Kentucky, the No. 1 rated team in the nation. The game was close until the final minute, and the Wildcats won B.V7V This time the team that has to be defeated, Dayton, does not carry such a high national ranking but that does not mean Carolina is guaranteed an eas ier time. The Flyers went through Western Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia Tech to get to Louisville. Carolina went in 1957 and was expected to get to the cham pionship game without a great deal of trouble because Michi gan State was not one of the leading teams in the nation at the time. The Tar Heels won, but it re quired three overtimes to do it. The present players were quite young when that hap pened, but some of them re member it. Before the NCAA playoffs began, Dayton had about the same national rank ing as did Michigan State of 1957. The Tar Heels get their last hard workout this afternoon as they prepare for the Louisville invasion. There will be a light workout in Chapel Hill tomor row. The official traveling party leaves Raleigh-Durham Airport at noon Thursday. An 85-pas senger chartered plane has been obtained A light workout on the Free dom Hall court is scheduled for Thursday. The Tar Heels play the 7:30 game Fritlav, with Houston and UCLA meetisng for the West championship in the second game. « Drive with Hercules Ultrapremes roSMKP for Maximum Safety and • limes better than conventional liners .. . Rjgsbee Tire Soles Of / resistance to heat and excessive strain, insures a 'nmr-?c smoother more comfortable ride with NO sold . the best PKICtb THUMP. The ultimate in a tire service possible ondflexible guarantee .. . triple protection policy assures TtRMS. complete customer satisfaction. our own financing). RIGSBEETI RESALES Closed Wednesday 1:00 P.M.—Open All Day Saturday ■ ly & - '' m mt ** " HB T H Hfet!. §| | JrSsA *V COACH ANO FORMER FLAY ER RECEIVE AWARDS— Coach C. E. (Bighousc) Gaines (right) of the Winston-Salem State College Rams was namel CIAA "Coach of the Year" for lead VvJVJ M A t v la v H In V r*. M ■l , v ■ -—— ...... v -~ - FOUL! THE HARD WAY— (San Francisco: Warriors - Pis ton John Tresvan 3-F) picked up his second personal foul the Mays, Epstein t *' Homers; Fo Willie Mays, runner-up lo Babe Ruth as tin all-time home run king, flammed his first homer of the 19*7 major league exhibition baseball season Mon day as the San Francisco Giante downed the Chicago Cibs 9-6. Mays wtio has 542 lifetime homers, connected off Joe Niek ro in the first inning. Rookie Mike Epstein. Tony Horton and Mike Shannon were among the day's other batting stars. Epstein 6lugged a three-run homer in the fourth inning in leading Baltimore to a 4-2 victo ry over Cincinnati. Frank Rob inson, the Orioles' triple crown winner of 1966, had two hits, a triple and a single. Horton had a home run. dou ble and single in Boston's 4-3 triumph over Pittsburgh. Shan non's two-run homer powered St. Louis to a 4-2 victory over Philadelphia. It was the Cards' fourth straight triumph. SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES- ing the Rams to a 24-0 record for the current season. Coach Marshall Emery, a former Ram player and head basketball coach at Howard University, was named "Most Outstanding hard way, off the nack u& SF Warrior Clyde Lee (43-C; in 2nd period of game as Piston Dave Dußusschere "22-1 ookj on. In other games, tne Chicago White Sox downed the New York Mets 7-4, the New Ycrk Yankees' edged Los Angeles 7-5 and California beat Cleveland 6- 2. Tommie Agee's inside-the park homer insured the White Sox victory over the Mets. He connected in the ninth inning with one runner aboard. Hamrn's Team Wins Pro-Am HAVELOCK Durham pro Gone Hamm's fivcsome won Monday's Eastern North Caro lina Pro Am at Carolina Pine? Country Club here with a net best ball 59. 13 under par. Playing on Hamm's team were amateurs L. VV. Laughing house, George Salecby. Herb Purser and Allen Cooper. CIAA Tournament Coach" for 1967. Coach Emery in his freshman year as Bison Coach, led his team to the runner-up position in the 1967 tourna ment. Warriors held a lead for most of the tilt. (UPI Telephoto) Work Begins WINSTON-SALEM Workmen started Monday on the Wake Forest College Stadi um. When they are through, they will have built a 30.000 scat facility complete with a field house and lights for night games. The job is supposed to be fin ished by July 1, 1968. A large part of the grading 'has already been finished. The bowl has been scooped out and the general g-andstand area has been shaped. PHONE 544-1825 HUDSON WELL CO. Weil Drilling - PRICES ARE REASONABLE 7B