Davey Moore Stops Bassey In 11th Round On TKO MOORE DEFEATS BASSET Hogan “Kid” Bassey fright*, of Nigeria, throws a hard right at rrarid featherweight champion Davey Moore is the third round of their title fight August iSih. Moore ■wge awarded a knockout when Basse:? failed to answer the hell for the 11th round after taking a Mat ter*)* from Moore in the 10th, (CPI TELEPHOTO*. John H. Johnson Expects Banner Year With Giants (EDITOR S NOTE Tins is metier in the series of stories on Nations! Football League teams and their Negro pis? ern.t CHICAGO *ANP) -* Both the Detroit Lions and one of its lead ing backs, John Henry Johnson, disappointing years iasf season and both are looking for better times this year. The other tan player on the Li nns roster who appears a cinch to stick (his season, is Danny Lewis former Wisconsin star Somewhat of * disappointment too. last year. PAN-AM ROUNDUP ST CHARLES J LIVINGSTONE fOR ANP Th# Rip American Game? will | open In Chicane Thursday 'Aug 1 27 \ bur already the city Is buzzing 1 with activities Day by Day. sthiet»* from the SC-odd nations of the Western j Hemisphere who "’ill participate , in the "Little World Series" are j streaming into the city, Clubs, fra- j ternitie* end other social organi zations area sponsoring events for the visitors; and hotels and other business houses have hung out the welcome mat. . At, Pan Am Village on the Uni versity of Chicago campus, a task force, including coolds, baker? and other volunteer workers, is at work serving the athletes. This is so Simple task, as the athletes speak several tongues and their habits are just as diversified The village itself has been named "Little United Nations." because of international makeup ft is u aasimously agreed, however, that, mere good will and understanding ie on display here than at Lake Success. Here at the Village, ev eryone wants to shake hands and be friends WEST INDIANS. LATINS ftesaresKt cup & sAVß^sasasssaK 1 TIRE S I SPECIAL | » 870x13 M * [q l T “ * 11 AO £ 5 Racaocibl* I 100 < l Ticc « * * ,w ; | Installed Free : | MAC’S ESSO i | SERVICENTER | 1200 New Bern Are. jiQ $ Tele. TE 2-83112 Raleigh «0 ms «• sAvr.^!S£S?s£3y | WWWUW I’M nr Move Up To Quality \ Move Up To Schlitz. 1 Lewis hopes to establish himself in t | ih® coming season, Rookies ir, the Lions’ ramp at Bloomfield Hilts, Mich, in clude .terry McFarland, form er Michigan State guard, and George McGee, a big tackle from Southern Itnlversity, the I team's lfith draft choice last I winter. Injuries cut down the efficiency j | last season of Johnson who. when 1 operating in top condition, is as I good as they come He was fourth I leading rusher in the NFL in ‘57. I his first year with the Lions, but POPULAR Incidentally, Negroes who : him net had the opportunity j to travel abroad, are getting a chance to oh serve the contrast in culture which these athletes have brought with them. They have easy access to the Village, because the University of Chi cago Is located on the south side. in an area heavily popu lated by Americans of several nationalities and racial strains. Negroes predominate. Perhaps because several of them hove friends and countrymen liv ing here athletes from the West Indies (Including Haiti), Mexico and other Latin countries are the most popular in the village. They constantly befriended and ban queted in the homes of Chicagoans. UNCLE RAM WELL REPRESENTED N-, less popular are-the athletes who will represent the United States in the games. Among those seen at the Village are Bob Boozer of Kansas State and Oscar Robert son of Cincinnati, who are expect ed to spark the U. S basketball team. The two famous athletes were in good spirits and said they are raring in go. Also in town was Ed Hurt, head i coach at Morgan State college who i is the lone Negro member of n i four-man team of track coaches. : He will handle U. S. hurdlers in i *he games. B T Harvey, commis* i sioner. Southern Intercollegiate J Athletic conference, also breezed J into town and huddled with Col. • Jack Reilly, executive director of i' the games, early in the week. I - 'V i In the United States there is on* l Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of , Staff and 160 million assistant ! strategists. ) j It Pays To | ADVERTISE 31 ? _ last year he gained only 254 yards in SB tries, compared to 621 amass ed the year before. Youthful Mentor Is Doing Good HAMPTON, Va. (ANP) A brash, voung coach who gambled with a new pattern of play and came up with t top fighting 11 is compiling an enviable record at Hampton Institute, AMP learned. He its Ben jaw in Whaley, 33. % graduate of Hampton who is completing bis third year *t. theFcninsulg, team. He took over in 1957, follow int the re tirement of veteran coach Harry R Jefferson. under whom Whaley once played. Shortly after taking over the reins of the Pirates, Whaley came up with one of the most radical changes in the team’s history. He shifted from the traditional single wing to the sp!it-T formation. H® did it, he said, because the team did not have enough men up front to handle a powerful single-wing attack Patronise Our Advertiser* '<£g£Sß&&p ' w,, 3hS®S^ v ; v *«£s@s»sg^ TO«Sy^B |-v>i..-’ : y^^fS%jC?^j^^3^tog^^S3§gSK^MnEs^liß^^ i <;~ij^pyp , <^j)p^s|i^ii^ : ..,% -*jWjsj3jßßiffi'£-:>ffi ■ •£§!s& 'ijife^i^ l ' '->'• ... i g^g? KNOCKDOWN Nigerian Hogan “KM" Buwey hits the mmu after & stunala# attack by featherweight champion Davey Moore is the fourth round of their title bout August 18th, Moor* te&s awarded a knockout after Baosey failed to answer the Vi! for the 11th round. (Wt XRLBrHOM). Featherweight Title Y.ill Stay In America LOS ANGELES (ANP) The world featherweight title remained in America where it was restored early this year, when crowd-pleas ing Davey Moore of Springfield, 0.. stopped Hogan (Kidt Basey on a TKO in the 11th round in his first defense in Olympic auditori um last Wednesday night. The bout had been scheduled for 15 rounds. It vas ihe second time in six months that Moore had beaten Bassey, who hails from Lages, Ni geria. Last March 18, Moore out punched Bassey to score a 13th round TKO and win the title. In. that, fight, Bassey, the first native Nigerian to win a world boxing title, was the favorite. MOORE ACRES,Son Last Wednesday night. Moore, dripping with confidence, carried the fight so Bassey. Hogan fought well in the early rounds, but Moore was just too quick for him. Several times, Davey beat the Kid to the punch and then kept the pressure on so Bassey couldn't re taliate frt the fourth, he dumped Bjss*v with a weii-timed left Hear Montgomery Snubbed Moore-Durelle Title Bout CHICAGO (ANP) The Asso- ! mated Negro Press learned from a reliable source last week that segregation-minded Montgomery, .Ala, snubbed the recent Archie Moore-Yvonne Durelle light heavy weight title match According to the source, there was no TV or radio broadcasts I of the bout, in the entire Montgom- | cry area It was implied that the t Junior Leaguers Plan Organizational Growth NEWARK, N J (ANP) With the echoes of the recent 20th ann ual conference of the National Jun ior League, Inc., still ringing in their ea-s. chapter members throughout the country are em barking upon plans for an upsurge in organizational growth during the next \2 month period To achieve their goat, Junior Leaguers ar? faced with the task of overcoming the apathy of young women ’''ho are not interested in assuming civic responsibilities without » great amount of pred efine. The organization, founded tn 19- .33 by Mrs. William F King, Chics go (whose husband is a prominent attorney and former Illinois state senator', has for hr purpose just such a program—that of civic re sponsibility. Throughout the country, members of the organisation may be found rendering volun teer service to hospitals, com munity centers, Parent-Teach er associations, national fund drives. Girl* and Boy Scouts; Traveler* Aid. YM and VWTA ami a host, of other agencies hook, hi# right fast tacking gp both gloves resting on the re sin. However, be regained hi* feet and continued the battle. SUFFERS CUT Throughout the fight. Moore peppered Bassey with a piston-like left jab and a Jolting left hook. Sometimes the hok was delivered on top of four lightning left jab* as Bassey tried to back away and counterpunch. A fighter who cuts easily, Rassev suffered a badly bruised right eye snd s cut left eyebrow. However, the rut did not bother him too much. Bassey s best weapon was » right to the head. He stung Moore with it. several times, but each time Davey shook off the punch and kept boring in. In the 10th, Moore got Bassey in trouble early and went all out for a knockout. He brought bis own right into play and hurt Bassey throughtout the round. Bassey, meanwhile, folded his hands criss cross before his face and tried to cover up. ft was no use thought, as Moore went from the head to the body and back to t.h» head. ! blackout, of television and radio coverage may have been due to the interracial makeup of the bout. Moore, who retained his titie by chilling Durelle in three round* is. of course, a Negro. His opponent from New Brunswick Province, Canada, a fighting fisherman, is white. This is not the first time Mont i gomery has acted adversely to shows with interracial makeup. . Under ihe theme of "Women— The Heart, of the Community,” j members were urged to become more active on policy-making boards in their respective commu nities. Jesse Owens To Be Honored At **Sports Nights ” BOSTON (ANP- Jesse Owens, former Olympic track champion Will be honored *t, the seventh annua! swards d.nner of the Pos ton Sports Lodge, B'nai Brith. Sept. 20 at the Hotel Sheraton- Plßza Other sports figures to be fried include Jack Dempsey. Ty Cobb Johnny Weismuller, Bob Cousey and Don Budge. Thirty-seven per cent of the DHLA herds in North Carolina are now enrolled in the central pro cessing system at N C State Col lege DURHAM LITTI.E LEAGUERS — -Vyp!-h! of the tIMODUHIe of Little at! 'the conotre it Ok John Avery Boys Club team, sponsored in the Durham Midget League by Mutual Savings and Loan Association. The team finished second in Midget league tournament and in the regular season pennant race in the ten-team league. They are like countless of youth all over America whose sponsorship by com munity-minded business firms like Mutual Savings of Durham gives them an opportunity to plav base ball. Members of the team, pictured above, are. front row, left to right. Eugene Harrington, Jr., James Saunders, Lonnie Forie. riiffon Belt and James Jones.. Standing, in the same order are David Parker coach. Bocker Spaulding. Jr.. fmerHne Rich, Johnnie Johnson, P»nt Royster, Arthur Johnson, Donald Rmoake and Luther Brown. Bridge Ass Vt Closes Banner Tourney; Daly Is Reelected CLEVELAND, ’ O 'ANT') The American Bridge association elc-wl its 26tb annual nardional torn on ment Saturday ?: the H< Henson hotel. It. ivas considered ‘ - largest and mo*' successful champion' ■ip tournarni d in ‘he I •>- f • organization. Nearly vr > ■"•h>- were in constant play 1 .-•« is iy for eight, day* Approximately ! One from 28 states and at tended th« record turr ••• '» • hundred and fifty - r- <. mg $3,000 were distributed to (hr first and second place • v.nne- * of a!) events Forty eiciu no- 1 iff Masters were added so ‘ho 134 p, i - NCC Coach Says He’ll Field A Glassy Line DURHAM—North Carolina Col lege's head football roach. Hem ho H Riddick experts -nme fifty-fi’ e ■ candidates to show up v hen 1v» issues hi* f;rs‘ pail fr • fail drill* on September I Bolstered by the return of 20 loiter men l lf 'n last year's 6!h ranked nationally out fit, alone with a favored home sialp with five of their rune lifts on O'Keliy field, the grid T si.-■- promise to bo in the thick of the fight, for CIAA laurels again this year. Rldriirk, enteritis hi* ftftcenih season a* the mentor of dir Eagles' grid fortunes, has a nm ctrus of a good team, but I" I solid depth. His primal’ eon rern at. the beginning of Slid prart.iee will he to find a good quarterback replacement, to go behind his no. i signal-<• a Her, Reggie Pryor, and to find three ton flight halfback* with lots of speed and shiftiness The Ragle coaches have shout j throe weeks 1O YreH (ho Essies ! force* before faring NO ’ firs’ ' end opponent h r r<> m Dm ’ or, CENTURY I CLUB JL Mr *•/ |||l 'Vhßb 1 .. .-• r . 1 $ .1; KENTUCKY ■ STRAIGHT 945 mam BOURBON " Pint —i WHISKEY g* 4.5 QT. *l - sit cumtimim WEEK ENDING SATtfttOAT, AUGUST 23, 1353 vinusly accorded the association s tiona’ Urban league »'s! 000’ and highest honor. United Negro College Fund (sso9* At its final business meeting, i TV- !Wl national championships the association re-elected Vic- ••■•ill be held Sheraton-Fark ho tor R Daly. Washington. D C 'e! Washing ion, D. C Los An.?»- president for the llth ronsecu les 1 »H he host in 1981 and , h* Ire year, lie has been credited Sheraton-Cadillac hotel. Detrn:’ with bringing about the accept- will be 'be •' B ne m 1362 sfi-f of Negro bridge play era National officer? ??ec‘M -*••♦ ' A ut by ly of duplicate bridge in the mit, D cost Washington t:W’i l? s, i tivc secretary; Mrs Ruth H Mos fn accordance with its previous- i ley, Macon, <.’• a. treasurer and lv established nolicy the asr-ocia- Mrs Christine F Jones, Washing tifin voted S'J.JOO from its benefit ton, as i.-itant secret o Di P. W fund for distribut ion 10 ’he NAA- 1 Good. Mobile, Ais . is chairman of CT* Freedom fund iSl.OflO': Ns- the eight-man executive board Septembei 10 when Morris Brown 1 College comes here The Purpi” Woh cnrips of Atlanta, Ga. trounc ed (he Varies lest season 24-6. As usual at this time of the • -ar when all college coaches h» v e otu ;he irvmg towels Riddick express ed great concern ere; his (e-.,)-' '• chance* We could have a good *> am this ear if some of our fr I. rear players come through (or Us. to pive n* some depth," 'aid the cautious Eagle mentor. Though Riddick rails his line only adequate, it is known that he ha*, perhaps, the most pro mising line in the, CL\A this season, and one of the mo: t mo h:le tn the ‘school s history At ihe terminal position he ; * i blessed with the return of AU DI A A George Wallace, who snarl ed 17 passes last season, and Paul 1 Winslow, second leading receiver on the club with 11 receptions to | hi* credit There are also two oth er monogram winners at thi* spot "i Vernon Hatch and James Cham ber- hr. well as the presence of Cl.', i- Wit her spoon, regarded a* * j fine flank prospect alter sitting out ' last season as an ineligible At tackle hr- is irdent.-iadden vdh ‘ five behemoth?. ail with game ex year's regulars captain Luthei Jer ■ periencr Leading this crew are, last ; aids, 2-35 and James ' Champ'' Brewing u: an all-confe-'er e choice at, 275 A shad* behind thi* pa!i- afo Charles Robo Hinton, 7:40 and Rob Me Ad am. 6-2 >