20 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C., SATURDAY. MARCH 7. 1970 W-S Rams Upset Hawks ForCIAA Cage Championship v ' *-' CHARLIE SCOTT FOILED -Durham: North Carolina’s Charlie Scoti( with ball) goes up high in attempt to shoot over head of Duke defender Don Blackman (42), The Tar Heels’ Dave Chadwick (32) and an unidentified Duke eager keep their eyes on the ball. Scott, the leading scorer in the Atlantic Coast Confer ence, fouled out later after scoring 17 points. Duke won the contest, 91-83. (UPI). KITTRELL COLLEGE BULLDOGES-Shown above are the Bulldogs of Kittrell College, Kittrell. (See story). Kittrell Cagers Seek National Title KITTRELL-The Kittrell College Bulldogs head for the National Lit tle College Athletic Association Tournament, led by 6’3” Wendell Sport, the sharp-shooting NI.CAA All-American from Brooklyn, New York. The Bulldogs have already won three championship this year, having posted a 7-1 Eastern intercollegiate Athletic Conference (EIAC) record, the charges of Coach Moses Golan easily won the visitation title. The Bulldogs annexed t •;/ CIAC tournament champion ship with a 110-91- win ove: South Carolina Area Trade School, the onh team in tie conference to post a victor) over the Bulldogs. The high flying cagers recoi led 2-5 vic tories against three losses, while averaging 102 points pet game during the season, Wen dell Sport, avergaing 28.3 points per tilt, was at All-EIAC tournament choice and voted the Most Valuable Player in the tournament. The “Dogs” won a berth in the NLCAA tourney in New Kensington, Pennsylvania on March 12, 13 and 14 by whip ping Winston-Salem Business College (24-1) by a score of 72-71 for the South, Atlantic District NLCAA Championship. Wendell Sport and Rodney Mas sey won spots on the All - Tournament team. Sport scor ed 47 points in the two-game tournament and was named the “Most Valuable Player.” In National Junior College Athletic Assoclattor play, the Bulldogs have already establ ished themselves as oods on favorites to place high in the I Q foreUSs} 1 I '.AMllwo’eiO* * 8 I *U.uMM WU«I \ *aa»w Mxxt •«wtl C'OfcSS »> fttuA*** -S' I spring | I has I I arrived 1 I at Nowell’s! See our 1 I collection of tiie finest | | la men's wear and ac- 1 | ceworics. | ! I fMHMMHMMMmMMNMMMMBMW nation. The 99-98 win over I sot hi-:; ~1 Community College at Forest City, North, Caro lina was a step toward the championship of the NLCAA. Isothermal !ad posted a win over freshmen of the I'ni vei sit;, of South Carolina, whose varsit) teat i- rated No. 1 in the naiior:. The Bulldogs will represent the independent junior colleges in the regional N' JC AA Tourna ment. Thev will be paired with Louisl'urg College of the Cava lier - Tarheel Conference Tournament on March 13 at Lotiisburg for the right to play in the Regional* at Ferrurn College on March 6 and 7. In the upcoming tournaments, the attack will be led by Rob ert Brown, the diminutive hot shot quarterback. Brown, the prepster from Laurlnburg In stitute is averaging 16.2 points a game complementing Sports* 28. G norm. The Kittrel! bench, consists of a formidable group of players who have produced all season. A&T Drops Deia. State GR F E NS BORO -Despite out si c-oting Its first-round foe from the field, Delaware State, bowed to host North Carolina A&T, 82-76, in the Central In tercollegiate Athletic Associa tion Basketball Tournament. The game was played at 1:30 p.m. last Thursday. The loss eliminated the Hor nets and finished their season with a 17-8 record. The victory advanced North Carolina A&T to the semifiiials where it will meet Winston-Salem, 97-94 up set victor over high-scoring Norfolk State. Delaware State lost the game at the foul line. The Hornets made 29 field goals but con verted Just 18 of 30 free throws. In contrast, North Carolina A&T made Just 27 field goals but converted 28 of 38 charity toss es. Trailing 30-17 after more than 13 minutes, Delaware State Charged back to within three points at halftime. Dave With ers, who finished as the con test’s top scorer, sparked the rally with nine points in five minutes. Lowly-Ranked five Edge Md. 5t.,79-77 GREENSBORO - Scrappy Winston-Salem State, which barely earned a CIA A Tournament berth, surprised unbeaten and nationally-rank ed Maryland State, 79-77 in the finals to win the 25th annual event here before 9,000 fans last Saturday night. In almost unbelievable fash ion, the Pams (16-8 in regular season play) knocked off Nor folk State and Elizabeth City, then lit into the Hawks and end ed their win streak at 23 straight games. Winning the title was another milestone for Ham coach Clar ence ‘ ‘Big!, ouse” Gaines, whose teams have now won the play offs five times during the past 10 years. For his efforts, Gaines was voted the outstanding coach of the conference for the fourth time, a new record. In consolation game, second seeded Elizabeth City downed North Carolina A&T, 86-79. Winston-Salem’s fine victory was sparked by the outstanding performance of senior Allen McManus of Charlotte. The 6-2 McManus pumped in 26 points, 18 of them in the crucial second half when the Rams staged a rally. McManus picked up another laurel for the Rams when he was named the tourney’s most valuable player. Winston-Salem spent most of the game playing catchup and it wasn’t until the final four min utes of play that the Rams were able to overcome their taller Along with front line starters, Bernard Moore 6 ’4”, Oxford; Walter Leggett 6*3”, Washing ton; and 6*lo*’ Collins Vincent, Burlington, the “sixth men” play important roles. Lacy Flintall, 5*9” backeourter fiom Burlington, saved the "Dogs” from the jaws of disaster a gainst Isothermal Community College by connecting on a 15 foot jumper with two seconds remaining to pull off a 99-98 victory. Guards Darnell Brad on six footer from Henderson and Clarence Crowell 6*l** Brooklynite are aide perfor mers. Frontliners 6*7” Eugene Ev ans, Burlington, provides good board strength and ample scor ing, Rodney Massey, 6*6” re serve from win s t on-Salem, blossomed to full potential in the District NLCAA Tourney, and was named all-tourney. Tom Perkins, C 5” Greenville, and 6T>” Henry Leggett, Wash ington, have played key roles all season. The Hornet surge continued into the second half as the vis itors tied up the game at 44 on Steve Houlhac’s 18-foot jumper and then battled Into a 53-48 advantage with 14:08 remaining. However, A&T rat tled off five straight points to tie again. Operating against a&T’sfull court press, Delaware State's last lead was 57-95 with U minutes left, North Carolina then surged into a lead it never lost with seven quick points, aided by three Hornet turn overs. Withers finished with 21 points. Delaware State guard Hildebrand Pelzer scored 18 points, his top effort of the season. Bob Venderhost and Leroy Lark each added 10 points in a losing cause. A&T used nine players, and each scored five points or more. Daryl Cherry topped the bal anced scoring with 18 points. 6-socs -4-Charley Evans and 6-5 Lonnie Kluttz, whose rebound ing gave a&t a 63-43 edge on the boards, scored 11 and 10 points respectively. and more talented opponents. The key play in the game proved to be a desperation hook I shot by the Rams’ Ralph Jones with 2-4 seconds left in the game. Those points put Wins ton- Salem in front for good, 78-77. The Rams really clinched the win seconds later when Mary- i land State’s coach Joe Robinson called timeout, but the officials ruled it was his sixth and a warded Winston-Salem a tech nical foul, which McManus sank, j and the ball. That ended the scoring and gave the Rams their Important victory. Winston-Salem had trailed 36-31 at halftime. In the consolation game, the game was close much of the first half, including nine ties. Elizabeth City led 39-38 at half time, but got rolling in the late minutes of the game to notch the win. Hubert Moorer led all scores with 23 points, Freshman Al Carter of A&T led the Ag gies with 20 points. Other players named to the all-tournament team, besides McManus, included Johnny Mc- Kinney, Norfolk State; James Morgan, Levi Fontaine and W il liam Stewart, all of Maryland State; Mike Gale and Hubert Moorer, Elizabeth City State; Lonnie Kluttz, A&T; Vaughn Kimbrough, Winston-Salem and Jake Ford, Maryland State. Halem Globetrotters To Meet lew Jersey Reds Here March 14 When the University of Texas at El Paso (Texas Western) won the NCAA basketball championship Ln 1966, the Mi ners’ rugged 6-7 post man, was The Sporting Scene —l3 V STEVENS i**.****^^ The proof of the puddin is in the eating, and Winston- Salem State was the hungriest in the 25th Annual CLAA shoot out as the Rams picked up the seventh tourney tro phy for Coach C. C. ‘‘Beg House'* Gaines. Everyone around these parts knows that Winston-Salem is a tournament team and all had speculated that the Rams would be the team to stop the Hawks’ victory string. But it was supposed to happen In the opening round - not the final round. Until Shaw University hit its losing skid at the end of the season, Big House and Ms gang were headed straight into the destructive Hawks. This Vas the best the Rams could hope for; if by some twist of fate, they made the tournament. Then things siarted to happen. Shaw ’s Bears dropped their last two games and Winston won two, giving both teams a 10-6 conference record. Big House’s luck or influence or whatever you want to call it took over at this point. A flipped coin put Gaines in the op posite bracket from Maryland and in a bracket with two teams he had already defeated. The results is history. All of the games, though, we~e squeakers. Norfolk fell first by three points, 97-94, Elizabeth Citv by three 80-83. and Maryland by two, 79-77. As customary to the victor goes the spoils and Winston walk ed away with most of the awards Gaines'teceived the coaches award and Allen McManus, the most valuable player. Mary land’s Jake Ford received the C. E. Gaines award. Maryland dominated the ten man All-Tournament team by placing four players on the mythical team, Ford, James Morgan, William Stewart and Levi Fontaine. The remainder of the team consisted of McManus and Vaughn Kimbrough, Winston-Salem; Mike Gales and Hubert Moorer, Elizabeth City; Lonnie Kluttz, ALT; and Johnny McKinney, Norfolk. Winston has called it quits for the season as Gaines has decided not to compete in the NCAA small college play off, a tournament he won during Earl Monroe's regime. ALT, Elizabeth City and Maryland will compete in their respective districts in NAIA competlon. CHECKS CUT INJURED THUMB-Sara sot a, Fla.; Chicago White Sox outfielder Carlos May checks out his injured thumb before pulling on a golf glove and going to bat. May lost part of the thumb August 11, 1969 in an accident at Camp Pendleton, Calif, Before the accident May had hit 18 HR’s and had 62 RBl’s. Fol lowing the accident May was sidelined for the rest of the year. (UPI). j- - ." ~. DEFENDS WOMEN’S GOLF CROWX-Miami, Fla.: Amelia Lucas of Washington, D. C., suc cessfully defended her women’s division cham pionship Feb. 19-21 in the 17th annual North- South Golf Tournament at the City of Miami’s Miami Springs Course. Mrs. Lucas carded rounds of 94, 95 and 100 for a 289 and an eight-stroke margin over Ann Smith of St. Louis. just a sophomore. Today, at 240 pounds and more experienced, he is one of the finest rookies to come a long in years for the talented Harlem Gloi-etrotters, who will play the New Jersey Reds here Saturday, March \4, at 7;30 p.m. in the William Neal Rey nolds Coliseum on the cam pus of N. C. State University. “I have never seen an ath lete with more toughness on the boards, ” says Trotter general manager, George Gil’ett. David Lattin was a standout since high school days. Play ing for Worthing High in Hous ton, Texas, which won the Lone Star State prep title during his junior year, he won Prep All- America honors twice and was named to the Texas State All- Star team three years in a row. He was swamped with bas ketball scholarships from 85 colleges and chose Texas Wes tern. Lattin was twice hon ored as an All-America selec tion. The new Trotter was the top draft choice of San Francisco of the NBA and played the 3967-'6B season with the War riors. Last year he was select ed by the Phoenix Suns, one of the NBA’s expansion clubs. At the start of this cam paign, he suffered a broken hand in the Suns’ first exhi bition game. He had scored 20 points and picked up 19 rebounds in the 23 minutes he played be fore getting injured. The Phoe nix lineup was set by the time Lattin’s hand healed and he was cut loose, which turned out to be a break for the Trotters. Now In perfect shape, there's been no stopping him in his new role with the “Magicians of Basketliall”. An added attraction of half time entertainment includes a lively performance by the Gin ny Tiu Revue, an exhibition by trampolinist Steve Parry ana a championship table tennis fea ture. pdk 1 4 n 1 1 wm igffegii WiM WENDELL SPORT, KTT TRELL College’s NCLAA’s All -American basketball star. * *> * And when neither sun nor stars In many days appeared, and no small tempest lay on us, all hope that we should be saved was then taken away. fx-Pr© oath, 50, Wins 4th Straight Miami Meet MIAMI, Fla.-A 50-year-old pro returned to the amateur 17th annual North-South Golf Tournament Feb. 19-21 after a decade’s ab sence to pick up right where he left off—a winner—at the City of Miami’s Miami Springs Course. Joe Roach of Pacoima, Calif., while never the holder of a PGA member’* card, but once a "professional” golf coach, won the event by three strokes with an eight-over-par 72-74-75- 221. He hasn’t played in the City of Miami-sponsored tourney since winning four straight in 1957-60. Roach is a native Miamian, who started swinging golf clubs at age nine and cut his teeth on Miami’s Biltmore and Mi ami Springs courses. His victory was acome-from -behind effort, but he didn't have very far to come. Defending champion Bobby Milton of the Harlen Globetrot ters trotted off the course with the first round lead and medal ist honors with an even par 37- Roach, had carded a very steady 36-36-72, although not playing regularly for many years, and it looked like Milton was the man to beat. But Milton came out the sec ond day with a keen edge “too keyed up to play,” he said --while Roach jus- kept hitting the ball. ‘T figure I can shoot 75 on just about any course in the country,” Roach said, not in the least bit boastfully. ‘‘lf you make a couple of putts, you'll come in with a 68 or 69. if you miss ’em, you’ll get a 74 or 75." Roach showed the roughness of not playing regularly, but in remaining cool, took Milton nearly out of contention in the second round. Ti e Californian came in with 36-38-74 for 146 as the personable Milton skid ded badly to a nervous 41- 38- and a 150. Two others came into the picture the second day. Cur tiss Walker of Detroit equalled Milton’s opening day even par effort and with his opening 77 was in second position with a 148, and 18-year-old Dale Sea ton of Miami Springs had etch ed a 76-73-149 to sneak into third. It appeared the final round in the "4-hole event w'ould end up as a duel between young and old, as Seaton, capable of breaking par a: any time, was improv ing. But Roach was not to be in timidated by this youngster, and marked another coolly played 37 on the front side of the final 18, while Seaton and Walker both chalked up 39*s and Milton dropped out of the picture wit! a 41. Amelia Lucas of Washington, D. C. continued her winning ways by successfully defending her women’s championship di vision title with a 94-95-100-- 289 effort, bettering Ann Smith of St. Louis by eight strokes. Metropolitan Dade County Mayor Chuck Hall presented keys to the county at a get acquainted party to Robert Smith of Nashville and Thomas C. Mitchell of Montclair, N. J., who had played in all 17 North-South events. Smith, a former pitcher for the old Baltimore Elites, won TREADS HI €34 EH]* *** SIZE I Ut UNION • BANK AMMICABD I BUFFALO SSSsj 101 PROOF-8 YEARS OLD a WM H if®» jal r «Jiw STRAIGHT BOURBON J U jWHISKEY $ 5 45 #:ITWH£EI7PP® |»f FIFTH JLJB'Pint iurtm ftC. Ijjtl t. * . ill the First Flight divison of the inaugural North-South event. City of Miami N ice Mayo: M. Athalie Range presented keys to two others who had played' in all former North- South tourneys at a gala Trophy Awards Ball--Ha milt on Hughes of Fort Worth, and Anderson Gunn, of Bridgeport, Conn. Among the record 235 entries from 21 states, ti e District of Columbia and the Bahamas, were several celebrities, in cluding former heavyweigi t boxing champion Joe Louis, a Up time baseball great Jackie Rob inson, and Freddie Green, a 27- year veteran guitarist it! the great Count Basie orchestra. Miami Mayor Stephen P. Clark was on hand greeting and golf ing with entrants throughout the,tourney. A closest-to-the-hole con test on the elevated par three, 136-yard seventh hole was won by Tyree Simmons of Chicago whose tee shot landed 30 inches from the cup. Proceeds from the contest benefited the James E. Scott Community Center building fund. The center will be a day-care center for under privileged children. In addition, entrants donah some S6O toward the contlnm ■ employment of women wl.il In nurse's training undei th concentrated employment set ’, ice of the Economic Opportuni ty Program, Inc. *:r Pi t la*# 1 * • & 1 $ JONES GOES TO FENCE-'-. Petersburg, Fla.: New Yoi k Mets* outfielder Cleon Jon goes to the fence to pull do , a long fly ball during practic . Jones led the Mets' starting out field with a fielding percent age of .991 and onh two os - rors. (UPI).