1
?THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, NOV. 2P, 1098 | Sk».. Vpi ' ";? ' -<r-i'? ? '' rs;t«cr , , L^.i" JMRIOII - ? ;./,»\u25a0%. ? ' Fred Baldwin Shines in Eagles' Fourth Quarter TD Uprising BY EARL MASON The North Carolina College Eagles defeated the Virginia Union University Panthers for Tigers Clinch 2nd Straight Championship the first time in four years last Saturday by a score of 22-14. The Eagles scored all their points in the last quarter for the-come-from behind victory in a CIAA contest played here at O ''Kelly Field. By EARL MASON Timat Sports Editor Va. Union scored late in the second and third quarters be- fore NCC stormed back in its The Merrick - Moore Tigers NCHSAC Eastern 3 A football won their second straight championship here last Friday night at the expense of the E. J. Hayes Tigers of Williamston, 32-14. A crowd of about 3,000 spectators gathered at the Durham County Stadium to witness the titular encounter. Coach Harry Edmond's de- fending Eastern and State 3-A titleholders caught fire mid- way the fourth stanza to run away with the closely fought contest. Merrick-Moore scored 20 points in five minutes and 40 seconds in the last 12 min- ute quarter. The Durham County eleven hit paydirt in the first and se- cond periods before the fourth quarter outburst. Hayes scored following the second half kick- off to make a game of it for three quarters. Otha Chavis scooted 43 yards in the initial stanza for Mer- rick-Moore after Morris Allen recovered a fumble. The score came with 7:22 left in the pe- riod. kickoff and marched 67 yards for its first score. Lanier pass- ed to Braxton Speller for the final two yards. An attempted pasi for the conversion was nQ good and with 9:34 left in the third stanza, Merrick-Moore held a slim 12-6 margin. final home appearance with a gallant fourth stanza effort After a scoreless first quar- ter, the Panthers hit paydirt in the waning moments .of the second quarter. Irvin Mallory raced 11 yards for Union's first TD. James Simms kicked the extra point to give the Rich- mond. Va., eleven a 7-0 half- time lead. BEARD ON THE MOVE?Vir-| ginia Union University's Mon- | roe Baard (32) it shown above picking up yardage against I North Carolina College in a I game played between the two I schools Saturday at O'Kelly Field on the NCC campus. Beard gained a total of 125 j yards in 17 carries, but his run- ning was in vain as the Eagles defeated the Panthers 22-14. Coming up to malce the tackle for NCC is Billy Alsbrooks (26). (NCC Photo) Freddie Lee started the ball to rolling for the Tigers in the fourth period when he raced 36 yards for the tally. In Sports Video By EARL MASON Tim*s Sporti Editor Rickey Lanier, Hayes' quar- terback, was hit by a host of Merrick-Moore tacklers and fumbled the ball when he tried to pass from his end zone. Wal- ter Carrington recovered for the Tigers in the end zone for the TD to give M-M a 12-0 lead at the intermission. Hayes took the second half James Newman scampered 25 yards through the middle for the Panthers' third period tally. The sustained 84-yprd drive was highlighted by the running of Monroe Beard. Again Simms kicked the con- version to increase the lead to 14-0 after three quarters of play. Fred Baldwin led the fourth stanza uprising for the NCC Eagles of Coach James Stev- ens. On the first play, Baldwin dropped back to pass but was run out pf the pocket. The freshman quarterback broke in- to the secondary and raced for what looked to be an NCC touchdown; but he threw the ball down before he crossed the goal. The ball rolled out of the end zone, and the officials marked it at the one, and Bald- Continued on page 8A MM, NCC USE SIMULAR TACTICS North Carolina College and Merrick-Moore closed their home football season last week- end. Even though one was a college game and the other a high school title tilt, these school championship tilt, these two teams used simular tactics in winning. Both local schools used fourth quarter spurts to come out on top in close games. Supremes Coming to Raleigh WILD TURKEY 8 YEAR OLD STRAIGHT BOURBON ® WHISKEY- (I 101 PROOF JML £JjstinNicKc: JQ WILD k ft FIFTH TURKEY^ [qjJUCHT BOt RBON WHBKrj I .? TJ qeeebgs^BSD AUSTIN, NICHOLS & CO., INC. NEW YORK, N.Y, PHONE 682-9295 1M 1 . Laundry and 1 11) Lew Cleaners j CASH & CARRY OFFICES Corner Roxboro and Holloway Streets |§! Quick Ai A Wink? Roxboro Rd. at Arondale Dr. B Drive-la, Cer. Broad and Eaglewood Ave. H THE CAROLINA CLASSIC FOOTBALL A&T Aggies vs. N. C. College Eagles THANKSGIVING DAY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25 1:30 P.M. GREENSBORO MEM. STADIUM ADMISSION ... SZSO MUSIC BY: THE AAT COLLEGE MARCHING BAND THE NORTH CAROLINA COLIUGE BAND RALEIGH?The Detroit-based young ladies, The Supremes, Diana Ross, Mary Wilson and Florence Ballard will co-star with The Lovin' Spoonful for Dr. Jocko's 2nd Anniversary at the Raleigh Memorial Audito- rium on Thanksgving night Thursday, November 25. Other outstanding stars to appear in person include Earl Van Dyke, Gene Burks, The Soul Broth- ers, The Earl Van Dyke "Teen Orchestra," L. C. Cooke, John- Ny Taylor and The Upsetters and their great Orchestra. Spe- cial added attraction will fea- ture Dr. Jocko and The Su- premes on stage together. Friday night at the Durham County Stadium, the Merrick- Moore Tigers scored 20 points in the final stanza to break open a close contest for the Eastern 3-A title. This was the second consecutive sectional crown for the Tigers of Coach Harry Edmonds. The North Carolina College Eagles had to come from be- hind ?with a fourth quarter rally against Virginia Union. Coach James Stevens chargers caught fire in the last 15 min- utes of play to pull the game out of the fire, with all 22 points. No title was at stake Satur- day at O'Kelly Field but the Eagles gained prestige by beat- ing Union for the first time in four years. ? ? ? POOR ATTENDANCE AT BOTH GAMES With football season draw- ing near a close, financial re- ceipts at local schools do not look too good. For the simple reason Durham has not sup- ported our area schools 100% percent is never expected in attendance at any local athletic contest, but all the school offi- cials are asking is a large crowd at the games. Proof of the fact that specta- tors have not turned out for the games was present last Friday and Saturday. With Merrick-Moore playing for the Eastern title, the Durham County Stadium should tauve been packed. We cannot get on the field »nd play for the grid- ders but the least we can do is show our loyalty by attend- ing the games. A sparse crowd was on hand for the Saturday afternoon Continued on page 6A For their appearance in Ral- eigh The Supreme is set to give away a new 1966 all chan- nel color TV absolutely free to some lucky person. As Di- ana Ross' said, "I want our visit ~tb Raleigh to be remem- bered and I feel that a color TV set as a gift will long be remembered." THE SUPREMES The old expression, "three's a crowd," can in many ways be applied to Diana, Flo and Mary. Wherever in the world the three appear a crowd is certain to be on hand, since this trio, known collectively as The Supremes, is the leading female vocal group in the mu- sic world today. The Supremes are now in the enviable position of having had three consecutive recordings?- "Where Did Our Love Go," "Baby Love," and "Come See About Me"?reach the number one spot on the sale charts. All of this happened in a three- month period, during which they sold in excess of three, million records. Additionally, they are the first female vocal group in history to attain the coveted status of topping the British record polls. a .'?! M 1 Mp7 I CIRII THANKSGIVING NITE fl THUR NQV.OIS LOOO CHOICE RESERVED SEATS J.SO-GEH ADM J.OO WsmmMlL owayX'(rM| © ? GUARANTEED REAL 100% HUMAN HAIR WigsS- STYLIB4 ONLY $16.95 BUY (2) WIGS FOR $31.93 Deluxe Quality Human Hair Ixtra Thlck-Lonp-Luttroua will Not Mat or Fad* Natural Hair Llim Cloaely ttltehod on ventllat. ad foundation for comfort and fit. Ho Ida all aottlnt* beautifully. Doml ? Dranad for Kaay Styling. Any Color or Send Sample Dealred?Give Head Size. Sond $3 Deposit on eech Item. (Poetal Money Order) Balance C.O.D. Wholeeele dealer* Invited SUSY WIGS 507 9th Ave. Hom York, a Y. 10017 M-M Captures Eastern Crown * * * * * * ********** North Carolina College Defeats 22-14 Cbt Carcftt Qjmes W f[fjji?TiffTHTJNlaT3££a|j M less than six minutes, the Tig- Continued on page 8A D. C. DANCE The first Presidential Inaugu- ral Ball was in 1809 for James Madison, the Catholic Digest re- ports. The first children's parties and first egg rolling on the White House lawn were held during Andrew Jackson's term. NEW! TRY US! THANKSGIVING NOT THANKSKEEPING America's Thanksgiving'table is piled high with the blessings of abundance, while millions of people fight starvation. We have an obligation to these unfortunate ones; so while we give thanks for the blessings which enrich our lives, our happiest observance of*+t|is' Thursday in November will be to increase our generous' contributions to the des- perate need of others. > *-K' ' After all, the word /j is "Thanksgiving," not <1 "Thankskeeping." ? (This bank will be closed on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25) 114 WEST PARRISH IT. OURHAM, N. C. WE ARE PROUD To have had a part in the Remodeling of c ~?* Sincere Congratulations to DURHAM BUSINESS COLLEGE 912 RAMSEUR ST. Phon. 681-2011 6A

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Page 1: North Fred Carcftt Quarter Uprisingnewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1965-11-20/ed-1/seq-6.pdf · ?THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, NOV. 2P, 1098 | Sk».. Vpi ' ";? '-

?THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, NOV. 2P, 1098

| Sk»..Vpi

' ";? ' -<r-i'? ? ''rs;t«cr ,

, L^.i" JMRIOII

-?

;./,»\u25a0%. ?'

Fred Baldwin Shines in Eagles'Fourth Quarter TD Uprising

BY EARL MASON

The North Carolina College

Eagles defeated the Virginia

Union University Panthers forTigers Clinch2nd StraightChampionship

the first time in four years

last Saturday by a score of22-14.

The Eagles scored all theirpoints in the last quarter forthe-come-from behind victoryin a CIAA contest played hereat O ''Kelly Field.

By EARL MASONTimat Sports Editor

Va. Union scored late in thesecond and third quarters be-fore NCC stormed back in its

The Merrick - Moore TigersNCHSAC Eastern 3 A footballwon their second straightchampionship here last Friday

night at the expense of the E.J. Hayes Tigers of Williamston,

32-14. A crowd of about 3,000

spectators gathered at theDurham County Stadium to

witness the titular encounter.Coach Harry Edmond's de-

fending Eastern and State 3-Atitleholders caught fire mid-way the fourth stanza to runaway with the closely foughtcontest. Merrick-Moore scored20 points in five minutes and40 seconds in the last 12 min-ute quarter.

The Durham County elevenhit paydirt in the first and se-

cond periods before the fourthquarter outburst. Hayes scoredfollowing the second half kick-off to make a game of it forthree quarters.

Otha Chavis scooted 43 yardsin the initial stanza for Mer-rick-Moore after Morris Allenrecovered a fumble. The scorecame with 7:22 left in the pe-riod.

kickoff and marched 67 yards

for its first score. Lanier pass-ed to Braxton Speller for thefinal two yards. An attemptedpasi for the conversion was nQgood and with 9:34 left in thethird stanza, Merrick-Mooreheld a slim 12-6 margin.

final home appearance with agallant fourth stanza effort

After a scoreless first quar-

ter, the Panthers hit paydirt

in the waning moments .of thesecond quarter. Irvin Mallory

raced 11 yards for Union's firstTD. James Simms kicked theextra point to give the Rich-mond. Va., eleven a 7-0 half-time lead.

BEARD ON THE MOVE?Vir-|ginia Union University's Mon- |

roe Baard (32) it shown above

picking up yardage against INorth Carolina College in a Igame played between the two Ischools Saturday at O'Kelly

Field on the NCC campus.Beard gained a total of 125 jyards in 17 carries, but his run-ning was in vain as the Eagles

defeated the Panthers 22-14.Coming up to malce the tacklefor NCC is Billy Alsbrooks(26). (NCC Photo)

Freddie Lee started the ballto rolling for the Tigers inthe fourth period when heraced 36 yards for the tally. In

Sports VideoBy EARL MASON

Tim*s Sporti Editor

Rickey Lanier, Hayes' quar-terback, was hit by a host ofMerrick-Moore tacklers andfumbled the ball when he triedto pass from his end zone. Wal-ter Carrington recovered forthe Tigers in the end zone forthe TD to give M-M a 12-0 leadat the intermission.

Hayes took the second half

James Newman scampered25 yards through the middlefor the Panthers' third periodtally. The sustained 84-yprddrive was highlighted by therunning of Monroe Beard.Again Simms kicked the con-

version to increase the lead to14-0 after three quarters ofplay.

Fred Baldwin led the fourthstanza uprising for the NCCEagles of Coach James Stev-ens. On the first play, Baldwindropped back to pass but wasrun out pf the pocket. Thefreshman quarterback broke in-to the secondary and raced forwhat looked to be an NCCtouchdown; but he threw theball down before he crossedthe goal. The ball rolled out ofthe end zone, and the officialsmarked it at the one, and Bald-

Continued on page 8A

MM, NCC USE SIMULARTACTICS

North Carolina College and

Merrick-Moore closed theirhome football season last week-end. Even though one was a

college game and the other ahigh school title tilt, theseschool championship tilt, thesetwo teams used simular tacticsin winning. Both local schoolsused fourth quarter spurts tocome out on top in closegames.

Supremes Coming to Raleigh

WILDTURKEY8 YEAR OLDSTRAIGHT

BOURBON® WHISKEY-(I 101 PROOF

JML£JjstinNicKc: JQWILDk ft FIFTH

TURKEY^[qjJUCHT BOt RBON WHBKrjI .? TJqeeebgs^BSD

AUSTIN, NICHOLS & CO., INC. NEW YORK, N.Y,

PHONE 682-9295

1M 1 .

Laundry and 111)Lew Cleaners jCASH & CARRY OFFICESCorner Roxboro and Holloway Streets

|§! Quick AiA Wink? Roxboro Rd. at Arondale Dr. BDrive-la, Cer. Broad and Eaglewood Ave. H

THE CAROLINA CLASSIC

FOOTBALLA&T Aggies

vs.

N. C. College EaglesTHANKSGIVING DAY

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 251:30 P.M.

GREENSBORO MEM. STADIUMADMISSION ... SZSO

MUSIC BY:THE AAT COLLEGE MARCHING BAND

THE NORTH CAROLINA COLIUGE BAND

RALEIGH?The Detroit-basedyoung ladies, The Supremes,Diana Ross, Mary Wilson andFlorence Ballard will co-starwith The Lovin' Spoonful forDr. Jocko's 2nd Anniversary atthe Raleigh Memorial Audito-rium on Thanksgving nightThursday, November 25. Otheroutstanding stars to appear inperson include Earl Van Dyke,Gene Burks, The Soul Broth-ers, The Earl Van Dyke "TeenOrchestra," L. C. Cooke, John-

Ny Taylor and The Upsetters

and their great Orchestra. Spe-cial added attraction will fea-ture Dr. Jocko and The Su-premes on stage together.

Friday night at the DurhamCounty Stadium, the Merrick-Moore Tigers scored 20 points

in the final stanza to breakopen a close contest for theEastern 3-A title. This was thesecond consecutive sectionalcrown for the Tigers of CoachHarry Edmonds.

The North Carolina CollegeEagles had to come from be-hind ?with a fourth quarterrally against Virginia Union.Coach James Stevens chargers

caught fire in the last 15 min-utes of play to pull the gameout of the fire, with all 22points.

No title was at stake Satur-day at O'Kelly Field but theEagles gained prestige by beat-ing Union for the first time infour years.

? ? ?

POOR ATTENDANCEAT BOTH GAMES

With football season draw-ing near a close, financial re-

ceipts at local schools do notlook too good. For the simple

reason Durham has not sup-ported our area schools 100%percent is never expected inattendance at any local athleticcontest, but all the school offi-cials are asking is a large

crowd at the games.Proof of the fact that specta-

tors have not turned out forthe games was present lastFriday and Saturday. WithMerrick-Moore playing for theEastern title, the DurhamCounty Stadium should tauve

been packed. We cannot get onthe field »nd play for the grid-

ders but the least we can dois show our loyalty by attend-ing the games.

A sparse crowd was on handfor the Saturday afternoon

Continued on page 6A

For their appearance in Ral-eigh The Supreme is set togive away a new 1966 all chan-nel color TV absolutely freeto some lucky person. As Di-ana Ross' said, "I want ourvisit ~tb Raleigh to be remem-bered and I feel that a colorTV set as a gift will long beremembered."

THE SUPREMES

The old expression, "three'sa crowd," can in many waysbe applied to Diana, Flo andMary. Wherever in the worldthe three appear a crowd iscertain to be on hand, sincethis trio, known collectively as

The Supremes, is the leadingfemale vocal group in the mu-sic world today.

The Supremes are now in theenviable position of having hadthree consecutive recordings?-"Where Did Our Love Go,""Baby Love," and "Come SeeAbout Me"?reach the numberone spot on the sale charts. Allof this happened in a three-month period, during whichthey sold in excess of three,million records. Additionally,they are the first female vocalgroup in history to attain thecoveted status of topping theBritish record polls.

a .'?! M 1Mp7I CIRII THANKSGIVING NITE

fl THUR NQV.OISLOOO CHOICE RESERVED SEATS J.SO-GEH ADM J.OO

WsmmMlL owayX'(rM|

©?

GUARANTEED REAL100% HUMAN HAIR

WigsS-STYLIB4ONLY $16.95BUY (2) WIGS FOR $31.93

Deluxe Quality Human HairIxtra Thlck-Lonp-Luttroua

will Not Mat or Fad*Natural Hair Llim

Cloaely ttltehod on ventllat.ad foundation for comfortand fit. Ho Ida all aottlnt*beautifully. Doml ? Dranadfor Kaay Styling.Any Color or Send Sample

Dealred?Give Head Size.Sond $3 Deposit on eechItem.

(Poetal Money Order)Balance C.O.D.

Wholeeele dealer* Invited

SUSY WIGS507 9th Ave.

Hom York, a Y. 10017

M-MCaptures Eastern Crown* * * * * * ***********

North Carolina College Defeats 22-14Cbt Carcftt Qjmes

W f[fjji?TiffTHTJNlaT3££a|j M

less than six minutes, the Tig-Continued on page 8A

D. C. DANCEThe first Presidential Inaugu-

ral Ball was in 1809 for JamesMadison, the Catholic Digest re-

ports. The first children's partiesand first egg rolling on the WhiteHouse lawn were held duringAndrew Jackson's term.

NEW! TRY US!

THANKSGIVINGNOT

THANKSKEEPING

America's Thanksgiving'table is piledhigh with the blessings of abundance, while

millions of people fight starvation.

We have an obligation to these unfortunate ones;

so while we give thanks for the blessings whichenrich our lives, our happiest observance of*+t|is'

Thursday in November will beto increase our generous'contributions to the des-perate need of others.

> *-K' 'After all, the word /jis "Thanksgiving," not <1"Thankskeeping." ?

(This bank will be closed on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25)

114 WEST PARRISH IT. OURHAM, N. C.

WE ARE PROUDTo have had a part

in the Remodeling ofc ~?*

Sincere Congratulations to

DURHAM BUSINESS COLLEGE

912 RAMSEUR ST. Phon. 681-2011

6A