north turns (larijili cbf...

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-SATURDAY, OCTOBER 38, 1988 THE CAROLINA TTMEB- EAGLES CLAW WINSTON-SALEM RAMS 32-12 North Carolina College Turns Three fumbles Into Touchdowns WINSTON-SALEM North Carolina College turned three recpvered fumbles and a block* ed punt into touchdown* as the Eagles defeated the Wlni- ton-Salem State College Rams, 32-12, here Saturday afternoon in a CIAA contest played in rain-soaked Bowman Gray Sta- dium. f The Eagles capitallnd on two Winston-Salem fumbles for a pair of quick touchdowns Ih the first period only to see the Rams come back to tie the score, 12-12, with two tlx pointers in the initial quarter. The Durham eleven stormed back to put the game out of reach with one touchdown In the third stanza and two more tallies in the final period. A fired-up defense for the Eagles limited the Twin C|ty charges to?3l yards total of- fense and no first downs In the second half after the two teams battled to a 12-12 tie. at the break. A total of 18 fum- bles, 10 by NCC, plagued the two teams throughout the after- noon but the Eagles were able to turn their three recovered fumbles into scores. NOO lost two fumbles. NCC's Charles Bellinger fell on a Winston-Salem fumble, on the second play of the game on the Ram's 40. It took the Bull City forces seven plays to cash in on the miscue as Herman Mathews passed 20 yards to Juliah Martin for the score. A pass for the conver- sion fell Incomplete. Following the ensuing kick- off, Winston-Salem coughed up the ball on the first play as the alert Russell Price was there to fall on the bell at the home stander's 23. Mathews romped into the end lone from 11 yards out to give the Eagles a 12-0 advantage with 10:18 left in the period. The not-to-be-denied Rims got on the score board four minutes later when Larry Brat- cher broke through to block a punt and Ronald Brandon fell on the ball in the end zone for the TD. Melvin McNair« passed 11 yards to Brent Cromwell for a Ram The thirit stanza turrftfigjNty to be a decisive punting slrug- glie before Joseph Harrell re- covered a Winston-Salem fum- ble at the Ram's five. Thur. man Jones plunged over from the one. The Eagles put together their longest scoring drive of the day early in the last quarter, going 57 yards in seven plays. Jones climaxed the drive with a five- yard run. George Smith blocked a punt at the Ram's nine with time running out. Roger Foust bulled over from the one with 52 sec- onds remaining in the contest. Jones was the workhorse for the Eagles, picking up 61 yards I M \u25a0Rr H JR. II BL ePK TO COACH IASTIRN ALL- STAM?George Quiett, acting head football coach at North Carolina College, will be one of the assistant coaches for the East staff in the aecond an- nual Sudan Temple All-Star football game. The game, matching college seniors in North Carolina, will be played November 90 in Raleigh. Bill Dooley of the "University of North Carolina and Hanley Painter, head coach at Lenoir Rhyne, are the other coachaa for the East. -M I s M RETIRING Els ton Howard, one of baseball's oil-time. great catchers, said yesterday heJ,s retir- ing as' a plover. Howard, was plagued this post season by an arthritic con- in 19 carries. Ollls Carson was another bright spot for the Ea- gles, returning six punts for 130 yards. NCC now stands 2-1 in con- ference play and over-all while the Rams, who went down to their third straight defeat, are 0-3 in the CIAA and 1-3 over- all. The Eagles will celebrate homecoming when they play host to Maryland State College Saturday. Score by quarters: N. C. C 12 0 8 12?32 Win-Sal 12 0 0 o?l2 Cbf (LarijiLi fiinfo " ' DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA " : 3 NCC Players Nominated For Eastman Squad Hiree North Carolina Col- lege football players have been nominated as potential mem- bers of the Eastman Kodak's College Division All-American football squad. Quarterback Herman Mat- hews and split end Julian Mar tin are listed as possible of- fensive selections while Doug- las- Wiikerson heads the list for the deffensive unit The final selection of the twenty-two man squad will be made for Kodak by a special committee ' of the American Football Coaches' Association in late November. Mathews is a 5-9, 176- pound junior from Tampa, Florida and Martin is a 6-1, 195-pound junior from New Bern North Carolina. Wiiker- son, also a junior, Is a 6-4, 240-pounder from Fsyettevilie, North Carolina. Mathews and Martin com- prise the Eases' M and M com- bination. At sophomores last year, Mathews completed 58 of 117 paasaft for 1,169 yards and nine touchdowns while Martin caught 80 paaaes for 787 yards and four TDs. Wilkenon and Martin wen named to tie AD-CIA A first team last year as sophomores. Both are prime candidates to repeat this honor Oils season. OUR WORLD OF SPORTS A&T Aggies Swamp Norfolk State Team 61-14 OREENSBORO Rampag- ing A&T uaed a brilliant per formance by quarterback Stan Jacobs and Ail-American can- didate Willie Pearson to trounce Norfolk State, 61-14 in a Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) football game here Saturday night. It was the third straight win for the Aggies and by fai their finest showing of the young season. The favored Spartans never had a chance as Jacobs, a deadly passer, kept the air fill- ed with his tosses most of the evening, When the smoke had cleared, Jacobs had completed 13 of 23 passes for 234 yards and four touchdowns, all to Pearson. More than 10,000 fans watched as the -quick Aggies struck for one touchdown in the first period, three In the second period, four in the third quarter and one in the final period. Hie other A&T points came on two short plunges by full- back Dick Armstrong, a 50- yard runback after interception by Freshman tackle Ralph Cole man, a 40-yard pass from re- serve quarterback Charles Mid- dleton to end Daryle Cherry, and a 12-yard run by Willie Pearson's brother, Lorenzo. Freshman Eric Cox's seven placements completed the scoring for A&T. Norfolk State's two scores came In the third and fourth quarters re- spectively. At 13:45 of the third peri- od, the Spartans' spunky quart- erback Ike Fullard tossed a 59-yard strike to flanker Rae Jarvis and Kenny Edmonds converted to cut the A&Tlead to 28-7. Midway the final period, fullback Pettus Farrar plunged across the goal line from the one yard line, but by then the Spartans were trailing, 55-14. Jacobs, a sophomore transfer student, has already shattered several A&T records. His me- thodical destruction of Nor- r\ fll i N*~» V . tpTrA^^^^At' JtnrientJlje \u25a0l""'' STRAIGHT Si KENTUCKY BOURBON Km $095 mam PINT 4/5 QT. STRAIGHTKENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKY ? 86 PROOf ? 8 YEARS 010 ANCIENT AGE OIST. CO., FRANKFORT, KY. folk State was really accom- plished In the first half when he piled up 131 yards In pass- ing. It was the finest perform- ance of Pearson's career. The 195-pound senior from Win- ston-Salem, caught six passes in the game for 133 yards. Jacobs spent nearly the en- tire last quarter on the bench, but Middle ton and a third pas- ser, Jerome Turner kept the ball rolling. In all, the Aggies gained 340 yards passing to 164 for Norfolk State. A&T also led J. C SMITH MVP?Johnson C.I Smith University sophomore defensive end Larry Jones re- ceives the Coca-Cola Player of the Week Award from Coke representative Ceaser Wallace for his outstanding defensive play against A&T State Univer- sity. Jones, a Durham native and '67 graduate of Merrick- Moore High School, is consid- ered one of the Bulls' leading pro prospects of the future, in rushing, 161 yards to 124. The Aggies' stout defense kept the clamps on Norfolk State's fallback Larry James, holding him to 26 yards on the ground. Fred D * McNeill Jr. MM County Board of Education Durham County, November 5 ? Former Classroom Teacher and Football Coach ? Holder 8J3., M.S., and Principal's Certificate, North Carolina College . \u2713 Supplemental Training: Wisconsin State, and North Carolina State University ? Former Associate Director N. C. Teachers Associa- tion and Treasurer of Its Credit Union ? Program Associate Learning Institute of N. C. YOUR SUPPORT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 WILL BE GREATLY APPRECIATED Exciting F HOMECOMING \u2605\u2605\u2605 \u2605 \u2605 A.&T.STATE UNIVERSITY "AGGIES" MORGAN STATE "BEARS" SAT., NOV. 2nd _ KICKOFF 1:30 P. M. GREENSBORO MEMORIAL STADIUM Big, Spectacular Pre-Oame Parade. color- l£/*f ful half-time show featuring the famous K. I A. A T. Marching Band plus prancing, Tl 1?\ gorgeous majorettes. V" 1 | General Admission $3.00 jQjF] Reserved Seats $3.50 & $4.00 Children SI.OO VA Advance Tickets On Sale In A. & T. Bookstore Located In Memorial Union tMundnl mn * I \u25a0 CJUH & CARRY \u25a0 ; :T ' ?< Brihrnaytmwti \u25a0." H i \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 cw«i an A V (mu uaiwmto 'v, ;\u25a0 , *** A W>|fc »iiU. M. ai AmM* Ofti; 808 SCOTT IS THE MAN TO LEAD NORTH CAROLINA "V. FORWARD fiST* HE WANTS YOUR VOTE von 808 SCOTT FOR GOVERNOR Dtrk» Cintf CiaaitlM Ftr lib Scttt 7A

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Page 1: North Turns (LarijiLi Cbf fiinfonewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1968-10-26/ed-1/seq-7.pdf · Rhyne, are the other coachaa for the East.-M Is M RETIRING Els ton Howard, one

-SATURDAY, OCTOBER 38, 1988 THE CAROLINA TTMEB-

EAGLES CLAW WINSTON-SALEM RAMS 32-12North Carolina College TurnsThree fumbles Into Touchdowns

WINSTON-SALEM NorthCarolina College turned threerecpvered fumbles and a block*ed punt into touchdown* asthe Eagles defeated the Wlni-ton-Salem State College Rams,32-12, here Saturday afternoonin a CIAA contest played inrain-soaked Bowman Gray Sta-dium. f

The Eagles capitallnd ontwo Winston-Salem fumbles fora pair of quick touchdowns Ihthe first period only to see theRams come back to tie thescore, 12-12, with two tlxpointers in the initial quarter.

The Durham eleven stormedback to put the game out ofreach with one touchdown Inthe third stanza and two moretallies in the final period.

A fired-up defense for theEagles limited the Twin C|tycharges to?3l yards total of-fense and no first downs Inthe second half after the twoteams battled to a 12-12 tie. atthe break. A total of 18 fum-bles, 10 by NCC, plagued thetwo teams throughout the after-noon but the Eagles were ableto turn their three recoveredfumbles into scores. NOO losttwo fumbles.

NCC's Charles Bellinger fellon a Winston-Salem fumble, onthe second play of the gameon the Ram's 40. It took theBull City forces seven plays

to cash in on the miscue asHerman Mathews passed 20yards to Juliah Martin for the

score. A pass for the conver-sion fell Incomplete.

Following the ensuing kick-off, Winston-Salem coughed upthe ball on the first play as

the alert Russell Price was

there to fall on the bell at thehome stander's 23. Mathewsromped into the end lone from11 yards out to give the Eagles

a 12-0 advantage with 10:18left in the period.

The not-to-be-denied Rimsgot on the score board fourminutes later when Larry Brat-cher broke through to block a

punt and Ronald Brandon fellon the ball in the end zone forthe TD.

Melvin McNair« passed 11yards to Brent Cromwell for aRam

The thirit stanza turrftfigjNtyto be a decisive punting slrug-

glie before Joseph Harrell re-covered a Winston-Salem fum-ble at the Ram's five. Thur.

man Jones plunged over from

the one.The Eagles put together their

longest scoring drive of the day

early in the last quarter, going

57 yards in seven plays. Jones

climaxed the drive with a five-yard run.

George Smith blocked a puntat the Ram's nine with timerunning out. Roger Foust bulledover from the one with 52 sec-onds remaining in the contest.

Jones was the workhorse for

the Eagles, picking up 61 yards

IM \u25a0Rr

H JR.II BL ePK

TO COACH IASTIRN ALL-STAM?George Quiett, actinghead football coach at NorthCarolina College, will be oneof the assistant coaches for theEast staff in the aecond an-nual Sudan Temple All-Starfootball game. The game,matching college seniors inNorth Carolina, will be playedNovember 90 in Raleigh. BillDooley of the "University ofNorth Carolina and HanleyPainter, head coach at LenoirRhyne, are the other coachaafor the East.

-M

Is

M

RETIRING Els tonHoward, one of baseball'soil-time. great catchers,said yesterday heJ,s retir-ing as' a plover. Howard,was plagued this postseason by an arthritic con-

in 19 carries. Ollls Carson wasanother bright spot for the Ea-gles, returning six punts for130 yards.

NCC now stands 2-1 in con-ference play and over-all whilethe Rams, who went down totheir third straight defeat, are0-3 in the CIAA and 1-3 over-all. The Eagles will celebratehomecoming when they play

host to Maryland State College

Saturday.Score by quarters:

N. C. C 12 0 8 12?32Win-Sal 12 0 0 o?l2

Cbf (LarijiLifiinfo"

' DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA" :

3 NCC PlayersNominated ForEastman Squad

Hiree North Carolina Col-

lege football players have been

nominated as potential mem-bers of the Eastman Kodak'sCollege Division All-Americanfootball squad.

Quarterback Herman Mat-

hews and split end Julian Mar

tin are listed as possible of-

fensive selections while Doug-las- Wiikerson heads the list

for the deffensive unit

The final selection of the

twenty-two man squad will be

made for Kodak by a specialcommittee ' of the American

Football Coaches' Association

in late November.Mathews is a 5-9, 176-

pound junior from Tampa,Florida and Martin is a 6-1,

195-pound junior from New

Bern North Carolina. Wiiker-

son, also a junior, Is a 6-4,

240-pounder from Fsyettevilie,North Carolina.

Mathews and Martin com-prise the Eases' M and M com-bination. At sophomores lastyear, Mathews completed 58

of 117 paasaft for 1,169 yardsand nine touchdowns whileMartin caught 80 paaaes for787 yards and four TDs.

Wilkenon and Martin wennamed to tie AD-CIAA first

team last year as sophomores.Both are prime candidates to

repeat this honor Oils season.

OUR WORLD OF

SPORTSA&T Aggies Swamp Norfolk State Team 61-14

OREENSBORO Rampag-ing A&T uaed a brilliant performance by quarterback Stan

Jacobs and Ail-American can-didate Willie Pearson totrounce Norfolk State, 61-14in a Central IntercollegiateAthletic Association (CIAA)football game here Saturdaynight.

It was the third straightwin for the Aggies and by faitheir finest showing of theyoung season.

The favored Spartans neverhad a chance as Jacobs, adeadly passer, kept the air fill-ed with his tosses most of theevening, When the smoke hadcleared, Jacobs had completed13 of 23 passes for 234 yards

and four touchdowns, all toPearson.

More than 10,000 fanswatched as the -quick Aggiesstruck for one touchdown inthe first period, three In thesecond period, four in the thirdquarter and one in the final

period.Hie other A&T points came

on two short plunges by full-back Dick Armstrong, a 50-yard runback after interceptionby Freshman tackle Ralph Coleman, a 40-yard pass from re-serve quarterback Charles Mid-dleton to end Daryle Cherry,and a 12-yard run by WilliePearson's brother, Lorenzo.

Freshman Eric Cox's sevenplacements completed thescoring for A&T. Norfolk

State's two scores came In thethird and fourth quarters re-spectively.

At 13:45 of the third peri-od, the Spartans' spunky quart-erback Ike Fullard tossed a59-yard strike to flanker RaeJarvis and Kenny Edmondsconverted to cut the A&Tleadto 28-7.

Midway the final period,fullback Pettus Farrar plungedacross the goal line from theone yard line, but by then theSpartans were trailing, 55-14.Jacobs, a sophomore transferstudent, has already shatteredseveral A&T records. His me-thodical destruction of Nor-

r\

fll i N*~»V . tpTrA^^^^At'

JtnrientJlje\u25a0l""'' STRAIGHTSi KENTUCKY

BOURBON

Km $095mam PINT

4/5 QT.

STRAIGHTKENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKY ? 86 PROOf ? 8 YEARS 010ANCIENT AGE OIST. CO., FRANKFORT, KY.

folk State was really accom-plished In the first half whenhe piled up 131 yards In pass-ing.

It was the finest perform-ance of Pearson's career. The195-pound senior from Win-ston-Salem, caught six passesin the game for 133 yards.

Jacobs spent nearly the en-

tire last quarter on the bench,but Middle ton and a third pas-ser, Jerome Turner kept theball rolling.

In all, the Aggies gained340 yards passing to 164 forNorfolk State. A&T also led

J. C SMITH MVP?Johnson C.ISmith University sophomore

defensive end Larry Jones re-ceives the Coca-Cola Player ofthe Week Award from Cokerepresentative Ceaser Wallacefor his outstanding defensiveplay against A&T State Univer-sity. Jones, a Durham nativeand '67 graduate of Merrick-Moore High School, is consid-ered one of the Bulls' leadingpro prospects of the future,

in rushing, 161 yards to 124.

The Aggies' stout defense kept

the clamps on Norfolk State'sfallback Larry James, holdinghim to 26 yards on the ground.

Fred D *

McNeill Jr. MM

County Board ofEducation

Durham County, November 5? Former Classroom Teacher and Football Coach? Holder 8J3., M.S., and Principal's Certificate,

North Carolina College .\u2713

Supplemental Training: Wisconsin State, andNorth Carolina State University

? Former Associate Director N. C. Teachers Associa-tion and Treasurer of Its Credit Union

? Program Associate Learning Institute of N. C.YOUR SUPPORT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 WILL

BE GREATLY APPRECIATED

Exciting FHOMECOMING

\u2605\u2605\u2605 \u2605 \u2605

A.&T.STATEUNIVERSITY "AGGIES"

MORGAN STATE"BEARS"

SAT., NOV. 2nd _

KICKOFF 1:30 P. M.

GREENSBOROMEMORIAL STADIUMBig, Spectacular Pre-Oame Parade. color- l£/*fful half-time show featuring the famous K. IA. A T. Marching Band plus prancing, Tl 1?\gorgeous majorettes. V" 1 |

General Admission $3.00 jQjF]Reserved Seats $3.50 & $4.00

Children SI.OO VAAdvance Tickets On Sale In A. & T.

Bookstore Located In Memorial Union

tMundnl mn * I\u25a0 CJUH & CARRY

\u25a0 ; :T ' ?< Brihrnaytmwti \u25a0."H i\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 cw«i an AV (mu uaiwmto 'v, ;\u25a0

, ***A« A W>|fc »iiU. M. ai AmM* Ofti;

808 SCOTTIS THE MAN TO LEAD

NORTH CAROLINA"V.

FORWARD

fiST*

HE WANTS YOURVOTE

von 808 SCOTT FOR

GOVERNORDtrk» Cintf CiaaitlM Ftr lib Scttt

7A