OCR Interpretation


Jackson advocate. [volume] (Jackson, Miss.) 1939-current, October 13, 1962, Image 7

Image and text provided by Mississippi Department of Archives and History

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn79000083/1962-10-13/ed-1/seq-7/

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See JSC Tigers And Alcorn Braves
In Grudge Game Saturday Night
The Jackson State College
Tigers scored in every stanza
in their 1962 Homecoming fea
ture attraction as they romped
to a 61-0 victory over the Ark
ansas AM&N Golden Lions.
The Tigers scored with seven
minutes left in the first quarter
when Roy Curry, senior All
America Tiger quarterback,
i went over from the seven-yard
line to climax a 73-yard drive.
Curry’s pass to Dan Pride gave
the Tigers and 8-0 lead. Min
utes later, “Big Ben” McGee,
the Tigers’ one-man gang,
blocked an Arkansas punt and
Willie Richardson covered the
ball for the Tigers’ second
score. The Curry-to-Pride com
bination clicked again to add
two points.
Louis McRae put back-to-back
touchdowns in the record book
as he sneaked over from the
three and ran 60 yards for his
second TD. Curry passed to Al
bert Greer for two points after
McRae’s three-yard run. Con
version following the 60 - yard
run failed.
Leslie Duncan scored from
the seven and Curry’s aerial hit
its target, Willie Richardson,
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for two points. Pride blocked an
Arkansas punt on the Lions’ one
and on the next play Curry
handed off to Alonzo Clark for
another TD. Jordan converted.
Reuben Marshall ran around
right end from the three-yard
line to end the scoring.
Jackson picked up 23 first
downs to seven for Arkansas,
gained 435 yards to 41 for the
Lions. The Tigers had 171 yards
passing to eight for Arkansas
and 264 yards rushing.
-o
School Of...
(Continued From Page One)
by Mrs. Marie Best, instructor,
school of pharmacy; “An Insur
ance Program for Pharmacists,”
by A. W. Sullivan, vice-presi
dent, Midyette-Moor Insurance
Agency; and “Investment for
the Pharmacist,” by William
Calder, manager, A. M. Kidder
and Company.
The second session featured
discussions on “Pharmacy and
the State Board: New Phar
macy Regulations,” by F. A.
Canova, executive secretary of
the State Board of Pharmacy;
and “Prescription Pricing Pol
icy — How to Compute the
Professional Fee,” by Hurd
Jones, professor of pharmacy at
FAMU.
W. S. Holt, manager of the
Eli Lilly Co., Jacksonville Dis
trict, spoke on “The Customer
and Public Relations” during
the third session.
The final session was a sym
posium on employer - employee
relations. The speakers were:
Joseph Awkard, head, depart
ment of psychology, FAMU;
Carl Andrews Jr., FAMU Uni
versity Hospital pharmacist; Mr.
Holt, and John R. Foxx of the
FAM'U school of pharmacy.
The seminar ended with a buf
fet dinner for the participants
in Jones Hall.
: call a :
;DOTTY CAB;
' DAY OR NIGHT ;
; FL 2-4494 !
; RADIO EQUIPPED ;
(This Space Reserved) •
r—:-——————
THE ROSE STREET NURSERY
AND KINDERGARTEN
821 Rose Street
Approved By
State Department Of Public Welfare Child Division
NOW OPEN
FOR CHILDREN FROM TWO TO
SIX YEARS OF AGE
FROM S A. M. TO 3 P. M. DAILY
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
Mrs. Frances R. Greene DIAL
FL 2-1213
■—^g———————■ ' ■■ —— ■ ■■ ————
j People, Spots In The News
TAPS? No, just heat exhaus
tion felled this gallant bugler,
17, as “he crossed finish line
in band contest in Rochester,
S-CURVE handsomely marks
Alpine road and bridge over
reservoir in Neufall, Germany.
WINNER of three beau
ty titles in Europe in
three months: Barbara
Balestrino of Union City,
N.J.
‘ECONOMY HOUSE,’ painted, decorated and finished by
owner, is typical of new trend in low-cost housing. This,
one of several models designed by Institute for Essential
Housing, Wayne, Pa., was financed by Universal C.I.T.
Credit Corporation, with lot as “downpayment.”
Senate...
| (Continued From Page One)
dorsed his nomination in glow
ing terms.
Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa.),
the highest integrity and abi
lity” and that he was “confident
that Higginbotham will make
an outstanding Federal Trade
I Commissioner.”
Admitted to the Pennsylvania
bar in 1953, the new FTC mem
ber a former Mayor of philadel
phia, said Higginbotham was
“a man of has practiced law in
Philadelphia since 1954 specia
lize in civil and appellate suits.
He has been a special deputy
attorney for the state on pro
blems of escheat, those cases
involving the return of proper
ty to a proper claimant.
-o
United Supreme.
(Continued From Page One)
16th, at the Masonic Temple.
Representatives from all of
the Southern States, and from
California, Arizonia, New Mex
ico, Haiti, Hawaii and Liberia
Africa will attend the session.
Divine services will be held
at the Pearl Street A. M. E.
Church on Sunday night, Oct.
14 with the sermon being de
livered by Dr. Charles W.
Stewart, pastor of an A. M. E.
Church in Buffalo, N. Y.
--.
Dr. Charles H. Wesley, pre
sident of the Central State Col
lege, Wilberforce, Ohio, will be
the principal speaker at the an
nual banquet to be held Monday
night.
Candidates will be elevated to
the 33rd. and last degree at the
Monday session at 3 p. m. in the
temple building. Presiding will
be Dr. John G. Lewis, Jr., sov
ereign grand commander, Baton
Rouge, La., and hosts will be
r 1,1 1 ———
Southwestern
Athletic Conff.
Round-Up
Two Conference games fea
tured last week-ends action in
The Southwestern Athletic Con
ference.
The Wiley Wildcats took the
measure of Hie Alcorn College
Braves as Alcorn made her in
itial start in the league. Alcorn
jumped in front near the end of
the first period on a twenty yard
pass play from Jim Davis to
Charley Jones. Lonnie Taylor, a
halfback, scored the first two
touchdowns for Wiley. The first
on a 34 yard pass, and the sec
ond on a 12 yard run. In the
fourth quarter, Bill Henry, and
Fred Dotson added touchdowns
as the 41st team coached by
Fred Long opened Conference
MVC Devils Host
Grambling Sat
Itta Bena, Miss. — One of
the nation’s perennially top
ranked grid powers will be seen
in action here Saturday night
when the vaunted Grambling
College Tigers invade Magnolia
Stadium to clash with the host
Mississippi Vocational College
Delta Devils.
The Devils, who have yet to
beat the Tigers in a series dat
ing back to 1957, will be out to
pull the upset of the year by
toppling the Louisiana invaders
who are known for their damag.
ing display of grid power.
MVC mentor Douglas T. Port
er will pull out all stops as his
Devils will seek to take the mea
sure of Coach Eddie Robinson’s
G-Men. Porter is reticent about
the attack he will use, but ex
pressed optimism that his boys
will be “up and ready” for this
game.
At presstime word was re
ceived that the Grambling Col
lege band, which was slated to
share halftime activities with
the 101-member Marching MVC
Band, will not be able to appear.
Halftime will be by the MVC
Band conducted by Ruessell
Boone and the high school bands
on campus for the college’s sec
ond annual Band Day.
Kickoff is 7:30 p. m.
the Council of Deliberation of
Mississippi, and the Stringer
Grand Lodge of Miss., of whi^i
James G. Giliam, Clarksdale is
FOOTBALL
MISSISSIPPI
VOCATIONAL
COLLEGE
THE DELTA DEVILS
vs
GRAMDLING COLLEGE
TIGERS
GRAMBLING, LOUISIANA
MAGNOLIA STADIUM
ITTA BENA, MISS.
SATURDAY OCTOBER 13th
KICKOFF 7:30 PJW.
GENERAL ADMISSION ...$1.50
STUDENTS.75«
—■ ' — , 1 ”m*
play with a 28-7 victory.
At Southern, 23,000 fans
watched Southern dominate of
fensive play by poling up a
271-98 total offense edge over
C rambling only to lose 14-3.
Late in the first quarter, after
two field goal attempts had gone
haywire, Southern was on the
march again when a halfback
fumbled when tackled, and J.
D. Garrett, Grambling fullback
intercepted in mid-air, and raced
47 yards for a touchdown. In
the second quarter, Southern
turned an intercepted pass into
a field goal, and on the attempt
ed on-side kick-off, Charles
Cook, Grambling End rumbled
61 yards to end scoring for the
day. It was hard nose football
at its best as Southern had first
and goal at least six times only
to have Grambling’s forward
wall throw them back.
It was a great doy for ends
and in Non-Conference Games
they dominated scoring. At Mis
sissippi Vocational, League
Champs Jackson State swamped
Mississippi Vocational College
as Willie Richardson caught
eight passes good for 198 yards,
and three touchdowns. He added
one catch for a two point con
version as he took the lead in
Conference scoring with 32
points. Jackson State was warm
ing up for homecoming Satur
day against Arkansas State who
crushed Jarvis 66-6 in Pine Bluff
Saturday night. Lugene Jones,
punt return specialist scored
three touchdowns, and All-A
merica Paul McPherson two to
lead Coach Van Johnson to his
first win as Head Coach.
Texas Southern University
playing under wraps before her
Conference game with Prairie
View in Houston Saturday night
sprung Charles Green for the
first score on quartebrack roll
out, Matt Batts for a four yard
quickie before hitting Warren
Wells for three passes of 54,
32 and 8 yards as the big end
was determined to make his
presence felt. Halfback Scruggs
ended the scoring with a 23
yard scamper as Texas South
ern downed Bishop 42-6.
JSC Tigers la 51-0 Victory
Over Arkaesas Golden Lien
rnt v i ^ ..
Ana it sun ouiie v^ouege
Tigers, sporting four decisive
victories, journey to Alcorn
A&M College Saturday for their
third Southwest Conference en
counter. Playing on their own
reservation, the Braves are ex
pected to go into their war
dance in an attempt to drum up
the most furious attack since
General Custer's Last Stand.
The Braves lost their first
and only game of the season to
Wiley College two weeks ago.
Tiger supporters believe that
the Braves were looking ahead
to the Jackson State College en
counter when the Wildcats
clawed them to the tune of 28
7.
The 1961 Southwest champ
ions will go into the Alcorn
game with the best defense re
cord in the conference, an aver
age of 69.5 total points per
game. Two of their four oppon
ents have been held to negative
yardage rushing. The Tigers
dominate every department in
SWAC statistics. In a grudge
game such as the upcoming
Braves-Tigers clash, they will
have to earn any improvement
in these figures.
The October 13 game is sche
duled for Alcorn's Henderson
Stadium at 7:30 p. m.
In addition, to the two Confer
ence games on Saturday, Octob
er 6, 1962, Southern journeys
to Dillard University to meet a
team that downed Alabama St.
48.6. Grambling will be at home
to Tennessee State upset by
Morris Brown, and Wiley goes
to Dallas to play Bishop.
STANDINGS
Conference
W. L PCT
G rambling 1 o 1000
Jackson St. Col 1 0 1000
Texas S. Uni. 1 o 1000
r—
Wiley College 1 0 1000
Ark. AM&N Col 0 0 000
Alcorn College 0 1 000
Prairie View 0 1 000
Southern Uni. 0 2 000
All Games
W L PCT
Jackson State 3 0 1000
Grambling Col. 2 0 1000
Texas Southern 2 0 1000
Wiley College 1 0 1000
Alcorn College 1 1 500
Ar/ AM&N 1 1 500
Prairie View 0 1 000
Southern Uni. 0 2 000
DON'T GAMBLE
WHEN YOU CHOOSE
YOUR NEXT CAR
We Stand Squarely Behind Every Car We Sell.
Ask Any of Our Hundreds of Regular Customers
CRAIGO, MOTORS, Inc.
Plymouth - Valiant - Chrysler * Imperial
419 S. Gallatin St. Jackson, Miss.
FOOTBALL
JACKSON STATE COLLEGE
TIGERS
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS
VS
ALCORN A&M COLLEGE
BRAVES
ANNUAL RENEWAL OF TRADITIONAL RIVALRY
SPECIAL HALF-TIME SHOW
AT
HENDERSON FIELD
ALCORN COLLEGE, MISS.
SATURDAY OCTOBER 13TH
KICKOFF 7:30 PM
GENERAL ADMISSION..$2.50
STUDENT ADMISSION.$1.00

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