Everybody Out For Every Basketball Game MAROON AND GOLD Let’s Back Those riffhtins C hristian C'agers VOLUME 33 I'LOX C'')r,-'rr;T- y p ttFDXESnAY, .lANlARY 13, 1954 NUMBER 7 Elon Alumni Of Alciniance At Banquet Merriment and good felowship fpstured tlie anual Isantjuet meet ing of the Alamance County Chap ter of the Elon College Alumni Association which was held in the collcse dining hall herer at 7:30 ocl'.ck last Wednesday night. Jan- uaiy Wi'- The meeting, which was hailed as being definitely the most suc- cesful in the history of the local alumni group, attracted more than 100 former Elon students from Burlington and other Alamance Couiitj communities. Presided ever by Woody Wilson, Burlington business man, who is president of the Alamance County organization, the banquet session kept serious business affairs to a minimum, with a program that emphasized entertainment, of the light and enjoyable typo, and de licious food and beautifully deco rated tables contributed to en joyment of all present. The invocation was by Dr. -John G. Truitt, with the alumni g.^estt welcomed back to the Elon campus by Mrs. Scott Boyd, Elen's alum ni secretary. Greetings were also extended by Dr. Leon E. SnilLh. Elon College president, and by William B. Terrell, of Warrenton who is president of the General Alumni Association of the col lege. A special feature of the ban quet was the presentation of mis cellaneous gifts from the alumni to Prof. and Mrs. A. L. Hook, who are at this time beginning con struction of a new home to replace the one which was destroyed by fire early last fall. The presenta tion was made by Eugene A. Gor don, Burlington attorney, who ex tended the greetings and good wishes from Elon aiumni in tliis area. Prof. John Foster West, Elon faculty member from tlie college’s English Department, who is known for his activities as a writer and poet, brought roars of laughter from the alumni audience with a humorous address that climaxed the evening program. His address followed a series of musical numbers and skits, which had been presented by Elon stu dents under the direction of Prof. John Westmoreland. The student program included two skits by La- verne Brady, a senipr girl of Ilob- Wns, and four musical numbers by student singers. First of the musical offerings was ■■You'll Never Walk Alone,” rendered in entrancing style by a tliorus of more than thirty student singers. Tliis was followed by The Bitterness of Love,” tenor solo by Jerry Smyre of Greens- boro, Take Joy Home,” by Ju- dith Ingram, soprano soloist, also of Greensboro; and by ‘Make Be- with the two soloists in ^net combination. Accompanying TYPICAL SNAPSHOTS OF FOiniEK ELO\ FOOTBALL STAR AND PRO HOXEK Pictuied abo\e in two shots that .jp.fied his athletic career is Joe Colombek. a former Elon foot'iall great, whose mysterious dea h was discovered when liis body \,as unccvtiet. in a lonely grave on Long Island just before Christmas. Golombek. who came to E on from Portsmouth, Va., is pic ured at the left in an lilon uni form in tlic period during the late ’thirties when he was staning and earning All-State honors as a Christian fullback grid star and boxer whil^ he was fighting as a professional boxer in the Norfolk-Portsmouth area in eastern Virginia portrays graphically Golomhek's trcmcndcus strength. A later sh t on the right pictures the big Taken as a publicity 'unt -hot. that picture all the singers at the piano was Shirley Cox. of Elon College. Church Speaker t^oiiiing To Eloii Elden Mills, pastor of the “■“t Congregational Christian West Hartford, Conn., one ^ outstanding religious speak- and leaders in his field, will PPsar on the Elon Campus for a Mies of services during the week ^Sinning February 8th and end- “8 February I4th. Appearing as a representative he Home Board of the Congre- Christian Church in ■ rica Dr. Mills will speak to Elon student body in chapel each morning during his Former The mysterious death of a for mer Elon football star, whose body was discovered by New York po lice in a lonely grave on Long Island sent the name of Elen Col lege rocketing over Associated Press wires to the front pages of newspapers from coast to coast during the Christmas holidays. The body of the man. later iden tified as Joe Golombek. once a brilliant fullback for the Fighting Christian football squad, was dis-1 covered on Tuesday, December 22nd. and the first stories hit the| afternoon newspapers the follow-1 day. while the New Y’ork authori-j ties were still seeking to estab-1 lish the identity of the slain man.' Identity was established within! twenty-four hours, and the morn-, ing papers on Thursday, Decern- j ber 24th, carried Associated Press; dispatches which stated definitely that the slain man was Joe Gol-j ombek, the former resident of , Portsmouth, Va., who won football laurels at Elon College, later ■ fought as a profesional boxer and j then chose a career as a soldier in the United States Amy Air Forces. ' The first news stories told how New York police, following up a, tip contained in an unsigned let-| ter, uncovered Golombek's body j in a shallow grave in a remote clearing, not far from Long; Island’s Great South Bay, and thej lone clue at first as to his identity! was an Elon College ring for the Class of 1947, which bore the nni- tials “J. G.” inside. The authorities also had evi dence from the unsigned letter, which had been addressed to the commander of the Westover Air Force Base, Chicopee Fall, Mass., and which stated that the dead man had been in the Army Air Forces. Search of his clothing al so revealed a cleaners tag fromj Portsmouth, Va, ■ | The Greensboro Daily Newsj staff upon receipt of the press dispatches, contacted Elon College authorities on W'ednesday after noon, December 22nd, and a check of alumni records disclosed that the only graduate either 1947 or 1948 whose_ initials were ”J. G.’ was Golombek, and the same alumni records disclosed that the big athlete had been in the Army Air Forces at latest report and that he had been originally from Portsmouth. His Air Force serial number, as recorded here in 1948, were forwarded to the news agen cy on the chance that it might lead to identification through the finger prints in the War Depart ment files. In the meantime, however, iden- Elon Athlete Is Mysteriously Slain Body Of Joe Golombek Discovered On Lono^ Island; Death Unsolved lification had been made that battered too badly to be recog- friends in Brooklyn. They also same day by the statements of nized. : stated that at the time of the visit two of Golombek’s friends in New ] The two friends, David Rosen, Golombek was on a 12-day pass Y’ork, who were located through, 24, and James Johnson. 23. told I from Westover Air Force Base, a telephone number written on police that they last saw Golom- ' where he had been stationed a scrap of paper in the slain man’s I bek on November 8th when he' A check with Air Force offi- pocket. They identified him main-; had visited them in their Man-!cials at Westove» revealed that ly from clothing and body cha- hattan hotel, at which time he the big sergeant had departed on racteristics, since his head was; had told them he planned to visit the 12-day leave on November 4th, GOLOMBEK AT ELON Elon lUans Fifth HifrJi School Da\ my Elon College will award eight tree .scholar^llipN, with a total value of S4.400. a^ a feature of the j college’s fifth anual "High School Day,” which will ut' (.tj.-,i.'rved on the Elon ( anipu.-. c.. \'i e,lnL iday, February 3. i The'ii' ^cholai'shipT will be ' equally divided between Ijoys and girls, with the top winniis in each group to crowned as ■King and Queen” of the day’s festivities. The scholarship awards were first made at the Annual "High School Day ” last year, and there was widespread interest in the con test. I Invitation.'- are now being mail- I ed to more than 300 high schools in North Carolina and Virginia with each school inviled to send u.-. enure senioi^ clas^ to be the ^lue.sts of Elon College for the uay and with each school invitod to enter one boy and one girl in the contest for the eigiit scholar ships. Details of the scholarship con test are being enclosed with eaca invitation. cUing tlie fact that competition will feature the fields of scholarship, poise, personality and appearance. ; Top awards for both boys and i girls will be $1,000 scholarships to apply on a four-year coursu at Elon College, while other scho larships in the amounts of $600, $400 and $200 will go to boys and girls who place second, third and fourth in tlieir respective divi sions. ! Plans for the fifth annual event iare incharge of a faculty commit tee, which is working with Roger “Who was Joe Golombek?" Such was the question on the tongues of many preyent-day Elon students when they read in their newspapers of Golom- bek’s mysterious death and the discovery of his body in a shal low grave near Long Island’s eastern tip Just before Christ mas. And those same dispatches, which brought a question to the lips of more recent Elon stud ents and faculty members, also set the minds of many Elon alumni and faculty members and Elon townspeople spinning back ward along the trails of memory to the time when the name of the big Danish immigrant boys was known to virtually every sports fan in this area. Interviews with many of those former Elon students and with the faculty members who knew big Joe Golombek resulted in widely differing stories, and a composite of all their opinions might well be condensed into a thumb-nail sketch wiiich says that “Joe Golombek was a sort of Jekyll-and-Hyde personahty an aesthete who played the violin with skill and tender feel ing and who could listen alone for hours to the mu-sic of the cliBSsical masters—an athleU® who loved physical combat and who could and did rip enemy football lines to shreds,” A check into the Elon Col lege records reveals that Joe Golombek first came to the Elon campus in the fall of 1937 from Portsmouth, Va., a husky boy who tipped the scales at 200 pounds or more, who stepped at once into a regular berth at fullback for Coach Horse Hen drickson’s Fighting Christian football squad. al finals before being defeated. Then came the 1.939 football season and the end of Jf»e Gol ombek's Elon grid career. No no one seems to know exactly I the reason, but early that season Elon football fans and sports- | coach Hendrik.son dropped him writers of that year branded Golombek as more than slightly terrific in ability, and he contin ued through that season and the next to be a real star in virtu ally every game that the Christ ian grid squad played. With a 7-1 record in 1937, the Elon eleven lost the Conference title to Appalachian, but the Christ ians tied with Catawba for the Conference crown in 1938. In 1938 Golombek was named as .All-State fullback, chosen in competition with the stars of the North Carolina “Big Five” an well as the North State Con ference, that in the days before I'vo-platoon football and when the .411-State included only eleven men. Those same two years saw Golombek gain laurels in ama teur boxing circles and put the name of Elon in the national exploits in the square ring. He won the heavyweight champion ship in several Golden Gloves tournaments. He won the heavyweight crown in the Carolinas Golden Glove?f tournament at Charlotte in the winter of both 1938 and 1939. He went to New York to the national Golden Gloves meet each year as a member of the Carolina’s team, and each year he fought his way to the nation- from the squad in some sort of disciplinary action, and the big boy soon dropped from school. After leaving school Golombek entered the army and served through World War II, return ing to Elon after the war to re sume his studies. He played one season of basketball just after the war, and finally completed requirements for graduation. He was a member of the Class of 1947. but delay in completing his work caused him to be listed with the Class of 1948. Also after World War II he took a whirl at professional boxing, engaging in several bouts in the Norfolk-Portsmouth ■)(.'ing slated to report to Camp Kilmer, N. J.. on Nowniber 16th. Upon failure to report at Ivilmer al that time. Golombek liad been declared -AWOL. The New Y’ork men, both of whom had ser\ed witli Golombek in the Air Forces, drclared that in all their friendship they had never heard Golcmbek mention' f.:,!,,.. ",'”'1 i" . u ,1 . : Gibbs, tield secretary ot the col- hunting—the anonymous letter to . i j . '•* ""liege, and indications are that the the Air force authorities had;io^/i u , ““,1954 observance may break all stated that his death was due to, .. , , . , ... , , ", records for the number of visit- a hunting accident—and that he u . . 1 , be attracted to the had never mentioned knowing ^ anyone on Long Island or plan-1 -rh= .• ning to go there. The firs annual visitation of The two men described Golom-1 they gations from 43 high schools, with i)0k as a non-drinker, and declared that he had appeared^ j _ 1,1 t. ,and class sponsors. The second an- iiormally as a peaceable man. thus a total of more than 1,000 seniors .jlocking su.spicions th.it his death may have resulted from a brawl during a party. Possibility of a robbery motive, however, loomed in their statement thi-.t Golombeg had usually carried a good bit of money with him. nual event attracted delegations from 61 high schools and the third year saw visitors from 62 different schools. Last year there were senior groups from 69 dif ferent schools in North Carolina and Virginia, and for the third „ J T u straight year there were more Both Kosen and Johnson were i- j , f . u . J individual seniors and reported as quite perturbed during I „ ®! senior class sponsors on the camp us. heir questioning, but New York authorities apparently attached no; 'Uspicion to them,' since both were -eieased after the identification of the body. The FBI entered the case to investigate the anonymous letter that had pointed the way to Gol ombek’s grave. This letter said •hat the writer had been huting on Long Island with a companion and that the companion had been ■‘accidentally, fatally injured. " Enclosed in the letter was a de tailed sketch showing where the grave could be found, and skepti cal officers made the search Just as the letter said they would, they found a 4-foot pile of underbrush. Under this pile in a gray sport shirt, brown slacks and a blue area ot eastern Virginia, but he' |f«eater, Golombek lay on his back, and his mouth and nostrils soon dropped out of action in that field. -After finishing his work al Elon, Golombek re-enlisted in the Army ,\ir Forces, and the Elon .Alumni Directory of 1948 listed him stationed in Japan. As late as the autumn of 1943 Prof. ,\. L. Hook. Elon registrar continued to receive letters from him, one of the last men tioning that he had met a boy in the .Army, whom he wished to send to Eion as a student, proof that Golombek still re membered pleasantly his days on the Elon campus. were stuffed v.’ith leaves, indicat ing a possibility that he had been buried alive and had died of suf focation after being injured. The investigation revealed a pe culiar twist to the case when it was learned that Golombek's cous in, An.sel Liebman, 43, of Brook lyn, died of a heart attack on the same day that Golombek's body was found. The cousin died while driving a rented car on the New Jersey Turnpike, with his own cai standing unused before his home. A search of Liebman’s home re vealed a typewriter, but police stated that it could not have been the One used in typing the anony mous letter. (Continued On Page Four) The contestants for the eight scholarships this year will come to Ion on Monday, February 1st, and on that day they will compete in a series of tests that will deter mine the winners in both boys’ • and girls’ divisions. Winners will then be announced and the "King” and "Queen” of the high school program will be crowned on Wed nesday, February 3rd. (Continued on Page Four) Player 'fry-Oiits Slart riilirsday Try-outs for parts in the Elon Player production of ‘Pygmalian’, %vhich is to be presented in Whit ley Auditorium on February 18th and 19th, will be held in Mooney Chapel this week, with readings scheduled for 2:30 o’clock Thurs day afternoon and 7 o’clock Fri day night. This was announced by Prof. Charles W, Cox, faculty director of dramatics, who stated that a cast will be chosen at the same time for parts in the religious play, “Abraham and Isaac,” which will be presented as a chapel program on April 2nd. In announcing the try-outs for these two productions. Prof. Cox stated that the cast for “Pygma lian ” will call for five men and six women, while four persons will be necesary in the staging of the religious play in chapel.