Wednesday, May 4. 1955 MAROON AND GOLD PAGE TttREa Elon Meets East Carolinci In Important Contests Decide Conference Title Two Games Friday Mav sF;n iN(; new track kecohds ft Horst Meviiis Horst Mevius, Elons international exchange student from Lu- beck, Germany, has done a bit of re-writing in Elon's track record book this spring as he set new E!on records in the quarter mile, half mile and broad jump and helped set a new mark in the one- mile relay. The blonde speedster is pictured above in full stride as he swept to victory in the half mile against Guilford here on 'Wednesday, April 27th. Mevius should be a head-on favorite to capture first places in hi3 speci.ilties in the annual North State Conference meet this year. Elon Track Stars Hold Half (H Conference Track Marks With interest in track leaping to new heights on the Elon cam pus within the past few weeks, it will be interesting to Elon stu dents to know that Christian ath letes hold seven of the fifteen North State Conference records snd are tied for the mark in an other event. The fact that Christian cinder stars own exactly half the Confer ence records is quite remarkable in view of the team records, which disclose that Elon has won only cne championship since the Con ference meet was originated in the spring of 1950. The Christians were second in team scoring in 1950. first in 1951 and third in 1952, 1953 and 1954. Such could only indicate that Elon has had a tew individual stars but lacked balance for team strength. The Conference records, com piled from the summaries of the five North State Conference meets since 1950, are listed below, with the event, the holder, the year or years set, and the record time, height or distance. 100 YARD DASH — Gene Rob inson, Lenoir Rhyne (1953), and Bob Perry, East Carolina (1954). TIME — 9,9 secs. 220 YARD DASH — Bob Lewis, Elon (1950) and Wally Maultsby, Guilford (1950). TIME — 22.4 secs. 440 YARD DASH — Joe Bree- ^on, Guilford (1951). TIME — 54.1 secs. 880 YARD RUN — Larry Gaith- Elon (1950). TIME — 2 min., 9.6 secs. MILE RUN — Jim Elkins, Elon (1950). TIME — 5 Min., 0.8 secs. TWO-MILE run — Bill Hol land, High Point (1951). TIME — min., 28 secs. high hurdles — Mai Ben- "^tt, Elon (1953). TIME — 15.4 secs. LOW hurdles — Mai Ben- ''■Plt. Elon (1953). TIME—27.4 secs. SHOT PUT — Bob Edmiston, Elon (1950). DISTANCE — 44 feet ‘ inches. DISCUS — Paul Sykes, High “int (1952). DISTANCE — 130 4 1-2 inches. javelin—Paul Skinner, Gull- ord (1950). DISTANCE — 160 feet. HIGH JUMP—Len Greenwood, Cion (1950 and 1951), and Dave VIondy, Elon (1950. HEIGHT ,— 5 feet 10 inches. BROAD JUMP — Tom Francis Guilford (1954). DISTANCE — 21 feet 1 1-2 inches. (Continued on Page Four' Basehallers Divide With Quaker Nine The Elon Christians suffered their first loss in the 1955 North State Conference race when they split a double-header with the Ouilford Quakers on the Quaker field on Tuesday. April 19th. The filon nine won the opf'ner 11 to 2 and then ran head-on into dis- .'Ster as it dropped an abbreviated nightcap by a 4 to 3 margin. Charlie Swicegood. veteran Elon outhpaw, allowed the Quakers on ly two hits, both of them singles, in winning the first game. The Quaker scores came in the first and second innings, neither of 'hem being earned. Swicegood truck out 11 men and allowed four walks. In a second game which the umpires called in the sixth due to darkness, the Christians went ^!own by a 4 to ^ margin. Elon broke to the front with three runs in the top of the third on ingles by Don Packard and Nick Thompson, a double by Larry Dof- flemyer and a triple by Bobby Green. The Quakers picked up two in the bottom of the same inning on a walk to Don Hemric, a single by Lynn Buckner and a double by Fuller Cashion. They added t"o more in the fourth on two singles, a double, an error and two walks. These runs proved to be ihe game when the umpires ter- .iiinated play in the last of the >ixth. (FIRST GAME) r h e Elon 301 511 0—11 15 3 Guilford 110 000 0— 2 2 1 Swicegood and Hobgocd. Buck ner, Dowd (4). Roan (6) and All ied. (SECOND GAME) r h e Elon 003 000 0—3 7 2 Guilford 002 200 x—^ 7 1 Hall and Hobgood: Beneditte and Allred. r The 1955 baseball championship ol’ the North State Conference could well be decided when th( Fighting Christian nine battles the East Carolina Pirates in two game: on the Elon field on Friday af ternoon. for the Maroon and Gold squad could grab off first place by bumping the Pirates in both ends of the double bill. The Christians, after playing the High Point Pan'hers twice at High Point this afternoon, had five more games remaining of the regular season in the eastern di vision of the North State loop. There is a rained-out game yet to be re-scheduled with Guilford on the Elon field, and the High Pointers w'ill return h e i c next Tuesday for a doubleheadti that was postponed last week due to '.vet grounds. The crucial point in Ihe race, however, comef in the two battles with the Pirates on Friday afternoon, and it is no light task that Coach Doc Mathis' boys face in attempting to wrest two wins from the East Carolina squad. The two teams split even in two rlose games at Greenville two weeks ago. The Christians will probably send Luther (longer and Sherrill llall, the two big right-handers, to the mound against the Pirates and the visitors from down east are expected to pitch Tommy Pruitt and Mack Cherry, a pair of Pirate uces, each of whom held Elon to three hits in the earlier battles. Conger defeated Pruitt 3 to 2, while Cherry got a 2 to 1 deci sion over Hall in the games at Greenville. On The Sidelines By JOEL BAILET I'worn soap box, but when you at tend an Elon game you need bino culars to spot your nearest neigh bor in the stands. It's a good thing that turnstiles have not been installed at the local park, for it's a cinch they would long since more than a '^ew'' of the Chris-( have rusted. ^ It's hats-off. however, to those The individual who originated the statement, “You win some, you lose some, you tie a few, and some you get rained out,” must surely have played or seen his baseball in a region outside our own North State Conference, for tians' baseball contests have been washed out this spring. However, regardless of the Weather Man's little jokes, the season is progress ing and in a winning way for the Maroon and Gold diamond ex perts. On the subject of our fine base ball team, I was leafing through some of fhe other college news papers recently when I stumbled on an article that should interest local Ians (if such an animal ex ists). In Billy Arnold's column entitled “Sports Echo," which ap pears in the East CaroUnian, he refers to the Elon pitching staff as “the best pitching staff in the South” We will not argue this point with Mr. Arnold, for it seems that everyone in the conference and in the enUre state is well aware of the potenUal power of the entire Elon squad . . . that is, everyone except the Elon students T hate to get back on that well- few fans who do attend the ball games. If the school .spirit is at a low ebb, it’s certainly not their fault. We may very well have the best pitching staff in the South, and we know that we have a very good and a hustling club. Again, 1 ask you if you have seen the boys in action? Wonders never cease, as the old saying goes, and that’s what one recent visitor to our campus seems to have thought last week. Stand ing in line for dinner, I over heard an Elon student relate the golf score of that day’s play to a member of the Appalachian ten nis team, which had met our net- ters while the mountaineer golf ers played our Unksmen that af ternoon. “The score was something like 10 to 7,” the local student inform ed the visitor. (Continued an Page Fourl Dr)[) Decision At Lyiielibiir«j The Elon tracksters dropped a well-contested cinder meet to the Lynchburg Hornets at Lynchburg on Friday afternoon. April 22nd, by an 82 1-2 to 40 1-2 margin, with the Christian runners and field men forcing their more ex perienced opponents to record ex cellent marks in a number of events. Horst Mevius, Elon’s brilliant middle-distance runner, won first places in both the quarter and half and added a third first in the broad jump. Mevius set a new Elon and Lynchburg record in the half with a 1 minute 59.5 sec onds mark. John Platt copped Elon’s other first place in the high hurdles, and Platt also set a new Elon mark of 11 feet 6 inches in the pole vault. The summary follows: 100 YARD DASH — Jarrett (L). Green (E), Richards (E). TIME — 10.1 secs. 220 YARD DASH — Jarrett (L), Green (E), Scott (D. TIME — 22.9 secs. 440 YARD DASH — Mevius (E), Dooley (L), Scott (L). TIME — 52 secs. 880 YARD RUN — Mevius (E). Atwood (L), Gooch (L). TIME I min. 59.5 secs. ONE MILE — Atwood (L), Al mond (L), Watts (E). TIME — 5 mins. TWO MILES — Parker (L). Brown (L), Smith (L). TIME — II min. 41.8 secs. HIGH HURDLES — Platt (E). Rogers (L), no third. TIME — 16.7 secs. LOW HURDLES — Colbert (L), Platt (E), tie tor third by Creech (E) and Rogers (L). TIME — 26.1 secs. HIGH JUMP — Goode (L), Platt (E), Danley (Lj. HEIGHT — 5 feet 7 inches. BROAD JUMP — Mevius *E), Cranby (L), Creech (E). DIS TANCE — 2d feet 4 3-4 inches. (Continued on Page Four) SOI THPAW I1AVIN(; Fl>K VKAK Varsitv Team *» * Breaks Even ‘ With Pirates The El^n Christians and the East Carolina Pirates broke even in a crucial North State Confer ence doubleheader at Greenville on Saturday afternoon, April 23rd, with the Christian grabbing the opener by a 3 to 2 c-ount and the Pirates taking the nightcap by a 2 to 1 margin. The Pirates grabbed an early lead in the first game when they coui’tled both their markers in the first inning when they linked .terry Ktewart's single and Bill Cline's double with an Elon er- for. It was their final scoring for Uie game as Luher Conger and rharie Swicegood sopped them f-ffectively the rest of the way. The Klon outfit got back one >f the runs in the second when Charlie Cassell singled and scored on Larry Dofflemycr's double, bjit they waited until the seventti to plate the winning runs on three Pirate errors and a base on balls. Cecil Heath, East Carolina's All- Conference second baseman, boot ed two in that final inning to contribute heavily to Elon s win ning rally. The Pirates got to Sherrill Hall for two runs in the third inning if the second game on a walk to Jerry Stewart, a single by Gath er Cline and a triple by Bill Cline, and the two markers were enough to win a 2 to 1 verdict for Mack Cherry, the Pirate pitcher, who allowed ?:ion only a single run ■n the sixth. Elon could get only Ihree '■ingles off Cherry’s offering in the game. Larry Dofflemyer, with a two- bagger in the opener was the top batter for Elon, since none of the Christians could hit safely more than once in the double bill. Bill Cline topped East Carolina with a triple, double and single in the two battles. The score by innings follows: (FIRST GAME) r h e Elon 010 000 2—3 3 I East Carolina 200 000 0—2 3 3 Conger, Swicegood (7) and Hob- good; Pruitt and B. Cline. (SECOND GAME) Charlie Swicegood. senior southpaw pitcher from Lexington. i.= once more proving one of the main.stays of the Christian mound staff, sometimes as a starter and sometimes as a “fireman ' who goes in to put out a blaze. The big left-hander turned in a neat 2- hit job against Guilford for one of the best pitching performances of the year, no other Elon pitcher having held an opponent to less than three safeties. Swicegood went in as a reliefer in both games of a recent double-header at East Carolina The Lexington boy has won two and lost none thus far for the season. He has had 25 strikeouts and has allowed only 10 walks and 7 hits in 17 innings. Cindernien All Eve In Tivo Meets Gral) Vie tor y Over Quakers Baseball Schedule Elon 13, Guilford 3. Elon U, Williams 1. Elon 11, Williams 2. Elon 8, A.C.C. 6. Elon 4, A.C.C. 3. Elon-Guilford (Rain). Elon 3, Bur-Gra 10. Elon 2, Greensboro 8. Elon 11. Guilford 2. Elon 3, Guilford 4. Eton 3, E.C.C. 2. Elon 1, E.C.C. 2. Elon 4, A.C.C. 2. Elon 2, A.C.C. 1. (Remaining Games) •May 4—H. Point, away (DH). May 6—E.C.C., home (DH). May 10—H. Point, Home (DH). Elon Squad Top Bulldof^s In 2 Games With Sherrill Hall and Luther Conger turning in almost identi cal three-hit pitching jobs, the Elon Christians turned back the Atlantic Christian Bulldogs twice in a North State Conference dou bleheader here last Saturday, April 30tli. The winning scores were 4 to 2 and 2 to 1. Sherrill Hall was the winning oitcher in the opener, limiting the Bulldogs to three hits and strik ing out nine men, as he got the decision by a 4 to 2 score. Hall’s mates got to Bob Horne for eight hits, including doubles by Charlie Cassell and Homer Hobgood. Hobgood’s double to left field A as the decisive blow as Elon jcored all four runs in the second inning. Bobby Green's single CharUc Cassell's double and a walk to Larry Dofflemyer filled the bases, and all three scored on Hobgood’s two-play blow. Hob good then scored on Sherrill Hall s single. The Bulldogs came back for two (Continued on Page Four) The Elon College track teamj '.wept twelve first places in four- •cen events here on Wednesday, ■Vpril 27th, as the Christian cin- dermen defeated Guilford 94 1-2 to 27 1-2 in a North State Con ference dual meet. Horst Mevius and John Platt each won three first places and Bobby Green and Paul Watts each took two firsts for the Christians The summary follow^. 100 YARD DASH — Green (E), Richards (E), Bridges E). TIME — 10.3 secs. 220 YARD DASH — Green (E). Bridges (E), Richards (E). TIME — 23.7 secs. 440 YARD DASH—Mevius (E), Newcomb (E), Bradham (E). TIME — 51.8 secs. 880 YARD RUN — Mevius (E), Martin (E), Griffin (E). TIME — 2 min. 4.2 secs. MILE RUN — Watts (E), Ha worth (G), Stump (E). TIME — 5 min. 6 secs. TWO-MILE RUN — WatU (E), Haworth (G), Simpson (E). TIME — J1 min. 46.9 secs. HIGH HURDLES — Platt (E>, Creech (E), Blackburn (G). TIME — 16.8 secs. LOW HURDLES — Platt (E), Smith (E), Creech (E). TIME — 2'i.l secs. HIGH JUMP — Platt (E), Ever ett (G), tie for third by Stempin 5ky (E) and Newton (G). HEIGHT — 5 feet 9 inches. BROAD JUMP — Mevius (El. Fakhoury (G). Creech (E). DIS TANCE — 20 feet 10 1-2 inches. SHOT PUT — Newcomb (E), Cafasso (E), DiPema (E). ■ DIS TANCE — 37 feet 7 inches. DISCUS — Abernathy (G), Pi- Perna (E), N*ilson (G). DIS TANCE — 110 feet 1 1-2 inches. JAVELIN — Neilson (G), Aber nathy (G), Fitzgerald (E). DIS TANCE — 148 feet 8 inches. MILE RELAY — Elon (Smith, Newcomb, Bridges, Mevius), Guil ford. TIME — 3 nain. 38.4 secs 6 0 Elon 000 001 0—t East Carolina 002 000 x—2 Hall, Swicegood (6) and Hob good; Cherry and B. Cline. Golf^ Tennis Teams Face Title Meets The Elon golfers and nettern, who were slated to close their regular schedules by meetinij High Point away yesterday, will bid for the Conference titles in the North State tournaments with in the next week. The Christian golfers have won three of their last four meets, with results of yesterday’s Panther meet not known. The linksmen defeated Guilford 14 1-2 to 3 1-2, downed Appalachian 11 1-2 to 6 1-2 and swamped High Point 18 to 0. Only loss was to the Apps by a 14 1-2 to 3 1-2 count. The tennis squad continued to find rough sledding in recent meets, but the netters did chalk overwhelming victories over At lantic Christian in two meets. The remainder of the Elon net card during the past two weeks shows two losses to Appalachian and sin- gle defeats by Guilford, Lyncli- burg. High Point and the Waka Forest Freshmen.