Wkcz four ICAROON AND GOU> Thursday, Pehruary 12, dramath: moment in player show How To I’sf Bad Words Well We didn't object to swearing. Loss To Eloii I Aroused to a high pitch and, seeking revenge for their earlier; upset at the hands of the Elon | Christians, the Panthers ol High! Point cut loose with a sensation-, al shooting exhibition as they 1 ;trannpled the Christians 87 to 51 l.dn t Object .0 'ui a North 9tat^ Conference tilt We just thought .t sounded j ,3,, Thursday night. h—■ The Christians had trouble get- S„ we discussed cu>.mg decided wed not re Ithe home-standing Panthers raced thut there ,ou, a 41-18 lead by the end of convey the .^d even first half. That was the game to spend a lot of time in tl^ rode library dictionary. This wa_ " | to victorj . although UH4, To this i:.on to.sers made it slightly who made the Big Deci->ion have not broken our resolve. Now. anybody who's read line- one of these recollections of my undergraduate day- at Elon will know I'm no saint. I don't j , ^ figures, including Shor tend to be, I don't intend to be This may come as a radical iloser the seeond half, Danny Sewell, leading individual scorer in the Coiiference, was top man for the victorious Panthers, A ho had three other players in idi but we found that by not swearing, we could outdo those who did. I swear we did, Kxample; Somebody fell into our disfavor. Immediately he be came a rotating male heir in an Indiscreet canine lineage. The ia- sult was supreme. The hacks at swearing merely stopped there. I mean our language said the same thing, but we expanded on the theme. Being rotating, our man was a canine heir any way be turned. Well, that's not exactly a Sun day school sample, but it’s one I figured you’d read, I started to m.ik' a to-do about my past sum mer visit to Elon, A young fel low was good enough to sliow me around to all the new buildings and describe this and that. Trou ble was, every other word he used ■would have banged into our Elon Dirty Word Embargo, Circa Win ter 1944, Already this paragraph is getting dull and besides, there’s no point in showing up anybody. So, if I'm to get across any kind of a point against hard language. I’d better get into another case history before you chuck this into the can from sheer boredom. There was this stacked girl (sex s«.ms to be a fairly good way to hold interest, I think) from Burl ington. She had a build like a masonry outbuilding. When she walked, her posterior wiggled. Now, you unimaginative clods may have a word for this. Ours was "callipgyian." That's in the big dictionary in the Library. with 16, Cheek with 15 and Afen- dis with 10 counters. While the High Pointers were hitting with comparative ease, the Christians could muster only two men in the double-figure column. Big Tony Carcaterra racked eiglit field goals and five free throws for 21 points, and Cecil Wright added five field baskets and one frfe throw for 11 points as they paced Elon play. The High Point outfit could not keep up their sensational shoot ing of the opening minutes all the way, but they posted a brilliant 52 per cent floor average on 36 baskets in 69 attempts. Mean while, Elon hit 20 of 65 tries from the floor for 30.8 per cent. The line-ups: Pos.—Klon (51) Hi£h Point (87) F—Oakley 2 Sewell 24 F—Wright 11 Cheek 15 F—Carcaterra 21 — Williams G—Watts 2 Afendis 10 G—Wall 5 Short 16 Half-time: High Point 44, Elon 18. Elon subs — Burke 3, Hall, Col lins 3, Palkovics 3, Myers 1, Dog- gett, Oliver, High Point subs — Daniels 6, Duzinski 4, Unger, Skid more 3, Formyduval 2, Wyndham Webster. Carcaterra Top Scorer For Cagers Forum Offers Panel Program i The Liberal Arts Fonnn will i feature Dr. William Beidler and 1 Prof. Roy Epperson in a panel 1 di!9cussion of the topi* of “Uu- At the 18-game point and near- manisra and Scientism” in the ng the close of the 1959 basket-i West Dormitory Parlor at 7:30 ,all campaign, rugged Tony Car-| o’clock next Monday eyenine. aierra has edged out in front of: Dr. Richard Haff will moderate ^die Burke as the top point- the discussion. 1»59 I One of the highly dramatic moments in the recent Elon Player production of "Inherit the Wind ' is pictured above, it being one of the courtroom clashes of Johnny Meadows as William Harri son Brady and Joe Medlock as Henry Drummond. Brady and Drum mond were the stage counterparts of William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow, nationally famous characters in the famous "Mon key Trial" in Dayton, Tenn. Intramural Basketball Gaines (Continued From Page Threei STANDINGS (Through Feb. 6th) NATIONAL LEAGUE Sigma Phi 36, Sigma Mu 33 SIGMA PHI: Carmines 6, Dodge, 4, Parker 8, Lichok 8, DiSibio 7, DiPema 2, Ruggeri 1. SIGMA MU: Boswell 7, Howell 2, Fuller 7, Bergman 11, West 6, Moore, Sears, Wilkins, Matthews, j Iota Tau Kappa Radford. Bare. jKappa Psi Nu 8 I.T.K. 80, Alpha PI 35 | Sigma Phi Beta 6 I T.K.: Gates 25. Rhodes 15, Al- Chinese Bandits . len 23, Payne 10, Arnold 6. i Sigma Mu Sigma ALPHA PI; Mercer 18, Dob- Veterans 2 son 4, Mullins 3. Semple 8, Bryant Alpha Pi Delta 1, Huey 3. Slpma Mu 51, Chi. Bandits 38 , AMERICAN LEAGUE SIGMA MU: Boswell 22, Howell! ^ • 8. Fuller 14, Bergman 3, Wilkins East Dorm 7 w 1 ., 10 0 ... 8 2 6 4 ,. 4 6 .. 3 6 .... 2 8 ... 1 8 Catamounts Are Victors By 67 To 49 A seven-minute drive in the late'j^ accurate moments of the first half netted, b;,) paik„vics is another fine- the Western Carolina Catamountsp^spect in his first sea- a 67 to 49 victory over the Elon •„ j-lon uniform. Even cagers at Cullowhee last Saturday SPORTS SHOTS (Continued From Page Three) Especially quick and fast. Gil can be counted on occasionally for a 20-point performance, especially against any team which will run with the Christians. Seeing action at the other guard -pot in recent games has been Steve Wall, who of late has scored more than once in double figures. Wall, an extremely fast and agile freshman, will be seeing plenty of action for the remainder of the season. He rarely makes the mistakes attributed to first-year players; his passes are sharp and precisioned. and his shooting style night, but the Christians made tt close for the other thirty-three minutes of the contest. • After thirteen minutes were gone the Cats held a bare 13-12 margin, but in the next seven min utes the Western Carolina big boys rolled ufi a 19-6 edge and pulled out to a 32-18 lead by half-time. After that the Christians rallied again, and the Catajnounts held only a 35-31 edge during the last lialf Eddie Burke, Elon's top scorer, missed the game due to injury, and Tony Carcaterra proved the top man for the Christians with 16 paints. Bill Palkovics bad IS and Gil Watts 12 points. Swede Prau- son led the C^U with 18 points, with Jones, Shields and Pryor al so in double figures. The hne-ups: Pos.—Elon (49) West Car. (67) F—Palkovics 13 Frauson 18 F —Oakley 4 Jones 12 C—Carcaterra 16 .. Shields 13 G—Watts 12 Elmore 7 G--WaU 2 Pryor 15 Half-time: Western C«rolioa 32, Elon IS. Elon sutks — Wrifht, ColUna, Mall ; Westem CaroUoa sutw — Teague 2. Rudt-en. ;hough he does not shoot much, it appears that he has the softest touch on the squad. Cecil Wright ind C. G. Hall has both been breaking into the lineup with regularity, being particularly out ftanding for their floor games, »nd both have shown scoring abil ity at times. The Christian offense has been hampered and slowed down when faced wish a zone defense, which is usually the case, for to cope with a lone defense sharp passing and good outside shooting are needed. C^ach Mathis has spas- •nodicaHy had both from his boys, but fa«Ity passing more often than not has been present in Christian games. With a little more polish in that phase of the game, some of the close scores might have been reversed and the Maroon and Gold banner might have been wav ing high. The campus of ElOn College was 3 training point for a Student Army Trainiof Corps tinit during World War I and also for a atu- dent Air Force unit durisg World War n 4, Radford, Rogers. CHI. BANDITS; Somers 1. Moore 4. Taylor 15, Utz 8, Holmes 10. Kappa Psi 32, Sigrma Phi 22 KAPP.A PSI; Clayton 5, Maul din 7, Plaster 9, Porter 3, Med lock 4. Fentress 4. SIGMA PHI: Lichok 4, DiSi bio 5, Bujan 2, Carmines 4, Di- Perna 5, Dodge, Parker 2. East 53, Carolina 45 EAST: Jones 9, Hawkins, Thc»npson 20, Tyler 9, Troutman 10. Simmons, Reece 5. CAROLINA: Henson 19, Knapp 7, Tuck 2, Stephens, Nance, Sma- ;hers 5. Loy. Burgess. Wright 12. LT.K. 98, Chi. Bandits 32 I.T.K.: Rhoeds 7, Gates 38. •’aust 18. Clark 19. Allen 16. CHI. BANDITS; Miller 13, Som ers, Moore 2, Taylor 17, Utz. Kappa Psi 30, Sigma Mu 17 KAPPA PSI; Clayton 8, Maul din 9, Plaster, Medlock 4, Porter 4, Taylor 5. SIGMA MU; McCauley 4, Bos well 4, Fuller 4, Bergman 1, West 1, Towell, Moore. Radford, Wil kins. Stuckey. Smith 34, Looney Tones 33 SMITH; Foster 13, Ford 2, Ise- ley 3, Munick 15, Riddle 1, New man, LOONEY TUNES: DelGais 4, Brosky 8, Robinson 2, Edmonds 7, McLean, 'Vaughn 12, Maidon, Chi. Bandits 29, Veterans 26 CHI, BANDITS: Somers 8,' Moore 7, Utz 2, Holmes 4, York 8, . VETERANS; Reynolds 6, Little 5, Shue 1, Suddith 4, Ayres 10. Stafford. South 52, Sloths 45 SOUTH: Gozjack 12, Walker 6. Parietti 21, White 2, Libby 3, Dri ver 8, Ling, Wilkinson, Peat. SLOTHS: Shue 6, Oakley 15, Overton 22. Toms. McCutcheon 2. LT.K. 44. Sigma Phi 38 I,T,K,; Gates 14, Rhodes 9, Faust 3, Clark 10, AUen 6, Arnold 2. SIGMA PHI: Carmines 5, Aus tin, Parker 7, Lichok 10, DiSiblo 16. Dodge. Bujaa. TetCTkM Al»ka Pi t6 Carolina Hall 5 Sloths - 3 South Dorm 3 Looney Tunes 3 Smith Hall 3 nakpr for the Fighting Christian laiketball squad, but Carcaterra las played three more games than las Burke, and the Burlington ophomore still has the best per- i»me average for the squad. C -caterra, who continues to ,eaa the North State Conferenc .n rebounding, as he has done throughout the season, has hit 63 points in Elon's last four games iiid he shows a season total of i24 points, counted on 80 field iO?ls and 64 free throws. He is iiU hitting on well above 4(j per jent of his field goal attempts jnd has made good on 69 per cent jf his free throws. He is avcrag- ng 12.3 points per game. Eddie Burke, who has sparked he Elon attack through most of ;ie season, has been missing from .he line-up in three games due ^o in.iuries. He missed two games ivith an ankle injury late in Jan- jary, and then he had to miss the A’estem Carolina trip last week end due to a back injui-y which he incurred in practice earlier in .he week. He got back into action against the Atlantic Christian Bull dogs on Monday night, but his in jury seemed to handicap him as he chalked only six points. The tall Burlington boy, while playing in 15 of the team’s 18 games, has racked up 78 field goals while averaging approxi mately 45 per cent from the floor and has made good on 60 of 89 free throw tries for a 67 per cent ave. mark. His point total of 216 in 1.000 fifteen games gives him a per- 800 game average of 14.3 points. .6001 Only other Elon player to rack .400 for a 10-point per-game average ,333 throughout the season is Marsh .200 Oakley, the freshman forward ,111 i from Leaksville, who is averaging [a tiny fraction above 10 points on I a mark of 181 points in eighteen ave. I games. ,875 Six other Elon players have Tliis is the third of the Arts Fomm programs, the first hav ing featured Dr. Clarence Car son with an original research paper on “The Conception of Democracy and John Dewey" and the second featuring Lionel Norwak, piaaist from Benning ton College, who discussed his trip to Rossia. Night School Deanes List Made Public ,625 ,375 ,375 .375 .375 GAME SCORES (Fourth Week) East 48, Looney Tunes 40. Carolina 36. Sloths 34. Sigma Phi 45, Vets 29. Looney Tunes 47, South 30. Sigma Mu 53, Alpha Pi 25. Smith 37, Sloths 35. South 48, Carolina 43. Kappa Psi 39, Chi. Bandits 23 East 58, Smith 39. i’t.K. 54, Veterans 30. Sigma Phi 36, Sigma Mu 33. Kappa Psi 44, Chi. Bandits 37. I.T.K. 80, Alpha Pi 35. Sigma Mu 51, Chi. Bandits 38. (Fifth Week) Kappa Psi 330, Sigma Mu 17. Smith 34. Looney Tunes 33. Chi. Bandits 29, Veterans 26. South 52, Sloths 45. I.T.K. 44. Sigma Phi 38. Veterans 40, Alpha Pi 25. Kappa Psi 39, Alpha Pi 20. East 53, Carolina 45. Kappa Psi 32, Sigma Phi 22. I.T.K. 98, Chi. Bandits 32. VETERANS: Stafford. Reynolds 6, Shhe, Swicegood 15, Suddith 4, Little 3, Capuano 12. ALPHA PI; Dobson 6, Mullins 7, Mercer 6, Blalock 6, Ball. Kappa Psi 39, Alpha Pi 26 KAPPA PSI; Clayton 18, Maul din 8, Plaster 6, Fentress 5, Por ter 2. ALPHA PI; Blalock 6. Mullins 3, Dobson 5, Semple 2. Bryant 4. FOOTBALL (Continued From Page Three) Others on the winter roster are Don Miller, Johnnie Gozjack and D. C. Harris, ends; Dean Yates, Dick MeCutcheon, Darrell Ritchie and George Leh, tackles-; Bill Lilj- by, Artie Johnson and Roy Swan, guards; Jerry Hollifield, quarter back; Bennie Jones, Bart Wicker and George Moser, halfbacks; and Bob Overton, fullback. scored 10 points or better in one or more games during the season, but none of them have been able to reach the double-digit average. Those who have hit 10 points or more at least once during the year are Gil Watts, Bill Palkovics, Steve Wall, C. G. Hall, Cecil Wright and Marty CoUins. Tony Carcaterra, who had one of his finest nights in rebound ing against Atlantic Christian, has pulled down a total of 242 re bounds in eighteen contests and is 13.4 rebounds per game. Trail ing Carcaterra in the rebounding columns is Burke, who is aver aging almost exactly 10 reboundi per game. The individual scoring marks for the Christian squad, figured through the Atlantic Christian con test on Monday night, follow; Player Burke Fifty students of the Elon Col lege Evening School have been placed on the Dean’s List for the spring semester in recognition of excellent scholastic work during the fall term, according to an an nouncement from the office of Dr H. H. Cunningham, Ten of the group made no grade less than “A” on any course, while forty had no grade less than "B" on any course. The all “A” students included Simeon AUen, Charles Kail, Lo retta Hall, John Horvath, Gaye Johnson, Ross King, Linwood Mt- Cullock, Jason Rudisill, Wayne Stafford and Clyde Welch, The "B” honor group included Evelyn Allred, Homer Apple, Al bert Avinger, Teddy Baker, Cleve land Beatty, Mary Belle Beeker, Helen Benson, Lynn Blackwood. Jack Boutchard, Herbert Brooks, Edward Caldw’ell, Annie Cleapor. Dewey Crabtree, Carson Dabbs, Alfred Gunner- son, Carl Harmon, Bobby Har rington, Carlos Hodge, James Hol- senback, Mary Lou Kernodle, James Mallernee, Robert McIn tosh, Kathleen Miles, Bob Noah, Don Paul, John Rand, Charles Reavis, Betsy Roach Helen Rumley, Cynthia Shackley, Gilbert Shaver, John Simpson, Harold Smith, Arthur Sutton, Bar bara Tapscott, Edward Walker, Robert Wall, Theo Wall, Randolph ’iVilliams and W. S, Woods, Piaiiist Will Play Concert Monday Night Dr. Thomas Richuer, pianig who is a member of the faculty of Columbia University, wiy presented in a concert in Whitley Auditorium next Monday night at 8:15 o’clock. T'na concert will the fifth in the series of Elon Col lege Lyceum events during the ;ol- lege year. Students will be admit- tod upon presentation of their ac tivity cards. The guest artist, who holds a B.M. degree from the University of West Virginia, and both an M.A. and Ed. D. degree from Col umbia University, teaches piano at Columbia, and he has received numerous awards for the excel- lence of his work. Among his hon ors have been the Naumberg, the MacDowell and the New York State Federation Awards. Dr. Richner has concertized ex tensively in the United States and Europe, where he is engaged for annual tours in England, France, Austria, Holland and the Scanit navian countries. His program in Whitley on Mon day night will feature the works of both Mozart and Chopin. Mo zart numbers include Fantasia in D. Minor (K397), Sonata in B Hat major (K570), Fantasia in C minor (K475) and Sonata in C minor (K457). Chopin numbers will in clude Nocturne in E major, T»o Mazurkas, Two Etudes and Bac- carole in F sharp minor. Palkovics Wall Hall , . Collins . Myers .... Johnson Oliver ... Other Players Elon Totals Opponents 18 g fg ft Total .. 18 80 64 224 . 15 78 60 216 . 18 74 33 181 . 18 58 28 144 ... 18 43 18 104 , 18 26 15 67 18 10 29 49 . 12 13 7 33 . 13 9 5 23 8 9 2 20 6 2 1 5 4 1 0 2 12 5 3 13 . 18 18 410 464 265 317 1085 1245 LENOIR RHYNE Continued From Page Three) The line-ups; Pos—EioB (57) Lenoir Rhyne (89) F—Burke 2 Whitis 17 ^“Oakley 14 _ Norman 1-6 C—Carcaterra 18 Ladd 14 ^ Watts 7 Reece 11 ^ Wall 1 Seilarl 9 Half-time: Lenoir Rhyne 42 Elon 27. Elon ^ubs — Palkovics 7, John son 1, Myers 6, Baggett, Hall, Collins 2, Price, Lenoir Rhyne subs — Jjime* 6, Ck>odni«bt 4, Bowman t, KUby 2, Smith J, Me- Cora»iokJ[ BASEBALL (Continued From Page Thfee' The veterans returning (rom last year include Eddie Clark, first base; Don Lichok and Pete Jones, second base; George Allen, .shortstop or third base; Gil Watts Gary Henson and Arthur Thomp son, pitchers; and Tony Carca terra, Ted Eanes and Leroy Myers, outfielders. Also expected out are Mack Payne, infielder, and Joe DelGais, outfielder, who lettered two years ago. In addition to these letter vets. Coach Sanford also has Roger Knapp and Sam Simmons, reserve pitchers from last year, and Ed die Hughes, a transfer catcher, who transferred from Carolina and sat out last spring to become eli gible. There are also a number of ■ promising freshmen A il|«(*TCa(0 ( RaraAvis It’s a rare bird indeed who doesn’t care for the good taste of Coke! In fact, you might even call him an odd ball. After all, 58 million times a day somebody, somewhere, enjoya Coca-Cola. All these people .i just can’t be wrong! SIGN OF GOOO't^ ••■M Mdar ovMiority of Th# C0«»%«0 Co»|>ony by BUiamGTON COCA-COLA BOTTUNO COWANt