PAGE FOUK MAROON AND GOLD Friday, February 10, 1961 REID THU/ TO In «11 of the Elon freshman chemistry class in the science building that fall day in 1943 there was but one Virginian, a little red haired girl who was away from home for the first time in her Me. It appeared as though the little man, the teacher in the lab, sort of came out of the woodwork. He unceremoniously and unhur riedly shuffled into the room. "Umm,” he mused in his easy going, low voice. "Where are you from, young lady?” He nodded to the timid young co-ed from Vir ginia. He knew very well her home was in the Old Dominion. He was a thorough man. He check ed out things before he s»id any thing. “Hampton, Va.,’’ the girl ans wered. "You’re sure you're not from Dix HUl?” Everybody in the class — except one — laughed. With that, Ned Branoock broke the tension that confronts fresh men in their first college chem- iitry class. It was with his frolic some wit, his devoted prepara tion and his knowledge that he met his classes. It was wHh under standing that his classes were run. The Virginia girl, never having been to Carolina before, missed the significance of Dix Hill, the Raleigh institution. Brannock, of course, was slyly implying the coed might’ve been crazy to leave home. Before the first term was out, the girl looked forward to Bran- nock's prank-punctuated lectures. He was an aging man then, and often retired to a little office to rest up for the next class, but liis comprehension of human na ture was as young as that fresh man girl. This is the sort of thij]^ many of us Elon alunmi remember. We look back on old timers such as Ned Brannock and the EngUsh Department’s John Barney and to North Dorm and the ud- paved roads. They’re all gone. You won’t believe this — not just now, anyway — but we who have a few years on you are cer tain our memories are as good as ■what you are living now. And you know something else? Later on, your professors iwll die, and the campus you know now may change. Recollections of them will seem infinitely su perior to what the kids at Elon will be having after you. Sigma Phi Is Undefeated In Cage Play Sigma Phi, with an undefeated 6-0 mark, is topping the Ameri can League in boys’ intramural cage play; while the Iota Tau Kap pa quint, with a 7-1 record, is lead ing the race in the National League. Kappa Psi, with a 6-1 mark, and the Cai-olina Comets, with a 4-1 record, trail Sigma Phi outfit In the American League race. The Studs and the Carolina Hotshots, each with 5-2 records, trail I.T.K. in the National loop. The Studs, paced by Willie Tart with 21 and Tyrone McDuffie w^ith 17 points, handed the I.T.K. out fit its only defeat in one. of the best games of the intramural sea son by a score of 56 to 46. The top five individual scorers are George Owen, Carolina Com ets, with a 20-point average; Larry Hyman, of the Spiders, averaging 18.4; Lindsey Page, of Carolina Comets, averaging 16.3; Grady Tuck, of Carolina Comets, averag ing 15.5; and Jim Leviner, of I.T.K., averaging 14.9 points per game. THEY I.EAD CHEERS AT ELOIV SPORTS EVENTS Player Sho w (Continued From Pagf Two) was very effective. Judy kUliott, of Richmond, Va., received one of the biggest laughs of the evening as Lucinde, Genonte’s love-tOHched daughter, when she proved her stubborness to her father. Frank CianuIIo, of New York City, was funny as Robert, an in terfering neighbor. This was Frank’s first appearance on the stage, and he made it a good one. Richard Milteer, of South Norfolk, Va., as Leandre, the real object of Lucinde’s love, made his scene with the doctor one of the funniest in the play. Larry Biddle, of Dover, Del., was extremely ar ticulate and weU cast as Valere, the servant of old Geronte. This was the first major Elon Play*r production for the year and aslo the debut for Professor E. R. Day. We surely hope that more productions of this caliber will be coming soon. WUps Of Wisdom The man who rolls up his sleeves seldom loses his shirt. • • • Race Track — A place where windows clean people. * • • Rearing Children—The biggest beir-conditioning job ever under taken. Scribendi (Continued on Page Two) no charge for the dance. Ad mission by your Student Gov ernment Card. * • • Some people have been wor ried about the lack of culture on the campus. The Pan-Hellenic Council has plans to do some thing about this! They will be promoting the Bolshoi Ballet in Tschaikowsky’s SWAN LAKE at the Paramount Theatre in Bur lington on Thursday, February 16th. The Bolshoi Ballet Is mjoist acclaismed ballet of all t*me. More than eighty years after Tschaikowsky’s "Swan Lake” was first performed at the Bol shoi Theatre, Moscow, a full- length color film of an actual performance was made, which will be shown at the Paramount Theatre in Eastman Color. When it was first shown in 1877, ‘‘Swan Lake” was cooly receiv ed. Since then It has becou’.e probably the world’s mo&; po.) ular balle>t. The film is distribut ed by Columbia Pictures. Tickets for this magnificent performance may be obtaiaed from any member of »ither of the social fraternities or soror ities. The United States State De partment made a statement like this: "So that the people of tiie Soviet Union might better un derstand us, and so that Amer icans might better understand the Soviet people, the govern ments of the USA and the USSR concluded an agreement on Jan uary 27, 1958, which included provisions which envisioned re- cjplrocal exhibition of motjon pictures. This film is presented for your entertainment in co operation with the United States State Department by Columbia Pictures.” » * • Now to subjects on the lighter side of life!! N. C. State College hits cue Elon news. They come all the way from State to get "TasseU” to arrange dates. Go Bill! The Elon College Boys are not at Fort Lauderdale. They are at Fort Maye. The grapevine says Nick Ciotola made a better dis tance record than George Woot en. Welcome to the track team Nick. Miice York’s "frat” brotner from Portsmouth brings back big news after being away sev eral months. What’s up Miite. Gail Hettel is the campus rep resentative for Classrooms Abroad! This might be worth lookiiig into!! Probation? Surprise riend! First you are placed on proba tion — then you get your grades! It is not only a switch but it is a guessing game and loads of fun. ’Try it! Not direct ed — just thrown In. The varsity cheerleader group, which has led the cheering at Elon Coilege foottall ^and basketball games this year, is pictured above. Those pictured left to right are as follows: KNEELING^oanne Keith,, of Reidsville; Della Marie Vickers, of Elon College; Eleanor Smith, of Winston-Salem; Diane Clary' of Lawrencevilie, Va.; Phylli.s Hopkins, of Reidsville; and Helen Wright, of Greenville, S. C. STANDING — Judy Samuels, of Burlington; Linda Combs, of Re.dt; lUe, Harriet Hammond, of Balfour; and Janet Inge, of Qon College. Judy Burke, of Greensboro, who recently joined the cheer leader squad, was not present for the picture Delta Vpsilon Leads Girls Cage League The Delta Upsilon Kappa lass ies held the lead in the battle for the girls’ basketball championship on the Elon campus in most recent j standings, boasting a perfect rec- :ord of three wins and no losses in ithe round robin schedule now in i progress under the auspices of the I Women’s Athletic Association. The Delta Upsilon sextet was trailed by the Beta Omacron Beta cagers, who showed three wins and a single loss, that lone defeat by Delta Upsilon by a 17 to 14 count. Other teams in order In the standings were Tau Zeta Phi, Second West, Third Virginia, In- 1 dependents and Day Students. I Nancy Ellington and Judy Burke 1 have topped scoring for Delta Up- 1 silon, while Lulu Roberts and Sara Summers have led the B.O.B. outfit. Other leaders include Sue Humphrey, of Day Students; Mar sha Jordan, of Independents; Doris Faircloth and J^ne Keck, of Tau Zeta; Nancy Wyrick, of Third Virginia; and Donna Welbom, of Second West. WAA wm Hold Foul Shot Meet The sixth annual free Uirow toomament for Elon’s women’s students will get underway at the Alumni Metnorial Gymnas ium next Monday, February 13th, and will continue through next Saturday, February 18th. This was ansounced by Mrs. Jeanne Griffin, director of wom en’s sports on the campus, who stated tS'.lt the event wiU )}« under sponso^^'P of the Wim- en’s Athletic Association- The winner of the tourn;^^®"^ will receive an individual Ken Smith Paces EUm To Win Over Bulldogs Cadet Teaching (Continued From Page Oiiei cost, of Burlington, who taught eighth and ninth grade history. Four students worked in the Bes-1 semer Hifih School in Guilford | County, including Patricia Craw ford, of Greensboro, who taught tenth grade biology; Rodger Knapp, of Verona, Pa., who taught tenth and eleventh grade history; F.dward Green, of Middlttown, Delaware, who taught ninth grade mathematics; and William West, for third spot in the North State Captain Ken Smith ripped the cords with deadly accuracy as he paced the Elon Christians to a decisive 92 to 78 victory over the Atlantic Christian Bulldogs here on Monday night, a victory which moved the Maroon and Gold cag ers ipto a tie with Appalachian him in the double digit scoring column were Jug Irvin with 17 Dewey Andrew with 14 and Gary Teague with 13 points. Dick Knox with 19 and Jerry Fritz with 15 points lead the Bulldogs, with Elon holding Jack iBoyd, Bulldog ace, to a scant two points. The line-ups: of Henderson, Iw taught eighth and ninth grade physical educa tion. Three students were assigned to Southern High School, including Barbara Day, of South Boston, a., who taught high school mathe matics; Loretta Hilliard, of Dur ham, who taught high school home economics; and Janette Inge, of Elon College, who taught twelfth grade English. Cage Scoring (Continued from Page Three) no other team in the league could show a pair of shooters even close to the Irvin-Smith combined ave rage of 37.5 points per game for the current season. The individual and team sta tistics for the first 23 gamt.° of the year are shown below: Player Q FG FT TP Irvin 23 174 120 468 Smith 22 140 9y 379 Andrew 23 62 5s) 183 Burke - 22 64 22 150 Teague 22 57 29 143 Momingstar 22 39 58 Miller 20 52 21 Conatser 10 32 13 Hawks 20 13 23 Myers 9 Hodges 10 Maidon 4 Cheek 3 Guthrie 2 Bowman 5 ELON TOTAL OPPONENTS . .. 23 638 427 1,703 7 1 1 1 0 0 136 12.1 77 49 17 2 2 2 2 1 standings. The Chri^ians broke away to a 5-0 lead in the first minute and held the front all the way as they chalked their second win of the year over the Bulldogs. The Elon edge was eight points at half-time, and Atlantic Christian could never get closer than seven points after that. Smith hit eight field goals and dropped in twelve free throws in oacing the Elon attack. Joining Nortlicntt (Continued From Page Oae> Pos. Elon (92) ACC CJ8) F—Smith (28) Fritz (15) F—Irvin (17) Atkinson (7) C—Andrew (14) Oden (12) G—Teague (13) Boyd (2) G—Momingstar (8) Knox (19) Half-time: Elon 43, Atlantic Christian 35. Elon subs — Miller 8, Burke 2, Hawks 2. Atlantic Christian subs— Fillingame 11, Eskew 1, Parham 9, Harris 2. New York and at Garrett Biblical Institute in Evanston, Illinois in 1954. He also was Select Preacher at Cambridge University in 1958 In addition to his editorial dut ies in England, the Reverend Northcott is editor-at-large of the Christian Century and is its Lon don correspondent. He is also a writer on religious affairs for the Manchester Guardian and the London Observer, and is religious affairs adviser to the latter pub lication. He is an occasional mem- iber of the British Broadcasting Corporation’s “Brain Trust” and a broadcaster in the BBC’s serv ices from London. The tour planned for Dr. North- cott as a Danforth Visiting Lec turer will take him to sixteen out standing colleges and universities in several sections of the nation along with his visit to the Elon campus. --I Catawba Game (Continued From Page Three) The second hafl was a repeat of the first, with Elon taking a quick lead before the rivals began swapping scores. The final fifteen minutes again saw the lead change hands ten times, and Catawba came from behind to tie the count in the final minute on a field goal by John Garrison and free throw by Jimmy Wade. In the overtime the Christians’ erratic shooting really hurt, for they were' unable to score on eight floor tries, and Catawba took the lead on two field goals by Gar rison and Roger Snow. This forced Elon to press for possession, fwhich resulted in Elon fouls, and the Indians made good on four free throws in as many tries tor the final margin. A1 Johnson topped the Indian* and gained high score for the night with 19 points, one more than Oaptain Ken Smith, who paced Elon with 18 counters. Oth er Elon scorers were Jug Irvin with 14 and Eddie Burke with 12 points. Joining Johnson in leading Catawba were Larrell Forbis with 14, Garrison with 12 and Snow with 11 points. The line-ups: Pos. Elon (66) Elon Splits Catamount Tilts Life—The everlasting struesle to keep the money coming in, anti the teeth, ^ir and vital organs from coming out. F—Irvin (14) F—Smith (18) C—Burke (12) (j—Teague (3) G—Momingstar (6) Catawba (6S) Johnson (19) Wade (3) Medford (8) Snow (11) Forbis ;14) Half-time: Catawba 30, Elon 28. Elon subs — Andrew 3, Myers 2, Miller 2, Hawks. Catawba subs — Garrison 12, Dew 1, Moss, Rob erts. (Contmaed from Page 'Three) Cullowhee, Westem Carolina’s Mel Gibson broke loose with sharpshooting exhibition which netted 31 points f«r the home team. Riding on the fine shooting of Gibson, the Western Carolina cag ers were unable to clinch their win in the first of the two-game series early in the contest. Ahead by only four points at half-time the Cat quintet widened the mar gin to 15 points at 65-50 midwa the final half. Jug Irvin topped the attack for the Christians with 20points, but there were three other Elon play ers in double figures. Dev.cy Andrew hit 13, Ken Smith 11 and iBiU Momingstar 10 counters The line-ups: Pos. Elon (72) W. Carolina (85) F—Smith (11) Seal (15) 23 643 445 1.732 20) Murray (5) C—Andrew (13) L^velle (14) G—Miller (8) Gibson (31) G—Momingstar (10) Tarpe (16) Half-time: Western Carolina 39 Elon 35. Eton subs — Hawks 2, Burke V. P. I. Prof (Continued From Page One) South Dakota, prior to joining the VPI faculty thirty years ago. In addition to his teaching duties during the past three decades and more, he has also had practical experience with constmction com panies and has been associated with a number of military pro jects. He was director of a special study for the Ford Foundation in 1960 of possible acceleration of engineering studies. He has writ- Elon 85, West Carolina 84 Proving their fighting spirit and mettle under the most difficult conditions, the Elon ChrisUans re bounded from a 20-point half-time deficit to post a heart-chilling 85 to 84 victory over the Western Carolina Catamounts at Cullow hee last Saturday night. The Christian win came on a jumper from the side by Jug Ir vin with barely six seconds on the clock, and time was out before the Cats could regain their lead ■the home team’s margin to a single point. The Catamounts were off in fly ing style in the first half as they literally snowed the Elon outfit and moved to a commanding 52 to 32 margin. The 20-point deficit seemed too great to be overcome, but Coach Bill Miller’s boys did not know the meaning of defeat as they came back for a flaming final half. The Elon shooters were hitting hot as they counted 53 to 32 in that final half. Captain Ken Smith was good on his two free throws to cut the margin to 84-83 in the final minute, and Irvin’s jump shot did the rest. The Catamounts hit 32 field goals, compared with 25 for the Christians, but Hon was deadly from the charity stripe and drop ped 35 of 44 free throws, which came on a total of 22 Catamount fouls. Irvin topped the Elon scoring and was leader for the game with 23 points, and four other Elon players were in double figures, with Bill Momingstar getting 17, Dewey Andrew 16, Ken Smith 16 an Gary Teague 14 points. Mel Gibson led the Cats with 22 points and was joined by three of his mates in the double digit column. ’The line-ups: ten numerous articles in the en- Irvin’s jumper came only a few gineering field and is a member ®®conds after Ken Smith had iiit Pos. Elon (85) Smith (15) F—Irvin (23) C—Andrew (16) G—Teague (14) G—Momingstar (17) Half-^ime: Westem Carolina 52, Elon 32. I Elon subs — Miner, Hawks,' Burke. Westem Carolina subs I Peterson 4, Benson3, Gustafson 4,^ W. CaroUna (84) Seal (13) Lavelle (13) Murray (17) Gibson (22) Tharpe (3) (p of national engineering societies. I a pair of free throws to narrow i Green 2, Horn 3. Lambda Omega Rho SoiM fratemitiea get athletes. Some get brains. This fraternity gets yirtually everybody. Including wemen. It has fanatically loyal members in more than 100 countries around the world. It has no pin and its only ritual b the simple act of enjoying Coca-Cola mtg itail^e day of the year. Its name? L 0 R—Loven of ReOreBhmeat. Join op today. SIGN OF GOOD nSTT •oww «nde, oulhorily of Th. Coco^:olo Comp«.y fc- BURLINGTON COCA-COU BOTTLMG COMPAQ