Friday, October 20, 19®i POOB MAROON AM) GOLD Tampa Overpowers Elon In 13 To 0 Grid Battle NEW ORGAN BEING INSTALLED IN WHITLEY OuVmanned *nd out-gunned.t b«t DOt out-fou*ht. the Elon Chriit- tani dropped a Wtteriy-contwtcd 13 lo 0 decliio* to Uie p«w*rful and undefeated Tampa Unlverilty Spartan* before 5.000 fan* on PhllUpi Field at Tampa on Satur day nlgbt. October l«h Te Spartaiw penetrated the •tubbom Christian defen»e» for a oa tlir«« otker accaaiona a gallant and fighting band of Elon gridders halted Spartan threat* inside the Elon tes. There were three other time* when the heavy Sparta* eleven penetrated Elon territory, but each time the Christiana braced and halted the threat* far from sconng dirt, and four times the pair of touchdown*, one in the fin- flghtmg Christian.^ defenders eith ,1 minute. o( the first half and er took the ball or forced Tampa another In the fourth quarter, but to punt from deep In the Spartans Three times alert Elon players pounced on Tampa fumble*, one ot them halting a Spartan threat at the Klon four. Another of the Klon fumbles recoveries came ai the Tampa 26-yard line, setting up Elon’s only real scoring threat of file game late in the second, quarter, but /orward passes fell incomplete to stop the Elon threat 2U yards -hort of a touchdown own territory. I*rizrs Gaiiipiis (irouj)s Fraternltlen. »ororltlr% and other rampu* group* have a rhanre t» win a stereo phono- rraph and a Polaroid land cam era In the ■‘Collefe Bowl Round up.” a content _whlrh I* beln* UHrd on the campus under the dlrrrtlon of Rocer Bednarlk. The contest 1* to see which aroup can collect the mofcl empty packs from Marlboro. Parlla- menl, Alpine and Philip Morris cUarettes. The empty contain er*. which may be obtained from any source, should be collected and turned over to Bedoarik by N'avember lIKh. Staff Work In Progress (hi Annual The work 1* well *tarted on prep aration of material for the 1901 62 edition of Phi Psi Cli. Eloa ColUge annual, with Dori* Fair- cloth a* editor-ln-chief leading a capable editorial itaff In addition to the edltor.4n-chlef the *taff include* Eleanor Smith, BKlstant editor; Mclver Heixter- >0D and DIan Clary, organiaation editor*; Shirley Foakett, art edit or. and David Mar*hbum and Wendy Cowell, sport* editor*. Other staff members aae J4rce Howell. Brenda Woodward, Katli* ryn Thomas and Katky SaadefuT, cla*i editor*; Gail Hettel. feature editor; Carol Trage*or azid Valeric Spangler, copy editor*. Allen Tyn- d«U is buainew manager, and Patsy Cole 1* typist for the group. HOW IT HAPPENED 'CoatiMMd frrai Pag* Threal The Elon paailng attack ha* held an even greater adge over the opposition, for Christian pasa- er* have completed 25 of ton es for 380 yard*, while the enemy pa*aer* have completed only 18 of 47 attempu for Ju*t 211 yard* With *uch an edge over the op- poBltlod for thi* season. It 1* equal ly pleasing to note that the Christ ians have made a much better average on both offense and de fense than did the Elon eleven of a year ago The Chnstlan* have averaged 253 8 yard* per game on offense thU fall, far ahe»d of last year* average of 189 5 yard* per game. The Elon de- I'a* limited the opponents to a game of average of 199 3 jHrds. much le*a than the 260.1 yard* per game allowed the op- position last y^ar In the face of all tiese figures, one may ask Just how and why the Christian, of 1961 could have »o«t three of their first four game«. •“d the explanation may t>e found Elon 4 99 16 83 8 91 14 2 0 « 8 37.5 56 I 5 First Downs 14 Yards Gain Rushing 244 Yardii IxMt Rushing 52 Net Yards RusMng 192 Yards Gain Passlnx 150 Total Gains Scrimmage 342 Passeti Attempted 14 Passes Completed 8 Opp. Passes Intercepted 3 Runback Int. Passes 0 Number Punts 5 Ave. Yardh Punta 41.4 Runback All Kicks 30 Fumbles iMl 3 Yard* Penalties 115 •Score by Periods: Elon 1 a • 0 Tampa 0 7 0 6—13 Tampa Touchdowns—Moore (1* run), O'Brien (39-pass from Bes- aent. Extra Points—Neve 1 (kl«Rl. • • • The score was stir, a 0 to 0 tie when that Elon threat failed, and there was less than three min- to go until ntermlssion when Vaden Bessant. Sparian quarter back. connected with a pair of long passes to halfback Dick O’ Brien. one for M and the other for 21 yards, to put the ball on the Elpn five. Fullback Bob Moore smashed over in two tritfi, and Jim Neve booted the point for Tampa'* 7 to 0 halftlme lead. The *econd Spartan toichdown came in the fourth quarter when Tampa t«ok over after an Elon punt on the Christian thirty-two. The Chriatian defender* threw the Spartans back seven yards on the first play, but on second dawn Bcssent it O'Brien on a 39-yard f>asa for a touchdown. Neve's kick for point was bad, but the Spart ans had their 13 to 0 victory Sigma Mu Sigma Boasts Fine Record Of Service Prof Fletcher Moore, dean of the college and chairman of the Eton College music department, is ^clured atve at the new Reuter console of the newly renovated pipe organ in Whitley Auditonum which is to be completely installed and ready for use in the near future. The through gifts to the Elon College Organ Fund, will make the coUege's thirty-six year old Skinnw Organ into a completely modem instrument. It will have fifteen new ranks of pipes and a new hor»epower blower to repUce th. old 5-horsepower plant When the work is completed, the organ wiU have a toul of 2.392 pipes and will be one of the finest of its size in this area. (ConttauT'd fra* Pa«e Tw«) .same time it receWed the highest inter-fratemity scholastic rating. About 1,200 members were Ini tiated in SigBia Mu Sigma in the ensuing years, including college presidents, deans and heads of de partments, along with a number of prominent public officials. The Sigma Mu Sigma Fraternity was Quill (Continued from Page Two) with emphasis on maroon ai>d gold, will be springing up around the campus. Elon will display its array of floats in a procession down Main Street in Burlington the after noon of the game with the Cat amounts. Kick-off time is at 2 o'clork the afternoon of the 28th. ' Since Homecoming is so close ' to Halloween, maybe a little black magic in the form of school ' spirit could formulate a victory I for us. , Homecoming is, of course, climaxed by tke dance Saturday night. If you fellows haven't asked your favorite girl, you'd better make a point to do it right away—someone else might beat you to it. Let's make this year's dance a swinging one— not a sit-«round or a stand- around. We don’t have many chances to step around the floor to the music of such a lively group as the musicians obtained by the Dance Committee. Greek Letter Gridders Ton Intramural Action (iliatler Box Continued from Page Two) '•■nd the attempted captor reel- inging. Two blond animals, the only ones in exliwence. are Dogwood's, ■enounced dcgasomb. The cre atures are rarely seen outside the 'ungle in the daytime But l»t's not forget the two Yankee-birds who dwell together In the same tree in the upper»w,t region of the JungJe The yelk>w-f,athered one ii distinguished by her unus ual cry, "Yeh-Yeh"' and the black- feathered one can be .spotted by her unique chattering, which "ounds very much like a 33LP re- ■ording played at the speed of 78 The intramural football action, which is already in full swing, got underway with most of the favored teanu coming through unscathed in the first week's competition, with Sigma Mu Sigma, kappa Psi Nu and lota Tau Kappa each posting two victories The greater experieaae on the Greek letter teams proved to be the dacisive margin, with Sigma Mu Sigma turning loose a veteran team, which was bolstered by standout performances by several sophomores, to roll up an easy 27 to 0 victory over the Raiders of Smith and to grab a similar 26 to 0 margin over Smith I. Kappa Psi Nu, rolling along on the deft throwing arm of Jim Harrlll and the receiving of Jim Holmes, crushed Smith I by 45 to 6 and followed with a 28 To 7 thrashing o^ the Smith Sleepers. I*ta Tau Kappa played sound defense to edge the power-laden Carolina Colts 12 to 7 in the tight est game of the young season, and two days later ITK rolled over the hapless Smith Raiders outfit by a 34 to 6 count. The Carolina colts rebounded from their loss to ITK to topple the Smith Sleep- dle to Robert Utz pass got the extra point. Utz carried over for Sigma Ma’s second TD, and late In the first half Bill Bilderback Luby adding the extra point. In the second half Dick More count ed the final Sigma Mu touchdown, and Larry Strucker added the extra point for the 27-0 final score. Kappa Psi Nu. riding the arm of All-Campus Jim Harrill, struck early and often to crush Smith 45 to 6. George Mosher and York scored the first TD’s. and Jim Holmes added two more in the opening half for a hall-time 25 to 6 margin. Bob Stork scored Smith Is lone marker Jim Holmes, Murray and Mosher all scored in the second half drive. Sigma Mu Sigma kept its an scored-on mark through a second game by crushing Smith I 26 to 0 on October 11th. Held to a lone marker in the first half. Sigma Mu exploded for three scores and an extra point in the second half Lennie Riddle threw for thr«e of the Sigma Mu TD’s with tosses to Dick Purdy, Robert UU and Jerry Thompson, and Utz passed to Ken Lumpkin for another. The passing ers 7 to 6 in a penalty-riddled con-'"^ also figured heavily test. Tom Harrington put thei'” scoring drives. Arabs in front with touchdown in Psi downed Smith’s »n two figure* in the nUtlatlcal c*lumn*. the figures f»r fumbleis teat and penalties, two cat««ories •hat may be lUted as breaks " •f the game. f*»e®rt» *bow that Elon ha* iMt ♦hr ball • tjmes on fatitbles. jB»t twice as many „ the fumbln gained from Ihe opposition Als«. ■Ion has bMa pmuiftMd 365 yvds, aoi»p*r*j with only 149 yard* for the ovposlng team*, ud nany of «bose fmnfcln and pena)H«s have came at Just the rijkt tHar to kill •o Hod aooriiic tkr«M ar ta |He fUtr eaesay a aasra. RPM "There is a rumar that a pubUc tour of the Jungle win be under taken m the near future Entrance charge wUl be twenty-fNe cenU aad two PMIlJp .Morris pmck. The quarter*, which will be calleeted at gae by R,Mrit. wiU be used to obtain furniture for (he Wage* in the -few Darm. and the :hp waning moments of the first half, and Harrington then threw tn Carroll Monger for what proved to be the dectsive extra point. The Sleepers struck back with a touch down early in the second half as Tom Pool carried into the end zone, but the try for point failed. Sleeper 28 to 7 in grabbing its second win of the year. Jim Har- rill threw TD passes to George Mosher and Jim Holmes, and John Muaich scored one on a run and passed to Tom Cariburg for an other. The Sleepers lone marker came as Lombard threw to Poel The second game of the opening "''‘h Young passing for the e»tra point On Thursday. Octaber 12th, the Carolina Cohs rolled over Smith Ar|^s 28 to 0 aft.r a close first doubleheader saw Iota Tau Kappa strike early, with Eddie dark throwing to JIai Xeviner for the touchdowa. The point try failed, ■and neither team could *ei an other drive started in the first hn*. b*t ITK mounted another scoring drive in the second half a* Ham Harding scored the touch down Bin Libby carried over for the Colts' TD as the Carolina oat fense in »ear, and the ColU gat I'cted by sorori% houads for the «ke hrotherly love • • • ■'peaking of Ju.Uae, ccnU it have bee. Coafwious that sad kiTh. na. bel bl* browa daat bat aama- aay pearly-«thil*, may meet force aad (off dowa aicitiag throat.** ir- Eiirollment (Continued From Page One) Connecticut with 20 and Massach usetts with 13 students. These states furnished 88 per cent of the Elon enrollment, with the other 12 per (fent coming from 15 states and five foreign nations. The foreign countries represented include Brazil. Cuba. Israel, Jor dan and Turkey, each of them with one student attending Elon this year. Within North Carolina, the sta tistics show that 52 of the state’s one hundred counties are repre sented, Alamance County ^im ished 297 students, other leaders including Guilford with 53. Rock ingham with 33, Randolph with 25. Durham with 22, and Forsyth and Orange with 18 each. The varied religious member ships and preferences show that that there is a total of 23 denom inations represented. As usual, the IMethodists and Baptists are tops in student representation. There are 221 Methodists, 204 Baptists 1S9 Congregational Christians, 115 Presbyterians, 49 Episcopal ians, 43 Catholics and 37 Luther ans. These groups claim 89 per cent of the enrollment, with the remainder coming from 16 other religious denominations. Have you heard about the new course being taught at George Williams College? It’s called "Relaxation”. A 10-week, one- credit course for which students get credit for being lazy Is it for real? Actually the course has been a great success, for as a result of it, students have stopped biting their nails and have cut down on their smok ing Students lie on mats or sit in chairs with arm rests and con centrate on one muscle. The cue to "go negative" is then given, and the students rid them selves of their tensions. For now. Quill at Will is still. merged with the older Square and Compass in 1952, with Dr. Harry K. EversuU named as Grand Pres ident and Dr. William Moseley Brown as Grand Secretary. The very choice of these two first grand officers linked Sigma Mu Sigma forever with Elon College, for Dr. Eversull held an honorary degree from Elon, and Dr. Brown was a member of the Elon faculty at that time. - •• J The Sigma Alpha Chi (Square and Oompass), later the Sigma. Mu Sigma Fraternity at Elon Col lege has always maintained a high degree of campus service since the group was first installed at Elon back in 1950. It is the proud boast of the Sigma Mu Sigma boys that they have never refused a request for service at Elon. Officers of Sigma Mu Sigma this year include Ered Shull, of Bur lington, president; Jerry Drake, of Pleasant Garden, iirst vice- president; Dick More, of Arling ton, Va.. second vice-president; Lennie Riddle, of South Boston, Va, secretary; Paul Hyde, of Chi cago. Ill, treasurer; Lynn Ryals, of Durham, corresponding secre tary; Dick Purdy, of Annapolis, Md., athletic director; and Henry Johnson, of Burlington, social chairman. Other members from last year include Don Rankin, Miami Beac, iFla., Walter Bass, South Boston, Vs.; Harold Grey, Pleasant Gar- den; Lyn Puckett. Burlington; Mike Avent, Burlington; Bob Mc Kinnon, Burlington; Tommy Russ, Shallotte; Robert Utz, Madison, Va.; Ken Lumpkin, Danville, Va.; Bill Bilderback, Annapolis, Md.; Roger Grimson, Durham; Wally Sawyer, Portsmouth, Va.; Bill Luby, Wethersfield, Conn.; Skip Paslia, Arlington, Va.; Robert Ditzch Rozelle, N. J.; Sonny Murray, Vi*- gUina, Va.; Tommy Gold, Meor ville; Grover Mattingly, Wasu- Ington, D. C.; and Jerry Thoiap- fion, Lexington. New members initiated this year include Ken Broda, Fairlawn, N. J.; Harold Rogers, Durham; Bob Young, Oyster Bay, N. Y.; Larry Strucker, Great Bridge, Va; and Nick Ciatola, White Plains, N. Y. Faculty members and advisors for the group include Prof. JoJhn Graves, Prof. Paul Reddish and Prof. Weslai' Alexander. Talkiiiff Sports (Continued > rom Page Three which were in my mind when I opened this colunwi with the dec laration that Mother Luck must surely smile on our Christians some time. In each of these games, just a single break turning the other way could have changed the tide of victory. And now, I say to you, "Auf weidersehen bis zum nachsten mal!” BAST CAROINA m!s to^BUM ih^ f Rocier^ («ootimied from Page Thn«e) P»ss to BUI Libby far a Isne score The finrt kalf saw the ColU roU Bill Bill Flscatell. for one score aad ^Wr tossed to Danny Hall aad wall for two others, lota Tau Kappa r«de tke thaow CUrk in a,34 to extra point to cat Don victory to 12 aad 7 [IVHIlw passvd u Jug Irvin lor ITK’* first scare, and Clark threw to Peeblas for the secoad. West bPMsed lor a Eaider TD that aar rowed (he morgia, hut ITK's 0re»tar experiwe pain off » Clark pfcpoinled Uviner. irvia On Tuesday. Octaber lOtb, sig- «a Mu Sigma utilized ils exper ience to roB part SaUU * Raiders 27 to • The Greak out« giabbe^i a 204 Iea4 by haif-Mmr as Un- prp-j'**' **^dle thaew to Sonnj Mur- |ry for Utc first tson. aaid a Hardin* with sc»*Dg passes. fire first down* oa a 7#-yard scor ing drive. The scoring play was a 9-yard paas from Wooten to Dan Kelley, and Bar} Clcnents broke throagfc for a tw^iotor aad the 23-14 score. Bloo was off ta the races again the next Koie tie ChrisUans got the ball, again posttag five first- and-te« sn a 7»-yard jouniay Marvin Orowdtr and Wayne Ma- lianes were the big gainers en this drive, -witk CSeaMiX^ smack&ng over faam Uw one 'for the touch down. A pass was incomplete en the iry-fcjr-potats, aad the •score was writt«n at 2S la M. aAP Lamb^ Omega Rho Some frrtanhis, gat athlat*. SoM-Mt frrtwiiHy ^brtuiny It hM fttatieaHy loyd liMnore thM MK^coimtriaa itonA world. no p)n ud Ha^only ritail>ta tta aoJ^ doe»;ota trttj Ui natieT L O R-Levw ol todsjr. BURUNGTON COCA-COU BOTTUN« COMPAMT