PAGE FOUR MAROON AND GOLD FYiday^Iay 1, 1964 Itaiul Pr(‘K‘iits Spriiiji (]>iic*rl Tlir F'.lon CollfRr Concert Band will prnrnt lt> annual tpring ron- crrt in Whitlfy Auditorium at 8 o'clock next Thun*day nl^ht. Miy 7lh, under the direction of Prof. lack O. White a» conductor. A ipecial gue»t performer with the band at that time will be Prof. Walter He-itafer. pianist. »bo will make his fimt appearance on the Elon campu* when he playi Onhwln't "Khapnody in Blue" as a piano solo. The big concert band will play ■I p»*o(;ram cnnsisting of the v> nrki of Osterlinn, Handel, Mozart. Beet hoven. Tchaikovsky, Cacavas and Gershwin. Garth lIutMMi will ap pear as trumpet soloist with the band in Cacavas’ "Night In Ma»- hatUD. LKAVIX; EUKN COACH JOHNNY WIKE Pdiither JSine Doii'us Elon 111 1-0 Game The High Point Panthers eked a thrilling 1 to 0 victory over the Elon Christian.', in a Carolina Con ference battle at Hish Point I 'lt Saturday afternoon in whr* w.v po-wihly the be.st plaved erm- of the entire season in the circuit, fo' the rival pitchers each tiirn''(l ' masterful Ihree-h.t mounH each of them received erm'-l port. Dave Williard. the Pant*ier mo'ir ' ace. won the game, but he had to yield the true Ditching honor*; tr. Herb Johnson, who went the 'o ■' for the Christians. John«;on t:"” ' back the Panthers in one tw" ■ order in every innin? •*’ seventh, and only four mon fn?" him in that frame when fho ” ■ Pointers got th-ir o-’l” j'-or* It was simply a thri-o m three-down performance for .Tfhi"' almost all the way. Th? ^ ni'’ • got to him for one sincl- ■’ fifth, but Tom Piccinin* •>'•1 '■ Davis pulled a double k'Hi''™ '■ •' that runner and retire ft' T’ on three batters. The loan score of the game came in the bottom of the seventh. Bob Harris led off with a single, ad vanced to second on a sacrifice .'ind scored on Dave Kemp’* sln^e, hut Phil Cheek made a perfect throw to second base and caught Kemp on a .steal attempt. John.son then resumed his one-two-three pitching in the eighth, .so the Pan thf'r.s had not a single man left on b,n.se for the game. .lohnson fanned eight men and iillowed no walks in his fine mound •'•■rformiince. Willard walked two .••n'l fanned six in working out his 1-0 win. No man on either team hit more than once, R II R F.lon 000 000 000—0 3 0 Hiijh Point 000 000 lOx—1 3 0 ,Iohn.son ai>d Cheek; Willard and Ure. Eloii Faculty Dies Oil April 17 Prof. James L. Comer, 31. menv her of the faculty of the Elon Col lege mathematics department, died in Friday night, April 17th, in North ' pflim Memorial Hospital at Chap- ! Kill. H" had undereone surgery some weeks ago and had been in "Itical c( ndition for several days ;''r to h s death. '!.• wir .1 nr'ti'' of Morrison Tenn., and was a graduate of Ten- >?ssee Tech He held the masters ■ • •’e in mathematics from the Uni- "rsity of North Carolina and hi(' -ntinued to do advanced gradu ite work there since joining the Elon mathematics st."'f ’■V of 19#2. '■.ofossor Comer and his wife had l-'d In Chapel Hill during his ' luire at Elon. The wife survives, ' ”1’ with other members of the '•Iv In Tennes.see. \ siecial momorial service was I 1 In Whl;ley Auditorium on the - (■ m^uis at 10 o’clock Monday Coach Wike Takes Post With WCC Johnny Wike. line coach at Elon College for the past four years has accepted a position at Western Caro lina College for the 1964 football season. Wike will replace Romie Hamilton as line coach for the Catamounts un der head coach Dan Robinson. Ham ilton is leaving football to devote full duties to administration. A native of Mount Holly. N. C.. ,.ike played high school football in his hometown, two years in the Ma rine Corps at Camp Lej«une, two years at Wingate Junior College and two years at East Carolina. He came to Elon with Head Coach George Tucker four years ago. Atl Elon. he has taught in the physical' education department and also headed the golf squad. . Tucker said that he would ha'• a hard time replacing Wike. “We] The Catawba Indians grabbed top wi.sh him the best of luck at West-j honors over the Elon and Guilforc' ern Carolina, and we're sure he j tracksters In a triangular meet 0 Butler Attends Soiillierii Meet >V. E. Butler. Jr., business man ager of Klon College, represented the college at the annual meeting of the Southern Association of Col lege and University Business Of ficers, which was held in Atlanta. Ga.. April 15th, 16th and 17th. The three-day gathering included delegates from all universities and major colleges in the South, with a program which featured discus sion of numerous problems arisini’ from institutional purchasing, plant maintenance, building con struction and law relating to edu cational institutions. GET TOP HOLES IN NEW PLAY Indians Win Three-Way Traek Meet will do the same fine job he did for us. We certainly hate to lose him." Wike is married to the former Carolyn Alligood, and they have one son. He holds a B. S. degree from East Carolina and received his Master s degree in phy ed and education from the same school. Spotlijslitiii" (Continued From Page Three' chances are still better chat he will be successful. Many ELn athlete.s major in departments other than the stereo-typed image of the big, dumb P. E. major. In fact, of late, | Gregory E). Gray fO, Lovell fG). many athletes have been frequent TIME: 54.5 sect, ng honor rolls, ^ ^*^0 YARD RUN: Martin ^C). April 10th. The Indians took eleve" firsts and tied for another as thev tallied 85>4 points, with Elon takinr second with 39^4 and Guil/ord 2^ points. Roland Milltr and Bill Manr counted firsts for Elon in the two mile and the discus, and Wlllir Tart tied for first in the hundred. The summary: 100 YARD DASH: Tie for first by Tart (E> and Cook (C>; tie for third by Ingram fC> and Robins (O. TIME: 10.1 secs. 220 YARD DASH: Blackmon (Ci. Robins (O. tie for third by Tart lEl and Cook (O. TIME 22.9. 440 YARD DASH: Blackmon This concept of quality has been the primary reason for Elon foot ball successes over the past two years. Coach Tucker and staff look tor quality, not quantity. The loot ball team is chosen from a maxi mum of .V) candidates, and tho.se who make the team have ample op- Funeral rites were held I portunity to play. Large colleges '.!'iy afternoon, April 20th, in his ' town in Tennessee. Prof. ':es Toney and Prof. Wesley Alex- mder attended the funeral services as representatives of the Elon fac ulty. BaseJ)a11ers Donii AhJ)'^y' The Elon Christians used an eighth inning rally to break a 3-all tie and turn back the Belmont Abbey Cni.saders 5 to 3 at Belmont on April 23rd. nmning the Christian record to fifteen wins in twenty starts for the year, Jimmy Dailey went the route on the mound for the Qiristians and set the Cni.saders down with seven wide ly scattered hits. He allowed the home outfit two safeties in the first frarTK when the Crusaders plated two runs, but he never allowed more than a single hit in any one inning after that. It was a booming triple by Art Davis, husky Elon first sacker, which provided the tie-breaking scores for the Christians in the. eighth rack. Davis also hammered Continued From Page Oi out a double and single to give him ■ _ _ . ... » .u , . I .u i ‘ lenderson, and court jesters for th* a perfect three or three f^ ^ occasion will be Kay Kimbro, of da^No other Elon hitter bingled „,hane, and Clayton Johnson, of more than once. j , , R H E women’s phvs'col ^duci- Elon Oil 010 020—5 8 1 t '.vlll direct the pageant, witii R“lmont Abbey 200 010 000-^ 7 4 queen to be crowned by Fred Dailey and Cheek: Pohl and Stepbensoo, newly elected stndent Parks. y president. ^ruiii Nine Topples Elon 'i» I 'noir Rhvne P?nrs ch.ilked ' nn et victory over the Elon ‘■•'PS a' Hickory on April 20th ■ ''o-r tho F.lon nine its second ■ loss in Carolinas Con nee competition and leaving the ■Allans with an 8-2 mark in loop 'lay, h''d \v''lIon"H Lon ■ Phyne S to 2 in a previous en- ■ ;pmcnt on the Elon field, but it , ,T different story in the Bears’ 'r. where the Lenoir Rhyne nl.nted pairs of markers in '' the third and sixth innings to 'I up a margin that was .suffi- 1* for the victory. 'Hn oiitfi’ j'l-’H" n Trc it 1)1(1 :ill the gam? out of th" f'ro in h” top of the ninth, whon Phil h-ck blasted a two-run homer to ■ 'he Bruin lead to a single run. " 'h'-n out two otiier runners 'h? cushions in that frame before 'Lackey came on as a relief '. her for Lenoir Rhyne and forced >n Elon hitter to pop up for the final out. ' The line score: R H E n 000 001 002—3 7 4 ■ V- rhyne 002 002 OOx—4 9 2 : erott and Cheek; Gib.son. Lackey '' -ind Brown. WP — Gibson, 'r.f'run — Cheek lElon', one oa in ninth. often have 70 freshman football playerk. Future Elon footballers must be top caliber students and football players. They must be an asset to the college. Coach Tucker attempt; ‘0 recruit players which are better thnn the norm. They must meet Elon standards, regardless of theii- credentials. Coach Tuckor sells Elon. He talk' if our close student relation'h’o ''ur increasing academic standards and the opportunity to participate at Klon. Tucker also sells Elon ti the prospective athlete’s parent^^ The outlook for the continuation )f quality athletics, as well as qual ity education, at Elon is good, in the Diamond Anniversary expan .ion program now underway hen It Elon, one-third of the proposed lunds will go toward endowments for top quality students. We would hope that among these .students will be our Normal Nor min athletes, the kind we have iRht now. FHANK RICH PEGGY PARKER MIISOR SPORTS Crabtree lEi, Drydale fG), Pinnan avia C'. TIME: 2 mins. 16.6 secs. MILE RUN: Humphreyvllle Ch Miller E', Champan Ei, Long fC'. TIME: 4 mins. 48,9 secs. TWO-MILE RUN: Miller fE', Humphreyvllle (C>, Chapman (E' I-«ng C>. TIME: 10 mins. 34.6 secs 120 HIGH HURDLES: Martin (O, Moose (C', Allen (G), Dean (E). TIME: 16.8 secs. 220 LOW HURDLES: Gray (O. Ingram C'. Martin (G>. Allen G). TIME: 26.8 secs. HIGH JUMP: Grote (C). tie for second by Smith (G), Armstrong (C) and Hackett 'O. HEIGHT: 5 feet, 8 Inchei. BROAD JimP: .^Vpplefield (C). Robins C\ Coleman (G), Dean (E> DISTANCE: 20 feet, 5 inches. POLE VAULT: Martin (C), Gard ener (G). HEIGHT: 10 feet. SHOT PLIT: Roy (G', Ferrell (E> Purgason GK Mann (Ei. DIS I'A.NCE: 44 feet, DISCUS: Mann (E). Boyd (C>, Ferrell (E), Bailey (C). DISTANCE 118 feet, 5 inches JAVELIN: Seckel (C>, Lee iCl Cox (El, Kemnson (E). DISTANCE 1G4 feet, 4 inches. MILE RELAY: Catawba, Elon. riME: 3 mins. 38.8 ^ecs. Frank Rich, left, and Peggy Roach Parker, right, both of them from Burlington, will play the featured roles In the Elon Player presenta tion of "Oedipus," the great Greek tragedy by Sophocles, which is set for presenta'ilon on an outdoor stage at the south entrance to Mooney Building on Friday night. May 8th, and Saturday night. May 9t!;. Rich kas been one of the outstanding performers with the Players for the past two years, and Mrs. Parker was one of the brightest Player stars of some years ago, when she won high honors while performing rflth the Players under her maiden name of Peggy Roach. Eloii Group Gets Na't'oiial Offices Four m-’mbers of ti’e Limbj Chapter of Sigma Mu Sigma Fra ternity were elected or appointed to national offices in the fraternity It the anun.I Sigma Mu Sigma na tional convention, which was hel in Charleston, W. Va.. on April 18th and 20th. Larry Biddle, of Wilmington, Del., was elected deputy grand president of the fraternity; and Prof. Guy Lambert, assistant librarian at Elon, was elected grand secretary of th group. Melvin Shreves. of Assawan Va.. who has been vice-president of student government at Elon and ed itor of the campus newspaper this year, was appointed editor of th~ Sigma Mu Siema newspaper “T'l Azureor.” Also appointed to office was Dr William Moseley Brown, of St. Pet ersburg, Fla., who was formerly ' member of the Elon College faculty who was named grand historian b'' Grand President A. T. Boley. Dr Brovra was one of the men responsi ble for the merger of Sigma ?Iu Sigma and Sigma Alpha Chi in 195 GOLF SCHEDULE Elon 5'i, Pfeiffer lO'i, F.lon 6, Catawba 10. Elon 5'i, East Carolina 18'i. Elon 9'i, Lenoir Khyne 6V4. Elon 9. High Point 15. Elon 5, A. C. C. 15. Elon 7, Guilford 9. (Remaining Meets) Apr. 28—Catawba and Pfeiffer, at Salisbury. ■May 1—Appalachian and Lenoir Rhyne, home. May 1—High Point and East ■May 4—Appalachian and Lenoir Khyne, home. •May 11-12—Tournament, at Boone. TRACK SCHEDULE Appa- Guil- Elon 19'J, Catawba 85' laehian 57. Elon 39)4, Catawba 8514, foi-d 22. Elon 85, A. C. C. 41. Elon 60. Hi»h Point 70, A. C. C. X. (Remaining Meets) Apr. 29—W. and L., away. May 5—Open. May 9—Conference Meet. TENNLS SCHEDULE Elon 2. High Point 5. Elon 2. A. C. C. 5. Remaining Meets) Apr. 29—Guilford, away. May 9—Guilford, home. Date Not Set — Pfeiffer, home. May 14-15-16 — Tournament, Pfeiffer. REASON ENOUGH Men go bald because of the in tense activity going on in their heads. For the same reason, women seldom grow beards. MAY DAY Paiitlior Track (Continued From Page Three) Baugh (IIP), fourth Dean (E). TIME: 26.6 sees. HIGH JUMP: Young dlP). Rich HP), Brewer IHP'. Hill (AC). HEIGHT: 5 feet. 6 Inches. BROAD JUMP: Rich (HP), John son IE', tie for third by Dean (E) and Jones (HP). DISTANCE: 18 feet. 1H4 inches. POLE VAULT: Weisbecker (HP). Gregory (AC'. Tniiett (HP). Adams (AO. HEIGHT: 10 feet. 9 inches SHOT: Ferrell (E>. Wilson (E), Mann (E), Pearson (HP). DIS TANCE: 41 feet. 4 inches. DISCUS: Mann (E). Medlin (HP'. Peebles (AC>. Wilson (E): DIS T.ANCE: 118 feet 24 inches. JAVELIN: Seaver 'HP). Peebles (AC). Cox (E), Tice (AC). DIS- T.'VNCE: 148 ftet. 11 inches. MILE RELAY: High Point. Elon TIME: 3 mins., 33.6 secs. Wisps Of Wiwlom The ability to speak in many languages is valuable, but the abil ity to keep your mouth shut in one is priceless. 4 View From Tlie Oak vilion, the national fraternity and sorority exhibit will be entitled: Youth Partners in Free Enterprise. The displays in the exhibit will include realistic portrayals of how fraternities and sororities develop campus loyalty, provide valuable citizenship training, encourage schol arship, promote high standards of conduct, teach business manage ment, and inculcate the best tradi tions of citizenship in everyday liv ing. Many little-known but significant facts about the fraternity and sorori ty system will be highlighted in the exhibit fo» public edification. Ex amples (rf these are such statements that more than 75% of all funds contributed by individuals to Insti tutions of higher learning are given by fraternity men and sorority wom en, and the fact that over 70% of fraternity and sorority members complete their college courses as compared with only 50% of non fraternity students. The exhibit will have a limited run during the period from July 19 fo August 9 since the space is be- inq donatod by the American Eco nomic Foundation on a rotating ha (Continued From Paee Two) nt the World's Fair In New York today and finish up tomorrow. Last week Governor Terry Sanford ap pointed them as Goodwill Ambas sadors of North Carolina for the part they are playing as repre sentatives of Elon College and of North Carolina. Greeks and the World’s Fair The contributions of fraternities and sororities to the cause of higher education in American and Canad an oolieges and universities vril! be told to the world at the New York World's Fair which opened April 22 The story will be portrayed in a special exhibit jointly sponsored by the National Intra-Fraternity Conference and the National Pan hellenic Conference to be displayed in the huge Hall of Free Enter prise on the International Plaza of the fair grounds. The Hall of Free Enterprise itself, which is sponsored by the American Economic Foundation, will be a comprehensive and dramatic pre sentation of the blessings and bene fits of the free enterprise sy.stem of the Americas and other parts of the Western World. In keeping with the general theme of the mammoth pa- with other participants. Sloans Hold Anniversary Observance Dr. W. W. Sloan, veteran member of the Elon College faculty, has just ?ompleted his thirty-fifth year in the gospel ministry, and he and Mrs. Sloan were hosts to sixteen local ministers and fifteen of the ministers’ wives at a dinnei held at Moonelon in observance of the anniversary of Dr. Sloan’s ordina tion, which occurred on April 24, 1929. The Rev. Jiries Amash, a native and veteran minister of Palestine, whose son. Prof. Paul Amash, is a member of the Elon foreign lang uage faculty, pronounced the invo cation in the Arabic language. Dr. John Truitt, former superintendent of the Congregational Children's Home here and who was ordained in 1916, had the closing prayer and benediction. An outstanding feature of the pro gram at the dinner was “Testi monies From The Parsons,” In which each minister told of high ooints in his ministry, the hardest problem he had solved or his most embarrassing experience. Some told of forgetting the Lord's Prayer or the Twenty-Hiird Psalm or of start ing to read the wrong ritual in a service. After group singing, the wives of the ministers had an opportunity to tell their own stories concerning their husbands, and the wives con tributed as much humor as did the ministers. As mementoes of the oc casion, Dr. Sloan gave each min ister an autographed copy of his new book, “A Survey Between the Testaments," a volume recounting religious growth in the five centu ries between the Old and New Testaments. Ordained as a minister in 1929 upon graduation from McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago, Dr. Sloan i;erved as director of re ligious education at the Congrega tional Church in Appleton, Wis., and later secured his Ph. D. at North western University, He also served a pastorate near Grand Coulee Dam while that structure was being built, but he later entered the field of college teaching, and both he and Mrs. Sloan joined the Elon faculty in 1947. •CTTIED UNOE« AUIHO«irY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY fT “"RUnoicn oca-COLA bottling *’Coke“ it a registered tfode mork. )J953. TH£ COCA-COtA COMMNY

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