Friday, October 21, 196{
page four
Carson-Newman Downs
Elon By 14 To 0 Count
The Carson-Newman Eagles capi
talized on a partially blocked punt
WILL OFFER ORGAN CONCERT
Appearing as the second of the Elon Lyceum programs for the 1966-67
year will be a husband-wife team of organists, M. and Mme. Durufle, two
of the most noted organists in the world. Both are natives of France, he
born in Louviers and she in Marseille, and both have attained great rec
ognition in their nativeland, where he has been titular organist at Grand
Orgue de Etienne-du-Mont, and she has been titular organist at the Cathedral
of St. Veran de Cavaillon. Their concert at 4 o’clock on Sunday afternoon,
October 30th, will be one of two appearances in North Carolina, the other
being in Charlotte. Other American concerts will be in many of the nation’s
largest cities.
GIVEN HONOR
LINDA SMITH
Named Queen
By Sigma
Mu Sigma
The Lamba Chapter of Sigma Mu
Sigma, Masonic affiliated service
fraternity on the Elon College cam
pus, has just announced the selection
of Linda Smith, an Elon junior class
member, as the “Sigma Mu Sigma
Sweetheart” for the 1966-67 college
year.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter L. Smith, of Elon Col
lege, transferred to Elon College from
UNC-G during the past summer.
While at UNC-G she was a member
of the University Choir and of the
Mu Phi Epsilon music sororiety. At
Elon she is majoring in music and
preparing to teach piano and is ac
tive in the Elon Choir.
The Sigma Mu Sigma group has
selected its “Sweetheart” each year
for several years, with the girl thus
honored representing the chapter as
its sponsor in the Homecoming pa
rade and reigning at various gather
ings of the fraternity during the year.
Enrollment
(continued from page 1)
Honduras, Japan and Jordan.
Among the North Carolina students
there are 59 of the state’s 100 count
ies represented, three more than were
represented last fall. Alamance Coun
ty furnished 576 students, an increase
of 40 over the Alamance enrollment
last year. Other county leaders are
Guilford with 59, Durham 41, Rock
ingham 41, Randolph 25, Forsyth 24,
Orange 21, Person 20 and Wake 19.
The varied religious membership
and preferences represent 28 denomi
nations, two more than last fall. As is
usual, the Baptists and Methodists
have the largest groups with 357 and
299 students listed, each holding the
same relative rank as a year ago.
In third spot behind them is the
United Church of Christ with 264,
followed in order by the Presbyterians
with 171, Episcopalians 69, Catholics
65, Lutherans 47 and Jewish 6 stu
dents. The remaining 12 percent are
divided among other groups or listed
no preference.
The worst trouble with the future
is that it seems to get here quicker
than it used to.
and an intercepted pass deep in Elon
territory to sew up a pair of touch
downs and turned back the Elon
Christians 14 to 0 at Burlington Sta
dium on Saturday night, October 15th,
handing the Christians their fifth de
feat of the year.
The Eagles partially blocked an
* * *
HOW IT HAPPENED
Elon
Carson-Newman
18
First Downs
13
191
Yards Gain Rushing
188
23
Yards Lost Rushing
9
168
Net Yards Rushing
179
21
Passes Attempted
11
10
Passes Completed
5
84
Yards Gain Passing
37
252
Total Yards Offense
216
2
Opp. Passes Intercepted
3
24
Runback Interc. Passes
31
3
Number of Punts
6
30.0
Average Yards Punts
41.7
56
Runback All Kicks
31
2
Fumbles Lost
0
38
Yards Penalized
90
Score
By Periods:
Elon
0 0 0
0— 0
Carson-Newraan 0 7 0 7—14
Carson - Newman Touchdowns —
Medlin (12-run), Rutherford (2-run).
Extra Points — Pitt 2 (kicks).
* *
Elon kick in the first quarter and
gained the ball at the Elon 39-yard
line, and they drove from their for
the first touchdown, which came on
a 12-yard run by Ron Medlin. David
Pitt kicked true, and Carson-Newman
boasted a 7 to 0 lead at half-time.
Elon came back in the third quarter
to dominate play and drove 79 yards
to the Carson-Newman three for a
first down, but four plunges failed to
move the ball into pay dirt, with the
Eagles holding at the six inch line.
Late in the fourth period Carson-
Newman intercepted an Elon pass at
the Christian 25-yard marker and re
turned to the thirteen, and three plays
later Dale Rutherford bucked two
yards for the score, with Pitts again
kicking good for the final 14 to 0 win.
Writes Book
(continued from page 1)
being is immortal in some fashion.
Especially important is the manner in
which he links religious thought to
other channels of inquiry in the phys
ical and social sciences.
This is the third book which Dr.
Reynolds has written and published in
the field of religion since he joined
the Elon College faculty in 1946. His
first volume was “The Gospel Unlimit
ed,” published in 1949, which was a
Biblical study, and the second was
“Adventure With People,” a book on
Church leadership which appeared in
1954.
Dr. Reynolds is a native of Indiana,
the son of a clergyman, who followed
his father’s footsteps into the ministry.
He was educated at Butler University
and the Hartford Theological Semi
nary and went on to the University of
Edinburgh on a Welles Fellowship to
earn the Ph.D. degree. He also travel
ed extensively in Europe and spent
several months at the University of
Marburg in Germany.
Before he joined the Elon College
faculty in 1946, he was for a period
of eleven years the pastor of the
Second Congregational Church in
Manchester, Conn.
Maybe hard work never killed a
person, but you never heard of any
one resting to death, either.
Steere Will
Speak Here
On Monday
Appearing as the first of the speak
ers under the Visiting Scholars pro
gram of the Piedmont University Cen
ter during this 1966-67 college year.
Dr. Douglas V. Steere, a professor of
religion and philosophy at Haverford
College for more than thirty-five
years, will speak on the Elon cam
pus at 8 o’clock next Monday night.
Dr. Steere, a native of Michigan,
is a graduate of Michigan State and
Elon Band Is
Given Praise
By Grid Fans
The Elon College Marching Band,
which will be a feature of the Home
coming game with Catawba and the
Homecoming parade, has won much
praise from the grid fans for their
fine performances at other football
games played by the Fighting Chris
tians this fall. It has appeared at two
road games at Guilford and Appa
lachian and at the home tilt with
Presbyterian, playing under the di
rection of Prof. Jack O. White.
The members of the band group,
listed by instruments, follow:
FLUTE: Candy Hopewell.
CLARINETS: Bob Gregory, Gary
Johnson and Carson Kuhnert.
Saxaphones: Bob Johnson, Tom
Lewis and Dannie Underwood.
FRENCH HORNS: Terry De-
Long, Linda Duhl, Nancy Morgan,
and Judy Stevens.
TROMBONES: Clyde Bailey,
Butch Bayliff George Cannon, El-
wook Porshia, Elaine Sawyer and
Liz Woolsey.
BARITONES: Cleo Perdue and
Tom Short.
BASS: Terry Sink and Jim White.
TRUMPETS: Howard Eaton, A1
Garrison, Wally Hardwick, Judy
Lockhart, Kim Luffberry John Papa,
Eugene Perry, Robert Truitt, Jon
White and Lindsey Wyatt.
DRUMS: Richard Watkins.
MAJORETTES: Ann Stegall, Can
dy Allenzo, Eveline Garrison, Kaye
Savage and Connie O’Brien.
holds a master’s and doctor’s de
grees from Harvard in the field of
philosophy. He later studied at Ox
ford as a Rhodes Scholar and holds
honorary degrees from a number of
institutions.
He has served as a visiting lecturer
at the Episcopal Theological Semi
nary, Harvard, Chicago Theological
Seminary, Hartford Theological Semi
nary and Carlton College and at in
stitutions in Tokyo in Japan and at
Johannesburg in South Africa in ad
dition to his long teaching tenure at
Haverford. He is a member of the
American Philosophical Association
and is both a member and former
president of the American Theological
Society.
Bergman Leader
Of WAA Group
Sandy Bergman is president of the
Women’s Athletic Association for this
1966-67 college term, other officers
including Karen Carden as vice-presi
dent, Candy Allenzo as secretary,
Eveline Garrison as treasurer and
Muriel Cole as reporter.
Representatives on the WAA Coun
cil, including representatives from the
various sororities and dormitory
floors include Judy Stevens for Beta
Omicron Beta, Gail Summers for Pi
Kappa Tau, Linda Wesley for Tau
Zeta Phi, Gladys Wilson for Delta
Upsilon Kappa, Sue Harder for First
Virginia, Adrienne Moen for Second
Virginia, Mary Ann Thaxton for
Third Virginia, Donna Robertson for
Second West and Sue Bradshaw for
Third West.
Rapp Presented
By Arts Forum
The Liberal Arts Forum will
present Dr. Theodore Rapp, promi
nent military historian, at 8 o’clock
on Tuesday night, October 25th, in
West Dorm Parlor as the second
of its 1966-67 lecture series. The
Duke University historian will
speak on “The Significance of
American Power in the Twentieth
Century,” with a reception follow
ing his lecture.
Members of the Arts Forum, a
committee of the SGA, include
Robert Model, Pat McCausland,
Linda May, Denny McGuire, Dar
ryl Jennus, James Milward, Fred
Bright, Alex Oliver and Chairman
Carl King. Prof. James P. Elder
is faculty advisor, and Fred Moon
is coordinator between the group
and the SGA executive branch.
“Hard Sayin’s”
It often shows a fine command of
the language to say nothing.
A gossip is someone who takes a
dead secret and puts life into it.
AND SAVE!
Enough for the whole family
FOR HOME, SCHOOL OR
OFFICE They cost so little
DIVISION osWaterman
BALL PENS
To Write First Time— Every Time.
Medium Point Reg. 19 each
Only $1.98 Dozea
Fine Point Reg. 25( each
Only $2,49 Dozen
The Campus
Book Store