pridsY'1968 MAROON AND GOLD Page 3 Elon Hosts Quakers Monday yETERAN CATCHER AND PITCHER ARE KEY MEN WITH ELON NINE jj ^ 3^ SPORTS SPOTS llll By EDDIE OSBORNE This column goes Somewhat astray from the subject of regular ath- jetic^ sports around Uon 8 campus and will briefly with a new ^Port which has made its appearance at Elon at various and sundry times in recent weeks. That new ®Port is called breaking into machines. seems, too, that the participants in this new P°rt have been rather successful thus far. It all ®gan with the breaking of drink machines Q tearing the locks from ^ garette and candy ma- ines, with the “sport- 8 activities centered round the Student Cen- Alamance Building pthe boys’ dorms. ®Ofnetime the new ivity seemed to attract little attention, with most everyone seeming to ig nore the happenings which seemed to take place most often early on Sun day mornings. I guess Sunday is as good day as any for “sporting activity. Finally, however, the administration brought in a p-iir of Burns "guards to stand vigil on Satur day nights and Sunday morning, but after seve ral weeks and long hours of watching, no one was caught, and the sport was not even slowed up. Recently the guards were relieved, and the new ac tivity is seemingly left without witnesses. No one knows that roster of this newly ac tive “team,” but cer- (Continued on page 4) i ft Don Brady, a sophomore letterman catcher from Bennett, and Paul Amundsen, a junior letterman pitcher from Silver Spring, Md., are two of Coach Jerry Drake’s veterans who promise to be bulwarks of the Elon College baseball team during the upcoming 1968 campaign. Brady was a starter and regular receiver for the Christians last spring and should be much improved this year. Amundsen, who is 6-5 In height and weights 215 pounds, got credit for two wins last year in a campaign that saw Elon win only eight of twenty-eight starts. Goedeck Tops Cage Scoring For Season Henry Goedeck, Elon’s 6-6 junior center from Central Islip, N.Y., led the Fighting Christian ca- gers in scoring and re bounding for the third straight season when he topped Che 1968 Christian basketeers with an aver age of 19.3 points and 12,9 rebounds per game in a 28-game campaign. No less than five play ers on the Elon squad during the season aver aged 10 points or better during the season,which netted the Christians 13 wins and 15 losses. In addition to Goedeck, the double-digit scorers included Bobby Atkins with 13.1, Tom McGee with 12.4. Richard Mc- George with 11.1 and Bill Bowes with a 10.1 aver age for the games he played before dropping from :he squad in mid season. Goedeck finished the year with a total of 543 points in the 28 games, and this added to his pre vious totals of 577 in his freshman year and 479 last winter to give him a 3-year career total of 1,596 in 77 games for a 3-year average of 20.7 (Continued on page 4l SCORING (Season’s Final) Player G FG FT TP Goedeck 28 230 80 540 McGee 28 143 63 349 Atkins 20 84 95 263 Davis 28 77 108 262 McGeorge 22 87 71 245 Marshall 28 76 41 193 Bowes 17 71 30 172 Caddell 18 29 14 72 Other Players 16 5 4 14 ELON TOTALS 28 798 511 2107 OPPONENTS 28 841 514 2196 Drake Begins Second Season Coaching Nine The Fighting Christian baseballers, opening their second season under the coaching of Jerry Drake, himself a former Elon pitching great, will open their 1968cam paign by meeting the Guilford Quakers on the Elon field next Monday afternoon. That game with the Quakers, which also marks the beginning of the Elon drive for Car- olinas Conference honors on the diamond this spring, will be the first of four games setfornext week. Other games next week, all of them at home, are with High Point on Tuesday, Catawba on Thursday and Campbell on Friday. Coach Drake,whose team had a disastrous cam paign last spring with a record of eight wins and twenty losses, hopes for much improvement this year as he has fourteen lettermen among the players listed on his roster. He also has sev eral fine newcomers. Five letter pitchers on hand are Burgin Beale, senior right-hander; Paul Amundsen, junior right hander; Joe Byrtus, jun ior southpaw; and Steve Bird and Richard You- mans, sophomore right handers. Three lettermen are listed among the catchers, including senior Bobby Bulla, who has previously seen duty mostly as an outfielder, along with sop homores Don Brady and Frankie Mensch. There are three mono gram infielders on the roster, including first baseman Mike Hailey, second baseman Jim Freisinger and third baseman Dempsey Herr ing, allof whom saw regu lar duty last spring. The outfield corps also lists three lettermen, among them Larry Collins, a senior who was a fine southpaw pitcher until he ran into arm trou ble two years ago, and Richard Smith and Mike Spillane, both of whom started many games last season. ELON BASEBALL Mar. 18 —Guilford, H Mar. 19—High Point, H Mar. 22--Catawba, H Mar. 23—Campbell, H Mar, 26—Rensselaer, H Mar, 27—A.C. H Mar. 29—High Point , A Apr. 3—Pfeiffer, H Apr. 5—Un.of Maine, H Apr. 6—Guilford, A Apr. 8—Lenoir Rhyne,A . Apr. 9—Appalachian,A Apr. 10—Georgia, S., A April 11—Georgia, S., A Apr. 12—Oglethorpe, A Apr. 13—Georgia State,A Apr. 19—Newberry, H Apr. 20—Newberry, H Apr. 22—Campbell, A Apr. 24—Pembroke, H Apr. 26—Pfeiffer, A Apr. 30—Lenoir Rhyne,H May 1—A. C., A May 3—Catawba, A May 4--Appalachian, H May 7—Pembroke, A