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MAROON AND GOLD
Friday.October 11,1968
MAROON and gold
Dedicated to the best interests of Elon College and
its students and faculty, the Maroon and Gold is pub
lished weekly during the college year with the excep
tion of holiday and examination periods at Elon College,
N.C. (Zip Code 27244), publication being in coopera
tion with the journalism department.
REPORTORIAL STAFF
John Andrews, Landy Blackwell, Don Bowers, Edna
Brantley, Richard Bray, Rebecca Burgess, Chester
Burgess, Bruce Cohen, Dean Coleman, Dillard Dye,
Joe Fowler. Don Goldberg, Joe Goldberg, Tom Hardee,
Wally Hardwick, William Hartley, Joe Jessup, aondra
Jones, Bobby King, Bob Klingel, John McNeill, Sam
Massey, Jerry Midkiff, Denny Moore, Robert Nash,
Ned Poole, Elizabeth Sanders, Kay Savage, Jerry
Schumm, Ronnie Sink, Mike Spillane, Mike Straka,
Archie Taylor. Joe Teague, Bill Walker, Ronnie Wick
er, Jerry Woodlief. George Watts, Frank Webster.
Orchestra In Rehearsals
Longest Run Of Guilford Game
Tau Kappa Epsilon Boys Run
Ball To Greensboro Stadium
The Elon College-
Community Orchestra,
which launches its sixth
season this fall, held its
first practice of the new
term on Monday night,
under the direction of Dr.
Malvin N. Artley, who
urged all interested mu
sicians in the Elon area
to join the group.
The orchestra rehear
sals are being held in a
new location in the Carl
ton Building, which for
merly housed the Elon
College library. The re
hearsal room is located
on the ground floor of that
building adjacent to the
western end of the col
lege’s main parking lot.
Dr. Artley stated that
the orchestra will pre
sent its first concert of
the new college year on
November 4th. The or
chestra will also join with
Che Elon Choir in Decem
ber in the annual presen
tation of Handel’s “The
Messiah” in Whitley Au
ditorium as a pre-Christ-
FORUM OFFERS
MOVIE SERIES
The Liberal Arts For
um launches this year a
new type of cultural ser
vice for the campus with
sponsorship of its first
annual Fine Films Ser
ies, which will include
twenty-four movies dur
ing the year, represent
ing a wide range of cine
matic art and productions
by many of the world’s
finest movie directors.
The movie series was
begun last Thursday, Oc
tober 3rd, with the show
ing of “Rocco and His
Brothers,” an Italianfilm
(Continued on Page 4)
mas program.
There will also be a
spring concert next May.
with an ambitious pro
gram that includes the
performance of the Con
certo for Organ, Strings
and Percussion by Pou
lenc, with Prof. Richard
Apperson as an organ so
loist.
The longest run in E-
lon’s 21 to 10 victory
over Guilford’s Quakers
was made by the brothers
of Tau Kappa Epsilon
Fraternity, who carried
a standard game football
twenty miles from Elon’s
William S. Long Student
Center to the Greensboro
High School Stadium in a
"stunt” which did much
to add spirit to the Elon
battle with the Quakers.
The plan, which was
first announced by George
Hughes, of Wilmington.
Del., president of the Elon
chapter of Tau Kappa Ep
silon, was reminiscent of
the Olympic custom of
having relays of runners
bring the Olympic torch
from Mount Olympus in
Greece to the site of the
Olympic games each four
years.
Coach Red Wilson,who
directed his Fighting
Christian gridders to a
thrilling 21 to 10 win over
the Quakers, presented
the ball to the boys of Tau
Kappa Epsilon in front of
the Student Center on the
Elon campus at 2 o’clock
on Saturday afternoon,
September 28th, and the
boys took over from
there.
With approximately 20
of the TEKE boys taking
part in the relay mara
thon run, the ball was
carried from the Elon
campus to the entrance of
the Greensboro Stadium
in less than four hours,
with the final runners
reaching the stadium be
fore 6 o’clock that after
noon. They waited there
until just before game
time, when the ball was
carried into the stadium
and presented to Coach
Wilson.
The TEKE boys who
took part in the long dis
tance relay included
Clyde Ivey, Portsmouth,
Va.; Tom Balderson,
Portsmouth, Va.; Noel
Allen, Burlington; Don
Parkenton, Chesapeake,
Va.; Louis Blom. Staten
Island, N. Y.; Bob
Southerland, Hartford,
Conn.; Bobby Jones,
Memphis. Tenn.;
Steve Nicolay. Virgin
ia Beach. Va,; George
Hughes, Wilmington,Del.;
Buck Bayliff, Graham;
Jerry Webb, Asheboro,
Don Bowers, Asheboro;
Benny Saunders, Ashe
boro ;Skip Rodgers, Dur
ham; Ed Bakers, Falls
Church, Va.; Jimmy
Parr. Suffolk. Va.; Jim
White. Wytheville. Va.;
Leon Tew, Virginia
Beach. Va.; and Royall
Spence, Greensboro.
WILSO^ PRESENTS BALL TO FRAT GROUP FOR LONG GUILFORD RUIS
Tau Kappa Epsilon “school spirit” run with the football from Elon’s campus to the Greensboro HiSh
School Stadium as a preliminary to Elon’s 21 to 10 win over the Guilford Quakers is pictured above, with
the picture showing Coach Red Wilson presenting the standard game ball to the TEKE group in front of the
William S. Long Student Center on Saturday afternoon, September 28th. Shown in front of Coach Wilson and
the TEKE group are members of the Elon varsity cheerleader group.
Dean’s List Group Returned
-T'. ^ i-vi ^ ^ t-> n i
There were 221 stu
dents who won Dean’s List
mention for their honor
grades during the spring
semester of last year,
and 73 of the group grad
uated either in May or
August. Several others
failed to return to Elon
College this fall, but those
dean’s list honor students
back in college this fall
include the following
group.
Those honor students
back in college include
David Abernathy, Michael
Adams. Juanita Albright,
Don Allen. Wesley All-
red, Linda Amick. Paul
Amundsen, John Autrey,
Raymond Bailey, Ellen
Barnes, Rebecca Beale,
George Bennett, Richard
Bennett, Randy Bishop.
Belinda Black.
Betty Boone. David
Bowden, Zolly Bowden,
Larry Bowne, Edna
Brantley, Baxter Buchan-
on, John Burgess. Dean
Carelock. Laurent Chan-
guion. Faye Clemmons,
Judith Coffman, Dee Col-
clough, Muriel Cole. Jane
Crocker. Carolyn Day.
Douglass Dellinger. Da
vid Dunn. Larry Durham,
Bobby Ellis, Mary Eth
eridge. Shirley Fair-
cloth. Marilyn Farley.
Peter Fleming. Jim Fo
gle. C. W. Gee. David
Gilbert, Penny Gilliam,
James Green. Dianne
Gucker, Janet Hackney,
M .ke Hamm, Kathy Han-
drahan. Sue Harder. Sue
Hardie, Susan Heatwole.
Gary Hemphill,
Patrician Herbin,Bar
bara Horner, Jack Hu
ber. Barbara Hudson.
Jennifer Huffman. Steve
Hutcherson, Sandra Isley.
Leslie James. Tom Jer-
nigan. Judy Johnson. Ro
bert Kaplus, Blayne Kel
ley. Diana Kuhnert, Mary
Larrow, Charlotte Lay
ton. James Lightbourne,
Faye Lineberry, Steve
Litten,
Linda Long, Bick Long.
Lee Loy. Kim Luffberry,
Sherri McGirt, Ed Mc
Ginnis. Ed McGrahth.
Denny McGuire. Tom Mc
Hugh, Carol McKinney.
Ricjey McPherson, Cathy
Mangum, Earline Mann,
Sam Massey, Richard
Massey, Ruth Mayfield.
Adrienne Moen. Charles
Moore, Patricia Morris,
Harold Morton, Penny
Muse, James Myers,
Kenneth Neale, Talmadge
Nelson, Sally O’Neill,
Pamela Owen, Gerry Ox
ford, Dmmitia Panagio-
topolou, John Papa. Betsy
Patterson. Peggy Pente
cost. Cleo Perdue. Re
becca Perry. Linwood
Register. Theron Rice.
Anita Rich, Shirl Rogers,
Carolyn Roney. Connie
Russell, Brenda Saun
ders. Pam Sauvain,
Scarce, Russ Schetrom i
George Shahwan, Jeanne
Shay, Gregg Sigmon, Lau
ra Smith, Walter Smith,
Karen Stevens, Micl^y
Stuart. Joe Teague, A
Thomas. Nancy Thomas,
Linda Thompson, Hodges
Throckmorton,
David Towe, JuW
Treece, Linda Jrou
man, Mary Anne Under
wood, Carol Vincent
Richard Watkins, Lijia
Wesley. Ronald Wicke ,
Janet Winstead,
Wood, Jerry Woodliet
and Ruth Woody.