December 14. 1955 MAROON AND GOLD PAGE THREB Elon Quint To Enter Holiday Cage Meet At Paris Island Basketeers Viftors In Belmont Tilt starting slowly and closing with bang-up performance, the Fight- Christians Elon grabbed eir second successive win of the season at LeSington on hursday. December 1st, by turn- j back Belmont Abbey 90 to 83. The game stirred memories of 952 as Ben Kendall and Dee tkinson. a pair of Elon service eturnees, teamed up once more P pacing the Christian attack endall racked eight field buck- ,s and seven free throws for 23 uints while Atkinson hit for four leld goals and ten free throws „() 18 points. Two other Elon alters were in double figures, ith Ed Juratic getting 14 and ay Whitley 12 points for the ight. It was Ben -Kendall who got ot in the closing periods as the hristians pulled further ahead 11 the third quarter and main- ained the lead through the final en minutes. Roger Marcil was top man foi elmont Abbey team, hitting sev- n field shots and an equal num- er from the charity line. 'os. Elon (90) Belmont Abbey (83) -Juratic H4) Theberg (8i -Kendall i23) Grayson (18) -Atkinson (18) York (13) —Whitley il2) Marcil (21) -Citty i8) Tagliari (17) Half-time — Elon 46, Belmont bbey 43. Elon subs — DeRita (9), Mc- onald (4), Stout (2), Rickover. elmont Abbey subs — Lehan 4'. O'Leary (2), Meade. Senior Gvi ;’cl8 ul Fighting Christian Cagers Lose To McCrary The powerful McCrary Eagles anded the Christians their only efeat of the early season when hey met at Asheboro on Satur- ay night, December 3rd, the emi-pro outfit grabbing a close to 91 decsiion in a high- coring game. Ben Kendal, rapidly regaining e form that made him a feared ompetitor in North State play n seasons gone by, racked eight Ray Whitley Leading: the Elon Colleg:e Ag- ers this year as co-captains are a pair of sharp-shooting senior guards, each of whom is a dead ly threat with the two-hand set and the jump-push shot. The Christian leaders are Ray Whit ley (left), of Winston-Salem, and Ben Kendall (right), of KTtkomo. Ind. Whitley, now in his fourth successive season for the Christ ians, was one of the top scor ers for last year’s Maroon and Gold quint, hitting for 283 •points to rate just behind Dave Maddox and Ed Juratic. The Twin City sharp shooter has improved steadily since his freshman year and shows a ca reer scoring record of 171 field baskets and 86 free throws for 448 points. Kendall, who played here through all of th^ 1951 and 1952 seasons and part of the 1953 campaign, rejoined the Christians this season after two years of Army duty, and he has picked up where he left off in a career that saw’ him twice win All-Conference and once take All-State honors, the only Elon cag'er to place on the All-State squad since 1947. The Kokomo comet, with a scoring record that shows 566 field goals and 273 free throws for 1,205 points prior to this K-eason. already has the second highest career scoring mark in Elon history, and he has an ex cellent chance to smash Big Don Haithcox’s career recorrt before tHe season ends. Marines Will PUiy Host In Three-Day Tourney Kloii Cage Caines 83. Elon 78, Pfeiffer 62. Elon 90, Belmont Abbey Elon 91, McCrary 100. Elon 124, DuPont 70. Elon 106, High Point 101. (Remaining: Games) Deo. 13—Guilford, away. Deo. 31—Belmont .\bbey, away. Jan. 2—Dupont, away. Jan. 4—Pfeiffer, home. Jan. 7—East Carolina, away. Jan. 11—C. C., home. Jan. 14—Catawba, home. Jan. 16—Belmont Abbey, home. Jan. 18—Appalachian, home. Jan. 21—West Carolina, away. Jan. 25—liPnoir Rhyne, home. Jan, 28—Catawba, away. Jan. 30—McCrary, home. Feb. 1—Hish Point, home. Feb. 4—West Carolina, home. Feb. 8—Appalachian, away. Feb. 11—East Carolina, home. Feb. 13—A. C. C., away. Feb. 16—Lenoir Rhyne, away. Feb. 18—tluilford, home. Ben Kendall Walking The Chalk-Liiies By BILL WALKER Christian Cagers Down High Point, 106 To 101 The Christian cagers will hit the tournament trail during the early part of the Yule vacation, for the Elon hardwood squad will travel southward to Parris Island, S.C., next wfrek. where the Marine Training Base is sponsoring a three-day tournament and playing host to seven college teams from four states. The first annual Christmas In vitational Tournament will find the powerful Parris Island Marine squad as one of the entries, along with four teams from North Caro lina and one team each from Ken tucky, South Carolina and Georgia. The North Carolina teams which will compete in the meet are Elon, High Point and East Carolina from the North State Conference and the independent Pfeiffer College squad. Other entries are George town college of Kentucky, Pied mont College from Georgia and Krskine College from South Caro lina. The tournament gets underway next Wednesday night, December 23rd. The schedule will be plan ned along the same lines as the annual Dixie Classic in Raleigh, with four games to be played each day, beginning at 1 o'clock. Advance information indicates that competition in the meet will be fast, with the host Rfarine team likely to be a big threat. The Marines will feature a group of former college stars, paced by Ron Unleashing the greatest scor- Heyen, one-time ace of the West ing barrage in the history of Elon ern Missouri Teachers. College basketball, the Fighting! Local fans are familiar with the Christian cagers rolled to an easy brand of ball played by the three 124 to 70 victory over the Du- North State teams from Elon. High Pont Star sof Martinsville, Va ,'point and East Carolina, and Pfief- last Wednesday, December 7th, in fer has already established itself a game which marked Elon’s first as a definite independent threat 1 ttrill Wa Neiv Record h Set In DuPont Tilt appearance of the year on the home court. The attack, which averaged bet With the coming of winter and the advent of basketball on the Elon sports scene, there was one .. seasons gone by, racked eight ^oUeeable difference in the .eld baskets and mne free throws the year s first home or 25 pomts to lead Elon’s at- ^ ® game and the first hoi-.ie game of a year ago. The difference lay in the fact that there was no J-V game. Upon inquiry later, I learned that the J-Vs had been disbanded for the year, the reason being that the squad had failed to produce any great show of talent and had not shown as much improvement as had been hoped and expected. It is with real regret that many of the students heard of the dis continuance, since the added games on the home programs had ck. Other Christian cagers in ouble figures were Dee Atkin- on with 17, Ray Whitley with 4 and Ea'rl Stone with 11 points. The summary follows: os. Elon (91) McCrary (100) -Juratic (8) Langdon (20) -DeRita (6) Atkins (4) -Atkinson (17) . , Jordan (35) —Kendall (25) Likens (27) -Whitley (14) Wallace (3) Half-time — Elon subs — Stone (11), King Rickover (3), Sharpe (1), Mc- II), Citty (2). McCrary ubs — Shoaf (5), Allen (2), Slay- 'W 2). Callicutt (2), D. Nance. onald Twenty-Four Elon Gridders Get Letters For 1955 Play Award of football letters to 24 members of the Elon College Jootball squad for services during * e 1955 season have just been announced by Coach Sid Varney, en of the group received their 'rst awards in football, while five seniors received their final Elon letter. award group included four ®nds, four tackles, six guards, two 'enters, one quarterback, four allbacks and three fullbacks, rouped by class rank, there were "'e seniors, nine ' juniors, six ^Phomores and three freshmen. P receiving their first . ” ^°®tball letters, listed in al- „ ®^®Ucal order, are Richard Sumter, t-srcaterra, Inwood Tony DeMatteo. Pottsville, Pa.; Bob Dunlap, Pelzer, S. C.; Jack Henderson, Towanda, Pa.; Lynn Newcomb, Richnujnd, Va., Tom S, C.; Tony —, L. I., N. Y.; -’ason Cubbage, Sumter, S. C.; DelGais, Inwood, L. I. N. Y.; Shepperson, Danville, Pa ; and J. B. Vaughan, Graham. Those who had previously won letters, also listed in alphabetical order, include Whitney Bradham, Sumter, S. C.; Eddie Bridges, Morganton; Pat Cafasso, Cedar- hurst, L. I., N. Y.; Ed Davidson, Brackenridge, Pa.; Homer Hob- good, Oxford; Wayne Martm, Morganton; Chuck Maynard, Nor folk, Va.; Charlie Michaux, Fay etteville; Furman Moseley, Colum bia, S. C.; Kerry Richards, Ma- hanoy City, Pa.; Bob Stauffenberg, Morea, Pa.; Nick Theos, Charles ton, S. C.; Glenn Varney, Powell, Pa.; and Paul Watts, Taylorsville. offered much entertainment for| he students, and there have been Tiany who expressed a wish that the program might be resumed. * * * Basketball reigns as king in the sports field ati this time; and Elon, like other schools which ex pect big things in the hardwood sport, is glad of it. The Fighting Christian cagemen have thus far looked awful hard to handle, and they show signs of becoming even tougher with added experience. In the five opening contests, the Christians lost only one game, that a 100-91 decision to the Me Crary Eagles, while the win rec ord shows victories over DuPont Belmont Abbey, Pfeiffer and High Point. The Christians, paced by clever shooting, good rebounding and a fast-break style of moving the ball, literally "tore up” the visit ing DuPont squad by e 124-70 margin m the only pre-holiday lome game. With that victory Elon became he co-holder with High Point of he scoring title for the North State Conference. The Panthers had set the record a year earlier, and the Christians could easily lave broken the mark in the Du Pont game if they had known they were close. The Christian bench was cleared in the game, with everybody see ing action except the manager and Eton's fine, intelligent, over worked and under-paid score keeper. Varsity Five Wins Opener At Pfeiffer Here in North Carolina in re cent years, when one speaks of basketball, he is usually unable to get out two sentences without say ing something about N. C. State^ ,This editor is not different, and I (Continued on Page Four) With four men hitting in double figures and with ten different players having a part in the scor ing, the Elon Christians rolled to an impressive 78 to 62 victory over the Pfeiffer College cagers at Pfeiffer on Wednesday, Novem ber 30th. Ed Juratic, husky Elon forward, set the pace for the Christians in the early portion of this opening game, which saw the Maroon and Gold quintet grab the front in the opening period and hold a 35-27 margin at the halft time. The Christians really began moving in the third quarter as they dropped 29 points in a ten- minute stretch, pulling out to a 64-43 margin as the three-quarter pole was passed. The Pfeiffer out fit cut this margin slightly in the final period when Coach Mathis made free use of his reserves. Ed Juratic and Frank DeRita pair of towering forwards, topped the Christian scoring with 14 points each, but they were trailed closely by Ray Whitley with 13 and Dee Atkinson with 11 points. Ben Kendall played a brilliant floor game to set up shot after shot for his mates. A1 Hasbrough, former Long Is land University star, hit 21 points to lead the Pfeiffer scoring. The line-ups: Pos. Elon (78) Pfeiffer (62) F—Juratic (14) Garmon (8) F—Citty (6) Nuckles 2) C—Atkinson (11) Hasbrough (21) G—Kendall (8) Petrea (14) G—Whitley (12) Bryant (4) Halftime Score — Elon 35, Pfeiffer 27. Elon subs — DeRita (14). Stone (4), McDonald (1). Stout (5), King, Rickover. Pfeiffer subs—Thomp son (4). Roberts (1), Hinson (2), Rowe (4). The nets were almost literally smoking at High Point last Sat- I'rday night when the Fighting Jhristians outshot the High Point Panthers for a 106 to 101 victory :r. a North State Conference bat tle. U may have been tlie first time in Conference history when Iwo teams racked a "double-cen tury " score. The teams swapped the lead rapidly in the early minutes, with High Point grabbing a scant 25- 23 margin at the ten-minute mark. The count was tied and the lead changed no less than ten times in the second quarter of play, but High Point forged ahead at 55-50 in the last two minutes ot the half on quick baskets by Harold Crump, Paul Stanton and Ken Williams. Dee Atkinson, Ed Juratic and Ray Whitley paced the Elon at tack in the first half of play, and Frank DeRita joined with Atkin son and Whitley in the Christ ians’ second-half barrage that en abled Elon to pull out front and stay there. The Christians grab bed the lead just four minutes after intermission, and they were never headed after that time. (Continued On Page Four) The Georgetown squad will be coached by Bob Davis, former i.ic oiiovn., head mentor at High Point, and ter than three points per minute the Kentuckians are expected to for the victors, equalled the be anchored by "Little Humphrey Alexander, ’who played his first tolled basketball for Davis at North State Conference scoring record for a single game. The mark originally set by High Point last year with a 124-72 win over the High Point "Y” quintet. The win gave Elon a mark of three victories in four starts for the year and a team scoring average of 95.5 points per game. Thirteen Christian players broke into the line-up, and e'Sch of them scored, with six of them hitting for double figures. Tops for the night were Frank DeRita and Ray Whitley with 21 and 19 points respectively. Others in the double digits were Hugh Citty High Point. The Erskine squad has been one of the top teams in this district of NAIA play in recent years, and Piedmont is one of the best small - college teams in Georgia. Cage S(|uad Scores High The Christian basketeers, witli four wins in their first five starts, with 16, Ben Kendall and Dee At- have been averaging a thumping kinson with 13 and Jimmy Crumppoints per game thus far in .xU— nn r-rtoe/-\n \l/nif>n hAQ IVo Elon Stars All-Conference Whitley Bradham, speedy halfback, and Glenn Varney, a TUfsged guard, were two Elon gridera who W'in berths on the 1955 All-Conference football squad, which was chosen for the Greensboro Daily News by the North State Conference coaches at the close of he re cent season. It was the first time on the honor list for Bradham, the Sumter speedster, who led the Christian offense throughout the past !);ason; bujf Varney was a reiMater on the squad, having placed at a guard post a year go. Two other Elon play ers. Pat Cafasso and Kerry Richard, were given honorable mention on the 1955 squad. with 10 points. Ray Whitley and Hugh Citty, a pair of sharp-shooting outside men, led Elon to an early 28-10 lead midway the first half, and Frank DeRita assumed the lead at that point to pace the Christ ians to a 57-35 margin at half- time. Whitley, Ben Kendall and Dee Atkinson were the leaders in the third quarter, with Frank De- Rita banging in 11 points down the stretch. The DuPont squad, which posted 91 points against High Point just two nights before, was handi- capp>ed by the absence of Sam Belcher, a 6-foot 9-inch forward. Belcher had been called home due to illness in his family, and the scoring leadership for the visitors the new cage season, which has already seen the squad set a new Elon game mark and tie the exist ing North State Conference mark for a single game in downing Du Pont 124 to 70. Dee Atkinson, the jumping jack center, is pacing this scoring drive for the Christians with 92 points and an 18.4 average, but no less than five of the Maroon and Gold cagers are averaging in double figures In the early battles. Seven of the Christians have scored in double digits at least once this year, but Atkinson and Ray Whitley are hitting a furious pace and have been over the 10- point mark In every one of the first five games. Individual scoring totals through went to Jack Wallace, former |the High Point game are as fol- Carolina star, and Don Cook, eachjlows: of whom counted 19 points. Player Games FG I ... . K 26 34 26 23 25 The line-ups; i Atkinson 5 Pos. Elon (124) DuPont (70) ^ F—Juratic (6) Wallace (19) F—Kendall (13 Davis (7) C—Atkinson (13) Cooke (19) G Whitley (191 Bowden (10) G—Citty (16) Carter (4) Half-time — Elon 57, DuPont 35. KertdBll 5 ; DeRita 5 Juratic 5 Citty 5 Stone 4 Sharpe 3 Crump 2 King 3 Stout 2 Elon subs —■ DeRita (21), Crump McDoneld 3 (10), Stone (4), King (4), Rick over (31, Ooss (5), Sharpe 81, Watts (2). DuPont subs — Rob ertson (5), Joyce (2). Gerringer (2), Woolwine, Stanley. Rickover 4 Goss 1 Watts 1 ELON TOTALS 5 OPPONENTS 5 12 6 3 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 FT 40 13 26 26 8 10 8 5 2 1 1 2 2 1 0 TP 92 81 78 72 58 34 20 11 10 7 7 6 6 5 2 172 143 145 130 489 41S