Friday, March 30, 1962 MAROON AND lii P.\GE THREE Elon Nine Faces Five Tough Contests In Next Nine Days Track Squad Opens Year On Weekend The Elon College track squad, ..> ored by eight experienced let- r::v:i and loaded with new lal- r' among eigliteen newcomers to ' 'iri^lian cinder togs, will trek , ;iun •;> Wilson tomorrow for the ri nine 'rack ;r-.is wl.'cn I i;'e;i carded T"' the 1SJB2 :impaign. Coach Gary Mattocks lists let- -,;rmen George Wooten, Willie Taitj . and Bill Libby in a sprint squad, iial includes four ,speedy newcom-l rs. The new recruits in the speed unit include Carl BovendL'i-. Cijy- in Johnson, James Slclntyre and Ken Harper. ■Villi ' Tart and Jack Moore are a pair of letter vets who are on hind for the quarter, with Billj Mshaffee and Ronald Lanca.'jJ IS a pair of newcomers who icore in the shorter of the middle distance runs. Tart, Moore and Vlahaffee are ■ three quarter men slated for mile relay duty, with sprinter Clay'l/on Johnson likely to move up to round out tlie relay four. Bill Mahaffee is also listed .vi' thr half-milers, along with Bob Gwaltney, Rex Harrison and Bill Clark to give ElOn its best crew in years on the longer of the two middle distances, Roland Miller and Bob Willis, both of them let ter veterans, will handle the chor- les in tiie mile and two-mile events With all lettermen gone, the hur dle duties will fall ■ to a trio of ncwcomers this spring, including iTom Beery, Carmine D’Aloia and A' McDonald, all due to double in both the high and low barriers. In the jumping events, Charles Somers and Mike GoUa are slat ed tor the pole vault with Joseph m VF/rS BOLSTER iWA. I!OI*ES Four Conference Tills Are SUited l\ext Week The Fighting Chrislian baseball- who have already .shown high Cote and Rex Harrison assigned to the high jump and with George Wooten, Clayton Johnson and Ken Rovere on broad jump call. Senior Dick More is anchor man in all weight events, slated for duty in the shot, discus and jave lin. Others Cameron Little in the hot and discus, Jim Moore in he shot and John Gozjack in the "avelin. Talking Sports With DAVID PktOPHET’ MARSHBURN A pair of senior eterans who rcprefc'nt anchor points with tht* ilun College baseball squad ofl962 are pictured above. Jim Le- viner. pictured left, is starting his secomi season as a regular at first base, and the stoclcy slugger from Laurel Hill will be seek ing to repeat his feat of a year ago when he led the Fighting (’hrist- ians regulars in hitting with a .318 average. Steve Wail, senior outfielder from Greensboro, is in his fourth sea.son as a regular in center field for the Elon nine, and he has consistently been among the better fielders and hitters i n conference through' the four reasons. ■>i:mis,' in Ihoir oarIy-soa.s,»n en- ■ Busebllll Sciinilllr i’oun.t;]vS, Will fac'(‘ five ;::nnL V. ilhin ilu‘ ncxi nim* d;iv>. with four *1 the five enrountrr* .siluHiuied :or !ln* Jionu* field and the home f.-uis The C'hrislians will be hosi 10 the Washinfilon and 'rals on the Klon Field a( J o‘cl(>ck lomonow afKTnoon in tlu* jirst of the four honu* ejic.mntor:. which is also tlu' first Salurday i)::l(lo On the home .schedule. TIk* f.jci that the invading (ierierals a»(* from ihe supposedly "Big rime" Southern rojjfcicnce will lend additional imprest lo ihe clnsh. Til * I'lon nine will ilieji plun^»e into ihr lu*ait of its ('arolina.^ (am* f' 1 (';ice >chedule next week, meet- int AlJantie Christian, High Point. Ijcnoir Kliym* and IMeiffer in .i »iuaitt*l of games that will far in indicating Klon’s chances for Hu conference title for The Atlantic Christian IIulldo»’s :c»me to Klon next Tuesday after- ;ioon for a single ganu' that opens weeks scii(“dule, and Coach aiiford will then lead his Maro(»n iijd (Jold tossers o‘vr to High ’oint to eet the Panthers on their own field. Winding up next week’-, rugged L'onferenee card, the Lenoir Khyne }3ears come to Elon next Friday. .iiid Coach .Joe F'erel)ee w'ill bring hi always threatening Pfeiffer Fal cons to the local stronghold on ■-alurday of next week, liased on the play in the early Uon '.i, Susquehanna 0. Klon i, Susquehanna 7. Klun 3. Siisquehanna 5 Elun 4. Susquehaiuia 0. Klon 8, Williams 3. Klon 7, Williams 1. (Remaining' (iame^ Mar. 31—W anil I., home Apr. 3—home Apr. 4—llifch pitinl. away .^pr. 6—Lenoir Hliyne, home Apr. 7—Pfeifler. home Apr. !>—('ahiplKrll. himie Api;. 12—Lenoir Khyne. away April 13—West 'arolina, away Apr. 14—West Carnliiia, away. April 18—Appalachian, home Apr. 23—Fort Lee, away Apr. 24—Fort Ix;e, away Apr. 2fi—(juilford. away Apr. :27—IliKh Point, homo Apr. 30—('alawhii, home ■'lay 1—(auilMrU, home May 4—('ampbell, away May 8—Catawha. away May 9—East C^arolina, home May II—A(X-’» away May 12—East (Carolina, away May 14—Newberry, home (DU) May 15—Pfniffcr, away May IG—Appalachian, away sanies Coach Sanford has at legist Hvt' or six pitcher.s available for duty in the.se games during the coming week, and he will probably with a full letter combiQation afield that includes veterans at every post in both the infield and outfi(‘ld. ' Christians All Even In Games With Susquehanna SUSQUEHANNA 7, ELON 2 The Elon baseballers got an even break in four battles with a tour-1 The visiting Susquehanna outfit ing Susquehanna College nine of inuk advantage of five Elon errors Just as I expected, the Elon itlon when it comes to halting the Pennsylvania here as the Marooi; I thU a half dozen walks and add- baseball seaaon has gotten oft to opposing attack. Steve Hall and and Gold nine opened its 1962 ed a pair of timely hits, one of an impressive start. I say impres- Leroy Myers are lettermen outfiel- season. The rival outfits battled ,v m a two-run homer, to turn sive start in spite of the tact that ders who have seen service in the through two doubleheaders here I back Elon 7 to 2 in the second the Christians have lost some of gardens, .and both Mike Little Tuesday and Wednesday. March! laltle of the opening double-head Si^ma Phi Wins Campus Cage League Surprises came fast and furious the last week of campus bas ketball, and when it was over the oop had a surprise champion. Sig ma Phi Beta took advantage of a last-minute slump on the part of Kappa Psi Nu, all-season leader, move in as regular-season champ. Then both Sigma Phi and Cappa Psi were ousted in the first round of the tournament. As the final week of the regular reason opened, only Kappa Psi and their games and only managed an and Wayne Allen hae shown that ■even split with the touring Sus.- j.gy can play good outfield when quehanna outfit from up Penn- [hey are not on duty behii^ tlie sylvania way, for the Elon outfit piatg or on the mound, showed promise even in losing.. | The infielders have committed One usually thinks that HUon ^„me errors in the early games, and other southern teams would jych is to be expected. They have the edge in playing time on [,aye ai^o made some sharp field- the early-season visitors from the North. However, Susquehanna had already played three games when they hit the Elon campus, and our Christians were only playing their opening batttles. Susquehan na had elready defeated Lynch burg and had divided a pair with Campbell College before playing here at Elon. Note also that the weather in tliis part of Dixie has not been too suitable for spring baseball prac tice, and the Elon boys had got ton in only limited work on the field before opening their season Therefore,' we know that Coach Jack Sanford’s boys were not in ing plays, and they will improve as the season progresses. With lettermen like Jim Leviner, Eddie Clark, Jimmy Holmes, Jerry Pike and Wayne Mahanes as a neucleus, Coach Sanford has also come up (Continued on Page Fmit' Sigma Phi were sure of tourney, began to berths in the four-team play-offs, openers. Considering this fact, I would say that the Christians showed plenty of pro fbr the Rat Pack, Iota Tau Kappa Sigma Mu Sigma and the Bandits were all in running for the thu'd and fourth tourney spots. The Rat Pack grabbed one .spot with a 47- 43 win over previously unbeaten Kappa Psi. Then ITK edged Kap pa Psi 59 to 57 as Sigma Mu toppled the Bandits 55-54 in tri ple over-time, and ITK snatched the final tourney berth. Bill Graham led the Rat Pack to i^s win over Kappa Psi with 19 points, while Tom Oliver, Mike Graffeo and Allen Foster aU hit 13 points, for Kappa Psi. Eddie Clark dumped in 16 points to give ITK its crucial win over Kappa Psi, a win which eliminated Sig ma Mu from the running. Sigma Mu then retaliated by dumping the Bandits as Ken Broda hit 21 and Dick More and Lennie Rid- got 12 each. ,The Sigma Mu Sigma outfit ■niade a desperate bid for a berth with three wins in the final week (Continued on Page Four) raise in their early games. ■r on Tue.iday, March 20th. Jerry Tillman, Roy Erlandseii ini Billy Bates all saw pitching Ml^OR SPORTS At this early point in the season we have already been able to see power well distributed in our line up. Beginning with the lead-off batter, Jerry Pike, we h^ve seen that Jerry can still powder that ball, and other players such as Jim Leviner, Steve Wall, Mike Little, Eddie Clark and Danny Hall can hit the long ball. Danny HaU, still only a sopho more and playing his second sea son with the Christians, rocketed a pair of home run balls over the wall in one of the games with Susquehanna,, and he is off to a big start in his bid for circuit trip honors on the team. GOLF Elon 14 1-2, Pfeiffer 3 1-2. (Remaining Meets) Mar. 27—East Carolina, away Mar. 30—High Point and Atlan tic Christian, home. Apr. 2—Hisrh Point, away. Apr. 5—Lenoir Rhyne, home Apr. 9—Atl. Christian, away Apr. 12—Catawba and East Ca- robna, home. — — — Apr. 17—Guilford, away Apr. 26—Appalachian, away Apr: 30—Lenolr Rhyne, away May 4—Appalachian, home. May 8—Guilford, home. May 11—Catawba, away. May 14-15—Conference Tourna ment at Boone Turning to the defensive side we have seen some very fine fielding plays by some of the play ers and we feel that our Christians can match up well with the oppos- TRACK Mar. 31—Atlantic Christian and High Point, at WUbod. Apr. 10—High Point, away. Apr. 13—Gnilford, away. Apr. 17—Catawba, away. Apr. 28—Davidson Relays. May 1—W. and L. and East Ca- rolina, at Lexington. Va. May 2—NAIA Meet, at Hi«h Point. May 8—Guilford and Catawba. Home. May 12—Conference Meet at Greensbaro. 20th and 21st, dividing honors each | day. The first day’s hostilitie.s saw, | Elon cop the opening game b> a ? to 0 count, only to have a raft July for Elon in that seuu„u game, of errors and some ill-timed bases]but they allowed Susquehanna on on balls cost a 7 to 2 loss to the visitors in the nightcap hattle. The Susquehanna outfit hit well and timely to grab the third game of the series and the opener of the second double bill by a 5-,^ margin, but th.3 Christians camt back strong on the hitting of Dan ny Hall and some brilliant pitch ing by Mike Cleveland to take the fourth game by a 4 toO score elon 3, SUSQUEHANNA 0 Wayne Allen and George Oakley divided the mound duties in the opening game of the season, which Elon won by 3 to 0 score. Allen went the first four innnings or. the mound, with Oakley taking the final three frames. Each hurle. allowed one hit during his sta- on the mound, with Allen tanning two and walking none, and witli Oakley striking out one and walk ing one. Oakley was the winning pitcher since the Christians pushed ovp: three runs in the fifth and siJ^h racks. The first Elon counter came in the fifth when Eddie Clark singled and advanced to third on a walk and wild pitch, coming home on Phil Cheek’s ' sacrifice fly. The other two Elon marker came in the sixth when Jim Le viner sinigled, stole second ar. thn scored on Steve WeU’s booming triple. Wall then raced home wh Eddie Clark doubled for his sec ond hit of the ball game. The Christians got to the Susquehanna pitcher for six hits, with Clark’s ly two hits to match the scunt^ed two on John Viscone'.s two-ruji ,)lal of safeties whjch the vi.sitors | circuit blow in the sixth and then i.id garnered in the first encoun-j counted three on three walks, an or However, the five Elon errors error and a sacrifice fly in the liit the Elon pitchers hard in this .seventh. Steve Wall's triple and game, which .saw Erlandsen get single topped the Elon attack, credit for the toss. The line score follows: • Su.squehanna counted two in the "irst on an error, two walks and a single, but Elon came back with )ne in the first and another sin- igleton in the fourth to tie the score .if'er four frames, the visitors add- STAiM)S OUT IN WEIGHT EVENTS Su.'-.quehanna 200 002 3—7 2 1 Elon 100 100 0—2 7 5 Gibney and Eberly; Tillman, Er- l.lnd.sen (5), Bates (7) and Little. Losing pitcher—Erlandsen. SUSQUEHANNA 5, ELON 3 The invaders from Pennsywania grabbed a two-one edge in the se ries when they copped a 5 to 3 victory in the first game of the second double bill on Weflnesday, March 21st, with the Susquehanna Hatters hitting in timely fashion t gain the win. The Susquehanna batters peck .•d out twelve safeties, all of them singles, off three Elon pitchen as ttiey posted this victory. The dozen singles were spaced well, coming in many ca-^es with run ners on the cushions to push home two runs in the fourth and single ton markers in the third, fifth and seventh racks. Four of th.' Su.squehanna nine hit twice, with third baseman Lui>- cko and outfielders John Viscone, Green and Butler all getting a brace of .singUw. At the same tim^ Williams, visiting pitcher, worked a nice game on the mound, lim iting Elon to five scattered hits, two of thirm by Jim Leviner. The Itne-score follows: Su.squehanna OOl 210 1—5 12 2 ElOn . 101 001 0—3 5 1 Williams ami Eberly; Drake, Mc- I Duffie (5), Oakley (5) and Grose. !il»sing Pitcher—Drake. RI..)N 4, SUSQUEHANNA 0 Danny Hall, a slugging sopho more outfielder, and Mike Cleve land, a fine freshman pitcher, com bined their talents to lead the Elon nine to a 4 to 0 victory over Sus quehanna in the final battle of the second day’s play. I Cleveland, a freshman right- as the top effort. The Une score follows: Susquehanna 000 000 0—0 2 ■ Li,ot discuss and javelin throughout his Elon 000 012 x—3 6 2'’ Billig and Eberly; Allen, Oakley (5) and Cheek. Winning pitchers —Oaklej ^ hander from Arlington, Va., went double and single for three trip.s| pictured above, is beginning his ** |the route on the mound for Elon in this nightcap game and did a brilliant early-season bit of chunk ing He allowed the visitors only two hits while striking out ten ''«ntinued on 1‘age Four. stay in the weight events for the Elon College track hu?ky senior has been a consistent winner and pomt-g four seasons. He was Con- ference champion in Ihe shot'put year before last and he has plac^ ed in all three weight events in the Conference Utular m past two seasons. Last spring he was second in the on eren '>th 'Jie shot and discus and was fcurth in the javelin. .