Friday, February 26, 1065 MAROON AND GOLD PAQE TUB^ Branson Betters His Season Record As Elon Loses To Cats Elon Doivns App Capers By 72 To 59 Viich big Jesse Branson apparently recovered from an attack of flu that had hobbled him for several days and once again hitting like the All-American ace that he is, the Fighting Christians of Elon knocked another of the Carolinas Conference contenders when they toppled the Appalachian Mountain eers in Elon's Alumni Memorial Gymnasium 72 to 59 on Wednesday night, February 10th. Coming back strong after a loss to the Pfeiffer Falcons two nights before, the Christians rolled for their fifth victory in their past six games as they grabbed an early lead over the Mountaineers and were never headed. The Mounties did tie the score one time at 13-13 in the early rninutes of play, but Branson dropped a pair of charity tosses to regain the Elon lead, and the Christ ians never trailed again. It was definitely one of Branson’s finer nights as he hit on 14 floor shots from all ranges and all angles and connected on 11 of 15 tries from ‘ContiDued on Page Four/ ELON CAPTAINS CUKSE CAREERS 1\ COM RVSTIM. M . Christian Ace Pushes Total To 638 For Year Jesse Branson leftt and Dave Winfrey (righti, Elon's cage cap tains, who led the Christians into the Carolinas Conference tournament at Lexington this week are closing their careers in contrasting styles. Branson, who smashed his own season scoring mark at Western Carolina last weekend, is closing out in brilliant style; but Winfrey, with many brilliant performances behind him, has been injured all season and was expected to see little or no action in the tournament battles. Spotlighting The Fighting Christians By TOM CORBITT iL.i 22 Ij(‘ller Veterans .... In the past school spirit at Elon has been discussed frequently in the Maroon and Gold, and the con census of opinion through the years has been that Elon College lacks school spirit. In 1958 Bill Walker, at that time the sports editor of the Maroon and Gold, labelled the Elon student bo(Jy as “fair weather fans”. Another observed “the listlessness of school cheers" and suggested that the in sufficient “moral support of Elon’s teams” was due to some extent to what he termed the mediocrity of cheering. | Ted Fields, the sports editor in 1960, suggested that “school phil osophers” check the registrar's of fice, where “after scanning the cryp tic marks that will show your own scholastic production” the students “might find it a bit hypocritical to cast scathing remarks at a team which is giving its best.” At present, the general belief is still that Elon College lacks school spirit, for too many of us are still “fair weather fans.” Our cheers are still “listless,” and many students feel that the cheerleaders leave something to be desired. School spirit at Elon appears to have improved in recent years, but it must be noted that the Fighting Christians’ won-loss record in vari ous sports has been a creditable one over the past three years. Hon students demand perfect %n in athletics, and when something is at stake, then school spirit is good. The school spirit at the last home basketball game was a peculiar phe nomenon. Laurels at Elon come infrequently, hut the seniors on the basketball team were honored in starting roles in this last performance of the sea son before the home crowd. What followed the introduction of the sen iors was a spontaneous and heart warming outburst of school spirit. First to be introduced was Jesse Branson. A tumultous standing ova tion ensued. This occurred first be cause Jesse is truly an All-Ameri can and has quite literally rewrit ten the Elon record book. But there 3re other important reasons. Jesse nas changed quite a bit as an Elon student and has settled down to serious effort in many respects. Art Davis was next, and the re sponse from the still standing crowd *as equally as appreciative. Art has 'mproTed during each year at Elon, both on and off the court. Dave Winfrey achieved a ditferer. kind of greatness here at Elon Hampered by injuries through much of his cage career, Winfrey ha- fought on, and except for a limping leg or a bad arm, no one would have ever known that by medical standards he should not have been playing at all. Howard Andrew has also improve each year, and during his four year- here at Elon he has become a proud father and has worked his way to the Dean's List, so he also received an ovation. Perhaps, however, the greatest ovation was for the last senior. When the announcer said “from Pleasant Grove, N. C,,” pandemon ium reigned, for the Reid Hughes story is a great one. Cut from the squad and from a scholarship, Reid came back out for the team ana (Continued On Page Four) ity-One Boys In Winter Grid Drills iVi.uer football drills are in full ■ving at Elon College, with fifty- ne Christian gridders working daily nider the direction of their new lead mentor. Coach Gary Mattocks, •vho is assisted in the off-season jvorkouts by Assistant Coach Alan ,hite. Tile Christian squad for the winter •vorkouts includes 40 returnees from last fall’s Conference championship squad, among them 22 letter win ners, along with eleven boys who are new to the roster for the winter practice. Missing from the 1964 squad are seven of the 29 gridders who won letters for their work with Elon’s championship squad, four of those lost by graduation and completion of eligibility and the others due to academic difficulties or dropping from college. The major problem facing Coach es Mattocks and White looms in the finding of a replacement for Ed Wheless, Elon’s great quarterback, who wrote so many new records as a passer, and they will be giving several boys a try at the spot during the off-season work which is due tc continue through the second week on March and to close out with an intra-squad game between Maroon and Gold squads. The coaches have made no state ments as to a probable Whele.s* re placement, but among the possibil- .tiej are lettermen H. L. Robinson, who has played mostly on defense: Burgin Beale, a freshman reserve (A the past fall; and Robin Cobia, a fine reserve prospect of two years ' ago. Elon Trounces Catawba Richard Such, sophomore forward, came off the bench and racked nine teen big points in the second half 0 lead the Christian cagers to a 69-62 victory over the Catawba In dians in the final home game of the . . laKetnall season, a Carolinas Conference contest which had been iiowed out at an earlier dato. The Christians started an all senior line-up in the final home game, with Jesse Branson and How ard Andrew at the forwards, Reid Hughes at center and Dave Winfrey and Art Davis at the guards, and lior- ino.ed quickly tl the front and gained a 26-10 margin ed the Elon half-time lead to 27-23. Then, as the second half got under way, Richard Such broke loose with a terrific assault on the basket and ripped the nets for 19 points in the final half to keep Elon out front and to clinch the Christian victory, but Catawba kept it close all the way as Rhodes and Sessoms topped the In dian scoring down the stretch. Jesse Branson, playing his last ^ame before the home laii.s. iiit l ir 24 points, with Such as the only ..lur Elon eager able to hit in doth !i"ures with his 19-point total hodes led Catawba with 11, he Indian attack. The Elon Christians dropped a 77 to 69 decision to the Western Caro lina Catamounts at C'ullowhee last ;iiurday night, but Jesse Branson. Elon’s All-/Vmerican forward, earned ,1 personal triumph when he racked ;i iioints to outscore Western Caro lina's Henry Logan and at the same time set a new all-time Elon record for most points in a single season. When Branson ripped the cords for nine field goals and thirteen free throws against the Catamounts, his game total of 31 points pushed his total for the season to 682 points in 25 games to surpass his own Elon season record of 675 points that he set in 28 games last season. The above 682-point total includes Bran son's scoring against Fort Eustice, a game which does not count In the Conference statistics but does count in Elon's own records. The towering Elon forward need- •d every one of his 31 ptiinls on Sat urday night to top the efforts of Logan, the Catamount freshman star, for Logan hit for 30 points as he paced the attack for the West ern Carolina victory, a triumph which avenged an earlier Elon tri umph on the Christian court. A crowd of 3,800 rabid Catamount supporters packed the Western Carolina gymnasium and watched the Carolinas Conference rivals swap the lead back and forth through a tight first half. Elon pushed from behind in the closing moments of that first half and led by a 32-31 count at intermission. The second half started off in nip- and-tuck fashion through the first six minutes of the final period, with neither team able to gain more than a three-point margin, but after the 6-minute mark Logan blasted through the Elon Elon defense for three consecutive baskets and shot West ern Carolina to a decisive 56-44 mar gin. The Christians narrowed the count to seven points edge with seven min utes left and was within six points of the Cats with barely two minutes 0 play, but J. B. Kiser, Charlie Mc Connell and John Brintnall joined vith Logan to shtx)t the Cats ahead )y ten as the final seconds clicked Elon Ciiii‘ (iaino Klon 65, Wofford 64. Klon Gfi. I’friffor 68. Klon 85, 1.^‘notr Khyne M. Elon 65, High I’olnt 76. Klon 56, Appalachian 59. Klon 60, Ersklne 65. Klun 100, Ixiyola 80. Klun 71. Fort Kustis 75. Klon 84, Wofford 92. Klon 106, A.C.r. 79. Klon 60, Kust Carolina 67. Klon 70. ('iiiiiplx'll 59. PMon 67, (lUilford 44. Klon 86, Caniplx-ll 77. Klon 67. Illf>h Point 68. Klon 62, Catawba 60. Klon 91. A.C.C. 68. Klein 72, Krederlrk 56. F:ion 9'i, West Carolina 81. Klon 61. f*feiffT 65. Klon 72, Appalachian 59. Klon 72, KasI Carolina 66. Klon 69, Catawba 62. Klon 62. I/'noir Khyne 70. Klon 09. West Carolina 77. (Remaining Games) Feb. 24-27—Conference Tourney at Lexington. off, only to have Branson rip the nets for a last-second bucket that cut the final score to 77-69 and an eight-point lead. In addition to Branson’s 31 points that topped both teams, Richard Such was the only other Elon player who could score double figures. TTie Elon sophomore hit 14 for the night. With Logan hitting 30 points, other double-figure .scorers for the Cats were McConnell with 16, Ki.ser with 14 and Brintnall with 12 points. The line-ups; I’os. Klon (69) We»t Carolina (77) F—Branson (31) McConnell (16) F—Such (14) Bloom (3) C—A. Davis (8) Brintnall (12) G—Atkins (8) Logan (30) G—T. Davis (5) Kiser (14) Half-time: Elon 32, Western Car olina 31. Elon subs — Van Lear 3, Mixon. Western Carolina subs — Moore 2, .Vurrell, Pos. Elon (69) over the Indians. Then, in the closing minutes oflF—Branson (24i the first half, the Christians ran | F—Andrew cold on their shooting, and in less (^Hughes (5i than four minutes of actual playing G—Winfrey (5> time the visiting Indians tallied 13 G—A. Davis i5i consecutive points as Eddie ,ia i Half-time: Elon 27, Catawba 23. n i Ji:n S. ssiim.i led a rally that Elon subs — Such 19, Van I^ar j, ■■■ *' Atkins 8. Catawba sujs — N'oster 3, only a free throw by Branson mov- I' Catawba (62) Rhodes '21) Gamrot (2» Snyder (5> Hodges 131 HackfU '11' Elon Basehal] Squad Lists Tivelve Vets Coming as a sure harbinger of spring is the crack of baseball bats Keser\es from last fall on the and the thud of horsehide and ; winter roster include ends Richard I leather on the Elon College baseball wiiijanison, Richard Lee, Frankie I VAN LEAK IS FINE PROSPECT field, where Coach Jack Sanford already has 25 of his Christian dia mond hopefuls working out daily. Nine of the twenty-five candidates in the early baseball sessions are lettermen from last year, and three other monogram veterans will join the Christian baseballers when the baksetball season and the winter football workouts are ended. The twelve letter veterans due to be on hand when the Christians open their baseball season late in March include Pete Crook and Tommy Newsome, catcher; Art Davis, first base; Gary Taylor, second base; Comar Shields, shortstop; H. L. Rob inson, third base; Carlton High- smith and Carroll Monger, outfield ers; and Richard Such, Herbie John son, Lefty Everette and Jack Bur- tsche, pitchers. Davis and Such are still with the Elon basketball squad, and H. L Robinson is on the winter football roster. Fred Stewart, who saw heavy duty last year but did not letter, is also due to report when football drills are over. Briley and Tim Kempson; tackle i Mackie Carden; guards Lee John son, Mickey Hughes and Dickie i Hughes; center Carey Metts; and' backs Gary Jordan, Tom Brown, David Oliphant, Stewart McDonald, Jerry Hogge, Wally Burke, Perry Williams, Burgin Beale and Robin Ckibia. New boys on the squad include ’ ends Charles Spears, Dale Ward and Sam Hibbs: interior lineman; Raymond Smith and Bobby Colfie; ' and backs Jerry Jackson, William Walker, Andrew McPherson Clif ford Lester, C. V. May and Carl Kirkley. WATCH YOLTl STEP The coach had been drafted, and the superintendent was interviewing new applicants. You'll find me an easy man to work for,” he informed one pro spective coach. “Now, tell me about yourself, but first take off your hat, stop fiddling with your tie, and try to speak more distinctly.” B(*ars Get 70 To 62 Win hi Cage 1 ilt At Hickon T The Christian cage squad led tJip - scoring through nearly three-fourths y'lj . . of the game only to hit a cold, (^liriStUill 3 streak in the closing minutes and allow the Lenoir Rhyne Bears to forge ahead in the final seven min utes and win a Carolinas Confer ence battle by a 70 to 62 margin at Hickory on Wednesday night, Feb ruary 17th. The Bears broke out in front in jthe first moments of the game, but I Jesse Branson and Richard Such [paced a drive that sent the Christ- j lans ahead, and the Elon cagers led , by a 40-38 count at the half-time in- j termission. The Christians maintain ed that lead through the early part , of the second hall, but the Bears i tied the count at 57-all with e:,^ j left in the game and moved ahead ' from there to win the game. The Christians played without the I .services of Co-Captain Dave Win- I frey, who missed the battle when his injured knee gave trouble, and his deadly outside shooting was I sorely missed in the drive for the win over the Bears. .Neill McGeachey, Bruin guard, led both teams for the night with I 22 points, while Jesse Branson top- ' ped Elon with 21 counters. Such ; contributed 14 and Art Davis 10 The line-ups: To])s Pirates By Six Poin ts Superiority at the free throw line proved the deciding factor as the Christian cagers fought off a jJj;- termined bid by the East CaroUna Pirates and turned back the Pirate squad 72 to 66 in a non-conference basketball game on the Elon floor on .Saturday night, February 13th. Each team hit 25 field goals, but Elon caged 22 free throws in 30 tries to lock up the win. The battle proved close through much of the first half, with the lead swapping hands many times before Dave Winfrey dropped a pair of charity tosses to shoot Elon ahead 23-22, and the Christians then built the margin to seven points, only to have the Pirates narrow the gap to 31-29 at intermission on shots by Bobby Kinnard and Jerry Wood- •side. Fos. Elon (62) I F—Branson (21) F—Such (14) C—A. Davis 1C) G—Atkins (E G—Mixon (1) Charlie Van Lear, a rugged 6-7 and 200-pound freshman from Martinsville, Va., has played some very fine basketball for the Fighting Christians this winter and looms as an outstanding prospect for Elon’s future cage teams. He was coached at Martinsville High by Husky Hall and C. G. Hall, a pair of fornier Elon hardwood stars. I^noir Khyne (70) Miatkowski (12) Cochran (5) La.Moreaux I2) .McGeachey (22) Bua (1) Combined efforts of Jesse Branson, Dave Winfrey and Bobby Atkins shot Elon to a 48-40 margin soon after the .second half opened, and the Christians never trailed again. However, East Carolina did tie the count at 66-all on a Kinnard re bound, and it took four consecutive free throws by Branson to pull Elon Half-time: Elon 40, L«noir Rhyne| back to the front for keeps. Art 38. Elon subs — Van Lear 2. T, Davis 6. Lenoir Rhyne subs — Oeehan 17, Wells 11. Davis dropped a hook shot at the final whLstle for the final sU-point margin ontlnued on r»ge Four.