PAGE FOUR Friday, May 5, 1967 ‘ STUDENTS SIGN AS RED CROSS BLOOD DONORS s Elon students (with backs to the camera) are shown as they signed up to donate blood on the occasion of the visit of the Red Cross Bloodmobile to the Elon campus on Tuesday, April 18th. The visit proved a very successful one, with students, faculty and others of the college community giving 140 pints of blood during the day. Campus Bloodmobile Visit Proves Highly Successful W-L Cinder Squad Wins The Washington and Lee track squad turned back the Elon College cindermen 100 1-2 to 44 1-2 in a dual track meet in Lexington, Va., last Saturday afternoon, but Elon’s Joe Rinaca with 11 1-4 and David Oliphant with 10 1-4 points were top scorers in the meet. The summary: 100 YARD DASH: Rinaca (E), Oliphant (E), Price (WL). TIME: 10.3 secs. 220 YARD DASH: Rinaca (E), Norward (WL), Price (WL). TIME: 23.3 secs. 440 YARD DASH: Hinkle (WL), Freve (E), Miller (WL). TIME: 53.3 secs. 880 YARD RUN; Wildrick (WL), Paulette (E), Keat (WL). TIME: 2 mins. 2.9 secs. MILE RUN: Stack (WL), Blanch ard (WL), Gill (E). TIME: 4 min. 44.8 secs. TWO-MILE RUN: Bryant (WL), Leiff (WL), Holmes (WL). TIME: 10 minutes 42,6 secs. 120 YARD HURDLES: Jamison (WL), Moore (E), Thomas (WL). TIME: 15.7 secs. 330 YARD HURDLES; Meiser fWL), Jones (WL), Moore (E). TIME: 38.5 secs. HIGH JUMP: Jameson (WL), Lan kin (WL) tied for third by Anderson (E) and Smith (WL). HEIGHT; 5 feet 8 inches. BROAD JUMP: Oliphant (E), Cavitness (WL), Haston (WL). DIS TANCE: 19 feet 6 inches. TRIPLE JUMP: Crawley (WL), Carrer (WL), Oliphant (E). DIS TANCE; 39 feet 5 1-2 inches. POLE VAULT ; Graham (WL), Crossman (WL), Jamison (WL). HEIGHT: 11 feet 6 inches. SHOT PUT: Jones (WL), Edwards (WL), Crampton (WL). DISTANCE: 42 feet 11 inches. DISCUS; Edwards (WL), Cramp ton (WL), Jordan (E). DISTANCE; 122 feet 8 1-2 inches. JAVELIN; Schaeffer (E), Wil liams (E), Sharpe (WL). DISTANCE: 166 feet 9 inches. 440 YARD RELAY; Elon (Moore, Walker, Rinaca, Oliphant). TIME; 44.4 secs. MILE RELAY; Washington and Lee (Hinkle, Miller, Wildrick, Keat). TIME; 3 mins. 40.4 secs. Quakers Top Elon 8 And 4 The Guilford Quakers turned back the Fighting Christians 8 to 4 in a Carolinas Conference battle on the Elon field on April 18th, with the win giving the Quakers a sweep of the two-game series for the season. Bill Burchette, Quaker pitcher, had a perfect game going for five innings before the Christians got to him in the sixth for three hits and three runs to spoil his bid for a no-hitter. The Quakers were away in front with a solo run in the first inning on three hits, and they added other sin gleton markers in the third, fourth and fifth and a pair of runs in the sixth to roll up a 6-0 lead. Dempsey Herring was the only Elon batter to get two hits, with Joe Searcy pacing Guilford with three singles. The line score: R.H. E. Guilford 101 112 200 8 11 2 Elon 000 003 100 4 4 3 Burchette and Scott; Beale, Kirchgess- ner (7), Pecora (8) and Brady. LP— Beale. A gossip is someone who takes a dead secret and puts life into it. I Minor Sports | GOLF SCHEDXJLE Elon 13, Guilford 11. Elon 9, Pfeiffer 7. Elon 12 1-2, High Point 11 1-2. Elon 8, Pfeiffer 8. Elon 12 1-2, Guilford 11 1-2. Elon 12, Appalachian 12. Elon 11 1-2, Guilford 12 1-2. Elon 22, High Point 2. Elon 18, Catawba 6. Elon 4, Appalachian 20. Elon 4 1-2, A.C.C. 19 1-2. (Remaining Meets) May 9—A.C.C., away. May 12—Catawba, away. May 15-16—Conference Tourna ment at Boone. TENNIS SCHEDULE Elon 0, A.C.C. 7. Elon 7, High Point 1. Elon 0, UNC Freshmen 8. Elon 3, Guilford 5. Elon 1, A.C.C. 6. Elon 4, Pfeiffer 3. Elon 3, West Carolina 4. Elon 3, Guilford 4. (Remaining Meets) May 15-16—Conference Tourna ment at Boone. TRACK SCHEDULE Elon 82, Campbell 63. Elon 86, A.C.C. 59. Elon 38 1-2, Appalachian 60, High Point 74 1-2 Elon 92, Guilford 53. Elon 44 1-2, W. and L. 100 1-2. (Remaining Meets) May 5-6—State Meet, Durham. May 8—Conference Meet. Boone In Semis At Chapel Hill Myra Boone, Elon senior tennis player, advanced to the semi-finals of an intercollegiate net tourney at Chapel Hill on April 22nd, when she defeated Susan Slover, of St. Mary’s, and Margaret Taylor, of Peace, and then dropped a match to Janet New- land, of UNC-CH, in the third round of the meet. The Elon netter then ad vanced to the second round of the Pinehurst Invitational tennis meet for women the following weekend. There was excellent response by Elon students, faculty and towns people when the Red Cross Blood mobile paid a visit to the Elon cam pus on Tuesday, April 18th, with a total of 167 persons reporting to the blood center at Elon’s Alumni Me morial Gymnasium and with 140 of them giving blood. Twenty-seven per sons were rejected due to minor ail ments. The officials of the Red Cross blood program in the Burlington areas were high in their praise of SGA President C. V. May, Jr., who had charge of the arrangements for the Bloodmobile visit to Elon. The Elon students made up the majority of the blood donors, with students giving 77 pints of blood. Other donors were members of the Elon faculty and residents of the community, including employees of several Elon community industrial plants. Lenior Rhyne Wins 4-2 Tilt The Lenoir Rhyne Bears used a two-run homer in the eighth inning to break a 2-all tie and gain a 4 to 2 Carolinas Conference victory over the Elon Christians on the Elon field last Saturday afternoon. The Christians had scored first when they plated a single run in the first inning, only to have Lenoir Rhyne tie the score with another solo score in the second. Elon moved to the front again in the fourth on a walk and a pair of passed balls, but the Bears again knotted the count with a run in the sixth. Both the starting pitchers went the route on the mound, with Lenoir Rhyne’s Ralph Grubbs fanning four teen and walking only three while scattering eight hits. Elon’s Burgin Beale struck out eight and walked four while holding the Bears to seven safeties. The line score: R, h. E. Lenoir Rhyne 010 001 020 4 7 0 Elon 100 100 000 2 8 2 Grubbs and Bengston; Beale and Mensch. Herring Tops Elon Hitting For Season Dempsey Herring, Elon third-sacker, is batting a robust .380 to pace the hitting for the Fighting Christian baseballers, who are now in the clos ing portion of a disaster-ridden sea son. which has netted only a 6-16 mark thus far. The Christians close their home schedule with Lenoir Rhyne on the Elon field tomorrow. The runner-up honors in individual hitting belong to Danny Pendry, a sophomore outfielder, who is batting .359 for the year. No other Christian is within a hundred points of these two leaders, and the Elon squad as a whole is batting only .205 for the year. Mike Spillane, who has seen duty at both shortstop and outfield posts, is pacing the RBI standings with 10 runs batted home, one ahead of Jim Freisinger, freshman second baseman, who has batted 9 of his mates over the plate. Freisinger is knotted with Marshall Montgomery for the homerun lead, each having banged a pair of circuit blows. Danny Pendry has three doubles and two triples to lead both those categories. Chris Pecora, freshman righthander, has appeared as a pitcher in half the Christians’ 22 games and has been credited with exactly half of the six wins. Other wins have been divided among Steve Bird, Paul Amundsen and Joe Byrtus. each credited with a single mound victory. The individual batting marks for the Elon squad follows; Name AB R H Ave. Herring .. 50 5 19 .380 Pendry .. 39 6 19 .359 Freisinger .. 62 8 16 .258 Coble .. 27 6 6 .222 Kirchgessner 9 0 2 .222 Duggins .. 46 5 10 .218 Collins .. 23 3 5 .217 Pecora .. 19 6 4 .211 Amundsen 5 1 1 .200 Beale .. 5 0 1 .200 Smith .. 61 5 12 .197 Spillane .. 57 4 11 .193 Byrtus .. 43 2 8 .186 Hailey .. 41 6 7 .171 Montgomery .. 72 10 10 .139 Brady .. 67 7 9 .134 Other Players . .. 37 4 2 .054 Elon Totals .... .. 682 82 140 .205 Oponents .. 732 131 158 .216 Presbyterian Wins 2 Tilts The Elon Christians dropped a paj of one-run decision to the Presk terian College Blue Stockings at Ci- ton, S. C., on April 21st, losing 3ioj 2 in the opener and going down('- to 3 in the nightcap battle. The Presbyterian nine’s Jack Frei tossed a one-hitter at the Chrislianjf in the first game, but Blue Hose mii. ^ cues contributed to Elon’s two score in the first inning. The Hose got bad | one run in that same frame and add-, ed two scores in the second to wj, the 3 to 2 battle. | The Christians forced the secontf battle into extra innings when Denij sey Herring hit a seventh-inning triplt and stole home, but Presbyterian cant through with the winning run in ikt eighth. The Christians had scortd twice in the second, and PC got lhr« runs in the sixth. The line score: (FIRST GAME) R,H.t Elon 200 000 0 2 11 Presbyterian 120 000 x 3 61 Kirchgessner, Coble (6), Beale (6|ajiil Brady; Free and Thurston. LP - Kirchgessner. (SECOND GAME) R.HI, Elon 020 000 10 3 5! Presbyterian 000 003 01 4 61 Beale, Youmans (6) and Mensch; Fra, McBee (2) and Thurston. LP—Vot- mans. Andes Installed In Church Post i Dr. William J. Andes, of Atlanti Ga., for many years pastor of ibij Elon College Community Church Elon College, N. C., was installed n conference minister of the new Soutlf eastern Conference of the UnW Church of Christ in ceremonies heli at the Pilgrim Congregational Churi )j in Birmingham, Alabama last Saw day night. j Dr. J. E. Danieley, president q Elon College, delivered the addrts at the installation ceremonies for ft Andes, and he also conducted ll communion meditations at the Sul day morning services at the Pilgf® Congregational Church. Spring Weekend (Continued from page 1) Appearing with “The Temptations will be “The In-Men, Ltd. Band"« Burlington. The “In-Men” have n cently released two records, A Look At My Baby” and “I Do" Love You” and have appeared every major college campus in Southeast. Admission for the c®: cert will be $1.50 for all non-studenc excepting dates of Elon students. The Student Government Associt tion expressed gratitude to Gm Knapp and Carol Lupinnacci • planning this Spring Weekend. Tha are also extended to the manageffltf and staff of the cafeteria for meals provided and appreciation^ to every member of the student bo® and faculty who helped in stagi"! this program. An executive is the guy who is ways annoying the hired help j asking them to do something. The person with a chip oo shoulder always carries an unnec® sary burden. , CUNNH^HAM (Continued from page 1) attendance was on hand for his pearance, which initiated a series Arts Forum lectures that continut* through Friday, April 28th. |