FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1967 PAGE 3 Christians Upset PC Gridders W AJJ^ER^^Njyjilr r^E OR GE SHOWING W ELL IN PASS RECEPTIONS 7' SPORTS ■ SPOTS By EDDIE OSBORNE The “New” Elon Christians furnished ex citing but disappointing entertainment for their fans when they played host to the hill-billy eleven from Appalachian two weeks ago in the second game of this 1967 sea son, for the Christian fans were disappointed when they lost 34 to 13 after topping Guilford in the ex citing opener. The Apps might have won the game, but they found that the Christians were no tender babies in combat, for several of the Mounties hadto limpfrom the field with battle wounds at one stage of the game or another. It was pleasing that in spite of the cold night,the Memorial Stadium was packed with another rec ord crowd of spirit-filled fans, and this spirit was matched by the Christians as they put up a hard fight against the Mountaineers. A bright spot in the play for the Elon fans was when Burgin Beale handed off to Joe Rinaca on a re verse that netted a touch down and lighted the scoreboard with the first six points of the night. Lloyd Kanipe’s try for PO'nt failed, and the Apps came back to tie the score and go ahead at 13-6 by half-time. Beale continued to shine as he broke away for one long gainer on ground and passed to Richard McGeorge for a OCC.'JIIU. the Apps themselves roll ed in the final half to notch the final 34 to 13 margin. Shining brightly once more on defense for Elon was Lloyd Kanipe’s big white 53 at the line backer spot, and others of the Elon linemen were hitting hard all the way. The Christians travel led down into South Caro lina last weekend to bat tle the Presbyterian Blue Hose in the first of three battles on the road, and this week Coach Red Wil son will lead his Maroon and Gold legions over the mountains into Tennessee for a clash with the Car- son-Newman Eagles. Maybe Dr. Danieley should try his fortunes again with a dream about those Tennessee Baptisp, for his dream about Guil ford proved highly pro phetic. It was truly heartening to see the very fine stu dent body spirit for the two opening battles with Guilford and Appala chian, and one hopes that the same strong support will be accorded to me Fighting Christian grid ders throughout the re mainder of the season. The Greensboro paper declared that a thud was heard as off the victory cloud on the night of the Appala chian battle, but let s get the student body and the football team combined to bring down others ot Jimmy Waller (left) and Richard McGeorge (right) have started at the offensive ends in Elon’s early- season grid battles this fall, and the two sophomores form one of the finest pass-catching combination on the flanks to be found in the Carolinas Conference. Waller, who stands 6 feet tall and weighs 184 pounds comes from Winston-Salem and played freshman ball at Clemson before transferring to Elon. McGeorge, who is 6-4 tall and weighs 202, comes from Roanoke, Va., and was a starter for the Christians as a fresh man last fall. New Players Show Power On Diamond The fall baseball prac tice, which has been in progress for the past sev eral weeks under the di rection of Coach Jerry Drake, has brought about several question marks for the 1968 campaign, some of the questions pertaining to the physical condition of players and others concerning prob able regulars. There is one question whether Larry Collins, senior letterman pitcher from Florida, will return to his old form of two years ago when he was an outstanding starter on the mound for the Christians. Larry underwent elbow surgery in the summer of 1966 and saw only limited duty last spring. There are no other lefthanded pitchers on the roster. There is also a ques tion whether Joe Byrtus, a letterman first base man, will be fully re covered from knee sur gery last summer. Byr tus has played some fine baseball in the past two seasons, andCoachDrake is hoping that the Virginia boy will be ready to full blast. There is also an in teresting battle In pro spect for the four regu lar starting pitching posts, with the possibil ity that either Burgin Beale or Paul Amundsen, starters last spring, could lose their regular turns to promising new comers to the Elon mound staff. Among the fine new comers showing form in the fall workouts are John Austin, a very fine right hander from Greensboro, who starred in Ameri can Legion ball; Dave (Continued on page 4) Elon Faces C-N Eleven The Elon football squad treks westward over the mountains into Tennes see this weekend and will meet the strong Carson- Newman Eagles in Jeffer son City, Tenn., in a Sat urday afternoon game. This game marks the sixth meeting between the Fighting Christians and the Eagles, and Elon will be seeking to even the series count in wins at 3-all in this week’s game. The Eagles toppled the Christians here last fall by a 14 to 0 margin. the Conference grid squads off their Cloud Nines. Elon Rallies For Victory By 21 To 20 Once more the Fighting Christians used a fourth- quarter comeback for vic tory as Richard Mc George grabbed a Bur gin Beale pass in the end zone with 5:40 left in the fourth quarter to upset the favored Presbyterian Blue Hose 21 co 20 in a Carolinas Conference grid battle in Clinton, S. C., last Saturday after noon. The Christians scored first and moved to a 7-0 lead with six minutes left in the secondperiod,mov- ing 51 yards as Beale completed three passes to McGeorge for a total of 37 yards and Emery Moore dived over from the one, with Perry Will iams kicking good. With less than two min utes remaining before half-time, the PC eleven topped a 52-yard drive when Dan Eckstein bucked five for a score, which netted a 7-7 tie at the break. The Hose then came right back on the first play of the second half for a Kirtland to Eckstein pass that went 54 yards to a go-ahead TD and a 14 to 7 count. Elon threw a bomb of her own five minutes later when Beale tossed to Mc George, who raced 78 yards for a touchdown, Williams again kicked good to tie the score at 14-all. Moments later Presbyterian moved a- head again on a 78-yard aerial bomb from Kirt land to Billy Cooper, but the kick failed to leave the score 20-14 and set the stage for the Elon rally. With the Christians moving 58 yards for the winning TD, Beale keyed the drive with a 14-yard run and two passes for 28 and 8 yards to McGeorge, the last one caught in the end zone. Perry Williams booted his third extra point of the day to five Elon the 21 to 20 vie- torv Elon FACTS Prg^ 19 First Downs 12 147 Yds. Gain Rush. 84 32 Yds. Lost Rush. 36 115 Net Yds. Rush, 48 31 Passes Attempted 27 13 Passes Completed 15 221 Yds, Gain Passing 280 336 Total Yds Offense 328 4 Opp. Passes Interc, 1 3 Runback Int, Passes 0 6 Number Punts 6 36,5 Ave. Yds.Punts 37.3 94 Runback All Kicks 75 1 Fumbles Lost 1 34 Yds, Penalized 91 SCORE BY PERIODS: Elon 0 7 7 7 —21 Pres 0 7 13 0 —20 Elon Touchdown— Moore (1-tun),McGeorge 2 (73-pass from Beale, 8-p:tss from Beale. Ex tra Points—Williams 3 (kicks). Presbyterian Touchdowns—Eckstein 2 (5-iUn, 54-pass from Kirtland), Cooper (78- pass from Kirtland). Ex tra Points — Horne 2 (kicks).