cBinAY. FEBRUARY 7, 1969 maroon and gold PAGE 3 Christians Roll Over Indians Tthategy^^v^^j^orse^^ Catawba At Salisbury, 88-66 Coach J3111 Miller, pictured left above, is shown as he talked strate^ with his Fighting Christian cagers during the second battle with Catawba, which netted an 86 to 66 victory for the Elon quintet. The pictures which Coach Miller was drawing on the floor must surely have been good ones, for tte Maroon and Oold cagers completely outclassed the Indian outfit, holding Catawba s Dwight uurant to a scant five points for the night. The Catawba ace had gotten only two points against Elon on the Christian floor two weeks earlier. The Christian cagers were redhot and on the warpath as they trampled the Catawba Indians by full twenty points for a second time this season, winning over the Red Men at Salisbury on Saturday, January 25th, by a pleas ing 86 to 66 margin. This victory came on the heels of an earlier Elon win over Catawba on the Elon floor, the Christians having tramp led the Indians 97 to 74 two weeks earlier, and the second victory boosted the Elon cagers ahead of Catawba in the fourth spot in the Carollnas Con ference rankings. Not in many years had an Elon cage squad won two such decisive tri- umps over a Catawba hardwood squad, and the two victories were ren dered even sweeter by the fact that the Christians held Catawba’s Dwight Durante to a total of ex actly seven points in the two games, two points at Elon and five at Cataw ba. It avenged the 45 and 58 points that Durante scored against Elon last year. The fine defensive ef fort against Durante, who has been leading the Con ference In scoring with an average of better than 28 points per game, prov ed a big factor In Elon’s (Continued on Page 4) McGeorge Is Tops In Win From Apps COLE SCORES ACAINST CATAWBA With Richard Mc George playing his finest game ever In an Elon page uniform, the Fight ing Christian cagers turned in a tremendous 78 to 64 victory over an "PP team that handed High joint’s Panthers their only defeat of the year. Playing basketball with the same rugged power tnat earned him All-A- ™erican rating in foot- Dall, McGeorge pumped 29 points in the scor- ng column and also stole away from the Mountaineers and raced ®wn floor for easy lay- “Ps. He hit several re- layups that appear- 1 nothing short of magic. ihe Mountaineers, who Med out of the Caro- inas Conference this 6ason to play as an in dependent team, held a cant 33 to 30 margin at ® half-time Intermls- the two teams . r, l^attled tooth and toe- f ™roughout the first twenty minutes of action. However, the Elon rhFJ® came back after 3 , °^6ak with a new drive A caught up with the PPs after four minutes play, with McGeorge sinking the basket that tied the count at 40-all. Less than one minute la ter McGeorge bucketed a score to put Elon ahead 42 to 40, and the Chris tians never trailed again. The Christians were paced by McGeorge,Goe- deck, Bowes and Cole as they ran out a fifteen point lead with seven minutes left In the game, and they held a comfortable mar gin during the closing mo ments of play as the Apps fouled in seeking posses sion of the ball. There were four Elon players in double figures for the game, with Mc- George’s 29 points tops for both teams. Goedeck hit 17, Cole 11 and Bowes 10 for Elon, and Allen Price topped the Apps with 25 points. The Christians hit an amazing 30 of 51 shots from the floor, scoring even higher percentage on floor shots than from the free-throw line, and Bill Bowes led Elon on the backboards with 11 re bounds for the night. With Appalachian out oi the Conference, the game had no bearing on the loop (Continued on Page 4) I i I CACF GAMES Elon 79, L.M.U. 78. Elon 104, Cumberland 117 Elon 79, Wofford 63. Elon 74, High Point 87. Elon 94, A.C.C. 76. Elon 56, L. Rhyne 59. Elon 73, L. Rhyne 65. Elon 72, Campbell 66. Elon 83, A.C.C. 89. Elon 97, Catawba 74. Elon 106, Guilford 94. Elon 75, Campbell, 97. Elon 81, High Point 94. Elon 76, Wofford 60. Elon 65, Pfeiffer 68. Elon 86, Catawba 66. Elon 78, A.S.U. 64. (Remaining Games; Jan. 30 - Presbyterian(A) Feb. 1 - W. Carolina (A) Feb. 5 - Appalachian (A). Feb. 8 - Presbyterian(H). Feb. 12 - Pfeiffer (A). Feb. 15 - W. Carolina (H). Feb. 20 - Newberry (A). Feb. 22 - Guilford (A). Feb. 26-30 - Conference Tournament Grid Squad Gets Indoor Conditioning Preparations for the 1969 football season are already underway, with Coach Red Wilson having between 45 and 50 Chris tian gridders at work for the past two weeks on conditioning exercises and drills in the gymnas ium. Several boys miss ed the gym work due to absence from the short “Mini-Term.” Coach Wilson states that full-scale outdoor workouts will get under way on Monday, F ebruary 17th, with 65 or more players taking part in the winter workouts. The winter drills will continue until about March 15th, with from 16 to 20 dally sessions. A few days work in shorts Is planned for May. The Christians lost only four seniors from the 1968 team, but there are some academic cas ualties, and Mike Over ton will be lost from foot ball permanently due to a shoulder injury, for which he has just had surgery. Overton will work as a student assist ant to the coaches for the next two seasons. Wish I’d Said That Tommv Cole, Elon's fine freshman guard, almost .oel" orbit’as he goes up for a layup basket in F^n^s 86 to 66 victory over Catawba at Salisbury. C atawba’s Bullock also goes high trying to block the shot. Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see.— Madge Sheline, Hessville-Woodmar (Ind.) Lite.