IMMAY. MAY 4. 19Stti Lions Lose to Lehigh, Will Face Bisons Here The oldest rivalry in Penn State baseball will be renewed at 3:30 p.m. today when the Lions battle Bucknell . on Beaver Field. Penn State has won 39 of the 58 games the two teams have played since they first met in 1893. Although Coach Bedenk shuffled his lineup, Penn State was defeated Saturday by , Lehigh, 6-1, at Bethlehem. The Lions now have a 3-3 record and have lost two in a row. Lehigh's victory was its fourth in eight contests. WDFM will. carry a play-by play broadcast of today's game starting at 4:15 p.m. A pre-game show will get underway at 4 p.m. Pete Cherish made his initial appearance of the season, playing centerfield place of Ron Wei denhammer who was moved to shortstop where Francis Bowman had been handling the chores. George Ettenger, the team's lead ing hitter, did the catching again, but was moved from the sixth to the fourth slot in the batting or der. Tom Werner was moved from fourth to seventh in the lineup. Aside from these changes Bedenk used the same team which he had employed earlier in the campaign. Penn State got off to an early lead in the first inning. Leadoff man Charlie Russo got a base on balls and went to second on Cher ish's sacrifice. Russo was safe at third on a fielder's choice play and scored on Ettenger's infield sin gle. Lehigh rebounded quickly with two runs in the bottom of the first. Ron Dreesen cracked a dou ble to right and Harry Stotz smashed a two-out two-run homer to put the Engineers in front to stay. Dave Lucas started for Penn State but was replaced by Garland Gingerich with one out in the third. Gingerich made his entry at this point and gave up a single to Tom Gunn. Tom Gloete ground ed out Russo to firstbaseman Pat . Kennedy, with Stotz scoring on the play and making the score 5-1. A walk, two Penn State errors, and a single by Butz gave Lehigh its final run in the fourth. The Lions threatened to score on several occasions but could not get another man past third. Alto gether Penn State left 11 men on How the stars got started. Red Barber says: "I was a student working my way through the University of Florida when I was asked to be substitute announcer on a farm program. That got me a, job. In two years, I be came chief announcer. My break in sports came in '34 when I broadcast Cincinnati Reds games. Been doing Major League play-by-play ever since!" ROM' .9no f RaVor nianwide eget:et - tonsils* Industry analyst, Hairy IL in, show Cornell" ROW 10% ahead of th* seam& rand higtt•st eitshrit o6B lead hi historY/ • • "'Published in Printers' Ink. 1 96 6 , - AME :. ' •;'':?''.7. ' ... :' ' ''.l'... ' 1: :1;1:: C • AGREE IN . • ITH MORE PEOPLE , By HERM WEISKOPF base, running the total for the past two games' to 23. Today's game is the first of four home games for the Lions this week. Rutgers will be here to morrow and Syracuse will come to the Nittany Valley for a double header Saturday. Penn State's freshman baseball squad won its season's ' opener Saturday at Saltsburg from Kiski Prep, 5-0. John Egli's yearlings picked up five hits and rode to victory behind the eight-hit hurl ing of lefthander Eddie Drapcho who went the full seven innings. Keith Vesling will probably get the starting assignment against the Bisons today. The fastballing righthander has a 1-1 record. Ves ling won the season's opener with West Virginia, 12-1 and lost to Lafayette, 1-0, in 11 innings. The Penn State pitching has been up to last year's high stan dards, but the Lions' bats have been quieter this year. PENN STATE LEHIGH AB R H Russo,2b 3 1 1 Cherish,cf 3 0 0 Weid'h'er,ss 5 0 1 Ettenger,c 4 0 1 Kennedy,lb 3 0 1 Kline,3b 4 0 1 Werner,rf 3 0 1 Bradley,lf 4 0 1 Lucas,p 2 0 0 Gingerich,p 1 0 0 a-Bowman 1 0 0 Curtis,p 0 .0 0 Totals 33 1 7 a—Struck out for G b—Played left field Penn State 1 Lehigh 2 Intramural Deadlen, The deadline for entries in in tramural track and horseshoe competition is 4:30 p.m. Friday. Entrants may sign up in the IM office in Rec Hall. Trophies will be award ed fraternity team winners and medals will be pre sented to first place independent winners. .!igA '. 0000 " 71-IANI ANY ("THEP- cIGAR,a-rire TI E MILT antEMAN. STATE. COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Lion Frosh Place Second in Track Meet Penn State's freshman' tr a c k team placed second in a triangu lar meet 'Saturday at Annapolis, Md. Navy won the meet with 73 8/15 points. Penn State had 64 14/15, Penn finished third with 23 8/15: A new Penn State freshman'rec ord was set when Dick Winston ran the 120-yard high hurdles in 0:15.1. Winston won the 220 low hurdles in 0:25.1. He placed third in the broad jump, and tied with four others in the high jump. Buster Thomas won the 220 in 0:22.5, the 100 in 0:10.3, and team ed up with Dick Thier, Dave Nash and Dick Mohler to coif the mile relay in 3:32.2. Mohler won the 880 in. 2:01.2. Nash placed third in the 440 with an 0:52.6 clocking. Herb Hollowell scored a first in the broad jump, leaping 22 feet. He also placed third in the discus. Hary Fuehrer took a second place in the pole vault with a jump of 12 feet. AB R H Wagner,ss 4 0 0 Dreesen,lb 4 2 2 Butz,rf 4 1 2 Stotz,2b 4 2 2 Gunn,ef 4 0 1 Gloete,lf 4 0 2 b-Furiness,lf 0 0 0 Yurek,p • 3 0 1 Thompson,3b 2 1 0 Gilmore,e, -- 3 0 0 In the mile run, Don Mowry placed second, Don Woodrow third, and Paul Roberts fourth. Mowry also placed second in the two-mile run, with Woodrow third. Grid Stars Put Shot • Totals 32 6 10 ngerich in .the Bth for Gloete in 9th 00 000 000-i 7 2 08 100 00x---6 10 1 Penn State's two grid stars, Rosey Grier and Charlie Block son, are waging a personal duel in the shot put. Grier, giant tackle, shattered Chuck Drazenovich's old nark as a sophomore only to • have Blockson best it in his first varsity start. ~ « }m \ ~~ •-•,;••if Blue-White Contest Ends in 1212 Tie The annual Blue-White "Bucket Bowl" classic, climaxing 20 days of intensive spring drills, ended in a 12-12 tie Saturday as some 200( fans caught a satisfying glimpse of the material coach Rip Engle wilt field this September. The heavy use of the split-T optional offense, the expected good performances of the Lion regulars, and some outstanding work on on . the part of several freshman newcomers, put together a con vincing _show. The white team, captained by Jim Garrity, • drew first blood early in the second quarter on a 30-yard pass play from quarter back Bobby Hoffman to Garrity in the end zone. No extra point was attempted since Beaver Field goal posts have not been erected for the fall. With Don Bailey and impres sive freshman Milt Plum handling the quarterback duties, the - Blue lashed back early, in the second half, scoring twice in third per iod. Two sustained drives ended in touchdowns. Buddy Rowell smacked through the middle from one yard out for the first TD, and then Bailey climaxed another drive on a quarterback sneak. The ball changed hands several times in the fourth period before Lenny Moore, flashing his usual form, sprinted down' the middle FLOWERS TELEGRAPHED ANYWHERE BILL McMULLEN, Florist 122 E. COLLEGE AVENUE M. . on Ca •ti ; wi :kethe3o-i ly Camels f mels' cool h more for a 30-yard touchdown jaunt, bringing the total to 12-12. Coaches on both teams used their substitutes freely through out the contest. Several newcom ers as well as veterans showed up very well, even under the taxing afternoon heat. Plum, a deceptive ball handler and accurate passer, halfback Bill Kane, and tacide Sam Valentine all looked good. Veteran Bill Straub, Don Bal thaser, the Blue captain, RoWell, Garrity. and Moore all turned m noteworthy performances. One of the brightest spots in the game, however, was . the ef fective use of the optional play, running from Coach Rip Engle's Wing-T offense. Engle toyed with it last year and has been working with the offense this spring. Bail ey, in line for the quarterback job in the fall, ran well and han dled the laterals almost perfectly. What Mother Will Love Most The gift that will make Mother happiest on her Day is a lovely bouquet of flowers See Our Wide Selection Today! meek yourself! • 1 Mildness Test. Smoke ' s—see for yourself why . and rich savor agree any other cigarette! 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