PAGE TEN Pitchers Carry '9' Load; l op Lcscro ■ ■ ■ ■ V i The recent Easter grind left; Hoyas Here Tomorrow Pitching, the Lion baseball team’s most effective weapon of il }j uries . Heading! in its five winning performances thus far, will again be de- list are two of his starj pended upon to carry Coach Joe Bedenk’s victory hopes when|®£° e ” . 11 Hess with 21 the Lions host Georgetown in a twin-bill tomorrow afternoon. goals and Tom Seeman with n. A look at the latest Lion statistics show the Ed Drapcho-! pa inf Tnj ury and Hess Cal Emery pitching combination has carried the brunt of the ;came up with a broken right Lion lead thus far. Only three hitters —Ron Rainey, Bob Me-; thumb in the Adelphi game. Mullen and Guv Tirabassi —are over the .300 mark. Both may see only limited action _ . ", _ , ... tomorrow at Colgate. And Drapcho and Emery have * * * But Baer found some pleasure, responded to Hie chore wth in the improved play of his de-; youthful season—D rap c h o his ! tensemen during the 4-game tour. I two wins and Emery three. : to _ become. Both hurlers have epproxi- , “(Ray) Tuleya, (Harry) Brown mately the same records to date an d Sandy (Don Sanders) should* with Drapcho having a slight ,be commended for their improved! edge statistic-wise. Sophomore inlay over the series. Particularly: Emery has pitched 23 ummgs ;Sandy who just switched over to —he only worked the first five defense this year after being a, in the Lion opener with West- i midfielder. He’s really adapted! ern Maryland-and has allowed himself to the position. on) L^“7 e “But we have to do some more, «n ERA of 1.57. Ke has whiffed defensive work with our mid-' 28 and has walked 13. fielders,” Baer concluded. ; Drapcho, on the other hand, , Although Seeman may not be! has worked 22 innings and has .in top shape for the Colgate gamei allowed only 3 runs on 11 hits and Hess may see very limited! with an 0.82 ERA. He has walked iduty with his special fiberglass 1 only six and has struckout 34. [protective cast, Baer is planning! Turning to the hitting side of ;to center his attack around the! the picture, left handed hitting , midfield. Rainey leads the batsmen with a • j “Right now I'm trying to work .461 mark—six hits in 13 at-bats. • the others into the offensive pat-; Used almost solely against right- ~ • terns and get some more punch handed pitching, he also leads from the midfield,” said Baer. : the dub in RBl’s with 8. “I'll have to use Lou (Girard) as Tirabassi, who has given indi cations of recovering from a .191 season last year, is presently clipping the ball at a .357 pace —five hits in 14 at-bats. McMullen, a ,3CO sticker last season, is currently sporting a .333 batting average with 6 hits In 18 times at bat. Despite the lack of .300 hit ters. Bedenk said that he con sidered it to be adequate. His chief concern at the plate cen ters around two of his better hitters—Captain Jim Locker man and catcher Don Stickler. Lockerman, a .306 clubber last season, is presently hitting an anemic .158 while Stickler, a .297 hitter last season, is only at the .222 mark. However, Bedenk does not show great concern over their troubles. “Those things will come,” he said. “They’ll improve l as the weather improves and we play more often.” Sigma Chi Cops 2nd Half Title Sigma Chi copped the fraternity League B second half Intramural bowling championship to enter a playoff with the first-half winner, Delta Chi. Sigma Chi ended league play i i>y scoring a 4-0 win over Alpha! Chi Sigma, who finished in a tie! for second place with Alpha Sig-! ma Phi, each posting a 31-13 rec-j ord. Alpha Sig’s Bob Sickeler was the top individual bowler j with a 172 average for 28 games.! The remainder of the standings! showed Triangle, Phi Kappa and I Theta Chi trailing the leaders in; that order. Other League B action Wednes day night saw Delta Theta Sigma post a 3-1 victory over Phi Ep silon Pi. -Delta Sig’s Don Alcorn ■was top bowler with a 188-475; series. Phi Kappa, led by Bill Maczcees’ 195 single-game score, downed Triangle, 3-1. Howard Reich paced the losers with a 488 three-! game total. Dave Bucke’s 210-539 series, high for the night, led Delta Chi to a 3-1 decision over Kappa Sig ma. Posting forfeit wins were Alpha Sigma Phi over Alpha Epsilon Pi and Phi Mu Delta ever Theta Chi. Indians Top A 7 s On Wertz 7 Double - KANSAS CITY, April 25 (/Pi— The Kansas City Athletics, v.ho humiliated Cleveland with a 17- run outburst last night, got their comeuppance today as the In dians took a 5-3 decision with the help of a clutch double by Vic Wertz and fine relief pitching by Ray • Narleski. . The Indians took a 4-1 lead, scoring one in the first when George Strickland singled Wertz home, and adding three more in THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Ron Rainey The Lions’ leading hitter ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS is this would If so, you might enjoy working with us —because this is how we run ours: What We Do We are an electronics engineering company 8 years old and employing about 75 people. Our income is from two sources; research and development con tracts, and manufactured products. Our sales have been increasing steadily and we have recently had to double our plant size to keep pace with our ex panding operations. Who Are the Managers? As an engineering company, we have learned to trust engineers with our top positions. Our presi dent, vice-presidents, in fact all our management people, are experienced engineers. The business ex perience which equips them for management tasks has not obscured the technical considerations which dominate our activities. As in most small companies,' the distance from bottom to top is short. There are no rigid echelons, no remote and unapproachable Front Office. What Kind of People Do We Hire? Originality, imagination, and a basic physical insight into thei rwork are the qualities we value most in our engineers. Continuous stress on these qualities since the company’s inception has brought together a group of engineers who are, first of all, individuals, but who have proved ,too, to have this in common: the versatility of the non-specialist and, regardless of age, the lively curiosity that led them into sci entific careers in the first place. With professional interests often reflected in spare-time activities, they are free to carry on hobby projects in a company equipped “week-end workshop.” The atmosphere of mutual respect in which these men work is of their own making. We have found that, besides under standing their work, they understand one another. For a campus interview sign up now with Placement Bureau. Our representative will be here May 3. TRAK* COMMUNICATION PRODUCTS - MORSE-TO-TELEPRINTER CONVERTERS - PANORAMIC RECEIVERS - MULTICOUPLERS. INCREOUCTOR* H-F CONTROLLABLE INDUCTORS •Trade Mark how you run a company? sse Scorers Inj ;the main feeder from behind the’ ;nets.” !long island sidelights... Hess' not only hit for 6 goals in the Adelphi game, but had 7 | assists to play a major part in 13 of the Lion's 18 marks. Baer was also high on the ■clearing and passing of midfield er Jeff Bostock during the series. Most of the players wound up the New York part of,the trip ,by seeing Manhattan Saturday * night and taking in the Pirate- DANCING TONIGHT 10 P.M. --- 1 A.M. featuring the DON SMALTZ COMBO AT THE PARADISE CAFE BELLEFONTE How We Determine Salaries The individual contribution of each engineer to the company’s progress is the major factor that deter mines his.salary. We believe that this is the logical “pay scale.” We have no automatic increases or seniority requirements. To insure against stagna tion, however, the salaries of all employees are re viewed twice a year. This policy has resulted in exceptional pay and advancement opportunities, par ticularly for younger men. Two out of five of our top engineers are men who have been out of school less than five years. Where We Are We have located our company in southern Connecti cut because we like to live and work in this desirable area. Most of our employees drive to work in 15 minutes on country roads, and many go home for lunch. In this area, we are close to good schools as well as fine recreational, educational and enter tainment facilities. If You Are Interested We now wish to add more engineers to our organ ization to work on a wide variety of-projects in volving “communications engineering, digital and analog computer techniques; magnetics, research on ferrites, and other aspects of electronics. We need younger engineers to work with senior men of outstanding ability, as well as senior engineers to assume project responsibility. Company policy pro vides vacation, sick leave, insurance and help with graduate studies. If you would like to learn more, send for our free booklet describing the business and the people of CGS Laboratories. There is no obligation. (GS LABORATORIES, IKC. 398 Ludlow Street, Stamford, Conn. FRIDAY. APRIL 26. 1957 ured IDodger double header Sunday in lEbbets Field. The referees at the Adelphi game officiated the game so close ly and cleanly that they penal ized one of the midfielders for swearing. He said, “Damnit!” Jacks Handball Champ A 1 Jacks, who looms as Penn State’s starting quarterback in 1957, knows his way around a handball court. He is the newly- Icrowned interfraternity singles 'champion. •vUit'-srH *