WEDNESDAY. MAY 15. 1957 Lion Nine Hosts Lehigh With Undefeated Record An 11-game winnin * skein goes on the firing line once again when the Lion baseball :rs meet Lehfgh University this afternoon at Beaver Field. Game time is set fo: 3:30 p.m. Bedenk gives his cjft used line: “We'll run the string out- as long as it lasts,” which means this afternoon his ace hurler, Ed Drapcho, will take the tnound for the Lions. Drapcho, 6-0 on the season, carries a 1.14 earned-run-average into the game with him. In 47 Vi - , , . Innings pitched, Drapclio has al lowed only 13 runs-j-seven of which are unearned—on 34 hits. He has struck out 63 apd walked only 12, The rest of Bedenk’s ' be the same he has usi son: Steve Baidy, 3b; B 2b; Captain Jim Lock Don Stickler, c; Ron | Guy Tirabassi, ss; Dav rf; and Gary Miller, lit Watkins is in the ter up because it is report high will start its left Don Koch. Should a go for the Engineers, t be replaced by Jack In analyzing the pla; during the past, few denk was particula with the work of Bai good third basemen s as any of them.”' Baidy, who has allways been considered a good man defensively, has found the eye in the hitting department, raising his batting average from .222 to .255 'in the last three games. Bedenk was also pleased with the performances of Lockerman WDFM will air the Lions baseball game with Lehigh beginning at 3:30 this afternoon - . and- Stickler in the last three Lion games. Lockerman, who started off the season in a vicious slump, raised his batting average from a .276 mark to a solid .318. He joins Rainey, .379, and Watkins, .333, in the select .300 club. Stickler, also troubled by early season batting difficulties, boosted his mark from a mere .200 to a creditable .279. Defensively, Bedenk expressed great'satisfaction with his in field. He feels that his keystone combination of Hoover and Tirabassi is the best he has had under him in the last five years. He added that it could probably be rated among the tops he has had in his 27 years at the Lion helm. Pirates Whip Cubs, 8-6; Tigers Blank Red Sox, 2*o Pitching performances by Pitts burgh’s Luis Arroyo and Detroit’s Duke Maas sparked Major Lea gue activity yesterday afternoon. Arroyo struck out nine in a hot-and-cold relief stint to help the. Pirates whip the Chicago Cutis, 8-6. Frank Thomas had a four-for-five afternoon, including his fourth homer of the year. Maas, who couldn’t win a game for the Tigers in 1956 blanked Boston, 2-0, on a sparkling five hitter. Mat Managers Called First and second semester can didates for wrestling manager should report Friday at 4 p.m. to the wrestling room in Recreation Hall. ineup will ipd all sea ipb Hoover, Jerman, cf; Rainey, If; e Watkins, r tative line ed that Le landed ace, righthander Catkins will McMullen. r of his club games. Be- Captain Jim Lockerman rly. pleased He found his batting eye dy at third, base. He said, “I’ve had a lot of nee I’ve been here, but this Baidy is as good Name Street j City State SIIIMMIIIIIiniIMMIinMInHItItMIIItUHIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIiaiIIIMMMMIMIUIIIIIIMMMIMtmHItIIIIIIHUII THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA SUBSCRIPTION BLANK MAIL TO: THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Box 261 UNIVERSITY PARK, PA. $3.00 a semester—ss.oo a year Pitt Track Meet Rated Even By LOU PRATO An off day by one star per former on either team could de-j cide the winner of the Penn State-Pitt track meet in Pitts burgh Saturday afternoon. That’s how close the Lions and the Panthers are rated, according to performances thus far in the outdoor campaign. ■ And off those past showings it looks like Penn State will have an edge in the distance runs, the hurdles, the shot put and the dis cus. The Panthers get the favo rite role in middle distance runs, sprints, the high jump and pos sibly the javelin. - The mile relay, broad jump and pole vault-events could swing in either direction. The 100-yard and 220-yard dashes are perhaps Coach Carl Olson’s strongest events, for he has two of the nations top sprint ers—Herb Carper and Jim Don ahue—doing the running. Carper, a junior, is the Steel: City captain and holds the school record in the 100 with a 9.3 mark.' He ran the distance in :9.7 last : Saturday to win the event in the : 8 Duos Win Six fraternity doubles teams advanced into the semifinal round of the Intramural tennis tourna ment while two independent duos won in semifinal action. Flight One: Dan Gray and George Gray, Beta Theta Pi, downed Irv Bass and Stan Vogin, Phi Sigma Delta, 6-2, 7-5; John Olsen and. Roy Yoder. Delta Upsi lon, blanked Chris Kuebler and Harold Barette, Sigma Alpha Ep silon, 6-1, 6-0. Flight Two: Bill Sekeras and Don Kauffman, Alpha Chi Sigma, defeated Jack'Barbieri and Bob Metzger. Phi Kappa Psi, 6-2, 6-2; Blaine Baron and Stan Cheslock, Kappa Delta Rho, bested John Krall and A 1 Weldon, Phi Mu Delta, '3-6, 7-5, 6-2; Tom Fitzpat rick and Jim Schry, Phi Delta Theta, tripped Tom West and Chip Henderson, Phi Gamma Del ta, 6-3, 6-4; and Ed Browning and Brownie Losensky, Tau Phi Delta, defeated Glen Elder and Dave Allen, Alpha Gamma Rho, 6-4, 6-1. In the indie action, John Shenk and Michael Strange, downed Serenstickes and Warren Rose, in Notre Dame dual meet. Donahue is only a sophomore hut he is rapidly carving his way] | into the elite of the all time I Pittsburgh cinder greats. A pro-! duct of the Pittsburgh district high schools, Donahue is expected to reach the :9.6 mark sometime in the season although his best so far has been :00.2 short of that time. Both Donahue and Carper can hit the 21.0 mark in the 220. Olson has another potential sprint ace in sophomore Jay Moody. Moody is able to run the 100 in :15 flat and the 220 in ;21.9. Chuck Heflin, Jim Moore and Dick Doyle give the Panthers the strength in the 440-yard and 880-yard runs. Heflin copped the! 440 in a meet with Army with a :48.7 time but missed placing in the Notre Dame encounter last Saturday because of a box out on the final turn. Moore is the best! 880 man and he usually runs! around the 1:55 mark. Ron Siemon and Regis Goggin lead Skyscraper U’s high jump-1 irig corps. Both are capable of reaching the 6’ 3” mark on most ■Li an • with the heavy sports sched ___ Ik J ule on May 25. The opponent will in 3JVI i enniS;vr^i va rK j H. R. Gilbert, business manager of athletics, said Penn had agreed [to the switch. The game will be i played on Beaver Field, which would not be available May 25 ! because of a dual meet in track iand the P.I_A_A. track and field championships. .straight sets, 6-0, 6-1. Elwood Me-' 1 Glynn and John Guyker lost the! opening set, 6-3, to Jack McAr-! jthur and Terry Leach, but rallied! !to win the second and third sets,' 6-0, 6-1. ELECTRICITY MAY BE THE DRIVER. One day yonr car may speed along as electric super-highway* its speed and steering automatically controlled by electronic devices embedded in the road. Highways will be mads safe—by electricity! No traffic jams... no collisions... no driver fatigue. Power companies build for your new electric living . Your air conditioner, television and other appliances are just the beginning of a new electric age. Your food will cook in seconds instead of hours. Lamps will cut on and off automatically to fit the lighting needs in your rooms. Television "screens” will hang on the walls. An electric heat pump will use outside air to cool your house in summer, heat it in winter. You will need and have much more electricity than you have today. Right now America’s' more than 400 independent electric light and power companies are planning and building to have twice as much electricity for-you by 1963. These companies can have this power ready when you need it because they don’t have to wait for an act of Congress—or for a cent of tax money—to huild the plants. The same experience, imagination and enterprise that elec- j trifled the nation in a single lifetime are at work shaping your : electric future. That’s why in the years to come, as in the past, • you will benefit most when you are served by independent companies like this one. f J!»J| WEST PENN POWER PAGE SEVEN of their leaDS. | Pitt may also have Saturday’s (javelin winner if Corny Salva -1 terra can live up to Olson’s ex pectations. Salvaterra, who led Pitt’s gridiron heroes for the past ; three years, can toss the stick around 185-190*. But Olson thinks Salvaterra has the potential to reach the 200’ mark. Paul Thrash, who missed quali fying for last year's Olympic team by a hairline, is Pitt's top man on the obstacle course. : Thrash was the 400-meter hurdla victor in the 1957 Penn Relays , and can run the low hurdles in :24.0 and the high hurdles in : :14.8. His running mate Bob Russell ‘;has posted times of :14.7 in the 'ihigh hurdles and :24.8 in the ; Slows. (Penn LaX Game | Reset for May 24 i 1 Penn State’s closing game in :! lacrosse has been moved up to : Friday, May 24, to avert a con-