SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1 Lion By JOHN BLAC The Nittany Lion medley relay team crac Quantico Relays reco the Penn State school as it won the event i at the annual Quantic extravaganza. The Blue and White t won or qualified in eve race and two individual placed in one field even' the first day's action of t meet. The proteges of Coach Werner won the 4-mile qualified in the 400• rel the 880-relay and copped in the sprint medley. I Kerr won the 10,000-me and Bobby Brown quay. the 100-yard dash prelimi The Virginia weather w Braves op Pirates; H R Wins for Chisox PITTSBURGH (IP)—Pitching and power, the twin keys to a pennant last year, got the Milwaukee Braves off to a running start yesterday with an 8-0 victory over the Pitts burgh Pirates in their National League opener. Left-hander Warfen Spahn choked off two early Pitts-' burgt threats and breezed to the firmh with his 44th major league Shutout, In the second, the Pir ates loaded the bases but Spahn got Bob Friend on a fly to short center and then fanned Bill Vir don In the third, Bob Clemente led off with a double, but was unable to score when Ed Matthews made a great stop on a single by Don Hoak and Spahn struck out Bill Mazeroski. Big Eddie Mathews was the power man, booming a solid homer into the upper right field stands for two runs that broke a scoreless deadlock in the sixth. From that point the Braves won handily, adding two more runs in the seventh ansi four in a long eighth inning rally. PITTSBURGH MILWAUKEE AB R H ABR H Virdon.cf 4 013ruton,cf 5 1 3 Clemente,rf 4 2Mathew4,3l.) 5 I 1 Slutiner,lf 4 oAaron,rf 5 1 3 Stunrt,lb 4 ICov'ton,lf 5 1 1 Iloak,lh 4 ITorre.lb 5 1 1 brxel'ski.7.l) 4 ICrandall,c 5 I 2 Crout,s4 4 I Logan,sq 3 1 0 Fut 1e.3.c 3 IMantillo,2b 4 1 1 OSpahn,p $ 0 1 bSchofield 0 0 Cross., 0 0 Pot terrld,p 0 0 clli ight 1 0 Totals 33 7 Totaln 40 3 13 MAJOR LEAGUES By The Associated Press Yesterday's Results American League Cleveland 6 Kansas City Chicago 9 Detroit 7 New York-Boston (pod rain) National League Milwaukee 8 Pittsburgh 0 Los Angeles-Chicago (ppti snow and cold) American League W. L. Pet. Chicago 1 0 1.000 Cleveland 1 0 1.000 Waahington 1 0 1.000 Boston 0 0 .000 New York 0 0 .000 Baltimore 0 1 .000 Kansas City 0 1 .000 Detroit _ 0 1 .000 National League W. L. Pct. Milwaukee 1 0 1.000 x-Cincinnati 1 0 1 000 x-San Francisco ---- 0 0 .000 x-St. Louis .0 0 .000 x-Philadelphia 0 0 .000 Chicago 0 0 .000 Los Angeles 0 0 .000 Pittsburgh 0 2 .000 x—Play night games. NEW YORK (AP) Probable pitchers for today's major league games: National Leagae Milwaukee at Pittsburgh—Burdette (20- 101 vs. Law 114-121. Los Angeles at, Chicago—Drysdale (Is -13) vs. Anderson (3-3). San Francisco at St. Louis (N)—Jones (14-13) vs, Broglie ( 0 -0). Cincinnati at Yhiladelti la—Lawrence (6-13) vs. Cornet (10-12). American Leers Boston at New York—Brew Turley 121-7). Chicago at Detroit—Wyn' Foytack (15-13). Baltimore at Washington as. Kemmerer (6-15). Cleveland at Kansaa City -4) va. Garver (12-11). Set Mark at Quantico warm although a pouring rain, State and Quantico mark and was descended in the late afternoon, l also a second and a half faster but it did not hinder the track- than the Penn Relays record. men. Kerr was a last-minute entrant listance ed the I •d and record 9:53.8 l e track The distance medley foursome of Charlie King, Dick Hambright, Dick Engelbrmk, and Ed Moran flashed across the finish 80 yards ahead of their closest competitor, St. John's. Moran coasted home on the anchor leg, conserving his strength for the mile leg that he had to run in the 4-mile relay an hour later. inclads y relay ces and during e 2-day King, leading the Nittany quartet from the post, got the Blue and White squad off to a good start, flashing through his half-mile in 1:53.2. Hambright took the baton and dashed his quarter-mile in 98.8 seconds. Engelbrink proceeded to rip off his three-quarter mile leg in the dazzling time of 3:00.4. Cap tain Moran eased through the anchor mile in 4:11.4. The 9.53.8 total is a new Penn relay, ;y and a third reddia er run fied in inaries. as quite a—Walked for Friend in 7th: It—Ran for Kluszewski in 7th; c—Grounded out for Porterfield in 9th. Milwaukee Pittsburgh R—None. PO—A—Milwaukee 27-9, Pitts buigh 27-0. LOB—Milwaukee 8, Pittsburgh 26—Aaron 2, Crandall, Folks, Clemen te, Stuart. HR—Mathews SB—Mantilla. DETROIT (TPA Nellie Fox hit a 2-out, 2-run home run in the 14th inning yesterday, and gave the Chicago White Sox a 9-7 vic tory over the Detroit Tigers in a marathon American League open er. The peppery little second base man, who failed to hit a home run in 623 at-bats last season, connected against Don Mossi af ter Sam Esposito lined a 2-out single to left field. It was Fox's fifth base hit in seven official trips in the contest that lasted 4 hours 25 minutes. The game was only one inning short of tying the record for the longest opening game in baseball history. Walter Johnson pitched 15 innings for the Washington Sena tors and beat the Philadelphia Athletics 1-0 on April 13, 1926. The two teams used 43 play ers, only one short of the Amer ican League record set by New York and Boston in the 1956 season. Gerry Staley, sixth of seven Chicago pitchers, was the win ner. Mossi, fifth Tiger pitcher, took the loss. imilumummiliminninumminiiiimitinu , g NOW OPEN .==, ---, 2 L FULL DAYS 3.1 :,... ,.. 7 iEP A WEEK =, il.-- -14- 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Ei - --5. Ell - - -i - Davidson'sEi E-: 7.--. Barber Shop: , -=1 145 S. Allen -.-z -fimmomminimmomominommilliffimmil r (1242) n. (14-16) vs Walker (0-0) errs reit* (3- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA ... losing Buc hurler _ 000 002 240-0 000 000 000-0 in the 10,000-meter• run and sur prised the fans by upsetting vet eran Browning Ross of the Penn Athletic Clu b. Only five men finished the six and one-half mile marathon an d the swift Lion senior held a 100-yard advan tage at the tape. Displaying great stamina and re- ENGELBRINK serve, Kerr sprinted away from Ross in the last lap to pile up his wide margin of victory. Brown ran the 100 in 9.8 sec onds to win his heat and quali fy for the dash finals today. Ira Murchinson, running for the Mostoller Wins 2 In Badminton Adam Most°ller, Gene Grumer, Dean Seltzer and Dave Dunn each scored double victories to pace IM badminton competition last night. Dunn, Delta Tau Delta, was extended to three games in his two matches. He first eliminated Tony Hager of Alpha Tau Ome ga, 15-8, 10-15 and -15-14. Dunn then defeated Earl Harbaugh of Delta Theta Sigma, 10-15, 15-4 and 15-3. Grumer, Alpha Epsilon Pi, de feated John Craft of Phi Kappa Tau, 15-7, 6-15 and 15-14. Seltzer, Alpha Sigma Phi, first defeated Tom Ferentino of Theta Kappa Phi, 15-9, 15-5. His second victory was over Jerome Karp of Phi Sigma Delta, 15-14, 15-8. Karp earlier scored a 15-9, 15-8 win over Neal Mattern of Pi Kappa [Phi. Mosteller, of Alpha Chi Rho, beat Bill Fiedler of Sigma Nu and then defeated Bob Lackey of Pi Lambda Phi, 15-3, 15-1. Bill Sekeras, Alpha Chi Sigma, scored the only shutout of the night, beating Dale Tomkins of I Sigma Tau Gamma, 15-0, 15-1. Other wins went to Vance Rea of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Ned Manashil of Beta Sigma Rho; Charles Whiteman of Tau Phi Delta; Gary Best of Chi Phi; Bob Gross of Phi Epsilon Pi; John Behler of Theta Xi; and to Bill Rauschenberger of Delta Chi. Indians Stop Athletics As Rrodowski Stars KANSAS CITY (kP)—Dick Bro dowski came to the ninth inning rescue of young Gary Bell and veteran Herb Score yesterday and Cleveland defeated Kansas City, 6-4, in an American League open er before 22,630 fans. Bell, who had suffered only one bad inning, went into the ninth with a 4-run lead, With one out he gave up three straight sin gles and one run before being relieved by Score. Where Is Morrell's? " 1 1,4 * ot r: to I COLLEGE AVE. In answer to the question that has been puzzling everyone, we print this map as a public se: vice. P.S. Stop in for one of our delicious sandwiches or pizzas Chicago Athletic Club, and Dave Truitt, George Metzgar, Paul Winder of Morgan State ; Don Davies and Bill Schwab set a new Quantico record of icopped a third' 9.6 in their qualifying heat. place for the The 4-mile relay Quartet won , Werner me n in' its event in 17:195. Quantico Ma -1 the sprint med, rives finished second and Staley finals Truitt John's third. King ran the fastest was timed in 22 mile for the Lion team, clocking seconds for 220- a 4:17. Engelbrink ran 4:20, Herm yards and Metz- Weber 4:26 and Moran Jogged' gar in 22.2 for 4:26 5. ithe same dis- The Nittany 440-relay team 1 tance. Davies ran composed of Blaine O'Connor, ) the quarter in Bob Szeyller, Hambright and 1 49 8 and Schwab ;anchored the teaml with a brit- Brown qualified for today's finals in the time of 43.1 sec-SCHWAB onds. Winston-Salem set a new . pant 1 . 53.4 half-mile leg. Ouantico record of 42.1 for the i John Tullar and Jon Musser event. Morgan State and lowa i were the only Lions to place in are the other two qualifiers. the field events. The Niitany The same Lion foursome won, field duo placed third and their heat in the 880-yard relay! fourth in the discus throw. Mus trials. The time of 1:28 7 placed; ser's heave traveled 148' 11" them in the finals against Villa- i and Tullar topped the 150-foot nova. Morgan State. Winston-1 mark. Former Southern Cal Salem and lowa. ' (Continued on page eight) As a MATT-erema-FACT Contact sports have alweys been popular with American crowds—except one, lacrosse. And that seems odd from this angle because lacrosse is one of the hardest contact sports in existence and has the lowest rating on the House Un-American Activities list. In fact( it's as American as the Indians (who originated it) In case you're wondering what tiiis is leading up to, week as the Lions' defense con the game between the Naval tinually forcei, Loyola to lose the Academy and the Lions today ball. In fact, the Gre n Beaver Field. It starts at p.m. only took an average of four shots per period. In past years. this writer took in the games for two reasons• 1— The tough grueling contact that features more vicious block ing than even football (and there are far fewer pads) and, 2—l had to—it was my beat. But the factor that will draw me to Beaver Field this after- 1 noon is that this contest looks like , the best lacrosse match in my' four years here The opponent, Navy, is annual-I ly in the top of the nationaF ratings each year. In fact, in past! years this game was always con-I sidered a "set-up"--for Navy. The: Lion teams that faced the Middies! in the past had as their top am-1 bition to hold down the score. Not ; so today. Coach Bernie Baer's aggres- I sive talent search is beginning to pay off in the form of ex perienced stickhandlers and tough defensemen. Baer, who has been emphasiz-, ing defense this year, has a start ' ing unit of defensemen and mid fielders that averages 193 pounds. And none of them can he con sidered slow. In Baer's own words, "This is a tough, powerful defense. It's quite capable of slamming any 1 team around." They showed the fans that last week against Loy lola. In explaining his defensive "philosophy," Baer feels a strong defense will overpower the op ponents and get the ball to the offense, giving them the oppor tunity to shoot more. The philosophy paid off last PAGE SEVEN By MATT MATHEWS Associate Sports Editor Another factor that usually overtips the scales of balance is Navy's superior condition. But Baer feels the Lions are at least the Middies equal in this de partment. "Some of the boys were just getting their second wind in the fourth quarter last week." Baer stated, "And that's a good sign of then• condition to me" Baer also has enough good mid fielders that he was able to switch Johnny Behne to his high school position of attack Last v eek Behne scored eight goals, one short of the Penn State rec ord for one game. Baer is so heavy on imdfielders that Dick Weeden, who lettered last - year, is only on the third midfield trio. The player that stands out at midfield is junior Bob Swan son, who was ineligible last year. "Swanny" had three goals in the opener but is even more valuable as the team's top play maker. The three big boys on defense include former gridders Dick Dill, Andy Moconyi and Dave Erwin. All ale heavyweight; who are un (Continued on page eight) amosal , ow am ye irs sip► hol t" t .*i Eir 4 Here is only 1 of the more than 34 companies which will be here for fhe All-University Career Day April 15, 16 HUB all welcome!