We're Praying | That You'll Stay / “flez"! j VOL. XVIIi. No 2 “BEZ” ANTICIPATES HARD GAME WITH PITT NEXT WEEK Penn Slate Coaches Are Rounding Niltany Machine into Shape for Annual Tussle both elevens reported IN GOOD PHYSICAL TRIM Pitt Has Gone Through Difficult Season—Team Is Hitting Best Stride at Present With the last game of the 192-' foul -O.IH season, the big annual Turkey Day clash with I'ict on Forbes Field, looming up as the hardest contest of the year for Penn State's gridiron warriors. Coach IJezdek and his assistants are busily grooming the Xittany Uon for a gruelling tussle with the Panther when these two beasts of the jungle take the Held of battle next Thursday afternoon. While the Thanksgiving Day game will bring the regular season to a close for both Penn State and Pitt, it will not make the end of hostilities for eith er team as the Panthers are slated to go to San Francisco to meet Leland Stan ford in the latter’s big stadium on De cember thirtieth, while the Xittany Li ons will probably be in western terri tory at the same time, although an op ponent for Penn Suite in the post season game has not yet been decided upon. A territlic battle is looked for on Korbes Field next week. The Wurner ites have gone through u hard season thus far, having nothing easy since their opening encounter with the Uni versity of Cincinnati. The chief task which the Pitt coaches face at present it to keep the men keyed up to the proper pitch—something it is not easy to do. Tile excellent showing made by the Panthers in the W\ and J. tangle last Saturday indicates that they are primed to the utmost. Xo grid team has ever been known to go through a full season without a letdown at some stage, ami Warner is working with might and main in order to keep his charges from slowing up on the eve of the Thanksgiving fracas. In view of the fact that Pitt has nev er fulled to put additional tight into the annual fray with Penn Suite, Coach Bezdek is anticipating the hardest game of the entire season next Thurs day. The nexi ten days rest period before lining up against Warner’s pro teges gives the Xittany coaches an op- portunity to round the Penn State ma chine into form. The grid mentor or dered a complete day of rest on Monday as a reward fur the splendid showing made against the strong Penn eleven last Saturday. On Tuesday, however, the-men returned to the daily grind and since then have been putting in some strenuous work. . Numerous plays of intricate and tricky character are being devised Which will test the reported strength of .the Panther. In addition to creat ing new plays, “Bez” has attempted to speed up the Xittany offense and bol ster the defense with a view toward causing as much trouble as possible for the Piu outiit m week. The Xittany team, os a whole, is in EOOd physical condition. “Dutch” lie dank is rapidly recovering from the in jury he received in last Saturday’s Same and may be counted upon to dis play his usual fine brand of football in ihe Thanksgiving clash. Other mem tors of the squad are suffering from minor injuries, but none of them are of serious enough nature to prevent the "“n from entering the Pitt game if Jhej are needed. No material teve occured in the Penn State line-up 77 s Weck - and it is doubtful if any will place before next Thursday. O’ man on the first team is play a fine brand of football and is do . J 1 * 8 test to improve the team as a We, as the gridders are just as "«>• to "pm one over" on the JJprner as any of their admirers are to see ihem do it. ENGINEERING students dance tomorrow night . e Industrial Engineering Society , . old its annual dance tomorrow Phi fr ° m e3shl ~mll twelve* at the .Delta Theta house. The members e InduslrJ al • Engineering Depart ..b and their wives, will he the pa m and patronesses. Talbot’s orches- - s been secured for the dance. :: On the Gridiron :: •'ale vs* harvard , avy vs - West Point •Htfayeue vs. 1 .thigh "UCkneli vs. Butgers Dartmouth vs. Brown Dickinson vs. Delaware owarthmoie v». llaverford 'f: r C - vs - W. Maryland „ hlenburg vs. Fordham Gettysburg vs. U-Kanon Valley i}' and vs. Detroit OON’T FAIL TO HEAR FRED B. SMITH TUESDAY NIGHT -■—„ seml-l/l/eekly INtt &tafr A (CaUpgtan. [: MASS MEETING TUESDAY JNIGHT A football mass meeting will be held on Tuesday night in the Auditorium. All the coaches and the team will be there. This is the last public appearance or the grid men in State College before they leave for Pittsburgh. Something new ig scheduled for the occasion. Everybody out for a rousing send off.' AUTOMOBILE MEN WILL AID CAMPAIGN Pennsylvania Automotive Asso ciation Pledge Support to Development Plan NON-ALUMNI SUPPORTERS INCREASING IN NUMBERS Thus far, this week has been a very good one in the emergency building fund campaign. The steady stream of subscriptions has been continuing, the receipts at campuign headquarters var- ying from four to seventeen thousand dollars a duy. Monday was the second best since the days of the student cam paign when pledges totaling $17,042 passed over the desk of Professor A. H. Espenshade, now vice-dircetor of the campaign. The previous record for one day's mail was over $34,000. No olHcial report on the fund total has been made since Monday when $701,347.43 was recorded. President Thomas received great sup port and encouragement on Tuesday when he addressed the convention of the Pennsylvania Automotive Association, a group of automobile men. They passed resolutions supporting the Penn State development plan and started a sub scription for the fund in the light of the : great service which Penn State rendersj 1 the industries of the state. : More non-alumni are supporting the] Penn Suite drive every day. Facultyj ; campaign Held workers are turning in j 1 favorable reports every day, and.it is not ed that people who have never been at tached to the college arc among the most generous supporters of the drive. In many counties the alumni. are be ginning to get more active than ever before, and a steady increase in the fund is expected from this time on. The campaign has been featured in the past few days by Sullivan county going over the top with its quota, the third county to complete Its drive. Cumbria and Adams are the only other counties that have raised their quotas to date, but in all of these counties they are still gathering subscriptions. Cumbria and Sullivan are now about twenty per cent over-subscribed, and the good work is continuing. There were eighty-eight members of the "Penn State $1001) Club”, in u report given yesterday from campaign head quarters. This "club” is composed of inon or organizations who huve pledged $lOOO or more to the fund. Three of these have pledged $15,000 each and two others $lO,OOO each. There are two for $5OOO and six for $3OOO. Member ship in this “club” has been increasing rapidly during the pust few weeks. The latest member to join this “club” is F. A. Dalburg *O6, whose $l5OO pledge arrived yesterday from Maracaibo, Ven ezuela, where he Is connected with the Standard'Oll. Company. A former faculty member of Penn State to whom Professor Espenahade lust week sent some of tho campaign publicity material, responded yester day with a check for $lOO, indicative of the favorable light In which Penn Stute is held by non-alumni. Part of the letter follows “Although not an ulumnus of Penn State ray several years’ connection with the college and experiment station gen erated In me an attachment for the Old Centre County institution, which is only second to that for ray own Almu Muter. I take pleasure, therefore, in enclosing a check for $lOO us my con tribution to the Penn State College emergency building fund.” OFFICERS ARE ELECTED FOR FROSH “Y” CABINET The. permanent oincers for the fresh , man Y. M. C. A. Cabinet were elected on the evening of Wednesday, November sixteenth, at the University Club. Tem porary officers have been in charge of the afTairs of the cabinet for some time, and considerable success is being at tained by the members of the new organ ization. The officers elected were as follows: President. D. D. Henry '26; Vice-Presi dent, J. It. Dunlap '26; Secretary, C. D. Seaman '26; Treasurer, G. L. Guy '26. Plans were also made for the three parties that were held under the aus pices of the cabinet last Friday night. These parties are the beginning of a series of thirties to be given throughout the. year. In this work the freshman cabinet is cooperating with the senior cabinet. These parties are chiefly for those interested in “Y” work and serve as a means of the men’s getting bette acquainted with each other. STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1922 NITTANY HARRIERS OUT FOR ANNUAL INTERCOLLEGIATES Fourteenth Varsity and Third An nual Frosh Cross Country Takes Place Monday PENN STATE RUNNERS SHOW IMPROVEMENT Eighteen Colleges and Universi ties Will Be Represented at Van Courttand Park The Penn State varsity and freshman cross country squads are now prepared to enter the IntercoHegiutes to be held ut New York next .Monday, November twenty-seventh. This is the fourteenth annual varsity ami the third annual freshman cross country run of the In tereolieginte Association of Amateur Athletes of America and will be held over the Van Cortlandt Park Course Captain Rack '24, Horton '25, Decker '24, Fitzpatrick ’24. Wendler ’24, Yeager *25. and Kreiter '23 will represent the Lion as the varsity team, while the yearlings will be represented by Captain Shipley, Chandre. Guyer. Batchelor, 01- lield, Arm. and Barclay. It will be noted that seven men comprise a team while flve will be counted at the linish. Well Halnnccd Teams Both of the teams that Venn State is sending to the intercollegiates are well balanced, with the possible excep tion of Shipley, captain of the yearling (Continued on last page) WRESTLING SEASON TO OPEN FEBRUARY TENTH Columbia, Lehigh, Penn, Syracuse, Navy, Cornell, lowa State and Intercollegiates Scheduled The Venn Slate wrestlers will face a ! hard schedule this year when they meet seven of the most formidable col lege and university teams of the country. The season Is scheduled to begin with a meet sit home on February tenth and to continue until March thirtieth , when the team will Journey to lowa State. Columbia heads the list as the first 1 opponent against whom the Penn State wrestlers will combat this year on Feb i ruury tenth. This engagement is a tentative one. and may he scheduled a little later or earlier in the season. In . any event, the other seven matches, including the Intercollegiates nt Ithaca . on March twenty-third and fourth, wil*. appear as they are now scheduled. Lehigh will journey to Penn State after the match with Columbia. The tables will be reversed nt the next con text when the Ponn State grapplcrs will meet the Xuvy mattnen ut Annapolis on February * twenty-fourth. March the third will find Penn's strong array- within Nlttuny territory, Cornell, the host of the 1923 Intercol legiates, will be invuded on March the tenth; while one week later, on March the seventeenth, another group of New York State wrestlers will journey to Penn State in the personage of Syra cuse University's contenders. The Intercollegiates are next on the curd, to be followed by a distant trip to Amos, lowa, where the Penn State team witl meet tho lowa State delega tion. Cornell took first place In the 1922 Intercollegiates with Penn State a close second. Out of the seven matches which arc scheduled for the 1923 sea son, Lehigh, Cornell and Navy, were met last year and the Nittany team suc ceeded in- defeating all but the Navy. The varsity wrestling practice Is to start immediately after Thanksgiving, and will be conducted upon a basis sim ilar to last year, that is, candidates are to rejHirt in uniform at five-thirty every evening. Soph-Frosh Scrap With a host of freshmen material available from which to pick a team to' represent that class in the annual sophomoreJfreshmen class scrap on December ninth, Coach D. D. Detar is busily engaged trying to locate second year men to fill the vacancies in the sophomore division. .The greatest difficulty lies in the in ability to find men to fill the one hun dred and sevety-five pound and heavy weight berths. It is essential that these men be obtained as soon as pos sible as the trials for the scrap will take place on December fourth to sixth inclusive. Among the frosh who are now show ing promise of being available for the scrap are F. W. Sands and C. H. See ling In the 125 pound class, tfaffman, a 135 pounder Is also making rapid strides toward securing a berth. Dowd, another freshmen, in the 145 pound division, and McCool who tips the beam at 158 pounds are maintaining their positions in these respective weights. Over twenty frosh are constantly work ing out on the mats, and the Indica tions are that some very promising (Continued on last page) ! Composer of Note MUSICAL ARTISTS HERE TOMORROW Charles Wakefield Cadman and Tsianina to Present All- American Concert m PROGRAM SCHEDULED TO BEGIN AT 8:00 O’CLOCK Charles Wakefield Cadman, the well known American composer of "From j the Land of the Sky-Blue Water" and "At Dawning”, will appear in -the Audi-! torium tomorrow evening at eight o'clock under the joint auspices of the- Y. M. C. A. and the Department of sic Entertainment Course. To tho' thousands all over America who admire the work of this popular song writer and Princess Tsianina. the Indian Sing-1 er who will appear with him. these two! artists will need no introduction, as their names have been identified with a big movement for American opera and chamber music for a number of years. Although Cadman is best known to the general public for his songs and bal lads. he nevertheless stands high in general composition and has written! in every form, from teaching pieces forj children to operas and symphonic works. His lastost opera, "A Witch of Salem", based on the Now England his torical episode of 1692. will be produced in Now York in the near future, and is expeoted to have as successful a run as "ShanewLs” enjoyed for two consec utive seasons. In addition to these operas, Cadman has been widely represented by his choral compositions, "The Sunset Trull" "The Morning of the Year”, and "The \ ision of Sir Launfai". At the present time, this composer has more than three hundred published works to his credit. Cadman is more fortunate than most composers in that it is possible for him to adequately present his own composi tions in concert- He has a vigorous style and a technique suited to his own piano numbers and songs, and, accord ing to the critics, a convincing and col orful tone-production. His latest orchestral work "Thunder bird Suite" consisting of flve number* has just recently been Issued by Boosey and Company, his London publishers, and Is already scheduled for perform (Continued on last page) ENGINEERS WILL FORM ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE .Wish to Affiliate With the Na tional Association of Col legiate Engineers Well pleased with the success of the exhibit on Pennsylvania Day, the en gineers are now instituting a move ment for the formation of an organiza tion of all engineers which will carry on from year to year and take charge of such activities as the recent exhibit. At a meeting Wednesday evening of representatives of each of the engineer ing departments, the committee in charge of working up preliminary plans for the formation of this organization, reported that plans were progressing favorably and that they were in touch with the National Association of Colleg iate Engineers with the view of aflHi ating with them. This organization is similar in form to that In other Engineering Schools,! a tentative program for which is soon to be submitted to a meeting of the heads of the engineering departments. The National Association of Collegiate Engineers has chapters in a large number of engineering schools, each local chapter having as Us aim the fostering of a spirit to advance the school and Us engineers by .promoUng such activities as tend to broaden;!the engineering student. The 'purpose'is in accordance with the desires of the engineering students at this time, and will undoubtedly be of great benefit to the carrying out of such activities as are put on from time to time in the normal course of the college year. ‘‘BEZ” HESITATES TO ACCEPT OFFER TO COACH PHILLIES Nittany Mentor Still Undecided After Interview With Baker Last Friday Afternoon GRANTED EXTENTION UNTIL DECEMBER 12 Professional Baseball World Makes Tempting Offers But Bezdek Refuses to Answer Despite the tempting offers which William F. Baker, president of the Phil adelphia Nationals, has repeatedly made to Hugo Bezdek for managing the Phil lies for the next three years, the Nit tany mentor was still undecided after a conference with the big league presi dent last Friday afternoon. Complying with an urgent invitation from President Baker, “Bez” consented to call upon him while he was in Phil adelphia last week-end with the team and the baseball world fully expected to hear of some agreement being reached at that meeting. But, while "Bcz" was admittedly pleased and sat isfied with the offers which the Phillies made him at that time, he still refuses to commit himself one way or the oth er until after the close of the football season. For that reason. President Baker has given "Bcz“ an extension of time until December twelfth, when the scheduled football season will have ended and the Penn State head conch will have (Continued on last page) “AUCE-SIT-BY-THE-FIRE” TO BE STAGED TONIGHT James M. Barrie’s Popular Comedy Will Be Interpreted by Star Cast of Players Tonight in the Auditorium at eight llfteen the curtain will rise on the first super Player production of the Season, ’’Alice-Sit-By-Thc-Fire", the very popular comedy by Sir James M. Barrie. The play. was secured after much trouble In obtaining an amateur release and nothing has heen spared in giving it a real touch of professionalism. The! characters in the various roles are in- 1 terpreted by: j Colonel Gray C. J. O'Donnel ’24 j Mrs. Grey .Mary Butcher *2g! Amy Grey Kuthannn Sharpless '23 j Cosmo Grey B. B. Knhan *25 Hughes Roll.) Austin Blakeslee *22 Mary Ferguson '24; lamora Dunbar Henrietta Stickman *25 Richardson Miriam Ray '26 Annie Josephine Cronner '26 Mr. A. C. Cloetingh, the director, has been very fortunate in securing such a thoroughly able cast. Never before have the minors of a play been carried by such strong players. The leads of the play, O'Donnel and Miss Butcher, have fallen readily into the whimsical spirit of the lines, and their interpretation is elderly executod. The roles of the Colonel and Alice, which are so delightfully depicted, are presented after a fashion which is very true to life. The secondary roles of Rolio and Amy furnish exceptionally strong backing for the leads. These characters are portrayed by Austin Blakeslee and Miss Ruthanna Sharpless In a manner that is commendable to any amateur stage. The remaining cast fill In admirably, resulting In one of the best performances that has ever been presented in the Auditorium. Tickets will be on sale at the box office before the performance, and are priced at fifty and seventy-five cents. Y.M.C. A.IS REPRESENTED AT ANNUAL CONFERENGE Resolution Passed Endorsing Pro hibition Without Reservations at Forty-First Gathering At the forty-first Annual Internation-! al Generul Conference of the Y. M. C. i A., held in Atlantic City. New Jersey,! last week, Penn State was represented; by Frank I. Olinstead, E. R. Tomb *23. j |W. E. Davies *24 and H. E. Folkrod '25. j Nearly three thousand delegates, rep-j resenting associations in every state! in the Union, every province of Can-! adit and muny foreign countries, attend-’ ed the conference. Among the important results of the convention was the establishment of a new purpose basis for Y. M. C. A. chapters, legalizing a basis for active voting membership in the associations/ a resolution similar to one adopted by : the local association Inst year. A ruling was passed permitting controlling boards of associations to have ten per cent of the members men who are not members of evangelical churches. (Continued on last page) OPEN FOOTBALL PRACTICE TUESDAY •Coach Bezdek announces that there will be an open varsity foot hall practice before the Pitt game. All students are asked to he on Now Beaver after the last hour on that afternoon. FROSH-SOPH SAND SCRAP TOMORROW Bags Containing Sand and Placed at Midfield Will Be Contested by the Underclassmen BATTLE ON OLD BEAVER AT ONE-THIRTY O’CLOCK Old Beaver Field will be the scene of the first annual Sophomore-Freshman Sand Scrap tomorrow afternoon at one thirty. This scrap has been substituted for the Push-Ball Scrap which was eliminated because of the Inability to obtain a bladder for the ball. This new sand scrap will continue to be an anu ual event until the push-ball is again replaced in a serviceable condition. Following a commlttco meeting last Tuesday evening the details of the scrap were made known, and are to be conducted as follows: Twenty cement bags will be filled with dirt and sand and placed on the fifty yard line of Old Beaver Field. Sophomores and freshmen will be por tioned Into two groups of fifty each and take their stations at either end of the gridiron. At a given signal these groups will rush to mid-field and en deavor to carry the bags to their res pective goal lines. At the end of a five minute period a shotgun will announce the close of the first heat and will summon the partici pants from the field. Recorders will then proceeed to take tally of the! yardage gained by both sides. For ev j ery five yards gained in advancing a* bag toward their original goal line .that] side will be credited with one point. If a bag lies within the fifty and forty five yard lines it is to constitute one (1)1 point in the final tally. j The boundary lines will be the same! as now* exist on the regular football! gridiron, afid all bugs lying out-of-‘ bounds will not be counted. There will! be as many heats run off as there are' sophomores present to constitute al team of fifty men. It is the desire of the committee, however, to run at least three heats. Nn member will be permitted to enter the scrap if he is not properly equipped witli tennis shoes, and all are urged to be on hand at one o’clock sharp. L A. LECTURE COURSE PROGRAM COMPLETED Eleven Interesting Numbers Will Be Presented in Old Chapel on Tuesday Evenings The program for the thirteenth nn ual Liberal Arts Lecture Course has been completed by the committee which is composed of Dr. B. V. Moore, Chair man. Mr. C. C. Wagner, and Professor! T. J. Gates. The Liberal Arts Free lecture Course is a well known series of semi-popular lectures given each win ter by members of the faculty. It is sponsored primarily by the School of Liberal Arts, but members of the fac ulty in other schools are also asked to lecture. An effort Is being made to have a variety of subjects such that everyone will be interested in at least some of them. The lectures are given in Old Chapel on Tuesday evenings at seven o’clock. They- close promptly at eight so that they do not interfere with other plans for the evening. The entire program' for this academic year follows: { Jan. 9—Daniel Webster ' Dr. E. E. Sparks “The man who hits an audience ns Jan. 16— George Sand 'hard as Harry Wilson hits the line” is Dean Margaret A. Knight a description which has been given to Feb. 6—The Use We Have Made of Fred B. Smith who speaks at Penn Our Forests (Illustrated) State next Tuesday evening In the Professor J. A. Ferguson Auditorium following the mass mcet- Feb. 13—• American Humor ing. Professor F. L. Pattee This leader in Industry and religion Feb. 20—Snapshots in Spain (Illus-lhas probably spoken to more people trated) Professor W. K. Jones] than any other lecturer, not excluding Fob. 27 —A Budget System for Penn-|W. J. Bryan and "Billy” Sunday. sylvanla Dr. Jacob Ttinger! Smith, with the limbs, neck and shoul. .Mar. 6—Present Day Tendencies in ders of a prize fighter and a chest big the Theater i enough to house a turbine engine, has Profe/sor A. C. Cloetingh l uever fai,ed to attract capacity aud -Mar. j:l—Experimental Evidence for! fences. He is greeted enthusiastically and against the Variation ofjin ,lB Parts of the globe and he has Mass in a Moving Body : never been known to fail In winning Dr W R Ham- ovor bis hearers instantly. -Mar. 20 —The Response of Philosophy' Two ~r h| K> ,e! ‘ l responsibility to Einstein Dr. R. ]!. Dottvr.'-,-. !,re "»' d *»• Frc > t B - Smith. In business Mar. 27—What Do Von Wont tV,; hc is Aaslstant to * h<! Prv’ldent ° f Know about Radio? (Demon-! I°l™-Manvtlte Co., and in r<- stration) Dr. K. C. WnodruP I ' Blon he J s ' l,e commie : sion on churches of the Federal Council Apn. 10—Research . . _ . , A _ „ . ~ ~ : :of Churches of America. Firmly believ- Denn E. A. Holbrook t, ... ■ Ing that business and religion go hand in hand and being so valuable in both THIRTY-THREE -HUNDRED fields he devotes three days of the STUDENTS WANT “BEZ" TO pveek to business and four to religion. STAY WITH THEM ; (Continued on fourth page) le Man With The Grit is Tomorrow J PRICE FIVE CENTS HARD BASKETBALL CARD COMPLETED FOR 1922 SEASON Syracuse and Cornell New Opposi tion on Penn State Schedule- Fourteen Games Arranged DAILY PRACTICE WITH LARGE SQUAD STARTED “Hinkey” Haines to Coach Fresh man Candidates—Call Will Be Made After Christmas Recess With the completion of one of the most difficult basket ball schedules in the Blue and White annals. Coach Her mann with a squad of nearly thirty men Is preparing for the coming season un der conditions which at present seem very bright for the.successful outcome of the winter sport. The schedule for the 1922-23 season comprises fourteen contests, nine of which are to be played In the Armory. Several new opponents are arranged for on the card Who were not met by the Nittany five lost year, incldulns such teams os Syracuse. Carnegie Tech., Dickinson, Cornell, and Swarthtnore. These teams in addition to those who have always proved to be the strongest opposition in the post seasons, make the present schedule one which will test the utmost skill and endurance of the Blue and White quintet and to come through with the loss of one or two con tests could be considered a successful season. The completed schedule Is ns follows: Dec. 14 —Juniata, at home Jan. 6—Syracuse, at home Jan. 13—Carnegie Tech., at home • Jan. 20 —Bethany, at home Jan. 27—Lebanon’ Valley, at home Feb. 3—Carnegie Tech., at Pittsburgh Feb. 7—Penn, at Philadelphia Feb. 9—Dickinson, at home Feb. 17 —Pitt, at home Feb. 21—Pitt, ut Pittsburgh Feb. 22—Cornell, at Ithaca Feb. 23—Syracuse, at Syracuse • Mar. 3—Swarthmore. at homo Mar. 10—Alumni, at home Outlook Rrlfcht [ Beginning yesterday afternoon, Conch j Hermann has started daily practice [with his large squad of candidates in j preparation for the initial clash which jis now les than three weeks away. The j number of candidates utters “Dutch” a good opportunity to pick valuable ma terial from the several teams which ar® constantly scrimmaging. With such a dependable nucleus of four veterans as is now on hand. Hermann should have little difficulty in building a smooth working combination by the time of tiie first game next month. Whilo lasi ' season’s stars. Captain Koehler. Reid. Shair, and Loelfier are a sure founda tion for the team during the coming season their positions will lie closoly contested by several members of last year’s freshman squad who come through their schedule without a de feat in u commendable manner. Hafnes to t'oach Frosh “Hinkey” Haines, who during the football season has been aiding Coach Bezdek with the gridiron warriors, is now working with Coach Hermann : until the freshman basket ball season :is opened. Sometime after the Christ mas holidays, the frosh tossers will be called out and will be' coached by Haines. FRED B. SMITH IS COMING TUESDAY Leader in American Industry and Religion Speaks Here on the World Situation IS ONE OF AMERICA’S ' FOREMOST SPEAKERS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers