I'uge Twv Penn State Collegian Published Ecmi-vrcekly during the College year cy students of the Pennsylvania State College, in the inter est of the College, the students, faculty, alumni and friends. TIIE EXECUTIVE BOARD W. P. Heed ’27 - S. It. Robb ’27 - THE EDITORIAL STAFF \V. P. Reed ’27' - - H. G. Womsley ’27 G. P. Fisher ’27 Frances L. Forbes'’2 l NEWS EDITORS R. M. Atkinson *2S R. K. Fletcher '23 \V. S. Thomson ’2B WOMEN'S NEWS EDITORS Katherine Holbrook '2S THE BUSINESS STAFF S. R. Robb ’27 B. C. Wharton '27 F. X. Wkiunku ’27 ASSISTANT KI'SIXKSS MAXACKRS IS. a Ktlborn ’2 V W. J. McLaughlin '2S J. Ferguson '2B C. F. Flinn ’2B Subwriytiim priest 52. M. j.ayablo l-for*- NovomU-r 1. 1&2<5. ... ,1... ivutoifi.-e. S:at<* »w serond-f«n.« rnn»t«T. Oirltes Nlttatiy Priniintc ciM I*uMishlr>K Co. IluHiliu::. Stale Col- TeW«bi»nc: 252-W, Hell. The Penn State COI.I.KGIAN invito* cninmnnicathms nn any suit ject nf Colh'c inf.-rot- Ail rimimumr:iii<>r.s must bear the sigrmtnn* of the writer. and lh«* writers name will U; !u« munication. pmvi.limc that rummnrnration is dts-mcnl wortli) of I*uh liratmn. The COU.K'HA:.’ *lw«i««* no re.;poi..sih.!ity. however, for sentiments ex|ire->«e.l :n the 1-vtnr I«»x. All w.’iv f-r Tueolay*!* b*«e must U* in the office by twelve o’clock Sunday night.' amt for Friday’* isiw, by twelve o’clock Woiiicolny night. Checks and more? order* naming a payee other than “The Penn State'Collegian” will not !« accepted for account’s ilue this ncvvit paper. News Editor This Issue FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, I!>2G SOPHOMORES OUT Candidates for the cheeilcading staff were called from the sophomore class on Monday night. From the number of men who reported at the Armory, a spectator may draw but one conclusion Penn Slate students ' have lost all interest in their cheering. Penn Stale sophomores have no regard for their teams; they would have a com fortable seat in the stands and “Ict George” lead the cheers. Sophomores who have at any time enter tained thoughts of leading cheers should have' been at that meeting Monday night. There arc at least twenty-fire men in the second-year class who were yell-leaders in their preparatory schools, and not half that number answered the call. And at least a hundred sophomores have said, at some time or another: “Why is that bird leading cheers? I could do it boiler than-he can.” How can we know that this statement is true and not personal, when the sophomores who say it never attempt to.direct the student body in organized yelling? The Head Cheerleader is at the top of the list of important positions at Penn State. It is to this man, who should he a leader in every sense of the word, possessing a strong personality; effervesc ing with the spirit of Penn Stale—it is to this man, we know, that the freshman class looks for aid, for the personification of Penn State spirit during the first few weeks of College. And if the Head Cheerleader of the present finds no one who would be willing to bear this Task, no one who is full of love for the old College, he-surmises that cheering at Penn Stale has fallen into ill-repute, and that teams on the field are mechanical con trivances—machines that cannot be spurred on by spirit, but which are to be tested in driving power and criticized with pencil and paper. These things are not true. Sophomores have not lost their love for Penn State. They could not—and remain here. Somewhere a cog lias slipped and the time of the meeting was forgotten. The next meeting must exhibit the characteristics of . a Hibernian free-for-all, and to get into the fight, a man must be a sophomore.’ Sophomores 'Out!. ;-■ • f ' -' A TRADITION BECOMES A REGULATION Back in the days when there was nothing but a rail fence to separate the front campus from the galloping horses on the Horseshoe Trail, and the students of Penn State lived in the top of Old Main and dined (or, rather, ate) ill the wooden mess shanty in the rear of the big building, it was thought that: Pemi Stale had the prettiest campus of any college in the East. There were traditions in those days, as how. But they were traditions and not rules. It was not until the twentieth century had come that strict customs were set down and freshmen given to know that they would not he tolerated unless they observed the rule about the green head-cov ering, the black lie, the black socks. And even then, there were many customs which remained unwritten, and were handed down as traditions. It seems that in that long line of years be tween then and now, one class failed in its duly and did not pass along to the next group a tradi tion which had always been a part of the unwrit ten code. The failure of that class to perform its obligations has caused endless argument among members of five successive Student Councils, and it was only Tuesday when the question of the tra dition was again entertained. The Council saw fit to keep the tradition—it belongs to Penn State and is a part of the College—but an unknown tra dition is not worth-while. Because tlic knowledge of the custom is not known by a majority of the students, it was decided to place in the Freshman Handbook a new section under “General Customs” reading: “There shall be ho beaten paths on the from campus.” This curtails in no way the privilege of sen iors and juniors to use the front campus, but it does provide that there shall be no bare-oarth runways from the flagpoles to the southern corn ers of the campus. It also regulates the proced ure of girls who use the front campus oath as the shortest wav to Co-op but who should usva a differ ent path each journey. In other words,' it means just what it says—there shall be no beafi-.n paths on tlie front campus. Our old tradition falls in our esteem immed iately it becomes a rule. But only the students are the culprits, and it will not be long until we realize that beauty is not to be disgraced by short cuts. It remains for the upperclassmen to v.’.ave from a barc-earth path any- other upperclassntan who happens at the time to forget the tradition. And now that the tradition is common property,, there shall be no paths on that campus. President Treasurer Editor-In-Chief Assistant Editor Managing Editor Women’s Editor 15. Kaplan '2B F. 11. Hmaitz '2B When the lime for the football game with the University of Pennsylvania approaches, every student who fives (for about three months of the vear) in or around Philadelphia will be begging or borrowing train fare. When the annual clash with the Panthers rolls ’round, Pittsburghers will collect the money let out-for the Penn game and return to the native stamping ground for that last seasonal gridiron struggle. Mildred A. Webb '2B business Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Tlie whole system works out well—Easterners satisfied, Westerners gratified. It works out well—with the exception that when the crowd gets to either one of these games, there is no crowd. And why? Because the Penn State fol lowers are scattered to all corners of the stands and there is no well-defined Penn State cheering section. ‘ Alumni in Philadelphia look forward to the Poiiii-Penn State game as a ten-year-old looks for ward to Christmas. And then at Christmas time, after the gifts have been given, the ten-year-old cannot lie happy alone—he must have a host of little friends with whom to share his good fortune. And this is true not only of the child, but also of tlie alumnus. Unless he has all his friends gath ered about him at that Pennsylvania football game lie is as the little ten-year-old. It may be said that “lie’s all togged up with no place to go.” Tie’s all for Penn State —but he can’t find another Penn Stale, man to tell him so. The very same situa tion holds true at Pittsburgh on Thanksgiving Day—if there is no cheering section held abso lutely by Penn State men, the turkey may be pasteboard for all the alumnus cares. And the only way in whicli wo here at College can make the alumni sure of a host of kindred soul is to organize a complete cheering section at Penn and Pitt, exclude our acquaintances and reserve the section for Penn State men. For from that section must come the yells, the spirit that per sonifies tlie Nitlany Lion. It is our debt to the alumni of Penn State that there be at each of these games the biggest cheering sections that this Col lege ever has known. For without the alumni, there can be no student body to carry on. And without a student body, an alumnus is a nonentity. And without a cheering section composed of both students and alumni—a football game is a false alarm. —U. M. Atkinson The password of tlie season is: “Get to Penn and Pitt.” And that phrase means not only getting thero —but it means: “Get into the cheering sections at I’cnn and Pitt—and, with the alumni, yell for tlie Blue and White.” Ml 9 For ten yards and a girl with an , ippish-.nose'. Wiggled'.infronfcofj’us/c-W.e 'Didn’t want f anytKing.[anyway. ' • GET TO PENN AND PITT Yesterday, after class we. went right down To tlie bookstore. We wanted three Texts, some paper and ink, a new account And a Horshey. Three 30’s stepped On our feet, a clerk went through center —Syracuse Daily Orange BREAKFAST AT THE NEW Store ON OLD Co-op TifjsJ Jt*EiNN STATS...C'OLLEGrXAW Grid Gossip j Special Wire to the Penn State COLLEGIAN:—The /University of Susquehanna has a line which is practically impregnable.' Why?. An swer —it has a Wall in tlie middle. (Weak) The heralded Selinsgrove line in cludes other celebrities. Biblical stu dents and thcologists will doubtless bat a puzzled eye when Mtv.s ami Nicodenuis jog out in grid costume, hallooing in fanciful Old English Captain Moans business.” J.ct no elusive idea rest in the cere brum of any tough from these points we nt that the University of Pennsyl vnnut is not going to have an intel lectual eleven. The Red ami Blue Ims si;, nil practice every evening, with FolwelY and his juvenile brother Paul in the fading roles. Folwell is at the end of V-he, line, but brother Paul is right upb among them as a drop-kick er of no mean ability. \ 0 Doc Ritihiour expects to have his infirmary learn in shape for mortal combat at aii early date. Don Green shields failed!, to have his arm dress ed on Monday and was in shape to scrimmage Tuesday afternoon with the Varsity, 1/jit Captain Weston, Delp, SI amp and Bergman have re ported to the operating suite too often to be cured. Hoover and Smith Co. 712 Chestnut Street Philadelphia Fraternity Jewelry “Permanent Satisfaction** MR. READ lIYNSON Home Cooked Food Served In An Appe tizing Way CAMPUS TEA ROOM Under the management of the DeWalts S' % ' £ | Recreation at the proper time is an t l aid to study. | 5 VISIT THE -x ■ £ ... r, S State College Billiard Parlor | I ALLEN STREET £ - ». ... * •: '/'’v We are showing a new line of SILK UMBRELLAS Well made. In all popular colors. ! •.. E.G OLF’S 120i-2 E: College Aye: State College : Kodaks Framing TIIE HOME OF GOOD PHOTOGRAPHY THE PENN STATE PHOTO SHOP 212 East College Avenue Kodak Films Supplies CATERERS! See us for Fresh Vegetables and Fruits. Full Line of ’ Groceries. Prompt Delivery Courteous Service R. V. HOY & SONS CO. Phone 429 Open Evenings Barney Slump looked almost ton comfortable When he .appeared in white clothes and slippers at practice Wednesday afternoon. A wicked smile lit Bez’s features as he bade Barney summon his fellow cripples and "ioosen up” by jogging around the cinder track eight (8) times. A mathematics professor with a slide rule could easily prove that eight laps equals two much. The managers, substitutes, has- NITTANY THEATRE OPENING 1 Advertised as Friday, Sept. 24th * $ Postponed * Opening Tuesday, Sept. 28th | “See Your Orders Cooked” Cleanliness Courtesy Excellent Food S CIDER PRETZELS COLLEGE ICE CREAM No delay, ready packed in handy boxes SERFAS 136 Allen Street CANDY TOBACCO EAST COLLEGE AVE. FRAZIER STREET ibeens, oughter-wases and other side liners that limn New Beaver when the shades of night are being pulled (Sown crave to know the probable date of the earliest killing frost. Giant mosquitoes have raised monuments to their biting powers on many a shapley leg or, well-museled lin, and the owners thereof desire a cessation of hostilities. Public Sale of Antiques Oct. 2nd. Articles such as Bollinger Chairs, 2 AT CLUB DINERS, INC. State University Shoe Co. PROGRESS ON THE BRIDGE AND VISIONS THAT ARE GROUNDED ON THAT STEEL As the great trusses of the Delaware River ' Bridge are raised to position, the outline of the giant structure takes clearer form in the eyes of the beholders. " • •• : , But each step forward is more • than T ;a v gain'iri' bfid'ge building—it, is an advance toward a greater community, and greater prosper ity and convenience. ~ Visions such as these are within the reach of everyone, in his or her own life. Building a bank account will provide a bridge which many times opens the way from a humdrum' career to great opportunities. We Want a Touchdown F F R A FREE STETSON HAT IS R O waiting here for the Penn O M 0 ' M M State man making the first jyj ’ touchdown of the season. ’ s s FROMM’S Opposite Front Campus Since 1913 s' To the Freshmen And to our Upperclass Friends: The State University Shoe Co. welcomes you, and extends an invitation to visit us in our Store. We carry Army Shoes in all sizes, for Freshmen and Sophomores; and Dress Shoes for all occasions. , , . PUGH STREET The First National Bank of State College, Pa. YOUR ACCOUNT WILL BE WELCOMED HERE, WHERE THE BEST OP BANKING SERVICE AWAITS YOU. Friday, {September 24, 1923 sets of 6 each; Spinning Wheel’Yam Reels, Rockers, Walnut Bullet, Fq§ Poster Beds, Brass Kettles, Wrong# Iron Kettle and .Iron Dishes, WctjU Wheat Scythes and numerous other articles of early Central type. Sale at 1 P.M., next door to the Penn State Hotel, across East Campus. Terms made knownU time of sale. 9-21-tf Opening Time—Six O’clock Fridav— CONSTANCE TALMADGE in “The Duchess of Buffalo’* Saturday— LEWIS STONE in “Dun Juan's Three Nights” Monday and Tuesday— Return Showing of DOUKLAS FAIRBANKS in “The Black Pirate”’ Special Prices: Children 25c Adults 50c. OPENING NITTANY THEATRE Tuesday— MARY PREVOST in “Almost a Lady” Nittnny Theatre Opening as Advertised Friday. Sept. 21th Postponed Opening Tuesday, Sept. 2Sth! StAijlkl.Brss. ' Cathaum Building