All Tuned ! ' For Altoona VOL XXII, No. 18 BLUE AND WHITE . SOCCERMEN FIGHT TO 2-2 TIE WITH TORONTO VISITORS Serry and Griffin Score Pair of Pointers in First Minutes of Play—Both Teams Show Aggressive Attack CANADIANS ON TOUR Will Meet Syracuse, Haverford And Swarthmore Booters in Invasion —Visiting Goalie Stars Despite Injury Two five minute overtime penods following the regulation ninety min utes of play failed to determine a winner and both the Penn Stats and Toronto soccer teams had to be con tent with a 2-2 draw in a game that was a real battle from the opening whistle here Saturday. Five hundred persons were on hard to view the en counter. The Nittany booters literallv swept the Canadians off then-feat m the op ening minutes of the fray and before the visitors could get their healings Penn State was in the \an by a two goal margin. From this point a let down in the play of the Blue and White aggregation was noticeable The Toronto playeis, undaunted by the sudden turn of affairs, kept plug ging away until they had drawn up on even terms with their opnonenls. Griffin and Serry Tally Less than three minutes of the game hod been played when Guilin got loose from a scrimmage in fiont of the Toronto goal and shot the lea ther into a coiner of the net for the first tally. It was a perfect place ment. Shortly after this score, Sei'j bj a brilliant piece of individual work dnbbled -the spheroid 'thrrty yards through the uprights for Penn State’s second and final counter. Toronto Braces With seeming defeat just around the corner Toronto stiffened m its defensive play and with an offense made effective by short snappy pass es, soon carried the play into Lion territory. The seoond scoic on the othci hand had an inveise psycholog ical effect on the home team The Lions appeared to underestimate the leal strength of their opponents fol lowing the two quick scoies The Nit tany players became an oidinaiy team. Near the end of the initial quartei Downing, the visiting outside right, icceivcd an accuinte pass from the wing in fiont of the Blue nnd White goal and quickly converted it into a score. (Continued on last page) TO INSPECT R. 0. T. C. UNIT AT MONDAY DRILL Lieutenant-colonel Deems Will Represent Third Corps Area Head The Penn State R O T. C. unit will be inspected Monday, November fourteenth by Lieutenant-colonel Clarence Deems, Ji., of Baltimore, Maryland Every year the commander of the Third ,Corps area sends out a staff of officers on a tour of inspection and Lieutenant-colonel Deems is repre senting lus superior, Major-general Douglas MacArthuv. He will review the drills on Monday evening, and on Tuesday morning will examine mili tary equipment and supplies. Penn State is one of the ten insti tutions in this district that has never received honorable mention. For this reason the local officers desire to make a creditable showing. There are twenty-three colleges listed in the Tihrd Corps area. Chemistry Department To Study Crude Oils A study of the metallic constituents of crude petroleum is the project as signed to the School of Chemistry foi investigation by the Amcncan Pe troleum Institute. One hundred thousand dollars is being distributed among thirty-one colleges and univer sities by the Institute for the purpose of conducting research upon diffcicnt problems. Investigation will proceed under the direction of Dean Wendt Tho project is mostly theoretical. Prim S»tatf £ Cercle Francais To Present French Play Lc Cercle Francais is working on a French play which will be presented m the Old Chapel early in December. The play, the name of which will be announced later, will be presented en tirely in the French language The organization had a meeting last week and several French songs were sung. The next meeting is scheduled for Monday. A feature of the meet ing will be games that were played by the students who were enrolled in the Fiench institute here this sum mer. SOCIETY DISCUSSES PRIMARY ELECTIONS Advisability of System at Penn Stale Is Considered by Pi Lambda Sigma SUGGESTED TO DESTROY INFLUENCE OF CLIQUES Discussion of the advisibibty of in troducing primaries into the election system now in vogue at Penn State was heard at a meeting of Pi Lamb da Sigma, honorary pre-legal frater nity, last week Arguments were ad vanced concerning both the merits and disadvantages of election by the rrimary system. The discussion, lesolved itself into two main points. First Would the introduction of primaries assure the election of bettor men? Would it strengthen or lessen the influence of individual cliques? Disadvantages Outweight Merits General opinion was that the pri mary method of election would bene fit conditions to a certain extent, but that on the whole its advannges Mould r.ot be great enough to warrant its adoption. A debate on the proposition, “Re solved* That Ameucan social frater nities should rush _-only after they have completed the first year of co,- loge work,” will take place at the -revt meeting of the oiganization S H lorchia '27 and E L Willard ’27 will argue the affirmative; C. C Ber ryhill ’2B and A. S. Goiny ’2B, the negative. This meeting will be an open one and those interested arc in vited to attend. Book-loving Canine Keeps Library Vigil Shades of the Ghost Walk and a pair of hot dogs! One studious cam pus camne, ambitious, yea more am bitious than is the wont of some col lege men, rooted in the whys and uhorefors of the Carnegie Library one night last week until his nose be came so engrossed in a volume of "Campus Hounds,” that lie neglected the passing hours. That there was no illumination made no difference, so absorbed was ho. He thought it was a joke But 10, as the night grew on and tho cold of the outside night moused him from his reverie he became frighten ed. Fear gave way to tcrroi and teiror yielded to baying His an guished howls proved futile. It is not known whether the unfor tunate canine spent the remainder of the evening in peaceful slumber oi whether ho again “hit the books ” All that could bo learned was that he seemed particularly glad to see the librarians when they threw open the doois of tho Carnegie bookery the next morning COLLEGE TENNIS TILT ENTERS SECOND ROUND With the first round matches all played off in the all-Collcge tennis tournament, it is expected that the second round will be completed this week. Sixteen players remain in the second round including McCabe, Hinkle, Mitchell and Barr, all mem bers of last year’s varsity team. The winner will be declared the tennis champion of the College. Collegian Candidates Will Meet Tomorrow Freshmen candidates for the j editorial staff of the COLLEG- j lAN will hold then* third meet- ! ing of the year in Room 14 Lib- I oral Arts tomorrow evening at j tcvcp o’clock. Fieshmen and j sophomore woman candidates S will meet in Room Ifi Liberal ! Arts on Thursday at eight | o’clock. Additional candidates | may still report. | STATE COLLEGE, PA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1926 THESPIANS LIST TEN NUMBERS ON VAUDEVILLE CARD Miss M. J. Gobreclit, Marimba Artist, In First Co-ed Act Since 1918 MUSIC AND MAGIC VIE IN HEIGHT OF ORIGINALITY W. T. Neff Opens Performance With Sleight-of-hand— Finale a Feature The Penn State Thespians have be gun their final week of rehearsal, pre paratory to the presentation of their annual vaudeville show which will be given Friday A diversified card of ten acts is expected to become cne of the major house-party attractions. The ten skits all involving the cream of College talent, figure on the *impleted program, among th*>m be ing a great number of musical novel elties, a skit borrowed from the Mus ic Box Revue and a sleight-of-hand performance by the leading campus prestidigitator. An unusual feature, added this year, is the admittance of a co-ed into the realms of Thespis Magician Opens Program W T. Neff '2B, will open the per formance with a senes of mystifica tions that smack of the late Houdinu His bag of tricks is always replete with wonderment Following Neff’s curtain, P F Foster '2D, will appear on the boards with an educated mus ical saw. L W. Fisher ’2B, will pro vide piand accompaniment foi this act. The afoimentioned pianist will re main on the stage to offer the syn copation to which S. C Runklo '27 and R G Kennedy ’2B, wil clog Both men have had prominent parts m for mer Thespian successes and foot it with the familiarity that is born of experience. Miss Gobrccht Provides Feature The radically new feature of the annual vaudeville is to be saved for the fourth act In this number the Thespians introduce the first co-ed to have taken part in any of its pro ductions for ten years. The girl is Miss Martha Jane Gobrccht ’3O, and hei unusual approach to melody is made via the Marimba, a little-known instrument that is much like the xylo phone Miss Gobrccht has played for several organizations in Tyrone and Altoona and has broadcasted from seven mdio stations through out the middle-west Her work has 1 icceivcd much commendation. Following Mm Gobrecht’s act, a newly-formed piano tno will appear on the boards. The components, R ; (Continued on second page) DEAN WENDT ADDRESSES ACETYLENE ASSOCIATION Will Speak of Relation of New Gas to Modern Progress Dean G. L. Wendt of the School of Chcnustry and Physics will deliver the principal address at the opening of the convention of the International Acetylene Association m Chicago on Monday morning. “The Relation of Acetylene to Modern Progress” will be the subject of his speech. On the following Fuday evening he will speak informally at the banquet marking the end of the convention. The School of Chemistry and Phys ics is generally recognized as an au thority m the acetylene industry. The late Dean G. C. Pond’s mono graph “Calcium Carbide and Accty*- lenc” has just been revised and brought up to date by Prof. W. B. Mack. It is the fourth edition of the monograph and will be off the press in December Copies wil bo distrib uted all over the world. Already an advance call for ten thousand copies has been received Senior Architects in ' Beaux Arts Contests For the nation-wide Beaux-Arts In stitute of Design competition at New York senior architects heie have completed designs for "An Architects Office” which will be judged on No vember twenty-third For the same competition sopliomoic architects arc entering drawings of “An Entrance to a School of Architecture." Thirty drawings arc being submitted by the seniors and thiity-fivc by sophomores. Prof. J. B. Helmc will represent Penn State on the board of judges. Mining Students Leave On Toiir of Inspection Seniors in the school of Mines nnd Metallurgy nnd senior students in mining geoldgy under the direction of Professor Bomnc left for an in spection trap to Cornwall and other part 3 of Pennsylvania last week. Later the party will study the geolo gy of Franklm furnace at the New Jersey zinc mines.' These mines or dinarily are closed to visitors and this permission is unusual. Leaving on their annual inspection trip the junior students m ceramic engineering, under the direction of Profesor Shaw departed last week on an itinerary which includes eastern Pennsylvania and Trenton, N J. The pottery works will be the subject of interest in Trenton', after which the time will be divided among the cement and brick plants In the eastern part of Pennsylvania. . CUBS LOSE FINAL GAME Tff SYRACUSE Two Misplays Cause Plebe’s Downfall and Syracuse Gets Revenge, 13-0 PENN STATE YEARLINGS FAIL TO WIN A CONTEST Playing valiantly but handicapped by two costly misplays, a fighting cub eleven went down to defeat at the hands of the Syracuse yearlings, 13-0, Friday on a soggy field at Syracuse. A hail storm made handling the ball difficult and hampered the attendance It was the plebcs’ fifth defeat and their final game of year. Errors Converted Into Scores Both teams were evenly matched but the anxiety of the Orange to av enge last year’s setb ick and two Lion errors, one in the first quarter and the other in the last, both resulting in touchdowns', gave the home team the edge. - After these misplays, a fumble and an intercepted forward pass, it was Sammy Sebo, the Orange fullback, who plunged’thiough for the markers. His offensive drives continually kept the yearlings on tho alert and he fur nished tho real threat in the Onon dagan camp Although the Lion team showed improvement over its past playing Joe Miller, quarterback was the invading satellite Disastrous Season Friday’s reverse marked the end of the Penn State plebcs’ unsuccess ful season, failing to win a contest in five starts It was the worst sea son in years Three times tho cubs cringed before prep school gndders and twice they were downed by col lege freshmen. It was a badly patch ed eleven that entered the final con test but there were practically no in juries and few* substitutions Coach Hermann's main changes were Sta ley for Maxwell, Davis for Faulk and Faulk for Reilly. Syracuse elected to kick-off Pan accion received the boot and returned it to Syracuse tcuibory Miller rip ped off ten yards around right end and Staley added five more with an off-tackle plunge Ridgeway fumbled on the next play and Syracuse recov ered the leathei. That wns the break that turned the tide against the L.ons A long spiral surprised the yearlings and placed the ball within striking distance, Sebo driving through tackle a moment later with the initial touchdown, Louchs mist ed the placement attempt (Continued on last page) H. A. Canon ’27, Wins College Golf Tourney Erratic at times, but displaying good golf in spite of a strong wind, H A. Canon ’27 and T. S. Pannac cion ’3O, battled in the finals of the Penn State golf tournament last week with Canon winning the match seven up and five to go m a thirty six hole match Canon was thice up at the end of the first eighteen holes and Pannac cion’s spurt at the start of the second eighteen was futile. List Cross-Country Scrap For Four-thirty O’clock The soph-frosh cross-countiy scrap will be held this afternoon at four-thirty o’clock. Start- New Beaver field ilia race will be run over* the fresh man three-mile course. Candi dates for both teams are to re port at that time in uniform The intcrclass scrap will be staged Friday. (EoUrgtatt. GLEE CLUB VISITS ALTOONA IN FIRST SHOWING TONIGHT Forty-five Songsters Leave for Initial Concert—Rotaiy Club Is Sponsor POPULAR MUSIC CARDED FOR PENNSYLVANIA DAY Make First Local Appearance Saturday TVith Popular Monologuist Forty-five membois of the Penn State Glee Club are ready for their initial appearance of the season to be made tonight at the Peim-Alto hotel in Altoona Accompanied by Direc tor R. W. Grant the group vmII levac State College late this afternoon. Tonight’s concert is to be held un der the auspices of the Altoona Ro tary club and will serve as a condi fcjoner for the annual Pennsylvania Day program The latter event scheduled for Saturday* evening and given before an assemblage of hou->c party guests has become traditional, it marking the twelfth ye3i that the gleemen have performed on this oc casion " Popular Program Arranged Realizing that the social activities of the coming week-end demand a program of a light natuic Director Grant has airanged a repertoire of humorous and populai selections that should win the approval of the Penn sylvania Day audience Highlights of the vocal enteifcain nient to be given by tho gleemen in clude offerings bv the 192 G-27 Var sity Male Qumtet and Miss Nona Fales Peck a famous pnno nronolo gist of Hartford, Connecticut This year’s Quartet is composed of V/ C Bowie ’29, first tenor; F. E Ulf ’27, president of the, Glee Club, second tenor,' J. JS Dickson ’2B, baritone and D E Jenkins ’27, bass An advance ticket sale for the Pennsylvania Day performance will bo held tomorrow and Thui3day even ings at the Athletic Store at seven o’clock. Prices are one dollar, seven ty-five and fifty cents ENGINEERING PICTURES SHOWN TO A. S. C. E. Milwaukee Sewage Treatment To Be Discussed at Meeting Tonight Four leels of motion pictures m reference to the system of sewage disposal in Milwaukee, will be shown at a meeting of the student blanch of the American Society of Civil Engin ceung tonight in Old Chapel at sev en o’clock. The films were loaned to the Col lege by the citv cngincei of Milwau kee and weie procured thiough the efforts of Piof. E D Wnlkci, head of the Cn 'l Engineering depurtmeri The pictures will be augmented by a running lectuic. The showing of this picture is self explanatory and would piovc interest ing to many who arc not scheduling technical couiscs. All sanitary and civil engineers especially are urged to attend Campus Club Council To Honor Mrs. Hetzel At Tea for New Girls Tlans for the annual Campus Club Council tea for new guls and the re vision of the lushing system were discussed at a recent meeting of the C C. C The tea will be given in honor of Mrs Ilctzcl, wife of Penn State’s new* president, in January, the exact date not being set Present rushing rules were brought up for consideration and shoitcnmg of the rushing season was advoented Campus Club Council decided not to act definitely upon the matter until each Club has had time to form an opinion of the proposed change. ' FORESTERS TO DANCE Plans for tho annual foresters dance to be held December tenth vvcic discussed at the meeting of the Foi estry Society held Inst week. It was decided to follow the custom set in previous years nnd have the dunce informal. SCULL’S FIELD GOAL THWARTS LIONS, 3-0 Drop-kick in Opening Quarter Margin of Pennsylvania Victory—Nittany Attack Unrewarded “Masked Marvel” John Roopkc ’2B PLAYERS REHEARSE NEW MELODRAMA Present “The Witching Hour” November Nineteenth In Auditorium HUMOR AND SUSPENSE FIGURE IN PRODUCTION The Penn Stale Flayers will 3lagc “The Witching Hour” in the Audi torium on Friday evening, November nineteenth, a 3 one of the principal productions of the season Telepathy, is the basic idea of the play. Augustus Thomas, author of this drama and one of America’s most successful plavwnghts, attempts to piove that it ib possible for one per son to communicate his thought to flrother. Aiound the idea of thought tiansferenco the author has built a powerful plot that has been declared hunman and convincing “The Witching Houi” has a stiong- I> developed love theme, powerful suspense, pathos and an abundance of good-natured humor (Continued on second page) Hens Lay for Egg Production Honors On College Farm Thcie is intense rivuliy* between two hens oul on the College poultry fjim One, a bnried Rock yearling , has broken .ill records bv laying 288 eggs m ."On day*3 The last egg was layed several div*. befoie her year was up, but evidert’v believing that 2SB was enough the bidilv slopped The othci hen, a white leghorn Yearling has already layed 287 eggs and it will not be until Novemboi fourteenth that hoi veai is up Poul* tiv department officials me anxiously waiting to sec the total extent of her rccoid-lneaking gait A pen of thn teen Bai 1 ed Rock hens l.as been shipped to Pon.ona, Cali fornia, whole lhe\ will compete in the South California egg laying con test The contest is being held by the South California farm buicati The hens are icpoitcd to Have arrived in good condition Lutheran Association To Hold Conference Fiom all sections of the United States, including a deleg ition of Penn State students, tho Lutheinn Student Association will draw more than five bundled representatives when it con venes at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, December thir tieth. The sessions will close Janu rry second The confaience is hold every’ four years for the puipose of allowing the Lutheran students to voice their op inions on student problems and the Nittany group that plans to attend will have several matter* of student intorcst to discuss Inspirational ad dresses by popular religious leaders will bo given. One of the finest church edifices of the northwest will house the convention. Penn’s New Society—Scull And Toe PRICE FIVE CENTS "O Turned back from the very brink of victory by a fighting Pennsylvania line, the Nittany Lte tem porary and East and Weal dccki Itnepke Misses Placement In the second quartei, when Penn State completely outplayed the Quak ers, Roepkc* fell back to attempt a placement fionr the Penn foity-yard (Continued on last page) FRESHMEN ELIGIBLE FOR PRIZE ESSAY CONTEST Departments of Chemistry and English To Aid American Chemical Society The DepaiLmentr. of English nnd Chemist! y aie co-operating in direct ing the Amcncrn Ghesmcrl Society’s pn/e essay contest among tire fresh men The contest, nn annual one, offers six prizes of one thousand dol lars each to be awarded to tho stu dents .of this country willing the best essays In former years the content was op en to all college and university stud ents This yen it is limited to fi ash men. Penn State has more freshmen taking chemistry than any other Col lege of similiar sizq in the enuntrv, and tho Department of Chemistry ex pects to have a Inigo numboi of ac ceptable essays submitted. Mimoo giaphod sheets describing tho contest will be distiibutcd among the frcslr [incn this week