Bullets Points to VOL. XXIII, No. 7 Penn State Observes Dads' Day Tomorrow Huge Mass Meeting To Greet Visiting Parents Tonight in Auditorium—President Hetzel Will Speak Penn State opens wide its portals . today in anticipation of an influx of snore than one thousand dads expected to join in the celebration of the sev enth annual Dada' Day program ar s anged for the week-end. The week-end of activities will be ushered in tonight at seven o'clock in FATHERS' DAY Friday, September 30 7:00 p. m —Mass Meeting, Audi torium. 1. Addresses• C. C. Berrylull '2B President It D Iletzel E E Hewitt, Sr. 2 Musical Program 3 Presentation of football team Saturday, October 1 10.30 a m.—Annual Meeting, Par ents' Asscamtion, Auditorium. 1. Report, President E. E. He mutt, Sr 2 Addiesses President It D. II etzel R L Sackett 3 Business Session 2 30 P. m —Football Game:. Penn State ‘s. Gettysburg 8.00 p m —Smoker, Armory. Sunda, Ot.tober 2 11.00 a m —Chapel Sumo, Auth tornpm. the Auditorium with a huge ma, meeting; C C Berryhill '2B, press dent of student government, will ope the meeting with words of welcome t. lisltang parents on behalf of the stu dent body. President Hetzel Speaks itarFiVoTzilletzei, ed dressing a Dads' Day gathering Is the first time, will welcome the vim tors in behalf of the College Fat (Continued on third page) FRESHMEN HOLD ANNUAL TRACK AND FIELD MEET More Than One Hundred Plebes Expected To Engage in Cinder Fest iSi"ty freshman track candidates registered for this afternoon's open cinder meet in the hope of catching Coach Nate Curtmell's eye by prov ing their north and ability. More than fifty more are expected to report on Ness Beaver held at fcur o'clock ashen the engagement is scheduled to start, actor ding to N ite who has been personally directing the aspirants in their preparatory wail: Beginning the list of fifteen events - aith the 120-yaid hurdles and follow ing with the 100-yard dash, the sprat men wil get oft to an enily start in the meet Immediately following the century splint, distance men will lace I'm places in the mile lan The qua, ter-mile couise will then be cove.° to give breathing time for the two (Continued on last page) Enrollment In School Of Mines Shows Large Gains Over Last Year IVith an entailment of one hundred eighty-seven, the School of Mines has the hugest number of students of any yeah in its' histoty. The giaduating class from this school last•year leas the second lain , est east of the Mississippi river, and these men nre t now tilling many posi tions in the fields of metallurgy and MIMIC. Several new nice have been added to the faculty. J. W. Steuat t, insti ac tor in mining, comes hue from the University of Illinois, M. C. Smith, department of geology, is a pedant° of the University of West Virginia M. E. Brooks has returned to the po sawn of assistant in metallurgy af ter a year of research with the Dow ell Chemical company of Midland, Michigan and G. I' Dam, a Penn State graduate, has become an instructor in manna Dr. F. M. Swaith was promoted from instructor to assis tant piofe,ol of geology and pal- a - ,a---,---Aw ,,,,, 1 nut fate :47k . A•45,:f... 111andolinists To Play At Dads' Day Smoker With thirty-five men placticing, ev ery week, the Mandolin Club is making tepid progress in the organization of tits personnel for the coming season Although the date of the first con , ecrt is indefinite, the banjo section of the club will sender several popular musical selections at the Dads' Day I smoker in the Armory tomorrow em. ening at seven o'clock. The next business meeting of the IClub -Is scheduled for Monday even ing at seven o'clock in the Band Rom. Nonunations soil be hell for vice-pies- Went The election of a vice-presi dent became necessary with the resig nation of R. M. Atkin,on '2B DIVERSE PROGRAM AWAITS ROTARIANS Creamery, Experiment Stations, Engineering Laboratories Will Be Inspected LUNCHEON TO BE HELD IN ARMORY SATURDAY Visiting Rotarians will be green nn immediate insight into the educational side of Penn State college life Nihon they are divided into groups, each of wlrch is furnished a ith a competent guide, and taken on a tom of the Col legogrounds ,and . buildings tent Sat urday morning at eight-thirty o'clock. In then trip over the Campus the clubmen will sco the students and ac tivities of the Schools of Agriculture, Chemistry and Physics, Education, En gineering Mines and Metallurgy, and Liberal Arts (Continued on third page) Hort Department Will Hold Alumni Day Show Plans are now being made for the annual Alumni-Undergradute Horti-I culture shen to be held on Alumni, Day. Returning alumni sic asked to. bring samples of their products in— eluding fruit, flowers and vegetables. Cups oil! be awarded to the best al umni exhibit and the best undeigiad uate exhibit ILandscape architects Bill base a ~competitive calubit illustrat•ng the I principle. of landscape design The home economics student baking and exhibiting the best apple pie will also he awarded a cup The Crab Apple and Top= clubs are in charge of this show, with H B. Walton '2B as chairman of the committee. PENN STATE L. H. B. L. T. R. H. B. R. T. Stumpf (2) Roepke (20) Gr'nsh'ds (25) Miller (18) 510" 168 5'11" 170 6' 100 6'3" 214 F. B. Q. B. F. B. C. C. Brandiff (1) Hubicsak (5) Pincura (21) llamas (22) Mahoney (27) Kurz (3) 5'10" 190 5'9" 160 6'11" 155 6'l" 188 6'l" 186 6'9" 172 L. IL B. R.T.•L. T. R. H. R. Dr'baugh (4) .Richer ( 39 ) • Slaughter (24) we 150 Wolff (34) sqo" 200 6'l" 235 5'7" 170 Substitutes:— Penn State—Wilson (47), Slamp (24), Pa rams (43), Martin (36), Livermore (91), Curry (44), J. Wilson (50), Dansorfield (45), Harrington (46), Hewitt (51), Ridgway (54), Slamp (24), Lungren (31). Gettysburg—McMillan (10), Snyder (7), Cramer (13), Morse (28), Hertzlich (26), Hall (14), Tussey (23), Fiser (9), "Klinger (22), Stoner (15), Roche (16), Mum. (19). STATE COLLEGE, PA.,, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1927 PLEBE CRIBBERS BATTLE VARSITY IN TRIAL SESSION Veteran Team Scores Twice but Freshmen Count Six-Pointer By Consistent Attack FRENCH LEADS YEARLINGS AGAINST BEZDEK'S SQUAD Edwards, Diedrich, Kaplan and Gordon Exhibit Strength In Attack, Defense Holding the sarsity football team to two touchdouns in a double poring of tuenty4ive minutes and noting once against the varsity second team, the freshman gridiron men began their mole intensive training tot the coming encounters of the season on Wednesday. IThe pluhe footballers fought their heavier and mote experienced oppon ents viciously mery step of the clay, breaking up pas,es and making des perate one handed tackles in veteran fashion Yearling Line-up Matched against Dt.lp at left end for the sarsity nas Meyci Kaplan, former Philadelphia Central high right end, while opposing Al Lesko the othet wing scan the blonde Earle Edwards of Augusta Mislay acad emy fame Facing Don Greenshie,ds at one tackle post was Jun Lose while (Continued on last page) WPSC BROADCASTS FOOTBALL GAMES Larry Conover Yields Moleskins For Microphone Play-By-Play - Description oe Battles GETTYSBURG GAME TO GO ON AIR TOMORROW With Larry Con°, cr, assistant foot ball coach, at the microphone, WPSC, the Penn State lath° broadcasting sta tine plans to get back on the air again Saturday afternoon with play-by-play description of the game with Gettys burg. , ' Hopes mole enter tun that the Dads' Day mass meeting Friday night could bo broadcast, but connections to the Auditorium odl not be completed it time Preliminaly tests mith Bruns phonograph records on Sunday afternoon and catty Monday morning hare brought a flood of comments of excellent reception from all pails of IPennsyhania and from points as dis tant as lowa Chief Oper..tor Gdbest Crossloy and his assistants base been working over time ssith tests and the peifeetion of new apparatus installed during the summer, and by mid-October it is ex pected that the bioadeastirg of leg programs will he started These will likely be on Monday and Wed (Continued on last page) L. E. R. E. Delp (35) . Guilan (8) 6' 175 5'9" 165 L. G. R. G. Panaccion (38) host (11) GI" 195 5'11" 190 R. G. L. G. Hastings (39) Williams (17) 6' 187 5'11" 195 . R. E. L. E. Lesko (30) Cockley (27) 511" 185 6' 178 College Glee Club To Sing Before Rotarians Convention Next Week Thirt;,thice of the hundred-and twenty-five candidates for glee club positions were accepted following the recent trials held by Director It W. Grant in the Auditorium The new glee men, with the regulars, will ap pear for the first time this year be fore the Rotarians' convention Friday night . For at least one month the new songsters will be under the tutelage of Director Grant, and it is hoped that the final tests given at the end of that time will not change the person nel of the organization Among those who won bass or bar itone positions were A. W. Anderson, K. 11. Hallman, H. E. Niehey, G H. Pollock, 111 C Suerkin, D A. Yarnell, and S C Kingsley Tenor places were obtained by G. W Abson, W. R. Corbin, W. B. Hess, J V. Landis, J H. Reif, F. G. WOad and others. G. S. EDDY TO TALK AT SUNDAY CHAPEL Internationally jlinou n Speaker Holds Open Conference Sunday Evening NOTED Y. M. C. A. WORKER CONDUCTS TRAVEL TOUR Speaking in Sunday Chapel, George Sherwood Eddy, -an inteinationally known teligious loader, will present a mesage of vital interest to all Penn State students. - Mr Eddy, who is one of th e gtentest religious lend- :Imes," Ise speak here al Sunday morn ins chapel am wlll also gw. CM= ==l MILE= ening. At that time he will G. S Eddy discus ',whims peitment to the cc ligious life of college students and will be prepared to ansuer any ques tions from his audience. Social Secretary of Y. M. C. A As social secietary lot the national Y M. C A., Mr. Eddy has traveled in India, Japan, Erni:a, the Neat East, and Russia. He is the author of nu merous books dealing with Asiatic problems and the world war He per sonally conducts annual touts of Eut are for clergymen and other. engaged in public welfare work. arranging fot trterviews with such international 'gigues as Lllod George and Btiand Mr Eddy vvas the ot.ginator of the Fellowship for the Chustian Social Order, an association of religious !cadets intelt.ted in applying Christ tan principles to everyday ptactical affairs. GETTYSBURG Tattrgiatt. M. E. LABORATORY TESTS EFFECT OF OIL ON BEARINGS Professor Bradford Will Direct Graduate Students' Work In Theory Study TO ISSUE BULLETIN ON EXPERIMENT RESULTS Philadelphia Concern Sponsors Investigation and Gives Se{ oral Machines Assembling of the apparatus in the mechanical engineering laboratory to carry on extensive investigation oath regards to the lubrication and effect of oil on beatings, is non• under way These tests are to be carried on for a number of years bp graduate stud ents and professors tinder the direc ton of Prof L J Bradford as a re sult of smeral theories that have been advanceJ by noted engineers It is expected that these tests will prose the theories and make them lass ,Smeral of the questions to be stud ied are the testing of lubrication and the characteristics of bearing, the effect of oil grooi es, the deteimmation of temperature at diffment points of the bearing, the thickness of the oil (Continued on last page) JEFFREY SELECTS POSSIBLE LINEUP Soccer Mentor, After Intensive Practice Period Forms Tentative Team CHERRY, NOW INJURED GETS FULLBACK BERTH Day by day, the probable opening hoe-up of the Lion booting combma bop is becoming more and more dis tinct Coach Jeffrey, after more than three weeks of intensise di ill on Old Beaver field, is carefully weighing evi dence and tentati,ely selecting from among thirty aspnant.., the team which mill meet Altoona nes.t. Satur day. Abetted by the ieturn of sm. en let teimen from hest year's eleven, the ..occdr mertor has been conducting daily scrimmages moth the idea of rounding into form a creditable team to face the stiff schedule before It. Chem ➢iamlums Berth Captain Cheery, at pi esent on the sideline because of a urenched back, has had little difficulty in maintaining the stability of his place in the light fulibacl broth. As IS evidenced in scrimmage, he has lost none of his newel to boot the ball when and where ho desires Allan, sturdy veteran of last 3 eat's fieshmun team is to start Ibbo season, occupying the correspond yng left position In the main.* positions the Lions have been fortunate in having setts :ins in the form of RCP 3110 and Strim lam at the light and left berth, respec tnely. Edgerton who shored up wall on last year's plebe eksen, is favored by Jeffrey to start the season in the center halfback position. (Continued on last page) Bold Freshman Breaks Customs for Thirty-five Years Without Reprimand Eighty years old and still a riesh-lor every Fiedunan class entering the man' The "Fresh" under considers-;portals of Penn State. For that) ton is not the dumbest but r, without !years he has worn a dint. But in a doubt the most daring of the Sloss ( spite of lus subserviency to "eastom.” of 1931 he has alwat, been one of the most Gathering at the home of the plebe's faithful ft lends Penn State cler had grandson, II C. Ci semen, en West Time ass when a football game College avenue, a number of fiends was not complete unle, lie was an and ielatives dined a ith this rush- eye-witness. As in looter lie vas 'un man Wednesday evening _ feet (and still is tot hi, tiemulous About ..ix-thitty o'clock a number a u•ce could be heal d lomw¢ in the of men nom the nentby faateinity ,ells at the Lebanon VaVey game housas suddenly °mei god twin thou •( trparrins respective residences .111 d Hocked in a "I couldn't die ,hile you fellov, Lody upon the unsuspecting "Fresh" me living.," he stated to the gatheling who was violating rule numbet turn-lof 11(1111110ra \ednesdnl Cc crung. tv-fout of the Fleihnoin Fiondbook I Ito is soul to ha c helped : a wl the It appealed to be nnothel act of ins stones and build Old Alain "I baN c d:clinnate haring. been bete in State College for seven- The absembled ci owd 111111 w aited too of the eighty veal, of ni 1 fe but a few seconds when wit walked a he intoimed his respectful li.tenms, nonchalant freshman—with an em- ''and I expect to be bete tint many blcm of floslidom cosenng locks of Mill gray Yes, gray' Yes Andy Lytle, a fn end of VOL' more than thirty years this many loyal Penn Stater 1- eighty homnary Inembt 1 NITTANY GRIDMEN RENEW FEUD WITH GETTYSBURG LIONS TO PLAY' HEAVIER OPPONENTS TOMORROW AFTER TWO-YEAR GRIDIRON LAPSE • 1 Gridders Wear Maroon 1 , i Jerseys For Courtesy / IBecause foul of Penn State's 1 remaining football opponents i Ihave the color blue piedominat- i ing in the regalia, Coach Hugo Bezdek has adopted maroon as 1 a temporary hue for ht. train 1 Imembers Courtesy to those 1 opposing teams, and facilitl in , distinguishing the opposite pla,- ! ers uere other motives that led 1 Coach Bezdek to take action in 1 this matter. 1 - HETZEL STRESSES NEED OF PROGRESS "Penn State Requires Financial Support" States Proxy To Upperclassmen WILL APPEAL AT ALL LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS If the "extremely important prob lems" are to be soloed "hunied ',to eless most be made," according to Pt esident Ralph Dote lictoel lobo, addresing a jo , nt meeting of the Jun ior and cannot classes in the Auditor ium on Wednesday night, made an ap peal for the co-operation of students, friends and alumni,of the . Collere in ' his attach on these proble ms Stating that the people of the state do not realwe Penn State is more than nn agricultural college and describing (Continued on third page) Perspiration Plus Persistence Gives Pluperfect Cheers Stentorran vocalization of sopho mores and Juniors who aspire to be come cheerleaders resound through the Armory every e% ening after sev en o'clock Sometimes toucans mirth intersper ses the yells as some of the aspiring !cutlers of cheers and songs go through antics with uluch they are not quite fnnnhar and a hich occasionally land them on the floor II F Blankenbil ler '2B, head of the present 'opines that out of this group nmo conic sonic r emni liable chemsters who in time and solth sufficient practice may e‘en MIISs the standard of pie ions years. The Natalie} in the ranks of the ju nro: cheer-lenders caused by the fail ure of W fl York '2 l ), to return to school will be filled when n new junior is chosen after the same Saturday at itcrnoon The sophomore candidates urll go through a meek more of gymnastics and cocalrzatrons before the fated few oro chosen It is not ton late for oth er second-year men to enter the ranks l of the beginners, according to Blank enbiller One Freshman Does Not Choose to Run PRICE FIVE CENTS Penn State's unlined legion of foot ball oatriors sill skiiinish oith the Battlefield Battalion limn Getttsburg tomes mon afternoon on New Beaver field in the second encounter of the 1927 gi stilton campaign. The Dad , ' Day fracas, scheduled for to a-thiitt o'clock, 1,111 mark the re n^oink of ho‘tilities betmeen the op po-ing Pennsylvania teams after a :lose of too tears The Orange and Blue, locally famous for the fighting of teams that base iepresent cii thou colons, advertise their finish ' e , produit as ore of like quality and predict plenty of trouble for Bezdek's chaiges in tonioiloo battle of brawn. Be>dek Strengthens Team Meanm bile the Nittan2, mentor has lc - no limo scorning about the sla t Ebel , stiength of Gettysburg and ha, been tightening the loose parts of h 3 gi uln on machine %%WI alternate I , ght practice and scriminag,e Par sties is being laid on the sti ength of intei fm once, general speed anti accuitic, as aell as technique of offensi‘u and defensi,e play for line -11101 Alienated from the tackling dummy fo almost a smock, the Lion gmdmen rctut net] to the sauclust ligure Mon dam tot the 'impose of improsing their funi in this depait,ent of the game In-taintions and suggestions were of foie I ane, be the Nittaitt coaching corps under the direction of lingo Bez del. Dummy tackling ,as resumed because of the erratic form sonic of di., Lion ch t•ges displayed m the op ening game smith Lebanon Valley last &Unitas Lime tackling also consta : toted putt of the piletice session Mon dal afternoon Var,it Versus Plebes VW, I. .autuai benclit has bean derived from occas,onal scrim ' irrges between the !list team and the freshmen regulars. That is exactly a hat resulted from Beztlek's short confer ern o nnh Dutch Hermann Wed rebday afternoon Both tutors sent their I [...race!, e combmations into combat and ,ecuied backfield stations to c.oqm,e the defects and strong pants of their group, eZnmen teens hate aluass offer ed stubborn resistance And Wednes day's session thou ed no exception A timid at the start because of so called "stago flight," the yearlings exhibited 5 , hurt span and a dogged ateimination as the game progress ed which 'nought a smile of satisfac tion from Ilermarn in spite of the fact fiat Roepke and Wolff each scor e,' Co: the big brother.. The blond leader's ~ceinato tee tutu: booted the (Continued on second page) GRANGE WILL LAUNCH LEADERSHIP CONTESTS Educational, Entertainment And Social Factors Help To Decide Winners ' C Discussing ,eveit I mopeled pr. Jett., the Penn State Grange held a meeting Ttie,nly mooing a ith a huge numb°, pie,ent. Ali ingements mete made tot a cnnte_%t with the Ohio State rnivelmly Clang° and a local idea conte.A. The contest w.th the Ohio State unnetsit, Giange begins Satindar. October Inst., and still continue until the fifteenth of June This contest is being launched by the tuo orders to Ir.se intetest in the Cu/nee along leadetship lines. The points to be Lon,deted in the contest ate the social, the educational and the enter tainment The te,ults utll be based on the individual showing of each Grange dating the petted of the'ton test The local tonte,t, cc MO is just be ing dece:oped, is an idea contest Thole will be an according of pri/es fm the name of the beet piojeet that the Penn State Mange could under take Who's Dancing I Theta Upolon Omega Theta Cht Thu Phi Delta Phi Delta Theta Saturday Alpha Sigma Phi
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