The Air VOL XXIII. No. 22 ALTOONA MEETS DEFEAT BY LION SOCCERMEN, 3-0 Serry and Marshall Net Penn State's Points in Third Quarter of Play REVISED LINEUP FAILS, TO HANDICAP ROOTERS Nittany Team Remains Here To Prepare for Haverford And, Swarthmore The Penn State boaters repeated their early-season victory over Al toona, Saturday, when an the second half of a much disputed game, they ran rampant through the car-men's ranks for a 3-0 win. Both teams shooed increased vigor and skill . , developed since their tilt on October eighth. The .Nittany com bination, despite an extensive re-or ganization of the lineup necessitated by recent injuries and ineligibilities, retained its characteristic team play and speed Sorry Nets First Goal Moans Serry, Egyptian soccerite playing for the first time this season, filled proficiently the center forward position and succeeded in netting the first goal of the fray. Previously, the keystone berth had been the one out standing sneak point in the Nittany offense. Sorry, able to place the sphere equally well with either foot, is almost certain to remain at the cen tral post for the remainder of the sea son. IS2=MI3 Netting the final two points of the Lion score, Dick Marshall maintained his position as high scorer of the Penn State team. Glaser, playing a phase of the game unfamiliar to him, did (Continued on last page) I=l DR.JOHNSOKADVOCATES OPTIMISTIC VIEWPOINT Appeals Chiefly to Generation Of American Youth for Transformation With an appeal directed ehietiv to the younger generation of America, Dr :Mordecai IV. Johnson, president of Howard university, Washington, D C, addressed the chapel congi.e gation here on Sunday morning. • "Be not conformed to this world; but be ye transformed by the renew ing of your mind, that ve may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of Cod," was the biblical verse which Doctor Johnson used as his thome. He spoke of the achievements of the fathom of the nation in bringing it to the position of masteiy which it now holds and of the great changes in human life and relationship made possible by an op timism toward human nature That ours is not yet a finished country, bonnier, was pointed out by Doctor Johnson, and he declared that while it is undoubtedly the best in which to lrse, it is not yet the best possible. Strife between capital and labor, political corruption, growing distrust of other nations were men tioned as some of the conditions - which are dangerous to continued prosperity. As an illustration of the potentialities of the human lace, he outlined the rise of the American negro Train a condition of servitude to his present state of prosperity and citizenship "Much snore remains to be done en the sphere of racial and international relations," declared Doctor Johnson, in closing, "and a seligion of pro found optimism embodying a sympa thetic understanding, tolerance and confidence in fellow-man, regardless of creed, race or nationality, is neces sary:" Kinsloe, Doggett Get A. I. E. E. Appointments Prof. G. L. Kinsloe and L A. Dog gett, of the elechical engineering de partment, have been appointed to membership on committees of the American Institute of Electrical En gineers. Professor Kmiec is a member of the Institute's committee on education and also of the technical committee on the production and utilization of light. Professor Doggett is chairman of the committee on student activi ties, including the states of Pennsyl vania, New Jersey, Ohio, Delaware, West Virginia and the District of Colubibia. ~,... 11 ---'4 .74 • " il l run , a A \ - ~.,....,,,:>.„„. ~,..„s_, LION HARRIERS SWEEP TO VICTORY IN IC-4A MEET RADIO COMMISSION CONFINES WPSC TO DAY BROADCASTING New Schedule Bars Evening Programs—Goes in Effect On December First COLLEGE STATION WILL SHARE TIME WITH WBAK Boxing, Wrestling Accounts, Sunday Chapel Services To Be Continued Notice that the College radio sta tion would be limited to daylight broadcasts after December first came a few days ago from the Fed eral Pad.° Commission at Washing ton, D C. In 'sweeping changes, the commission altered the wit‘e length or hours of about 70 stations The order does not affect the WPSC wave length, and it will continue on one thousand kilocycles, or 299 8 meters. Just Mint effect the change will have on radio broadcasting from the. College cannot be determined fully at this time. It means that no broadcasting may be done after seven' o'clock on the evening, so far as offi cials hens know at this time. This will make it necessary to hold the usual evening programs between six and seven o'clock instead of from eight to nine. The time of broadcast ing may be shortened and the num ber of days per seek increased. No definite plans will be made until (Continued on second page) isEAT Professor Leaves Flivver Hurriedly As Mouse Appears A well-knonn professor lies "anti pedestruming" himself to his church vath his trusty Henry recently, ashen he heard a peculiar noise in the back of the machine Believing that the rear end ryas causing the trouble, he approached the posterior section of the "tlrvver" and was surprised to see a small mouse jump from the fender and ',Salk nonchalently across the road. After investigating for about a quarter of an hour without success, the bearer of ',nom ledge finally reached the church without any dent disasterous effects, and following the sermon, started homeward. He had driven about two squares when he heard the same noise that he hail listened to earlier in the morn ing, and according to all laws of psy chology, he sought the cause Once more a mouse scampered from the lest For the thud time the noise was heard, and a third time the disgusted 'mass searched for the cause. He was riding along for fully five minutes, when he felt something mov ing up his leg In one limp he was out of the car, and in less time than it takes to tell it in, the professor was losing all sense of propriety, while he illustrated the mysteries of the Varsity Drag in a manner befitting any of the sm. of Thespus Next day, he found under the rear sent of his automobile, the cause for all the trouble of the previous morn ing. There in all the privacy afforded by an assortment of tools and tugs, was a tle,erly constructed mouse nest with thee small inhabitants. FORESTRY PROFESSOR - ATTENDS CONFERENCE ,Prof. Harold S Newms, of the forestry depaitment, attended the first National Commercial Forestry conference held ut,Chicago lust week. The convention was called by the United States Department of Com merce. Re-fmestation and a sustained yield from a business point of view Nen the rproblems discussed by the inure than two hundred and thirty executives and forestry experts who attended the conference. Commercial forestry, the business of grooving crops of timber by private enter pitse, seas the theme of the con clave. STATE COLLEGE. PA., TY Bill Cox Successfully Defends %•Country Crown Against 250 Competitors FRESHMEN LOW SCORE OF 31 BREAKS RECORD Detweiler Crosses Tape First For Yearlings—Reikers, Meissinger Place (Special lo COLLEGIAN) Penn State's cross-countrymen flashed to fame yesterday in the IC-4A tournament at New York City, when both the varsity and fieshmen harri ers captured individual and team him ors. Captain Bill Cox breezed home ahead of a field of 250 for his second national title while Detweiler strode to victory ahead of the plebes of six teen colleges and universities The varsity defeated Hareem! 50- GO foi the championship, while the thirty-one points registered by the fieshmen is the lowest yealling.score reel recorded at an LC-4A meet The Dartmouth freshmen took second hon ors. The official check-up on the points received may cause a slight variation from those announced di acctly at the end of the races and re crrded here Cox led the ‘aisity field with a time of 30 minutes, 36 1-5 seconds Following arc the first fifteen placinzs order Cox, Penn State; Richard son, Maine, Reid, Harvard, Lindsey, Alamo, Mmendeck, Penn; Lee, Penn (Continued on last page) I=l GUMBEL RECEIVES GRANGE POSITIONS "National COnel:gie geits Penn State Master College Editor of Organ DELEGATES FROM FIVE STATES ATTEND PARLEY The three Perin State delegates re turned Sunday from the National College Grange Confeience at Clef: land, Ohio on Psiday Problems of national college Giange interest nese discussed at this nation-nide agricul tural gathering One of the Penn State delegates, Walter C Gumbo! '2B, was elected to too impos tent positions. He was chosen as college Grange editor of the National Grange Monthly, the official neat.-` organ of the National Grange, and also named as chairman of the National College Grange Conference for next year. The other delegates front Penn Slate at this meeting store Thomas VT Crit tenden '29, and Jane L Gleamy '29 ro.e states, Maryland, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania oere lop (Continued on second page) ON THE TURKEY DAY MENU PENN STATE , PITT L. H. B. L. T. R. T. Roepke (20) Gr'nsh'ds (25) Wasmuth (14) L. G. R. G. Panaccion (38) Roberts (16) 6'l" 195 180 Q. IL Lungren (31) C. s'B" 170 Mahoney (27) or 0'1" 190 Pincura (21) 5'11" 155 R. G. Martin (36) 6' 190 F. B. Hamas (22) 6'l" 188 R. H. B. R. T. L. T. L H. B. Wolff (34) Ricker (37) Kern (23) Welch (10) 6'7" 170 6'10" 200 178 166 or Miller (23) R. E. L. E. 6'11" 180 Lesko (30) Donchess (36) Substitutes: -- PENN •STATE—Darragh (26), Hastings (28), Parana (43), Curry (44), A. Wilson (47), Balmer (93), Livermore (91), Craig (32), Miller (23), Dangerfield (45), Harrington (46), Ridgway (42), McAndrews (37), Hewitt (51);. Whitmore (33). PlTT—Salata (11), Demoise (17), Fisher (18), Sergeant (24), Golberg (26), Meier (34), Corson (37), Helsing (33), Bowen (26),-Parkinson (36). DAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1927 COLLEGIAN'. f To' Publish Next Issue' December 2 Because of 'rho Thanksgiving vacation, the COLLEGIAN will suspend publication with this ibStIO until Friday, December second. 5 FRATERNITIES WILL HOLD CONFERENCE AT NEW YORK CITY One Hundred Institutions Send Delegates:to Annual Convation TO DISCUSS SCHOLARSHIP AND EDUCATION ECONOMY Dean' 'Warnock. and Schinnerer To Represent/Penn State At ,Nationtd Parley The Interfraternay Conference, an annual gathering, of delegates front practically all fraternities of Amer ican colleges and 'universities, will convene at the Hotel Pennsylvania, New York, on Friday and Saturday. Victor 0. Sslannerer '22, has been 'selected to represent Penn State at this nation-wide convention Dean Arthur R. Warnock will attend. More than two hundred delegates, representing sixty different freterm ties from a hundred institutions of learning, will be present. Chief among the topics for general discussion be 'the question of seholaralup, which fins been the par amount concern of the interfraternity crgarazation during the year. Other problems of note to come before the meeting will be the movement for economy in education, the relation of the fraternity to 00 parents of its tlw,t tuper,folovelon , rment of freshman. - College Presidents Will Attend A number of college presidents and a score of deani and professors from all sections of the country situl at tend the parley to aid in the discussion of these problems Among the colleges to he repre sented are Illinois, Yale, Cornell, Columbia, Penn Stale, Rutgers, Wis consin, Minnesota and Michigan., ETE3MZEI PHI LAMBDA UPSILON ELECTIONS Associate John W. IVlute Graduates Freder9.l, A. Steele Oscar L. Roberts Gregg M Dams Karl H. Engel Undergraduates Frank U. Rapp '2B Robert B Kdbotn '2B Edwaul 0 Crum '29 ,Wllham S. McCarter '29 Eugene R Singley '29 James C Fritz '29 L. E. R. E. Delp (35) Guarino (20) 6' 175 166 Cutler (15) 102 L G. Pox (30) 171 Totirgiatt. SOPHOMORES WILL VIE FOR HONORS IN SPEAKING CONTEST Entrants To Compete in Section Trials Before Selection Of Final Sextet PRIZES OFFERED TOTAL SEVENTY-FIVE DOLLARS College and Forensic Council Sponsor Oratory Meet December Second •Preliminary teals for the Sopho more Extemporaneous Speaking Con test, sponsored annually by the Col lego and the Forensic Council, were announced for November twenty ninth and thirtieth by Prof John It. Fruzell, debating coach, v.ho has charge of the contest arrangements. Survivors of the eliminations will compel, tot the first and second prizes of fifty and tmenty -five dollars on gold, offered by the College and the Forensic Council respectively, in the Auditorium Finlay evening, Dec ember second, at se‘en-thirty o'clock. Registration for Trials Registration for partiomation in the flints will be held on Tuesday even.ng, November twenty-ninth, in Old Chapel at acorn-thirty o'clock, at which time the candidates will an nounce their topics and be assigned to ono of the six sections Included in the competition The lone quash ficaton for the second-year entrants (Continued on third page) I=l A. A. ANNOUNCES 1928 GRID CARD Noteiliailie'"RePinee's - N.' y. 11. On List of Opponents For Next Year SCHEDULE SYRACUSE FOR ALUMNI HOMECOMING DAY Penn State's 1928 football schedule announced by the Board of Ath letic Control presents the same teams at this season, with the exception of Notre Dame which replaces New York university. Fne games ate played at home, and four on for tme fields. The schedule opens with Lebanon Valle, Gettysburg, and Bucknell played in the same order. Syracuse returns on October La enty-mnth as the Alumni Homecoming attraction Tao games are played on Franklin Field—Pennsylvania on the same corresponding -October date, and Notto Dante two reeks later. This latter game is the third of a three game series, the rust game of uhleil aim played at State College in 1925, (Continued on last page) R. H. B. Hagan (21) 167 Q. B. Edmards (38) 168 F. B. Booth (12) 100 GRIM NITTANY GRIDMEN HOPE TO FELL PANTHER IN TURKEY DAY CLASSIC Bitter Foes Play in Se And Roepke Se Post—Cripp College Grants Recess For Football Send-Off A ten-minute iecese at the beginning of the first hum today has been granted by the College Board of Ad ministration for the purpose of length ening the time set fm the team send off Classes will begin at one-tucnty o'clock ' Students utll congregate at Co-Op at twelve-thirty o'clock and will thence proceed to Varsity Hall where the send-off %%111 take place Head Cheet•leadet Ilenty F Blankenbiller '29, requests that e‘ely student be present. KDKA BROADCASTS COLLEGE BAND AND QUARTET PROGRAM Holiday Activities To End With Dances at Webster Hall And Hotel Schenley NOVEL DIALOGUES WILL VARY EVENING EVENTS Thanitsgiviii"a;CSmoitei Pice To Students Presenting Athletic Passbook The fourth annual "Penn State Night" plogram consisting mostly of muscat numbers by the militate band and tarsity male quartet mill be broadcast from station KDKA, Pittsburgh, to-norrom night at ten o'clock. President Ralph D lietzel's gieeting9 to alumni mill be included in the evening's program Among the thirteen selections scheduled five mill be tendered by the ‘nrsity quartet composed of Paul G Nagle '2B, Ehen M Peek '2B, John E. Dickson '2B, and Edeun T Eggers '2B, and eight will be given by the military or Blue Band undo' the di rection of Bandmaster W 0 Thomp son Dialogues hetes°cn the ment hols of the quartet and the an nouncer mill take place hefote each nuinbm A Thanksgiving Eve smoker w ill be in progress at Kaufmann's Stu dentl trill be ndmatted free of charge to the latter, upon presentation of then matimulation card of athletic passbook. This smoker ndl be given (Continued on third page) EM!SEMOI M.E.LABORATORY GETS UP-TO-DATE SEAPLANE To Use Machine, Donated by Air Bureau, for Exhibition and Instructional Work Fot the purpo,e of instructional stork, an MS-I seaplane has recently been presented to the department of mechanical engineering by the Bureau of Aeronautics of the United States Mao y. Fatdd ~th pontoons, the seaplane Is designed for a single pilot and is of the hi-plane type It weighs sis hundred and fifty pounds and has an eighteen feet wing spread Origin ally the plane was lammed by a three cylinder, an-cooled Lawrence engine, the finetunner of the fam oti .1-5 Wright "whnlwind" air cooled engine. In addition to the plane, duce types of engines, propeller blades, a wing and other equipment were le cowed by the department front the Naval Aircraft facto* , at Philadel phia, The equipment is bet up in the Mechanical Laboratory and is open to publw inspection, announced Prof. Arthur J. Wood, herd of the de partment. IA Beastly Encounter PRICE FIVE CENTS son's Finale As Welch k All-American es May Play Eagei to match his proness lagainq that of the powerful Golden Panther, a grim and snarling Nit , tone Lion, nill proul to Pittsburgh eally this afteinim to lie in wait un til the appointed day of combat, on Thanh.giving afternoon, Cohen the nn c cot feline iicals clash for suprem acy in the Panther's Pitt Stadium llepre.,entira Berilek's uell-trained Lion are Unity- three -glidiron stal elm ts echo will make the Journey this afteincan, aftei as rousing send-off, to a secluded count* club on the out skirts of Pitt.shingli, where they will 'eat until the morning of the game Thiea complete teams, in reward foe their stienuous efforts this season, will boaid that Pittsburgh4bound ti am Regular, 31a3 Not Start Because of their recent leg injuries, too of Penn State, backfield main slaps, Cs Lunge en and Alhe Wolff, may occupy ,eat.., on the bench when the opening whistle begins the annual Turkey Day classic. Both have been icst.ng since they received medical treatment after the New lark um ...sue game Neither has partici pated in sciimmage, although rach has done his grunting chores and kept himself in a limber condition 11 injuly', fatal touch should again reach Lungi en and Wolff. it is cer . tato they njll battle Pitt only in saint Other, roe, they are slated to occupy tr•eir regular posts. 31eanwhile Beadek, who has consid eied the situation thoroughly, has been losing no time in grooming cap aole.substitute, fur the pasta that may be vacant, Procure, displaced earlier the ,eason by CY, has been toiling .ii his old post, this time as an under study, with Dangeolield as a third likely choice. promising bona onan e fullback, n being trained for V. olff's halfback post and will start if Alhc has to occups the bench Re cent aerfoiinance, by Miller have earned hen the reputation of one of the most ‘aluable substitute lacks Hp, punting, cad running and for maid pa,sing all smack of the sen sation gricluon abrbtres Sti able, late]; turned into a back, his Boatick', thud choice for the post Whitmore, fast, crashing halfback, is also shown malt talent at carrying the ball Bealiring that the Pitt line la the (Continued on third page) EMMUIIII R.O.T. C. PREPARES FOR ANNUAL MILITARY BALL Novel Decorating Scheme Will Garb Armory for Dance ' January Thirteenth Pt epai amens are all eady under was for the wall annual Military Ball Which xdl he held in the Armory on Pt clay night, Janum y tlm teenth, an nenneed the Student Colonel, Adel bort S Schroeder '2B, yesterday. A novel scheme of decorating, never before seen in the Armory, will ho under the oupennsion of the Elm Decorating company from Wi liamopot t, Penn, baton. Pas ors in tho lot in of pi ogrums has e not }et been selected All cla,,e, ate ins ted to the gala affair for which u ,übscription price of foot doll.ns will he charged. Music will he furnished 'by a widely known Victin Recording orchestra the name of which will not he made known until after the Holidays. IMMEI DR. FORBES WILL SPEAK AT CHICAGO CONVENTION lli Einest B FOlthez, director of the institute of ammul nutrition at the College, mill appear on the pro. onion of he American Society of Ani mal Production in Chicago on Friday Doctor Follies, inteinationally promi nent as an authority of livestock feed ing, wil speak on "Energy Ildetabol- Nin as Related to the 'Plane of Nu ti ition in Cattle." Ms address will be based on esperiniental work done dining the past year in the aminal csonation calorimeter at Penn State, the only appitiatus of its kind in ac tive our at the present time.