•*="[ fflrrnt (firillrgnm. Vo). 29-No. 11 Boxers Will Face 6 Opponents-Matmen Schedule 5 Matches Lion Ringmen To Meet Harvard for First i. Time This Year Michigan included on 1933 WRESTLING CARD Mitmen . Open "Against ; Tarheels .■ Here—intercoliegiates Place Undecided v Lion boxers face a difficult six dual ifteet season in.!which -Harvard ap pears for tho first time, while the ■Wrestlers yill. stack up-against five opponents,- according to the'l933. win ter .'schedules'just' announced. ; -Pitt mitmen, whom-the Lions trim-* med/:6*to-l, last'year, and West Vir ginia arc absent from the boxing card, Chicago and Princeton have been dropped 'from'the wrestling schedule,' rind the ’ University of Michigan has b&eh added. • Meet West Virginia (Opening the season almost a. month, later than last year, the Lions will face the University" of North Caro lina Tarheels here February 11. Mat men .will begin with West Virginia . Here on February 4/ .Journeying' to Cambridge, Mass.-, Nittariy' ringmen will meet Harvard dn 17. Dartmouth,-, origin ally scheduled as the opponent for the following" nighty has discontinued the sport, and-New.Hampshire will prob ably be'scheduled'for'-that date.;': / i' University, of -Michigan;.wrestlers, coming.here : for the .first time, will.be Lafayette ; here the .following, week ; end/ -Lion oii’ Cor-, hell grapplers'at/Ithaca,-.N. .V., .on; February 25, and engage Syracuse in the last dual meet here March ;4/' Syracuse,. Army-Here \Two stiff, home-,meets.-' are Springfield defeated Penn State at soccer' today; 2-to-l on a goal late in the last quarter. .• The teams battled evenly through out most of the game until the Springfield attack broke down the strong Nittany defense. ‘Casterline scored the only Lion 'tally after’ the Penn State eleven staged a consist ent advance toward the Springfield •goal. > - The defeat this afternoon was the second suffered by Penn State'in the last three days and only the fourth in the* last .seven - years..' Spring ■ field’s victory preserved their un defeated, record in the Eastern, Col legiate Soccer Association which has extended since' .their entry in the league last year. - , , • . COLLEGE ARRANGES DEDICATION PLANS Will Celebrate ‘ Completion of ■ Home Economics Unit ■ ■ •On Saturday Dedication of the new' Home Eco nomics building will take place Satur day as part of the Alumni Homecom ing program, Adrian-0. Morse, cxecr utive secretary to the president, an nounced yesterday. Governor-Gifford Pinchot has been ashied to speak at the dedication ex ercises along with Col. J. Franklin Shields,'president of- the. College Board of Trustees, and ■ .President Ralph D. Hetzel. Dr. Hannah Mck. Lyons, College trustee, lias been in. vited to represent the home economics •committee-’-of 'the Grange.-;..#- - Organizer ijlay Speak • As organizer and head of the.home economics - departirient from 1907 to 1910, Mrs. Louise Waugh Kohler has also been asked to speak. Miss Flor ence M. Dibert, a trustee of the Col lege, has been asked to represent the State Federation of - Pennsylvania !Women;, which 'sponsored ’the’ orgarii ,zation^-of- the-deparfcmcnt. All of the organizations, which aid ed in establishing the home economics department here have been invited to participate in the dedicatory exercis es of - the new unit, Miss Edith P. Chace, head of the. department, an. nounced yesterday. The new building, constructed at a cost of $400,000 with funds appro priated by the State .to relieve unem ployment, was completed this sum mer and contains practical workrooms and laboratories to permit research work. A small cafeteria, where school lunches are served as a phase of class work, is a feature of the new structure. The E-shaped building also includes a well planned modern nursery school in the center wing, and a newly equipped sewing department. CO-ED DORMITORIES ELECT PRESIDENTS FOR 1932-193! Doris M* Acker ’34 was elected president of McAllister Hall at s meeting last week, while Elsie "W Darlington *33 was chosen as head oi Grange dormitory, and Emily M. Steh man ’33 as the new executive of the Women’s Building. Newly-elected town dormitory presi dents are S. Rhoberta Wolf *34 at the Gables, Janet Beman ’35 at the Fra zier Street dormitory, Edith Mac-, Alccr ’34 at Foust’s, Louise M. Cop polo ’34 at Harvey’s and Mildred ll genfritz ’35 at Ivy Inn. I.F.C. BOARD OF CONTROL PUNISHES PHI EPSILON PI Phi Epsilon Pi was found guilty by Interfraternity Council • Board of Control of violating article 3, section 2, of the IOSS* rushing code. Article 3, section 2, states that there shall be two dates a day: a. luncheon date—ll o’clock to 4 o’clock; b. dinner date—s o’clock to 10 o’clock from September 15 to 21; and c. dinner date—s o’clock to 8 o’clock on all other nights of rushing. The Board of Control imposed the following penalties on Phi Ep silon Pi: Publication in the Collegian. Notification of national officers. Lion Gridmen Bow To Harvard Eleven Nittany Team Gives Crimson Stubborn Battle Before Losing, 46-to-13—Collins, Lohr Score Touchdowns By GEORGE A. SCOTT Mt Penn State teams are fighting teams—for references call John Harvard, Cambridge,. Mass. It was back in 1914 that the' Crimison "had its first taste of Lion fighting qualities. Another dose was administered in 1921, and Saturday the Nittany Lions of 1932, outweighed, already once defeated, arid potentially the underdogs, outfought and outgained a powerful Harvard eleven, only to bow, 4G-to-13, to the superior reserve strength mustered by the Crimson color-bearers. Those men cf State need not feel | ashamed of their showing against Harvard. The score is no indication ol' the game, for it doesn't tell of the Lions’ great first half play, of a des perate goal line stand in the second quarter, and of constant scoring threats that kept the •Crimson on the alert from start to finish. Stars For Lions COUUf p, S C I DIRECTORS F to Meet tonight Counselors Will Discuss Annual Program, Approve Budget . ’ At First Assembly To adopt a constitution and to for mulate plans for the year, the,board of directors of the newly-organized Penn State Christian association will meet for the first time at a dinner in the Old Main Sandwich Shop at 6 o’clock tonight. A budget will also be approved at the meeting. According to the new charter' of the Christian association, the board of twenty-three members will supervise the finances and act as general counselors to the association. Chosen Last Year Elected by the membership of the old “Y” last year,, the association’s di rectors are headed by Dean Ralph L. Watts, of the School of Agriculture. .»frs. Harold A. Everett is vice-chair nan, while Prof. Julius E. Kaulfuss, >f the civil engineering department, is ;reasurer. Harry W. Seamans will ict as secretary of the group. Faculty members of the board in clude Dean Charlotte ,E. Ray, Prof. Mary J. Wyland, Prof. Chesleigh A. Bonine, Dr. Carroll D. Champlin, Prof. John H. Frizzell, Dr. Carl W. Hasek, Prof. J. Orvis Keller, Adrian O. Morse, and Dean Arthur R. Warnock. Mrs. Clara Phillips and the Rev. William E. Kroll are town members of the group. • Student women representatives will be Isabel McFarland .’33, Margaret E.' Borland *34, and Betty B. Thompson ’34, while men students will be repre sented by* Robert M. Maxwell ’33, Frank L. Weaver ’33, John E. Ryan *34, and Gayle V. Strickler *34. 5 STUDENTS NAMED TO AID IN RADIO STATION OPERATION Five students possessing radio op erator's licenses were named assist ants.to the regular.operating staff of shortwave station WBYA, it was an nounced yesterday by Gilbert L. Crossley, faculty manager of the sta tion. . ■/ Students* service, records together with their knowledge of radio prin ciples and the Morse code were the basis of. the selection. Those who qualified .were: Sidney W. Koran ’35, Howell N. Babbitt '36, William Crce *36, Charles M. Kearnes jr *36 and Ernest Warnick -, 36. ESTABLISHED PRICE FIVE CENTS Scored 7 Touchdowns Harvard scored seven touchdowns, al least one in dvery quarter. Irad Hardy, burly Crimson.tackle, sprinted sixty-seven yards in the first period to score after recovering Tommy Harp er’s fumble in mid-air, Captain Carl Hageman snared a long pass on the three-yard lino to score the second touchdown, and Jack Crickard took another pass over the goal lino for the third touchdown. A blocked punt on the Lion twenty nine-yard line put Harvard in scoring position in the third quarter, and Crickard again crossed the goal line for a touchdown. Messrs. Crickard, Grady, Whitney and Nevin combined to march eighty-two yards on six plays with Nevin registering the fifth score, another long forward pass put the ball on the State three-yard line early.in the fourth .quarter, and .Bar rett (lid the scoring, and tho final touchdown came late in the game af ter on intercepted forward pass. Lions Tie Score . Seemingly all Harvard—but not quite. ’ Captain,“Spike” Collins and Bill Lohr, were on the sending and re ceiving end of two forward passes that advanced the ball from the Lion twenty-yard line to Harvard’s twenty eight-yard mark, and Bill Lohr cut through left tackle for the remaining distance to score the first touchdown. Collins added the extra point, and the score stood at 7-to-7, with the second quarter hardly started. Again in the fourth quarter Collins, Lohr and "Doc” Conn drove the ball to the Harvard three-yard line, and Collins delivered the second Lion touchdown. Reserve strength counted heavily in the game. Harvard used thirty-five men in the sixty minutes of play while Coach Bob Higgins sent twenty-six of the twenty-seven men who made the trip into the fray. Sigel on Bench Only Harry Sigel, sophomore half back who is suffering from a charlcy horsc, missed action on the Blue and White side. Dick Woolbert, injured in the first quarter, went back into the game in the second period. "King” Cole was put out of action permanently on the first play of the second half, Fred Kane and Earl Park were injured on the same play in the third quarter, and Harry Wantshousc “got his” in the same period. Cole, Kane, and Wantshouse received in- (Contimictl on jmye three) I.F.C. BOARD OF CONTROL PUNISHES PHI SIGMA DELTA Phi Sigma Delta was found guilty by Interfraternity Council Board of Control of violating arti cle 4, sect ion 1, of the 1032 rushing code. Article 4, section 1, states that there shall be a silent peviod, meaning.no communication of any kind between a fraternity man and rushee, from the close' of each evening date until the following morning at S o’clock. The Board of Control imposed the following penalties on Phi Sig ma Delta: Publication in the Collegian. Notification of national officers, Forfeiture of fifty dollar bond. Suspension of social privileges for the semester immediately fol lowing that in which the violation occurcd, or suspension of one of the offending members of Phi Sig ma Delta.