Page Four THROUGH OTHER EYES ' Penn Considers Schedules Pennsylvania’s athletic plan, the Gates Plan, States. “The football .season will be definitely limited by administrative order to a reasonable number of games.” All the players and students hoped this latest blow would be def initely postponed, as has been the case with a similar proposal at Yale. However, the 1933 schedule was announced last week, containing games with Franklin and Marshall, Dartmouth, Navy, Lafayette, Ohio State, Penn State and Cornell in 'that order. The schedule, if shorter, is more difficult than this.season’s. To meet this schedule, Pennsylvania wall be without the services of Sokolis, Mhsavage, Collis, Perina, Ondcrdonk, Willson, Yablonski, Eustis, Burnett, llemeon, Sweeney, Munger, Treretola and perhaps Colehowcr. Very little heavy material will come up from the freshman team and in 1933 Penn will need to depend on smartness and skill of mostly inexper- ienced men instead of upon experience and weight. Now comes the vital question. When will the Pennsylvania moguls permit practice to start?' If it is the intention t 6 begin practice on Franklin Field when school opens, the absolute and final death knell of intercollegiate football at Pennsylvania will be sounded. All of the teams on the 1933 schedule but two will have had the benefits of a long spring practice and two or three weeks of concentrated fall practice. Will the Pennsylvania authorities force thpir light, inexperienced squad to play with a handicap of three to eight weeks’ practice? This .would be an insurmountable obstacle for a squad which was subsidized, let alone one where the players must be developed from the student body. It would be very unfair to force a team to go into action without an equal opportunity for practice, purely an administration which is looking after the interests of its students will see that such. A.serious mistake is not made. ... With such a scarcity of big material as will be at Pennsylvania next year, it would have been far wiser, if fewer games were wanted, to give the schedule one open date in the middle so enough material could be patched together to meet the remaining teams on the schedule. If football is a sport and the boys like to play it, what is the idea of eliminating practice and the chance to play? If football is not a sport it should be eliminated. The admission of Lafayette and Penn State to the schedule are wise moves. They are natural rivals, the boys will enjoy meeting these rivals and the games should draw good gates. 'But dropping Lehigh is;in consistent. | Becuusc the Bethlehem team stopped subsidization sevei’al years; be fore Pennsylvania and lacks material enough to make them draw at'the gate is no reason they should be dropped. They are a natural rival in every sense of the word and follow Pennsylvania’s de-emphasizing plan more closely than any other college in this district. Dropping Lehigh is a blow at Pennsylvania’s own policy. —The Penn Collegian, Philadelphia Public Ledger CLASSIFIED BALLROOM DANCING INSTRUCTlON—ln dlvidiiiil instruction for beginners. Call 775-J. or see Mrs. F. J. Hanrahnn, Fyc Apart ments. etch LOST—Brown wnllet containing valuable papers. Plcusc return to Student Union desk in Old Mn!n. 2tpdEF FOR RENT—Desirable rooms for students, S 2 and $2.50 per week. Garman Club, 206 W. llcavcr Ave.. phone 53G-M. 2tchJßW LOST—Sigma Nu fraternity pin between Rec ‘ Uni] and' Old Main. Initials W.F.W. Call ‘•.White «t 0023. . .• ‘ , ; . ItcompWMS EMPLOYMENT*—Two co-eds can'work for lioiiril in/acuity home. Phone 2SK-J. ItpdHß WANTED—Passengers to Colgate. Cull Leff- LOST—Latin hook, “Conn Trimulchlonis” by IVlronius. Finder please call Louise Cop polo at -IIC-R. ltcompPß LOST—Lady's Parker pen, H. C f Liggett in scribi'il. Finder please notify owner fit Phi Mu House. ItnpJM DEAL & SON Plumbing and Heating 117 South Frazier Street Between Classes The Coroer unusual A. NASH CLOTHES Made to Your Individual Measurements—sl9.so to $29.50 C. .W. HARDY, Tailor . Opposite Postoffice Phone 24 WANTED—Passengers to Philadelphia; round trip $4.00. Leave Saturday noon, return .Sunday night. Call 412-J. ItpdHß SOCIAL DANCING INSTRUCTION—Indiv iduaI and group lessons. Call Ellen J. Mitchell. 468-J. 4tpdHß FRATERNITY PLEDGES OR MEMBERS— . Any interested in making spending money call fur Gardner McCloskoy. Kappa Sigma, • between 4 and 5 o'clock. Good proposition. ItpdHß MRS. ALVINA LOCKWITZ Shampoo and Finger Wave, 85c Permanents, $3.00 & $4.50. ■ . / NcwLocatiun—Austin Barber Shop,':,- J :‘. ’■ : -&V**--*'* '“'' PlfON'E"Wr^'S FOR THE BEST FUEL . Use Neville Coke • ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS COAL HILLSIDE ICE & COAL COMPANY Phone 136-J New Plaid Silks $l.OO a yard EGOLF’S Penn State Co-op Store Second Floor 206 South Allen Street Blue Books (16 page)__Members—6 for 5c Non-Members —5 for 5c Typewriting Bond Members—4oc a Ream Non-Members-7-49c a Ream NOTICE! ANY ONE CAN BUY AT CO-OP Nittany Hai LION TEAM DOWNS ORANGE, 26-TO-29 Streeter, Hill School Captain, Leads Grenninger to Tape After 5-Mile Run Ily JAMES M. SHEEN ‘34 The Lion is still king of the Hill. But only by a sl:m 26-t0.1r2 margin did Penn State cross country runners maintain their supremacy over Syra cuse harriers for the seventh succes sive year in their meet here Saturday. After leading the pack for the first five miles, Curt Grenninger was out spurted by Captain Bill Streeter in the last two hundred yards, and trail ed the Orange leader at the tape by a three-yard margin. Streeter’s amazingly strong finish dash enabled him to complete the course in 27 min utes 34 seconds, one second faster than the Blue and White runner. King Finishes Fifth Bateman of the Orange team gained third place, five'yards behind Gren. ninger, to lead Bill Van Cise, veteran letter winner, who gained a. Nittany fourth place. Although hampered Jay an abscessed jaw which kept him from eating much for two days before the contest, Captain Charlie King ed his teammate by seventeen yards to keep the Blue and White score down. An experienced Syracuse- runner, Carr captured the sixth position in 28 minutes 36 seconds, ahead of Bill Space, Lion veteran, whose bad leg had kept him out of practice for part of last week, and probably slowed him down Saturday. England Follows Space • Running a little behind Space, Kenny England, starting his second year on the varsity cross country team, circled the course in 28 minutes 45 seconds to complete the scoring of Coach Nate. Cartmell’s men over the long jaunt. Although his position did not count in the final scoring, since only the first five men on each squad to finish are listed in the total'score, George Harvey’s strong spurt enabled him to. come home two-fifths of a second ini front of Harrison, who captured ninth' for the Orange. Smith, in tenth' place, completed the scoring for the Hill school. Lion cross country men will prob-'. ably compete in time trials _today_or tomorrow to determine participants in the Pittsburgh meet Saturday. Freshmen harriers competed in a trial run Friday. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN riers Defeat Syracuse in First Meet of Season Panther Fres Yearling Gr Lions Hold Pitt Team Scoreless During Second Half By W. M. STEGMEIER ’3l A heavy, smashing Pitt freshman line sat on the Lion cubs long enough to glean two touchdowns in the first two periods of the yearling game here Saturday. The second half told a slightly different story, even though the score at the end of the game re mained 13-to-0. Early in the game, Roberts, Pan ther center, caught a poor State kick on the Lions’ forty-five-yard line and, with the help of excellent interfer ence, scampered down the field for a touchdown. Malarkey, a halfback, made the extra point good for the vis itors by a 'placement, kick. Laßue, substitute back, secured the second scoro for the Little Panthers early in the second quarter on a cleverly exe cuted sixty-yard run. Lions'Use Passing Attack Forced: to resort to a passing at tack because of the large weight han dicap, the> Nittany freshmen had ample opportunity to- polish up their aerial tactics. Maurer did most of the passing'/while Cooper and Andrews took turns on the receiving end. . In the third period, McClure, Pan ther back, .fumbled but recovered to run forty yards to Penn State’s ten yard line.--Three times Pitt charged the line .of scrimmage but failed to gain more -than six yards. After -a five-yard ; penalty for delaying the game, the; Panthers made up their minds to try a pass over the goal; Cooper, Lion backgrounded it to pre vent a third Panther, score. Pitt Line Shows Speed j The game ended with Malarkey, a flashy Pitt backfield man, stealing a. thirty-yard r end run on the Lions to * 'jjjjp 1 b w v R ft is s'* ..w. . mmmmM 00*- imen Defeat dders, 13-to-0 What a Pitt-y Stale Freshmen Pitt Freshmen 7 . First Downs 10 140 Yards Gained Bushing 395' 0 Yards Lost, Penalties 40 10 Passes Attempted 8 4 Passes Completed 1 1 Passes Intercepted by ' 2 place the ball on State’s twenty-yard line. Throughout the contest, the- Panther line showed speed as well as weight by their unusual interference. 'Coach Nels Walkc started Douglas and Murvinc at-the ends, Sloan'and O’Neill at tackles, Esterly and Latorre at guards and Kessler at the snapper back position. In the backfield he used Maurer, Andrews, O’Hara, and Cooper. HOCKEY TOURNAMENT OPENS The junior women’s hockey team .met the sophomore squad on Holmes Field yesterday afternoon. The sen ior women will meet the sophomore .team this afternoon, while the juniors and . seniors will play Thursday. On Monday, October 31, there will be a game between the seniors and fresh men. Balfurd’s Tailor Shop Under, the Corner Room Orders for Suits or Tuxedos For House Party Accepted Until October 26 have no place in cigarettes They are not present in Luckies ' ... the mildest cigarette you ever smoked WE buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world—but that does not ' explain why folks' every where regard Lucky Strike as , the mildest cigarette. The fact i is,, we never .overlook the a truth that “Nature in the m Raw : is Seldom Mild”—so "Ifa man write a better booh, preach a better strmoh, or make a better mouse-trap than hu neighbor, tho ho build bis bouse in the woods, She world will make a beaten path to bis door. "—RALPH WALDO EMERSON. .Does not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike?- ALUMNI BOOTERS BOW TO VARSITY Graduate Socccrmen Weaken as Present Lion Team Wins In Game Here, 2-to-0 The class was there, but lack of training always tells, and the Penn State alumni socccrmen were defeat ed before the Homecoming crowd here by a 2-to-0 score, Saturday. Despite the long lay-off from ac tive competition the former Nittany stars, with three all-American team members and three former varsity captains working as they did in their day, gave the varsity some stiff com petition, staving off the 1933 hoot ers’ attack for. three quarters before they weakened. Flashing an overpowering drive down the field in the last period the Nittany soccermen'slipped the ball through the defense twice, with Chick Musser and Julie Krcms, a promising sophomore making the goals. The alumni play centered around WARD’S Tobaccos Confectionery and *. Soda Fountain Service Try Our 35c Lunches 138 South Allen Street • Phone 33-M —and raw tobaccos these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are then given the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described ' by the words—“lt’s toasted”. That’s why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild cigarettes. ~ ■. C ,JI “It’s toasted” That package of mild Luckies Tuesday, October 25, 1932 I. M. Football Tonight Commons Club Versus, Kappa <- Sigma Tau Sigma Phi Versus ’ 5 Phi Delta Theta Alpha Tau Omega * Versus Sigma Phi Epsilon Alpha Chi Sigma Versus Alpha Kappa Pi the former ail-Aimerican men, Bill Lutz ’29, Bud Anderson ’3O, and Sis Edgerton ’3O, with Coach Bill Jef frey’s performance at center-forward steadying the graduate eleven. TEAM FEATURES BROTHERS • Five pairs of brothers arc. listed on. the Indiana University football squad this year, according to the Indiana Daily Student.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers