■Tuesday;„November 1,1932 - Between the Lions The Sports Editor Our Opponents Sewanee, o—Louisiana State, 38 Unless Louisiana State is seven points better than Colgate, the re sults of the last games before Saturday's Houseparty clash should give the Lions quite an edge. Temple, 7—Carnegie Tech, 7 Hats off to the Tartans for destroying the bugaboo of greatness that. has been built up around the Owls through expert publicity. This is one / tie Temple was lucky to gain, for they were outrushed and outplayed. This ,and That Colgate impressions .... Some observers have compared Hamilton •with State College .... We think the N. Y. village might better be com pared with Pleasant .Gap . . Colgate may very well be termed the . biggest football college in the East .... The football “stadium” reposes .right in .the middle of Front Campus .... The Lions stayed at the Hotel Syracuse in company with the Michigan State eleven and a convention of magicians .... Saturday afternoon it looked as though some of the magicians had been induced to transfer to the Colgate backfield .... The crowd at the game numbered only about 5,000, but it was the biggest crowd Colgate has had at a'home game in ten years, the natives told us .... The ovation our own Sea gull got when he left the field was far from the usual birdie .... Colgate was penalized so much for holding and roughness that the referee placed second when ball-carrying statistics were compiled .... The Colgate band showed off its ,beautiful new - uniforms .... Then the alumni showed their appreciation of the beau tiful by tossing coins in the band’s benefit blanket.... The Lions amazed the victorious Maroon by singing “Victory” at the top of ’their voices on the way back through town . . 7 . Stan Zawaeki’s good behavior on • past Syracuse trips has been so good that the brother of a certain Syra- I cuse young lady had Stan paged in the Syracuse lobby, inviting him to : take said sister out again .... Most of the boys ended up at a movie i called “Rackety Rax” which is a satire on tlye overemphasis of football at certain colleges .... That was piling it on a bit heavy for one day. • —S. H. B. • The Girl Will Be Happy with a Gift from Our Wide Selection 1 COMPACTS BRACELETS LOCKETS RINGS ' And Many Others ;■ * j 1 HANN & O’NEAL ; East College Avenue . , ' 272-M HouseParSy Show e Saturday, Nov; sth AT 7r15 featuring PENN STATE Glee Club - Players - Thespians IN ‘Panics of 1932’ Ticket Sale Daily at Treasurer's Office, Old Main Wednesday, Thursday, and Fri day Nites; 6-9, at Corner Room Reserved Seats 50 & 75 Cts. The Colgate Football Eleve Lion Harriers End Seventh Straight Year Undefeated Coach Nate Cartmell’s Cross Country Team Downs Panther Runners 18-37 By JAMES M. Penn State cross country runners met no pitfalls in their meet against Panther hill and dnlers Saturday. When Lion barriers downed the Pitt cross country team 18-to-37 at Pittsburgh, it marked the seventh successive undefeated season for Nit tany runners in dual meets^ • Pitt runners in fourth and sixth places marred the perfect scores that Penn State bill and dalers have held over the Panther harriers for the past three years. The Lion victory resulted from first, second, third, fifth, and seventh places. . . Grenninger Takes First Curt Grenninger’s steady plugging over the five and three-eighths mile Schenley Park course enabled him to reach the finish tape first in twenty eight minutes-and one second. Cap. tain Charlie King and Bill Space closed their, intercollegiate dual meet competition by crossing the finish line together in second place. Albright, flashy Panther runner captured fourth place, followed by Bill Van Cise, who also ran his last dual contest as a Blue and White har rier. Ken Wagenhouser, probably the outstanding runner on the Pitt team, met a reverse after a brilliantly suc cessful season, and came home in sixth place. Completing the Nittany scoring, Johnny Napoleon finished the long jaunt in seventh place, followed by George Harvey, sophomore runner, in the eighth position. Kirkpatrick J'ffidr is Cross jSlen* a] Z/ip might exp "Let’s say you’re painting clouds* You’ve got your primary colors here on the palette. But you haven’t the clouds until you blend certain colors into the special tone you want. "This is very much what happens in making a good cigarette. And I gather that what Chesterfield means by Cross-Blending is what on artist docs with colors. Their Domestic and Turkish tobaccos—many varie ties of each—arc the primary colors. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN SHEEN *3i and, Kerr finished ninth and tenth for the Panther team. Freshmen Defeated Freshmen runners failed in their quest for revenge for last year’s de feat, losing to the Panther cubs 25- to-30. Book captured second place for the yearling harriers, while Light gained a fourth place. Hoffman, Burney and Barnes captured seventh, eighth, and ninth positions to com plete the Lion scoring. L M. FOOTBALL TEAMS PLAY 3 GAMES DAILY Will Have Use of Additional Field For Afternoon /Contests v With the acquisition of an addition al field on the golf course for after noon games, three contests instead of two will be played daily in the intra mural touch football tournament, Wil liam H. Crown 'jr. '34, manager, an nounced yesterday. No- afternoon games will be sched uled for. M-bndays, while three will be played on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. Because of difficulty by the groups in getting their teams to gether on Fridays and Saturdays, no .contests will take place on those days. 1 Delta Chi will meet Lambda Chj, Alpha on the hew touch football field on the golfVou'rse at 4:15 o’clock this afternoon. »'. , ’ They blend and cross-blcnd these tobaccos until they get the special tone they want—in other words, the Chesterfield flavor. -"And just as each color you use. acts on the others to change and ■ enrich them, so each Chesterfield to bacco partakes of the fine qualities of every other. , "You f weld* different kinds to get a better kind. That’s Cross-Blend ingl’ 9 Chesterfield >ss JBlendecf— t/iats why theure MILDER that’s why they TASTE BETTER Conquers MAROON DEFEATS NITTANY GRIDMEN (Continued front page one) duty at fullback to complete the team. Captain “Spike” Collins, Anderson, Ivreizman, Long, and Berry went into action halfway before the end of the first quarter, and “Zev” Zawacki followed a short time later, but Har per, Woolbert, and Hesch, Lion stal warts who have played as regulars in almost every game this season, watch ed the entire game from the side*- lines. The contest was so much a Colgate triumph that there are few bouquets to toss to Lion players. Harry Sigel, sophomore halfback, celebrated his return to play after a two-weeks’ lay off to twice carry the ball for inr dividual gains of twenty-five and thirty-five yards, the latter run com ing as the return of one of Colgate’s punts. SPECIAL! The Barclay Shoe Styled by Neltlelon Formerly 56.50 Now, Silling All Shoes in Stock At . $3.90 C. S. DUTTON & CO. Montgomery’s Lions, 31-0 Lions Marooned Penn Stale Colgate 3 First Downs 2£ 66 Yards Gained Rushing 321 8 Passes Attempted 14 3 Passes Completed 8 1 Passes Intercepted by 1 23 Yards Gained ’ 116 ,?5 Yards Lost, Penalties 115 24 Average Punts 45 44 Return of Punts 2 NACIOS ’33 WINS FINAL' IN ALL-COLLEGE GOLF TOURNEY William A. Nacios ’33 won the all- College golf tournament, 6 and 4, from J. Richmond Ritenour ’34 in the final 'found played on the College course Saturday morning. Nacios ad vanced to the finals by defeating H. Lloyd Beyer jr. ’35 in.three up and two to play. Ritenour won his match from Rog er H. Hetzel '35/ 3 and 1 2, to play Nacios in ’the‘final round.' Page .Three KNEW BARBER SHOP HAIRCUTS 33c East Beaver Ave., Second Floor Across from I’ostoffiee Snjdcr, Proprietor DEAL & SON 4 Plumbing and Heating 117 South Frazier Street Tuxedos and Accessories For Houseparty It 'c Also Rent Tuxrdos Cleaning and Pressing GERNERD’S Ox Allen Street HEV GEOR6E, | 'FAST •> ME? 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers