Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, September 07, 1934, Image 6

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    Page Six
Soccermen Lose Initial 5 Matches to Scots
Columbia, Syracuse, Penn, Bucknell Loom
As Biggest Hazards on 8-Game Grid Card
Columbia, Syracuse, Penn then
Buckncl). These are the highlights
of the eight game reason that Coach
Bob Higgins and his Blue and White
gridders start pointing towards when
full practice starts on new Beaver
Field, Monday afternoon.
Sage sports writers, mumbling in
their beards, predict the Columbia
game as the toughest of the season.
The team that smashed its way
through Southern California at the
ifAis
-COLONIAL
HSW. NITTANY AVE.
States FiaestCtubJiesidence
FRATERNITY and
PERSONAL
STATIONERY
CHAPTER PAPERS
STATEMENTS
INVITATIONS
PROGRAMS
NITTANY PRINTING
AND
PUBLISHING CO.
BLANKETS. LINENS
WELCOME FRESHMEN
EGOLF’S
DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS
LINGERIE HOSIERY
AN IDEAL PLACE TO STOP OVER NIGHT
WEEK-END OR PERMANENTLY
PENN STATE HOTEL
EAST COLLEGE AVENUE
Desirable Rooms annd Excellent Board for Students at Moderate Rates
LIVE HERE AS YOU LIVE AT HOME
Phone 964
HORSEBACK RIDING
SPECIAL TICKETS ON EASY TERMS
31 an hour or a 12-hour ticket for $lO.
FREE INSTRUCTIONS MAKE RESERVATIONS
Rear of Hotel and Theatre—Phone 9799 Open Day and Night
CAMPUS SADDLE SCHOOL
WE GREET YOU
ONE OF THE NEW FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN SOPHOMORES
JUNIORS SENIORS
Many Have Model A Fords and V-B’s
UP-TO-DATE SERVICE AT
NITTANY MOTOR CO.
AUTHORIZED FORD SALES AND SERVICE
1000 West College Avc.
TTpltft T QQC—kt t STATE DINER offiSl
.JL X-4 Good Food 35c Lunches and Dinners 25c Special Platters
Rose Bowl on New Year’s day to
become National champions, will be
tough, tough meat for the Nittany
Lion to attempt to devour.
Bucknell Strong for Final
Bucknell, scheduled as the last
game of the season on November 24,
looms as a good hard second in op
ponent strength, while Penn and
Syracuse, following in that order aft
er the Columbia game October 27, will
furnish plenty of opposition to what,
promises to be an unusually fine Nit
tany team. The Lewisburg warriors
bavr’t faced Nittanymen on the grid-,
iron for several years. Penn’s bat
tlers tied the Blue and White squad'
(>-G in a heart-breaking game at
Philadelphia at the end of last sea
son. while Syracuse squeezed out a
12-G victory over Coach Higgins’ men
at Archbold stadium last year.
The 1934 season will open against
Lebanon Valley here October 6, with
the Nittanymen opposing an “opener”
team that was easily defeated last
year to the tune of 32-0. Gettysburg
comes to Beaver Field after a lapse
of two years for the second game
of the season on October 13.
To Meet Lehigh Oct. 20
The next week-end the Lion ag
gregation travels to Bethlehem where
they meet Lehigh on October 20. Last
year the Nittanymen ran through the
Brown and White eleven with almost
too great ease, 33-0. After the Le
high breather, October 27 will find
the Penn State gridders in New York
City, where they will meet Colum
bia University, while on Alumni Day,
November 3, the Lions will meet
Syracuse’s orange team on New Bea
ver field.
Last year’s tie will be fought out
on Franklin Field in Philadelphia
when the Higgins-coached eleven
meets Penn’s warriors November 10,
while Lafayette conies here to meet
the Nittanymn on New Baver Field
November 17, Pennsylvania Day. The
mass-migration of approximately
5000 Penn State students to Lewis
burg will mark the renewal of hos
tilities with the ancient Blue and
White neighbor, Bucknell, when the
Bison and the Mountain Lion clush
in the new Bucknell stadium to wind
up the season November 24.
Brains Behind Fall Sports Campaigns
CHICK WERNER
BILL JEFFREY
Intramural Sports Provide
Altletics For All Students
Fraternities, Clubs, Unit
In Wide Variety,
For the benefit of the majority of
students at Penn State, who are un
able to meet the requirements for var
sity competition, an extensive system
of intramural athletics has been .de
veloped by Hugh Bezdek, director of
athletics.
The program includes all sports
represented in intercollegiate com
petition, in addition to som neot in
cluded on varsity schedules. Frater
nities, clubs, and non-fraternity units
compete for honors in tournaments
which arc conducted in each sport.
The tourneys are directed by exper
ienced coaches and instructors and al
though it is not the primary purpose
of the plan, quite frequently valuable
material for varsity teams is discov
ered.
Fraternities Cooperate
During the past year the frater
nities have cooperated in delaying the
dinner hour from 5:30 o'clock until 6
o’clock, and the majority of classes
have been eliminated from between 4
and 5 o’clock in the afternoon. These
two improvements have made possible
a full itwo-hour period for recreation
and ‘all-students athletics. -
•The increased participation .of stu
dents shows evidence that intramural
-athletics at the College is growing
steadily in importance. %
Forty-eight teams took part in the
mushbal-1 tournament, while indivi
dual champions .were crowned in the
boxing and wrestling competition. In
addition to the major sports, intra-
QUALITY
SHOE REPAIRING
J. B. MINGLE
116 S. Frazier Street
HANN’S
WATCH SHOP
now located at
120 E. College Ave.
EXPERT WATCH AND
JEWELRY REPAIRING
WATCH ATTACHMENTS
THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN
*'v .
* COAChBoB tJIGGINS. <>
When .the Mon Soccermcn stack
up against iheir oponents, when the
Nittany Griddcrs tear through a
hole for twenty yards, when State
emerges victorious from a cross-
country race, these three. men,
above, will .be the ‘brains on the
bench’ behind the tactics of the
teams. Shown here are Bill Jeffries,
soccer mentor, Bob Higgins, head
football coach, and Chick Werner,
its Compete For Honors
of Touriiaments
mural handball'and volleyball were
conducted during the winter season.
More than sixty students participated
in the forjner tourney, ' while three
times, as many entered the later com
petition.* i
Sports conducted during the spring,
season included ' horseshoes, tennis,
golf, soccer, track, and lacrosse.
Football; for those desirous of learn
ing the fundamentals of the game,
was-featured during the spring com
petition.
At student sports council is selected
each year to control the intramural
athletic affairs of the College. A
general manager is named by this
group, as well as separate managers
for each of the .three seasonal divi
sions. The manager for each season
assumes responsibility for the sports
conducted, during that season.
•Earn as Much as Possible, Then Borrow
Balance for Education-Alumni Advise
■ A judicious combination of earn
ing as much; as possible and borrow
ing the rest is the advice offered by
prominent Penn State alumni to stu
dents who do not have sufficient
funds to go through college.
Twenty of the list of outstanding
graduates who answered a Collegian
questionnaire believe that a combina
tion of the two is the best method.
Ten advise working to earn all of the
necessary funds.
Only two alumni think that the
needy student should borrow all of
the money needed .to finance his years
in college, while four indicate that it
is more desirable' to stay out long
enough to earn sufficient money to
go through all or several years of
college. Five say that working out
of'.college a year or two and then
.earning money while attending col
lege is the best, while eight believe
that the three methods should be com
bined.
Of the fifty-two alumni who an
swered the questionnaire, thirty-three
earned part of their college expenses,
eight earned all of the necessary
.funds, while eleven did not earn any
of the money needed . for their ex
penses. Of those who worked, ten
earned the money during-the regular
college session, eight during the sum
mer, and twenty-one .during both -the
regular session and :the summer.
First U. S. Team to
14 Lions on Trip; Drop 4
Games by Narrow Margins
Nittanymen To Play One More Match; Will
Return To Enter College Sept. 19
With the distinction of being the
first American collegiate soccer team
to ever tour in Scotland, the Penn
State hooters are now completing a
scries of six games in that eounLry.
The team is meeting, six of the
leading amateur clubs of Scotland;
most .of the players are members of
the last year’s championship team,
although one is a graduate. The
team sailed from New York on the
steamer “Caledonia,” August 11, and
will return before school starts here
on the 19th.
At the present time five of the
games have been played, with the
home team losing all of them by nar-:
row margins. It lost the first game
with the Leith Amatures, G—l; - the
second with the Galashiels'Fairydean;
Club, 7-12; the third with the In
verness Caledonians, 10-G, the fourth
with the Elgin City Club, 5-1, and
fifth with the Falkirk Amateurs, 10-1.
Coach Jeffery-has picked the fol
lowing men to represent Penn State
in the series:
Don Masters, John ~E. ..Binns and
A 1 Daykin, all of Philadelphia; Day
kin was captain and an all-American
selection in 1932. Benjamin Palmer,
Swathmore; Frank Osterlund, Nor-
Athletic Teams Gain
Win Average of .658
Athletic teams at Penn State last
year turned a total win-lose percent
age of .058. This is a total of the
individual averages of the various
teams; out of the eighty contests
which were held, the State teams
turned in victories for 'fifty-one of
them, lost 27 and tied two others.
Of the thirteen varsity teams re
corded, the soccer men turned in the
best performance with a clean slate
of six victories, no Lies and no losses,
winding up the season to tic Penn
for the Eastern Intercollegiate cham
pionship. Only one other perfect rec
ord was .reported—that ‘of the gym
team in winning its only contest.
The golf team, with its six victories
and one defeat, turned in the next best
record. Its percentage was .857. Oth
er excellent. performances were reg
istered by. the wrestling and basket
ball teams, both with .750 averages.
The wrestling team lost one and tied
one of its five contests, while the
dribblers only lost four of their six
teen engagements.
The track and lacrosse teams each
won two-thirds of their contests, and
the baseball team turned in a per
centage of .538. Teams that turned
in a straight 1500 rating were fenc- i
ing, tennis, cross-country and foot
ball. The football team last year won
three games, lost three games and
tied the final game with Penn G to G.
The only team that lost more games
than it won was the boxing team with
two, victories and four defeats.
Altogether there are thirteen var
sity sports on this campus. The Fall
sports arc football, soccer and cross
country; Winter sports are basket
ball, boxing, wrestling,- gym, and
fencing, while Spring sports are base
ball, track, lacrosse, tennis and golf.
The concensus- of alumni opinion as
indicated by additional comments
seems to be that students should work
part time only, borrowing some mon
ey toward the end of their junior or
senior years, and then not too much.
Preferably one year and not more
than two years is cited as the maxi
mum time that a student should stay
out of college to earn money for his
expenses.
“A man does not get full benefit of
his college course when all his time
is devoted to earning his way
through,” one alumnus says. “There
fore, a man should get together thir
ty or forty percent of his college ex
penses and then earn the rest as lie
goes through.”
“My advice to students would be,
don’t borrow too much',” adds anoth
er alumnus. “I should fix $l,OOO as
the maximum. And by all means:
borrow under the proper business!
terms—pay interest, protect yourself I
with insurance and pay back a stipu-j
latcd amount yearly after graduation.
Otherwise your borrowing will be
come a nightmare to you.”
FOR RENT—Rooms at $2 and $2,50,
611 Pugh street, Phone 181-W
WANTED —A girl to work for
Board. Phone 246-M. 2t
WANTED—‘Carriers to deliver Col-j
legian, Apply at Room 313. Old!
Main, j
wood; Osterlund is now in Portugal
and will join the team in Glasgow.
Richard A. Sigel, Narberth; Rob
ert W. Dallas, North Wales; F. Mar
pie Ambler, Langhorne; Joe ‘Bie
licki, Bethlehem. Jack Fletcher, of
State College,-captain of the team for
next fall; Woodrow Carman, llu
blersburg; Edwin G. Long, Pitts
burgh.
Edward G. Finzel, Frostburg, Md.;
William McEwan, South Hadley,
Mass.; McEwan is a brother of John
McEwan, captain and .star of the
Syracuse University team last fall.
William H. Nicholson .of Wilkes-Bar-
re, varsity manager for next fall,
is accompanying the : group in the
capacity of manager.
Morrison Will Lead
Lion Football Team
Merrill (Barrel) Morrison will
lead the Lion eleven this year. Morri
son, a senior, has held down one of
|lh half-back posts for the past two
years and has been a constant threat
tc all opponents because of his speed,
shiftiness and ability at open field
running. He is extremely light for-a'
football man, weighing only 155
pounds.
Jack Fletcher will act as captain of
the soccer team which is away now
England. Fletcher plays full-back
this fall. Fletcher plays
and weighs over 180 pounds. He is
noted for his ability to- break up an
opponent’s thrust at the State goal.
George Harvey will lead the.cross
country team in their jaunts over hill
and dnle this year. This diminutive
harrier is also captain of the var
sity track team, making him the only
person to serve as captain of two
sports here this year.
Leaders of the other varsity sport
teams for the coming year, are: John
ny Stocker, captain of the basketball
team; Howard Johnston, captain of
the wrestling.team; and Mike Zelez
noek, captain of the boxing team. 1
Both Johnston and Zelznock wei*e in
tercollegiate champions in their re
spective. sports. .Jast,..yeaiv-JHggy.”
Webber'will be the leader of the la
crosse team.
Leaders of the minor varsity' sports
are Nelson Green,, captain of tennis;
Don Masters, captain of the gym
team, and Johnny Kreidcr, captain of
fencing. Two men-were selected to
act as captains of the golf team:
“Chick” Beyer and Tommy Marshall.
Foresters Spend Year _
At Mont Alto Branch
Approximately eighty freshmen en
rolled in forestry will. spend their
first year and the following summer
at Mont Alto, a branch of the Penn
State school, where there, are excel-,
lent physical facilities for, training
along practical lines.
First-year men at Mont Alto’ have
the same customs as those at State
College. They also organize ,’their
own sports, activities, and clubs.
Welcome
Freshmen!
We congratulate you on your wise choice
of Penn State as your Alma Mater. We are
sure your career here will fulfill your great
est expectations.
This store is ready with the newest in Fall
fashions—at popular prices.
+
SEE US FOR YOUR R. 0. T. C. SHOES
THE HUB
DEPARTMENT store
East College Avc. Near East Gate
Friday, September 7, 1934
r ake Tour
Presbyterians Have
Majority of Students
Enrolled Here in ’33
Totaling 857, Presbytreian students
enrolled at the College last year num
bered one-fifth of the-student body,
according to the religious classifica
tion announcement by William S.
Hoffman, College registrar.
Methodists ranked second with .674
and 552 were listed as Roman Catho
lics. Lutheran ranked next, followed
by Reformists, Hebrews, and Protes
tant Episcopal.- •
Twenty-seven differentn creeds
were named on the list, including
nearly all 'of the known Christian
faiths. 122 failed to specify their
preference, while 173 failed to cite
their creed; merely .indicating that
they were Protestants.
FOR RENT
Rooms—s 2. and $2.50
nllso. Furnished Apartment
611 Pugh Street—Phone JBl-W
When Stylish and
Sturdy Shoes
Go Hand in Hand for Your
College Needs at
BOTTORF BROS.
Shoe Store
YOUNG MEN
Prefer our Shoes for Style
Setters.
Priced Very Moderately
$3.95 to $6.00
MISS CO-ED
Prefers our Shoes for Cam
pus and Dress Wear.
$2.95 to $5.00
They are surely the last thing
in style
+ -t- +
i We Carry .a Complete
* Line of
Gym Shoes and
Bedroom Slippers
Also R.O.T.C. Shoes
BOTTORF
BROS. BOOTERY
STATE COLLEGE, PA.
Be sure and see this store.
Entrances on Beaver Ave.
and Allen St.