Page Four BIELICKI NAMED LEADER OF 1935 SOCCER SQUAD Joe Bielicki, regular inside left on the undefeated soccer aggregation of the past two seasons, was named to lead the 1935 squad, at a meeting of the lettermen Tuesday night at the home of Coach Bill Jeffrey. Bielicki, for the last two years, was picked by Coach Jeffrey for a spot on the latter's All-American squad. Bielicki was high scorer for the Lions last year, tallying six points, and was second to Bill McEwan this year. A total of 827 living chemists have had training in chemistry and chem ical engineering at the Pennsylvania State College. CAthaum '.•AWarntr6f.oUiwsThcjtto ]1:30 and 3:00 Matinees at Evenings at . . . 6:30 and 8:30 A Complete show as late as 9:10 WHAT A LINE OF GOODS HE SOLD HER . . . AND THEN SHE SOLD HIM OUT! . . . The great laugh star of “20 Million Sweethearts" and “Here Comes the Navy” as God's Gift-of-gab to women in riotious expose of high-pressure salesmanship-^ PAT O’BRIEN ANN DVORAK CLAIRE DODD “I Sell Anything” N ITT ANY l ''j.ijUWirperjßro*. Tfttitrt ' '. 6:30 and 8:30 Evenings at Sylvia fidney BEHOLD m WIVE!" ...GENE RAYMOND H.B.WARKER.IAURA HOPE CREWS' MONROE OWSLEY ATTENTION STUDENTS Special Weekly Board Rates — Start Saving After Xmas Vacation THE GREEN ROOM CONVENIENTLY LOCATED AT COLLEGE AND PUGH Complete Winter Sports Calendar Sport Varsity basketball December 29 Varsity basketball Rutgers New Brunswick January 2 Varsity basketball Wheaton January 5 Varsity basketball Penn January 9 Varsity basketball Temple January 12 Varsity basketball Juniata Interclass wrestling finals Varsity basketball Western Maryland At Home January 19 Varsity basketball W. and J. Varsity boxing Cornell January 20 Intramural boxing finals ‘ Varsity basketball Varsity boxing Varsity wrestling * Freshmen wrestling Inter-class boxing finals Varsity basketball Varsity basketball Army At Home Varsity boxing Maryland College Park Varsity wrestling Columbia At Home Freshman basketball Brown Prep At Home February 13 Varsity basketball St. Thomas February 16 ‘ Varsity basketball Navy Annapolis Varsity boxing ( Navy Annapolis Varsity wrestling Cornell Ithaca Freshman basketball Wyoming Seminary At Home Gym Panzer At Home February 22 Varsity basketball Carnegie Tech At Homo Freshman basketball Carnegie Tech Pittsburgh [Varsity boxing Syracuse At Home ■Varsity wrestling Lehigh At Home Freshman wrestling Wyoming Seminary At Home Freshman basketball Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Gym Army West Point Fencing Syracuse At Home March I Varsity basketball Colgate .. Hamilton Freshmen basketball Bucknell At Home March 2 Varsity basketball Syracuse Syracuse Varsity boxing Western Maryland At Home Varsity wrestling Syracuse ' Syracuse Fencing - Cornell . Ithaca Varsity basketball Pittsburgh At Home Varityp boxing Army j West Point Varsity wi-cstling Navy ( ' At Home Freshman basketball Dickinson Seminary ' At Home Freshman boxing . Army West Point Fencing. Rutgers ‘ At Home' Boxing Intorcollegiates Wrestling Intercollegiatcs Fencing Boxing Intercollegiatcs Wrestling Intercollegiatcs Fencing Penn New Methods Employed in Adaptive Gym Work Are Proving Beneficial, Walke Says Prof. Nelson 3. Walke, freshman football coach, was sitting in his of fice thumbing through the record cards of his classes in physical edu cation 10, an adaptive gym course for students physically unable to take re quired gym work. “Gain in weight since September— Opponent December 14 Ithaca January 16 January 26 Susquehanna At Home Miami At Home Miami At Home Mercersburg At Home February 1 February 6 Bueknell February 9 February 23 March' 15 Philadelphia John Hopkins (pending) Baltimore March 16 eleven pounds,” the line on the card where his finger pointed read. “You know,” he said, “I get a big ger kick out of reading that than from coaching a team to win any football game. This is rc*l work.” The man to whose record he had referred is one of the sixty-nine in the two classes which meet twice a week with additional special work for severe cases. He is twenty-one years old and has had paralysis of both legs for fifteen years. “Before coming to State, this boy had never participated in any activ ity. The weight he has added was due largely to swimming and special exercises,” Professor Walke explain ed. “His activity enables ,hinj to as similate his food better. He seenis to be in a better frame of mind, too.” Although this is by far the largest class since adaptive physical educa tion classes were organized here, Professor Walke is handling all the work himself and senior physical- ed ucation students do not have charge of classes as in former years. * Students recovering from opera tions are transferred from their reg ular gym classes to the class where they are given special exercises to strengthen the-weak part without in juring it. The special exercises taught the students include passive ones in which the subject allows Professor" Walke to move the weak limb; resistive ex ercises in which the student tries to prevent the' instructor from moving his limb; assistive ones in which the patient puts forth a slight amount of effort to aid the instructor to move his body; and regular active exercise which the student engages' in him self. While most of the students in the' classes are suffering from limb dis abilities, there arc ten cardiac cases or mild heart ailments. Games played include ping-pong, shuffle board, and volley ball. As a new policy this year, Dr. Jos eph P. Ritenour, College physician, examines each member of the classes once each month and makes a report of his progress. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Speidel Pupils Grapple With New Mat Lexicon At Home By VANCE PACKARD “What’ll we call this one?” wrest ling coach Charlie Speidel queried. Capt. Johnston and Paul Civitts, ex hibits A and B, lay in a tangled heap at his feet. : At Home Philadelphia Learning wrestling holds this year is not a mere process of memorizing complicated, and apparently non-sen sical labels. “We’ll make them up as we go along. And if we don’t like the handles that we gave them last year, then we’ll change them.” Maybe this explains the past suc cess of Charlie’s grapplers. He doesn’t teach according to a set formula. Like a master cook, he combines his own ingredients as he goes along, and the resulting dish is unique but very tasty. At Home At Home At Home At Home Ithaca • \ To the average observer, it all ap pears very haphazard. Then Red Johnston slips . into another hold. “Last year we called it a cross-body clamp. What’ll it be this year?” Someone volunteers “A bar-arm pry.” The coach grinned, said “0.K.” and wrote it on the near-by black-board. “Now grab, a partner and practice it until you have'it perfectly. And don’t forget, that’s it label -for the rest of the year.” ‘ However, Charlie believes that it is too early in'the year to worry about specific holds yet. Now he is stressing fundamentals; not necessarily the basic holds, but the indispensibles, such as balance, feigning, how to stay on ones feet, leg-dives, sit-outs, and above all, endurance. At Home At Home At Home At Home The daily program is very simple. Immediately t after getting in their uniforms the grapplers run out to the College barns and back, even in zero weather . . . following this, the rope climbing, rope-skipping, and limber ing-up exercises. Until Charlie shows up they play about on the mat, prac ticing the holds they learned the night before. * Soon Charlie descends upon the group, clad in his uniform, shouts jubilant greetings, and then picks a scrap with the nearest husky within reach. Maybe it’s Captain ‘Red.’ After rolling around for a few minutes and making the 165 pound Intercollegiate champion look very helpless, he leaps to his feet, clap his hands, and in ah amazingly, short time has his seventy NEW INTERSECTIONAL . SPORTS CARD PLANNED Innaugurating 'a new' program of intersectional competition* in fresh men physical education' classes this semester, "this department of physical education' completed -its^fall 1 tourna ment in Rugby recently and will begin a more comprehensive line of activity this winter rin handball, basketball, and volleyball, which will include both freshmen'atfd' sophomores. Each of the sections in' the'fresh-; man division’ entered teams in the tournament,"which was run off out side of class. The winning team was section eight, better known on the field as the'“Sleepers.” Members of the team are: Maxwell Derby ’3B, captain, William A. Balsley '3B, Alvin E. Di Ilio ’3B, Bruce E. Draw baugh jr. ’3B, Charles G. Ehly ’3B, Carl J. Fisher ’3B, Edward G. Foehr ’3B, Earl M. Fry ’3B, James A. Har sanyi ’3B, Samuel Hettinger '3B, Lawrence M. McClure ’38,-John A. McLaughlin'’3B, William Whitehead ’3B, and Harry R. Ulrich two year student. Philadelphia Philadelphia As the idea has proved successful, a spring program of baseball and speedball will be launched. After a year’s trial, the program will be con sidered by the department for having a permanent place in the physical education course. Sackett Gives Report Dean Robert L. Sackett, of the School of Engineering, will present a report dealing with athletic parti cipation of transfer students, from junior colleges to the Council of the National Collegiate Athletic associa tion in New' York on December 27. Dean Sackett is vice president of the second district. » Dunaway Will Preside Dr. Wayland F. Dunaway, of the history department will serve as chair man of a joint meeting of the Ameri can Historical association of the May flower Hotel in Washington, D. C., December 27, 28, 29. Dr. James E. Gillespie and Dr. Francis J. Tschan, also of the >history department, are other faculty members who plan to attend the Washington convention. “GO WEST YOUNG MAN” > ■ + And in Going West STOP at the .. PENN WAY . TEA ROOM MUNDY’S CORNER matmen writhing under his notorious setting-up exercises. After this onslaught, the boys are given a breather while Charlie de livers the above-mentioned black board talk where they formulate and compose their holds. When the wrest lers are almost breathing normally again, he makes them rehearse what they have just learned. What happens from this point on varies each night. Sometimes they fool around for tl.e rest of,the time; more often, they have individual bouts of four to six minutes each; where the one partner gets on' top and rides awhile, and then gets underneath and tries to get out, while the other rides . . . then to the showers. A Man To Watch LOU GROWER only three-letter man at Rutgers who will probably be in the start ing line-up when the Lions meet the Red Roosters in New Bruns wick on December 29. Grower, who is a senior this- year,- was_ high scoring guard and forward for the past two years, as well as an out standing guard on the football team. He also hurls the weights - for the track team. rpc& WILL OPEN ? lICOIiRT/CARD) HERE (Continued from page one) probably, see action, as will Francis Strapp,- veteran forward. ' Marty Thompson, forward, and Bill Kozu sko,-center, are also expected to mix in the fray. The Red Roosters boast two non lettermen features—Al Chizmadia and Tom Rooney. Chizmadia .won numerals as a guard three years ago and returned' to the squad for the first time this year. He starred at half back and quarterback on the football ‘ team, is’ an outfielder on the Scarlet nine. Rooney is a center; a numeral winner two years ago, he plays third base on the Rutgers ‘ nine. This year's heavy seventeen-game schedule is a real ordeal for the court men. They will have played seven games before any of the other major winter sports teams open their sea sons. On Wednesday night, January 2, the day College re-opens, the Li ons will encounter Wheaton [College in Rec hall: On January 5 they will travel to the Quaker City and attempt to break their jinx against- Penn. .The Temple" Owls will be up ,here to test the mettle of the 'Lesliemen on January D, the .first of a series of eight home games in it row! On January 12 .they' are scheduled to meet Juniata, .while‘Western Mary land will be here on the 16th. SHe-Lions Scoring 38 points to the '37 team’s 15 points, the freshmen -tallied an overwhelming victory ini the swim ming meet at the Glcnnland pool last Tuesday. They took seven first places out of the ten events. In the events which were judged for form, the first places went to Dot Warr '3B, side stroke; Rita Alstadt ’37, elementary back stroke; Claudia Bodes '3B, breast stroke; Marion Bar bey '37, crawl. The winners of the speed events were Garnet Salberg '3B, frec-style; Hannah Judd '3B, back back crawl; Ruth Edgar '3B, crawl; Heartiest Season’s Greetings, and Best Wishes for a Happy - '■Vf' Christmas Vacation K. & M. MARKET For Students and Faculty Rail Fares Reduced tj -v. The railroads appreciate the' enthusiastic responses of students and faculty to thci‘‘College Special’’ fares .which combine econ omy with the great-advantages of rail travel—safety, speed, com fort and convenience. , If you bought one of the reduced fare round-trip tickets when • you came to school this Fall, the coupon is good returning home between December 10 and 25. When coming back after, the Holiday, be sure to take advantage of this one and one-third fare ticket, the purchase date for which has been extended to January - 16. Diagram below shows going and return dates. . COING TO SCHOOL • RETURNING FROM SCHOOL Round-trip ticket may be Return portion of ticket may bo used to Homo Sta purckaeed at Homo Sta- tlon during any one of the period* named belowi tion durln, any or.. oF Spring Cl™ - tho periods named below: • 1934 1935 1935- • ■ - Dec. 10-2 S Mar..9-Apr« 20 May 15-June3o Dec. 25,1934-Jan. 16,1935 ' Mar.9-Apr.2o MaylS-Juii'o3o . Mar. IS-Apr. 23,1935 May IS-June 30 - Going trip must begin on date ticket is purchased—-limited to reach school station within ten days. Kctum trip must .begin on. date of validation of ticket by railroad agent at school station— , limited to reach home station within ten days. Tickets good over same route both ways. Stop-overs will be allowed in each direction. - Tickets good in coaches, also in Pullman cars, upon payment of regular Pullman charges. Baggage will be checked under the usual , regulations. No certificate or other form of identification necessary. .-.- 9 ■■ : r T R A V EL BYT RAI N Assuring your comfort with speed - ’ •;'' Your convenience with safety. CENTRAL PASSENGER AND TRUNK LINE ASSOCIATION RAILROADS Friday, December 14, 1934 Loii: Sutton ’3B, breast. stroke. ’ : Ruth Lee ’37 was the unquestioned victor in the diving, contest, and the ’3B relay team won the last event. ''*** 'As the last games of the intra mural? basketball season were played on Monday, the Downtown Girls de feated .Mac hall 16-to-6, and Kappa Kappa Gamma overwhelmed Alpha Chi Omega 4040-2. Women's build ing forfeited to Delta Gamma; Phi Mu to Gamma Phi Beta; and Grange Dorm to Alpha Omicron Pi. • The Rockefeller Foundation has re cently granted McGill University a gift- of $1,000,000 for. the foundation of a department of neurology. Season’s Greetings HILLSIDE ICE and COAL CO. Dealers in High Grade Coal and Clear Sparkling Ice
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers