Page Four Much Room in Texas Texas could provide about 3,604 square feet for each person In the Evenings at . . . 6:30 and 8:30 Last complete.show at . . 9:10 TODAY ONLY It's a Return Engagement! so NEW it's a SATURDAY' ONLY -1 ' hiiiiiiiiiii i f.'' 64 4 ;72cd0i, 1 „ Miff '- 1111 .v 41 AGL moot with DILL BOYD' 1 Women in Sports I By REGINA RYAN HOCKEY The junior women loom forth as "the" players in the series of hockey games now being played off on Holmes field. Rather lute warm in their game with the seniors earlier in the season, the juniors won by a 5-to- , 1 score. Next trouncing the sophomores by a 6-to-3 score, the '37 women gradually warm ed up and started on their way. Then the freshman women appear ed on the scene ready for battle—and it was a battle royal. Both teams finished the game panting and each side had scored exactly 3 points. Tie! Everyone waited for the return game and Wednesday our first-year women did their best, but they had met their waterloo, and the juniors chalked up 3 hard-earned points to the zero the freshmen received for their efforts. Regardless, the '39 girls have a mighty fine team. When the Army and Navy teams are picked for the championship game after Thanksgiving, we expect to find it made up almost completely of first year and junior women. This is an old custom of picking the best women hockey players from all classes. MANAGERS Mary Lou Clippinger has been elect ed head basketball manager for the coming season, with Dot Schumaker as junior assistant. Helen Kummer was elected senior class manager; Betty Ebright, junior class manager; and Dot Elliston, sophomore class manager. Women's Debate Team Selected at Try , outs At the final- try-out• meeting held Wednesday evening, the following women were selected for the women's varsity debating. team: Dorothy J. Ely '36, Mavis V. Baker '37, Helen M. Chamberlain '37, Jean E. Kemp '37, Lucille D. Hayes '3B, and Ruth H. Zang '3B. Freshman women selected for the squad are: Eleanor B. Acker, Nancy Baldwin; Evelyn L. Boger, Vivian S. Doty, Anita E. Davidson, Juli Crass, Lucille B. Greenberg, Elizabeth J. Keener, Ruth V. Koch, Cecile G. Metz, Mary E. Pugh, Naomi G. Pugh, Eliza beth M. Reyburn, Joan Sperling, Mar garet A. Stephenson, Norva T. Thom as, Ann Very, Margaret A. Wentzel, and Julia Zubroff. :' , '. , ..g : <.'i.' , : - :V . ::.:'; , : - -:::i:iQ:'',.:.:',1:'1,• -, ' . .,i' ,l l:Zt ... ;' i :i,;::V . ..','"'"' .:.te.:i':.,::67i.i:...;.!..t.::: o CoAct Bad /-1/GGiivs, Higgins To Head Coaches Meeting Sutherland, Harman, Bierman To Speak at Philadelphia Meeting Friday. Bob Higgins, head football coach, will preside at the annual meeting of the Second . District of the National Football Coaches Association to be held at the Bellevue-Stratford hotel in Philadelphia next Friday afternoon and evening. The Lion mentor is chairman of the committee which planned this year's affair.. The other members of this Committee arc "Jock" Sutherhind, Pittsburgh coach, and Harvey Har man, University of Pennsylvania leader. ' At least nine nationally known foot ball 'coaches and sports writers will address the gathering, which will in clude from 100 to 200 coaches. The meeting is being held at this time be cause of the Army-Navy game the following day. The featured speaker of the confer ence will be Bernie Bierman, coach of the powerful Minnesota team, and president of the National Associa tion. The Second District includes colleges from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. The speakers, with their topics, in clude: Perry Lewis, Philadelphia sports writer, "Football from the Press Boa;" Sy Pausis, University of Pennsylvania end coach, "End Play;" Walter.Okeson, commissioner of foot ' ball officials of 'the Eastern •Inter collegiate Athletic Conference,' "The Placing of Officials." Other speakers are: . Carl Snavely, University of North Carolina coach, "Football in the South;" A. W. Palm er, well-known official, "A Discussion of Rules;" Elmer Leyden, Notre Dame mentor, "The. Forward Pass;" Chester Smith, sports editor• of the Pittsburgh Press, "High Spots of the 1935 Football *Season;" and Suther land on "The Off-Tackle Play." . Stet/J(74 , tr , t y . ......,, YOUNG MAN OF' , "' .4 "'":. -" F ~,,,,,,,,,,;;•: • .-,' THE MOUNTAINS 11 1 -''','O'k 4 ":`'-' '', "7 11 ..'::-.;.,,,.., Stetson presents a mode sug- 4 - 4 4' ,"• ; . . gested by the gay and rakish ~..02,..:, ''' ~ headgear of the Alpine guide. i ,::„...- :-,..- v L You'll like it I You don't have ''-:- .‘ .44 ; :":: ~ to yodel when you wear it— ~‘, ' ~.' 'ik / .......,,` but you may feel Tike doing i'.'''.k . '' so From sheer exuberance and C , IP . \.' ....."- , s ,A . -' 1 1 1 - 1 high spirits. That's the kind of C . . '-' a hat it is i '6 s ° L''''' • ' ..zi l Ai 4,00 . 1 "the largest non-frat affair of the season" Varsity Hall Dance with Bill Bottorrs /Music VARSITY HALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22 75c per couple 9-12 THE PENN.STATE COLLEGIAN Between The Lions -By wALT FREUNSCII Well, anyway, thank Cod for the soccer team. When all else in the Penn State athletic picture is obscured and foggy, this one aggregation stands out like a beacon of hope, shinning and. glam orous. Just one fly in the ointment, if you don't mind mixed figures; two flies, in fact: No. the -world in — general and-the metropolitan press in particu lar have . failed to apprecite this fine' bunch,. and the Penn-dominated asso-I elation that State is in has always be-, littled her every' effort to gain recognition. No. 2, the local stu-1 dent body is bo-, vinely indiffer-1 ent to this sport. True, they may , brag. a bit at' home when all other conversa-1 tional s.t an d bys have been exhausted, but' their support Walt Freunsch otherwise is sad - . missing. The gainei,en New Beaver field this year had better crowds than last year, but even so, the contests deserved much more patronage than they got. The game has action, it calls for head work, it is one sport' that emphasizes cooperation above flashy individual ism, and it is simple to understand; at. least it- has none of the haffling technicalities of a sport like baseball that evoke' those horribly dumb ques tions froml.thC , feminine spectators. • The team'. next Year should also be a championship outfit, and take it from your Uncle Ned, you are all a bunch of panty-waists if you don't get - around and watch an expertly coached machine do things with a soc cer ball that - YOU might expect only a Houdini or-a George Morris to do. The writer of this pillar is in no position to • discuss the debacle on Franklin. Field last week,'having been a thousand miles away from the scene of the slaughter. If you want a ra tionalization,' you might dope it out that a team With Penn's potentialities just couldn't keep on losing all their games, and We had to hit them on tiie day they foOnd themselves. Penn did n't even give the rooters the chance of calling the affair a moral victory, it being a, royal pasting such as we haven't had 'since Columbia hammer ed us, 334,4319,'tw0 years ago. Maybe it's just ad; (veil; these so-called mor al victories too often stand for. some thing desirable desirable in the eyes of players and fans, when as m matter of fact they don't ainount to a tinker's dam. The game tomorrow will make or break the season. If State loses— and why, be so optimistic as to be lieve that impossible'.'—then the wri ter retraets,a . former statement and concludes that the season will have keen a Ilop,'no less. If State wins, it will be the first time since the twenties that the team' has won five games. The record shows that the teams have even lost as high as five games . a year in .scholarship days, so five victories this year would definitely stamp it a successful sea son. Bucknell can't be under-rated. They have a backfield and two ends that are peachy, as Stoopnagle would say. Their reserve strength is'not so stur dy, and in this may lie the outcome of the 'game. Predictions aren't our forte, but we see State smacking the Herd for a fitting finale to the sea son. Just let the team play as it did against Villanova And the line remem ber that-it has a reputation to regain, and we look for buffalo meat all over the plains of Central Pennsylvania. Stuhldreher is being talked of as a successor to gob Higgins. If the ath letic powers here want to swap horses in the middle of a stream, it's hard to believe that they plan to pick a crowbait for the job. Moreover, as long as Higgins has brought the team hi 'the halfway point, he ought to be given the chance to see if he is going to advance his burden further. This season has shown that Penn State football can be something about which the alumni can again be' proud; now we await the next five years as it test of whether the upswing is only tem porary or destined to lie a permanent trend. Elsewhere in this issue is a-study of the intercollegiate cross-country drama in which Penn State played an off-stage voice. The writer knows a few of the harriers, as they are called by the fun-loving reporters, and he hopes that the terminology isn't apro pos. But how else can one explain such a startling reversal 'of form? Maybe Chick was right after all. Thompson To Lecture To. Engineers on Law Senator Edward J. Thompson of Philipsburg will address the weekly senior engineering convocation , this afternoon at 4:10 in the Chemistry Amphitheatre. His' subject will be "How the Legislature Works." Senator Thompson, who is thor oughly familiar with the procedure in the enactment of legislation in the Commonwealth, will give an intimate view of the machinery employed in the preparation, debates, and passing, of legislation. Each week, engineers who are to graduate in June are entertained by a guest speaker who is well known' in his particular field. The. last speaker was M. Ward Fleming, 'president judge of the Centre County Court of Common Pleas. • , CLASSIFIED BALLROOM DANCING ,INSTRIIC- • TlON—lndividual social dancing instruction. For appointment call 7794 or see.,Mary Hanraban, Fyc Apts., 200 West College avenue. WANTED—Ride to Chicago or Rock ford over Thanksgiving vacation, leaving anytime after Tuesday noon. Phone Joseph 'Corriols, 83-2tpdRWOO FOR SALE—TD Ford roadster. Sec Obie, Delta Chi, 175. lt-Co.WBS WANTED—Round trip ride to New York City in sedan over Thanks giving vacation. Phone Kaye 613. It Co. PAS FOR RENT—Very nice double rOom with • single leds located cloSe to campus. Board if desired. Phone 625 R or call at 129 S. Frazier. 92-ItpdGD WANTED—Two rides to Scranton or vicinity for Thanksgiving. Call Dick or Bob at 740. J. S9-ItodOD WANTED RIDES—For two to Pitts burgh, Youngstown or that vicinity, November 26th or, 27th. Phone. Joe Sherman, 447-J. 4t lti. R.A. WANTED—Ride to York or Harris- burg Tubsday afternoon or evening, November 26. Call Stambaugh, Watts llall, Room 119. 8 l-lt MGD LOST—Brown , leather pencil pouch, two keys and fountain pen. If found please phone Evelyn Beck 783. 86-1 t pd GD LOST—Pair of rimless glasses in a black ease. If found please return to Student Union office. 87-ItpdGD LOST—inGlennland pool locker room, white , gold Hamilton watch. If found please Phone 894. Reward. 90-It pd GD WANTED—Young man to share stu dent's room. Good board if desired. Phone 1507-R or cell at 512 W. Col lege avenue. 01-3 t pdJCP LOST-‘Vide gold bracelet. Half studded with small diamonds; Fri day night of houseparty. Phone Al pha Omicron Pi. lt. Mi. R.A Plumbing and Heating Phone 1066 808 TAYLOR Campus Bulletin Registration opens for the pool and billiard tournament at the Student Union office. Competition will begin after Thanksgiving. Tickets for General Smedley D. Butler's talk may be purchased at the Student Union office. Harvest Ball Tickets may• he pur chased at the Student Union office. Varsity Hall dance tickets may be purchased at the Student Union of fice. Hazleton Mountaineer .Club will meet in room 407, Old Main, at 7 o'clock. The regular Friday Evening Fel lowship of the Hillel Foundation will be held in room 905, .Old Main, to night at 7 o'clock. Dean A. R. War nock will speak on "Problems of the Jewish Student on the, Campus." SUNDAY There will be a Hillel Social at the 'Phi Sigma Delta house on Sunday night, November 24, from 7:00 to 10:00 o'clock. Skits, entertainment, and music for dancing will be pre sented. A Thanksgiving vesper service, un der• the auspices of the Christian As sociation, will be held in the Hugh Beaver room, Old Main, at 2:20 o'clock. MONDAY The third meeting of the course in Horticultural Show. Planning will be held in room 104, Horticultural build ing at 7 o'clock. Student Union Board will meet in room 305, Old Main, at 7 o'clock. Miss Dorothy Quiggle, of the chem 7 istry department, will, speak on "Pc trolium" at a meeting of the Gradu ate Women's Scientific Society in room 318, Old Main, at 7 o'clock. - MISCELLANEOUS Seniors in education who have, re cently returned from practice teach ing in Altoona and Johnstown, should report their local State. College ad- • dress to the Registrar's office im mediately. Wednesday is the last day 'for.sen iors to have their LuVie pictures talc:-, en, according to an announcement, made by James H. Armstrong '36 Editor-in-Chief of the La A Student Union Christmas danCe will be held Friday, December 1. No stags will be admitted. • Telephone 590 Clark Motor CO'. 120 S. Pugh St. Stale College . Packard :Sales. and Service Cars for Hire Storage, ~Gas, Oil, Tires, • ' AccesSories, Reliairing;washing "You. keep it, my friend. I'm wearing an Arrow Shirt with the new Armes Coifar" 6 Rain or shine—the elements cannot - bother ArosetHnor will Arosct bother you; This com fortable new ivilthiss collar attached to Arrow shirts is set with utmost precision and retains its perfect fit and fresh appearance under all cir cumstances. Sanforized Shrunk. Looks starched but isn't. Try Arosct today, 5.2 ... Arrimitics, ARROW sa:IiidITRIETss FOLLOW ARROW AND YOU FOLLOW .THE,STYLC. Distrib•ated by' W. R. HICKEY- State College - Phone 1517 Friday, 'NaveMbar 22, 1935 Council Lifts Dating • Custom for Freshmen: All freshman dating customs were lifted permanently by the Men's Student Council. at a meet ing Tuesday night. The new rul ing will take effect today, Ralph T. Irwin '3O, secretary of the Coun cil, announced. The rule which -prohibits fresh men from having •their hands in their pockets was also lifted . at.the Tuesday meeting. • While there :will be no restrictions on , dating frein now on, all regular customs must be. worn while freshmen are 'on dates. • : Thanksgiving!. + Before you go home, you will want to dress up:_ with a new Suit or Top-.: • . coat. _ _+ We have just the-kind of an outfit you'll like. + Come in and let us showt • them to you. • - . SUITS. By Society Brand, . • Hart Scliaffrier:& Marx, ' Worsted-Tex, • Saxon -Weave, Town-Weave and •. CaMpui-Togs. . $ 22 5°10 $ 35 • TOPCOATS- By Knit-Tex, Society'Brand .and%Campus Togs. $ 22 50 , 10 $3O • See the New TIE• BAR - • A new creation! FROMM'S lld,E. College 'Ave. ,