Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, November 26, 1935, Image 3

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    Tuesday, November 26, 1935
INTRODUCING .
With this issue, we present a new
line-up of winter sports writers. We
feel that inset of them are as well
qualified : to cover their slants as the
average 'COLLEGIAN sports writer; in
sonic cases, perhaps bettel..
Get rid of that .
gloOmy atmosphere
in your room
Tell your parents ,
about' Ella Taylor's
Radio Bargains,
The Music. Room
Plain andl V T
1
Fancy .. . W 0 °lens
'EGOLF'S
Show Dad and Mother Your LaVie Proofs
DURING VACATION
Portraits Make Fine Gifts, You Know
_ .
The IDIENN TATE
1. HOTO HO P
212 East College Avel3ue State College
TAKE HOME FOR
AN ENJOYABLE 'THANKSGIVING
THE' WONDERFUL BARGAINS
from
HARRY....SAUE RS
•
Allen Street
Hillside Ice and Coal Co.
Dealers in the Highest Grades of ,
Coal and Coke
Call Us for Your Supply of
FIREPLACE WOOD
• Phone 136-J • r
Just the Things You Need
for this Thanksgiving
Vacation . . .
TOP COATS, OVERCOATS . $19.50
NECKWEAR . . . . . 2. for $l.OO
SHIRTS $1.45
SPORT SWEATERS . . . . $1.95
SUEDE JACKETS . . . . $5.50
WOOL TROUSERS . . . . $3.50
GLOVES $1 to $2.95
HATS $3 50
migs,E=AAGTE, -
MEN'S SUEDE SHOES, $3.50 1
MORRIS DEPT STORE
;.! EAST COLLEGE AVENUE
Bob Grubb will do boxing, bringing
all the gory details frOm a ring -side
angle.. Townsend Swaim will come
to grips with the doings of the grap
plers, and Dick Lewis is slated to
cover the knights of the wooden way.
Dick almost got to cover boxing—it
having been bruited about that ht
was a former district junior champ in
that, sport—but it seems that he held
the title eight days,, so someone
thought better of it.
Johnson Brenneman will cover
swimming, fencing,- and indoor track'.
for the edification of those whose ap
preciation of the athletic picture is'
well rounded, and to Phil Heisler falls
the task of writing intramurals. That.
May seem anti-climatic, after cover
ing 'varsity football, but his public is
prepared for something new and dif
.ferent..
Lion Basketeers
Start Floorwork
For Opener Here
Five Will Meet Ithica
In Non-league Tilt
December 14.,
Opening their 1935-36 season as
members of the Eastern Intercollegi
ate Basketball Conference, and with
a twenty-seven game schedule, the
Lion basketball squad under Coach
Spike Leslie, is dribbling into form.
to Meet Ithaca College , . in a 1 1 : 3 11 ,
league game December 14. -
The courtmen have been tossing the
balla around for the last few weeks,
and most of the old guard, with the
exception of the football ' men, are
practicing daily,.... Five sophomores so
far have come, put to strengthen the
team. • •
Hutch .These Boys
Jim .Hunter, who towered at center
last year, did not return to school, and
the job is, now - divided between Mc-
Williams and a giant sophoinore nam
ed Reichenbacli,'of whom we will hear
more this season.
"At forward, Captain Bar Riley,
Mike Kornick, Paul Perry, aim
Smith, and Chuck Glennon will re
ceive plenty of competition' from Sol
Mieholf and Herb Peterson, sopho
mores. Prank Smith, last year's sec
ond high scorer, will return to guard
with Mike Kornick and Levan Linton.
SophOmore competitors ate Joe Prop
sa and Rabbit Wear. -
Here is what the team will do this
season:
December 14, Ithaca; January 8,
Penn at Philadelphia; January 11,
Navy at Annapolis; January 15, Syra
case; January 18, Pittsburgh; Janu
ary 21, Bucknell; January 25, Car
negie Tech; February 'B, West Vir
ginia;'February.ll, Temple at Phila
delphia; February 12, Army at West
Point; February 15, Georgetown;
February 19, Temple; February 22.
West Virginia at Morgantown; Feb
ruary 26, Georgetown at Washington; .
February 29 , Rutgers; March 6, Car
negie Tech at Pittsburgh; March 7,1
Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh.
Jeffrey Is Confident
Booters Will Go
To California
While waiting for a reply to a cab
, led. inuiry as to a definite schedule
and guarantee, Bill Jeffrey is quite
optimistic as to the possibility of his
championship boaters spending .Christ
rims vacation in the For West. In fact.
according to Bill, should things pan
out as anticipated the Penn State soe
aer team will meet the University of
San Francisco 'for the championship
of the United States on Christmas
day.
Several other . contests have been
mentioned by San Francisco officials
as being possiGle matches for the
Penn State lads. Among them are
games with Pasadena College, and a
group of all-stars managed by Vic
McLaughlin, of cinema 'fame, who in
addition to supporting this team,
owns the stadium in which they play!
We note with mixed feelings that
Yale,. remains co-Folder. of the Asso
ciation title with Penn State, by vir
tue. of a.2-to-1 victory over their, Big
Three rival,' Harvard, on last Friday.
With one game remaining, and that
with Princeton on next Saturday,
prospects.seem bright for Yale to end
the season undefeated.
. Although - post-season contests are
notoriously frowned upon by the Big
Three, were 'a soccer match with Yale
to - be arranged the result would be
most, interesting. In feet the gauntlet
has already been thrown to the bull
dogs,' according to Coach Jeffrey but
to date no anwser has been received.
THETA ALPHA, PHI
(National Dramatics Honorary)
C. K. Lucas Brightman '36
Frances G. Hamilton '3G
Wade S. Plummer '36
Jean F. Woodruff '36'
Elfzabeth Balderston '37
Beatrice Conford , '37
Mary Louise.Frear '37
You Can Get It at Metzgers
Hunting Equipment of all Kinds
Shotguns and Rifles for Sale and for Rent
All Kinds of Ammunition
VISIT OUR RIFLE RANGE
NOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
• We furnish rifles and ammunition or
you can use your own rifle
THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN
Between
The Lions
-By WALT FREUNSCII
Wall, anyway, thank God for the
Blue Band. '
When a learn plays the way it did
against Bucknell, even the most en
thusiastic supporter finds it hard to
explain just what is wrong. Let's
not, gloss over the factsand call
what happened breaks; they were
mistakes an d
the game was
lost through
them. Even
that last min.
ute drive can't
erase the fact
that blunders
and not a su
perior tea m
heat the Lions.
Bucknell's of
fense was non
existent and
ours was nul-
Walt Freunsch • lined e,v e r
time by a mis
take committed at the most inop
portune times possible.
The season as a whole must now
be regarded as a dismal failure;
what started out to be the best sea
s2n in years has been just a so-so
Showing. Instead of a consistent
squad we'have a mystery eleven; if
it hadn't been for the defensive
ability of the line, we would have
wound up in the cellar. The peo
ple around here are getting tired
of seasons that are only mediocre,
of waiting ;or the New Deal in ath
letics. Tfiey are that especially be
cause of the fine material this year.
Well; with the exception of substi
tuting, the coach's job ends on a
Friday night. Just whom mould
you blame when the team makes a
sorry mess of the Saturday's un
dertaking? Some sort of ruling
prevents the coach from playing,
you know.'
In my opinion, the team let the
school down 'in that game Satur
day. If they had been 'encounter
ing opposition of any calibre what
soever they would have an alibi. As
it is—well, anyway, thank God for
the Blue Band.
Well, your sports - editor. is
tins nervously by until Yale's soc
cer season is concluded. To be de
clared co-champion is something
very fine, hut for a really fine bunch
of boys, the unique honor is none
too fine. If they - go to California,
and it seems that they may, they
will bring, nothing but 'credit, to the
institution.• .
Speidel Face's G
As Grappler
Although an' undertone of a g onized
!grunting and groaning has been heard
pouring over the campus from the
general direction of Itec for some
time now, it has been merely an in
dication or preview of what is to
come. Starting this afternoon the
chorus will be stepped up at least an
octave and will be under the official
direction of Charles Speidel who will
tell the boys what it is all about, for
wrestling practice officially starts to
day.
Concentration is the order of the
and, and will continue to be until after
the first match with Michigan on
January 18. Seven dual meets, the
largest order in many year:. is the
schedule for the grapplers and meet
ing a Big Ten group like Michigan,
on opening day only makes the going
tougher.
With Thanksgiving and Christmas
vacations acting as effective barriers
to proper training, Coach Speidel is
faced with the gigantic task of select
ing,. organizing and training an al
most entirely new team in the short
time of five weeks before curtain call.
Of last year's strong team only three
regulars are back. Captain Jack
Light, Sammy Wolfson and Joe
O'DoWd. Eight lettermen were strick
en by graduation.
After the engagement with Michi-
Nittany Mitmen
Begin Workouts
For First Meet
3 Home Meets, 4 Away
Contests Scheduled
For Ringmen.
By 808 GRUBB
With the opening meet less than
two months away, Penn State's East
ern Intercollegiate champion boxing
team will swing into intensive prac
tice after Thanksgiving vacation un
der the tutelage of Couch Leo Houck,
who is entering upon his twelfth year
as Lion ring mentor.
While an official call has not yet
lick extended, a number of the Lion
ring veterans have been working out
daily in the gynt under Coach Houck.
Among them are Captain Russell
Criswell, 115-lb. champion for the past
two years; Frankie Goodman, 1:15-lb:
fighter; Lou Ritzie, title-hold
er; Freddie O'Neil in the 115-lb.
class; and Izzie Richter, heavyweight.
Francis McAndrews, who is now prac
tice teaching in Hazleton, is working
out there.-
Coach Houck has had his hands
full with teaching intramural ring
contenders some of the fundamentals
of the mit game, hut he will be able
to devote his entire time to varsity
candidates after the intramurals have
been run oil next week. '
Face Heavy Schedule
The Lions are faced with a sched
ule of three home meets and four
away contests in addition to the East
ern Intercollegiates which will again
he held here and the N. C. A. A.
Olympic try-outs at Charlottesville,
Va.
The season opens with Western
Maryland here January 25. The Green
Terrors tied the Lion boxers in their
meet here last year and should fur
nish plenty of opposition for the Nit
tr- et. M.
cony ringmen s opening meet.
T. will meet the Lions here February
The Lion ringmen will go down to
Annapolis 'February 15 to avenge a
5-3 defeat handed them by the Navy
boxers last year. They meet the Or
ange at Syracuse February 22.
Cornell will come here on Febru
ary 29 for the last home. meet. A
meet with Army at West Point March
7 and Wisconsin, a newcomer to the
Lion schedule, at Milwaukee March
23 will conclude the schedule.
The Eastern Intercollegiate; will
be held here March 13 and 14. The
ringmen will go to Charlottesville.
Ara., to participate in the N. C. A. A.
Olympic try-cuts March 27 and 28.
gantic Task
's Season Opens
gan, the wrestlers will enjoy a brier
respite. Temple and Pittsburgh, who
provide the second and third encount
ers of the - Nittanymen usually have
rather weak teams, Temple being no
toriously poor, -and Pitt being de-
scribed as a weak sister when it
comes to wrestling.
However. after these meets it will
be necessary to whip the squad into
top season form to meet Lehigh. Al
ways possessed of a strong team Le
high has developed into one' of our
most, bitter rivals in the catch-as
catch-can sport.
As usual, the matmen are a couple
of months behind on their schedule,
practice should have started long ago.
Just why this condition should exist
we can't say, on account of having
promised Charlie Speidel that we
wouldn't. After all—football is im
portant.
Len Henderson Named
'39 Harriers' Captain
Leonard P. Henderson was named
honorary- captain of the freshman
cross-country team at the annual
cabin party held by the varsity and
freshmen Thursday night.
Henderson was the winner of two
dual meets this year, and in the other
two he led the Lion squad. At the
Intercollegiates, he placed tenth.
Vanity captain and managers will
bo chosen this week. Winners of
letters and numeral will also be an
nounced.
Printing.
for
Student Societies
and Fraternities
+ •
Chapter Publications
Nittany Printing and
Publishing Company
110 West College Avenue
INTRAMURA
With this column, we wave a balmy
adieu to the host of intramuralists
and their doings which we have en
deavored to cover for the past season.
It was fun for all, including us. And
we witnessed some fine sport as well
as' a few unparalleled incidents, that
follow in the wake of intramurals
and go to make the whole business a
right noble, if not dignified, enter
prise.
On the horizonlooms boxing, which
promises to provide spectacular en
tertainment. These matches, where
few punches are pulled and fewer or
rive, can stack ❑p against any ama
teur bouts anywhere. And people pay
to get in to amateur mit-slings in less
civilized communities. The boxing
Henry Brown Selected
As Swimming Manager
Henry B. Brown '36 VMS appointed
varsity swimming Manager at a meet
ing of the members of the executive
committee of swimming last week.
Since this is the first year that swim
ming has been a varsity sport here,
there were only three members on the
committee, Coach Robert E. Galbraith,
Neal M. Fleming, graduate manage•
of athletics, and Frank 01-fora 4 A
president.
In order to get swimming organized
on the same basis as other sports, a
joint call is being issued for sopho
more second assistant managers and
junior first assistant managers. Be
cause the team must practice in the
Glennland pool, the number of' man
agerial candidates will probably be
Coach Galbraith has issued a call
for freshman swimming candidates.
They should report to the Glennland
pool Monday, December 1, at 1 o'-
clock.. All managerial candidates
should report to the Athletic Associa
tion office in Old Main.
Going Home
For Thanksgiving?
Let Us Service Your Car
Gas, Oil, Anti-Freeze. etc.
Clark Motor Co.
120 S. Pugh St
To You All
AN ENJOYABLE THANKSGIVING
COOK'S MARKET
Renting...
COATS—APRONS—TOWELS
BED and TABLE LINENS
A Satisfactory Laundry Service
PENN STATE LAUNDRY
120 W. Beaver Ave. Phone 124
The- Nittany Lion
Thanksgiving Dinner
at the inn
FULL COURSE DINNER
With all the trimmings
12:30-2:30 P. M.
Adults, $1.50 per plate
Children under 12 years, 75c
Page Tlireo
HIGHLIGHTS
tourney, however, is free to everyone
except the entries, who will pay a
quarter per head for the privilege of
being battered to entertain the crowd
and win points toward the trophy.
Instead of the usual brass watch
chain which amateurs receive for
their services elsewhere, the first
three in the tourney will receive med
als for individual achiev2ment. Each
bout will count one point toward win
ning the tourney. The group in first
place with the highest total number
of points, will be awarded live points
toward the cup, the group in second
place, three 'Points, and third place,
cne point.
Entries should sign up immediately
at Miss Keller's office. Contestants
will weigh in next Monday and Tues
day afternoons, and each and every
pug must have his physical examina
tion certificate with him at the time
he weighs in, It all starts December
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