Successor. To The Free Lance, Established 1887 VOL. Rt—No. 21 Lion Eleven Faces Undefeated President Holds : collegian Observe . s - . . .. . .. _. Football Half Holiday Annual Recepilion —l n —observance of the football • . half-holiday granted annually to . ... the students, the Daily Collegian f Of s laffliembers will suspend-- publication until Tuesday, when issue 22 of .Colleg ian's 150 per. year will 'appear. President' and 'Mrs. -Ralph D. With the prospect of . a long • IfetFel received the Colfege faculty weekend made possible by the and staff* - in Old Main from-8:30 .tO cancelling of classes tomorrow 11:30 p..m. last night, . morning many• strdents are plan- The receiving line stood in the ning to make the 200 mile trip second finer lounge which had been to Philadelphia to witness the deck t, ;by Conrad B. Link, in- game with the Temple Owls. s r irliatiV.L;in horticulture. Organ Along with the immigration of music 'Was supplied by John •E'. undergraduates will go the Blue Beck '42. Band, Nittany Lion, townspeople, • Those.in the line were the• Pres- and faculty. The group. will be idea and Mrs: Hetzel; J. C; Cos- swelled in the Quaker •City by a grchre,.trustee, % and Mrs.- Cosgrove; large contingent of alumni who Mrs.- Clara. C. -PhilliPs, trustee; are residents there. • • State Secretary of Mines Richard Maiz.e;; trustee, and Mrs. Maize; L A •Ar Dean and Mrs. A. R. Warnock; and C ouncil - Plant Dean and Mrs. Frank D. Kern. 14 _ . Dean CharlotteE. Ray; Dean and sonh . a Mrs.- Edward D. Steidle; J. Orvis Membership Keller, assistant to the' president. V.. in Charge of, eXtension, . and Mrs. • Action was taken yesterday by -Kellar; Dean F. C. Whitmore; Dean the Liberal Arts _Council to per- C. W. Stoddart; S. K. Hostetter, as- mit a limited number of sopho- Sistant to the president in - charge' mores from the lower division to of businesS and finance, and Mrs. serve on the Council.. Hostetter. ' - • ' - . Petitions will be' used for nom .- A. ' 0. Morse,: ,assistant., to the inations and an open voting poll preident. in. Charge •,of . ..resident .in-- -in:--the - ::-Sparic.--- . P.t. ctitcilng-zwin . be_ Btitictioki, and • Mrs: - 1/forse;-Dean used for final voting, the Council and Mrs.. M. R. , Trabue; - Dean. and decided. The ' number of names Mrs. Carl P. Schott; Dean - andlVlrs. needed on petition's and the date H. P. .Hanimond, - and Dean and when they are due will be decided Mrs. S. W. Fletcher. . at the next meetirg. BtUdent assistants were Charles . The council plans to sponsor F. Mattern '42, and James W. Rit- three smokers during the - year ter '42. .- for the arts and letters, commerce Those in the receiving line were and finance, and journalism de served-refreshments irilhe,Alumni partments. Arts and letters will Association roms after the recep- have the first one, near. the. end tion .They were joined by Roger of November. lletzel,,seciind son of tne 'President, • The plan of - having a smoking and, Mrs: Roger Hetzel. - . - and social room in the Sparks Guests danced to _the music of Building was endorsed by the the Campus Owls in the first-floor CounCil. Plans are also under lounge. way for some method of relieving - ' congestion 'of students at the low er side door of Sparks Building 45 ladependent Party between classes. AliceM. Murray '42 was ap- Nominates 8 For Chairman .pointed Council representative to the Council Administration Coin " ,Organiiation of the freshman In- mittee by William 0. Meyers_ '42, dependent party got under way. at Council president its initial meeting last night when the 56. - frosh present nominated . • eight _students, one of which will Juniors To Be Pledged be elected clique chairrhan at their .- neat. meeting, Thursday night. By Scabbard andilade • th. 4,. • following I students - were ._. .... , . n nomiated: James Byrne, Burk Eighteen Advanced ROTC stu- Coldveri, _Jack Dempsey, IVl.urray dents will be pledged by Scabbard Friedman; , .. Mickey Mauro, Jack ,and Blade; national military honor- ary society, at Morgan and Leighten Reiss. Ruth ROTC infantry and engineering parades next Monday Yohe' was made temporary secre tary,. . . and Wednesday Captain Richard . • " • C. Tozer '42, announced last night. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111! Those to be pledged are: News Flashes aVleasday, Joe F. Garbacz, Norman Lamond, George E. Coutts, David 111111111111‘11111111111111fitillIon11111111111111111111111111111111 J. McAleer James A. Hari.vick, Stanley E. Forbes-, Harold W. TOKYO Nippo-American re - Yount, Paul R. Irons, William S. lations were further strained yes • Ivans John W. Morring, Edsel J. terday when the cabinet of Prince Burkhart, Harry. J. Hofmeister Jay Konoye resigned in favor of a W. Thornhill, Allen B. Crabtree, new.pro-axis group. 1? rinse Ken- Edward M. Adams, Richard C. Al oye had worked for more amicable en. relations with the United States. BERLIN A high command communique indicated last Warneke To Choose . night that Odessa had been taken by the Nazis after a two months Shrine Site Monday siege. Moscow would not verify • the report. • Definite action on the Lion VlCHY—Matshal Petain yester- ,Shrine placement will be taken day ordered the arrest and con- Monday when Heinz Warneke, finement of' Gamelin, Blum, Dala- sculptor for the class gift of 1940, dier; and four other former high brings a full scale model of his pro- French officials lect to the campus. MOSCOW—Arnbassador. Stein- The plaster model may be placed hardt and the entire United States on exhibition here prior. to actual diplomatic.. corps -, evacuated .Mos- work .on the approved site:in front cow yesterday: - of the Water Tower. • Ti lt . B at t y ~.t;;;), Tau Edward 13—Blackburn, :Tames P OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, STATE COLLEGE, PA State team against the - Temple Owls tomorrow. The Nittany Lions have a reputation of being dangerous on Philadelphia. gridirons and may upset the favored Templars. Officials: referee, R. D. Evans, Tirsinus: umpire J: Murray, Georgetown; head linesman, J. R. McFhee, Oberlin; field judge, L. W. Jourdet, Pennsylvania. Broadcast stations and. WIP; 610; WWSW, WKST, 1280; WIVIRF, .1510. Penn State Van Lenten Schoonover Bonham Raysor Kratzke Kerns Potsklan Weaver Krouse (0 Petrella Smaltz Panel To Advise On Social Usage "Should I cuddle and coo?" This and other pertinent ques tions which may be troubling freshman men and women will be considered by a panel of experts at the fourth freshman mass meeting to be held in Schwab Auditorium at 7 p. m. next Tuesday. Theme of the meeting will be "Freshman-Social Leader." Har old P. Zelko, instructor in public speaking, will be the chairman. Faculty and student experts will advise the freshman on good social usage. (Mrs. Elizabeth W. Dye, as sqciate professor of home econom ics; Ruth H. Zang, assistant"dean of women; W. E. Kenworthy, exe: cutive secretary to the president; Kittsley.R. Smith, assistant profes sor of psychology; Sarah P. Searle '42, and A. John Currier '42, PSCA Cabinet co-presidents, are to ' ap pear. • • A.meeting of this group and the PSCA Freshman Mass ,Meeting's Committee will •be held in 304 Old Main at 4:30 this afternoon. * * * PROBABLE LINEUPS Position RE QB RH To Lay Cornerstone Of Church Building Laying of the cornerstone of a proposed $85,000 religious educa tion building to hnuse work among nearly 1,200 Presbyterian students will take place at ,10:45 a. m. Sun day at the State College Presby terian Church, Beaver ave. and Frazier st. All Presbyterian churches in the Pennsylvania ~ynod will observe "Presbyterian State College Sun day" and attempt to raise $lO,OOO toward the bulding. Hon. John L. Holmes, Clerk of Sessions of the church, will lay the cornerstone, and Rev. Donald W. Carruthers, director of the Foundation, will insert data from 10 church organizations in the stone. Camera Club Elects Officers elected - at the' first meeting of the Camera Club for the coming year . are: William Clark '42, president; Paul Burk hart Jr., '42, vice-president; Betty Rose '42.. secretary-treasurer. rgiatt Temple Seaver Kilroy Korba Woodside Frahm Jajkowski Moister Drulis Sparagna Toinasic Sutch WEATHER Clear and Cool PRICE THREE CENTS Temple Petrolla, Tomasic Big Offense Guns By 808 SCHOOLEY Accompanied to Philadelphia by a throng of students celebrating their annual foot;: all holiday, the underdog Nittany Lion eleven will encounter an undefeated Temple Owl team when the open ing whistle blows for the game in Temple Stadium at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow. Penn State will he attempting to even the series, tomorrow's game being the fourth between the two teams. Temple snatched victories in 1931 by vanquishing the Lions. 12-0, and repeated a victory the next year, 13-12. The only Nittany victory over the Owls came la.4t year when Penn State upset Coach Ray Morrison's highly-rated team 18-0. Temple has garnered three vic tories under the lights this year, having conquered Kansas, V. M. 1., and Georgetown. The battle with the Lions will be their first daylight tilt this season. Although the Lions are the underdogs in the battle, Coach Morrison is taking no chances and has been drilling his team in se cret sessions. However, the Nit-. tany Lions have a habit of playing their -best against Philadelphia , . A great offensive battle has 'been predicted, with Pepper Petrell o a expected to blind the Owls with his flashy running, and Captain Andy Tomasic, Temple's • All- American candidate, certain to cause the Lions no little trouble with his triple-threat ability. To combat the aerial war which Tomasic undoubtedly will launch, the Nittany Lions will rely on the passing of Bill Smaltz and the receiving ability of Captain Len Krouse. Tomasic is dangerous, particularly on running passes. Opponents have been unable to predict whether he will pass or make an end sweep with the ball when he fades and looks for pass receivers. Coach Bob Higgins has prepared a pass defense which he hopes will stem Owl threats through the , air. The grid mentor's chief worry is to keep Tomasic from getting beyond the line of scrim mage, for he is one of the best broken-field runners in the nation. Continued on page Four Caterers' Group Merges With IF( The Penn State Interfraternity Caterers' Association, previously independent of the Interfraternity Council, officially joined forces with the council last night at a meeting held at the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity, according to Thom as J. L. Henson '42, IFC president. Instead of setting up an entirely new organization, fraternity cater ers decided to incorporate the as sociation that had been set up last year. TliP officers of the first caterers group were retained and their constitution, set up at their reorganization meeting last Wed nesday, will be voted on. Herbert- C. Jennings '43, presi dent of the group, stated, "I feel that now we are collaborating with the IFC, greater accomplish ments can be made in making the organiiation a successful one." The next meeting of the caterers will be held at the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity at. 8:30 p. Wednesday, October 22.