EatablUh*diM7 VOL. 38—No. 42 Karyer Captures Ireslunan Title IIT ICI& Meet . .Special, io The Daily Collegian - NEW YORK, Nov. 17—. Terry . Karyer, outstanding Penn State _ freshman harrier, took yearling , hopors in ' the Intercollegiate , AAAA at. Van Cortlandt Park this ; afternoon. . ~ , IVJtQre .than 250 runners -repre senting 24 colleges started the ■ race; the 33rd in the IC4A annals. V-- Despite Karver’s victory the ■ Nittany Lion Trosii came in second ; in the team scoring, ti-ailing Man ; hattan by seven points. .The Kel , iy- Greens retain their crown ca|p ’ tured last year. ! .: In the varsity run the Blue and >, White took fourth place. ' Rhode ' Island State,' last year’s winner, \ repeated the act this year to win ! the team title, placing their five ; men inside ,the first 25 to finish. > "Herm Goff berg wr.s. the first .’'Lion to cross the finish line, plae ■■ l3th. ■ Curt Stone followed Goff berg in 17th place. Mac f Smith” placed 41st, Pop Thiel 46th-, ! arid -Norm. Gordon 57tli to give .the . Penn.. State team its total of i 164; : y. /'.A'..; . ■ - Leslie Mac Mitchell, captain of the .:NY|J 'iteam,'' tpolc individual l .\honprs.jn ttie; yarsify rape fpr the .Hhirii; '-feat ' set by Jdliri Paul Jones of iC rneil iri 1912. Mac Mitchell’s ij.tiirie of 26:40-was 38 seconds slow - er jthan his winning mark of last -year. Bob'Nichols, Rhode Island State, c^n finished a shade:;ahead .of .Gleft Masten, Col ’gate^®taky!;;^;^;:.;;. ■ . A: partial summary: - -.-v ; r- “ VVarsity, '.Yeajnf jr.Scores:Rhode Island [ second, 112; ,Mrinhftttpri;,;taiird," 130; Penn State, fourth,; Cornell, fifth, 175; (Continued'on-Page Three) la, !lig IA lecture ' Kgpneth.i D, -Hutchinson, assist tant'prof essorof economics, speak- Time Price Control,” /• will the Liberal Arts Lecture [Series inTYI Sparks Building .at | 7:3Q p. m; today. The. Liberal Arts Lecture Com mittee, headed by J. Paul Selsam, associate professor of history, an . bounces that it has chosen this t.pp.ie,-because of the work Doctor Hutchinson has done in the fields of -inarkgting, economics of pric ing,, and. inflation control. . Learning of the practical echhoinics by a varied bus iness •jejtphjience, Doctor Hutchin i son seryed-as manager'of the Bos ton.-salesroom of the Standard Sanity ; Manufacturing Company, ans conducted an industrial sur vey .oT Xanawah Valley for the Federal;.Subsistence Homestead Corporation. 'Peal PM Tags Ready for Upperclassmen Upperclassmen will wear “Beat i Pitt” tags this week in preparation Jfgir-the pop rally Thursday night, James W. Ritter ’42, co-chairman of the rally committee, announced last night. Tags are available at Student Union, the Athletic Store, and the Corner. Room today. . - The rally, to be held on the Jor dan Fertility - Plots, will include talks by (Robert D. Baird ’42, Coach Robert A. Higgins, F. Jos ~eph Bedenk, . and H. Leonard Krouse -’42, team captain. -. TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 18, STATE COLLEGE, PA. Last Call Issued For Players' Tryouts Students wishing to try out lor Players’ second production, Shakespeare’s “Taming of the Shrew,” must make appointments at the Student Union- today .be tween 8:00 a. m. and 5:00 p. m. ac cording to Frank S. Neusbauni, professor of dramatics. Students unable to sign up at the announced time should .make appointments at the' Players’ of fice in 413 Old Main. Graduate and special students are eligible. Immediately following Thanks giving vacation, Professor Neus baum will begin rehearsals. This will be the first Shakespearean play given on the campus in three years. Kriss Funeral Services Held Funeral services for Dr. Max Kriss, professor of animal nutri tion and a member of the College faculty for the past 23 years, were held yesterday in Philadelphia. Interment followed at Roosevelt Cemetery. IHis death at his home Sunday morning, caused by-coronary em bolism, came .after 'an illness of ftwp weeks. (Doctor Kriss was -born May 15, 1894, at Ostropol, Russia. He came to the' United States in 1910 and earned his way through the Col lege largely by teaching Russian and Hebrew. Following gradua tion iii 1918, he received his M. S. degree at the College, in J 920, He .'obtained his. Ph. D. degree at Yale University in 1936. The .deceased was a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Ameri can Institute of Nutrition, Ameri can Chemical Society. Society for Experimental. Biology and Medi cine, and American Society of An imal Production. He was also ac tive in the affairs of his fraternity, Gamma Sigma Phi. , Author and co-author of more than 50 scientific papers dealing with animal nutrition, Dr. Kriss, who was engaged in the research department of the College’s Insti tute of Animal Nutrition, was con sidered one of the world’s lead ing authorities in his field. He is survived by, his wife and one son, Joseph, an honor student at the Yale University School of Medicine. Advertising Honorary Initiates 10 Students Ten students and two profes sional advertising men have been initiated into Alpha Delta Sigma, -professional advertising fraternity, it was announced by. John J., Long '42, president Earl Gaines, advertising man ager of the Pittsburgh. Press and Richard Beeler, advertising de.- partoent otf the Altoona Mirror, were the newspaper men initiated. G. M. Snyder advertising manager of the Reading Eagle-Times, a member of the fraternity, was al so, present at the ceremony. The following students were in itiated: Leonard E. Bach ’43, Dean J. Clyde ’43, Sidney Friedman ’43, Philip Jaffe ’43, Stanley B. Kraus ’43, William J. Maher ’43, Alvin E. Maurer '43, Edwin L. Patridgc ’44, Bernard S. Roth ’43, and Jacob N. Shearer ’43. Exit Only Students today are requested to use the South door of Sparks Building for exit only, as a result of a rpling passed by the Liberal Arts student council. The group will meet in 305 Old Main at 8 o’clock tonight. OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE New Method Announced For Selling 1941-42 Artists’ Course Series Tickets Rolling StOCk Penn - State’s “untolab,” which last summer travelled 10,000 miles on a demonstration tour, will be placed on ex hibit for students, in 119 New Physics, at 8 p. m. Thursday. The exhibit is being sponsored by Signia Pi Sigma, honorary physics fra ternity, and will feature comments by Harry Van Velzer, resistant professor .of .physics, who will lecture in conjunction with the demon stration. Following this exhibit, the moving laboratory is scheduled to Start its second tour which will include approximately 100 towns and cities. At Long Last! Nittany Soccer Streak Stopped At 65 Straight By Army Booters By DOM GOLAB •It had Jo happen sometime. No team, no matter, how mighty, can take on the toughest compe tition in the nation year after year, win games by hair-raising margins, and remain undefeated forever. In Saturday’s dramatic game, a rugged, hard-charging Army soc cer team with a purpose, stunned the victory-surfeited Nittany Lions, 1-0, to put an end to the most incredible winning streak in tlie history of intercollegiate ath letics—6s consecutive gtJmes with out defeat. On November 5, 1932, Coach Bill Jeffrey saw his hooters lose a 2-1 contest- to Syracuse. Not Until exactly nine years and ten days later did he see them lose again! The record compiled in the inter val renders futile even the most carefully prepared stock of super latives. It will stand, never to be matched, never to be forgotten, as a lengthy—and utterly fantas tic—chapter in the annals of great accomplishments. -The story of the.game itself can be simply told. It was the old, old case of Penn State finesse pit ted against an opponent’s rug gedness and- power. This time power won out.' The historic tilt' was a nip-and tuck struggle all the way and could have gone to either team. The determined Cadets, paced by Captain Bill Guyckeson, easily the finest center halfback in the East, bottled up the smoothly functioning Lion -attack with their unorthodox hard-rushing style of play. Brilliant in defeat, the Jeffrey- boro, a passenger in the. Price cai man fought like true champions to was killed instantly. Kline re the last man, but the insoirefi ceived a fis§Bafg>of the left arm, Army hooters were not to be de- left leg, and lacerations about the nied their first victory over Penn face and body,. Dorothy Kline, 25, State in the seven-year series. an occupant of his car, received Late in the tiiird quarter, Cadet fractures oif both legs and severe center forward Charley Garvin body bruises, hooted the most significant goal in Price is a varsity track and modem intercollegiate soccer to swimming star and a pledge aft (Continued on Page Three) Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity. White Socks Custom Lifted By Tribunal • White socks that freshmen have had to wear since the beginning of the term, may be substituted for colored leg-wear- at noon tomor row, Raymond F. Leffler ’42, Stu dent Tribunal head, announced last night. He also urged all freshmen that have as yet failed to secure their “Beat Pitt” signs to get them im mediately at the Athletic Store. The signs were supposed to ap pear on all freshmen yesterday afternoon but many students have failed to get them, according to Leffler. One Killed, Three Hurl In Weekend Auto Crash Special to The Daily Collegian JERSEY SHORE Albert A. Price ’42 sustained lacerations and a . possible fracture • of the skull and a fractured jaw in a two err head-on collision Saturday night that resulted in the death of one person and the injury of tom others. The accident, according to po lice, occurred at a junction on Route 94 about one mile from Salladasburg, when a car driven by Max M. Kline, 25, of Cumber land, Md., made a left hand turn and crashed into the machine op erated by Price. Edwin T. 'Shield, 34, of Wells- PRICE THREE CENTS December 3, 4 Set As Ticket Sale Dates Priority nui ibers will be dis tributed to patrons a day in ad vance of the regular- Artists’ Course ticket sale, according to the new procedure for seat distri bution announced last night by Dr., Carl E. Marquardt, chairman. i-! ;X' Numbers for students will be available at the Athletic Asso ciation ticket windows at 4 p. m. Tuesday, December 2, and for fa culty members and townspeople at 4 p. m. Wednesday, December 3. The card bearing the number will also include a schedule showing the time its holder should return the next day to secure tickets. “Under this plan the person re ceiving priority number 21 will return to obtain his tickets be tween 8 and 9 a. m. the following morning, the person receiving number 47 will appear between 9 and 10 a. m., and so forth,” Dr. Marquardt explained. “From past experience, those in charge of the ticket sales be lieve, they will have no difficulty in handling 30 applications, an hour. The schedules will be made up on that basis,” Dr. Marquardt stated. “To receive full benefit from the number given the previous after noon, the prospective purchaser will have to be on hand when his number- comes up. Failing that, he will have to-go-dd the; end- of the short line which will have formed according to the publish ed schedule for that hour,” Mar quardt explained.. _ Those who took advantage of the pre-sale lrst May will be able to obtain their seat numbers at the ticket window tomorrow from 9 a. m. until noon and from 1:30 to 5 p. m. Cost of tickets for the current series is the same as last year,' except that each ticket is subject to the new federal excise tax of ten per cent. Tax included, the standard prices will be $6.05, $4.95, and $3.85. A limited num (Conlinued on page four) IMA Football Movies Scheduled Tonight Encouraged by increasing at tendance at each of their past three programs, the IMA will pre sent their fourth showing of foot ball movies when Saturday’s Penn State-West Virginia game will 'be screened in 121 Sparks Building at 8 o’clock tonight. To afford better vision for spec tators, a larger screen will be used at tonight’s showing. Coach Bob Higgins will comment on the pic tures. Admission is free to all. .UIIIIimiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIUIIHUIHIIUIIIIUIIItIF Late News iiiiiiniiiniiHiiiiuiiiiiimiiiuiiiiiiiiuuniiiiiuiiiuiumnt, WASHINGTON. D. C. A bill was introduced in the Senate last night that would enable the Presi dent to take over the captive coal mines and crush the strike called by UM.W.A. President John L. Lewis. DETROIT. Mich. The CIO convention showed no split in the support of the closed shop. WASHINGTON. D. C. Presi dent Roosevelt conferred witli Sa buro Kurusu, Japanese diplomat, to discuss a peaceful solution to critical problems in the Far East. Both, however, were reluctant to reveal what was said. WASHINGTON. D. C. The Nazi steamer masquerading under the U. S. flag was declared by the Navy Department a derelict. WEATHER Cloudy and Wanner