BEftt PITT! yOLi'ffS— No; 46 Lion Eleven Seeks To Shake Pitt Jinx Finance Confab Will Hold Final Sessions Today '■'.Final sessions, of the sixth an nual conference of the Municipal 'and•''Local Finance Officers of Pennsylvania, which started yes terday, will be conducted this morning. The “Information Please” 5 program, in which eight experts in the field of municipal finance' ;\Vill be quizzed by’ dele gates; ; attending the convention, will .feature the morning’s activi ties. : • ' • Sponsored-V by the Institute of Local * Government, less than 200 registered yesterday in '■ Old out .of the 250 expected t° j ntfencb,:,.'jrf ter. registration, J. - O- Kdlier,‘;.aS?istant to . the presi ... deht imcliatg'e ;of extension, wel coined r 'C()flvCiition members. Following the quiz, .breakffcfet will be Served 'in the Sandwieh Shop with leading finance officers as hosts. The chairmen of yes terday’s sectional meetings will ; then report their findings to ; the . convention; ~~Speeches-* by— outstanding; -au thorities in the field of finance, open 'discussions, and informal talks will make up the remainder of the' program. Speakers are: ..Carr Chatters, Chicago, execu tive director of the Municipal Finance Officers Association of " william BENGf/OUSEtZ -Prr7 tackle United; States and Canada; Albert Pleydell, deputy- commissioner of TIISSG StdTS Miiy ShlllG - tVl’.en the Nittany Lions and Pitt’s Panthers, tfc'ngle in their annual grid New ''V’ofk purchasing de “ battle-this afternoon,-the sports world may hear a lot of praise echoed for the above five players. Cap Gham'bbr'of Commerce research Bill'B.enghouser of Pitt intend to steady the Panther offensive. - . bii'reau; aild;Fred W. Hoslex - , prin- " ■ - ■■■■ ■■■■ "■ ■ - •ffito; of Public lii- Judging Team Enters Construction Starts Ideal Football Weather ii^ppperating with, the finance Chicago International On Wind Tunnel For Today's Contest l^SfeSaSa n tion a s te HaroldUF PeQn State ’* seven man live ' Concrete, has been cut and ex- flight snow flurries yesterday Mdei'fe^i-executive secretary of stock add meat ud § in S team wiu cevation completed for the wind morning dampened the hopes of tfrdi Institute .of Local. Govern- Participate in the International tunnel being constructed in 'the many a Pitt, weekend espirant. ; iitentj|is7inTohargb of all arrange- Livestock Show scheduled in Chi- sub-basement in the New Physics Despite the sun’s appearance later . ttid; convention. cago this Saturday, Coach Wil- Building, according to John H. the dav skepticism still reigned .. !i luiictfeon at the Sandwich-''!* Bl * l L. Henning, professor of ani- Henzsey, contractor of the project. However college weather experts Shop- wjll formally close the con- ***al husbandly announced last The tunnel, which will be used agreed that' there is nothing to • ferexice -today..; night. ' in aeronautical study, wiU be about The forecast ?all s The team, coiisisting of George seven feet, four inches at the for.fair and continued cold s —Der- R. Krupp, Donald S. Gaige, highest point and will be made of feet football 'weriher. James A. Kennedy,. Robert. S. ro eUers ~— = Christ, Almon K. Birth, John T. c n-iven by two 'gasoline motors, SyiMphOlSy HISSES GSlOSfill Smith, and James H. Swart, all will force air through the throat Herbert F. Turnbull ’42 was seniors, is scheduled, to practice of the tunnel at .a maximum rate elected, president, Elsie J. Lund at Purdue* University and the Uni- of 250 miles an hour. ’42, secretary-treasurer, and Eu versity of Illinois while enroute Henzsey- said that the tunnel gene W. Lederer ’42, librarian, at to Chicago after seeing the Pitt should be completed within three a recent meeting of the Symphony game today. - y months. Orchestra. Tribunal Schedules Customs Bluebook For Exempt Frosh “Although-'.freshmen are per mitted to stai-t dating at 8. a. m. today it is'nd-indication that Tri bunal is starting to Ray mond F. Leffler ’42, Tribunal chairman, stated last night. To qualify this statement, Leff ler announced a Tribunal spon sored quiz • for all freshmen exempt from customs because of age or wearing of customs ct an other college.. The “customs” bluebook is dc- signed to test the campus know- ‘t'dge of the~’4sers and will cover 1 — T’emi State songs, cheers, BMOC’s, faculty, buildings, and other per tinent matter . in the “bible,” Loftier added. The test will be held Tuesday night at 9 o’clock in Room 10 Sparks Building, he stated. All those freshmen carrying exemp tion cards, must be present as roll r will be d: Red, added the Tribunal head.*’ln addition* the five v vio lators: who carried punishments for the past week must be present • at the. meeting, ihe announced. iffr Swig @ (Eott AN BULLETS FOR BREAKFAST! Ex-Editor Dodges Strikers Bullets BuLlets for breakfast—that was the experience of Adam A. Stny ser ’4l. last year’s Daily Collegian editor and now staff writer for the 'Pittsburgh Press, who was one of five reporters who narrowly escaped death yesterday, during an early morning uprising of coal strikers at Nden'born, The reporters’ car was riddled ■with bullets as they entered the town at 4 a. m. to find, themselves in the midst of a shooting labor war. Smyser, along with others was starting out on early morning news patrol. . “'l’m one of the lucky guys the bullets didn’t hit,” Ke declared in a phone call later on that morning, made from a company store where OF THE PENNSYLV. SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 22, STATE COLLEGE, PA. outside he said, a boy was “sweep ing up blood.”' In a detailed account of the shooting Smyser told how he, along with the other newspaper men, drove along the road in total darkness and stopped suddenly when they noticed a long line of cars blocking the road. “None of the cars had any lights on and at first I didn’t get what was happening. Then boom, boom, came a couple of reports from up on the hill, and I saw that men were lying flat on the road—one of them had even crawled under •the' car ahead' of' lis,”' he related. A' lull in ’the. shooting occurred during' which Smyser decided to get out of - the car. He slithered tIA STATE COLLEGE BILL. Smbltz -PEH'I 'STATP Bf}c& out of the automobile on his hands and knees and crawled to the side of the road, when sudden ly the guns from the hill let go again. “'Could it have been that those marksmen-up on the hill saw poor little me, perhaps the only person among hundreds who was moving down in the valley. At any rate the turf all around me started spitting up, and I realized that the puffs of dust were created by spat tering grape-shot,” Smyser related. . Smyser .said, that at daybreak he went upon-on the hilland picked Up some of the empty shells. “None of them had my name on it,” he concluded. wjtatt * P£PPEB?PETKeiXA Penn Stats BACK WEATHER Cooler with' Snow PRICE THREE CENTS Niffanymen Hope To Avenge Loss Suffered in 1946 By 808 SCHOOLEY As usual the Penn State Nittany Lion eleven will assume the role of the underdog when it tangles with the Pitt Golden Panthers in a determined effort to free itself from one of the biggest jinxes in college football in Pitt Stadium at 2 o’clock this afternoon. Not since 1919 have the Lions tasted victory flavored with Pan ther meat in the Smokey City. In that year it was Coach Bab Hig gins who paced the Blue and White to triumph, 20-0, over Pitt- from his end post. The Panthers hold •a sharp edge of victories as a chal lenge to the Lions. Twenty-four decisions were pinned on the wall by Pitt and the Lions have carried off 14. Two games ended in a tie. But the classic upset of the series which began in 1893 was recorded on New Beaver Field in 1939 when Coach (Higgins’ charges walked away with the contest, 10-0. Last season the game was again transferred to Pittsburgh raid the Lions were again beaten, 20-7, to wreck their hopes for a 'Rose Bowl or Orange Bowl bid. So the rival ry which has developed to siword’s point will be tested in today’s 41st meeting of the teams. The Pan thers are the Lions’ oldest rivals, and Pitt’s likewise. Team spirit reached a new high in Lion practices during the week as Penn State prepared to throw all its power against the Panther grid machine. With a squad un hampered by injuries, the Lions bear no particular love for the aerial robbery tactics of Pitt’s Ed gar- “Special Delivery” Jones and intend to spoil his habit of inter cepting passes. The Lions refuse to tag their backs with talent names, but they have elected "Big Bill Smaltz post master of the ‘‘air mail” depart ment. Today’s battle looms as 'a tussle between the needle-accur acy of Smaltz’ passes and Jones’ ability to snatch enemy . aerial tosses and turn them into scores (Continued on Page Three) iiimiiiuiimiimiiimmiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiim Late News illllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU PITTSBURGH—With the in creasing distux-bance and violence in which 12 pickets were wound ed when 150 sti-ikers were fired on from behind coal mine slag, mine authorities naked Governor Arthur H. James to send out the State police to quell the rioting in Fayette county. The Governor said he would comply with their request. DETROIT After reelecting Philip Murray chairman, the CIO convention yesterday condemned the use of aimed forces to squelch disturbances in the strike areas. VlCHY—Hitler will meet Mar shal Petain next week to discuss French possessions in Africa and the new landing of arms on the eastern coast of Africa by the British. TOBRUK—A full Nazi division fias been reported trapped near Tebruk in Britain’s new offensive in Libya. To Show Color Movie “Combat" is the title of the natural color movie to be shown by the Hort Club at 4:15 p, ni., Tuesday, in 100 Hort. The film Is ‘ narrated by Lowell Thomas, tmd denis with the control of pests on fruits and track crops, includ ing potatoes. Admission is free.