I fufi’ Pjep State Attack WitfcThree Markers *By PAT NAGELBERG ' Sports Editor An inspired young TPenn State 'ootball team, lifted to its great-, ist performan&e of - the year by ,hree Seniors, spotted an up and coming Pitt eleven one touch toswiv’fn the first-period and then umed on'.the full power of its long stored vengeance to run roughshod over the Panthers, 31. to 7, in the Pitt Stadium Satur day. . More' than 33,000- spectators saw. the Lions upset all pre-game predictions, which established Pitt at a 2 to-1 favorite; to score their tirst Winin Pittsburgh since 1919. Behind 7 to 0 after Edgar (Spe cial' Delivery) Jones sent the Smoky City fans into hysterics Movies of the Penn State-Pitt; game, originally scheduled for this evening,’‘have been 1 cancelled be cause of the extension of ‘the Thanksgiving vacation. As yet, ho' substitute date has been set for the showing of the movies. with : ai startling 43-yard touch down jauntr.midway in the first period; the keyed up State eleven caught "fire -in. the second quarter and kept up its touchdown parade for- the/remainder of the game to run; up its- largest total against Pittfcsince the 38-0 count in 1912. ■paced by Pepper Petrella, Bill Smaltz -and Captain Len Krouse, the Lions scored twice in the sec ond quarter,- added another touch down and field goal in the third, and-put the- finishing, touches on the well-skinned Panther with, a > fourth tally in the final period. Only an offside penalty in the Closing minutes of the battle pre vented the Nittanymen from scor ing their- fifth'touchdown. Smaltz made . ,gppd ; ;ntl 'four extra point 'inversions. ; Sidetracked by injuries for the ast two games, Petrella came ack to : surpass any of his pre ious performances by tallying ■jtate’s first three touchdowns and n, general; running the opposition •agged. ISis.', first six-pointer cone n the latter part of the second juarter on a short'plunge off left tackle after a pass from Smaltz (Continued on: Page Three) Deer Hunters Seek Cut Firie Exemption : :Astsr Thanksgiving A tentative plan to exempt deer mnters from the $5 class-cut fine ollowing tlie Thanksgiving vr.ca ion i:\vill' be considered by the Senate Committee on Rules this Eternpbn." - Provisions, of the plan call for unters/.to report to Student Un on with .their matriculation card md,huniing license between 8 and !0:30" p. m. Sunday for exemption from the, fine. This .plan was' brought before Ail-College Cabinet by, Robert A. Wasser. '42 iat Irist Tuesday’s meet ing.' Cabinet''approved the plan rad" forwarded it, to the Senate Committee,on Rules for its con •ideration. ■'[] .. . Hunters -had difficulty in get ting exempt from the cut fine last year partly because they did not eport to College, before • going hunting and rise because there lad been no official notification of heir exemption from the fine. It vns riot until several weeks after 'he Thanksgiving vacation that he hunter.-; fiiinliv were exempt. tty, Jii, ,m fAHTA J AYS.' — STATE CO/6£C/£r See Story on Page 2 aKlreWieEßMiJW.'lwiilt- vV"J I smy9Sli!Skf?w -i ®l}p !a% Hi doll VOL. 38—No. 47 Holiday Climaxes Grid Upset: NITTANY TRIUMVIRATE— Not for 29 years have the Pitt Panthers been beaten by the Nit tany Lion eleven as badly as they were Saturday. In 1912 the Lions carried pff a 38-0 victory. And the above seniors, Bill Smaltz, Captain Len Krouse, ehd Pepper Petrella. (left to right) wrap- Harriers Place M In Nationals EAST LANSING, Mich., Nov. 24—A group of Penn State har riers paid their own way on an 850-mile trip and took' second place in the National Collegiate Cross-country run here today. The Nittany Lions, out-and-out underdogs .before the meet, sur prised everyone by ; nabbing the runner-up position, trailing Rhode Islrnd State, the TC4-A cham pions; Norm Gordon paced the Blue and White contingent to the tape, taking 11th place. Herar Goff berg followed in 15th. Captain Alex Bourgerie took 27th, Curt (Continued on Page Three) School Council Votes To Invite Transfers Transfer students in the Educa tion School will be invited to fa culty social hours as a result of a decision made by the Education School Student Council. Purpose of the social hours is to acquaint students "with the fa culty and to discuss student prob lems. These meetings are social and no speeches are made. Rich ard Stevenson ’42, president of the council, appointed Lois Jeanne Kaiser to handle the invitation of transfers.. Frosh Cliques Nominate Officers In the initial political venture of Other candidates, which were the freshman class, tentative can- announced last night by the i'resh didnte line-ups were released last man cliques, are as follows: vice might with Robert 7j. 'Weitzel (In- president, Harry Mitchell (Inde dependent) and M. Clifford St. pendent) and Robert E. Becker Clair* (Campus) heading the slates (Campus); secretary, lone 11. Tro as nominees for the class presi- vaiuli (Independent) and Ruth A. deucy to he decided election day, Embury (Campus); treasurer, John Wednesday, December 10. T. Nolan (Independent) and Wil- Although both cliques claim new liarn C. Masseth (Campus); histor and staftling inovations in their ian, Patricia E. 'Diener (Indepen platforms, public announcement of dent) and 'Robert Thompson (Cam these party planks will not* be re- pus). leased until the freshman poltical Nominations will not be official mass meeting next Tuesday, which until petitions are filed Monday will officially usher in the week with Jerome H. Blakeslee ’43, long campaign lasting from De- Frosh Elections Committee chair cember 3to December 10. man, .These petitions must con- mti TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, STATE COLLEGE, PA, Tribunal Postpones Customs Bluebook : . Bcnause-df- the- ei«ter>,sio-ni>‘i'--.th«: Thanksgiving vacation, the exam ination of exemptees by Tribunal, previously scheduled for 9 p. in. tonight, will be postponed until Tuesday evening, December 2. The. customs quiz ■ will be held in 110.. Sparks Building at 7:30 p. m. LA Council Elections Posfponed One Week Sophomore elections for Liberal Arts student council have been postponed until Monday and Tuesday according to William O. Meyers, president of the council. Originally scheduled for yes terday and today, the elections were set buck a week because the extended Thanksgiving vacation would prevent some students from voting. The elections will be held in the lobby of Sparks Building between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday and Tuesdav. Three men and one wo man will be elected to the coun cil. Only Liberal Arts sopho mores are eligible to vote for the representatives. Deferment Blanks Ready Deferment blanks for - second semester fees may now be secured at the Bursar’s office in Old Main. nexpecte OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE which complied with student re ped themselves in grid by thumping Pitt, quests in the form of a 150-foot Smaltz was brilliant with his passes and plunging, petition bearing the names of and Krouse lived up to his reputation as the 3 > 990 students. _ , , • • x,. j. T 5 Classes will convene Monday finest pass receiver in the East. Petrella realized . . „ . .. ... .... . .. , /morning at 8 p. m. at the official his biggest grid ambition as he ran through the close of the Thanksgiving holi- Pitt line at will, reaping three touchdowns.. <3 ay. wjtan -■I The Council calls attention to HI f ■ I 48-hour ruling applying to OA Ulsnff \Af 15&I absences before and after vaca nt ■ IWSBJ s#Vl*>a®lß tions and requests student cooper ■■ ' m i l ation in observing the special rul- T»|M [A Mem YAf If ing - The $ 5 cut-fine period be f. a JIS : IHJYvW b Mhßli gan, : at noon..yesterday u and will ® continue until 5 p. m. Tuesday, From Wall Street to Harlem, December'2. Broadway to Bowery will be the Surpassing demonstrations re theme of the PSOA’s annual social suiting from the 10-0 victory over inquiry trip to New York from De- the Golden Panthers in 1939, cember 4 to 7. More than 20 peo- sporadic outbursts of student eh ple are expected to participate. thusiasm developed last weekend Heleri E. Schneider .’42, chair- into three organized rallies, man of the committee for the event The first celebration which be announced that students who plan gan at 1 a. m. was broken up by to make the tour and have not reg- firehoses and extinguishers in the itsered should attend a meeting in men’s dormitories. More orderly the Hugh 'Beaver room, 304 Old were the gatherings of 2500 stud- Main, at 8 p. m. Monday, Decern- ents who besieged President Het ber 1. Committee members in- zel’s home a't 1:30 and 10:15 p. m. elude Nicholas Evasovich ’45, Jean Sunday. M. Womer ’42, Charlotte M. Hart- Appeals for a football holiday to man ’43, and Frank'P. Graham ’45. celebrate the 31-7 drubbing given Items listed for the trip are Fred to Pitt were met by the President Waring’s program,! Radio City Mu- with the suggestion that a student sic Hall, TWn Meeting of the Air, petition be presented Monday Stock Exchange, civil liberties morning. Under the direction of union, China Town, Henry Street cheerleader Charles E. Peck ’43, Settlement, Lavenburg homes, volunteers collected individual Father Divine’s church, 'Harlem petitions from organized groups YMOA Greenwich Village Co-op until 3 a. m. yesterday raid pre- International House, Riverside sented them to the President at 9 Church, Fellowship of Reconcilia- a. m. tion Ashrem, where Dr. A. J. t„tiuil,llllllimil1IIIUIlllllllimilllimUlimillHUlllllllir Muste is expected to speak. The group also plans to attend other T churches on thfe trip. JLI\J.LvZ? IN WW O 'liiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiimiK Permissions Needed Written permissions from par ents for coeds over 21 years of age to drink may be given to Jeanne C. Stiles ’42, chairman of WSGA Judicial Committee. tain the signatures of at least 75 male freshmen and 25 frosh coeds. Also due at the same time are platform, statements and pictures of all candidates. Elections Committee must approve the platforms, and also reserves . the right to censor any provisions WASHINGTON AH exporta •that may seem ridiculous. tion licenses to German-held ter 'Blakeslec has warned against ritory in Africa, including the any campaigning before the offi- French possessions, have been re cial opening of campaign week at voiced. Observers in the capital the political mass meeting next say that this is merely one more Tuesday. Under the new ’45 elec- way that the American govern tions code penalties for violations ment is trying to help the (British, of the code are left to the discre- They say that this should aid the tion of the comn'iittee but are not British in their present drive in to exceed 50 votes. . North Africa. Thanksgiving Recess Begins At 5 P. M. Today Fired by a, history-making vic tory over Pitt, student rooters, burning with jubilation, observed a 24-hour celebration which was climaxed yesterday morning by President Ralph D. Hetzel’s an nouncement of a half-holiday to morrow. Opening of the Thanksgiving recess is automatically -advanced, to 5 p. m. today by the action of the Council on' Administration CAIRO, Egypt British troops have'penetrated to the south of To bruk and are threatening the Ger mans’ from the beseiged city and with a column from Egypt. The British say that the tank losses on both sides have been so large that the infantry has had to do all the fighting by themselves. ROME, Italy An official Ital ian communique admitted that a British column had penetrated 200 miles into the interior of Libya. This column movement clearly in dicated an attempt by the British to drive straight to the coast across the desert. The Freshman nump WEATHER Cooler with Snow PRICE THREE CENTS