PAGE EIGHT 'Cat' Fur Flies Continued . from page two the 1925 Lion gridders put on their greatest game of the season against Pittsburgh even though the final score was 23-7. As one sportswriter wrote apologetically, "Penn State was outscored but not outplayed." (Gasoline was burned in order to put the field in shape, but this was not to be a hot afternoon for the Lions.) State scored its first 'P.D. in three years against the "anthers on a fake kick. and ~ s s, Cy Lungr en to Mick "cston. 1926: "Pitt Onslaught Con tiers Lions in Final Period." Long runs by Gib Welch annul tellar play of battered P.S. Viewing a trip to the West , :tat, Pitt's Panthers won the 'astern Championship by down- State 30 to 0 in 1927 In 1928 Penn State was deter lined to get its first grid win - .ver Pitt in nine years. But de •ressed by Toby Uansa's 96-yard .iuchdown run in the first period, , he Lions again limped back to 'heir lair licking their wounds. The Score was 26-0 in favor of "'qt. 19r1: Penn State made it close CLASSIFIEDS Alt classified advertisements must be be` 12:00 p.m. day preceeding issue. vices are 40c one insertion . $l.OO ' , ree insertions: 17 words or less. All ids over 17 three for ge for each ,ertion. Call Collegian 6711. LOST 19 BEER MUG, A.T,O. crest and name "Hungry" on sides. Sentimental_ val . Please call Bearer, 2532. "F.AVY PLAID COAT left in North End Nittany Dining Hall Monday noon. finder call Mutchler 5051-285. OST AT DELTA Sig House on Saturday, gray gabardine topcoat. Henry Paget nbel. Call Bill Hoffman, Dorm 9. VY FOUL WEATHER lea at Main Engineering last Monday. Please no 'y Maw. Schultz-Main Engineering'. FOUND r RING OF PEARLS. Call Harry Grans bfick, Pollock Circle 6 after 7. WANTED •iIIET, SINGLE ROOM near campus for male student. Write P.O. Box 612, State cllege. HIDE TO BOSTON, Nov. es. 211 or 24 Call Hal 2526. FOR SALE lIREE ROOM TRAILER, steel roof, ad ditional room and porch attached. All ~ , v eniences of Windcrest--715-B Wind refit. 3.\L&-1947_27 foot Zimmer house trail er, used 6 months, equipped for house ' eping, drapes, silver, dishes, ete. Duo .l•erm heater, bottle-gas stove. Displayed rear 231 S Atherton St. Call Ted 868 to: ppointment to insport. $1950. MISCELLANEOUS 13EY GANG—Charity bazaar at the Kap pa Alpha Theta House. Dec. 4, 2 p.m. pm. LASTING CURLS for any hair. Safe, quick, easy—Curly-Head Capsules, 4 for Counter 3, MURPHY'S I`iIITANY ROOM and board available. Suitable financial arrangement. Call De V Hex, Nittany 52.14, 5051.292. DON'T FORGET Episcopal Canter bury Club Supper Meeting this Sunday, Nov. 21 at 6 o'clock instead of 5:15. Phi Beta 'Glamour' SEAM-FREE NYLONS WNW PAIIOIIIO H Smart girls aws wearing them—foe they're a smart fashion! The Seal of the DANCING Twins identifies their lissive, patented heel* for t titt ,operb fit ... their Gussetoe •Hr comfort ... their flawless, sewn • ree look. You'll find them under leaddig brand names at your , favorite college shop or store. THE DAILY but couldn't quite make the grade as Pitt won out, 19-12. In one of the most one-sided games between the two schools, Pitt's Panthers clawed their way to a 41-6 win in 1931. Four Penn State fumbles in the opening period were instrumental in driv ing the nails into their own coffin. TIME SOOTHS ALL ILLS Evidently feeling the need of a period of reorganization and re construction of their battered morale, Coach Bob Higgins' grid ders dropped relations with the Panther pack during the years 1932, '33 and '34. The respite did some good fur in 1935, following the resumption of play between the two bitter rivals, the Panthers were limited to •a mere 9-0 win. "band;' Dick Cassiano Scores Thrice!" This was the headline which _greeted early Collegian readers on November 23. 1937, as Pitt's jungle cats gave the Nit tany warriors their 24th loss in the 38th meeting of the two col lcoes. snatching a 26-0 verdict. COMES THE REVOLUTION! Headline—" Roaring Lions Re venge 20 Years of Defeat With 10-0 Calsomine." Said Dick Pe ters, Collegian sports editor, after the 1938 State win, "It took 20 years, but, oh my, the cheers and bonfires are still reverberating up the hazy Nittany valley." NITTA N y The International Film Club and Romance Language Dept. present MONDAY - TUESDAY EVES EXECUTIVE CAREERS IN RETAILING One-year Course Y ER OUT••• , e 0 ... on the strikes of slow drudgery, in accuracy and inefficiency. Royal Port able typewriters turn out cleaner, neat er work. It has the most sensational • typewriter improvement in years— FINGER FORM KEYS—designed to cradle your finger tips! Because of its speed spacer, rapid ribbon changer and "Magic" margin its the favorite port able at American Colleges everywhere. CARL H. STEELE 121 E. BEAVER "All things come to him who waits," says the adage and the ' years between 1941, '42 and '43 were the Lion's time to howl. In 1941, united behind the slo gan "Send Special Delivery Jones to the Dead Letter Office," Penn State's grid machine smashed out a 31-7 nightmare over the toothless Panthers. The Lions were sparked by Pepper Pe trella, Bill Smaltz and Captain Len Krouse. 1942: A 14-6 win by Penn State highlighted by a 90-yard second period touchdown runback by Larry Joe. "Wild" Bill Dutton, who needed only 75 yards to snare the all-time Pitt yardage, was held to a rheumatic two yards, mute testimony of State's 'stub born resistance. THIRD STRAIGHT WIN Penn State outlasted the Smoky City boys, 14-0, in 1943 to gain their third straight clas sic win. The following year Pitt re versed the numerals on the scoreboard to score its own 14-0 win over the Blue and White. A freak 84-yard run by Pitt's Jimmy Joe Robinson was enough to spell a 7-0 defeat for Penn State in 1945. The game repre sented one of the most bitterly fought and closely contested grid clashes between the two colleges. Pitt extended its traditional • grid jinx over Penn State to three in a row as the Panther copped the 1946 game, 14 to 7. Again a win over the Blue and Gold would • Prepare to step into a responsible executive position in the retailing field: buying, advertising, fashion, personnel. Specialized training, exclusively for cob lege graduates, covers merchandising, personnel management, textiles, store organization, sales promotion, and all phases of store activity. Realistic ap proach under store-trained faculty. Classes are combined with paid store work. Students are usually placed be fore graduation. Co-educational. Mas ter's degree. Tuition $350. Four full tuition scholarships available. Limited enrollment. Write Admissions Office for Bulletin C. RESEARCH BUREAU POt UTAK TRAINING UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURG* • Pllblmol3, Pa. have given Higgins an undefeated season. Elwood Petchel, State's flying fragment, starred in defeat fOr the Lions. Last year a bowl-blinded band of marauding Lions reached out with a predatory paw and as Tom Morgan, Collegian sports editor, said, "left cleat-marks in the Panther's hide that will burn and ATTENTION Fraternities and Sororities Your group can make a night of it to see this new and dif ferent stage production at Center Stage. Talk it over—de cide on a night, the number, etc., and call the Drama Office for reservations. TEN NIGHTS IN A BARROOM GRAND OPENING... , , Monday, November 22 Souvenirs for Ladies-4 to 8 p.m. Complete Washing, Extracting, and Drying Sei•vice ALSO Quick Dry-Cleaning Service • • Store Hours: 8 .am. to 8 p.m. 'State College LAUNDERETTE 210 WEST COLLEGE AVENUE DIAL 4785 ANTES MOTOR SALES PHONE 2505 ROUTE 322 lit MILE NORTH of STATE COLLEGE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1948 rankle for many moons." For the 29-0 win put the Lions into the Cotton Bowl. It was State's first perfect nine-game football season, and it left the impression in the minds of many that the 1947 edition was one of the greatest Nittany teams ever to stomp across a gridiron. This P.M.—You call it.