PAGE EIGHT Prep Concert Blue Band Formed With 60 Members Sixty members were named to a Prep Concert Blue band last week by James E. Dunlop, direc tor. The prep band was formed this .semester as a supplementary group for the concert band, he said. Size of the concert band was limited by seating capacity of the stage in Schwab auditorium. The prep band was organized to util ize an exceptionally large amount of talent this year, Dunlop said. First practice of the prep band will be held at 7 tomorrow night in 117 Carnegie hall. Members of the band include Jerry Acciarri, Ann Barker, Al bert Fegley, and Phyllis Oxford, flute and piccolo. Carolyn App David Bronstein, Glenna Cox, Wilson Cramer, Robert Fatzinger, E. Ann Fisher, E. Jay LeVan, Don ald Nevel, Rudy Piacentino, Grant Price, David Ranscher, Conrad Ruht, Frederick Sinfelt, Glenn Stimpff, Anna. Mae Webb, and Lawrence Wexlin, clarinet. Russell DiMarco, John Mantino, Wayne Sexauer, Leo Curto, Rich ard Wert, and Tyson Brown, saxo phone. Elva Zimmerman, bassoon. CLASSIFIEDS LOST 1 PAIR GLASSES in brown leather ease. Near Main Engineering. Call. Chuck 4989, Delta Chi. . GOLD RING with pearls and garnet in • setting. (Inscribed E. Hebeur). Phone 26b9. Sentimental value. ' Reward! LOST, SATURDAY pair of red glasses gold and pearl trimmed. Black Tera case. Desperately needed. Call Flo 342 Atherton. WHOEVER TOOK wrong' topcoat from Sparks Sat. morning—car keys in Pocket please call Bob Shore 4953. MISCELLANEOUS IF• YOUR typewriter needs repairs just call 2492 or bring machine to 633 W. College Ave. Mr. Beatties 28 years ex perience is at your service. FRUSTRATED? the models at BILL'S MODEL SHOP will never let you down. 202 West Prospect 6:30-9:00 p.m. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY The :atm Cola Bottling Co., of Altoona, Pa. Kenneth Fehr, Robert Gohn, Wil liam Hess, Keith "Hyatt, William Lysinger, Dave Margolf, Robert Marsh, Edward Reider, Marlin Ristenbatt, Lewis Rovansek, Ron ald Sauers, and Richard Talada, cornet and trumpet. David Bis choff, Bernard Dillon, Adam Kois, and Theodore Kuhns, bass. Ralph Egolf, Rowland Riker, Ernest Stahl, Herbert Tomlinson ; horn. Richard Bingaman, Edward Kleyps, and William Stambaugh, baritone. Ted Godshall, Wesley Kreibel, Charles• Naginey, Eryth Rea, E. Ward Reighard, and Wil liam Stackhouse, trombone. Ron ald Cline, Richard Gray, Richard Harris, and 'John Skewis, precus sion. TYPING dc. MIMEOGRAPHING. Secre- tarial service newly managed by Helen Yarnell, Room 205, Hotel State College. Phone. 4906. TERM PAPERS, reports, etc. . : typed. Call 6443, 7 p.m. Ask for Snyder. Very reasonable. WEARING A Tux for houseparty ? If so, you, can rent one at the .Young Men's Shop, 123 S. 'Allen. LATIN AMERICAN students wish ex change English lessons with persons in terested in Spanish. Call 7715 or inquire 300 Sparks. LAUNDRIES DONE in orivate . home. Will call for and deliver. Phon 7579. FUR - SPORTSMAN revolver 330. Columbia LP phonograph MO, Remington electric shaver 312. See DeGroat, 631 W. College. FOLDING CHAIRS like new $2.50 and $3.00 each. Can be seen at Skytop. Phone 6592. . 1936 FOUR-DOOR Plymouth. Good en gine, good body, $l5O. Weiser Motor Company, 217 South Atherton. Phone 4171. FOR SALE 1940. Plymouth. Good con dition. Bob Landesman, Hamilton Hall, Room 57. Call 5051 Ext. 1170. AMBITIOUS YOUNG Man for sales work during spare time. High• com mission paid. Must have experience in men'a wear. For interview write P.O. Box 616, State College. • trade-marks mean the same thing. THE 'DAILY' COLLEGUN," STATE - COLLEGE," I-zNNb x-07ANIA FOR SALE WANTED 0 I 950,,Th• Coca-Cola Company Rip Seeks ID's .AfO.r.....7lTi:.'Qvil.,:lrio, (Continued from page four) something was wrong•with the syStem," Engle said. yesterday. "but Brown, which doesn't have too much, scored 27 points in one ' period against Colgate, and Paul Bixier has a good club." The same winged-T. is being used by Gus Zitrides, Engle's successor at Brown. It takes time to learn the sys tem, Engle said, and right now our biggest difficulty is the lack of cohesion on the offense. "We play well, but not well long enough," was Engle's conclusion. Pace East In Pass Defense Engle was obviously alluding to the inability of the Lions to continue the rapid first-quarter pace they displayed against the Owls. Defensively, however, the Lions looked good. They held Temple to 33 yards in passes and Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests "I gnu the answers...but I wasn't talking!" non-talkative baby ... but one look at his "literary leanings" tells you 'Specially those tricky cigarette tests! As a smoker, you probably know, too, that one puff or one sniff— that tests don't buffalo him. or a mere one-inhale comparison can't prove very much Why not , make the sensible test—the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test. You judge Camel mildness and flavor in your own "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste) ... for 30 days. Yes, test Camels as a steady smoke and you'll see why . More People Smoke Camels than any other cigarette! now lead the East in pass de fense. Following an exchange of punts, the Lions took possession on their own• 37 and moved downfield . for the touchdown .in 10 plays. Tony ,Orsini, who gained 105 yards in 21 attempts before being sidlined with a shoulder injury early "in the fourth period, ripped off 12 yards to get the Lions rolling and then shared the ball-carrying chores with Jim Pollard to give the Big White a first down on the Temple 30. Vince O'Bara picked up 3 yards on a quarterback sneak and then rifled one to John Smi dansky on the Temple 7. Orsini bucked over in two plays, going over right tackle for the score at 11:50 of the quartet. • • The Lions continued to look like • a world-beater following the Number 5... THE GNU The debating team couldn't niake much use of this about a cigarette! TUESDAY, OCTOBER` 31,-:1950 ensuing kickoff. After allowing the Templars - a first down, the defense tightened and the Owls punted out to the State 31. O'Bara passed to Smidansky for 10 yards and after Orsini and Pollard failed to gain he boot legged 17 yardi around right end to the Temple 38. Orsini plugged for a first dawn on the 27. Then came what Engle termed "the turning point." Wingback George Jacob got the jump on Ed Charters, the Temple .safety, and grabbed O'Bara's heave on the 2. As the two went down, however, Charters wrested the ball away and Temple took over on the 2. - Temple knotted the count late in the second quarter when Gene Caterina drove off right tackle from the one foot line to cap a 60-yard march. Bill Bonsall con verted. ,:::::.:.:isl'. •!::.::'...i.:.li.:'.:.lF.l.i.:i':'•':ii::*.