PAGE EIGHT Daring Young Man. SWINGING AND SWAYING from ihe Old Main lower, a work man undertakes a repair job 150 feel above the plaza in front of the building. Safely ropes keep workmen's insurance rales down, as they repair ihe dome and add transparent waterproofing to it. It's ihe first repair job on the lower since Old Main was re constructed 25 years ago. The lower is 80 feel tall. Campus Summer Campus workmen were busy throughout the summer with a series of remodeling and repairing projects while still more are planned for the near future. The largest project was the renovation of the cafeteria and kitchen in the Home Economics Building. Both rooms were re- painted and a new cafeteria coun ter and ceiling acoustics tile in stalled. Grandstand Painted The Beaver Field grandstand is being painted. The work is ex pected to be finished for the first home game with Virginia, Oct. 9. The White Hall gymnasium was repainted, as were the General Extension Building, Wo m a n’s Building, and Temporary Class room Building. Post Office Built Hi the Nittany.-Pollock area, a new post office was built and the athletic field improved. , A new classroom is being in stalled on the first floor of En gineering C. The parking area near Whit more Laboratory was resurfaced. DelSeDonne— (Continued from, page one) Lutter had been k proposed. All three declined. Miss DelleDonne said she would accept the post if the group wanted her as chairman. Secret ballot was taken. The elections code- to go before cabinet tonight specifies that the party clique chairman is to be elected at an open clique meet ing. The party constitution calls for election by the council. McMeekin said: “Considering the new code was adopted unanimously at encamp ment, I want to go on record that I am not in favor of the closed meeting tonight.” “But, rather,” he said, “I am in favor of an open meeting Sun day night. This would have al lowed everyone present, whether past clique members or not, eli gible to vote for the clique chair man.” Lutter concurred with McMee 3kin, saying that to hold an elec tion at that time was to go against Sie wishes of both the majority of student leaders and the admin istration. Other officers elected were Janet McKee, secretary; Rita Baibrow, secretariat; and James SEace, treasurer. Miss DelleDonne said a fresh anta-i clique meeting will be held Bt 7 p.m. Sunday in 10 Sparks. ÜBA IS STILL OPEN TODAY Undergoes Face-Lifting The parking area behind Grange Dormitory will be enlarged to ac commodate Hetzel Union Build ing parking and the entire area given an asphalt coat. A new,-parking area will be con structed on the lawn behind Woman’s Building and between Pond Laboratory and Burrowes Building. The area will accommo date 36 cars. Two Japanese Yew shrubs have been planted in front of the HUB. Additional landscaping has been done in the area around the Nit tany Lion Inn. The complete planting program will begin next week. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE ONE CUSHMAN motor-scooter, 1949 mode], A-l condition. Price $B5. Phone AD 7-4432. HAYNES FLUTE in excellent condition, priced reasonable. Call AD 7-3946 at noon or after 5 p.m. 1947 CHEVROLET 4 dr. sedan, R&H, 5 good tires, very good mechanically, clean. $3OO. Pollock 14-20 ext. 274. $2O SET of Dietzgen drawing instruments, never been used. Will consider any reasonable offer. Call ext. 2303. ENGINEERING DRAWING set, complete with board and T-square, also Zoology disecting kit. Phone AD 7-4752 evenings 5 to 7. EBONITE Selmer Clarinet. Call AD 7-4702. REVOLVER—Smith and "Wesson 38 calibre 4% inch barrel, recently purchased. Re cently married, must sell. Phone AD 7-4720, UNIFORMS. Ideal for Home Ec students or waitresses. Newest fall styles in da cron, nylon, poplin. Call AD 8-6239. 1941 INDIAN Motorcycle, new battery, good tires, good running condition. Must sell. Call AD 7-7705 after 5 p.m. PICKETT AND Eckel Slide Rule, model 800, like new. $lO. Inquire Robert Hen derson, 414 S. Pugh St. ' 1949 CHEVROLET 2 dr. sedan. Heater, good tires, new seat covers, excellent condition, $595. 1949 Ford V-8 2 dr. sedan, R&H, seat covers, like new, $595. Can be financed—private. Phone AD 7-4712.- CHEMIST’S SLIDE Rule, $22.50; Dietzgen drawing set, $10.00; Gladiator coronet, $30.00. Phone AD 7-2595. IS YOUR typewriter giving you trouble? If so, just dial AD 7-2492 or bring ma chine to 633 W. College Ave., State College. NOTICE NEXT-TO-NEW Shop, 315% W. Beaven Come here for second-hand goods. Just arrived; drawing sets, T-squares, drawing triangles. Open 9-12, 1-4; Closed Wed. p.m. and Sat. Phone AD 7-7169. RIDE WANTED FROM PHILA. to State—Wed., Sept. 29th. Call 341 Simmons or leave message at Collegian office. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA AIM Discusses General Plans, Co-operation The Association of Independent Men last night discussed general policies for the coming year. Loa Joan Packard, president of Leonides, gave a report on the makeup of Leonides, and asked for closer co-operation between AIM and Leonides. Reports were given by repre? sentatives from ■ the West Dorm and Nittany areas on dates for resident hall elections. b er t Dennis, president of AIM, gave a report on the National Indepen dent Students’ Association, held this summer. Dennis also announced that he would hold office hours in. 129 Waring from 8 a.m. to noon on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and from 8 a.m. until 11 a.m. Satur days. AH AIM judicial cases will be heard in 127 Waring Hall, it was announced. James W. Dean, assistant to the Dean of Men, in charge of inde pendent affairs, asked that repre sentatives from the Nittany-Pol lock area present parking recom mendations, in order to combat the traffic situation when the ice skating rink opens. Prof to Discuss Novel On WDFM Tonight S. Leonard Rubenstein, instruc tor of English composition, will discuss his recently published novel, “The Battle Done,” on WDFM program, “Just Out,” at 8:30 tonight. ■ The book concerns a German prisoner of war camp in South Carolina. Rubenstein is a grad uate of Rutgers University with a journalism degree and holds .a Master’s degree in fine arts and creative writing from the Univer sity of lowa. “Just Out” is a half-hour show dealing with recently released records, books, and magazine articles. Few Froths Available Froth, campus humor magazine, will remain on sale today at the Student Union Desk in Old Main. All but a few copies of this month’s issue have been sold. Jack Rose, director of circulation, said yesterday. PIANO MAN and string bass man for local dance band. Phone AI, AD 7-2939. STUDENTS EARN up to $1.50 per hour on a steady part-time job. See "Perry” at Dux Club. 128 S. Pugh. MALE STUDENTS wanting rooms in dormitory, please call AD 7-4332, im- , ROOMS FOR RENT—Local—State College area. Contact AD 7-4979. AFTER OCT. 7, large double room, private bath, new beds, towels and linen, fac ulty home. In State College. Men only. Phone: EL 5-4741. Ask for Mrs. Buck. ANYONE INTERESTED in horse-drawn hayrides contact Lynn Mothersbaugh. Phone EM 4-1544. One or 2 wagons avail able. FOR YOUR next party, would you like your fancy sandwiches or cookies to have a professional look and homemade flavor? Call Mrs. Garner AD 7-3996 and order. BOWLERS—THERE will be a meeting of the A.I.M. League Mon. Sept. 27 at 7:30 p.m. at Beaver House. A captain* or representative from each team should be present. New teams welcome. Any indi vidual wishing to join a team should also attend. 329 E. Beaver Ave. Phone ADams 7-7851. TENNIS "FANS’*: It’s Hassinger for racket stringing the no-awl way. Prompt service. Guaranteed work. Longer life to string and racket. R. T. Hassinger, White Hall or 514 E. Beaver Ave. after 5 p.m. PARTY COOKIES, canapes, and other hors d'oeuvres, birthday cakes and other cakes, excellent fruit punch. Frida Stern, 122 E. Irvin Ave. Phone AD 7-4818. FOUND HANDKERCHIEF "Donna Ma rie” ; Box 539 Hamilton. NAVY BLUE suitcoat taken by mistake at Delta Sigma Phi party, Sept. 18. Call AD 7-4151. HELP WANTED ?OR RENT MISCELLANEOUS FOUND LOST 'A Million Millers / Mumbles Marsh The name is Miller. Charles R. Marsh, assistant pro fessor of electrical engineering, called the roll for his first class of an engineering 1 section. And when he called Miller, nearly half of the class replied. A check of the- names revealed that seven of the 16 students in the section had the same last name—and the name is Miller. Advertisement FOOTBALL THROUGH THE AGES The football frenzy is upon us. But let us, in the midst of this pandemonium, call time. Let us pause for a moment of tranquil reflection. What is this game called football? What is its history? Its origins? Its traditions? These are not idle questions, for when we have the answers we will-appreciate even more fully, enjoy even more deeply, this great American game of football. First of all, to call football an American game is somewhat mis leading. True, the game is now played almost exclusively in America, but it comes to us from a land far away and a civilization long dead. Football was first played in ancient Rome. Introduced by Julius Caesar, it became one of the most popular Roman sports by the time of Nero’s reign. The eminent historian Sigafoos reports a crowd of MMCLDDXVIII people at the Colosseum one Saturday afternoon to see the Christians play the Lions. With the decline of the Roman empire football fell into disuse. The barbaric Huns and Goths preferred canasta. However, by the Twelfth Century A.D. football had emerged from its twilight and risen to its rightful place in the firmament of European pastimes. The eminent historian Sigafoos reports that the whole continent was in the grip of wild excitement in the year 1192 when the Crusaders, under Freddie Barbarossa, journeyed all the way to Damascus to play the Saracens in the Fig Bowl game. The Crusaders squeaked through, 23 to 21, on a field goal by Dick Coeur de Lion in the closing seconds - of the game. October 21, 1512, will ever remain a red letter day in the history of football. On that day Leonardo da Vinci, who has often been called '“The Renaissance Man” because of his proficiency in a hundred arts and sciences, was painting a picture of a Florentine lady named Mona Lisa Schultz. “Listen, Mona baby,” he said as she struck a pose for her portrait, “I keep telling you—don’t smile. Just relax and look natural.” “But I’m not smiling,” she replied. “Well, what do you call it?” he said. “Gee, I don’t know,” said Mrs. Schultz. “It’s just an expression, kind of.” “Well, cut it ont,” said The Renaissance Man. “I’ll try,” she promised. And try she did, but without success, for a moment later the artist was saying to her, “Look, Mona kid, I’m not gonna ask you again.; Wipe that silly grin off your face.” “Honest to goodness, The Renaissance Man,” said she to him, “it’s no grin. It’s just the way I look.” “Well, just stop it,” said Leonard testily and turned away to mix his pigments. When he turned back to Mona Lisa and saw the smile still on her face, he became so enraged that he seized the nearest object a casava melon, as it happened and hurled it at her with all his strength. Showing great presence of mind, she caught the melon and ran with it from the studio until The Renaissance Man’s temper should cool. This was, of course, the first completed forward pass. Another date dear to the hearts of all football fans is September 29/ 1442. It was on this date, according to the eminent historian Sigaf oos, that a sixteen year old lad named Christopher Columbus tried out for the football team at Genoa Tech. He failed to make the team because he was too light. (He weighed at that time only 12 pounds.). And why, you ask, is this date September 29, 1442 so dear to the hearts of all football fans? Because young Columbus was so heartbroken at not making the team that he ran away to sea. And if that hadn’t happened, he never would have discovered America. And if Columbus hadn’t discovered America, the world never would have discovered tobacco. And if tire world hadn’t discovered tobacco, football fans never would have discovered Philip Morris which, as every fan knows, is the perfect companion to football. As Sigafoos, the eminent historian, says, “Land’s sakes, I can’t even imagine football without Philip Morris. I’d, sooner go to a game without my raccoon coat than without my neat, rich tobacco-brown snap-open pack of mild vintage Philip Morris Cigarettes which come in regular or king-size at prices young and old can afford. Land’s sakes!” The end of football in Europe came with the notorious “Black Sox Scandal” of 1587, in which Ed Machiavelli, one of the Pisa mob, paid off the University of Heidelberg Sabres to throw the champion ship game to the Chartres A. and M. Gophers. It was a mortal blow to football on the continent. But the game took hold in the American colonies and thrived as it had never thrived before. Which brings us to another date that remains evergreen in the hearts of football lovers: December 16,1771. On that date a_' British packet loaded with tea sailed into Boston harbor. The colonies_ had long been smarting under the English king’s tax on tea. “Taxation without representation,” they called it, and feelings ran high. When on December 16,1771, the British ship docked at Boston, a semi-pro football team called the Nonpareil Tigers, coached by Samuel (Swifty) Adams, was scrimmaging near the harbor. “Come, l a ds cr i e d Swifty, seeing the ship. “Let’s dump the tea in the ocean!” With many a laugh and cheer the Nonpareil Tigers followed Swifty aboard and proceeded to dump the cargo overboard in a wild, dis organized and abandoned manner. “Here now!” called Swifty sharply. “That’s no way to dump tea overboard. Let’s get into some kind of formation.” And that, fans, is how the “T” formation was born. ©Mar Stallman, 1954 This column is brought to you by the makers of PHILIP MORRIS who think you would, enjoy their cigarette. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1V54 ASAE to Hold Picnic The student branch of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers will hold a -picnic at 6 tonight at Sunset Park. Cars will be leaving for the park at 6 p.m. in front of the Ag ricultural Engineering Building. Donovan Reappointed George L. Donovan, director of associated student activities, was renamed as regional representa tive of the Association of College Unions yesterday. (Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek? etc.) Advertisement