SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 1960 Weinberger Forgeries of Although forgers of art are great technicians, they will always lack an understanding of art and a feeling for taste. Martin Weinberger, distinguished visiting professor in art and architectural history, said in a lecture last night. The forger will always be a hit-or-miss type of artist, he said, but although every co py i s a forgery, not every copy is a bad work of art. The art of forgery arose in the beginning of the 15th century, when people first began to pay money for old things, he said. The market for collectors items has been so great, Wein berger said, that if all the sup posedly• authentic English and French furniture appearing in the museums is actually real, ev ery Frenchman and Englishman between 1600-1700 must have had at least three writing desks and several dining room suites Chess Team To Compete At Princeton Penn State will become the 1960 National Intercollegiate Chess Team Champion if it can beat players . from New York and the University of Chicago, Mordecai Treblow, director of the tournament, said yesterday. The National Inlercollegiate, biggest tournament in college chess, will be played on Dec. 27- 30 at Princeton .University. It will be a' seven-round Swiss team tournament in which teams will play opponents with the same win and loss score without any team being eliminated. The tournament is open to any full time college undergraduate. Treblow, said he thinks Penn State can beat its leading oppon ents, the players from Harvard, Columbia, City College of New York, Fordham and the Univer sity of Chicago. Represeriting Penn State at the tournament will be Anthony Can tone, first board, and Richard Sommerville, second board. Play ing the other two boards and act ing as alternates will be. Harry Mathews, Anthony Poulos, George Djurjevic ,and Eugene Grumer. TOCS-- (Continued from page one) long since ended L-when the na tion might have been able to af ford the luxury of summer-long "holidays" from learning. "What is needed, obviously, is a fundamental shift in the public attitude toward college-going. Whereas now it is the "regular" student who attends college nine months out of every twelve for four years, and the "irregular" student who also attends in the summer, it should actually be the other way around, with the "reg ular" student attending on a year round basis. The exception must become the rule." John Wanamaker would wait early at the door to his depart ment store. To all late department managers he would merely smile and say "Good morning." Nothing else happened, but nobody was late a second time Discusses Masters By ELLIE HUMMER The curator of a museum or a connoisseur of art must face many different types of for geries, Weinberger said. These people fear a work that has been patched up more than one , that is an outright lake from the beginning, he added. I The work may be a copy of an original by the actual artist of ,the original, he said, and many lof these workshop pieces may be 'very good. Another copy may be by a contemporary of the artist and at • least have the general 'feeling of the period, he said. A forgery by a later artist is per haps the easiest to detect because it is more removed from the orig inal. Very few forgers last more than 30 years, Weinberger said. He explained that when the mannerisms of the particular period the forger lived in have died away, it becomes apparent that the work has mannerisms of the forger's own contempor ary period. To illustrate this point, Wein berger showed a slide of a statue 'of supposedly ancient Roman origin. Although the trained eye 'could pick out the technical faults 'of the work, he said, any one •knows the ancient Romans did; .not wear the trunks which are; very .evident on this work. Another example of this ten dency of a forger to put his own period in the work was the coffee pot which appeared on a work which was to have been of a time previous to the modern coffee pot, Weinberger pointed out. The three main techniques of forgery are the simple copy, the composite and the sublime meth od, he said. Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL 3 " c or. kti'' CTTE. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Kleenex Kaper Plays Part in Horse Show Common facial tissues played an important part in the , Riders Club annual Fall Horse Show last weekend. The "Kleenex Event" was one of 14 classes presented. Partners on horseback held a tissue be tween them cantering, trotting and walking their horses as di-, rected. The length of the tissue remain ing intact determined the win ners as Dora Ann McKenzie, senior in elementary kindergarten education from Montrose and president of the Riders Club, and her partner Donald Ferry from Roaring Springs. About 100 entrees participated in the contest. In the Burlap Bag Race the participants had to ride to a pile of burlap bags, dismount, climb into bags, remount and ride to the finish line. Barney Derstetter, a 4-H member from Tyrone took first place in this event. Bareback Horsemanship was judged on' form and was won by Jane Clarke, freshman in agri culture from Centre Hall. FIRESIDE FORUM on India with MR. AND MRS. CHAUNCEY LANG SUNDAY 6:30 P. M. Wesley Foundation 256 E. College Ave. The best tobacco makes the best smoke! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winiton-Balein. N. O. Yale Prof to Speak At Chapel Service E. William Muehl, professor of practical theology at Yale Divinity School, will speak for the University chapel service at 10:55 a.m, tomorrow in Schwab. His topic will be "The Dark Reflection of God." A lawyer by training, Muehl is considered an authority on homiletics, the art of preach-I !i ;. ng. He received his bachelor '''ISA Asks Indies !arts and his bachelor of law de-1 agrees from the University of; Michigan and an honorary mas- . ITo Join Committee ter of arts degree from Yale. In addition to being a member for ' Proj ect Joey' ;of the Michigan Bar Associationi The Independent Students As- Muehl belongs to the Amerioanl sociation will place posters in the Arbitration Association and has . indepe served as arbitrator in New Eng-. residence halls asking !ents and student groups to sind gn- land labor management disputes.up to help ISA with Project Joey, Members of the University Susanne Bolich, project co-chair-- ; Chapel Choir and the Meditation man, said yesterday. Chapel Choir will sing for the! . Those who sign up for the proj service, with James Beach con- , C',CL Nvill help give a Christmas ductjng. !party on Dec. II from 1-6 p.m. Speaking at the Protestant ‘vor-tin the He.tzel Union Building. ship service at 9 a.m. tomorrow in;About 80 children from the St. the Helen Eakin EisenhowerNary's and St. John's orphanages Chapel will be The- Rev. Donaldand the Blair County Children's Mcllvride, Presbyterian chaplain? Home will attend. , to the University. ! Each child will be the personal Rev. Mcllvride, who will speak guest. of a student for the party. on "Pushing to the Extremities."! Movies will be shown and a came to the University in 19.5615ing will be held in the HUB after teaching in the Michigai - Oallroom. All the children will be public school system. Ile is also treated to a special Christmas din director of the Westminsterlner in the HUB Terrace Room. Foundation: 1 He is a graduate of Western Michigan University and received his bachelor of divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary and a master of arts degree from the University of Michigan. The Meditation Chapel Choir, directed by Willa Taylor, will sing for the service. In 1924 attendance figures shoWed 3320 undergraduate stu dents at the University with men outnumbering women by more than eight-to-one. PAGE FIVE