PAGE TWO Pitt Game Victor To Receive Trophy A rotating trophy in the form of a "scuttle' bucket" will be set up this year for the first time and awarded to the winner of the Pitt- Penn State football game by the Interfraternity Councils of the University of Pittsburgh and the College. • The scuttle bucket, similar to wing buckets found in front of fireplaces, will be jointly sponsored by both IFC's as a reult of a Government Will Train Engineers The U.S. Civil Service Commis sion has announced an examina tion to fill highway engineer trainee jobs in the Bureau of Pub lic Roads. The jobs are located mainly in and around Washington, D.C., but are also available in other parts of the country and in territories of the 'U.S. They will pay between $3175 and $3410. Two jo b classifications ar e available. One is for college stu dents who will have completed three-fourths of the curriculum toward a bachelor's degree in civ il engineering by Sept 30, 1953, and who plan to return to school to continue their under-graduate training after working for th e summer. Persons who have completed college work or its equivalent and have been accepted for work un der the other classification will continue their on-the-job training for approximately three year s. During this period they will be given a series of study assign ments on 'iighway engineering and on the work of the Bureau of Public Roads. In addition to passing the 'writ ten test given by the commission, applicants must be U.S. citizens under 35 years of age and in good physical and mental health. Examinations will be held in any of the cities named on the list accompanying application forms. These forms may be ob tained at first- and second-class post offices, or from the U.S. Civ il Service Commission. Washing ton, 25, D.C. Applications must lie mailed by Feb. 10, 1953. Four to Debate In Vermont Forensic Meet Four members of the men's de bate squad will leave tomorrow for two days of competition in the University . of Vermont, annual forensic tournament at Burling ton, Vt. The tournament is the first ma jor debate event of the season for the College team, and results should indicate the squad's strength this season, Jay Headly, Manager, said. Approximately •40 colleges and universities from the eastern- district will be represent ed at the meet. Representing the squad will be Benjamin Sinclair and Dav i d• Swanson, who will debate affir matively. Thomas Dur e k and Richard Kirschner will uphold the negative side of the question. They will debate the national intercollegiate top i c, Resolved: That the Congress of the U.S. should enact a compulsory fair employment practices' law. In last year's tournament the Penn State team, composed of David Lewis, Robert Alderdice, Clair George and Mark Unger, placed fourth. The 1950 squad took second place. Sale of Tickets to End For Engineers' Dinner The sale of tickets for a "get acquainted" dinner sponsored by the Institute of Radio Engineers and the American Institute of Electrical Enginers will end to morrow. Tickets, priced at $1.25, may be purchased from Saul Glasser at the Ordnance Research Labora tory and John Wax-field in the Electrical Engineering depart ment. The dinner will be held Tues day at the Autoport Restaurant. Pitt IFC suggestion. The bucket and its tradition will be inaugu rated at a pre-Pitt game ceremony Saturday. The IFC's will purchase the bucket and exchange it every year. The bucket will reside and be on display at the school win ning the annual Pitt-Penn State football game. Small, metal plaques will be placed on the bucket each year, listing the date, the winning school, and the score of the game. In the event of a Penn State vic tory in any of the games, the bucket will probably be displayed in a trophy case in Recreation Hall, IFC President, Arthur Ros feld said. This new custom will initiate a' tradition similar to the one existing between the Universities lof Michigan and Minnesota where the winner of their game is pre sented with a brbwn jug. The bucket, Rosfeld said, will show the clean rivalry and co operation existing between both schools. It should become a great tradition, he added, since the ri valry is so keen. Rivalry betweeh the schools dates back 52 years. A bucket was chosen, Rosfeld explained, to symbolize the hard coal school, Pitt, and the soft coal school, Penn State. Pitt's Panthers beat the Nittany Lions last year, 13-7. The last State win was in ,1950 when the Lions edged by, 21-20. As the record now stands, State has won 19, lost 30, and tied two. Friday Is Deadline For MI LaVie Photos . Mineral Industries seniors may have their pictures taken for the 1953 LaVie until Friday at the Penn State Photo Shop. Men are asked to wear suits, white shirts, and ties. Women are requested to wear white or plain colors. Foreign Student Directory Resembles UN Roll Call By HELEN LUYBEN It's not a roll call of movie ac tors, breeds of dogs, or colors of the rainbow that you find listed in a special student directory pub lished by the College. Instead this directory reads like a roll call of the United Nations General As- 1 sembly. It's the foreign student direc tory for the fall semester, and with the exception of the 134 stu dents whose names are listed in it, very few Penn Staters know it exists. This unique directory lists stu dents on Penn State's rolls from 51 foreign countries. Canada, Ger many and India triple-tie for first Place with 11 students each. the largest number enrolled from any one country. China ranks next with eight students; Japan, six; England, five; Colombia, Philippines, Nor way, Finland, Egypt and Israel, four. Bolivia, Turkey and Italy have three students each on campus. Austria, Australia, Brazil, Burma, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Greece, Iraq, Korea, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and Thailand have two students enrolled. Lone a rep resentatives from Belgium, Chile, Dutch West Indies, France, Guate mala, Hungary, Indonesia, Iran, Jamaica, Lithuania, Malaya, Mex ico, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Pol and, Portugal, Trans-Jordan, Ven ezuela, Vietnam, Union of South Africa and Uruguay make up the remainder of the 134 students. It wouldn't be safe to guess the male-female ratio, going strictly by a rundoWn through Christian names in a foreign student direc tory. Instead of John and Mary one finds Gio, Jaime, Mohey and Yusuf, names which just don't hint gender. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE comm.= PENNSYLVANIA 'Driver Put On Probation By Tribunal Tribunal placed ,a student driv er on probation rast night fo r parking a car in the wrong lot without a permit sticker showing. The driver pleaded guilty to his second offense before the men's judiciary committee and •w as fined $2. He will have to report at the next two meetings of Tri bunal. If any other violations are incurred during the probation period the case will be referred to the dean of men's office for dis ciplinary action. Tribunal heard 33 cases dealing with infractions of campus park ing regulations. A total of $2l in fines was collected. Six $1 sus pended fines were issued and sev en cases were dismissed with a warning by Richard Rau. acting chairman. One student charged with ille gal parking on the street next to Thompson Hall protested his bat tery was dead and he could not move_the car. He appeared for a second violation before Tribune' The case was dismissed but a $: suspended fine from his first vi olation was recalled. A $1 suspended fine was levied on a student who parked his car in the service drive behind Sim mons while he worked in the dining hall. A dietitian gave him permission to park there. Rau re minded the driver that parking permission is granted only by the Campus Patrol and even though service drives are not posted they are no-parking areas for students at all times. A recommendation will be sent to the Campus Patrol to transfer the parking area of a discharged serviceman who is unable to walk from his present area on Ag Hill to his classes in Osmond an d Freer. The student was fined $1 for illegal parking near his class. Three cases were dismissed be-1 cause the cars reported for illegal I parking actually had permits. The owners alleged they had acquired new cars since the original per mits were issued and they had not yet switched the permit stick ers when they were ,reported. An extensive search through the directory produced only one movie actor—Robert Taylor from Jamaica. There's a Mr. Bolger on campus from the Netherlands, but his Christian name is Bouwe in stead of Ray. When, among the Joanchims, SantosheS, Prodiptos, Tokunoskos, and Giuseppes you come upon a JOE, you just can't believe your eyes, even though his surname is Mijares and he's from Guatemala. Little American words like "soon" and "thorn" are combined to become the foreign sounding Soonthorn, which stuck in front, of Sappapa fits right into Thia land culture. Traveling to the Orient, up comes R.U.G. Rao from India, the nearest thing to an advertisement for carpets found in the directory. Here from the Philippines, Her mogenes F. Belen should have Chest Total THE CAMPUS CHEST ther- mometer climbed to the $2BOO mark yesterday as returns con tinued to ,come in slowly. Jos eph Haines, solicitations chair man. said funds had reached the $6OOO mark at this period during the drive last year. AF ROTC Conducts Mock Trial Today The Air Force ROTC will pre sent a mock trial at 3 p.m. today in th e Armory to demonstrate court-martial procedure under the new Uniform Code of Justice put into effect last May. Seniors in the advanced pro gram will participate in the de monstration. Ervin Fennell will be trial council. Paul Asplumbh, president, ' of the- court; William Durr, defense counsel; Edgar Ber ger, th e accused; and Robert Frame, law. officer. The . program is under the direction of Major John F. McHugh. been the one to- come up with homogenized milk. Mr. Belen is, however, enrolled with 12 other foreign students in industrial education (which leads all other college curricula in for eign student enrollment.) The School of Education seems to have the majority of foreign students with an approximate enrollment of 24. The Agriculture school claims 20 foreign students, while students in the Liberal Arts (from Eng land, Germany, France and Ja pan) and Chemistry-P h y sic s schools number 16 each. The di rectory lists 12 foreign students enrolled in the School of Mineral Industries; eight in engineering; five in physical education; four in home economics; and only one in the Reserve Officers' Training Corp. (These figures are all ap proximate, and the directory fails to list curricula for 28 students.) ktadi , l l .. Mans2A/A.&..L alUaj Ed Council Approves McCoy Plan The Education Student Council reversed its, stand on the McCoy seating plan, and voted that vice president Bud Shank should rep resent the Council as being in favor of the plan. Shank will vote for the Council at the All-College Cabinet's meet ing tonight. Plans were made to publicize a trip to the UN on December 11, 12, 13, and 14. The trip is being sponsored by the Council and the Department of Political Science: The purpose of the trip is to visit the United Nations and allied agencies in action. Plans are made to visit the General Assembly, any committee meeting that may be open, the UNESCO headquar ters, International House, the U.S. Embassy for the UN, and sight seeing. At a recent meeting of the Sen ate Welfare Committee, Shank reported that the Council has nev er been approved fora charter. He -.tided that this would have to done by way of a petition for a charter as "a worthwhile organ ization." A discussion was held to start a series of regular coffee hours, 'cased on the idea of a recent cof fee hour for students and faculty members in the Education schooL County Group To Hear Coach Frank Vatrick, Penn State back field coach, will speak at the No vember meeting of- the Centre County Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recrea tion, at 7:30 tonight in 3 White Hall. His topic will be "The New Coach and His Problems." Before coming to the College, Patrick played professional foot ball with the Chicago Cardinals for two years and was backfield coach for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Patrick will present a film of the Penn State-Penn game along with his talk. Two student delegates to repre sent the Centre County group at the state convention Dec.-11 and 12 at Reading, will be elected at the business meeting preceding the talk. The meeting is open to the pub lic. Applications Available For Graduate Exams Graduate record examinations will be held on campus Jan. 30 and 31. Bulletins of information and application blanks are avail able in 207 Buckhout. Jan. 16 is the deadline set for applications by the Educational Testing Service, P. 0. Box 592, Princeton, N.J. STEWART GRANGER DEBORAH KERR "PRISONER , OF ZENDA" •)* JEFF CHANDLER SCOTT BRADY "YANKEE BUCCANEER" TONITE - OPEN 6:00 "SEVEN DAYS TO NOON"