Lion* 30,(XX Tough ) Expected to See sst Lion Home Test Collegian Sports Editor . undoubtedly be the roughest home contest ,he Lion football team takes place this after i DT) when the West Virginia Mountaineers 3me of the luster off the Lions before 30,000 : Field. What will of the year-for noon, at 1:30 (E try to knock so fans on Beaver The Lions, (who upset top-ranked Ohio State last week 7-6, are six-point favorites to make the Mounties their fourth victim of the season. In four games thus far the Lions have beaten Penn, Holy Cross, and Ohio State, and have lost to Army. 'Big V Bluebt eek' oks >ned Questi : Council Board ight to ask the of the nine col cheduling blue ing Week. .The Intercolleg< voted Thursday r deans and faculty leges to avoid f books during Spr The board dec! led that such a plan would be njhre fair to both students and professors. If no’ blue books were given during Spring Week, students would not be taking tests without preparing for them adequately, the council felt. “We realize that we’re here for an education and not for Spring Week activities,” Donald Patter son, ICCB president, said. “But it’s a generally accepted fact that studying is cut to a minimum that week. Grades given then aren’t a fair indication of what a stu dent knows.” - The board authorized each council, president to present the plan to the dean of his college. However, no president will be compelled to do this if he opposes the plan. At the time of the board meeting, no president flatly re fused to submit the plan for fac ulty consideration. Requests will be made soon, Patterson said, before ■ depart ments make up course schedules for the spring semester. Rain Expected During Game Following the trend of every one giving opinions on football games, the weatherman has come cut with his prediction for today’s Lion-West Virgi: ' - It’s going to be s wet afternoon, according to the University weather station. | The rains are expected to be gin early, in the morning. Breezy, southerly • winds are expected to shift to wester- | lies during the day, with light showers called fot The 'best news the weatherman could give football fans was that the afternoon rainfall may only be a light one; The high today is forecast to he between 60 and 65 degrees. A cold front is expected in the area Sunday morning. Lion-WVU Tickets Available Today Less than 1500 tickets for the "West Virginia game will go on sale at 9 a.m. today at the Beaver Field ticket booths! The. tickets are mainly in the temporary bleacher section at the south end of the gridiron with some in the lower east stands. Seats cost $3.50 each. Fifty tickets remain for the Syracuse away game, Nov. 3. Agriculture Magazine Available on Tuesday The November issue of the Penn State Farmer, Forester and Sci entist- will be available to agri culture students. Tuesday at their departmental offices. This new plan, of issuing the Farmer will replace the old meth od of placing them in the lobbies of the Ag Hill buildings. Six-Point Favorites Over Mountaineers By FRAN FANUCCI The Mountaineers, meanwhile, have won three and lost two. The two losses coming at the.hands of Pittsburgh and Syracuse, op ponents of the Lions, too. Moun- . Hadio Station WMAJ will carry today's Lion-Mountie game at 1:30 (EDT). with Mick ey Bergstein handling the play by-play. tie wins were scored over Rich mond, Texas, and William & Mary. In the long series between the! Lions and Mountaineers the Lions; hold a 14-7 edge, although losing the last three games to the boys from Morgantown. Lion-West Virginia games have been traditionally thrillers and today’s contest will not be dif ferent. Both teams pack potent offenses and strong defensive lines. In their four games the Lions have scored 91 points while holding the opposition to 20. West Virginia has tallied 90 points but has allowed 66 points. j The Lions’ well-balanced of fense will be spearheaded by quarterback Milt Plum, who Ohio State Coach Woody Hayes called “the best quarterback I’ve seen around in sometime.” The Lions’ defensive unit is headed by captain Sam Valentine, whose amazing performances at the guard position have drawn raves all-over the East. Both Val entine and' Plum were named to the All-East team this week for their outstanding play against the Buckeyes. The Mountaineers -run behind the flashy Mickey Trimarki at quarterback, who is regarded as a top-notch passer and ball handler. The line has tackle Bill Under donk as its sparkplug, backed up by Chuck Howley at center. Underdonk is rated by coach Art Lewis as being better than Bruce Bosley and Sam Huff, both of whoih were mentioned on many All-America' teams last year. (Continued on page eightJ WH Students Foil Lion-Painting Try ,A car load of West Virginia University students reportedly at tempted to give the Nittany Lion statue a paint job early today. West Halls. students rushed to the scene and foiled the attempt, a student said. One of the WVU students was reportedly captured and was said to have gotten his hair shaved. Attempts to paint- the Lion statue are made about two or three times each football season, with the University of Pittsburgh probably the biggest offender. Hungarian Revolt Spreads to Austria VIENNA, Saturday, Oct. 27 {IP) —Budapest’s anti-Red rev olution blazed across western Hungary today to the borders of Austria on a widening panorama of reeking war and death . Anti-Red Hungarians also were reported gaining .against Soviet led armed force in south Hungary. Casualties Mount Casualties mounted into many uncounted thousands. - The rebels fought through a fourth straight night, rejecting the Hungarian Communist regime’s latest ultimatum to down arms or! die. .... „ \ J oUf? Daily |S| (EnUrgiatt VOL. 57. No. 34 STATE COLLEGE. PA.. SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 27. 1956 FIVE CENTS Emergency Parking To Begin Thursday Both fraternity and town independent men may park on the old vegetable gardens behind the Agricultural Engineering Building beginning Thursday, under a temporary parking plan announced yesterday by the University. Attempts will be made through the Borough Council, the Interfraternity Council, and the Association of Independent Men to locate off-street parking downtown for stu- ~ ‘ , V," , ■ >^V v - y^*.V't -«jj~* *> J 'V?V J ,^', *■ !■ ,_a«rM.g?-sfr. > 2 Too Hi Him EMERGENCY PARKING for students driven from all-night parking on borough streets will be provided from Nov. 1 until Thanksgiving recess on the former vegetable plot area south of Park avenue, between Area 72 and Area 73, Educator Says College Aura Promotes Student Instability Colleges- contribute to student’s mental instability by providing an atmosphere in which traditional beliefs are questioned but are never put in their place, an educator believes. Dr. William S. Carlson, president of the State University of New York, believes "the very atmosphere of the university tends to corrode the average student’s traditional moral and religious beliefs” and that little is being done about this new disturbing element m his life, according to the New York Times Colleges Termed Unhelpful “To the extent that colleges take no steps to fill the vacuum of belief which they create, he said, they are contributing to the sum total of mental instability.” Carlson said schools do inten tionally create an atmosphere “un conductive to religious growth.” “If ths university is -culpable, Some Russian tanks were re-miles from the Austrian border, ported to have joined the rebel Other eyewitnesses said Soviet aide in Budapest. soldiers shot down rebellious The situation outside flaming farmers their wives and children Budapest was roughly this: in farms and villages. 1. Rebels were reported to have Austria sent troops to the fron wrested much of western Hun- tier, promised asylum for refu gary from combined Soviet and gees and warned it would resist Red Hungarian forces. any Red attempt to pursue fugi 2. Travelers streaming into Aus- fives across the border, tria from Hungary said rebels Rebels 'Gaining* were holding much of south Hun- Witnesses said the rebels ap gary with the added help of min- peared to be gaining despite the ers and striking workers. armed might of Soviet and Hun- Rebels Seize City - garian tanks, artillery and jet Travelers said they were told planes, the rebels had seized the Russian Heavy fighting still was report headquarters city of Miskolc near ed in Budapest, where the revolt the Czechoslovak border. began Tuesday. The Hungarian A Hungarian doctor appearing government warned that if more dramatically at the frontier said than three persons assembled any : Russian soldiers massacred 75, where in Budapest they would be (peasant demonstrators only 10. shot. FOR A BETTER PENN STATE it is on the grounds of omission, rather than commission,” he said.l “The universities have not gone out of their way either to praise or condemn religion; they simply have—for the most part—ignored it altogether,” he said. Religion, Science Conflict Carlson stressed that mosti young persons’ problems arise be-] cause they attempt to reconcile] religion- learned as s child with the science that, as young adults,! they now confront. ] He said the university has the] responsibility of giving the stu dent an equal opportunity to' understand religion and science. denis who park at the temporary site. The vegetable plots will be available until the Thanksgiving vacation to students who cannot find other parking facilities be fore the borough’s 2 to 6 a.m. parking ban goes into effect iThursday in the fraternity area, according to Walter H. Wiegantl, director of the physical plant. | However, Wiegand said, stu j dents must move their cars from I the gardens by 10 a.m. Nov. 10 and Nov. 17 so that parking will be available for visitors to the Boston University and North Car olina State football games. Students to Report Students must report to the Campus Patrol office to apply -or a special permit for the area witli jin two days after they have moved their cars to the plots. Each student applying for a 'permit will fill out a question naire, copies of which will be (sent to the borough and to either | the Interfraternity Council or the ] Association of Independent Men |in an effort to locate downtown parking for the student. Plan Excludes Lots >iU : 1 f n Wiegand said the emergency parking area does not include es tablished parking lots 72 and 73, but that students may enter the gardens through lot 72. Spaces in lots 72 and 73 are assigned for I regular campus parking, he said. j Men's dormitories will be con structed on the emergency park ing site in the near future, Wie gar.d said. The plots have been rolled, but are not paved, and they are expected to become mud ]dy in wet weather, according to the University. Ban Begins The borough’s overnight park ing ban will g o into effect Thurs day in the area between Allen street, Beaver avenue. High (street, and Irvin avenue. The ban is now in effect throughout most of the remainder of the borough, but enforcement was postponed in the fraternity area to give students a chance to ! find off-street parking facilities. Students to Gain [Hour of Sleep Students will receive what will probably be a much-needed extra hour of sleep this weekend as Uni versity Park and State College re vert to Eastern Standard Time. Standard time will go into effect at 2 a.m. tomorrow when clocks will be turned back one hour. Much confusion has resulted in the past month because many sur rounding communities, including Bellefonte, returned to Standard Time on Sept. 30. Local clergymen tomorrow can expect to have a number of early arrivals for church services due to those who will probably forget to change their clocks to Stand ard Time. Pictures Due Monday For Mardi Gras King | Candidates for Mardi Gras king must submit their ■pictures no later than 5 p.m. Monday to the Hetzel Union desk. Pictures must be 5 by 7 inches and should include the name of .the candidate and his sponsoring 'group on the back.