PAGt EIGHI Series Will Open Thomas Play With The Theodore Mann-Jose Quintero production of "Under Milk Wood" by Dylan Thomas will open the University Artists' Series with performances at 3 p.m. and 8:30 p.m Saturday in Schwab. The play will come direct Panhel Plans Talks on Rush The Panhellenic Council will sponsor Sorority Firesides again Sunday for those girls who are interested in winter term rush and inay have missed last Sunday's Fireside, Janet Carlisle, Panhel rush chair man, announced yesterday. She said that the purpose of of the firesides are to explain sorority life and to answer any questions which prospective rushees, may have. They will be held in the lounges of McKee, Runkle, East C and D, South, McElwain, Simmons and Atherton. Pollock firesides will be held in the solarium of each residence hall, Miss Carlisle also announced tilt , rush schedule. Registration for Open Houses ‘vill be Oct. 23 and 24. Anyone interested in' rushing must reg ister for the Open Houses which will be held Nov. 11 and 12, Jan. 3 and 4 will be the dales for rush registration. Fresh men women must haye at least a 2.30 all-University averaga to be eligible for rush, and upper class women must have at least a 2.00. The First Chatter Dates are Jan. 5 and 6 and second Chatter Dates arc on Jan. 7. Bermuda Junctions will be held Jan 10 with Coffee Hours on the following night. Ribboning is scheduled for Jan. 12. Journey Into Night," by O'Neill. r,:rsc . • week-- Student ticket distribution will :be from 1:30 to 5 p.m. Wednesday (C'liiriai(ed from 7;age one) .at the Hetzel Unicn* Desk, and f-•••• r c r i cn ; 131.,3 rvf w with from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 to o7ft. - n-'7t:cn a7ml the 5 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. fc,sr the corn- General sale of tickets will be from 9 a.m.' s to 12 p.m. and 1 to ing "car . _ • Wiet activities planned for the 5 p.m. Thursday fall term include a homecOming They are $1.25 each tea Oct. 28 and Project Joey, an' annual party for orphans. Nov. 11)1111MINIE Poin appointed Sue Bolic as co chairman of the Project Joey committee Pat Schaaff, secretary of ISA,; gave a report on the organization's otlivities during Orientation Week. She said that copies of the [nine News, a news sheet telling of the activities of ISA, are being OHF:buted to independent stu-I Laundry Conference Nearly 100 officials from statel i'istitutions will meet here Oct.il II to 13 for the annual Institu- ional Laundry Conference. At the meetings, they will dis- cuss common problems concerned with laundry and cleaning opera-: Lions at the state institutions which look io the University for idatice in their cleaning opera -1 ions. Plan ahead complete formal wear rental, sales and service available right here. No need to search any further for your tux. Free Parking At Rear of Store While You Shop • 229 S. Allen St. • AD 8-1241 y to the campus from the off- Broadway Circle in the Square Theatre in New York where it is currently playing. "Under Milk Wood" takes its audience back to the author's youth in a small, Welsh town by the sea similar to the one where he was born. Howard Taubman, New York Times drama critic, described the play as "a rare experience in the mingling of laughter and tenderness." This is the last of Thomas' large, completed works. It is not considered a theatrical script in the strict sense, since it is pri marily a play for voices and was meant for radio performance. Only 10 persons are used to fill the 37 different roles in the play. No one character can he .:on sidered the "star" all are of equal importance. Quintero and Mann, the co producers of the play, are .al so the founders of the Circle in the Square Theatre. It grew out of a stock company which the two men managed in Wood stock, N.Y., in the summer of 1950. However, many of the theatri cal awards which Quintero has received are not for producing, plays but for directing them. He won the off-Broadway and Ver-, non Bice Memorial Awards fori his direction of Eugene O'Neill's,! "The Iceman Cornell)." Recently he was awarded the Grande Prix, du Television Award in Monte' Carlo far directing "Medea." star ring Judith Anderson. Quintero also earned the Antoinette Perry Award, the Newspaper Guild's Page One I Award and the Variety Award for his direction of "Long Day's A Luncheon Suggestion for just 40c FISH and Chips and a large bowl of Our Own Made Soup LILLIAN'S RESTAURANT Next Door to Murphy's Open 6 A.M. to 10 P.M. mac Sez . TRADITIONALLY When University traditions are discussed, blazers are correctly placed at the top of the list. Put a traditionally correct' midnight blue blazer at the top of your wardrobe list. Lightweight zephyr wool, designed for year-round wear. The Mid night blue blazer with antique metal buttons ... just $25. HABERDASHERY Supplement your blazer pupil with a pair of gray flennel slacks. An elegant combination. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Graduate Students To Help Youths In Rehabilitation graduate students in the social sciences may be work ing with the State College Borough Police in a rehabilita tion program for handicapped children and young people, John R. Juba, chief of police, said last night in an interview after the Borough Council meeting. The allotment of state and fed eral funds for the program de pends on whether the borough has the minimum number of 7,000 children under 18 years of age, Juba said . The program would be con tinuous and cover all juvenile de linquent cases and those involv ing handicapped children, Juba said. The arrangement with the Uni versity that graduate students help in the program is pending, Juba said, but he added that the plans "are expected" to go through. Juba also told the council that, on Oct. 10 the Police Department will begin a 20-week program of basic instruction in police princi-. ples. The Department of Public Instruction has appointed Mr. Ju-' ba to teach the course which will be held for two and a half hours one evening a week, The class will probably be limited to about 20 men, Juba said. In other business the council decided that the Board of Adjust ments must go before a public hearing at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6 to make a minor change in the Zon ing Ordinance. Peace Corps Volunteers -- (Continued from page one) uation by the Peace Corps staff. After the nine week training and selection program here the volunteers will have a 10 day home leave and then meet in San Francisco for the flight to the Philippines. The volunteer trainees receive $2 per day to cover general ex penses while training here. When in the Philippines' rural islands, called the Visayas, they will re ceive a subsistance allowance from the U.S. government. They will live and work in the "barrios" (Philippine villages) in housing similar to the native and Friday CORRECT 487/16C2/6 oof s ki 'hit Center of Pennsylvania° Counseling Services Aid Confused Frosh Freshmen no longer need to be worried or confused about their choice of careers, thanks to the efforts of Dr. Donald IL Ford and his staff in the Division of Counseling. Every freshman .entering the University or one of the commonwealth campuses offering the baccalaureate degree receives an intensive counseling program before he arrives on campus for registration. This program, started in 1956, consists of various interest and aptitude tests and a day of counseling during the summer. I The counseling program here is • rend Plans unique in that parents are D eh involvedi in a pre-registration counseling l - • program. The program is focused! Homecoming not on orientation to college life, but on the academic side of the' ERIE Homecoming at the University planning a career! lUniversity's Behrend Campus in this north-western Pennsylvania to fit the indiYidual, Ford said. !city will be held Saturday. The University is one of the 1 Behrend's soccer team will lock few major schools to require horns with Grove City College to I counseling sessions with every open the day's activities. freshman and follow them up I Registration will then be held ' with needed attention through ifrom 7 to 9 p.m. in the Memorial out his undergraduate life. A !Room, at which time alumni will i student may go to the Division have the opportunity of seeing of Counseling anytime for help ;and discussing plans for the multi if he is dissatisfied or having ;million ollar expansion prram. trouble in his curriculum. A mode d l of the new science og r am . trouble building, the construe- One out of every five freshmen . tion of which is now under way, changes his major before registra-: will also be on display. tion. By the time he has reached There will be a dance from 9 junior standing, one of every two p.m. to 12 p.m. at Erie Hall. students has changed his major at( All alumni of the campus are least once, Ford said. I invited to attend the homecoming. It is important for the individual,Tickets for the dance are $1 per person. to decide for himself what to do, said Ford, director of the program.l There are a number of careers fort COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS each person. "Our problem is to! BUY. SELL, TRADE, TELL help the individual narrow down l his choice to a range of things in which he will be happy and successful," he said The counselor also gives the student a prediction of • his grade point average for his first semester. These predictions are to mo tivate students to do their best work and to show them how good! they can be if they really try t i Ford said. They are also to let the student and his parents know what can be expected in grades,, he said. Engineers and Architects!! • - . . You are welcome to attend the first meet ing of the Engineering and Architecture Student Council on Wednesday, October 4 at 6:45 p.m. in 215 Hammond Bldg. Refreshments will be served after the meeting. STUDENT INSURANCE PLAN extending deadline one week to Oct. 8 forms available at HUB Desk and Doty & Hench Insurance Agency 108 S. Allen St. Insurance for all undergraduate students and graduate students who have use of health service facilities. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 3. 1961 BIKE REPAIRS PARTS ACCESSORIES Western Auto 200 W. College Ave. AD 74992