PAGE TWO Soviets County' A group of 11 Soviets is sched uled to * arrive at the University today tor a week’s study of U-S. farm-community living, in con nection with a two-month Ameri can-Russian exchange program. ; Hie-Soviet delegation includes engineers, teachers, a journalist, -architects, and Soviet youth or- 1 ganization officials, Woodrow W. Beirly, news editor of public in formation. said yesterday. Since their mam interest is studying agriculture, members of the group will spend a few days visiting the University's agricul tural research laboratories. They will also attend agriculture classes. IK ADDITION, the men will tour the University and the Cen tre County area. Their tentative schedule includes visits to a pub lic school system, hospital and local farms. They may stay over-, night at some of these farms. Receptions and dinners with faculty members are planned for the visitors but they will have free time to attend Saturday’s wrestling meet and the Artists’ Series program. A reception tor the Soviet visi tors will be held at the Slavic Center and the Cosmopolitan Panhel Approves 1962 Rush Schedule The Panhellenic Councillast night accepted what rush chairman Marjorie Zelko termed a “rather unorthodox” rush schedule for 1962-63. ■ l Informal talks with potential rushees 'Vsfill be conducted, by the rush guides Get.; 15! and 16, and registration for open houses will take place'Oct. 24 and 25. This segment of the schedule is identical to this year's schedule with open houses, being held the term preceding formal rush. Open houses' will be held on two weekends. Nov. JJ, 17 and 18. Next year the open 'houses will each be IS minutes long with a| 10-minute break in between- This year’s open house schedule in cluded 10-minute rush sessions with'lo-minute breaks. Forty-five open houses are scheduled for next year with approximately 35 rushees attending each one. RUSHEES WILL register for formal rush Jan. 3 and 4. and the first round of chatter dates will be held Jan. 5 and 6. Chatter dates will be 45 minutes long with a 15-mlnute break. There will be 11 times offered but rushees will be able to attend only £en. Miss Zelko explained the extra time was added to avoid overcrowded hours January 7 will be a free day with the second round of chatter dates being held Jan. 8 and 9. These sessions will be an - hour long with a 15-minute break. There will me eight times offered and rushees may dttend six. Bermuda Junctions are slated for Jan. 11 with party last ing one hour ahd 15 minutes. Rushees may attend three. Two coffee hoursf each lasting an hour and a half, will be held on Sunday, Jan. 13 Ribboning will be held at ,7 p.m. Jan. 14 in the suites. New College Diner •DcwHtCVNH 1 *!► Mr .*< Study in 'Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited Uni niversity of Anzuuia program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford Uni versity, University of California, and Guadalajara, will, offer July 2 to August 10, ar% folk lore, geography, history, lan guage and literature courses. Tuition, board and room is $245. Write Prof. Juan B. Radi. P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. to Study Farms Club will also sponsor a party to honor the men. nr THEIR tour of the Univer sity agricultural facilities, the men will visit the dairy barns, the agriculture research labora tory and the poultry research house. They are also scheduled to see the .veterinary science, meats and soil laboratories. The men, averaging. 32 years of age, will be accompanied by an interpreter since only two speak English. - f. The, group’s visit is being spon sored jointly by the Soviet Bureau of‘Youth Travel in Moscow and the U.S. Council of Student Travel, Samuel N. Gibson, direc tor of the, University Christian Association, said. THE UJS. COUNCIL is a pri vate agency which ; includes 98 universities-and several national organizations which sponsor edu cational travel programs, he ex plained. The UCA planned:the Soviets’ visit to the University, Gibson said. . Robert Clapp, senior in arts and letters from Livingston, NJ, has visited Russia under this exchange program started in 1958. | MISS ZELKO SAID she is ex pecting 1,600 rushees to register lor the next formal rush. She said even though freshmen enrollment will be leas, the number of fresh men from this year’s rush wbo will be rushing again will balance the loss. i She said also.- that next year ' more emphasis wilt be put on the rush guides’ responsibilities. She : asked that each sorority with membership over 50 in the fall elect two rush guides instead of one. This, she said, would enable ‘ rush guides to have smaller groups and to have a more personal relationship with the rushees. Stale Today! 1:39, 3:31*5:3!, 7:32, 9:33 . Ai.1.1.. G ; olivia it unuua —■ mm hihieux ROSSMO BRAZZi GEORGE pHILTON ART CONTEST FLOATING EXHIBIT v I —Cash Prizes —Chance to sell art work; . if so desired —Winner's Work will be.disj in University Residence THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA 'Series' to The University Artists' Series will present Pittrrette Alarie, coloratura soprano* and her hus band, tenor Leopold Simoneau, in the last concert <if the term at 8:30 pm. Saturday in Schwab, Tickets for the performance will be available to students this after noon, and all .'day ! tomorrow through Saturday! at the Hetzgl Union desk. . . . i The Canadian h.isband andwife team- has appeared in concerts, operas, aid ipusic festivals throughout Europe and North America. ; j_ MISS ALARIE IfiADE her debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1945 in Verdi’s “The itasked BalL” At this time she appeared with; such noted opera singers as Jan Peerce, Leonard Warren and Zin k a Malanov. The soprano, hps also appeared with the Paris Opera, the Opera Comique and leading orchestras 858 Bomber On Record Run 'Rocks’, Classes Fifth period classes might have shaken up students more than usual. Monday, ;>s a 858 bomber set new speed records traveling in a 40-mile-wide corridor from Los Angeles to New York and back. ’ The bomber’s jet engines re sounded as it flew overhead about 2:30 p.m. rattling dishes and win dows throughout Centre County. Three distinct “booms” were heard here—one during the morn ing on the bomber’s westward flight, and two during the after noon on its return flight, j j "THE JET made the round trip at an-average speed of 1,300 miles per hour. Its total traveling,time was~4 hours, 42 minutes and 32 seconds for the 4,900-mile trip. ' The trip from Los Angeles to Newt York took two hours, one minute. The plane used£twenty six minutes to turn around,and refuel over th,e Atlantic: Ocean, and 2 hours, 15 minutes data: it arrived back in Los Angeles. - Other areas of the U.S. suffered real damage ar glass objects, par* ticularly plate glass windows, were shattered:when the jet broke the sound barrier. Sponsored by Pi Gamma Alpha Local Fine Arts Honorary - ••• * . Watch future Collegians • andc&mpus Bulletin boards for Completerules Let Collegian Classifieds WORK FOR YOU »!ayed Areas Present Opera Dug ajid. Bizet’s ’opera, "The!Pearl Fishers" with the Philadelphia Grand Opera Company, i . • ] Simoneau met Miss Aiarie in the Montreal' studio of his, singing teacher, 'and married her' after a long period Of. -working, singing and acting together. < | j Since their marriage, the two singers have made many appear ances and recordings.together, in cluding a new record , release of Handel’s “Messiah** in the original text ' • j : ' Irving Kolodin of the Saturday Review, called than “Mr. and Mrs.; Mozart Stylist*.for their record ings on Epic, Angel andj West minster Records. j in Montreal, Toronto and Vienna. This season, she will ’perform in “Orpheus" on- Canadian Broad casting Company television and with the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Montreal Symphony orchestras. Her husband, "Simoneau, has been the leading tenor of the Vienna State Opera, La Seala, the Lyrjic .Opera of Chicago and the Pans Grand Opera. He has ap peared Vi th the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the New York Phil harmonic )and the Cleveland Sym phony Orchestra. HE IS BEST KNOWN for his roles in “l’Enlance du Christ" with the Little Orchestra Society /V/rr/iyW \Catha LAURENCE l^'ltoiSSK K |iflm>nH3.ls'aa is 11 f Wednesday, march t.\ 19&2 Begins TONITE 7:00- 9:05 PJVL il, ! - GERALDINE M ,HAL msSSWtUWS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers