PAGE TWELVE Peace Corps Set for Next Another round of six-hour Peace Corps examinations will be given locally at 8:30- s.m. next Satur day in the -State College Post Office. Persons who .have already filed s:Peace Corps application have received special permission slips to take this examination. But other interested persons may take the examination if there is space in the testing area. THERE IS not a set passing score on the test, officials said. The purpose of this test is to determine the overseas assign ments for which applicants are best qualified: About 15 graduates of the Uni versity have been selected for Peace Corps projects and are over seas servinv.in such countries as Ghana. Colombia, = Tanganyika, 'Philippines, Ivory Coast; Niger, Malaya and Thailand. Over 300 volunteers for Philip. pine elementary school 'leaching assignments were trained here from July 1961 to June 1962. They were trained• in three groups pf 70 volunteers and there was one group of 150 volunteers. Two of the groups lived in the Graduate Circle housing and another in Ath erton. The fourth group was JIM'S ARMY :NAVY STORE Used Army Desks $2O & $25 BUNK BED - $5 MATTRESSES •'' '/107-Af; { h~ ~. t' f' PENN 'STATE DINER • - :Breakfast Special, :•coffee Break r I o• ~1;r ~ {.. Tests Week integrated with other students in several campus residence halls. THEIR TRAINING .program in cluded a sixty-hour week 'of classes plus one weekend of phys ical training at the Stone _Valley Recreation Area. The second phase of theThilip pine volunteers training took place in a six-week session at the Uni versity of the Philippines, where they received intensive training in Tagalog;, the Philippine national 'language. This summer another 300 volun teers were trained for similar assignments in the Philippines at' the Universities of California* and Hawaii. BEAT NAVY • Juliet Room • :is fashion • and fashion costs no more . . . • • ,tovin & Country Special - Black or Brown Calf $10.99 • Mid-Heel Pump , Penny Loafer ' -$899 Sandler . - • P. F. Sneaks' _ • $4.69 New Fall Colors Adler Knee Socks $2.00 *IF 4 . : ; y , V WELCOME PENN STATERS "Eat at the Sign of the Lion" Monday thru Sato' - rday Served 7-11 A.M. -- A new eel every day lay;;~ ~~, r .., Ina( THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNNERSITY PARK, PENNSYLyANIA 130 West College Avenue FREE CUSTOMER PARKING Rear of Diner after 6 P.M. up your COLLEGIANS doily at our friendly counter String Quartet to Give 6 Concerts The Alard String Quartet of Wilmington College, Wilmington; Ohio, will be the University's quartet-in-residence for 1962-63, Raymond Page, the group's viola player,- said yesterday. The group will present six foi mal concerts. In addition to the concerts I which begin in October, the Alard String Quartet .will instruct' sev: eral music daises for beginner*. The musicians will offer lectures and hope to present informal con certs besides those' . scheduled, Page said. ' The members will play in the University's Symphony Orchestra and teach private lessons to col lege and ' State College High School students, he added. The Atard Quartet has alio scheduled out-of-town concerts in New York; Delaware And Ver mont. .= The instrumentalists Were hiied to help expand the University's music curriculum and .to bring the students in close contact with .; . such noted Musicians, Hummel Fishbu#L, professor and head of the music and music •education departthents, said. Other members of the quartet are: Donald Hopkins, first violin; Joanne Z. Feldman, second vio lin and Leonard Feldman, cello, . , . . .y,'HERLOCHER'S fi..15 .'. ' . ' : 1+1,14111 . i. , ~ t , r i , . . , order .r• - I After. ; .. ~. „ .•I he Game , . 1.- 1- -1- , , , ..,.. i 1 r , , . Chicken- Dinners ,• , ! , . 1.. . i . - Shrimp Dinners , i , , . . , Call AD 8 - , 0518 1 i i . For Dorm__ Delivery • : • i. _ 11C . i 9-11 A.M. Coffee 5c a cu Donuts 5c eac SATURDAY; SEPTEMBER '22. 1962 Page said. The musicians are ;all members of the Wilmington Col lege faculty., and they were grant-, ed a !leave of absence to par ticipate in' this program, he said. Last term, the Curtis String Quartet, of Philadelphia, was the quartet-in-residences 1:30 -4: P.M. Hour • t I , / / / .
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