SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1961 World At A.F. Sees Missile-Type Projectile BULLETIN WASHINGTON (/Pj The Air Force announced last night its radio station at Shemya Island, Alaska, has just detected an ob ject with missile characteristics coming out of the Soviet Union and passing in a southeasterly di rection. Whether this object is a missile programmed to land in the Pa cific or a space vehicle is not known at this time. The Shemya Island radar is operated 24 hours a day and its purpose is to detect and report objects in its radar screen. Earlier this week there were indications Russia might be get ting ready for another missile or space launch firing into the Pa cific area in the near future. The Navy said that three Soviet missile instruments ships were sighted Tuesday, apparently head ing southeast along a line from Kamchatka Peninsula to the im pact area about 1000 miles south west of Hawaii. The three ships the Sibir, Chukpta and Sakhalin were a little over halfway along the route toward the impact area when ob served Tuesday. US. Jet Sets Speed Record LOS ANGELES (/PI A Unit ed States jet bomber, flashing high over the desert, has eclipsed by hundreds of miles an hour six world speed records. Five were held by the Soviet Union. On one trip over a 621-mile closed course Thursday, the 858 Hustler averaged 1,200.194 miles per hour. The Soviet Union claim ed the previous mark, 639 miles per hour, set in October 1959 by a plane it did not identify. The Hustler, a $lO-million, four jet, delta-wing bomber, went twice around the closed course between Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and a point halfway be tween Yuma and Phoenix, Ariz. You Have WMT vffwa ToB^Y ONncMBR<aRY GRD So<3>me gfinfc »T WiThUs. VALENTINE CARD For Your Special Valentino McLanaban's Soil Service 414 E. College Aye. and McLanahan’s Drug Co. 134 S. Allen SI. A Glance Bootle Orders U. ol Georgia To Readmit Negroes MACON, Ga. (IP) A federal court yesterday ordered readmit tance to the University of Georgia of two suspended Negroes by 8 a.m. Monday. Judge W. A. Bootle ruled that the university’s “order of with drawal or suspension is hereby terminated by 8 a.m. Jan. 16.” By holding up the revocation until | that hour, the school officials could delay the Negroes’ return to class until Monday instead of Saturday. The injunction against another [suspension or expulsion provided [that such action could not be taken “on the grounds that the same is necessary for their per sonal safety because of mob ac tion or violence on the campus.” His order was handed down aft er a two-hour closed conference with attorneys for the state and the Negroes, who were suspended from the school after wild cam pus rioting Wednesday night. Havana Charges U.S. with Spying HAVANA (/PI —Cuban propa ganda organs loosed a new at tack on the U.S. Guantanamo Bay naval base yesterday as Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s sup porters rallied here to celebrate “victory over Yankee aggression.” All three Havana morning pa mpers the semiofficial Revolu tion, El Mundo, and the Com [munist organ Hoy accused U.S. [naval officers in Guantanamo of jtorturing a Cuban worker, Manuel Prieto Gomez, 39, at the base, to force him to confess he was a spy for Castro. The accusation could form the basis for a new’ Cuban demand that the United States abandon its largest and oldest naval base in Latin America. In Washington, the U.S. Navy denied the accusation. WHERE THE LIONS EAT! that is . . . The Penn State Diner 24-hour friendly service convenient prices "ITour Business is Appreciated" THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Soviet Team Invited To HUB Dance j The Soviet gymnastic team has been invited to a dance at the Hetzel Union ballroom after the meet Saturday. The Soviet-American Gymnasts’ Dance, which is sponsored by the [lndependent. Student Association [and the Pollock Council, is being iheld to give the Soviets an idea of our music and our style of dancing, Bruce DeWoolfson, dance ‘chairman said last night. j The admission-free dance will [begin at 9 p.m. with recorded music provided by disc jockey Donald Rees who has worked at the Pollock Halls Record Hops. At 11 p.m. after the gym meet the Stan Barton Combo will take over and provide music until 1. [ Immediately after the final re sults of the meet are announced [at Rec Hall, the members of the [Soviet gym team will be given [navy blue w'ool blazers with an 'emblem composed of Soviet and !American flags crossing and giv ing the name and date of the meet. These blazers were pro vided by various student organ izations as gifts from American students to Soviet students. Bus Service- i (Continued, from page one) [were too many problems to solve j in the short time before the sched uled departure of the first bus. I Specifically, Bernreuter referred [to the fact that the bus line would require a guaranteed number of people to fill the buses before they would grant a charter. ! University policy requires ! that Bny group taking over a project like this one assure the availability of buses for the stu dents who sign up for Ihe trip, Bernreuter said. Bernreuter has suggested to [Weber that he present his plan ;to one of the area councils or to :the Student Government Assoc iation, since they would have the [necessary funds to back this type of venture. EAT German To Talk The Rev. Eberhard Bethge, former pastor of the German Evangelical Lutheran Church in London, will speak on the subject, “The Predicament of 10:55 a.m. Sunday at the Cha torium. ! The Rev. Bethge, together with Dietrich Bonhoeffcr, was involved in the famous plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler on July 20. 1944. The failure of this plot resulted in the death of Bonhoeffer, former director of the Theological Semi nary of the Anti-Nazi Confessing Church, and all of Mr. Bethge’s family. He escaped execution only because of the arrival of the Rus sian Army in Berlin. Rev. Bethge will speak at a University Christian Association dessert and forum, Sunday eve ning at 7:30 in the Eisenhower Chapel Lounge. The Rev. Theodore Braun, Unit ed Church of Christ Chaplain to the University, will give the ser mon at the Protestant W'orship service to be held in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel Sunday at 9:00 a.m. The Emerson Society will meet Sunday in the Eisenhower Chapel FIRESIDE FORUM discussion of "Worship Through Drama" Sunday evening, 6:31 jus. Everyone Welcome Wesley Foundation 256 i. College Fan? Jimmy Smith thinks it is sometimes. But having fun is hard when you can’t waft. YW east reach things. You can’t di»b good. You can’t go where other kids go. Oh, you can push yourself around the home if yeo’*t kicky enough to have a makeshift go-cart. But hew far can you really CO what you're bora with a defective body? Jimmy’s too youag to thick about that, yet. But graws-upt should. They should know that medical science to weritiag harder than ever before to build new lives for thousands of ehifdreo bom with tenons birth defects. They should know K to the goal ef the NEW MARCH OF DIMES to discover why birth defect) happen in 1 out of s# births, and to keep them fren happening. That's a big job. It wiß take knowledge, trained hands, hard wash and money the same ingredients that produced the poKs vac cines. It takes the kind of help you give, when you say 'Yes* to the NEW MARCH OF DIMES. “ "MsiWMroWi -■ - s; " HEW '.'V-. '.r ' ■■ ■ -■ ■ - BIRTH DEFECTS • ARTHRITIS * POLIO Minister at Schwab : Established Christianity” at ipel Service in Schwab Audi- where Dr. Gerald M. Moser, as sistant professor of Romance languages, will be the speaker. Morning seminars at 9:30 and 10:30 will be held Sunday at the ; Presbyterian University Center. Discussion leaders will be James Hnlfaker on “Psychology and Re ligion” and Pat Smothers on “Bib ilieal Studies in Basic Christian [Beliefs.” | The morning services are at [9:15 and 10:45. The sermon by Rev. William F. McClain is en titled "Stress on Behavior.” The Sunday Evening Fellowship at 6:20 p.m. will have Mrs. Willa Taylor speak on "Corporate Wor ship, Music and Symbolism.” The Wesley Foundation Fireside Forum will meet at 6:30 tomor row evening to discuss the “Works of Dylan Thomas.” —The Penn State map collec tion has about 30,000 different maps. PAGE THREE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers