PAGE TWO dateline washington The Same Scene, A Few Changes Returning to a summer job after a year's absence can at once demonstrate, both dramatic changes and also a comforting tilPtleSs This is especially true if the job is with a news-gathering agency such as United Press International in Washington. Walking in the door at 714 National Press Building, you immediately become aware of this strange combination. New faces dot the hectic office; yet at the same time you are greeted by regulars who put you at ease at once. The teletype still clacks, the chairs squeak, the telephones jangle, the headsets don't fit or the earpieces slip to your chin in the midst of the dictation of a crucial story . More far-reaching are the changes in the material handled daily by this wire service, its lifeblood-news. The cast has changed. Gone (but not forgotten) ere Eisenhower. Herter, Brownell and—internationally—Lumumba. In their places have come the JFK's, Rusk. brother Bob Kennedy, and the rest of the new frontiers-men. Khrushchev and Mao Tse-tung remain but thrust into new importance are Prince Souphanouvong, Pathet Lao head, and Prince Boun Oum, head of the Royal Laotian government, rela tively unknown to the American public last year. The world's geography has not yet been tragically altered or eliminated by nuclear blasts although its potential blowup spots have increased. Indeed, Laos has emerged in importance' from inch-long newspaper "fillers" about the amount of U.S. foreign aid poured into that country to a front-page, headline problem. Actual methods of handling this news have changed little, but the importance of a newspaper necessity, good spelling, has been vividly demonstrated, especially with the Laotian crisis. Names like Souvanna Phouma, the Laotian neutralist leader, Boun Own, or Souphanouvong appear daily in news dispatches. Also on the world scene, you must remember that it is Viet Nam (two words) but the Vietnamese government (one word), Looking at the home front, such names as Auchincloss, Ribicoff, and Najeeb Halaby (Federal Aviation Agency administrator) must be recalled quickly. The facts are virtually the same; just the names have been changed. University Summer Calendar Today AWS Publicity Committee. 7:30 p.m., 214 HUB Interlandia Folk Dance, 7:30 p.m., Waring lounge - "Ring Around the Moon" 8:30 p.m., Beal Barn 'theatre (through Saturday) Tomorrow Beginning swimmaig lessons, 9:00 . and 10:00 a.m.. contact Martha Adams UN 5-7591 Bowling, 7:00 p.m., Ree Hall, 35 cents Claremont String Quartet Reci tal, 1:00 p.m., HUB ass'embly 100:11 Saturday Bowling . . 7:00 p.m., Rec -Hall, 35. cents Mt. Nittany hike, 3:00 p.m., meet at Presbyterian Center, 132 W. Beaver' Square Dance, 9:09 p.m., HUB ballroom, admission free Sunday Graduate Group. Picnic at Whip pies, discussion of Protestant- Roman Catholic relations, 4:00 p.m. Meet at Presbyterian Cen ter, 132 W. Beaver. (Call AD WMAJ Program Highlights 6:30- 9:30 Alan in the A.M. 9:35-11:00 Dick. Homer Show 1:30- 4:30 Bob Zamboni Sh. 4:30- 6:00 Dick Homer Show 7:05- 9:00 Curtain Time 10:05- 1:00 Groovology 54 NBC NEWS ON THE HOUR NBC EMPHASIS Monday through Friday MONITOR From NBC on Weekends PITTSBURGH PIRATES BASEBALL WMAJ 1450 Wide Range Radio Night & Day by kay mills 8-2411 for supper reservations) 'Student Seminar on "Protestant- Roman Catholic Encounter, 9:30 I a.m., Presbyterian Center, 132 W. Beaver Monday AWS meeting, 7:00 p.m., Sparks, open to all women students iDuplicate Bridge, 7:00 p.m., HUB .lounge "Life With Father," 8:40 p.m. Ma i tees Playhouse (continues for two weeks) Tuesday Claremont Spring Quartet Reci tal, 7:00 p.m., HUB ballroom Wednesday Chess Club, 7:00 p.m., HUB lounge Outdoor Movie, 9:00 p.m., HUB lawn, (pavilion in case of rain) Veterans Administration contact representative, 10:00 a.m. to 3:15 p.m., 3 Old Main - 7 AIIt‘CONDITIONED ATIFIAVM Now Showing . . . • Coming SUNDAY • The Explosive Story of The Sins of Rachel Cade In Technicolor Angie Peter Robert DICKINSON • FINCH • MOORE SUMMER COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Trustees Approve Final Pians On Nuclear Reactor Facilities Final plans for the expansion of the Nuclear Reactor facilities for nuclear study and research have been approved by the Board of Trustees. The project, for which the Gen eral State Authority has allocat ed $1,272,000, calls for additions to the present building and con struction of new units to the south of the reactor. The addition will contain count ing laboratories for the study of adioactive material, an electronic shop, and "hot cells" or rooms and facilities for the handling of radioactive material. The new building will also pro vide room for the 5,500,000-elee- FAMOUS LOCK'S 'RESTAURA►NT DUNCAN HINES APPROVED Victorian Room—Exclusive and Elegant Ballroom—Local Indian Decor Lounge—Col. Shoemaker Antique Collection Three Beautiful Drives-30 min.—Routes 220, 64, Jacksonville "OPEN UNTIL 2:30 ON SUNDAYS" Banquet Facilities to 300 OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE Special Prices to Parties LOCK HAVEN 5470 ( . .- 7sTARLETE4 , * .DRIVEM THEATRE ** BENMIt PM, RTE. 145 * IMWEDI STATE COLLEGE I MOW* Showtime 9:05 DST Thurs., Fri., Sat., June 22, 23, 24 "CIMARRON" Starring Wets Ford & Anne Baxter - also - "FRECKLES" Starring Martin West & Carol Christensen Sun. ihru Wed. 25-28 (a first run feature) "Revolt of the Slaves" Rhonda Fleming & Lang Jeffries "Operation Bottleneck" Ron Foster & Milk° Taka 'The Magnificent Seven' Yul 'Brynner & Steve McQueen STARLITE welcomes all the new stu dents to Penn State. We invite you to take a short drive up Benner Pike toward Bellefonte and visit the STAR LITE. Here you'll see the beet in movie entertainment available to Drive-In theatres. "Meet the Stars under the Stars at STARLITE" Feature at 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 tron-volt Van de Graaff positive ion accelerator, a high-voltage machine for the acceleration of charged particles, which was ac quired largely through a grant from the Westinghouse Electric Corporation. Presently, the research center, which was opened in 1955, is a source of radioactive 'material for class, profesor, and graduate stu dent study. 'Friends' to Hold Social The State College Friends meet ing will hold a coffee hour during the summer at 10 a.m. before the meeting for worship each Sunday. The MATEER PLAYHOUSE at STANDING STONE NOW PLAYING RAY LAWLER'S international success "SUMMER of the 17th DOLL" 1•01...O.•••••••4•mmu~.••••••••••••••••rearal Start Next Week for TWO Weeks America's longest running theatrical hit "LIFE WITH FATHER" THURSDAY. JUNE 22. 1961 Chem-Phys Applications Applications for the Chem- Phys Student Council Hand book staff are available at the Hetsel Union Building Desk. They should be returned to the HUB Desk by Wednesday. yAy ig, NOW Feat: 1:46„ 3:43. 5:40. 7:37. 9:34 P =l t 5 .- • As DANNY it' ( ( ~, ~ , KAYE ,„......,, s.;-, DANA r " ,.,-;':: WYNTER /:.:05 4 * P .rj ,„ .. , , / . ' ' Op t y / IrsiE / . , . Au. a , AI.4IWILFMO MARGARET HYDE WHITE 'RUTHERFORD ..,d , i‘IISS DIANA DORS pi,...f., O ~rx XISE Doaill aq MW 91011.9111 rfilentyJA4 MI aoi UMW SHAVIIIM • lin typal ' -''''' i ftWICRPOI Ne, ~/, • TECHNICOLOR' PANAI,,sIou•
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers