page SIX / Professor To Visit Michigan David B. Van Dommelen, as sociate professor of family housing and home art at the University, will address two art groups in Lansing, Mich., on Nov. 7. He will address the “Cam pers” at 10:30 a'.m. and the "Loomcrafters” at 2:30, p.m., speaking to both groups on "Art with Fabrics.” He will speak the following day in Kalamazoo, Mich., where he will have a one-man show of his wall hangings and •following that will conduct a. one-day workshop with public school art teachers in Kala mazoo, HERLOCHER'S RESTAURANT Spaghetti Special Every Thursday ALL YOU CAN EAT *1.20 A button-down in a basket weave. (Something old, something new.) This Arrow shirt gives you best of both worlds. (1) A long-pointed collar roll in the most authentic (radition. (2) A husky-looking basket weave that updates ordinary oxford. For other interesting features, check the tapered body; back pleat and back collar button. Lots of, stripes, solids and whites. , "Sanforized” labeled. $5.00. Bold New Breed from ~ARROW~ 3 ■>- 7 ■> J Wf V , i * *7'i •/*/.? ; <* •; ■ ■ U'# :V s: 'V* -Hi •Jft S /: ft nun Johnson CAM RANH, BAY, Viet Nam ' , ’(/P)—President Johnson, as commander in' chief of U.S, forces;'flew here in y secrecy' Wednesday and ‘rubbed elbows wilh 'the Cam'-Ranh Bay contingent of ; the 330,000 American fighting men in Vietnam, y ,• :*■ arms, with great pride and with great “We in America, depend on you, on the young and'ion the brave, to stpp-ag- ; .‘ Men jn baUte some loting field gression before it sweeps forward for packs and-rifles, others swathed in band then.it must be .stopped-by iargei sac- ages,and plaster casts, greeted Johnson rifice .and- a heavier* cost,’ he tola ]usty cheers, In the crowd were Fighter planes and armed helicopters pilots just back from aerial strikes against circled overhead,, for .protection as John- Communist forces in - South Vietnam, son arrived at this relatively secure sea- . As Johnson moved among the men, side base north of Saigon, He spent two shaking hands and patting them on, the hours and 4 minutes mingling with the back,-there were cries of "LBJ all the troops, shaking' hands, joking, awarding way!” medals and -signing “LBJ” autographs. , Secrecy and security surrounded the The President grew emotional'as' he'• x ( 470-mile flight from Manila and-back, expressed deep satisfaction with the Four F 4 Phantom jets covered the ap- American fighting man. -proach of his distinctive blue-and-silver “And soon,” he said, “when peace jet transport, Vietnamese were banished can come to the world, we will receive from the base while he was present you back in your homeland with open lest their numbers include Viet Cong TODAY ON CAMPUS Chess Team, 7:30 p.m., 217-18 East Prospect Hetzel Union Building ( News & Views General' Staff Circle K, 6:30 p.m., 214 HUB Meeting, 7 p.m., 117 HUB. Gamma Sigma Sigma Rush News & Views TrainingUßoard, ’ Tea, 7:15 p.m., McElwain ( 6:45 p.m., 118 HUB , Lounge Sophomore Class, 8 p.m., 215. Hat Society Council, 6:30 p.m., HUB 215 HUB Students- for Democraiic So- Inteniational Films, 7 p.m., ciety, 6:30 p.m., 217-18 HUB HUB assembly room Undergraduate Student Gov- Marketing Club, ’7:30 p.m., 346 ernment, 7 p.m., 203 HUB WDFM Schedule 4-4:05 p.m. WDFM News 4:05-6' p.m. Music of the Masters 6- p.m. WDFM News tinued) 6:05-7 p.m. - After Six (pop- 7:45-8 p.m. - .Weekend Pre ular) ' * ' view (Liz Shafran interviews 7- p.m. - Dateline News Homecoming Chairmen) 8-10 p.m. How About You? (all request show) 10-10:05 p.m. WDFM News 10:05-12 midnight’— Symphonic Notebook (Antes, Berlioz, a People Read a Small Ads a You're Reading One Nowl j vt" ; ? i * m: * r. -« mi m cv-'-Y -■ feus iitlfti It Visits Troops at Vietnam Base (comprehensive campus, na tional and international news) 7:15-7:45 p.m. After Six (con- 12-12:05 a.m. WDFM News College Caper Weekend at Grossinger’s Fri., Sat., Sun., Dec. 16,17,18. ! Fun, frolic, festivities, dawn-to yawn! Dancing to live music, ap petizing cuisine,'outstanding entertainment, midnight swim party, gala cocktail party, skiing, tobogganing, skating, world championship barrel jumping. Gals,' guys, gaiety! Get with it! Write or phone for SPECIAL RATES, reservation form and brochure. ' <o- . ... ... where the sun never sets on fun Grossinger, N.Y. Direct Line from NYC - LO 5-4500 (Area Code 914) 292-5000 Special Wlntersession Rates and Brochure yours for the asklne January 15 to February 13,1967. EM= il `;' ftit / THE DAILY, COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Security Tight for Presidential Trip To Meet Servicemen at Cam Ranh Bay Engineering Advisory Council ENGINEERING PROGRESS was the topic Masters in Harrisburg, president, and Vir for the Industrial and Professional Ad- gil E. Neilly, associate professor of engi visory Council of the College of Engineer- neering, secretary. Also pictured are How ing at its meeting here last week. Officers ard L. Hartman, acting dean of the college for the year were elected. They are, left and Nunzio J. Palladino. who becomes to right, Gerald K. Gillan of Modjeski and dean of the college on Nov. 1. “ We've got a business card in Olde English type which comes on expensive yellow crepe! lt?s not flimsy and white . . . neither is our music” THE INTRIGUES / METZGERS X, V With a Fine Assortment of Sweatshirts Tee Shirts Long & Short Sleeves Adults' & Children's Stuffed Animals China Metas Downtown Melzflers CoNe Ave. Next To The Peoples Bank 111 S, ALLEN ST. - 1 , t sympathizers. Live-ammunition was with drawn from many of the rifle-carrying troops on the sprawling premises.; Corny but Nice Touches Johnson savors surprise- and drama— and he does not shy away from emotion. All these elements were, present—plus some corny but nice touches such as a guitar-toting trio of enlisted men sere nading Johnson in a mess hall with bare ly rhymed verses sung to the tune of “The Yellow Rose of Texas.” But most of -all there was Johnson himself—closer to ground combat than any president since Abraham Lincoln toured a Civil War battlefield. Not since World War 11, and Frank lin D. Roosevelt, has any chief executive ventured into a war zone. Dwight -D. 238-4880 Proudly Salutes Your Penn State Souvenirs Glassware A MEMBER OF THE PENN STATE CO-OP WITH TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU Eisenhower went to Korea in 1952, but as president-elect. Johnson was at one moment the ramrod-stiff commander in chief, hold ing, in his stomach and standing tail in khaki ranch clothes that somehow man aged to give him a military look. Then he would become the friendly, joking politician, ready to exchange ban ter with all comers. There was the pep-talking leader urging his field commanders to “come honle with that coonskin on the wall.” And there was'the weight-conscious middle-aged man shaking his head and patting his stomach at the sight of mashed -potatoes in the chow line, and then ac cepting a heaping portion with gravy. The President’s big message at this The SPECTRUM ON SALE Today and Tomorrow • HUB Ground Flor • ENG Library 25c Subscribers: Bring Your Cards ‘/ Cedarwood Items Campus Shopping Center 358 E. COLLEGE AVE. sweltering, sandy bastion was this: “I give you my pledge: We sjiall never let you down. Thank you for what you are doing for your country.” ■ 13 Days Before Election Johnson came to Cam Ranh Bay just 13 days before an election back home that he thinks may influence Hanoi’s attitude toward peace talks. But he said his coming had another purpose—“ One good purpose: To tell every soldier, sailor, airman and Marine how proud we are of what you are doing and how proud we are of how you’re doing it.” Despite the suddenness of the trip, it really startled few Americans, except perhaps the men at Cam Ranh Bay who received Johnson with scant advance no tice. As Johnson himself told the troops, and as most people had suspected when he, set out on his Pacific journey, “I juvt could not come to this part of the world and not come to see you.” Housing Educators Plan Conference . A University undergraduate m family housing and home art is among speakers for the Tenth Annual Conference of the American Association of Housing Educators in session this week at the University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. She is Carol Cupples, of Philadelphia, who worked for two summers with the Phila delphia Housing and Re development Authority and who will start her career as a full-time employee of the Authority after her gradua tion from the University in December. Miss Cupples, the only col lege undergraduate to appear on the national program, will take part in a panel discus sion of "Housing in the Com munity” with an Extension Housing Specialist and a homemaking instructor in an aduit education program for low-income families. Enthusiastic about ■ her learning experiences in Phila delphia, Miss Cupples main tains that too few students are aware of “the exciting career possibilities!’ open to majors in the housing field. “Officials of redevelopment and urban renewal projects NEW COLLEGE DINER Downtown Between rhe Movies ALWAYS OPEN ■uiituiiuiiiimimiiiiimimimmimi SLAVE JAMMY 6-8 - TONIGHT - Warnock THE LOST WORLD *SOMA = ' *support Our Magnificent Area ?iiimiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii for the man who takes his pipe seriously, We’ve just perfected a completely new pipe mixture, called Luxembourg. It’s for the man who has graduated from the syrupy-sweet tobaccos. Blended from choice U.S., European, Middle Eastern, African and Asian leaf...and subtly enriched with one of tile rarest honeys in the world. We’d like you to try a pack on .us. How come? We figure one pack is just about what it’ll take to convince you that it’s the finest pipe mixture around. After that, who knows... you might make it your regular smoke. The Imported luxury pipe mixture j P. LORILLARD COMPANY ] j Dept. L', 200 East 42nd Street. New York, N.Y. 10017 J | - Please send me a free package of Luxembourg Pipe Mixture, J i ! I I Cily. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1966 are looking for college grad uates who have studied hous ing and other needs in rela tion to people,” she said. “And the needs of people are em phasized in all majors in the College of Human Develop ment.” CAROL CUPPLES - AUTO - PARTS • ACCESSORIES Western Auto 112 S. FRASER ST. inimmiimiummimmiimmmu Music by mimmiimimiiiiiiiiimimiiß
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers