RENEGADES OUT FOR BLOOD IN SERIES REVIVAL
Five Little Peppers
SONG LEADERS— left to right; Patty Ponto, Joy Taranto, Joan Ehrenclou, Billie Lowe, Bettie Ball.
LUNCHEON FEATURES RED & WHITE
Coed Party
AWS Fashion Show in
Auditorium Today
Clothes, the subject close to
a woman’s heart, will receive
their due at 3:00 this afternoon
when the AWS sponsors as its
semi-annual Coed Party, a fash¬
ion show in Sexson Auditorium.
A Miss PJC, Queen of Fashion,
and her court of two will be
selected from among the girls
modeling the clothes. Five mem¬
bers of the faculty will act as
judges.
The attention of judges will be
focused, not only on fashion, but
on such points as the models’
poise, smile and posture.
Eight of the girls were chosen
last Thursday by the AWS Ex¬
ecutive Board as being fashion-
wise and therefore model their
own clothes. Campus representa¬
tives of Pasadena department
stores will appear in clothes sold
by those stores.
The eight selected by the board
are Betty Burns, Joan Condee,
Joann Cross, Shirley Rafferty,
Judy Ware, Abbie Lourchie, Joyce
Erickson and Betty Johnson.
Lionel Sorocco, at the piano,
will provide the ‘mood’ music and
Lillian Roberts is the narrator.
HUDDLES ON SALE AT
ALL BOWL GAMES
. The Huddle, official football
program, is on sale throughout
all home games. The starting
lineup and roster, grid schedule,
and write-ups of players are fea¬
tured each week.
Every student attending a game
is urged by the school to support
the Associated Student Body by
buying a Huddle at the game
each week.
A/VIS SPONSORED AFFAIR
PRESENTS NOTED
GUESTS
Red and white day this Friday makes another colorful
appearance on the PJC campus.
It is traditionally a day where students are to come garb¬
ed in the brightest red and white regalias they can dig out of
the mothballs. In fact, Bill Schubert, AMS president, declares
that a prize will be given for the best get-up on campus.
Highlight of the day will be the AMS luncheon at noon
in the Women’s Gym. This luncheon honors the opening of
the Metropolitan Conference for the Bulldogs who will meet
Bakersfield that night.
Sam Hayes, well-known sports reporter and newscaster,
will act as master of ceremonies and will present his football
forecast for 1946-47. Tentative plans have been made for
speakers, Paul Bixler, head grid coach of Ohio State, and
Sam Hanks, leading midget auto racer.
Dr. Sexson, superintendent of schools, the board of edu¬
cation, and businessmen of Pasadena will also be present.
Entertainment will be provided by the Euterpeans and the
band.
The women’s restrictive clubs are holding a contest to
determine which club can sell the most tickets. The prize, free
tickets to the midget auto races for the winning club, will
be presented at the next assembly by Bill Schubert, AMS
president.
Ticket sales began Monday at the bank and at the Triton
Booth.
AMS Board members will also have tickets to sell. There
are only 750 tickets available to men students. These fifty
cent tickets will excuse all buyers from their 12 and 1 o’clock
classes.
Following red and white day is the conference opener
with Bakersfield in the Rose Bowl. As before, everyone is
urged to wear his red and white beanie.
Music Lovers
Kantela Club Has 1 st
Meeting of Year
Beginning their first meeting
of the year with a musical pro¬
gram and picnic, the Kantela
Club has extended invitations to
all students in music classes and
friends on campus interested in
music to get together with the
club at 5:00 today.
New and old Kantela members
plan to meet by the swimming
pool for a picnic supper. From
there they will adjourn to room
208D where the best of Kantela
talent will provide entertainment
for the guests.
Founded in 1938
Founded in 1938, the club’s
purpose has been to bring togeth¬
er students interested in music,
to furnish opportunities for stu¬
dents to perform for each other
and to create a wider interest in
good music.
Reservations and tickets for
the program may be purchased
from Roger Munn, president of
the club, Georgie Meyers, secre¬
tary, or Jean Berg, club treasurer.
Kantela’s sponsor, Mrs. Carolyn
Weersing, from whom tickets
may also be had, is located in the
music building.
STAR NEWS INVITES PJC
PUPILS TO OPEN HOUSE
From 4 to 10 p. m. on Thurs¬
day, October 3, the Pasadena Star-
News will hold its 60th anniver¬
sary open house.
In a letter written to the school,
W. L. Blab*, associate editor, ex-
Conference to
Have Scrappy
Opening Night
Bakersfield Still Irked
Over Former 19-7
Nudging
In a grand resumption of a
series that was dropped back in
1942, a heavily loaded squad of
Bakersfield Renegades will march
into the Rose Bowl this coming
Friday night to test proverbial
Bulldog tenacity.
The Renegades will be knee-
deep in ball toting talent and
more than anxious to avenge the
19 to 7 defeat suffered at the
hands of the Bulldogs on the oc¬
casion of their last encounter.
No Shortages
Head coach “Jack” Frosh can
do no moaning about a shortage
of material on this year’s maroon
and white aggregation. Three
weeks ago he had 100 candidates
for varsity slots and nad to slice
down to 50 so that he and Earl
Sargent, his assistant, could move
around out on the practice field.
Frosh will bring south some 35
gridsters with plenty of ball-play¬
ing experience and an average of
186 pounds of brawn.
Wearing the Bakersfield colors
will be at least three ali-county
prep stars and four lettermen
back from the 1942 eleven as well
as the pick of Bakersfield High
School stars for the past four
years.
Game Under Belt
Bakersfield got started last this
season with only one game played
to date against the Fresno State
Jaycees. But Friday night’s ruck¬
us will be the Metropolitan Con¬
ference opener for both teams.
Tom Mallory takes to the Bowl
a twice-exposed, sharp- toothed
Bulldog squad that has met and
acquitted itself well agaist Santa
Ana and Chaffey. The edge in
experience may mean something
insofar as black and white figures
are concerned, but dopesters in
the know have tabbed this con¬
ference opener as a game where
anything can happen.
Poll Shows Students
Favor Clubs, Draft
In a cross-section polling of
the PJC student body by the
student opinion poll, conduc¬
ted by Roger Stewart, it was
discovered that 54 percent of
the students are in favor of
restrictive clubs, 49 percent
prefer the present selective
service laws.
The final results were ob¬
tained by proportionate repre¬
sentation of all the classes in
school according to their num¬
ber. The poll was conducted
by personal interview to allow
for necessary explanations.
Exact figures in the poll are
as follows:
1. Q: Are you in favor of
having restrictive clubs on
campus? Answer: Yes — 54 per
cent; No — 29 percent; No
Opinion — 17 percent.
2. Q: Are you in favor of
the draft law as it now stands?
Answer: Yes — 49 percent; No
— 35 percent; No Opinion— 16
percent.
tended an invitation to all stu¬
dents interested in seeing how a
newspaper plant operates.
A greater effort than ever is
being made to have all operations
not only explained but demon¬
strated, the letter said.