Feeling Left Out? Take Club Day Cure
A/l/l i)jL Clubs Campaign for
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C larOniCfe Campusites, Friday
VOL. 55, NO. 6
PASADENA CITY COLLEGE, PASADENA, CALIFORNIA
MARCH 17, 1954
City College
Campus Put
on Presses
Pasadena City College’s prize¬
winning yearbook, The Campus,
is on the press in its 1954 edition,
according to Glenn Carothers, ed¬
itor of the project.
This year’s annual is centered
around an unusual theme, which
calls for a wide usage of color
and unique mechanical work.
Some of the color work as well
as a few runs in black and white
are already off the press. Pho¬
tography for the book, much of
which is being done by the pic¬
torial journalism class under the
direction of Walter Girdner, is
rapidly being completed. The
printing schedule has been set
up, however, so that events oc¬
curring near the end of the
spring semester will be included
in the yearbook, which will be
distributed at the close of school.
The Pasadena City College Press,
managed by Robert van der Veen,
will do all of the mechanical
work connected with the publica¬
tion of the annual.
Working with Carothers on the
project are Miss Gladys Snyder,
adviser; Kay Cushman, associ¬
ate editor; Lorna Wevursky,
managing editor; Paul Mill-
spaugh, art editor; Mignon Mc-
Clean, business manager; and
Douglas Hope, athletics editor.
Lois Bouvier, Jacquelyn Brit-
ter, Robert Christensen, Scott
FitzRandolph, JoAnne Mulder,
Robert Nichols, Henry Olson,
Frances Short, Marlys Tennyson
and Anita Wilcott are also on the
annual staff.
Physical Science
Plans Open House
Three general fields were re¬
vealed yesterday as areas for ex¬
hibition in the annual Physical
Science Open House to be held
April 30 by George Morlan, stu¬
dent chairman, and James Mel-
drum, faculty adviser to the
Physical Science Council.
Exhibits will be tendered in
chemistry, physics and geology,
with a student in charge of each
demonstration. Movies will be
shown throughout the evening.
AWS Has Two Meets
Coming Up on Calendar
Sue Doehring, Associated Women Students president, has recent¬
ly announced two conventions at which Pasadena City College women
will be represented on March 20 and April 30.
Seven AWS board members have been invited by the Uni¬
versity of California at Los Angeles to attend, meet new acquaint¬
ances and exchange ideas to improve women’s activities next
Saturday.
East Los Angeles Junior College will be the site of another AWS
conference in April. Southern California schools will be represented
and attending from PCC will be Dr. Catherine Robbins and two
City College AWS members.
Presentation of the Pasadena AWS cabinet was also made
recently and the members are as follows: Freshman Class,
Nancy Elliott, Pat McBrown, Margy Jackson and Marilyn Beh-
rendt; Sophomore Class, Connie Remde, Bonnie Imus, Ann Dixon
and Anna McBride; Junior Class, Carol McIntosh, Joyce Elmore,
Sandy Mueller, Suzy Palmer and Karen Thome; and Senior Class,
Nancy Cline and Jban Mendenhall.
“Mr. Steak” was the scene of the AWS installation banquet
and the new board and cabinet were inducted there. Sylvia Pauloo,
outgoing AWS prexy, was presented with a gift and thanked for her
outstanding semester of work. Sue Doehring then spoke to the
group and stated that she hoped that this semester would be as
successful for AWS as the last one was.
City College Groups Need You!
Want to join a club? Friday, March 19, students both
old and new will have an opportunity to attend meetings of
the various Pasadena City College clubs and to join organi¬
zations of their choosing. Held semi-annually, club day fea¬
tures presentations by PCC
groups of movies, special outside
speakers, and discussions. They
throw out their hooks for new
members in the special Club Day
Bulletin, issued Friday morning.
Clubs are publicizing their ac¬
tivities by means of displays in
hall cases and posters. The bul¬
letin will include a statement of
the club’s meeting plans and the
student handbook explains quali¬
fications for membership.
Many organizations will hold
joint meetings in order to gain a
wider audience for especially
noted speakers or motion pic¬
tures.
In charge of Club Day is the
Student Organizations Council,
headed by Es Johnson, commis¬
sioner of organizations.
ALL RIGHT, YOU GUYS . . . I’ll join, exclaims frightened
Frank Veloz, who is obviously being influenced in his decision
as to which club he will join on Club Day Friday. Doing the
persuading are Cliff Hooper, Lee Conover and Larry Ross, each
with a representation of his respective club in hand.
Drive Soon to be Held
for Payment of Uniforms
Work has been progressing on the Bulldog Band uniform
shares sales program, according to Mary Ann Pennington,
chairman of the drive. Letters have been prepared by the
committee and are ready to send out to the Pasadena mer¬
chants that have been asked to
help finance the new garments,
which were purchased by the As¬
sociated Student Body last fall.
Miss Pennington, who was ap¬
pointed by the student body cab¬
inet to the chairmanship of the
drive, has met with the band
parents organization, and the two
groups will cooperate in staging
the effort. It is hoped that suf¬
ficient funds will be obtained to
eliminate the greater part of the
uniform deficit now facing the
Associated Student Body.
The Pasadena merchants have
been asked to take part in the
drive because it is felt that the
band is a community asset as
well as a Pasadena City College
institution.
^Cinerama
Have you seen Cinerama? The
P a r e n t-Teaeher Association
Council of Pasadena City Col¬
lege is sponsoring a morning
session of Cinerama on Satur¬
day, March 20, at 10:30 a.m.
Special rate tickets of $1 each
are available at the campus
bank for Cinerama.
Four Selected as
Language Chairmen
According to Patsy Wood-
bridge, president of the Language
Council, four new chairmen of
the language sections were re¬
cently elected.
Students named as chairmen
are Elena Dewar, Latin; Mike
Bonner, Spanish; Dorothy Berry,
French; and Del Elliot, German.
These students will be in charge
of their respective sections and
will co-ordinate the activities of
the section.
Nineteen members form the
Language Council, four repre¬
senting each section. Members
are selected at the end of each
semester.
Film to Be Shown
by Math-Astronomy
Pasadena City College’s newly-
formed Math-Astronomy Council
is sponsoring a film, ‘Dynamic
Measurement,” today, March 17,
at 3 p.m. in 200C.
The 30-minue, color, sound film
by
С о
n s
о
1 i dated Engineering,
deals with straining guages, their
application and uses. It is broad
'in scope and will be of interest
to all scientists and engineers.
Red Cross Fund Drive
Proves Huge Success
Approximately $200 was raised in last week’s Red Cross
Fund Drive, according to Blythe Gentry, chairman of the Red
Cross Council. “We were very pleased to have raised this
amount, since there was not a fund drive in 1953,” stated
Miss Gentry. On Wednesday and
Thursday, March 10 and 11, the
Red Cross collections were made
in 10 o’clock classes.
Money collected from the drive
will go into the PCC Red Cross
Fund and will be used for school
activities and affairs. Recently
the Red Cross donated $20 to the
Foreign Affairs Commission so
that they might send representa¬
tives to the Model United Na¬
tions.
Red Cross funds will also go
into a joint assembly with the
PCC Key Club on April 23.
Publicity chairman for the
drive Was Sandra Tarr. Dick An¬
derson was in charge of the
drive. He also handled posters
for the event.
Robert Bowlus is acting adviser
of the Red Cross Council. Duties
of the group include coordinating
a network of campus Red Cross
activities.
'An Arabian
Might 9 to Be
0MD Motif
“An Arabian Night” has been
announced as the theme of the
Order of the Mast and Dagger’s
annual spring carnival, accord¬
ing to Kathy Gage, president of
the highest honorary organiza¬
tion.
To be held on Friday, May 21,
the all-school event will feature
decorations and technical effects
in a desert motif around the Mir¬
ror Pool carnival site.
Committee chairmen named to
handle the details of the affair
are Kathy Gage, steering; John
Willis, finance; Jeanette Payne,
business; Joan Jahnke, booth re¬
lations; Lois Johnson and Sylvia
Pauloo, technical; and Nancy
Wichman, queen and coronation.
Jim Galbraith and Dick Ander¬
son, publicity; Ann Lindsay, OMD
booth; Jim Blixt, cleanup; and
Donna Irwin, special effects, will
also work on carnival arrange¬
ments.
Mrs. Jessie Chittenden, adviser
to OMD, will also work with the
members of the various commit¬
tees in the staging of the carni¬
val.
As usual, the clubs on campus
will have booths and receive 50
per cent of the profits from that
booth. The other half of the
profits will go to the Order of
Mast and Dagger to cover ex¬
penses.
Art Design Show
Now in Progress
Pasadena City College art stu¬
dent are exhibiting their work in
the current Design Show.
Held in the art gallery, which
is located on the third floor of the
main building, the exhibit, open
to the public, can be viewed ev¬
ery night except Friday until
10 p.m. The Design Show dis¬
plays the recent work of the ad¬
vanced design students who have
worked under the direction of
Mrs. Helen Reid and Leonard Ed¬
mondson.
Featuring modern abstractions
and other work of creative imag¬
ination, stressing the design ele¬
ment of value, texture, color and
form, the show will end this
week.
Foreign Relations to be
Enhanced by Model UH
International relations students from Pasadena City College
will join forces from 100 colleges and universities in 11 western
states on March 25, 26 and 27 for the Model United Nations, to be
held on the UCLA campus.
PCC has been selected to represent the country Iraq. The stu¬
dents will represent the actual policies of individual UN member
nations in authentic sessions of the General Assembly, Security
Council, Economic and Social Council and other bodies.
The students will confront actual obstacles and attempt to find
their own methods of solving them. The purpose of the sessions is
to acquaint students with the problems and procedures of the world
government organization.
Dr. Ralph Bunche, of the UN Trusteeship Council; Benjamin
Cohen, assistant secretary-general; David W. Wainhouse, chief ad¬
viser to the United States delegation; and other American and foreign
diplomats will add to the value and authenticity of the occasion.