'GIVE FOR TOMORROW- -TODAY
EDITORIAL
Is This 'Just Another' One?
Our nation is in the midst of another American Education
asily be the most im-
ed?
'lleetive whole is only
which it is composed,
s exist for the people;
nt and public agencies,
.entatives, our parents
ts, must act a^publi
no longer attenAicho
Week. Just another
portant Education
In a democracy,
as strong and as just
American government
totalitarian people exi
Through elected £
basically control educa
information officers, to
cognizant of its activity.
As worldly conditio:
increasingly important,
allowed to slip from the
tion Week should serve as a reminder for all of us to bring our
school home with us every evening.
Thus, this will not have been “just another” public observ¬
ance.
'Beat Compton' Sentiments
Voiced by Canine Rooters
“Beat Compton!” has been announced as the chant which
Bulldog rooters will repeat tomorrow at the 12:30 p.m. pep
rally on the front steps of the C building. The rally will be
the mid-day feature of Red and
HRONICLE
Vol. 48, No. 9
Pasadena, California
November 8, 1950
White Day which has been pro¬
claimed in honor of the big game.
Pep Commissioner Bill Miner
says, “This is the game of the
year. We are calling on every
student to support the team. You
can start the ball rolling by at¬
tending the noon rally and wear¬
ing Red and White during the
day.”
Special buses have been char¬
tered to transport rooters to the
Coliseum. The buses will be
loaded in front of the Mirror
Pools and will leave at 6 o’clock.
Students are asked to purchase
tickets today before 3 p.m. at the
Student Bank. Round trip fare
is 50 cents.
Members of the Pep Commis¬
sion have worked out five special
card stunts for the game. They
will be set up by members of the
commission in the Coliseum dur¬
ing the afternoon. The stunts
will not work out if the rooting
section is not filled. "What do
ya say,” Miner challenges, “let’s
fill the whole side of the stadi¬
um.” Remember ’47; it can and
will happen again!”
Bulldogs Drub Tartarrouting
Ventura, Face Compton in LA
Compton’s terrible Tartars, victors in seven of their last eight outings, play host to
the Bulldogs from Pasadena City College in a Thursday night Western State Conference
headliner at the Los Angeles Coliseum. Compton, angered by their recent defeat at the hands
of a Don Burroughs-led Ventura Pirate eleven, stomped hapless Glendale City College 34 to
6. In their last outing, the Bulldogs thumped Ventura 34-0 last week. Pasadena has met seven
opponents, and has come up with victories over Mexico City College, San Bernardino Valley
College, Glendale City College and Ventura Junior College, and tied with Santa Ana Junior
College and Everett, Washington, Junior College. Lone Loss was to Los Angeles City Col¬
lege, 19-6.
Local Students Urged to Aid
DestitutdBwopean Comrades
“Give for Tomorrow-
be conducted at PCC Noveni
men. An annual project
students in the war-dev;
Tafkers Add Certifica
To ’Gabbing' Assortment
Four certificates were added to
the collection of PCC’s forensics
squads last weekend, as Coach
Paul W. Smith took a group of
deciaimers north for a practice
session at Santa Barbara College.
Ruth Squire copped excellence
honors for extemporaneous
speaking at the competition, as
well as an honorable mention
award in discussion. Honorable
mention certificates for extempo¬
raneous speaking also went to
City Collegians Mike Schon and
Vincent Sardisco.
Other local participants were
Jan Johnson, Peter Adgie, Doro¬
thy Herrmann and Lani Revuel-
to.
is the theme for the World Student Service Fund drive to
J, according to Anne Fox and Jim Donahue, student chair-
ent^WSSF colWits money to
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sick and destitute
oiAe world.
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goal is half of which will be
Jo's ’Little Women' Escapades Come
To Life In Play Revival of Novel
“Little Women,” based on the well-known novel by Louisa
Mae Alcott will be presented in the Little Theater on Novem¬
ber 16, 17 and 21 at 8 p.m. and
on November 20 at 4 p.m.
The story is centered around
the March family. The father is
away in the service, and though
the family is not poor, it has
very small means of livelihood.
Jo, the oldest of four girls, is the
“tom-boy” of the group. She is
portrayed by Rae Holcomb. Her
sisters are: Meg, Coryn Stroman;
Amy, Nira Monsour; and Beth,
Janice Gibson. Their mother,
Marmie, is played by Valerie
Haas. It is Marmie who guides
the family through several seri¬
ous crises.
Love interest is provided by
John Owens as John Brooke, and
Jack Beasley as Laurie, the boy
next door.
Russian Intentions
To Be Discussed
Louis J. Adler, author and re¬
nowned lecturer, will discuss the
“Kremlin Timetable” during his
second appearance on the Tues¬
day Evening Forum, November
14.
Adler has held positions of re¬
sponsibility in the US govern¬
ment which included 1936-37 ex¬
ecutive director of the National
Housing Committee, Director of
speaking campaigns for sale of
World War I "Liberty Bonds”
and he was also a foreign corres¬
pondent during 1946-47.
With a background as a stu¬
dent of Russia, the Soviet sys¬
tem and world communism for
25 years, he spent 1946-47 in six¬
teen European countries, six
months east of the “Iron Cur¬
tain.” He watched the operations
and techniques which enabled the
small communist minorities seize
absolute power in Poland, Hun¬
gary, Rumania, Bulgaria, Yugo¬
slavia and Albania. In Czecho¬
slovakia, he saw the ground-work
laid for the “coup d’etat” which
allegedly destroyed the liberties
of that country a few months
later.
Future Employees Get
Authentic Career Picture
Student vocational interests
were discussed at length Friday
during the annual Vocational
Guidance Day, sponsored this
term jointly by members of the
Key Club, the student personnel
office, and departmental chair¬
men.
Occupying the usual assembly
period, the discussion hour fea¬
tured speakers representing 14
departments of the school.
versify in Burma
books and clothing. The other
half will be used to help estab¬
lish a
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sanitarium for men
and women students in Central
Greece.
SCA’s Ernest Becker, in speak¬
ing of the fund drive, urges stu¬
dents to “remember, the war is
not yet over. Students in Europe
and Asia desperately need your
help.” Tn a final plea for the
generosity of PCC students, he
adds, “please do not let them
down!”
‘Can We Survive?’
The drive will be launched
Monday with a student-faculty
discussion panel in Library Hall
at 11, 12 and 1 o'clock. The topic
is “Can We Survive the Ato '-
Age?” This discussion will
ture students from Greece, J,
and other countries.
Meal a Day Requested
Posters asking students
faculty members to donate
price of a lunch will be i:
student and faculty cafe
every day next week.
“Seeds of Destiny” and
films will be shown in Sexso
Auditorium Tuesday at 11 and 12
o’clock. Dr. Robert Yeaton, fac¬
ulty member, will give a com¬
mentary. There will be no ad¬
mission charge.
Representatives will explain to
students about WSSF, answer
questions and receive contribu¬
tions Wednesday and Thursday
in all 10 o’clock classes.
Pools Join Drive
At 11, 12 and 1 o’clock on Wed¬
nesday, there will be a Mirror
Pool coin toss for the benefit of
WSSF relief.
Thursday will be devoted to
honoring Ingvar Kattemaa,
PCC’s DP student from Europe.
Thanksgiving Zipper Slated
The drive will be concluded Fri¬
day with the Thanksgiving as¬
sembly. The Rev. George Hill,
pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Pasadena, will be the
speaker.
Committee chairmen are: Joyce
Kilgore, art; Virginia Roycroft,
classroom solicitation; Ann John¬
son, main hall booth; Mike
Schon, Thanksgiving assembly;
Joanne Stanley and Marilyn
Gough, educational films.
s Singers Embark
On Television Careers
PCC Madrigal Singers will per¬
form before the KFI-TV tele¬
vision cameras on November 16,
at 10:30 p.m., it was announced
by Edward N. Qualen, group ad¬
viser.
The Madrigal Singers are a
group of 16 students who special¬
ize in singing madrigals, a par¬
ticular type of composition which
was especially popular with 16th
and 17th century choralists.
This is the second year that
the Madrigal Singers have been
entertaining in this area.
Those who are interested may
see the Madrigal Singers on KFI-
TV, November 16 at 10:30 p.m.
aiming Quintet
s Contest Finals
finalists will compete for
grand award in the annual
division speech contest,
red by Phi Rho Pi this
in at four in 12C.
nth grAde finalists® ;
sts^WIdy 'easWTanc
McKinney and Don Robinson. All
of the finalists will repeat their
speeches on “What My Education
in America Means to Me.”
Admission will be 50 cents for
generals and 25 for student body
members.
Since the first game in 1927,
the PCC-Compton fray has car¬
ried through 25 games, with 15
wins for the Tartars, 7 for the
Bulldogs, and 3 ties.
Continuing with the record,
the Tartars have put 311 points
across the Pasadena goal-line
against the 165 for Pasadena.
Moreover, the 1950 hosts have
scored the most points in one
game, 38. Against this, the Bull¬
dogs have run up on 27 counters
in a single contest.
Can We Break It?
For seven straight years, the
Tartars have come out on top of
the scoreboard with but one ex¬
ception — that one being the 1947
14-13 “game of the year” upset,
blasting the perfect record of the
Tay Brown men. Last year it
was 25-6 in the Rose Bowl.
All three ties have been 0-0
scores. These were in 1928, 1932
and 1937.
Originally, the Maroon and
Grey vs. the Red and White game
was to be held in Compton’s
Ramsaur Stadium, but the crowd
seems greater than the stadium’s
capacity, so the “biggie” has been
moved to the Coliseum.
Tartar Giant Rumbles
In Compton’s first game of the
season, the Tartars trounced the
San Diego NTS 21-17. Next game
for the 1949 WSC champs was
an intersectional affair with
Hutchinson, Kansas. The Tartars
won this one 14-6.
Back home again, the Bluejays
of San Diego JC dropped a 43-12
count to the Comptonites, follow¬
ed by the 57-7 thumping at the
Rose Bowl over the Muir Mus-
s.
onipton Bomb Dropped
'epped up by this merciless
victory, the Tartars dropped the
bomb on Weber College of Utah
with 67-0 hammering. San An¬
gelo of Texas was next, 27-7.
Then came the surprising de¬
feat at the hands of the Ventura
• Continued on Page Four
French 'Savoir Faire' to Be Contrasted
With American ‘Way of Life' Tuesday
“As the French see us and as we see the French” will be the
first in a series of discussions which will inaugurate a French
Forum at City College. Dr. Oreste F. Pucciani, professor of French
at UCLA will present this topic on November 14.
In order to give persons in the Pasadena area an opportunity
to hear the romantic language of France and to learn more about
the people of that nation,
spoken other than in t!
gated by the Extended
At 8 p.m. on Janu:
at USC will discuss
со;
against propaganda of v.
of history at Occidental
American relations. Th
who have achieved fam>
by Georges Archard, f
French at Los Angeles
Preceding the talk
violinist of the Civic ore:
|W students to hear this language
these forums have been insti-
ment.
Dr. Rene Belle, professor of French
rary French humanism as a defense
es. Andre Kalpachnikoff, professor
iwill talk on the future of Franco-
Teigners
iscussed
lessor of
College,
ее,
first
ions, Also
am will be dedicated
j-ench literature, and will
consul of France and
|ollege
Irst fi
1 will p
included on the program will be a presentation of skits by students
at City College.