Nancy Mangum Wins Statewide Honors
Bank of Amenta Announces
Award at CJCA Conference
The California Junior College Association saw
PCC’s Nancy Lee Mangum named by the Bank of
America as California Junior College Woman of the
year at the group’s conference in Bakersfield last
week.
Six PCC administrators and faculty members
attended the three-day conference, which was gear¬
ed to “The Continuing Challenges for the California
* Junior College.”
Nancy, a PCC sophomore, was presented with a
$1000 scholarship by Robert L. Gordon, executive
vice-president of the Bank of America. She was
named from among eight women finalists, repre¬
senting more than half a million California junior
college students.
Criteria for selection was a record of outstand¬
ing academic achievement, participation in college
activities, leadership, community service, and, fi¬
nally, personal interviews before a panel of judges.
Dr. Armen Sarafian, PCC president, felt that
“Nancy’s sincerity, dedication, interest, and devo¬
tion in helping others, made her an outstanding
example of the college woman.”
Nancy’s academic record is a 4.0, even after she
served as the international students commissioner
last spring. She is also a member of Spartans, the
highest honorary women’s organization, and a three-
semester member of Alpha Gamma Sigma, state¬
wide, honorary, junior college scholarship society.
The six PCC administrators and faculty mem¬
bers who attended the conference were Dr. Armen
Sarafian, Dr. Delmas Bugelli, Albert V. Bean, Wil¬
liam K. Grainger, Arthur J. Schechter, and Frank
J. Ziol.
The proposed creation of the position of the as¬
sistant chief of the California Division of Higher
Education was one of the main items of discussion.
“The creation of such a position,” stated Dr. Bugelli,
“would give the junior colleges a stronger voice
in Sacramento. This is especially important, as
higher education will be looking to state and federal
aid for financial support as the junior college as¬
sumes the first two years of higher education.”
“Student Government and Activism — A Threat
or a Hope,” was one of the workshops attended by
PCC representatives. The meeting was to determine
policies on college speakers and on the solicitation
of funds. Dr. Bugelli felt that there was a very
strong element of support for the exploitation of
all points of view, as long as there was balance and
communication back and forth.
NANCY LEE MANGUM smiles proudly after being named the
California Junior College Woman of the Year. Dr. Armen Sa¬
rafian, PCC president, was present when she was presented with
a $1000 check by Robert L. Gordon, at right, executive vice-
president of the Bank of America.
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AWS Week Offers
Dance and Fashions
Vol. 24, No. 10
Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California
April 13, 1966
AM 5 Surprises Pageant Editor
in Man of Month Recognition
Larry Harris has been chosen
AMS Man of the Month for
March. He was awarded a $10
gift certificate . .nd a citation
signed by S. Luke Curtis, dean
of student activities, and the mem¬
bers of the AMS Man of the
Month committee.
Indicating the long hours and
dedication his job as editor of
the Pageant requires, Larry is the
first Pageant editor in four years
to maintain a full schedule of
classes other than journalism.
Campus
Corner
VOTERS REGISTER
FOR PRIMARY
Special registrars will be lo¬
cated in the main hall of the C
building and in the Campus Cen¬
ter lobby today to register any
person of voting age for the June
primary election.
COUNSELING CENTER
.OPEN FOR PROGRAMMING
Students cleared for program¬
ming may make counseling ap¬
pointments for summer and fall
program planning at the Coun¬
seling Center, 138C, next Monday
through Thursday from 8 a.m. to
9:30 p.m. and Friday from 8 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Catalogs will be
available beginning April 18.
CIRCLE
К
TO SCREEN
SURFING FILM
Circle K’s screening of “Water-
Logged,” Bruce Brown’s latest
surfing film, is slated for April
23 at 7:30 p.m. in Sexson Audi¬
torium. Admission is $1.25.
LINFIELD COLLEGE
INTERVIEWS TODAY
Ted Wilson, assistant director
of admissions, Linfield College,
McMinnville, Ore., will be on cam¬
pus today to interview interested
students. Mr. Wilson will be lo¬
cated on the Campus Center
porch from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
Despite the hectic struggle with
constant deadlines, he still man¬
ages to keep up his studies in
physics, chemistry, and anthro¬
pology.
Larry and his staff may be
found in the Pageant office, 31C,
almost anytime during the day
and often until late into the night.
What do he and his staff do with
all that time? “We cry a lot,”
Larry grinned.
Harris will graduate this se¬
mester with an AA in art and
transfer to either Cal State LA
or Long Beach, where he will
seek a bachelor’s degree in adver¬
tising design. He originally joined
the Pageant staff as an artist.
By Emily Vezerian
and Bill Seavey
Spring happiness has filled the
members of the Associated Wo¬
men students with so much vim
and vigor, that for the next three
days of Women’s Week, they have
promised to serve and entertain
all Lancer coeds. Barbara Beckley,
vice-president of AWE, will chair
Women’s Week.
“Getting to Know You” will
mark Wednesday’s activity, which
will involve all AWS members
carrying bouquets of daisies.
Making attempts to improve cam¬
pus relations among women stu¬
dents, the AWS will hand out the
daisies as symbols of friendship.
Upon receiving the daisy, the
coed will be invited to Friday’s
board meeting.
An afternoon fashion show, at
12 noon, on the Campus Center
patio, will be Thursday’s high¬
light.
—Courier photo by David Laidig
LARRY HARRIS was nearly beside himself when an AMS Board
member told him that for his arduous efforts as Pageant editor,
he is to receive $10 and recognition as the March Man of the
Month.
Lancer Band Returns Home
After British Columbia Tour
By Bandy van der Veen
During Easter vacation, the
Lancer Band made a 3000 mile
trip north to Victoria, British
Columbia, where they performed
three concerts for the Spring
Flowers Festival.
Scheduled to leave the campus
on Thursday, March 31, the band
encountered an unscheduled de¬
lay, when one of the three bus¬
es wouldn’t start because the
fuel tank had been filled with
gasoline instead of diesel fuel.
This delayed the start of the trip
for better than two hours, while
the bus’s tank was drained and
the fuel lines were cleaned.
The band traveled straight
through to Tacoma, Washington,
on Saturday where the PCC mu¬
sicians marched as the featured
band in three parades of the 33rd
Annual Daffodil Parade in the
Puyallup Valley.
Leaving Tacoma on Sunday, the
Lancers moved along to Anacor-
tes, Washington, where they
boarded a ferry for a very scenic
ride to Sydney,
В.
C., on Van¬
couver Island. From Sydney the
band was escorted by the Cana¬
dian Police into Victoria. The PCC
Band was lodged in the pictur¬
esque Empress Hotel.
In Victoria, the band gave con¬
certs in front of the Parliament
Building, at the Empress Hotel,
• Continued on Page Four
Colloquium Replay
A videotape replay of the En¬
glish department colloquium,
“Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?”, will be presented
tomorrow at noon in 19C-1.
Helen Barnes, associate profes¬
sor of English, discussed Ed¬
ward Albee’s controversial play
yesterday.
Student Leader Meet
Serves as Opinion Body
Six student officers found out
at the recent California Junior
College Student Government As¬
sociation what was on the minds
of their counterparts at 80 other
junior colleges.
From the three-day session in
San Diego, recommendations on
raising the status of junior col¬
leges, permitting local colleges to
collect mandatory ASB fees, and
placing directional signs on main
thoroughfares will be forwarded
to the junior college lobby in Sac¬
ramento.
The CJCSGA went on record
supporting the Master Plan for
Higher Education and proposed
amending the state education code
to remove junior colleges from
the classification of secondary
schools.
Student leaders were also con¬
cerned with restrictions on on-
campus speakers, but a petition
for student rights was ruled out
of order in the general assembly.
Representing PCC were Steve
Scott, ASB president; Ray Fors,
ASB vice-president; Shelley Lin-
derman, Senate president; Nancy
Jane Urban and Bill Meyers, AWS
and AMS presidents.
Lee Rosen, PCC commissioner
of finance, attended the confer¬
ence as treasurer of the state
organization. The PCC group’s
adviser was Robert Ehrlich.
Fashions for women will be
from Reva’s Dress Shop. Men’s
fashions will come from Haek-
ett’s.
Lancer coeds who will model
include Kathy Weigand, Beth
Jackson, Joyce Aisiwa, Gayle
White, Cheri Richmond, and Al¬
berta Walker. Models for men’s
fashions will be Steve Moullen,
Dave Sautter, Gabriel Fang and
Steve De Windt. Fashion show
chairman is Bernadette Terril.
According to Nancy Jane Ur¬
ban, AWS president, Friday
should be the most exciting day
of all. At 12 noon, on the Campus
Center patio, Go-Go girls will be
on hand to give a dance demon¬
stration of social and other types
of dancing, to launch the spirit
of the dance that evening.
“Judgment Day” will theme
the annual AMS-AWS dance to
be held in the Campus Center,
Friday night from 8 to 12 o’clock.
Featured will be two bands; the
Piranhas, downstairs in “hell,”
and the Project 5, upstairs in
“heaven.” Attire is dressy sport.
Effecting “hell” will be red and
black decoration, red lighting, and
Go-Go girls wearing red with
black fringe. Converts will sign
in the Black Book and greet Sa¬
tan.
Blue and white decorations, blue
lighting, and angels will set the
stage for “heaven.” Pure souls
will pass through the pearly gates
and be led by St. Peter to the
White Book, to register.
A formal invitation has been
sent out to the Los Angeles Valley
College AWS in an effort to re¬
solve the AMS-AWS rift there,
according to dance co-chairmen
John McCue and Mischelle Rolfe.
Music Dept
Film Screens
The music department’s docu¬
mentary film on the life of Arnold
Schoenberg will be telecast in
two half-hour shows on the ABC
Scope television series, tomorrow
and Friday. The set will air at 7
a.m.
“Arnold Schoenberg, Father of
Modern Music” is only one in a
series of programs that has been
produced by PCC’s telecommuni¬
cations section for the ABC tele¬
vision network.
Included in the show will be
Truman Fisher, PCC music in¬
structor, interviewing Schoen¬
berg’s widow, his son Larry, and
Rudolph Kolisch, one of the com¬
poser’s first students.
A string sextet performing one
of Schoenberg’s early works,
“Transfigured Night,” and a per¬
formance of the first movement
of the “Fourth String Quartet,”
will be part of the first half of
the program.
During the second half, Robert
Gross and Peter Hewitt will per¬
form Schoenberg’s “Fantasy for
Violin with Piano Accompani¬
ment.”