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Vol. 30, No. 12
Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California
December 11, 1 968
— Courier photo by Herb Bowerman
PASADENAS CJCSGA DELEGATION is caught by Carl Ludlow, member of the Pasadena City Col-
the photographer as they leave 'for Fresno. lege Board of Trustees, joined them later.
Student Attempting Establishment
of American Hall of Fame Library
Political science major James
CJCSGA Action
Tied by Red Tape
Harvey sees the “American
people fast losing the pride and
interest that they should have in
their country.”
To cure the problem he has
diagnosed, he has begun work on
the establishment of The Ameri¬
can Hall of Fame Library.
Harvey, who is related to two
presidents, Hayes and Theodore
Roosevelt, first conceived the idea
in April while discussing what he
should do with his collection of
famous autographs.
From that moment he began
planning for what may be one
of the greatest creations in his
life.
Harvey proposes to create a
library to honor “our outstanding
public officials and great Ameri¬
can men and women who have
given leadership to the growth,
prosperity, social, and cultural
advancement of our nation.”
Special Christmas Dates
Announced by Library
Sorry Jane and Joe Lancer.
That excuse for the missing term
paper won’t work.
You planned to say you couldn’t
get the research done, library
closed, and all that? Better try
again.
PCC’s library staff announces
these hours for the Christmas
vacation :
December 23, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
And from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on De¬
cember 26, 27, 30, and January 2
and 3.
Plans for the library are in
their preliminary stages. The 19-
year old PCC student has nearly
finished forming an honorary
board of directors. Already on the
board of directors are such per¬
sonalities as Meredith Willson,
Norman Rockwell, Dr. Albert Sa¬
bin, Governor William P. Knowl¬
es, and others.
As soon as the board of direc¬
tors, of which Harvey is president,
is completed, they will file the
library with both the state and
federal governments to make it
tax exempt. This will allow people
to make donations to the library
funds deductable.
A bank trustee has already been
set for the library. Harvey feels
that the library won’t become a
reality until 1975.
Main theme is to be the gover¬
nors of the United States. The
library, however, will honor great
Americans from all walks of life.
Famous papers will also be kept
for Americans to have access to,
and not locked away.
Harvey hopes to have the pro¬
ject located in Southern Califor¬
nia. He wants it open to the public
at no charge.
Harvey wants the library to be
different from the Smithsonian
Institute in that it will feature
people rather than things. He also
wants this to be a project of youth
Anyone who has questions or
suggestions he urges to contact
him through the Courier editor,
37C, or by mail: James Harvey,
46 El Dorado St., Arcadia.
Recommendations for a sum¬
mer school educational program
for disadvantaged students have
been issued by a PCC committee.
The outlined program is for a
six-weeks summer session 8 a.m.
to noon daily, with three teach¬
ers for two blocks of students.
The committee favors a team
teaching approach and the use of
student tutors.
Suggestions for course organi¬
zation include English 401, to be
taught as a block with (a) Com¬
munication 401 or (b) Reading
Techniques English 132, or (c)
Psychology 1A, Sociology 1, or
Sociology 2.
One teacher would be a regular
English teacher, one a communi¬
cations teacher, and the third a
psychology or sociology teacher.
The extra teacher would make
possible small group person-to-
person encounters with the stu¬
dents.
Also, five teaching assistants of
the same ethnic background as
the students could serve as small
group leaders in the classroom
and follow up as tutors outside
the classroom.
“This would make it possible
to schedule students in a college
transfer course such as Psycho¬
logy 1A or Sociology 1 or 2 and
have a probability of success
with the majority of the stu¬
dents,” states the committee.
The committee proposes “that
these courses retain an integrated
student population by the same
policy as presently exists in the
catalog criterion of the require-
EDITOR’S NOTE: Future issues
of the Courier will contain stories
on the resolutions brought before
the conference’s general assembly
and their effect on the student in
the junior college system.
21 Courses
Added Here
Twenty-one course additions
have been approved for the new
catalog by the College Council in
its last two meetings.
A course in opera survey has
been added to the Music Depart¬
ment. It will be a three-unit four-
hour course.
Four courses have been added
to the Art Department. They are
history of Asian art, Japan, ad¬
vanced interior design, experi¬
mental photography, and cinema¬
tography.
The three courses added to the
Engineering and Technology De¬
partment, are basic electrical de¬
sign, management training, and
advanced machining techniques.
The English Department added
reporting and newswriting, fea¬
ture and editorial writing, copy¬
reading and editing, and journa¬
lism field work.
A course in student reports has
been added to the Library.
The Nursing Department adds
Vocational Nursing 150A, B, and
C.
Six courses were added to the
Physical Education departments,
four to be coeducational.
The latest two additions in bus¬
iness are the merchandise check¬
er, a non-graded adult course,
and apparel arts, open to all stu¬
dents.
There were 29 deletions, 29 pre¬
requisite changes, 17 title
changes, and numerous descrip¬
tion changes, and course number
changes.
Withdrawal Date
Friday, Jan. 10, is the last date
to withdraw from college or to
drop a class, first semester.
ment for a qualifying course in
the departments of English and
Social Science.
The members of the committee
which outlined the program, are
Dr. Delmas A. Bugelli, Dr. Elton
Davis, Mrs. Margaret O’Donnell,
Woodrow Ohlsen, Dr. Harold Sal¬
isbury, and Mrs. Betty Mallonee.
Pasadena’s delegation at the
California Junior College Student
Government Association confer¬
ence in Fresno last weekend
found many valuable ideas of the
student leader in the state junior
colleges strangled in the red tape
of Robert’s Rules of Order.
The opening assembly never got
past approving the orders of the
day. A dispute of a dress code for
the convention stopped the as¬
sembly cold.
The seminars and workshop
following the assembly proved to
be highly productive. The areas of
politics, curriculum, and co-cur-
ricular activities were discussed
in the seminars. The workshops
that began the next day were run
to bring the most important prob¬
lems in the three areas of junior
college before the second general
assmbly in the form of resolu¬
tions.
The selection of priority of reso¬
lutions completely disruted the
second general assembly. The re¬
solutions from the workshops
were put into an order by a com¬
mittee. Many of the delegates
felt the priority list was bad. The
assembly was recessed for an
hour and a half last Friday night.
Running into the early hours of
Saturday morning, some of what
delegates termed the most impor¬
tant to the junior college issues
were finally acted on.
The 46th bi-annual conference
finally concluded Saturday. The
next State conference will be held
in Palm Springs next semester.
Watts Satire
at Harbeson
A satire on the poverty pro¬
gram will be presented by the
Aspiring Repertory Theater Com¬
pany on Thursday, December 19,
at noon in Harbeson Hall.
The company, a theater group
from Watts, will present the
musical comedy “did you get a
Head Start” using both dance and
music. The play gives pro and
con on the poverty program.
The group is composed of 17
actors. The actors are all Negro
students who have had no formal
training. They formed last sum¬
mer, and have played in such
places as USC, the California
Teachers Association, the Assis¬
tance League Playhouse, and the
Beverly Hills Playhouse.
The group has no organized
place for its rehearsal, and prac¬
tices in different churches in the
Watts area three times a week.
The play is being sponsored by
the Assemblies Commission. The
play will be open free to ASB
card holders. Others will charged
75 cents admission.
Faculty members are also in¬
vited to attend without charge.
JAMES HARVEY
. . . plans library
Special Services Enrollment Card
Needed for Receiving Cl Benefits
To be assured of receiving benefits, all continuing veterans must
have on file in the PCC Veterans Office, the Special Services Enroll¬
ment Card.
Eligibility for benefits provided under the GI Bill requires active
duty in the armed forces for a period of at least 181 days and an
honorable discharge.
The procedure for filing is:
1. Upon completion of enrollment, a Special Services Enrollment
Card must be filled out and returned to the PCC Veterans Office.
2. All new veterans must file an application for educational
benefits.
3. After all forms are filled and approved, the VA will return a
certificate of eligibility to the student’s home address.
4. These forms must be filed with the PCC Veterans Office.
5. A new enrollment record must be filed each semester to contin¬
ue benefits.
For further information, contact Mrs. Dorothy Roberts 10C be¬
tween the hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Pageant Wants You
ALL ROYALTY HEAR THIS: Your campus magazine staff is
searching for royalty now attending PCC. If you are or have
been a queen, princess, Miss California, Miss Pasadena etc.,
please fill in the coupon below and return it to the Pageant.
WHAT’S YOUR BAG? Do you have an interesting business or
activity outside of PCC? Are you a writer, artist, dancer, re¬
searcher, etc? Fill in the coupon below and return to the
Pageant.
Pageant Office, 31C or Campus Center Box
Name . Phone .
Address .
Class (Frosh, Soph) .
Royalty:
What . . .
Where .
When . . .
Your Bag:
What .
Why . . .
Where .
Summer School for
Diasdvantaged Set