Holder. Sisco Win Harbeson
EXOTIC EVENING — The alluring atmosphere of
“Polynesian Paradise" provided a setting for the
annual OMD Carnival Friday night. Thirty-three
— Courier photo by Carl Neustrand
club booths, decorated as little grass huts, made
this year's carnival the best financial success in
many years.
'Cornier
Vol. 24, No. 14
Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California
May 11, 1966
PCC Delegates Instrumental
at Recent Model UN Session
A PCC delegation of 10 stu¬
dents and adviser John Madden
attended the XVI Session of the
Model United Nations held two
- weeks ago at the San Francisco
Hilton.
The Pasadena group was very
active throughout the session.
Bill McLinn was elected caucus
chairman for the Organization of
American States group, and “Rap¬
porteur” for the Economic and
Finance Committee. McLinn and
Rich Smylie gathered support for
the passage of a complex resolu¬
tion calling for the setting up of
a UN Capital Development Fund.
PAUL Markowitz and Ed John¬
son had a busy time trying to
amend the harsh resolutions pass¬
ed by the Afro-Asians calling for
economic and military sanctions
against the Union of South Afri¬
ca.
They did not succeed and a hard
resolution passed the General As¬
sembly. Ed was elected caucus
vice-chairman for the OAS in the
Trusteeship Committee.
Kathy Lamb led the Legal
Committee into passing a Vene¬
zuelan resolution calling for the
codification of international law.
Activities Set
for Greek Week
Alpha Sigma Beta, beter known
as the Associated Student Body,
in conjunction with Circle K, will
present Greek Week ’66 May 16-
20.
A Banner Bash will begin the
festivities Monday. Banners will
be erected around campus em¬
blazoned with the names of on-
campus Greek letter clubs. The
club with the best banner will re¬
ceive a $15 prize.
Tuesday the AMS Tricycle Race
and the pre-Rock Dance will be
spotlighted at noon.
The week will be capped by the
Grecian Rock Friday in the Cam¬
pus Center cafeteria. Alpha Sig¬
ma Beta members will be ad¬
mitted for 75 cents, non-members
for $1.25.
The resolution had complex
amendments, offered by the big
powers, but it passed the commit¬
tee with no opposition.
THE question of Red China and
the drafting of a Covenant of
Human Rights was dealt with by
Sue Frewin and Brenda Sherman.
Nancy Mangum participated in
the questions of Rhodesia, while
Jose Mercade attended the meet¬
ings of the International Court
of Justice.
The 1200 delegates heard Lord
Caradon, permanent representa¬
tive of the United Kingdom to the
UN, on Saturday morning. He
spoke on the daily life of a UN
ambassador, and related some of
his experiences as UN adviser to
emerging nations.
THE General Assemblies were
not without their sense of drama
and comedy. On one occasion, a
Cuban delegate walked in with a
toy machine gun, and Paul Mar¬
kowitz, leaping to his feet, chal¬
lenged the Cuban’s right to bear
arms.
ASTRONOMY LECTURE
The fifth in the current series
of lectures in PCC’s new plane¬
tarium will be tomorrow at 7:30
p.m. on the topic, “Constellations
of Summer and Autumn Sky,” by
Clyde Eaton, associate professor
of astronomy. Those interested in
attending are asked to call the
college for reserved free tickets.
PEACE CORPS
A representative from the
Peace Corps will be on campus
Friday and Monday. Anthony
Masso, staff member from Wash¬
ington, D. C., will man an infor¬
mation booth in the foyer of the
Campus Center.
VISION LECTURE
“Vision, Physical Coordination,
and Intelligence” will be the sub¬
ject of Dr. Homer Hendrickson
in 200C at noon tomorrow. Dr.
Hendrickson, researcher as well
as a practicing optometrist, will
A thunderous ovation came
from the floor, and the Cuban
delegate was forcibly taken out
of the assembly, not without first
accusing the U.S. of imparing
his freedom of speech.
On another occasion the dele¬
gation from Nigeria stated that
the world was becoming nuttier,
because they had just learned
that the price of peanuts, of
which Nigeria is a chief supplier,
had gone up $10 a pound.
IN other developments within
the MUN organization, Tucson,
Ariz., was selected as the. site of
the XVIII Session in 1968.
PCC’s chairman, David Laidig,
actively supported the Occidental
College bid for the ’68 session.
Eric Johnson, former ASB presi¬
dent at PCC and chairman for
the Oxy delegation, reported that
PCC would have a big part in the
XVIII Secretariat.
The MUN Charter was amended
in order to allow colleges from
Mexico City and Vancouver, B.C.,
to participate in next year’s MUN.
speak on vision as it applies to
such skills as apply to study,
running hurdles, and piloting air¬
planes. He will also discuss vision
and theories of learning.
COUNCIL MEETINGS
Sale of “Pipes of Pan,” antholo¬
gy of student literary works,
published once a semester, will
be discussed at the English Coun¬
cil meeting tomorrow in 137C.
☆ ☆ ☆
The Speech Arts Council will
meet tomorrow to discuss plans
for the council banquet this Fri¬
day. All members who plan to
attend the banquet should be
present at this meeting.
☆ ☆ ☆
The student curriculum meet¬
ing scheduled for May 17 has been
cancelled until further notice, ac¬
cording to Dr. Delmas A. Bugelli,
dean of instruction.
Queen Peggy'
Reigns Over
OMD Carnival
By Buss Pooler
and Emily Vezerian
Pele, the Polynesian volcano
goddess, has been soothed to rest.
Her dread voice and searing
tongue are quelled.
And what brought about this
miracle? It was OMD’s carnival
last Friday night: the fun and ex¬
citement were enough to appease
any goddess.
Queen of the carnival was
Margaret (Peggy) Kliebert, en¬
tered by the life science depart¬
ment. She received the crown
from Dr. Armen Sarafian. A tro¬
phy, designed especially for the
affair, was presented to Her
Majesty.
John Holder and Dianne Sisco
were named the outstanding sec¬
ond semester freshmen at PCC.
This honor brought with it the
$100 John Harbeson Scholarship
Award to each.
Holder, a business administra¬
tion major, is secretary of foren¬
sics, and a member of Phi Rho
Pi, national honorary forensics
fraternity. He competes in three
speech categories: oratory, de¬
bate, and extemporaneous speak¬
ing.
Historian for the Circle K, vice-
president of the Associated Men
Students, and a member of Alpha
Gamma Sigma with a 3.5 GPA,
he plans to transfer to USC.
Miss Sisco, a secretarial admini¬
stration major, is ICC correspond¬
ing secretary, and Flying Club
secretary. She is a member of the
Future Secretaries Association,
and of Alpha Gamma Sigma,
statewide scholarship organiza¬
tion.
Miss Sisco, with a 3.3 GPA, in¬
tends to become a legal secretary.
Booth awards at the carnival
were: Spartans’ caricature booth,
sweepstakes; Alpha Gamma Sig¬
ma dart throw, novelty ; and AWS
marriage-divorce booth, theme
prize.
As for the “people’s pick” for
popularity, it appeared to be a
close contest between the jail of
the Varsity Club, centripetal
painting by Physical Science, and
the record toss of Theta Rho Pi.
Candied apples, sold by WAA,
appeared the most enticing food.
The jail housed such dignitaries
during the evening as Dr. Sarafi¬
an, John L. Sullivan, the witch¬
doctor (continuously), and many
ASB officers, including David
Laidig, Courier editor. Laidig
said he was well-treated and com¬
fortable during his stay. There
were, however, those arrested
who complained of “police brutali¬
ty.”
Paul Schwartz won the AMS
“Whiskerino” contest with a
worthy display of fashioned
growth.
Journalism Day
Features Duncan
PCC’s annual Journalism Day
will draw students from 25 area
high schools and private schools.
Sponsored by the Publications
Commission, the event will take
place Monday, May 16, stated
Carol Mitchell, current commis¬
sioner of publications.
Ray Duncan, KNBC arts editor
and columnist for the Pasadena
Star-News, will be the keynote
speaker of the afternoon.
Two writing contests will be
held, one in sports and one in
feature writing. Writing work¬
shops will also be offered in the
fields of social affairs, sports, and
feature writing.
Tours of the campus and journ-
a 1 i s m facilities (Courier and
Pageant offices, and print shop),
and writing awards will also be
offered.
Miss Mitchell states that she
hopes the day will be a great
success and that “the students
will profit from the experience.”
Campus Comer
Awards
JOHN HOLDER
. . . top man
DIANE SISCO
. . . winning coed
Students Say
Thank You at
Internet! Fair
The Campus Center will turn
into a showcase of world-wide
scope when the International Fair
arrives at PCC this Sunday after¬
noon from 2 to 6:30.
Sponsored by the International
Student Commission and the In¬
ternational Club, the bi-annual
event is presented by the foreign
students as a traditional thank
you to the people and organiza¬
tions of the community for their
hospitality and service.
The student and faculty dining
rooms will be the sites of the ac¬
tivity.
Between programs, guests can
see the many exhibits and demon¬
strations and enjoy refreshments
served by the foreign student
hosts.
The more than 50 countries that
have contributed nearly 300 stu¬
dents to PCC’s current enrollment
will have displays of their native
lore and explanations of their
characteristic costumes. Nigeria,
Korea, Brazil, the Netherlands,
Colombia, Ghana, Norway, China,
Mexico, Cuba, the Philippines,
Guatemala, and Panama are some
of the nations represented.
ISC president Ellen Yamamoto
and IC president Irshad-ul Haque
are coordinating the fair’s many
activities.
Japanese students will demon¬
strate karate, judo, flower arrang¬
ing, a tea ceremony, and callig¬
raphy. Other countries are show¬
ing their own writing symbols
and explaining their backgrounds.
Besides the native dances to be
performed in costume during the
international show, instruments
of ancient origin will be played.
A guitar from Paraguay and a
chirango from the Bolivian Andes
are among the most interesting.
The fair has the energies of all
the foreign students on campus
behind it, and they cordially in¬
vite everyone to come free of
charge.
Organizations Day
The Inter-Club Council will ob¬
serve Student Oragnizations
Day tomorrow at 12 noon. This
gives the student an opportuni¬
ty to visit the organization of
his choice. Locations of club
meetings can he obtained from
flyers in Courier and Crier bins.