JC District To Elect Board of Trustees
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Vol. 25, No. 8
Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California
November 2, 1966
CJCA Votes Out Junior Rose
Bowl, Adopts Stute Pluyoff
Thirty-two Candidates
File for Seven Seats
By John Maffei
The California Junior College
Association voted overwhelmingly
Thursday to adopt a state football
playoff starting in 1967. The pass¬
age of this measure may have
doomed the Junior Rose Bowl
Game, as we know it.
The establishment of the state
playoff puts all other junior col¬
lege bowl games on the chopping
block as well. Such notable games
as the Elks Bowl, Potato Bowl,
and Orange Show Bowl will be
no more.
The tentative plan adopted by
the CJCA calls for the champions
of the Metropolitan, Eastern,
Western State, Pacific Southwest,
Valley, and Golden State Confer¬
ences to begin the playoffs
Thanksgiving weekend of 1967
and continue through the second
week of December. Semi-finals
would be played December 2 or 3
and the finals December 9 or 10.
THE CJCA’S decision allows no
California school to be eligible for
a post season bowl game. This
means that if Pasadena finished
its season with a perfect record
and Glendale, in the same league,
finished by losing only to Pasa¬
dena, Glendale would be ineligi¬
ble to go to a bowl game out of
state.
Pasadena, on the other hand,
would be automatically put into
the California playoffs.
By adopting the state playoffs
in California, the CJCA is copying
the CIF high school playoff sys¬
tem. The junior college playoffs
will be nothing more than a glori¬
fied CIF playoff.
WHEN a man goes out for foot¬
ball at a jaycee, he expects to
play college ball and to be able
to play in a post season bowl
game if his team is good enough.
The playoff system is dragging
the junior college down to the
prep school level instead of build¬
ing it up to the college level.
If you could look at the playoffs
in a different light, they could
work to the JRB’s advantage. The
playoffs would determine the
champion of California. That
team would represent the Golden
State in the Junior Rose Bowl, but
a few things must be considered
first.
IF THE state playoffs conclude
December 10, the JRB would have
to be played either December 17
or December 24. If the game is
Cotton Candy
Sale Nov. 28
The chances are that few of us
can remember far enough back
to when we were small kids,
eagerly smacking our lips over a
sticky mess called cotton candy.
We will all have the opportunity
to regress into a premature sec¬
ond childhood when Alpha Lamb¬
da Epsilon, the police science fra¬
ternity, will stage a cotton candy
sale November 28 through De¬
cember 2. The Campus Center
will be the site of the sale, which
will begin at 11 a.m. and extend
through 2 p.m. The price is 20
cents.
held on December 17, the rival
coaches would have only one
week until the Rose Bowl Game.
Either date would be bad from a
publicity man’s standpoint. And
the California team’s coach would
have to get his team mentally
ready for the JRB Game after
winning the state title. The JRB
would seem almost anti-climactic
to his team.
If this plan were adopted, the
Junior Rose Bowl would benefit,
but the other nine California
bowl games would be up a creek.
I PERSONALLY feel the CJCA
is making a tremendous mistake.
The JRB is 21 years old and has
reached the stage of national im¬
portance and national coverage.
I think the CJCA should recon¬
sider its vote, put the same plan
into the form of a proposal, and
let the fans express their opin¬
ions.
Ballot boxes could be set up in
all the junior colleges in Califor¬
nia and all people of jaycee age
or over should be allowed to vote.
It is the fans who support the
teams and make football the
game it is today.
I asked PCC’s end coach, Ron
Robinson, how the CJCA’”s de¬
cision will affect the Lancers. He
said, “The decision will definitely
affect the team. They will certain¬
ly have more incentive to be the
last team to play in the Junior
Rose Bowl. But I do think that
the California finals will be held
in the Rose Bowl and will be
called the Junior Rose Bowl.”
IS THERE a chance of the Cal¬
ifornia champ meeting an eastern
opponent? Robinson said, “No, be¬
cause the Rose Bowl people won’t
go for it and because of the time
element involved.”
Pasadena City College’s ath¬
letic publicity director, Marilyn
Vore, noted that the Rose Bowl
is not available to anyone from
the second week of December un¬
til after the time of the Rose
Bowl game.
So it would appear that the Ju¬
nior Rose Bowl as it exists now
is at an end. If it is, the CJCA
will have plenty of angry fans
breathing down their backs.
Pageant Pics
Set Nov. 14
Attention, students! Show your
enthusiasm as part of Pasadena
City College by getting your pic¬
ture in this year’s Pageant.
Pictures for the Pageant will
be taken during the week of No¬
vember 14 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
in the Campus Center. If there
is a good turnout, the picture¬
taking will be extended during
the week of November 21. There
will be a charge of $2.30.
Nursing, dental and medical as¬
sisting students will have their
pictures taken in uniform at
Juanita Studios, 92 N. Los Robles,
Pasadena. Appointments can be
made by calling the studio at
796-6760, December 9 to 21 and
January 3 to 6.
Election of the first Board of
Trustees for the greater Pasadena
Junior College District will be
combined with the general elec¬
tion of November 8.
Thirty-two candidates have
filed for the seven seats availa¬
ble. Candidates are: Area 1 — Mrs.
Ellen H. Ellis, housewife; Paul S.
Finot, teacher; Paul W. Fox, ap¬
praiser; and Cecil Osoff, teacher.
Area 2 — Thomas W. Elliott, in¬
dustrial relations manager; Mau¬
rice T. Galpert, minister; Rudolph
Lopez, school counselor; Keith
McKay, teacher; Robert C. Mi¬
chael, real estate broker; J. Ray
Risser, retired teacher; and Gor¬
don E. Rudolph, engineer.
Area 3 — Hugh M. Gilmore, re-
Phi Rho Pi
Competes
at SD State
Phi Rho Pi, PCC’s intercolle¬
giate debate and competitive
speaking organization, did well
in a tournament held at California
State College at San Diego last
weekend.
PCC’s delegates were strong in
individual events.
Jan Garvey and John Holder
won excellents in extemporaneous
speaking against lower division
competition, while against novice
competition, Theodore Roberts
won a superior in both extempor¬
aneous and impromptu speaking.
Impromptu, this year on infla¬
tion, tests a speaker’s ability to
think fast on his feet. With two
minutes preparation, the contes¬
tant delivers a six-minute speech
from a choice of one of three
assigned topics.
In extemporaneous speaking,
on what should be the federal
government’s policy toward ex¬
tremist groups, the format is the
same but the preparation time is
30 minutes.
McGuire Stars
in 'Royal Gambit’
Director Donald Ewing has an¬
nounced the cast of “Royal Gam¬
bit,” second of four PCC Theater
Arts Association productions.
Bruce McGuire will star as
Henry VIII. Sharing the bill as
Henry’s six wives will be Judy
Castagno as Katherine of Aragon,
Margaret Markov as Ann Boleyn,
Jill Pipkin as Jane Seymour,
Susan-Jean Folks as Ann of
Cleves, Chris Potter as Kathryn
Howard and Cathy Gruwell as
Kate Parr.
The play is scheduled for De¬
cember 7, 8, 9, and 10 in the Little
Theater.
Selective Service
Men students who have not tak¬
en the College Qualification
Tests for the Selective Service
may now make application to
take them on November 18 and
19. Information is available in
the Counseling Center, 138C.
Applications are also available
at your local draft board office.
tired; Maurice T. Keenan, mana¬
ger; Walter T. Shatford II, at-
tourney; and Mrs. Earline H.
Tate, psychiatric social worker.
Area 4 — Mrs. Margaret Enger-
ran, housewife; Robert G. Free¬
man, radiologist; Robert H. Lan-
ham, college instructor; Mrs.
Alice Mothershead, housewife;
Robert M. Rossini, business ex¬
ecutive; A. Wallace Tashima, dep¬
uty attorney general.
Area 5 — John M. Duling, col¬
lege administrator; Charles F.
Eckels, retired teacher; John H.
B. French, sales representative;
Theodore A. Jacobs, scientist; Jan
W. Pluim, high school principal;
Mrs. Alice Smith, housewife; and
Roscoe N. Sonne, Jr., real estate.
Area 6 — John D. Campbell,
teacher; and Carl Ludlow, cloth¬
ing store manager.
Area 7 — Robert I. Boyd, physi¬
cian.
The trustee area boundaries are
Area 1 — La Canada; Linda Vista
area north of Colorado and west
of Arroyo Seco; and Altadena
north of Woodbury and west of
Lake.
Area 2 — Pasadena and Altadena
east of Lake, with a southern
boundary along Washington to
Altadena Drive, south to Orange
Grove, east to Sierra Madre Villa,
south to Foothill, and east to the
boundary of Arcadia. Includes
Hastings Ranch and Sierra Madre.
Area 3 — Pasadena from the
Arroyo Seco to Lake between
Colorado and the northern boun¬
dary of the city.
Area 4 — Pasadena, bounded on
the west by the boundary of the
Pasadena Unified School District;
on the north by the Colorado
Freeway, and Colorado to Lake,
then north to Washington, east
to Altadena Drive, south to the
boundary line of the City of
Pasadena, west and south to the
north boundary of the San Marino
School District, west and south to
California, west to Fair Oaks,
south to the south boundary of
the Pasadena School District,
then west to the western boun¬
dary of the district.
Area 5 — All of South Pasadena,
all of San Marino, and that area
of Pasadena south of California
and east of Fair Oaks above the
South Pasadena and San Marino
city limits.
Area 6 — All of Temple City Uni¬
fied School District plus that part
of Pasadena School District and
extending west to the boundary
line of the City of Pasadena,
north and east to Sierra Madre,
north and east to Sierra Madre
Villa, south to Foothill, then east
to the eastern boundary of the
Pasadena School District.
Area 7 — All of the Arcadia Uni¬
fied School District.
Palmer Heads
Judicial Group
The newly created Judicial
Council is beginning to take shape
wilder the leadership of Oscar
Palmer, chief justice of the coun¬
cil.
Appointed by John Holder, stu¬
dent body president, the seven
member council is now faced with
reviewing and interpreting the
ASB Constitution and the con¬
stitutions governing campus clubs
and organizations.
The Council is a separate gov¬
erning body with no direct link
with the ASB structure. It is di¬
rectly responsible to the ASB
president and meets only at his
request. It has the power to make
recommendations on constitution¬
al matters, but lacks the power
to enforce the rulings.
Recommendations are made to
such governing bodies as the In¬
ter-Club Council on club consti¬
tutions, and to the ASB Board on
the ASB Constitution.
Chief Justice Palmer is now
serving as parliamentarian to the
ASB Board.
Other members of the Council
are Tillman Tramell, Margaret
Makahara, Connie Hall, Janey
Ishida, Ron Thee, and Jan Garvey.
Frosh Council Seeks
'Penny-u-Vote' Queen
As its first activity of the year, the Freshman Class Council will
sponsor the annual Fresman Queen Contest.
Today is the last day to pick up applications in 111C. All appli¬
cants will appear before the freshman executive board for interviews
this afternoon.
Seven girls will be selected, one to reign as queen and the other
six as princesses.
Tomorrow the seven girls will be Introduced to the student body
at a noon assembly in Sexson Auditorium. They will then begin their
campaigns lasting through next Wednesday. Any student may cast
a “penny-a-vote” for the candidate of his choice.
The winner and her six princesses will be presented to the student
body in a pre-game ceremony at the Glendale College-Pasadena City
College football game the evening of November 11 at PCC.
Freshman Class officers were recently elected to serve under the
leadership of class president Marty Donahue. They are Tom Coston,
vice-president; Steve Middlebrook, treasurer; Jeannette Harrison,
corresponding secretary; Pat Fisher, recording secretary; and Sharon
Canfield, historian.
The executive board and the Frosh Council would like to encour¬
age support from the entire class and student body for this first
project of the year.
— Courier photo by Larry Watkins
CONSTITUTIONAL OR UNCONSTITUTIONAL? — are Tilman Tramel, Oscar Palmer (chairman),
Members of the newly created Judicial Council Margaret Makahar, Connie Hall, and Janey
meet to discuss the above question. Left to right Ishida.