—Courier Photo by Alan Zanger
STEVE GOLDMAN, chairman of the Price Com- organization was also discussed. Eight members
mittee, discusses prices at a recent meeting. The of the committee received awards for their work
changing of the bookstore into a non-profit last Thursday.
PCC Student Senate Hears
Important Committee Reports
Board Will Decide Fate
of Campus Pool Tables
One of the most important is¬
sues in the last five years was
presented before the Student
Senate last Tuesday.
A resolution drawn up by the
Price Committee asked the ap¬
proval of the Senate that the PCC
Bookstore be totally non-profit be¬
fore the second semester. The
vote was unanimously in favor.
The committee representing
handicapped students reported on
the hope of a ramp, funded by
the ASB Board, to be built be¬
tween R Building and upstairs
Campus Center. The idea will be
brought up before the Board for
its consideration in about two
weeks.
The Curriculum Committee told
of the discussion from its last
meeting when they discussed a
PE theory class that was sched¬
uled for next semester, but was
going to be dropped. The result
was that the course would be
available next semester.
Art Show on Loan
A contemporary art collection
from the Home Savings and
Loan Association is now on dis¬
play in the College Art Gallery.
Paintings, sculpture and prints
will be open to public purusal
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fri¬
days from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
Tuesdays and Thursdays from
noon to 3 p.m., and Monday
through Thursday from 7:30
to 8:30 p.m. Take time to enjoy
these fine works now in the
building conveniently located in
the quadrangle in front of the
Bobbins Building.
* * *
Students, Faculty Relate
There will be a meeting of stu¬
dents and faculty tonight at
7 :30 in the student dining room
to discuss problems. All inter¬
ested are encouraged to attend.
A letter was written to all fac¬
ulty and placed in their boxes
asking for suggestions on ways
to improve faculty-student rela¬
tions.
A meeting between the faculty
and the students in the coffee
shop at 7:30 a.m. was held today.
The Faculty Relations Commit¬
tee suggested a single coffee shop
and cafeteria for both students
and teachers so that they would
mingle more.
Minority students with a grade
point average of less than 2.0 and
with a family income under $6000
are eligible for the UCLA Con¬
sortium. This is a grant run by
UCLA and is given to 75 PCC
students each year. Interested
students should see Ernest Neu¬
mann, dean of counseling serv¬
ices.
Another item discussed in the
Occupational Ed
Tour Here Friday
Interested high school students
from throughout the Pasadena
City College area will be bussed
to the PCC Occupational Educa¬
tion Day open house Friday for
VIP tours of the campus.
The event will run all day from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
“Industry needs well-trained
employees,” said Prof. Daniel A.
Ball of the Engineering and Tech¬
nology Department, coordinator
of the event. “This is an oppor¬
tunity for all students to tour all
our vocational training facilities,
with guided tours and personal
counseling. We hope many young
people will join us for a survey
of job opportunities.”
Ball has visited the nine public
and two parochial high schools in
the PCC area and has been as¬
sured of their cooperation in the
event. All the schools will provide
bus service for their students who
want to visit the PCC open house.
committee was the possibility of
automatic dropping of a class
from a student’s record that end¬
ed in an F grade. This idea is
still in discussion.
The idea of lockers for bike
riders to put their books in was
brought up before the Senate.
Each senator was told to check
with his class to see how many
would be interested in having
lockers. Dave Terrebonne, ecology
commissioner, told of plans for
a paper drive.
The Parking Committee is still
collecting petitions to change the
one-hour parking signs on streets
near the PCC campus.
Cliff Maken, head of the Racism
Committee, said he wanted to in¬
crease his committee to about 15
persons.
Pasadena City College plays
host to one of the nation’s major
mineral shows this weekend.
The annual event of the Miner-
alogical Society of Southern Cali¬
fornia will be held at the Campus
Center Saturday from 10 a.m. to
9 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m., sponsored by the col¬
lege’s Dana (geology) Club.
Admission is 50 cents, free to
students, with half the proceeds
going to the Van Amringe Schol¬
arship Fund for geology students.
By SALLY HANDFOBTH
The sixth meeting of the ASB
Board was called to a semblance
of order by ASB President Chuck
Wilson.
John Marshall objected to the
minutes of last week’s meeting,
as they were vague and incom¬
plete in some spots.
He suggested that perhaps a
taping of the sessions would pre¬
serve the delicate intricacies and
subtle marrow of the meetings.
Disapproval of added tape para¬
phernalia provoked someone to
suggest that the Board use the
microphones which had been
placed before them to enable the
secretary to hear all that trans¬
pired. This, they concurred, would
solve some of the inadequacies of
the minutes.
Marianne Cordova, Senate sec¬
ond vice president, cleared up a
point about “Steve Crowell and
the draft council episodes.” It
seems a Mr. Hall from the Pasa¬
dena Presbyterian Church has
been working with Steve Crowell,
ex-draft councilor.
Hall’s card was given to an un¬
known religious commissioner as
a token of action, one supposes.
The meeting was then launched
into an orbital spin about pool
tables and the possibilities of put¬
ting one in the Campus Center.
Plinio Tuta, athletic commission¬
er, said that Dean John Eikenbery
negated the idea because there
was no room for a table.
Bob Black asked that the new
Sailing Club on campus be put
into full keel and motioned that
its constitution be ratified. The
motion was seconded and passed.
Marshall came forth with his
usual deadpan, dormitive enthusi¬
asm and two resolutions. Both
were passed by the Board and are
written as follows:
1. Resolved by the Prices Com¬
mittee that the PCC Student
Bookstore operate on a non-profit
system; and approve the Book¬
store Non-Profit Committee to
regular showings devoted exclu¬
sively to minerals. Gems and cut
or polished stones are barred.
Speakers will include:
Prof. John Sinkansas of Cal
State San Diego, “The External
Morphology and Symmetry of
Crystals,” Saturday, 11 a.m; Dr.
Royal Marshall, Pasadena miner-
recommend such a system to the
Board of Trustees on November
4.
Resolved also that the Book¬
store begin tlris system no later
than the first day of the second
semester and before that day if
at all possible.
2. The Associated Student Body
Board, representing the students
at Pasadena City College, re¬
quests the advice and cooperation
of the City Council in finding
ways to decrease the parking
problems and hazards hindering
students on our campus.
Careful consideration is asked
for, concerning the one hour
parking limitations on public
streets surrounding the campus.
The paper drive was again
brought before the board, and
Bob Held, finance commissioner,
described the plans which were
being drawn up.
People’s Lobby and the Ecology
Club are to provide the manpower
while most of the actual collecting
of papers will be done by gram¬
mar school children with a re¬
ward incentive to bait them. The
papers will be stored in one of
the parking lots and guarded by
the Ecology Commission.
The, drive is set tentatively for
December 6 to 11 and should not
cost more than $150 from ASB
general funds.
Ecology Commissioner Dave
Terrebonne said, “I feel I cannot
let this go to a vote until I make
clear what I said at the last meet¬
ing. If some dingbat gets past
our barbed wire and machine
guns and burns our papers, I
cannot guarantee reypayment of
the Board’s investment.”
The Board daringly gambled
the money and passed a motion
that the ASB Board supply $150
for the drive.
Awards of merit were given to
eight members of the Prices Com¬
mittee for outstanding work out¬
side the Senate itself.
alogist, "Zinc Minerals," Saturday
at 3 p.m.
Dr. William S. Wise, University
of California at Santa Barbara,
“How to Identify Mineral Speci¬
mens,” Sunday, 11 a.m; and Mo¬
desto Leonardi, mineralogist from
Trona, “Building Good Collections
by Trading,” Sunday, 2:30 p.m.
Ecology Club To Survey
Buying Interest in Bikes
Ten-speed bikes are becoming bikes. Students may also list a
more and more popular today as brand name if they wish.
Plan Trip to Arizona
Vol. 34, No. 6 Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California November 3, 1971
Major Mineral Show Comes to
PCC on Weekend of November 6
people are switching to this mode
of transportation.
The Ecology Club and the Bi¬
cycle Committee are investigating
the possibility of purchasing these
bikes at discount prices.
The committee is currently sur¬
veying the students to find out if
there is enough interest in the
program for it to be feasible.
If enough students do show in¬
terest, the committee will scan
the area seeking discount prices
from dealers on bulk purchases.
The committee is sure they will
comply if their order is large
enough.
Those students who are inter¬
ested in purchasing bikes should
list their name, phone number
and the type of bike desired. The
types include American, Europe¬
an, English and Japanese made
Bike discount notes should be
deposited in specified boxes lo¬
cated in C Buildin, the Campus
Center, and the Library.
Almost 100 exhibits from pri¬
vate collections and dealers will
be on display and/or on sale,
making this one of the largest
Lees To Speak on Energy,
Environmental Studies at PCC
Lester Lees of Caltech will
speak on “Energy — Where Does
It Come From? Where Does It
Go?” in the next lecture of a pop¬
ular new environmental studies
series today at PCC.
Talks are given each Wednes¬
day in Sexson Auditorium at noon
with the same lecture repeated at
2 p.m. Admission is free, and the
public is invited.
Lees is director of the Environ¬
mental Quality Laboratory at Cal¬
tech, where he has been professor
of aeronautics since 1955. He has
served as consultant to TRW,
Inc., Rand Corp., and Aerospace
Corp., and is a fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences.
Shelly R. Johnson, PCC instruc¬
tor in life sciences and coordina¬
tor of environmental studies, said
all the lectures are tape-recorded,
and some are video-taped, for fu¬
ture use.
Red Indians and Indian sup¬
porters met again last Thursday
at noon in 212C.
They worked on the group’s
constitution, fitting the national
constitution to the needs of PCC
students. It is understood that
Indians and non-Indians are equal
in the group.
Two Indian reservations in
Arizona — Navaho and Apache —
have invited those interested to
spend a weekend on the reserva¬
tions. There will be more about
this at the next meeting.
Craft classes start next week.
Indians of different tribes will
teach the bead and leather work
of their cultures.
If Red Indians and their strug¬
gle interests you, call Night Hawk
after 6 p.m. at 449-0473, or Rabbit
at 359-1993, or go to the next
meeting Thursday at noon.
It is hoped that a future pro¬
gram for the meeting will discuss
the Black Mesa project. Indians of
that area in Arizona are trying to
sue the government to stop the
power plant that is already start¬
ed on their sacred grounds.
'Twelve Angry People'
Opens Little Theater
“Twelve Angry People,” the
smash TV and screen success,
is coming the first and second
weekends in November in the Lit¬
tle Theater.
Be on hand either November
5, 6, 12, or 13 at 8:15 p.m., or
November 7 and 14 at 5 p.m. for
this tense drama. Admission to
the show is $1.50. Tickets may be
purchased in 20C, the Communi¬
cations Office, or at the door.