Women Sketch ' Autumn Portraits'
'Cornier
Vol. 23, No. 9
Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California
November 10, 1965
Fashion Show, Banquet Catch
Eyes of Lancer 1 Gibson Girls'
— Courier photo by Stan Carstensen
ROARING TWENTIES — Flapper Mary Spawr is shown being inter¬
viewed by Jim Mason of KPCS, while Norm Hubbard pulls up his
suspenders. All three will be on the scene Friday night prior to
the PCC-Ventura football game for the poor man's answer to
Homecoming.
“Autumn Portraits in AWS”
will be theme of Women’s Week,
to be held November 15-19. Pub¬
licity and decorations will follow
a Gibson Girl theme with the use
of the traditional autumn colors.
An afternoon open house, to
take place luesday from 2 to 4
p.m., initiates the festivities.
Members of the Associated Wom¬
en Students Board will act as host¬
esses. All coeds, administrators,
and faculty members are invited
to attend. Refreshments will be
served in the Campus Center
lounge. The open house is chair¬
maned by Debby Sill.
THE AWS Mother-Daughter
Banquet was started this semes-
Bulletin Board
Latest engagement for the Lan¬
cer Band will be the Sacred
Torch Ceremony at Forest
Lawn which takes place tomor¬
row.
Game Skit Motif Set
for Flappers, Crooks
A college-community symphony
will be conducted by Frank
Van Der Maten with Stennis H.
Waldon as organ soloist, Satur¬
day, Nov. 13, at 8:15 p.m. in
Sexson Auditorium. Admission
is free.
Civil disobedience and its place
in a democratic society will be
the theme of the second Social
Science Department seminar
Tuesday from 10:30 to 12
o’clock in Harbeson Hall. Mem¬
bers of the panel will be J.
Robert Trevor of the English
Department, Richard Vetterly
of Social Science Department,
Jimmy Garrett from the Stu¬
dent Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee! SNCC), and David
Cheal of the American Friends
Service Committee. Moderator
will be Dr. Jerome Wolf.
☆ ☆ ☆
The student lounge was closed
last Thursday at noon follow¬
ing ASB Board action on a reso¬
lution submitted by Commis¬
sioner of Finance Dustin
Holmes. The lounge will be
closed until November 18 due
to student misuse.
As an added attraction to Fri¬
day’s final home football game,
a special Roaring Twenties pre¬
game show and post-game dance
will be presented.
Served up as a sequel to Home¬
coming, the production is largely
the work of the Junior Executives
under the direction of Norman
Hubbard. Assisting Hubbard will
be Junior Executives vice-presi¬
dent, Mike Newell, and Mary
Spawr.
Tuesday Slated
for Career Day
Approximately 3100 students
will participate in PCC’s annual
Career Day, to be held Tuesday,
from noon to 1 p.m. All students
enrolled in basic communication
are required to attend one of the
meetings.
Career Day speakers, spon¬
sored by Circle
К
and department
chairmen, will speak on subjects
ranging from dental hygiene to
keypunch and to advertising de¬
sign. Nearly all fields of study
at PCC will be covered.
Basic communication students,
who chose • their preferred sub¬
ject several weeks ago, may pick
up their room assignments in BC
classes. Due to full participation
this year, no meetings have been
canceled.
Members of the Junior Execu¬
tives will portray the inscrutable
Untouchables who will battle the
gangsters of AMS, led by the foul
villain Apathy, in the person of
Evan Thompson, over the flap¬
pers, including Candy Bor as Lady
Spirit. The JE’s are scheduled to
arrive in a paddy wagon followed
tentatively by a hearse, which
will remove the gangster remains.
Master of ceremonies for the
farce will be Jim Mason of KPCS,
college radio station.
In accordance with the motif,
all members of the skit will be in
costumes depicting the period.
Costumes also will be the dress
for all students wishing to attend
the game-dance.
Lambda Delta Sigma is in
charge of the dance in the Cam¬
pus Center. Admission is 75 cents,
with entertainment being furnish¬
ed by the Victors’ Band.
Noted Author Allen Drury
to Express Faith at Forum
PCC’s Tuesday Evening Forum
next week presents Allen Drury,
who will discuss “A Novelist’s
Expression of Faith” at 8 p.m. in
Sexson Auditorium.
ALLEN DRURY
. . noted author
Drury has become one of Amer¬
ica’s leading political novelists
with his two best known works,
“Advise and Consent” and “A
Shade of Difference.”
For 15 years prior to publica¬
tion of “Advise and Consent,”
which won a Pulitzer Prize, Drury
had been accumulating experience
as a journalist covering national
politics and the U.S. Senate. He
has been employed by the United
Press, the Washington Star, and
the New York Times for a five
year period. He is now a political
contributor to the Readers Digest.
Born in Texas, brought up in
California, Drury attended Stan¬
ford University and worked on
the Stanford Daily before assum¬
ing his first job as editor of the
Tulare Bee in California.
“Advise and Consent” was pub¬
lished in 1959, and was a Book of
the Month Club selection.
ter especially for Women’s Week.
The banquet will be held in the
student dining room in the Cam¬
pus Center November 17 at 6:30
p.m. Tickets are available by res¬
ervation at the College Bank at
$2.50 per person. The catered din¬
ner will be followed by the AWS
fashion show.
Titile of this year’s show will
be “The Gibson Girl.” Charles
Dana Gibson was the original cre¬
ator of the Gibson Girl, who was
intended to represent the typical
society woman at the turn of the
century.
Dawn Baker, president of the
Associated Women Students, has
appointed Nancy Urban chairman
of the fashion show, which will be
held during the Mother-Daughter
Banquet. Banquet chairman is
Pam Johnson.
FASHIONS for women will be
from Gene Burton’s Carousel and
the 505 Shop. Men’s fashions will
come from Desmond’s Campus
Shop.
The nine PCC coeds who will
model include Anastasia Doovas,
Bonnie Mittler, Ruth Kindred,
Lynn Ratzman, Sara Gundry,
Dorie Williams, Joice Aisawa, Al-
Station Manager
Back from Capital
John Gregory, station manager
for radio station KPCS at Pasa¬
dena City College, returned from
Washington, D.C., this week after
attending the National Foreign
Policy Conference for Editors
and Broadcasters sponsored by
the State Department.
Gregory participated in the sec¬
tion on Latin America, an area
where he has lived and had ex¬
tensive experience in radio activi¬
ties.
— Courier photo by Lorry Albert
HOW IT'S DONE — 1965 Rose Queen Dawn Baker is shown ad¬
dressing Thursday's assembly. Tourney officials behind Dawn are
W. Reid Allen, J. Randolph Richards, and Bruce McPheeters. Se¬
lections begin this week.
berta Walker, and Dianne Wil¬
liams.
Women’s Week will end with an
AWS board meeting in the Cam¬
pus Center board room, Novem¬
ber 19 at noon.
Parade Plans
Told Students
J. Randolph Richards, president
of the Tournament of Roses,
spoke briefly about the annual
New Year’s Day Parade recently
during an assembly.
This year the PCC Lancer Band
will lead the parade at the request
of CBS and NBC. Another first is
a plan to have 21 girls dress in the
native costumes of countries se¬
lected by S. Luke Curtis, dean of
student activities, and the heads
of the Tournament of Roses. Pri¬
or to the parade, the girls will be
introduced, each holding a bou¬
quet of her national flower to
help establish the parade theme.
Reed Allan explained the vari¬
ous factors in the selection of the
Rose Queen. First he explained
that the selection is not confined
to PCC this year but is open to
10 accredited colleges and high
schools in the Pasadena area. The
first judging will be held at the
Pasadena Civic Auditorium next
Saturday at 9 a.m. in the Gold
Room at the west end of the audi¬
torium. Each girl upon arrival
will receive a registration card
with her number. Dresses and
heels will be the accepted dress.
Each contestant must have a
grade average for the previous
year of “C” or better. She must
be single and between the ages of
17 and 22.
The seven girls who are select¬
ed will receive personal ward¬
robes. These girls will attend
breakfasts, luncheons, teas, din¬
ners, television programs, the
Rose Bowl Game, and a tour of
Disneyland.
Counseling Opens
for Spring Term
Counseling apointments for the
spring 1966 semester for current¬
ly enrolled students, grade level
code five or above and honors at
entrance freshmen may be made
beginning Friday at 8 a.m. in
138C.
Appointments may be made by
all students in Sexson Auditorium
from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., and in 138C
from 4 to 9 p.m., November 15
and 16
All students may make appoint¬
ments in 138C on November 17
and thereafter from 8 a.m. to
9 p.m.
“Be on time for your counseling
appointment,” warned Cleon L.
Butz, dean of guidance and coun¬
seling. The appointment schedule
will be tight enough that if an
appointment is missed it will be
extremely difficult to get another,
for 13,000 students are expected
to make appointments this semes¬
ter.
The schedule of classes will be
available by November 22 when
programming will begin.
Each student must present his
ID card when making an appoint¬
ment.
Fourteen counselors will be on
duty through Christmas vacation.
Counseling will continue into Jan¬
uary.