New Guest Speaker Stand at Pasadena
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Vol. 27, No. 1
Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California
September 13, 1967
THE RIGHT WAY TO START THE YEAR!— The
happy optimism on the faces of PCC gridders
and coaches last year at the end of the regular
season, when the team was selected to play in
the Junior Rose Bowl, might be a good omen for
the 1967 season. Head coach Don Hunt, center
foreground, leads his Lancers against Fullerton
Saturday. Gone is line coach, Harvey Hyde, left,
to the University of Hawaii, and players Tom
Sherlock and Dennis Seagrove, right of Hunt.
Sophomore Class Planning All-out
Crusade During Membership Week
Controversial Talks
Touth Off New Polity
Sophomore Class President
Tom Coston announced that the
membership drive for the Sopho¬
more Class Council will be held
September 11 to 22. Coston will
be interviewing members during
this period.
All sophomores may join the
council. An ASB card is not need¬
ed. Anyone wishing to apply for
the council or to hold the offices
of either soph vice-president or
treasurer, may obtain applica¬
tions in 111C, or in the Sopho¬
more Class office on the upper
floor of the Campus Center. The
Placement Bureau
You may register with the
Placement Services, 166C, for
part-time work during the col¬
lege year or for full time work
following completion of voca¬
tional training.
Parking
Parking for student cars is pro¬
vided with entrances on Hill
and Bonnie Avenues, but is not
permitted except in the marked
stalls of student areas.
Food Service
Coffee Shop is open Monday
through Thursday from 7:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and 5 to 8:45
p.m., and on Friday from 7:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Student dining
room is open daily from 10:45
a.m. to 1:15 p.m.
Lockers
Locker keys are being issued on
tlie second floor of the Campus
Center.
first general meeting will be held
during the third week of school.
Coston said, “I will stress aca¬
demic involvement as a basis for
many of our activities, as we will
initiate a Sophomore Class forum
series, featuring provocative and
well-known guest speakers, dis¬
cussing the issues that our college
students are concerned with.”
As far as social activities are
concerned, the sophomores are
planning a class concert featur¬
ing a top name rock group, and
a daytime assembly with top en¬
tertainment free to students.
Get Acquainted Dance
Circle
К
is sponsoring a Get
Acquainted Dance in the Cam¬
pus Center lounge Friday from
9 p.m. until midnight.
Medical Consent Cards
Students under 21 living away
from home are advised to get
emergency medical consent
cards in 18C from 7:30 a.m. to
5 p.m. The cards must be sign¬
ed by parents or guardians and
should be carried by the stu¬
dents at all times. They give per¬
mission for emergency treat¬
ment.
WAA Sports Night
Women’s Athletic Association
annual Sports Night is set for
the Campus Center, Friday,
from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Table
games, volleyball, and other
sports will be available, plus
the popular pie-eating contest.
Sponsors urge that students
wear tennis shoes and casual
clothes.
The class will be working on
the June graduation. PCC is no
longer a member of the Pasadena
City School System, so the gradu¬
ation will not be held in the Rose
Bowl with the high schools as for¬
merly was the case.
The class constitution will be
revised and brought to a vote so
the class can have a framework
by which to work. A Sophomore
Class scholarship fund is being
planned for outstanding students
in the class. Also there will be a
literary magazine featuring arti¬
cles, essays, and reports on class
activities, at the end of the semes¬
ter.
Coston said, “We are attempt¬
ing to interest large segments of
the class in these activities and
as a result an interest in their
class and ASB government.”
Peace Corps
Exams Soon
The Peace Corps will hold a
placement test Saturday at 1:30
p.m. in Room 6, Post Office Build¬
ing, 281 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasa¬
dena.
Any citizen of the United States
who is 18 or over and has no de¬
pendents under 18, is eligible.
Married couples are welcome to
volunteer if both the husband
and wife join.
Applicants must fill out a
Peace Corps application. These
forms are available at all Post
Offices. If you haven’t already
submitted an application, bring
one to the test with you.
You don’t pass or fail the test.
The test simply tells the Peace
Corps how you can best help the
people of developing countries
around the world.
The Pasadena Area Junior Col¬
lege Board of Trustees adopted an
official policy on guest speakers
at Pasadena City College.
The amendments proposed by
Trustees J. Ray Risser and
Charles Eckels, were touched off
by the campus speech of Bettina
Aptheker, Communist Party mem¬
ber and Free Speech Movement
leader, and by Jerry Farber, Cal
State Los Angeles English pro¬
fessor, who spiced his talk with
four letter words.
Aptheker’s appearance on cam¬
pus was sponsored by the Afro-
American Student Union and she
was brought on campus under
false pretenses. The Student Un¬
ion was strongly reprimanded by
the college.
The amendments would pro¬
hibit invitation of speakers advo¬
cating violations of any laws and
those advocating violent over¬
throw of the United States gov¬
ernment.
Following is the text of the pol¬
icy:
I. Purpose. Guest speakers may
be invited to the college for the
purpose of extending and enrich¬
ing the instructional program.
II. Occasions: They may speak
(1) to classes or combinations of
classes, (2) to student organiza¬
tions and assemblies, (3) to facul¬
ty-sponsored activities, and (4)
on public forums and lecture se¬
ries.
III. Approval. Approval in ad¬
vance shall be secured as follows:
(1) for classes, by the teacher, the
appropriate department chairman,
and the administrative dean for
instruction; (2) for students or¬
ganizations and assemblies, by
the appropriate adviser, the dean
of student activities, and the ad¬
ministrative dean for instruction.
(3) For faculty-s ponsored
events, by the Faculty Senate
president in consultation with the
president of the college; (4) for
the public forums and lectures, by
the dean of educational services.
IV. Selection. The educational
value to the total college program
as outlined in Section I of the
Pasadena City College Bulletin
(catalog) shall be the criterion
for selecting speakers.
This means that the speakers
shall be judged as follows: (1) for
classroom presentations, as
knowledgeable in the particular
subject matter under discussion;
(2) for student organizations and
assemblies, as well qualified to
promote the aims of the given
organization as specified in its
College Library’s
Use Is Explained
An exceptionally adequate col¬
lege library is available for your
use. The student entrance is from
the south and the stacks are open
to all students.
To obtain a library card, pre¬
sent your student identification
card at the circulation desk in the
library lobby.
Library hours on school days
are, Monday through Thursday,
7:30 a.m. to 9:45 p.m., and Friday,
7:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m.
Calendar
The calendar of events for the
first semester is:
September 11 — First day of
classes.
October 16 — Last day to peti¬
tion for January 1968 grad¬
uation.
October 20 — Last day to drop
a class without a grade pen¬
alty if in good standing in the
class.
November 1-7 — Mid-semester
examinations.
November 23-24 — Thanksgiving
holiday.
December 20-January 1 — Christ¬
mas vacation.
January 17-26 — Final examina¬
tions.
January 26 — Last day of semes¬
ter.
announced program for the year;
(3) for faculty-sponsored meet¬
ings, as competent in the area of
common interest; and (4) for
public forums, as an expert on a
topic chosen by appropriate com¬
mittees.
V. Advisory Committee. If the
application of these criteria to
specific speakers and occasions
are questioned by the personnel
mentioned in Paragraph III above,
the administrative dean for in¬
struction may request the guid¬
ance of a Speaker Advisory Com¬
mittee, which committee shall
have student, faculty, and admin¬
istrative representation.
PCC Instructor
to Offer Art
Course on TV
Lennox Tierney, chairman of
PCC’s Art Department, will in¬
struct a three-unit course in art
to be televised in color over Chan¬
nel 7 for an hour each Saturday
morning starting this Saturday.
Tierney is an artist, lecture,
and photographer. He has trav¬
eled extensively in Europe and in
the Far East. He has conducted
courses in world arts and culture
at UCLA and under the Universi¬
ty of California Extension Divi¬
sion.
The course, designated as Art
1A, will survey the history of art
from prehistoric times through
the ancient, classical, and medie¬
val periods of Western civiliza¬
tion.
It will include seminar, quiz,
and final examination meetings
on the junior college campuses
in addition to the weekly tele¬
casts.
Tierney will illustrate his lec¬
tures with slides and artifacts
from his extensive collection. He
will be assisted by guest lecturers
from other junior colleges.
Adult Classes
Open at PCC
The Continuing Education pro¬
gram for adults offered by the
Educational Services Division of
Pasadena City College has been
extended, by request, to the new
districts which have recently
joined the Pasadena Area Junior
College District — Arcadia, San
Marino, and South Pasadena.
Classes have been held in Temple
City for many years.
In addition to courses offered
in the local communities, an ex¬
tensive program of classes is
available in Pasadena. The com¬
plete schedule of classes may be
secured by calling PCC, 795-6961,
between 8 a.m. and 9:30 p.m.
Monday through Thursday and 8
a.m. through 4:30 p.m. Friday.
Persons desiring information
on evening classes in Arcadia may
call 446-0319 between 6:30 and
9:30 p.m. on Tuesday or Wednes¬
day.
A student may register in the
classroom with the teacher during
the class session at any time dur¬
ing the semester, provided that
there is room, that he is able to
do the work, and that he does not
interrupt the activities of the
group. No tuition fees are
charged, either for classes or for
lecture series, but students are
required to buy their own text
books and supplies.
The first semester started Mon¬
day and concludes January 26.
Classes in Americanization, art,
business and distributive educa¬
tion, crafts and decorative arts,
engineering and technology, Eng¬
lish and speech arts, foreign lan¬
guages, homemaking, music, par¬
ent eduaction, and physical edu¬
cation are available. A lecture
series on Hawaii by Miss Mar¬
jorie E. Webster will also be held.
The Bulletin Board