i-CITY COLLEGE TlllmS
'I'hursday, December 9, 19S5
Language Department Plans Advanced Spanish Courses Alexa ndrina Espinoza, a new Spanish instructor on this campus, has announced four new Spanish classes to be added to the City College curriculum. The first ot the ne w classes is GOA, a. t h ree-unit clnss which introd uces S1mnis h liternture, cove ring novels, l)luys, and poetry. A two- unit class. 61A, wUJ co\'er a writ in ~ :Lnalysis of Spanish literature. Both of th ese classes will be ortered during the spring semester.
novels and poetry. It will be a th1·ee--unit course entitled 60B. Also a two-unit Latin American litel'ature class will be offered with the emphasis on analysis of Latin writings. In order to gain admittance iltto these new classes, a. s tude nt must have 16 units of S1mnish or the instructor's approval. All of these cou rses will be conducted entirely in Spa nish and are t ransferrable to San Jose State.
STUDENTS!
CC Food Closs Begins
Rome
art
The re will be a mee ti ng in room F-7 We d. Dec. 15, 196.5 or for more informalioQ call ~'h· Jefferson 253·2363. Fo re ign l11ngu 11 g e .x: o ols.
1sf Christmas Project The food preparation class of SJCC is busy this week preparing their Chri stmas project. The class, which is taught by Carole Freitas, has planned a dinner as their first Christmas project. To be held Friday, D ec. 10, in the Faculty Lounge, t hey themselves will prepare the food. 'T he class which consists of 30 members will 11re pare a m e nu of sh_rimp croole, rice, wate r chestn uts, and ja.va. an gel food calce. This event will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. and punch and hors d'oeuvres will be served before the dinner. There is no charge as the the dinner is open to members
BASCOM Farah Slac'ks have the neat, di sti nctively styled good looks college men prefer •••
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AUTO ELECTRIC Tune-Ups ••• By Carl • Brake Service • Inboard -Outboard Repair • General Repairs • Boat and Trailer Wirin9
permanently pressed in.
DISCOUNTS TO S.J.C.C. STUDENTS AND FACULTY Phone 292-6442
438 S. Bascom
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SLACKS, WALK SHORTS, J!;ANS
with
Typewriters as little as
araPress
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Prior to this project the food preparation class has made cookies for the United F und and prepared refreshments for homemaking club meeting.
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Cambridge and Ro,l/o May ASB Elections Arouse Little Interest
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City College. On Satw·day the well ogy." He is abo Associate Edltor )<nown psychoona lyst Rollo May of t he Review of Existential Psywill be in the College Tbeatet· and chology and Psychiatl")'. talk on "Anxiety and t he Student's The Cambridge show will preJdentity." Then on Sunday, s tand• ~HE
DENTAL
ASS IST~G
Student Initiative Group Has Speaker On Student Community Effectiveness , "Role of the college student in the community" will be the topic of discussion today by speaker John Lopez, member of Economic 0 pportuni ty Commission, according to Victor T a lvera, Student Initiative President. L opez, former UCLA stmlcnt, will be first in a series to "inform the student what h e can d o now," discussin g how a. student can be effective in the community.
. public relation research . tion, labor unions and . mvestiga. lS a member . f o vaberwus organizations. While a ~em r of EOC he has been ct· a l\-e_ · m co . mmumty development of the AI Vlso- Agnew area a nd i s current. . . . 1Y spectahzmg· -pie in helping s 0 1ve Pn.>bl.e.ms which plague~ them due to dlsorgani zation. All st d u ent:s are invited to attend.
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Lopez has been associated in
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WPE Stages 'A Dance Concert'
5 Years Typing Experie nce Will do A c::eurete W ork Call After 6 p.m. 286-0519
Diane Coelho and Susan
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JOURNALISM See Your Counselor or C. W. Palm er, Room 42
Sign Up Now For Next Semester Sec. 1306 1309
because now you can complete Air Force ROTC in just half the time! Are you interested in starting a military career in college-but afraid it will cut too deeply mto your schedule? Well, here's good news for you. Air Force ROTC now offers a 2-year program. You can start it any time you have2 years of higher education remaining- whether on the undergraduate or graduate level. Here's another good thing about this program : you get a chance to "sample" Air Force life before you sign up. During a special summer orientation session, you get to make up your mind about the Air Force, and the Air Force gets-to make up-its mind-about yeu. Only
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both are satisfied are you finally enrolled m the program. You'll learn a lot in Air Force ROTC. The curncul_um has been completely revamped. The accent IS on aerospace resea rch and development. ~ut of c~urse the classes are only the beg.mmng. The unportant thing is that you'll be takmg ~e first big step toward a profession o( great responsibility, as a leader on, America's Aerospace Team. Find out more about tl;>e new Air Force ROTC program. See the Professor of Aerospace Studies today!
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Course ~ 14 Newswriting 15 S urvey of Joun1. 65 NewspaJlCr Sta{( Lecture Laborat-ory
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Speech Majors Law Enforcement Majors. Business Education Majors EnqineerinCJ Majors Art Majors Drama Majors Enqlish Majors Dental Assistant Majors
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cut back in state coHege San J ose City College thousands · of dollars has been corrected by .ldi"ng ru nd s Wl"II no t occur U1 bul proportion to every federal grant the legislature. as a result of a: recent corrective Assemblymen recently passed bill by the legislature. a bilL changing an earlier bill to cost have would that An error ( Continued on Page 3) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- -- --!provide that state building money given to a college will be cut by the amount of federal buiJding money the college receives. A
Philosophy Symposium Meets Here Sa·turday
In o ther words, a coHege that needs $250,000 for construction and gets $200,000 of the total from federal sources can receive no more th a n $50,000 from the state.
By BILL BAYLEY
This year's number of ASB con-
College men who are eligible for didates ~s a prime example of the draft, but do not want to "overaU apathy among the- whole interrupt their education exten- student body',", states Randy Mulsively may find their solution in rine, com.missioh~r of elections. the National Guard, according to Five students are on the ballot
in conjunction with the philosophy department will be held Sa turday, December 4, 1965. Under the auspices of the Commission for Academic Affa:irs, the confab will deal with t he topic:
"Utopias -
t he philosophical, psy-
chological and political s ignificances ." Students leading t he discussions will -be Pete Drachsler, student ch airman , Kitty Prince and Mar~ iam DuVall. Instructors from the Philosophy department, E leanor Maderis, William Green, and William B. \Vest wiJl work in union with the guest speakers and students. Opening th e morning session at 10 a.m. Saturday morning will ~Clenient McGuire, Social Science instructor, who wiH act as moderatar for the symposium. The first paper of t he meet will be presented by William B. West, who has drafted as his topic "Philosoph ical Significance of Utopian Literature _ a case study of Plato's Republic."
hand information concerning stu~ dent government at City College.
Ron Berki, vying for Freshman class president, claims that more student enthusiasm is needed here at City College and would like to do his part ·i n helping to promote
it.
James Howard, candldate for Al Crane, Lieutenant Coloilel and for five student body offices, one Sophomore class president, saidr he battalion commander in the Na~ for each office. Jim Steele, who hopes to do what he can to reduce represents 1:\le Merchanrusing Club, tlle student apathy that h as been tional Guard and biology instruc· is the onl)'l person running for the nwnber
11 A bill passed earlier this year The fall symposiwn sponsored open discussion on the Poli tical Significance of Utopias." corrected by yesterday's and by the Associated Student Body
Following the talk by Groenen action- provided that any kind of will be an open discussion period federal grant, whether for buildof questions from the floor. ing or not, would force a cutback
so well exemplified by the tor at City College. office of student Body President. of people running ior offices tllls The Guard is having no diffi· and the only person running for semeste1·.
culty' filling whatever vacancies ASB Vice-president is Dave Wood, it has, says Crane, because of the who represents the Rally Club. distinct advantage of this type of This semester's Freslunan Viceduty other others. president, Ron Berki, 'is running Normally a college recruit in- for the office of Freshman presiterrupts his education only one dent, and Jim Howard, who repsemester, depending u pon his de- resents the Newman Club, is vying
intends to improve corrununications )>etween the president and other student body officers, and organize community communications between our campus and Gay other area colleges.
for Sophomore President. Grossheider, of the Merchandising
Unlike the regular philosophy of state funds . forums the symposium wil1 be an 14 If we'd received $5,000 in fedall day program rather than a few
hours. The symposium was initiat- eral money for microscopes, they ed by students of Mrs. Maderis' could have deducted that amount second semester philosophy class from our state funds," said Richone year ago. Many of the area ard W . Goff, assistant superintendcolleges are now holding the same ent of services at City College. type of program. Invitations have Officials on this campus asked been se-nt to many colleges in t he legislators' help w hen it aplocal area to attend the symposium. peared the original bill would deprive the college of badly needed The Dra ma D epartment of SJCC building funds. ls presenting a. jazz concert to be "We felt it was most unfair," held oD.t December 9 at 11:00 a.m. said. 'We stood to lose a s ub~ Goff in the City College Thea.ter. The stantial amount of money. It was concert will display lmprovi7.asignificant t-o the taxpayers of .tlonal jv.z ..and~ soro.e. -prepa:red .se.J ose." San lectious by Billy King and the said the new bill, which Goff Klngsme u. F eatured will be 1\lr. Di Po Po, now goes to Governor Brown for who has played in concert at CJty his signature, would allow SJCC to College before, a nd will be play- use the maximum in state funds fol' construction while drawing on ing witll the Klngsmen. The jazz federal funds for other needs. concert is being held to Jmblicize the play production, "Shakespeare The college is eligible for up a nd All That J azz,'' whic h will be opening D ecem ber 9 and will play to $60,000 a year Wlder the nationa} Defe n se Education Act t hrough t he 1 1th.
Running for a second term as ASB secretary., Gay Grossheidel'
Commenting on the number of
and Cosmetology clubs, is running candidates, Jim Steele said "I am
for a second tenn as ASB sect-e- highly disappointed in the turnout
of applicants for student bo<l¥ of-
tary. fices. I felt we had made quite a "I don't think there has ever gain against apathy witlh the rally been a completely white ballot be- club, a nd am very surprised with fore," said Mulrine. the outcome." "The onl·Y way another person ''With 10,000 people enrolled In can run- for an office is by being a the schoo~" commented Randy write-in candidate in the primary Mulrine, "there should have been election," Mulrine eX'J)lained," and at least three of four candidates this is \Vh.Y the primary is stiU for each office." going to be lleld." A person needs "Unless there are some write-in to be written-in by at least 50 candidates, I don' t think there will voters, and then he must qualify be much of a turnout at the polls," for the office. The write-in candi- another student spokesman con~ date is not permitted to, campaign until he has qualified 'to run for eluded. the office," Mulrine continued. AL CRANE
There will be no presidenrt'ial
debate'S or a candidates vally, :Mul-
Bids for CC Winter Formal Being Sold
CC Graduate Needs Books For Peace Corps 1n Africa
J
ESPECIALLY .RECOMMENDED FOR: Marketinq Majors General Majors Acc.ounting Majors Business Administration Majors Home Economics Majors Music Majors Physical Edu cation Majors
Legislature Corrects Building Fund Error
Niltional Guard Ha.s Mulrine Says Elections Answer for Men Reflection of 'Apathy' To finish School
Survey Reveals Students 'Slaves'
till
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Running for Five Posts
rine added, but the nominations parture for active duty training assembly was still held to introwhich is usually six month's dura· duce the candidarteS to the stu· Bids for the Sophomore Winter tion. dents. The prlmary election is ne.xt If a man is acceptable by ~he Wednesday, and the general elec- Formal will go on sale in front of t he City College Union, next Guard, he completes his local re- tion is December 13. Monday, December 6. cruit training, while awaiting his Following West will be Carol Presidential candid ate Jim comAfter assignment. duty active The bid, wWch costs $4.50, will ------ J acklin, psychological instructor, I :::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;::_~a~l~o~n:e,~h=e~act~d~ed.~ Steele maintai ns his 'immediate pletion of recruit training, the man who will discuss "'Psychological!. aims will be "to change the apa- reserve a place on ~the bay cruiser is assigned to a position withi n Significance of Utopian Literatufe" thetic atbitude toward student ·g w- "BarOOur Prince" when it weighs his unit and receives training in with emphasis on Skinner's book ernment." He added he felt the anchor for a saiL around San Franhi9 n ew assignment, said the "Walden Til." Mrs. J acklin, someattitude must be changed i'r stu- cisco Bay. 1\fusic will be supplied Colonel. wh at of a n authority'"on~ Skinner's dent government on this campus by the Philippines Trio for the Traditionally, National Guard shipboard dance-cruise. works, will try to show what mowas to be preserved. units attend two weeks of annual tivates a person to write as SkinThe ship will depart from Pier Vice-presidential candidate Dave and Szurcsik has asked t r a in i n g during the summer textbooks, Fisherman's Wh.arf at 9 p.m. 43'h ner has· done. If you have any old high school Wood, a new student here, has excould months. December 18, and will return a t The afternoon session will be books still lying around, now is Mi-s. Montandon to see i'f she president body student as perience Any City College man who midnight. Only 150 couples can atdealt with by Jan Groenen, social t!he time to get rid of them. Jo~ send him some texts. wants more information m ay find of another college, and is presently tend.. so bids should be bought most, need theY that books The science instructor. Groenen will seph Szurcsik, a graduate of City government student a in enrolled Szurcsik wrote, are basic math, Colonel Crane in room G of the college. College, is in Ethiopia with the class where he has received first soon. algebra, and geometry; basic elec- science building. The consultant would work s ix Peace Corps teaching people how tricity, machine repair, mechanThe San Jose Junior College mont hs in preparing a study of to fLx and operate machinery and ics, welding and trigonometry with whci.t vocationa1 needs will be Board ot Supervisors has awarded how to build roads. a simple method. These books need nd.t"led in the community and how a $5,648 bid to the Rosendin ElecHe has written to City College to be in high school, n<>t college, tric Company of San Jose, for the college can meet them. Gem1an instructor Charlotte Monwith The college will put up $3,272 relighting the City College maclllne tancion requesting assistance. In level, and have the answers them if possible. One area in and a like amount will come from shop. be suitable technicians in Ethiopia they are very short on which they are -in dire need of a - which bode well for the future, might the Vocational Education Act. By BILL DORSEY but it is a little hard future, the text is warehouse procedures, either as citizens or prospective to imagine their becoming leaders In recenl interviews, the 50 top wrote Szurcsik . worke-rs. of society or well developed indi· There will be a box in the Li- freshmen in a highly ranked uniSome are overwhelmed by their never had they evealed r versitY viduals." brarY, to collect any books that first sense of failure, and either getting were they and te da a had now from The study also found that the donate, to wish students drop out or lower their level of until Christmas. Mrs. Montandon no companionship from fellow stu- aspiration in some other irrational amount of reading assigned far wiU see that they are sent to dents. Some were even iound to way. Others rebel and attack the exceeds what anyone could do have suicidal tendencies. SzurCsik as soon as possible. system Yiith more enthusiasm than with intelligence, and the conseThe freshmen were interviewed wisdom. Szurcsik, a refugee from Hunquences of failure are made to gary, carne to the United States in a study of "The American Col· Most merely submit and "play shortly after t he Hungarian revo- lege," edited by Dr. Nevitt San- it cool," committing themselves appear so dire that no one can lution in 1956. He was a member ford. Sanford is director of the far enough to be assured of a imagine the prospect without beof. that country's Olympic track Institute for the Study of Human reasonably comfortable place in coming wmerved. team, and the City College track Problems at Stanford University. the world, keeping their reservaPICTURE IS GR~l team. He stayed in New York a The s tudy was made, in part. to tions to themselves. summed the results of Sanford short time, and then came to Cali- detennine if the pressure for "Of course, we stating, study he t stuour in created have "We track ungarian H fornia, with his grades is too great at American dents a kind ofi slave mentality," want students who can appreciate coach, to go to school here. colleges. It s howed that too many exclaims the usually soft spoken quality, but they will not learn He graduated from CC with a Americans define excellence solely Dr. Sanford. ''They want hard to do this through being overgeneral education major, was a in terms of academic and vocataskmasters whom they can keep whelmed with meaningless work. machinist in Hungary, and worked tiona1 success, resulting in deat a distance psychologically, re- Merely to suggest that students part tim:e in San Jose as a ma- mands of students far exceeding Jieving their guilt by doing exactly have Uteir problems, or even that ch-inist. This is why Sz:urcsik is rationa1 bounds. what is required and expressing they ought to be regarded as huteaching machinery and road PARENTS SET PATH their hostility by doing no more man beings, is to be accused of building in Ethiopia. coddling them and to be met with hat t show to on went study The than is required. He went to the University of the rejoinder that or course there Utah immediately upon gradua- paren<ts have made the path of FUN AND GAIETY GONE must be sacrifice if we are to youngsters: their to cle-ar success tion from CC for Peace Corps to contrary is situation "This excellence. achieve training. There he learned the they must get good grades in introduction of new ideas or good a into get to order in school all pretty grim," Sanford is "It major torgue of Ethiopia, Ambreaking away from the norm," work must they where college, ''and it is hard to say concluded, haric, a nd became accustomed to hard in order to go on to graduate Sanford conllinued. "All the fun Where it will end. To make any t he climate that he ""ould enand gaiety are gone, and with it school and success in life. to correct this state of afcounter in Ethiopia. the attractions of intellectual life. effort is to be accused of wishing fairs some students surrender to the He went to Ethiopia at the end This is leading to the wrong kind of last swnmer, and is now help- "systems" and adapt themselves of excellence. Our student-slaves to Jawer standards." ~ACRJE JENSEN, fonner professional athlete, is shown a bove placing t h e 1965 Prwte Bowl ribbon on ing the government develop the with various methods, none of 1\tary Turley. lle r prince~ses from left to right are Gay Grossheider and Cynthia H anson The 1i judging was held on Nov. 9, at a dinn er in the Golden Doo.-. of Los Gatos. The Pmne Bowl Game man{>O\\o""er to build highways in 1 be held at Spartan Stadium on Dec. 4. TILe Greater Junior Chamber of Conunerce ill Cambrian Is that country. 8ponsorlng all the Prune Bowl activities• 1
(Across From County Hospital)
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~ educators are coming to City College to look over the mastet• planning of Lhe district and its facilities. They are meeting with the approval of the Sa.ll:_. J ose City College District gov~ing board, which is interested in the outcomes of a workshop. The workshop will be designed to help faculty members develop educational specifications and facility needs as they apply toward greater communitr growth, according lo Dr. Paul Elsner, the director of institutional plannin g and resources at SJCC. Unde-r the Federal Vocational Education Act, the district has applied for a grant that would allow the hiring of a master planning consulta nt to study projected vocational class offeri ngs of the N~tion ally kn~\¥Jl
Wilmas Beauty Salon
I
Negro comedians and is on constant call by the nation's elite in nig'htc1ub entertainment. Like many of his Negro contem· poraries in the comedy fie ld, much of his humor stems .from matters dealing with civil rights and t he problems which have confronted his race. Rollo May is a pT~ac-ticing psychoanalyst and Professor of Clinicct!1Psychology at New York Universit)'l. He is a Fel1ow of the William Alanson White Institute of Psychi atry, Psychoanalysis and
Educators Visiting CC For Workshop -
"High Styling our Speciality"
. >" < • '
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God!rey Cambridge wU! be the :ftrst speaker in tllis year's Junior Fress Con.ference series. The con· terence will be 1Le1d December 5 in Room F -7 from 6 to 7 p.m. The program Is open to all blgh ll<!hool journallsm students and their a d· vJ8ers.
H-e is author of "Meaning; of Anxiety" and "Man's Search for Himself." He wrote the introduc·
C all for Evening Appointme nt 297-7776
•
up comedian G od frey C ambrid ge will entertain in the Men's Gym. Since his phenomenal success on the Ja·c k P aar Show during the early months of 1964, actor-writercomic Cambridge has risen to the top of American show business. He is one of the four most celebrated
sent examples ·of his humor su ch . . , as. "R' . l~ht now, lt s not a question . of getting served •a t the counter," Jte says, "'It's a m a tter of eating too much. I never ~t sel"'V'ed before, but now I have to eat at ~11 t he restaurants . . . Negroes, m . general, have becOme so popular that there aren 't enough of us to go a round. Only the weather bureau .is behind the times." He t hreatens to "picket the place WI-
Psychology, and lectures at tJhe New School for Social Research.
m ~tker, o n e of the committee chairmen. Each girl a.ttending t11e f ete must bring a. dish ol food front a foreign country. Guest speakers will be on hand to infonn the girls of t he physical education depru·tment of the activities held in variou s foreign cowl· tries in connection with physical education. The party, open to member of the WPE, is co-chairmaned by
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MASTER MECHANICS Trained in I Werner
PROGRAM at City Coli
ege offe rs fret X-ra.ys to students. Appomtme nts may be scheduJ 1~ IWtd ~2. DcmonstTa.ting their professionaJ t 1ed. nny da.y betweea uuques are (left to rtgbt) Kathy Ca.rso ns, Linda Johnson ' and 1\'I •ec ~try Ann A iroso.
GARAGE EUROPA Repoir of Volkswagens _
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CUlrura l Series programs here at sion .in Psychiatry and Psycho!-
The Women's Physical Educaand Recreation Organization ~~~~~~:»~~~:»~~~W,;~tion will h o1d a Christmas party Dec. 14 in the women's gym. A n in ternational theme has been selected acco rding to Susan S hoe-
RENT A TV OR STEREO
f~:.: :.:.k::· Clubs Give
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The purpose of add in g these new In the fa11, a class jn contem· porary Latin American literature classes to the Spanish curriculum will be given, covering playwrights, is, "to develop an articulate style in the writing of Spanish," said Miss Espinoza. W,?u ld you like to 5tudy Spanish in Ma· ~nd , ~•rman. in Mayrohofen (Austria), rench tn Par1s, European history in Cothis coming in fue~~ir'?"• or
f'fr II t '0.t 11 'Oll tgt <H:i mt s £.t•
Shakespearian Production
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Forget all the stories you've heard about face shapes determining h a irdo shape, It's the shape o f Eda o, - - - - · --
hair that settles the \\'ay the hair Adv. Mg•. JOHN M IG UELGORRY goes, and most any h airdo you see Busineu Mgr. ···- ..-· BRUC E RIGGS can be adapted in your own verNight Editor .................... Bil L BAYLEY sion to your face. Hairdo trends are s la nting toStoff Arl;st -·-······-··-··· BILL LANCE Adviser ···-··--·--- C. W . PA LMER ward the shorter side this year with such styles as the "Beat!~ Cut" and the "G uiche.'' As far as being practical goes, s ho rt hair is the answer. The days of teased and ratted hair are past. The blunt cut is a very popular style with college c<reds also-Lit gives a carefree plus an all-American girl look. Kenneth of a f amous ~ew York beauty saJon says, "I JUSt recently real ized that I get very much c loser to what a wom an wants if I ask her w hat s he doesn't want." Mo~t stylists are now sayin g that straight is no mere current f.ad, 1but an enduring, practical look. So girls, become one of the "Aware Ones," they're letting the new look show . • . rth e campus look.
RON GREEN
AS>t. Ed;t. - - · · · - LEE NORMAN N ews Ed ;t. - - - - -· SUSIE JONES Feet"'e Desk - - - J IM SCH ROEDER Sports Ed it . ···-········· BOB BO RZONE
or
att e n ding the now terminated
Nyhan s oid that he thougllt \'"! Pol(ce Aca.,demy at City College Police students who Used offiti·l would park in the co1lege's parking cars didn't ne d e permits beca~&• Jot, sometimes in faculty zones. th ese cars m ay be con .d SJ el'ej They came in official cars, ma rked " emergency ve hicles" and th and unmarked, ahd didn't h ave be ex e p t e d. However, parking pe1mits. Many Academy Beatty, ASB pres ident commcnteJ students coming in private cars that if they are stud~nts at City also neglected the required permH, College then they should h ail • or if they had it wasn't properly pcrmltS. He said, "I don't care ij attached. Seldom did an yone from they show up in a fire truck U the Law Enforcement class issue t hey're going to classes th citations to any of these studen ts. should have pei"mits ." ~ William Nyhan, instructor in the Accordin g to Nyha n, the Law Law Enforcement, said that there Enforcement s tuden ts are not ab~ really wasn't any need. "These to completely cove l· the area I men are 'quasi-students', t hey only a~l times, and a small nwnber ~ attend for 12 weeks," he said, "and ~Io1ators migh t go unnoticed, Add. are paid by their departments to mg that he h imself had seen two come here as part of. their job." offen ders, but had not bothero! Section 402 of Traffic and Por k- to Issue citation s. "I told one to ing Regulations on SJCC Campus get off campus a nd had the otheJ makes no distinction b e tween ad~ised that h e had broken a regu. students and "quasi-stude nts," H 1 a~Jon . I didn't see any point in states emphatically : Any student gom g throug h the Student Court ' Even though there may not ~ or staff member who at any time for any reason operates a motor enough campus police to blanket vehicle on campus must have a t he entire parking lot, most of tl! valid parking permit . . . Anyone offenders were seen parked in tht who is not a student is required lot jmmedia tely in front of ti'f by Section 404 to obtain a Visitor's L aw Enforcement class .[oorns. One City of Santa Clara· Lieu. permit. Larry Ar:perich, dean of men and tenant, whose unmarked, uncited parking director, reported t hat he car was park ed next to a privaU had no idea that some of t he car with a ticket under the wi pe~ Academy students were ignoring blade, sa id that even though h! our parking regul ations. · He said taugh t in t he Academy he had never been told a nything abou1
THE CA R ABOVE is used b y a poUeeman student at t hls college. It does not hn.ve a Jmrking sticker . Ot her s tudent cars tha t don't have stick ers get tickets. P olice stude nts · d on' t get tickets. Interesting ' · isn't It?
Chess Champ Blackstone De/eats Grand Master
Editorial
The Disinterested Student
States chess player last year, a nd is prese111tly engaged in the San Jose Chess Club tournament. L a,st s ummer, Blackstone played ln a series of tournaments on the Eastern seaboard. H e won $1,CXX> in prize· money after he completed 119 games, which was only part of the year's work. Blackstone began serious chess playing in 1959 while he was still in juniot:" hig h school. He had risen through four lower divisions of the U.S. Chess Federation to t he ran ks of Master. He has won the State Jun ior Champi onship four times and h as
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THE WORLD.-1963 ("J'ome (f.-:et have CHANGED
on!~ a selec~ few by the Inter- been the San Jose champion since
nabonal Chess Federation, and is 1960. After he turned 21 he went only a few steps above Blackinto the adult division' where he stone's ti tle of Grand ].!Iaster. Blackstone won more tourna- became Grand l\.1aster. Blackstone hopes to continue until he reach,es ments than any other United the rank of Senior Master.
S an J ose City CoUege was r ecognized nationally for its w ork with t he "Shoes for Kids Drive" in th e October issue of "Civibm," the or· ga nizatl on 's nation al pnbUca.tlon. City College students were com· m ended f or their a id in last year's Successful 'drive and encouraged in this year's drive. Pictured wit h the a rticle was lovely Kn.thy Rice, 20, last y ear's homecoming queen.
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Mysterious Bookstore I would like to see a published explanation of the mys terious inner workings of our student bookstore. It is common knowledge among many of my fellow students tha t the possibilities of finding a used book for a specific class are much greater in one of the privately owned bookstores in Lhe San J ose State College area Ulan those oi OW' own Bookstore. Appat·ently one of the reasons for the lack of more economical used books in our bookstore is that the used books a re not purchased by the store un til the critical buying
BAnEN'S A RT
7
FLORIST
10% Discount to Students C Y 3 _0655
11:00 41 T (1) Lecttu·e By Arrah~ement (G) Laboratory (Editorial, Advertising & SJ)orts)
{odvertisment)
tll lt II III Ill llilllllllllllll lllll lllllllllll ll l llllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllll UII UUII
~he fiJrst edition of their 32-page maga. zme 0 BS ABROAD is packed witb o.n·the-spot photos, stories and infonna. tlon about :your job abroad.
~arn how ~SIS guaran tees you a joh f
thrilling trip abroad for : FUN~c0u~ TURE ; PAY ; LANGUAGE ; TRAVEL. For your copr of lobs Abroad, air mail 1 :00 to ' ISIS, 133 rue Hotel de• Mon·
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Sterilized and Sani·Soft Finishe d Phone 294· 1933 77 No. 4t h St .
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In the past four years ISIS has placed more than 1,500 students in jobs abroad • year·round and summer.
Read how to cover your expc.n
State Farm Insurance Sove Money if you have o "8" or Better G.P.A. You
BABY'S DIAPER SERVICE
n orma tJOn Service announced that 800 :uden ~. will be accepted in 1966 from n antlctpated 4,000 applicants.
P a lmer
A
uuu uMct
J ERRY AULDRI DGE
Ph one 253 .93 61
r ~USSELS, The lntemational Student
GRODI:NS
DMrid Scot
trangeme nt From Society, a na turalistic obsclvation of man's lea rnin~ and condi tiol1!ing. Ironically enough , he started his cOllege career as a civil engjneeri~g major at San Francisco City College, but changed his major a['.ter taking the Strong Vocational Intorcst Test at America n Ri ver J unior Coll ege. As a youth, his in.terests were in surfiboard t~ idin g and especia lly body surfing. "At this time, they were not as popular," said Nielsen. He is m arried to Barbara Niel-
sen of City College D1·ama Depart-
•1,
ment, whom he met at Ainerican River Junior College, where he was a student in hQ,t P u blic Speakjng · class .
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ROGER COLLINS
~
ES BUSINESS MACH AND OFF I CE EQU I PMENT
170 'south Second Phon e 28b.2b I 0
Our5ZJ~~ takes you inside your diamond I ts penetrating light, its a ll -seeing eye, takes yo u right to the heart of your diamond ... a thrilling cxpe· riencc ... but more tha n th at, you have honest assurance that your diamond has been accurately judged and sensibly pricedCome in a nd ~c for yourself.
MORTO~,.)~ ~GE~ISTS Jfi .JIH~ mnnle.tnlltLICf.wa
Mon., Tues. & Fri. Till .9:30 P.M.
TIMOT' HY ~ 7 00 0 8, who i>Ortrays King Lear In the forthconting S~u1 Jose City Coll ege CXJ>erime ntal J>la.y production on Sb akesJ>cnre's
. wo rks, goes ove r diulOb"UC as Janet Schoenbun1, who pcrlorms t he r ole of Co rd e lia in King Lear , gets fin al costume fi tting by costwne designe r Barbara. Neilsen.
A ra t 11 0('11 Udon Is be-ing h.eld in Room S-2 to morrow a.t 11 f\..m.. ;:um o uJ H'CS J am es Ni e l~n of th e Ci ty College vsycholugy dep.H. I'tt' ment. T he (lcca.thlon is a. r ehea.rsal fo r t he Jtat deca t h lon to be h eld December 16 at Ame r lcnn River J. C. A ll stude nts are in.vlt.ed. to
ent er a. rat.
* * * * * * * * **** * RETURNING BY POPULAR D·EMAND
COASTERS Singing Your All·Time Favorites
, "Charley Brotvn" " Little E gy fJL"
Top Comedian & Impressionist.
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USE OUR " RENT TO OWN" PLAN
score from Duke Ellington's jazz score, ''Such Sweet T h under.'' wri tten and performed for the Stratford, Conn., Sllakespearean Festival several years ago, wiU provide musical background for the drama presentation featuring a company of 35. Bennett, chairman of the cqllege's drama a nd speech depart· ment, said the drama presentation will experiment with an exciting new a pproach to iUustrate a major statement in many of Shakespea.re's plays--"that reason gives way. to passion." "We will be attempting to illustrate the un iversality of S hake· speare's sta tements Which demon stl'ate that persons who a re otherwise reasona ble will abandon rea · son a nd commit ac ts of destruction when they are placed under grea t emotional s tress. Scenes may change from a ncient Rome to contem[X>rary America, but the S hake~ spearean characters will remain the same." F eatured in major roles wi ll be Joseph Bro<;la as Antho ny; J oella Collier as Cleopatra; Otis Courtney as OtheJlo; J onelle El nglem~ as Desdemona; RaJ ph Gerrard as MacBeth and H enry V; Ga:i ! Short as Juliet ; Katlly Wal sh ·a s Lady MacBeth ; Timo thy Wood as King Lear; Carl Pe rry. as Romeo; Judy Gattuccio as Kate and J a net Schoenbrun as Cordeli a. Lynd a Davis who is directing the dance program, said. the ins pi· ration of the pre-class ic music is combined with the 'medium o! mod· ern dance to offer a beauti ful blen'd of two eras. One dance num ber will feature a dance presentation with 12 male stude nts. All performances will start at 8:30 p.m. For ticket 'in(ormaUOn call the student finance o[iice, 298·2181. 4
Now Appearing Nightly
REN T A
MOS.
Thank you, J ames T . Howard Fres hman Class President
Join Sunny Jay and The Tombst ones and our Six Beaut iful (Yes 6) Go-Go Gi r ls Ni9htly.
selection of ik i equi pment and clothes , . , complete rental serVice. 244.0880 e 440 S. Winchester Opposite Mystery House, San Jo1e
3
The upcoming Winter Formal which is bel ng held on the Harbor P ri nce is being sponsored by the Freshman and Sophomore classes. It was mentioned in your last issue that the Sophomore class was sponsoring it singly. I hope that this error will be rectified.
The Drama Department will experimen t with the Shakespearean infl uence in a unique production, "Dance and Drama in Concert," slated lor December 9, 10, and 11. S luart Bennett, director, said the program will be performed in two parts- the first featuring a new and exciting production of modern dance performed by students from the college's women's physical education department with live vocal accompaniment by the Madriga l Singers presenting a backgroW1d of Elizabethan madrigal songs. The second half will featur e a drama presentation with 21 major scenes from eight different Shakespearean plays as enacted by drama students. The recorded musical
THE FABULOUS
F in e'~
S pecial Student Rates
N ote to t he Edi to r :
With The Bard's Work
Students Need Help ToSucceed
...
llO.It " I M
GUARANTEED
3
JAMES NIELSEN
~~u~~~tA!~~;i~'~a::'~e~~Ma:~h~
TYPEWRITER
Respectfully, Jim Steele A.S.B. Vice Prcsiclcnt
( C ontlnu ed f rom Page 1) less t he next hun·icanc is named somethi ng like Beulah." Offs tage Cambridge expresses the c1·eed behind ·his approach when he says, "I am only concemed wi th letting people see the truth of our lives. W e mus t brin g t hings out in t he open." For ticket informa tion for either S tude nts sometimes need help in strength in a subject to help the perfonnancc contact t he City Colother's wealme!:js. For example if lege finance office, 298-2181, exorder to succeed in college. By going to room 206 and asking someone is weak in math they are tension 273. for assistance someone there will paired with someone who excells. aid hi m. H e will be helped by a Cllairman for STAY, Kathy Students in P sychology, th e City • fe llow s tudent to keep from be- P rice, says it is not just a tutorCoUege psycho logy club, e lected' coming a college dropout. "Many ns, explai and service ing its ofi ce rs recently. Marol l\tnrtln The student needs only to regis- times individuals experience d iffi was 'e lected president, and Bruce ter in t he college's program caJ led culty in their s tudies because of vice-president. E I e c te d Harden, "Students to Assist You." which is t he new cx pex;:iencc of college life. ta.ry w as Judy Gomes; treassecre better kn ovvn as S.T.A.Y. They A person may find coUege a Jonely r er , Anne Alexa nd er; n·nd publicu want just that - t hat the student place even though thousands of Jim J\fount. I CC re ps tudents pass by him every day. ity c halrman, stays in college. tlltives elected wer e Glen rescn STAY advisors, she said, become STAY uses the buddy system to T a ll uy and Art N cgre t te. genuine friends to the people they According to t he new l'resldc nt help the weaker member sul'Vive assist. They help them meet new the college strain. T he two work frie nds, become acquainted with t he club has man y in ter esting fo r as a W1it the remainder of the college activities and in general, acti\'Jti ~ tcnta.tivcly planned help them to become more accli- the future. semester. Students a re paired for one mated to college life."
periOO, during and just after registration is over and class ass i~ ments have necessitated the buYing of text books. As a participant in the academic retreat program, I would like to say that the mismanagement of the se lling of t he book "Walden II", impa ired what could have been a worthwhile experience. Un til the book~tore is jmpt'Oved I intend to carry as n:mch of my business as is necessary, elsewhere.
t ha t these critics of student government are content to casl stones, instead of using these stones to buiJd a firm foundation for the Associated Student Bocly of Sa.n J ose City College.
Cambridge, Ro ll o May Appear This Weekend
Cost
JOBS ABROA D
shoulder model. Navy. OHve. Cambridge Grey. On ly 72.50 or 10.00 a monlh. !Others 57.50 to 100.00) Charge up t o $100-just show you r reg. or faculty card
To t he Editor: An open le tter: I would like to remind all stu de nts, faculty and administra tion members, t ha t studen t council meetings a re open to all interested persons. People sitting in t he College Union, classrooms, or the local pub cr iticizing council activities should reme mber t h,at the Student Cou ncil welcomes a nyone to speak out at the T uel?daY workshop sessions . Seeing the numbc1· of of ficial aspi rants for A.S.B. offices, it seems
versitY of CalifOI11ia. u · interest in existentialism has d h' , <.J.,,15 compelled him to wri tc 1s octoral dissertation on Man's Es-
Ma the matical Mate . . .
our classic sharkskin suit has natural good looks!
~ackbone of every sound campus wardrobe: Our hard.finished trghtly woven, pure worsted sharkskin in authentic natural
I n regards to the upcoming elec· tion, I sincerely believe t hat t here is something lacking on t his cam· pus. As of r ight now, t here are fi ve people running for five student body offic es. This leaves someth ing to be desired as far as enthusiasm on campus concerning studen t ac tivities. There m ust be five more people on campus who show some enthusiasm a nd a little interest in school activities. James Howard
lng 111
· parking permi ts. George Watts, f inance di recta
the violations since last semester, but had been unable to do any. thing about i t. However, Watts a nd Beatty b oth promjsed to look A high percen tJage of our stu- · toward social dilemma. Using data into the matter. The point is thai dents a ttend SJCC for one o"f two gf thered by some studen ts at H ar- it's too late for t his semester. reasons : (1) avoidance of draft, vard University a few years ago, Oh, well, maybe next time. and ( 2) to find s uitable members the cl ub is in the process of pubA pops concert featuri ng t h~ of t he opposite sex wi t h whom lishing a scientific questionnaire they might associate. Although we which will be completed by all \ !Vee F ive is to be held at the 8aA have tried to present coeducation- students desiring to find compati- Jose State men's gym on Thursal classes: have .s~a.ged. dances and bJe dates. Consisting of a simple da y. Decem ~ 2, ~tt 8:15 p.m., ae· other SOCial actiVI ties and made a Hs ti ng of desirable traits of the cording to George Ca iUley, melt' bcr of Spartan Programs Colllm) C!l.etll-St~,JknU.Olllll:c-siV.ilill!WS- Rlll'llili!l!!llis.".theJl!lestionnjlire '!® for m term mglmg, many studen ts be scored and students ln.atched as tee'. .f'Nef{ets n.r e on M le at ti eac.h sem:ster are sad ~y disappoint- scientifically as modern te<;hnology SJS Stud Pnt Affairs Office or at It the S partan box office. ed m the1r efforts to fmd a suitable at this campus permits. Tenta tive a nd to tht $1.50 is students S SJ d~tc or . mate. Counselors have date for the first admission of gen e r a l p ublic $2.50. tried to msure £!, ~<full-time" pro- this unusual project will be _Febgram for thos.e who would beat ruary, 1966. Only then will we tile dra ft, but little effort has been truly satisfy this hig hly timeexpended, toward tlle satisfaction consuming need of our studen ts of . the students' all engrossing and insure a more fun tcion al sys~ tern of hig her education dnve to find suitable consorts. J~t.n1es Nieison, A detennined effort is now being psychoJogy instructor made by the recently fqrmed psySJ CC facul ty cllology club to rectify this un-
532 S. Bascom Ave. Sa n Jo$e
F or the experience of writing for the College Times or, come on ~.you eager beavers (grrr you know who you are), td help sell advertismg space in the Times. DAY CLASSES St>-<·tion Course Cour&e Title Cr. Urs. Hrs. Rm. lnstr. Days 3 3 Newswriting 14 1306 MWF 10:00 41 P almer Survey of Journalism 15 1309 MWr" 11:00 41 P a lmer 3 3 1312 65 Newspaper Staff
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j'O'I'N'"''jOiJ'i'Ni'LISM'
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Dear E dito r :
Tile San J ose CitY College psydcp.::L rt.rnent has a new . chology '~"r James N 1elscn. staff mcmuo.; • . a sch ool counselor a nd a n l He lS ( instructor in generaJ psycho ?gy, h niques and man"lage ' college tec and Ute famil y. Nielsen, a graduate of Sacrafmento State, where he t·eceived lhis Bachclo 1• of Arts degree a nd his Masters, is presently complet. · ·s Doctorate work at the Uni-
By MIKE O'CONNOR . "T hey should h ave I:Sow that the horse is gone, anyone else " and perm! Its lik! cone ude<t "' someone may get around to closing sayj ng tha t h e wouJd talk "! t be barn door. to George P ay ton, head of th For tile last 12 weeks students Enforcement dept, e La.,.
CITY C!>LLE.GE 'lpfEs-:.S
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Letters to the Editor Department Experiments
lh Psychology Dept.
I
.r.r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r..o-.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,o~~§!II".Jilllll llllllll""..r IG"..o".r.r..CII:V
Gt·and M¥ter chess player J ohn Black~ tone, a data: processing ma jor at City College, was the onJy person to beat the Inte rnational Grand Master of chess, Pal Benko, in a simultaneous tournament held at Lockheed RecreaCenter recently. tion stubCity CoiJege studen ts h ave once more dis played their Blackstone, 21, was one of 38 born r efus a l to mterest th e mse lves in anythin g other than ti1 e m- l selves: Out of five avail a ble ASB offices all of fi ve whole students / players in the tournament whO sat in a circle wh ile Benko saw f1t to eucmuhe r the n1selves wit-h the t ask of s tudent governmoved from table to table makm ent. ing his moves. Benko won 34, tied 'Yhatevc~ the student council j s l ik e n ext sem ester those who three, and lost his game with a re dr sp~eased wit? il- will h.ave no o ne to bl am e bLlt ~hemselves. ckstone. Bla egal l petitions~ e h t for ines deadl Due noUce was gn·e n of th e The t i t 1 e of International pro cedu re~ were observed. T h e re were no unfair acti.ons on th e Grand Master is bestowed upon ~a~t of 11ns se m ester's co unci I. T h ose who didn' t bothe r to parLl CI)Jate or at l e ast tT y to r~i se a ~an didate l1ave no co mplaint. . .Pcthap ~ - s tudents don t reahze the op p ortunity they are m.Jssrng. !h1s could e asily be the l as t chance they wi ll h ave to b e .directl y 1~v?lv e~ lu their government. Once out of college m ean 1n gful pohtJcal. JObs fall to th ose who work th e m sel ves th.rou gh .... tl1 e maJor paTtJ es over a period of ye8rs. Peo ple. o n .this campus should also r eaHze that we a re f ort un ate to h ve 1n a country that a11ows stude nts so mu ch self go~en~ment. In tJ~e event that S"Ludents wer e oot al lowed any . , voice 1.n such affa 1rs t11 e y wo uld h e s ure to comp lajn th ey we re n ot h~m g prop e rl y .represe nte~. Yet, wJ1en tlw opportunity preser_llB I tself no pne I S 1nte r es te d. If th.in gs continue to de cline in tlu s manner there i s no r e a son to expect lhat s tudent government would n't b e te nni~ated due t o lack of participation . At t?e same llm e, two ca1npus publications suffer from th e Jack _of mte r ested students. The T imes n1u st work under th han<hca~> of an untr.aine<~ staf~ while St.udy m agazin e cannot eve~ h e publish e d. Cert aJDJ y, 1f this schoo l IS to be. info rme d iln eed s more comp e tet~L pe ople working for its n e ws paper. Study, wh1ch re~em hl es a g ro up of schoolboys in a mudfight ~ ~ ~ever .been the mte1l ectual magazine it pre ten ds to be. Still' 1 f I t JS to Improve (and there is great room for improvement) - R.G. m us t have compc leo t peOJ}J e writing for it.
Nielsen New Man
HowManyTickets(oulda Ticket·Tacker Tac~ If a Ticket-Tacker Would Tack Tickets? m
Thursday, Decom~r 2, 19G5 -
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Every Sunda y nite a Guest Performing Band
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"Along Came Jones" " Shoppin' for Clothes" "Y akety Yak"
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007 A GO GO FASHION SHOW - I P.M. Every Thurs. and Fri. 12 Noon
Exclu·sive Engagement in the San Jose Area Dec. 6-19
SPECIAL COCKT All· H. QU~ EVE~Y
Now Appearing Thru Sun.
Thursday 4:30 P.M.- 7:30 P.M.
THE OLYMPICS
• Dine in the Brass Rail Hofbrau • Recommended by the Diners Club of America • "The best food for the lowest prices." • Open daily 11 a.m. • 9:30 p.m. •
Come Join the Fun With the Big Sounds at ...
Spe cial Stars -
Favors
N ew Yea r's Eve Ce Ie b ra
f.
Entertainers ~ Gala No Reservation Needed
10 n -
W here all the ACTIO N
IS
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THE .·aRASS RAIL 160 Mt. View-AI•iso Ro3d, Near Lockheed
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2-<JITY COLLEGE TIMES
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AlalmApus ~oo - men can
~a~y~,~·~c~em~~~r~2.~1~9~ss · c ~~==~~====~~~~------~~·u~~
Forget all the stories you've heard about face shapes determining h a irdo shape, It's the shape o f Eda o, - - - - · --
hair that settles the \\'ay the hair Adv. Mg•. JOHN M IG UELGORRY goes, and most any h airdo you see Busineu Mgr. ···- ..-· BRUC E RIGGS can be adapted in your own verNight Editor .................... Bil L BAYLEY sion to your face. Hairdo trends are s la nting toStoff Arl;st -·-······-··-··· BILL LANCE Adviser ···-··--·--- C. W . PA LMER ward the shorter side this year with such styles as the "Beat!~ Cut" and the "G uiche.'' As far as being practical goes, s ho rt hair is the answer. The days of teased and ratted hair are past. The blunt cut is a very popular style with college c<reds also-Lit gives a carefree plus an all-American girl look. Kenneth of a f amous ~ew York beauty saJon says, "I JUSt recently real ized that I get very much c loser to what a wom an wants if I ask her w hat s he doesn't want." Mo~t stylists are now sayin g that straight is no mere current f.ad, 1but an enduring, practical look. So girls, become one of the "Aware Ones," they're letting the new look show . • . rth e campus look.
RON GREEN
AS>t. Ed;t. - - · · · - LEE NORMAN N ews Ed ;t. - - - - -· SUSIE JONES Feet"'e Desk - - - J IM SCH ROEDER Sports Ed it . ···-········· BOB BO RZONE
or
att e n ding the now terminated
Nyhan s oid that he thougllt \'"! Pol(ce Aca.,demy at City College Police students who Used offiti·l would park in the co1lege's parking cars didn't ne d e permits beca~&• Jot, sometimes in faculty zones. th ese cars m ay be con .d SJ el'ej They came in official cars, ma rked " emergency ve hicles" and th and unmarked, ahd didn't h ave be ex e p t e d. However, parking pe1mits. Many Academy Beatty, ASB pres ident commcnteJ students coming in private cars that if they are stud~nts at City also neglected the required permH, College then they should h ail • or if they had it wasn't properly pcrmltS. He said, "I don't care ij attached. Seldom did an yone from they show up in a fire truck U the Law Enforcement class issue t hey're going to classes th citations to any of these studen ts. should have pei"mits ." ~ William Nyhan, instructor in the Accordin g to Nyha n, the Law Law Enforcement, said that there Enforcement s tuden ts are not ab~ really wasn't any need. "These to completely cove l· the area I men are 'quasi-students', t hey only a~l times, and a small nwnber ~ attend for 12 weeks," he said, "and ~Io1ators migh t go unnoticed, Add. are paid by their departments to mg that he h imself had seen two come here as part of. their job." offen ders, but had not bothero! Section 402 of Traffic and Por k- to Issue citation s. "I told one to ing Regulations on SJCC Campus get off campus a nd had the otheJ makes no distinction b e tween ad~ised that h e had broken a regu. students and "quasi-stude nts," H 1 a~Jon . I didn't see any point in states emphatically : Any student gom g throug h the Student Court ' Even though there may not ~ or staff member who at any time for any reason operates a motor enough campus police to blanket vehicle on campus must have a t he entire parking lot, most of tl! valid parking permit . . . Anyone offenders were seen parked in tht who is not a student is required lot jmmedia tely in front of ti'f by Section 404 to obtain a Visitor's L aw Enforcement class .[oorns. One City of Santa Clara· Lieu. permit. Larry Ar:perich, dean of men and tenant, whose unmarked, uncited parking director, reported t hat he car was park ed next to a privaU had no idea that some of t he car with a ticket under the wi pe~ Academy students were ignoring blade, sa id that even though h! our parking regul ations. · He said taugh t in t he Academy he had never been told a nything abou1
THE CA R ABOVE is used b y a poUeeman student at t hls college. It does not hn.ve a Jmrking sticker . Ot her s tudent cars tha t don't have stick ers get tickets. P olice stude nts · d on' t get tickets. Interesting ' · isn't It?
Chess Champ Blackstone De/eats Grand Master
Editorial
The Disinterested Student
States chess player last year, a nd is prese111tly engaged in the San Jose Chess Club tournament. L a,st s ummer, Blackstone played ln a series of tournaments on the Eastern seaboard. H e won $1,CXX> in prize· money after he completed 119 games, which was only part of the year's work. Blackstone began serious chess playing in 1959 while he was still in juniot:" hig h school. He had risen through four lower divisions of the U.S. Chess Federation to t he ran ks of Master. He has won the State Jun ior Champi onship four times and h as
i:
THE WORLD.-1963 ("J'ome (f.-:et have CHANGED
on!~ a selec~ few by the Inter- been the San Jose champion since
nabonal Chess Federation, and is 1960. After he turned 21 he went only a few steps above Blackinto the adult division' where he stone's ti tle of Grand ].!Iaster. Blackstone won more tourna- became Grand l\.1aster. Blackstone hopes to continue until he reach,es ments than any other United the rank of Senior Master.
S an J ose City CoUege was r ecognized nationally for its w ork with t he "Shoes for Kids Drive" in th e October issue of "Civibm," the or· ga nizatl on 's nation al pnbUca.tlon. City College students were com· m ended f or their a id in last year's Successful 'drive and encouraged in this year's drive. Pictured wit h the a rticle was lovely Kn.thy Rice, 20, last y ear's homecoming queen.
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Mysterious Bookstore I would like to see a published explanation of the mys terious inner workings of our student bookstore. It is common knowledge among many of my fellow students tha t the possibilities of finding a used book for a specific class are much greater in one of the privately owned bookstores in Lhe San J ose State College area Ulan those oi OW' own Bookstore. Appat·ently one of the reasons for the lack of more economical used books in our bookstore is that the used books a re not purchased by the store un til the critical buying
BAnEN'S A RT
7
FLORIST
10% Discount to Students C Y 3 _0655
11:00 41 T (1) Lecttu·e By Arrah~ement (G) Laboratory (Editorial, Advertising & SJ)orts)
{odvertisment)
tll lt II III Ill llilllllllllllll lllll lllllllllll ll l llllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllll UII UUII
~he fiJrst edition of their 32-page maga. zme 0 BS ABROAD is packed witb o.n·the-spot photos, stories and infonna. tlon about :your job abroad.
~arn how ~SIS guaran tees you a joh f
thrilling trip abroad for : FUN~c0u~ TURE ; PAY ; LANGUAGE ; TRAVEL. For your copr of lobs Abroad, air mail 1 :00 to ' ISIS, 133 rue Hotel de• Mon·
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SAVE 30·40% O N AUTO INSURAN CE
Sterilized and Sani·Soft Finishe d Phone 294· 1933 77 No. 4t h St .
abroad anyLJJrle of the year.
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W e med icat e all ba by's d ia pe rs with DIAPARENE
In the past four years ISIS has placed more than 1,500 students in jobs abroad • year·round and summer.
Read how to cover your expc.n
State Farm Insurance Sove Money if you have o "8" or Better G.P.A. You
BABY'S DIAPER SERVICE
n orma tJOn Service announced that 800 :uden ~. will be accepted in 1966 from n antlctpated 4,000 applicants.
P a lmer
A
uuu uMct
J ERRY AULDRI DGE
Ph one 253 .93 61
r ~USSELS, The lntemational Student
GRODI:NS
DMrid Scot
trangeme nt From Society, a na turalistic obsclvation of man's lea rnin~ and condi tiol1!ing. Ironically enough , he started his cOllege career as a civil engjneeri~g major at San Francisco City College, but changed his major a['.ter taking the Strong Vocational Intorcst Test at America n Ri ver J unior Coll ege. As a youth, his in.terests were in surfiboard t~ idin g and especia lly body surfing. "At this time, they were not as popular," said Nielsen. He is m arried to Barbara Niel-
sen of City College D1·ama Depart-
•1,
ment, whom he met at Ainerican River Junior College, where he was a student in hQ,t P u blic Speakjng · class .
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ROGER COLLINS
~
ES BUSINESS MACH AND OFF I CE EQU I PMENT
170 'south Second Phon e 28b.2b I 0
Our5ZJ~~ takes you inside your diamond I ts penetrating light, its a ll -seeing eye, takes yo u right to the heart of your diamond ... a thrilling cxpe· riencc ... but more tha n th at, you have honest assurance that your diamond has been accurately judged and sensibly pricedCome in a nd ~c for yourself.
MORTO~,.)~ ~GE~ISTS Jfi .JIH~ mnnle.tnlltLICf.wa
Mon., Tues. & Fri. Till .9:30 P.M.
TIMOT' HY ~ 7 00 0 8, who i>Ortrays King Lear In the forthconting S~u1 Jose City Coll ege CXJ>erime ntal J>la.y production on Sb akesJ>cnre's
. wo rks, goes ove r diulOb"UC as Janet Schoenbun1, who pcrlorms t he r ole of Co rd e lia in King Lear , gets fin al costume fi tting by costwne designe r Barbara. Neilsen.
A ra t 11 0('11 Udon Is be-ing h.eld in Room S-2 to morrow a.t 11 f\..m.. ;:um o uJ H'CS J am es Ni e l~n of th e Ci ty College vsycholugy dep.H. I'tt' ment. T he (lcca.thlon is a. r ehea.rsal fo r t he Jtat deca t h lon to be h eld December 16 at Ame r lcnn River J. C. A ll stude nts are in.vlt.ed. to
ent er a. rat.
* * * * * * * * **** * RETURNING BY POPULAR D·EMAND
COASTERS Singing Your All·Time Favorites
, "Charley Brotvn" " Little E gy fJL"
Top Comedian & Impressionist.
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USE OUR " RENT TO OWN" PLAN
score from Duke Ellington's jazz score, ''Such Sweet T h under.'' wri tten and performed for the Stratford, Conn., Sllakespearean Festival several years ago, wiU provide musical background for the drama presentation featuring a company of 35. Bennett, chairman of the cqllege's drama a nd speech depart· ment, said the drama presentation will experiment with an exciting new a pproach to iUustrate a major statement in many of Shakespea.re's plays--"that reason gives way. to passion." "We will be attempting to illustrate the un iversality of S hake· speare's sta tements Which demon stl'ate that persons who a re otherwise reasona ble will abandon rea · son a nd commit ac ts of destruction when they are placed under grea t emotional s tress. Scenes may change from a ncient Rome to contem[X>rary America, but the S hake~ spearean characters will remain the same." F eatured in major roles wi ll be Joseph Bro<;la as Antho ny; J oella Collier as Cleopatra; Otis Courtney as OtheJlo; J onelle El nglem~ as Desdemona; RaJ ph Gerrard as MacBeth and H enry V; Ga:i ! Short as Juliet ; Katlly Wal sh ·a s Lady MacBeth ; Timo thy Wood as King Lear; Carl Pe rry. as Romeo; Judy Gattuccio as Kate and J a net Schoenbrun as Cordeli a. Lynd a Davis who is directing the dance program, said. the ins pi· ration of the pre-class ic music is combined with the 'medium o! mod· ern dance to offer a beauti ful blen'd of two eras. One dance num ber will feature a dance presentation with 12 male stude nts. All performances will start at 8:30 p.m. For ticket 'in(ormaUOn call the student finance o[iice, 298·2181. 4
Now Appearing Nightly
REN T A
MOS.
Thank you, J ames T . Howard Fres hman Class President
Join Sunny Jay and The Tombst ones and our Six Beaut iful (Yes 6) Go-Go Gi r ls Ni9htly.
selection of ik i equi pment and clothes , . , complete rental serVice. 244.0880 e 440 S. Winchester Opposite Mystery House, San Jo1e
3
The upcoming Winter Formal which is bel ng held on the Harbor P ri nce is being sponsored by the Freshman and Sophomore classes. It was mentioned in your last issue that the Sophomore class was sponsoring it singly. I hope that this error will be rectified.
The Drama Department will experimen t with the Shakespearean infl uence in a unique production, "Dance and Drama in Concert," slated lor December 9, 10, and 11. S luart Bennett, director, said the program will be performed in two parts- the first featuring a new and exciting production of modern dance performed by students from the college's women's physical education department with live vocal accompaniment by the Madriga l Singers presenting a backgroW1d of Elizabethan madrigal songs. The second half will featur e a drama presentation with 21 major scenes from eight different Shakespearean plays as enacted by drama students. The recorded musical
THE FABULOUS
F in e'~
S pecial Student Rates
N ote to t he Edi to r :
With The Bard's Work
Students Need Help ToSucceed
...
llO.It " I M
GUARANTEED
3
JAMES NIELSEN
~~u~~~tA!~~;i~'~a::'~e~~Ma:~h~
TYPEWRITER
Respectfully, Jim Steele A.S.B. Vice Prcsiclcnt
( C ontlnu ed f rom Page 1) less t he next hun·icanc is named somethi ng like Beulah." Offs tage Cambridge expresses the c1·eed behind ·his approach when he says, "I am only concemed wi th letting people see the truth of our lives. W e mus t brin g t hings out in t he open." For ticket informa tion for either S tude nts sometimes need help in strength in a subject to help the perfonnancc contact t he City Colother's wealme!:js. For example if lege finance office, 298-2181, exorder to succeed in college. By going to room 206 and asking someone is weak in math they are tension 273. for assistance someone there will paired with someone who excells. aid hi m. H e will be helped by a Cllairman for STAY, Kathy Students in P sychology, th e City • fe llow s tudent to keep from be- P rice, says it is not just a tutorCoUege psycho logy club, e lected' coming a college dropout. "Many ns, explai and service ing its ofi ce rs recently. Marol l\tnrtln The student needs only to regis- times individuals experience d iffi was 'e lected president, and Bruce ter in t he college's program caJ led culty in their s tudies because of vice-president. E I e c te d Harden, "Students to Assist You." which is t he new cx pex;:iencc of college life. ta.ry w as Judy Gomes; treassecre better kn ovvn as S.T.A.Y. They A person may find coUege a Jonely r er , Anne Alexa nd er; n·nd publicu want just that - t hat the student place even though thousands of Jim J\fount. I CC re ps tudents pass by him every day. ity c halrman, stays in college. tlltives elected wer e Glen rescn STAY advisors, she said, become STAY uses the buddy system to T a ll uy and Art N cgre t te. genuine friends to the people they According to t he new l'resldc nt help the weaker member sul'Vive assist. They help them meet new the college strain. T he two work frie nds, become acquainted with t he club has man y in ter esting fo r as a W1it the remainder of the college activities and in general, acti\'Jti ~ tcnta.tivcly planned help them to become more accli- the future. semester. Students a re paired for one mated to college life."
periOO, during and just after registration is over and class ass i~ ments have necessitated the buYing of text books. As a participant in the academic retreat program, I would like to say that the mismanagement of the se lling of t he book "Walden II", impa ired what could have been a worthwhile experience. Un til the book~tore is jmpt'Oved I intend to carry as n:mch of my business as is necessary, elsewhere.
t ha t these critics of student government are content to casl stones, instead of using these stones to buiJd a firm foundation for the Associated Student Bocly of Sa.n J ose City College.
Cambridge, Ro ll o May Appear This Weekend
Cost
JOBS ABROA D
shoulder model. Navy. OHve. Cambridge Grey. On ly 72.50 or 10.00 a monlh. !Others 57.50 to 100.00) Charge up t o $100-just show you r reg. or faculty card
To t he Editor: An open le tter: I would like to remind all stu de nts, faculty and administra tion members, t ha t studen t council meetings a re open to all interested persons. People sitting in t he College Union, classrooms, or the local pub cr iticizing council activities should reme mber t h,at the Student Cou ncil welcomes a nyone to speak out at the T uel?daY workshop sessions . Seeing the numbc1· of of ficial aspi rants for A.S.B. offices, it seems
versitY of CalifOI11ia. u · interest in existentialism has d h' , <.J.,,15 compelled him to wri tc 1s octoral dissertation on Man's Es-
Ma the matical Mate . . .
our classic sharkskin suit has natural good looks!
~ackbone of every sound campus wardrobe: Our hard.finished trghtly woven, pure worsted sharkskin in authentic natural
I n regards to the upcoming elec· tion, I sincerely believe t hat t here is something lacking on t his cam· pus. As of r ight now, t here are fi ve people running for five student body offic es. This leaves someth ing to be desired as far as enthusiasm on campus concerning studen t ac tivities. There m ust be five more people on campus who show some enthusiasm a nd a little interest in school activities. James Howard
lng 111
· parking permi ts. George Watts, f inance di recta
the violations since last semester, but had been unable to do any. thing about i t. However, Watts a nd Beatty b oth promjsed to look A high percen tJage of our stu- · toward social dilemma. Using data into the matter. The point is thai dents a ttend SJCC for one o"f two gf thered by some studen ts at H ar- it's too late for t his semester. reasons : (1) avoidance of draft, vard University a few years ago, Oh, well, maybe next time. and ( 2) to find s uitable members the cl ub is in the process of pubA pops concert featuri ng t h~ of t he opposite sex wi t h whom lishing a scientific questionnaire they might associate. Although we which will be completed by all \ !Vee F ive is to be held at the 8aA have tried to present coeducation- students desiring to find compati- Jose State men's gym on Thursal classes: have .s~a.ged. dances and bJe dates. Consisting of a simple da y. Decem ~ 2, ~tt 8:15 p.m., ae· other SOCial actiVI ties and made a Hs ti ng of desirable traits of the cording to George Ca iUley, melt' bcr of Spartan Programs Colllm) C!l.etll-St~,JknU.Olllll:c-siV.ilill!WS- Rlll'llili!l!!llis.".theJl!lestionnjlire '!® for m term mglmg, many studen ts be scored and students ln.atched as tee'. .f'Nef{ets n.r e on M le at ti eac.h sem:ster are sad ~y disappoint- scientifically as modern te<;hnology SJS Stud Pnt Affairs Office or at It the S partan box office. ed m the1r efforts to fmd a suitable at this campus permits. Tenta tive a nd to tht $1.50 is students S SJ d~tc or . mate. Counselors have date for the first admission of gen e r a l p ublic $2.50. tried to msure £!, ~<full-time" pro- this unusual project will be _Febgram for thos.e who would beat ruary, 1966. Only then will we tile dra ft, but little effort has been truly satisfy this hig hly timeexpended, toward tlle satisfaction consuming need of our studen ts of . the students' all engrossing and insure a more fun tcion al sys~ tern of hig her education dnve to find suitable consorts. J~t.n1es Nieison, A detennined effort is now being psychoJogy instructor made by the recently fqrmed psySJ CC facul ty cllology club to rectify this un-
532 S. Bascom Ave. Sa n Jo$e
F or the experience of writing for the College Times or, come on ~.you eager beavers (grrr you know who you are), td help sell advertismg space in the Times. DAY CLASSES St>-<·tion Course Cour&e Title Cr. Urs. Hrs. Rm. lnstr. Days 3 3 Newswriting 14 1306 MWF 10:00 41 P almer Survey of Journalism 15 1309 MWr" 11:00 41 P a lmer 3 3 1312 65 Newspaper Staff
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. r.r.r..cll!l : : !1!11:1:0! . r.r_..r .r .r lii!IIIIIIIIIC"'..--..r.r.r..o-..r..o-..--.r..--
j'O'I'N'"''jOiJ'i'Ni'LISM'
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Dear E dito r :
Tile San J ose CitY College psydcp.::L rt.rnent has a new . chology '~"r James N 1elscn. staff mcmuo.; • . a sch ool counselor a nd a n l He lS ( instructor in generaJ psycho ?gy, h niques and man"lage ' college tec and Ute famil y. Nielsen, a graduate of Sacrafmento State, where he t·eceived lhis Bachclo 1• of Arts degree a nd his Masters, is presently complet. · ·s Doctorate work at the Uni-
By MIKE O'CONNOR . "T hey should h ave I:Sow that the horse is gone, anyone else " and perm! Its lik! cone ude<t "' someone may get around to closing sayj ng tha t h e wouJd talk "! t be barn door. to George P ay ton, head of th For tile last 12 weeks students Enforcement dept, e La.,.
CITY C!>LLE.GE 'lpfEs-:.S
.
Letters to the Editor Department Experiments
lh Psychology Dept.
I
.r.r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r..o-.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,r.,o~~§!II".Jilllll llllllll""..r IG"..o".r.r..CII:V
Gt·and M¥ter chess player J ohn Black~ tone, a data: processing ma jor at City College, was the onJy person to beat the Inte rnational Grand Master of chess, Pal Benko, in a simultaneous tournament held at Lockheed RecreaCenter recently. tion stubCity CoiJege studen ts h ave once more dis played their Blackstone, 21, was one of 38 born r efus a l to mterest th e mse lves in anythin g other than ti1 e m- l selves: Out of five avail a ble ASB offices all of fi ve whole students / players in the tournament whO sat in a circle wh ile Benko saw f1t to eucmuhe r the n1selves wit-h the t ask of s tudent governmoved from table to table makm ent. ing his moves. Benko won 34, tied 'Yhatevc~ the student council j s l ik e n ext sem ester those who three, and lost his game with a re dr sp~eased wit? il- will h.ave no o ne to bl am e bLlt ~hemselves. ckstone. Bla egal l petitions~ e h t for ines deadl Due noUce was gn·e n of th e The t i t 1 e of International pro cedu re~ were observed. T h e re were no unfair acti.ons on th e Grand Master is bestowed upon ~a~t of 11ns se m ester's co unci I. T h ose who didn' t bothe r to parLl CI)Jate or at l e ast tT y to r~i se a ~an didate l1ave no co mplaint. . .Pcthap ~ - s tudents don t reahze the op p ortunity they are m.Jssrng. !h1s could e asily be the l as t chance they wi ll h ave to b e .directl y 1~v?lv e~ lu their government. Once out of college m ean 1n gful pohtJcal. JObs fall to th ose who work th e m sel ves th.rou gh .... tl1 e maJor paTtJ es over a period of ye8rs. Peo ple. o n .this campus should also r eaHze that we a re f ort un ate to h ve 1n a country that a11ows stude nts so mu ch self go~en~ment. In tJ~e event that S"Ludents wer e oot al lowed any . , voice 1.n such affa 1rs t11 e y wo uld h e s ure to comp lajn th ey we re n ot h~m g prop e rl y .represe nte~. Yet, wJ1en tlw opportunity preser_llB I tself no pne I S 1nte r es te d. If th.in gs continue to de cline in tlu s manner there i s no r e a son to expect lhat s tudent government would n't b e te nni~ated due t o lack of participation . At t?e same llm e, two ca1npus publications suffer from th e Jack _of mte r ested students. The T imes n1u st work under th han<hca~> of an untr.aine<~ staf~ while St.udy m agazin e cannot eve~ h e publish e d. Cert aJDJ y, 1f this schoo l IS to be. info rme d iln eed s more comp e tet~L pe ople working for its n e ws paper. Study, wh1ch re~em hl es a g ro up of schoolboys in a mudfight ~ ~ ~ever .been the mte1l ectual magazine it pre ten ds to be. Still' 1 f I t JS to Improve (and there is great room for improvement) - R.G. m us t have compc leo t peOJ}J e writing for it.
Nielsen New Man
HowManyTickets(oulda Ticket·Tacker Tac~ If a Ticket-Tacker Would Tack Tickets? m
Thursday, Decom~r 2, 19G5 -
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Every Sunda y nite a Guest Performing Band
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"Along Came Jones" " Shoppin' for Clothes" "Y akety Yak"
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007 A GO GO FASHION SHOW - I P.M. Every Thurs. and Fri. 12 Noon
Exclu·sive Engagement in the San Jose Area Dec. 6-19
SPECIAL COCKT All· H. QU~ EVE~Y
Now Appearing Thru Sun.
Thursday 4:30 P.M.- 7:30 P.M.
THE OLYMPICS
• Dine in the Brass Rail Hofbrau • Recommended by the Diners Club of America • "The best food for the lowest prices." • Open daily 11 a.m. • 9:30 p.m. •
Come Join the Fun With the Big Sounds at ...
Spe cial Stars -
Favors
N ew Yea r's Eve Ce Ie b ra
f.
Entertainers ~ Gala No Reservation Needed
10 n -
W here all the ACTIO N
IS
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THE .·aRASS RAIL 160 Mt. View-AI•iso Ro3d, Near Lockheed
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Ja·guars
Ge·t - s-h~afted ·
Jagged Jottings·
In Conference Picks B y F R E D JONES Golden Gate Conference champion, City College of San Francisco completely dominated the all-conference picks, which were named las t week during a meeting of the eight league CORches and their ass istants. San Fr-ancisco landed tUne players on the confe1·ence's top 22 of-
fensive a nd defensive performers , while garnering a total of 11 participants among the 44 men picked to the mythica l aggregation. Seco nd plaee fini s hf" r s San Jose a nd Foothill fa r ed less we ll in t he voting, wi t h Sa n Jose finis hing wi t h n o first clu b J)erfo 1·m e rs a nd seven se<:o ntl s t r i n g n ominees. Foothill o n t.he othe r h a nd woun d
******************************************* ****** ALL-GO LDF~N G A 'r E CONFERENVE SELECTIONS F l ~-t Team Offf"nse Second 'l'e..'lm Offense Brad R onsonette. Diablo................. E ..... ................... .. C ra ig S hupe, SJ CC MiJ<e Taylor, CCSF....................... ... T .. ... Steve Hanraha n, Chabot
Dave Malae, CCSF -·--·-----------··--· .. ... G............. -- -· --· -.. Bob BradJey, F oothill Mike Dunne, CCSF .. Fred Wenger, San Mateo..
~':t 6~=~~~~~bot..
.. ....C ........... Ric h l\'filla n , SJ CC ... G .... ...... ... ............ Rich Colombo, CCSF
....::::::::::~::::::·:::::::::::::J~h·~T~:~~~~~i.a,F~:~11~
Bill Lerch, Foothill
np \li fh t hree fi r~t team berth s a nd fo u r sf>co nll f' lub spots.
0. J. Simpson of San Francisco and his teammate Ron Fassler paced
the
conference's
By BOB BORZON E 4----CITl' COJ.LEGE THIES
run ning
backs. both garnering the most va luable back award. CCS F 's lineman Dave MaJae \Vas also voted as the confe1·ence's most ou tstanding line stalwart. San Jose' s record setting signal caller Bob Toledo, got aced out of the first team bert h by Foothill's more versatile field general Bill Let·ch. To l c d o on the season copped GGC marks in most passes attempted, most passes comple ted, most yards accumulated passing, and most touchdown passes thrown . Lerch on the o ther hand
...........B o b Toled o, SJ CC picked up the conference standard ....... .. ... i\-Iik e Goodman, SJCC in total offense. .... .... Fred Cariss, Chabot Conference coaches also blindly ........ Larry Dumas, Oakland overlooked Jaguar end Jim Heckendorn, who led the league in reFirst T eam Defense Second T eam Defe nse Lee Evan s, FoothilL ______, ...... ...... . lnt L.. . ............Jeff Adams, Chabot ceptions and yards gained recei vTom Greerty, Diablo ...................... Int L. ...... ..... ......... ...F rank Dully SJ CC ing, not even giving him a second Curlee Robinson, Oakland ..... .. ..... I n t L. ................... B ob Kuh lma m.: SJ CC club position. Craig Shupe, SJCC's Dave M a lae .......................... ... ....... Int L ....... .. ... .. ..Jack O'Donnell Foothill speedy fla nker, was also given a Don Coppinger, Foothill . .. .... LB ......... De n nis Ha~, SJCC second team nod despite his eight Ch1·is Dav is, CCSF ................. ......... LB. ............. ............Jim Evans Foot hi1J touchdown r·eceptions. Vic Livingston, Oakland ..... .. ......... LB ....... ......... John Jenkin s, S~n Mateo Walter Harris, San Matco............. .LB. ......... .... .......... Ralph Val tis Diablo Pat Ozenne, Chabot ..................... .. ... B. .... . ....... Sa m Germany, Oakland Ron Fassler, CCSF ............................ B .......................... Eddie Muniz, Chabot Brad Ronsonctte, Di a blo ................ .. B .................. .... E u ra l S mothe r s, CCSF Most Valu able Back-0. J . Simpson, CCSF, Ron Fassler, CCSF. Most Valuab le Lineman- Dave Malac, CCSF. ~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~· ~~~~~~~··~~~~~~~~ ~ ·~·~+¥~~~ M.-~to-~~'!'#;~~
By CrRTIS HYDE
FAGGED-OUT PA RTICI PANTS in Jast week's Turh:ey Trot smile hearti ly after bag-bri.ng delicious turl;;eys fo r their J)erformance in the tro t. S hown a bove a r e: Top Row (l-r) Ben Lyo ns, fifth; Du.ve O.lsen, fourt h;
~md
Les Ta.ylo1·, sLxth. Bot tom Row, Bruce Rabjdo u, t hird;
l\tarv P arsons, second ; a nd Drwe Rojas, first . Hend gobble r Si Simonj term ed t he even t very s uccessful .
Gridders Surge Past San Mateo; Finish Campa ign w ith 5-4 Record
A clutch interception by linebacker Dennis Hagins in the final minute of play saved the day for W IRE W HEELS - R & H the San J ose City College J aguars in their season fina1 tilt wi t h ColReal Good Co nd ition lege oF San Mateo by scm·e of $100 or Best Offer 18-15. Haglns' timely t heft h:l.lted the Owner Drafted s u.rgiJ)g Bulld og'§ effo r t to score Special St ud ent Rates ln t he fi na l sec!onbs. San MateG Call 967-0406 llad g:tinetl t rem end ous mo me ntum or DEPENDABLE TV RENTALS 1 l:l.to in the fo urt h can to, clriving 25 1-4445 after 6 P.M. 386 Race Street fo r a. score wi t h less than four ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Jl!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ minu tes rem aining in the game, a ud a ppea red to be off for t he whmin g tnlt ies, befo re Hagins inter ruvt.ed t he sc hem e. San Jose drew first blood in the fray, capping a 77 yard drive in 18 pl ays with a four yard aeriaJ Wilmas Beauty Salon from Bob Toledo to end Craig Shupe. The Jaguars ke pt their ' 8 12 So. Bascom dominance in the opening period by recovering an on-side kick and ( Ae ross From County H osp. ) controlling the ball for another two minutes. High Styling Our S p~eialfy
'58 M.G. ROADSTER
·RENT A TV OR STEREO
295-8488
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
Thursday, December 2, 1965
Footba lls and Turkeys ~ Dominate lntramurals
....... QB
0. J. Simpson, CCSF ...........HB Ron Fassler,CCSF -------... -......... _____ .HB Jack Layland, Contra Costa . ......... FB..
The locaJs scored again after a fumble recovery by Ed Rossette. Quarterback Bob T oledo moved the J ags in on two plays, the final being a three yard hook-up with Shupe, San J ose took the baH again on the very next series of downs. a fter Rossette and tackle Frank DuJly blocked a CSM punt. Toledo again engineered the drive which carried the Ja gs to pay dirt in six plays, with the bell r·inger a six yard flip to 1tackle Dully. Hagins, Du ll y, an d nossctte were all cited for t heir dutch per fo rma nces, but R ic h l\lillnn, B arr y Shoda. a nd Lar ry Willi:uns we re also given Kudos fo r to1) notch e f'furt" in. the line. Coach Jim Wheelehan also felt that ~udy Guzman, who subbed inthe m1ddJe of the game for injured Mike Goodman in the backfield was worthy of praise.
At th
t t
the J aguars were favored to finish in t he cella r of the Golden Gate Conference, but as t he season progressed the San Joseans took on the role as the league's Cindere11a team. Led by the fine throwing arm of Bob T oledo, the catchi ng of Jim Hecke ndorn and Craig Shupe and the inspired running of Mike Goodman, the loca 1 g ridders hammered to a second place finish in the loop their hlghcst finis h 1-ver in GGC competilion, with a 5-2 m ark. San Jose d id have trouble in t heir initial tilts losing to Fresno (14-24_) a nd Ueed ley (14--38); Reedley g-arnering a t}c rth in the Lions Bowl in SllJlh~ Barha ra. Th e J a gs then.- got un t r acked dwnping Jeugue roes Diablo Valley (2J-12), Foothill (2 '1 -l4), Oakland (32-19, Contrn. Costa (36-13), :md San Ma.teo ( 18-15) , bn t were sadly u1le nd ed by Chabot (26-6) und for a pie<:e
The San J ose City College Bowling League, conducted at Fiesta Lanes, is rolling in fine sty le with the Wee VVillies in first place with the Champs and Rafters closing in fast. The Mudchocks, Cossack s, Keglers, Unknowns a nd Misfits follow in tbat order. Stanley of the second pla ce champs copped the high game a nd high series with a 247 mark and total of 671. Stanley has an average of 184 a nd proves to be a valuable asset to his team. l\'lein e n of t he fift h place Cossacks takes t he second plu ce hono rs with a. 233 h igh gnme a nd l\'Ia r h:s of the Champs )Jinces third with a 228 score, The first place Wee W illies stand out in the total pin category with 11 ,144 bagged pin s.
The s portsm e n seem to dominate the r ace in th a t Robi diou and Ols e n played bask etba ll a nd Ben L yons pla yed football for t he Jaguar g rklders . Les Taylor, diving champio n for the past two years, got a t ur k ey for h is efforts as shth pl ace. An interesting s ide note is that Fred Jones, ch\ssy Beaver scout, tr iJ)I)ed his way to 11th place. Bette l' luck n toxt year. Men's doubles tenni s tournament wiU be starting soon and interested r acketmen should sign up witb Coa ch Si Simo ni as soo n as pos~ s ibl e. Last date fo1· entering this event will be next Monday.
grid action ut City Cn iJ f'J.:"e has been ha.mpe retl hy rain the pa!O;t ff'w dayfo) hut J)lay will re!-OUme slwrtly. The E le ment11, The Annual S,JCC 1'ur1wy Trot hcad1•d hy l~on BrooiLc; antl Len ended last weel{ with D:wid Rojas, Gillen, grabbed th e first place t itle with a. time o·r 4:.4_9, taking first of the open 1eabrue. place. Rojas r unning a ve ry fast The Club League with topped by first lap time of 60 second8. The t he favor ed Campu s Brass, headed speedy Rojas tir ed his worthy op- by versa tile Jim Ga m a, wit h a 4-0• )JOnen ts after the first quicl;; lap m a r k The standings of both Hnd th en proc.ed ed to take t.h e t OJl leag ues a re as rollows: spot t rophy. Secontl Jllacf" w e nt to 'fhe OJtcn L eng ne 1\farvi.n Parsons who W1'estled with w L Rojus fo1· the Jag ma.tme n. 1. E lemenL<:; ..... 4 0 Bruce Robidiou sped to thir d 2. Lio n s 2 2 place a nd a tu1·key with David 3. J unkies 2 2 Olsen, Ben Lyons and Les T aylor 4. W hiz Kid s ....... following close behind. 5. Beavers .. ...... 4 lntramnr~LI
s
f th
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THE AUT HENTIC ARNO l D PAl MER CARDIGAN
GARAGE EUROPA CATERS TO THE STU DENT WHO SE EKS PERfECTION, fOR TH EIR MECHANIC S ARE TRAINED IN EUROPE FOR PERFECTIO N IN SAN JOSE.
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850 Lincoln Ave. San Jose 25, C alif.
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292-5675
BY ROBERT BRUCE
• Brake Se rvice • Inboa rd- O ut boar d Repair • Genera l Repai rs • Boat and Trai Jer Wiring
DISCOUNTS TO S.J.C .C . STUDENTS A ND FACU LTY
A choice blend ing of 50 % alpaca / 50% wool in a distinct ive links stit ch makes this the most important add1t1on to any man 's ward robe! Designed fo r year ' round comfort, it comes in a wid e va riety of the new· e st s hades. Full cut in s izes S, M, L, XL.
438 S. B<!lscom
By JIM GA.MA
San Jose City College's cross country squad qualified for the State Meet, held at American River Junior College in Sacramento, on November 27 after running their best team race of the season . The Jags quaJificd for the State Meet two weeks ago at the Northern Californi a finals, which were held at Sacramento State
c ·
for some un explain able
r eason J aguar gridd ers were . totally
fslighted in the selections. The selec tion oi Foot hill's Bill Learcl1 over san J ose's Bob T oledo ~t the q~ant~rback spo t is a_ p rime example of pali t ics bearing a weig h1ng pos1tion 1n Al l-League p1cks. Toledo wa.s by fa r the best slgnul-c11.lle r in the league, setting Je..'lglle sta-ndards 1n various depnrtme nts. \Vhe n the Jags fac ed. Foothill and Learoh , Toledo fired three touchdown bombs to pace a 21-14 vic~ tory. It is r epor ted tha t Learch d r ew t he n od because he is more of a complete ba.UpJa ye r tiL'Ln Toledo. Another word, the so called experts felt t hat t he Owl fie ld g e n e ra l was m ore of an all~aroWld t h r eat on the gridiron. A mere look at the statistics shows that th e "experts" screwed up! Toledo threw a record 17 touchdown aeria ls during the confe r en ce sea~ son and also set new mark s 1n p asses a ttempted!, p asses compl eted., yards gained by passi ng. Lea rch was far behind Toledo in all ol these categories, however, he picked up a fantas tic 190 yards on the groWld. This tremendous r u shin g effo rt, which is about h alf of what 0 . J . Simpson pick s u p ~n a sin gle game, a pparen tly js what gave h im
and
the fiirst team berth. It is also possible t hat due to the fiact fuat Foothill received a
College. Little Bob S n n d o v a. I lookc<l m ighty big as he letl the charge of'i:he locals by taking filt h among the 130, or so, Norther n Cnlif or'I nia runners and second among the BOB S ANDOVAL, t he J agua rs outsta nding ha rrier, r omps h ome to a. Golden Gate Confer ence e ntries. fifth pla ce f inish ln t he No rth er n Ca lifornia at Sacra me nto last week. The overall wi nner \vas Foothill Sandoval finished fHth out of m ore thi.m 130 entries in tliC race.
Co llege's Russ 'Ma hon . Mahon finlshed the 3.4- mile r ace with u time 9f 16 :32.5. Snndo\'al, who a ,·eraged 4: :55 pe r mil e, finis hed wit h a 16:45. Bobby a lso m ade t he AllNorthe rn Californi a\ team by finishing in t he top ten. Another bright spot was the finish of all-leaguer Don Hand. I n the words of coach Charles Baker, "Don r an his finest race ever for City Co1lege." Hand finished 16th overall and was fourlli among the GGC participants. His time of 16 :55 was · only six seconds away from the number ten man. Rounding out the rest of the field for the Jaguars were Humberto Hernandez, also an allJeaguer, taking 31st: Ralph Kearns with a time of 17:39, 47th; and
a1so had two men who didn•t fig. ure in the final scoring ( they only count the first five finishes) , they were Lee Caery 78th and Gil P a lacios 9lst. The team title we nt to F resno City c.>Uegc, who racked up o nly 36 llOints. Rh·n l I"oothill Co ll ege finish ed seco nd with G9 points. The final three teams in the to p [h•e we-re, Sacramento City College, totaling 117 points; A llle rJcn n Rive r, running their score to 147; and our own Jags who a massed 166 points to capture the munber nve spot. On Thursday, November 16, the Golden Gate Cross Country finals were held at the College of San Mateo. San Jose did very well o n the Bulldog's all weather track, Jim Rocca finishing ve• ry strong, taking s•econcl in the team stand-
•llo,. Cabrl Host Hoopsters Menlo in Weekend Frays J~~s Dl~appornt . Fa ns; ,
grabbing
67th.
The
Cinderjags. ings for the t hree mile race.
bid to the Lettuce Bowl, a game in which they wer e solidly 1:rolU1ce-<:4 the Ati-GGC selectors appare nt ly felt t h·a t the selection of Learch would be a boon 10 t he publicity angle of the g>ame. As the result ot superior ignorance on the part of the selecting: committee '8) gross injustice has •been created. All~Star picks must be based solely on the performance of the i ndividual and ·his e ffect on the- team, as outside The SJ CC record against t hese thD e uJraignsgtrtahveel ctoh't"h·;mFaosot: ;llidaanyd forces m ust be dis counted . Jaguar basketball is on !Jhe move "' this week . The San J ose five teams last year was one win a.nd T he pick of Lcareh w asn ' t t he onJy spot whe re pla ye r s of top- · two losses. The Bronco's ha.d their Alan H ancock Tournaments. In By PAZ R-OCH A four men via the fou l route. notch talent w ere overlooked in favor of J esser -tights. F o r example~ s tart ed their season last night best te..'l.m last year losing one and the NOFth-South classic the locals San Jose City College concluded San l\lateo a.nd FootJ1iU conJim Heckendorn, t he leading pass r eceiver in the GGC and in t he t op against the Santa Clara Bronco completely smashed the Jags. The start off with Long Beach CitY its water polo season on a rather trolled the Ali·Tournament selecFrosh at the Civic Auditorium. locals are gurming fo r a. win to CoiJege. \ They are the defending drab note. The Jaguars finished tion...~ as nU th e selections we re fr om ten nationally , dld.n?t e ve n r eceive h onorable m en tion . Howe\•cr, suc h The hoopsters play host to CabrilJo compe nsate for last year's loss. champions of t he last two years. fifth in the Northern Ca lifornia Foothil l or San l\-lateo. Foothill performers u.s FC>OthiU's John Callahan landed berths e ven though Co1lege and Menlo P ark this FriThe Cabrillo five beat t he hoop- In the Hancock tourney the SJCC Junior Coll~c Tournament over placetl three men on t he t.eam, t helr pass catching records we ren?t. too note wor thy. day and Saturday night at 8:00. sters In a. squeaker and the Jags five play the host of the tourney the weekend at the City College while the Bulldogs gnlned f our San Francis·c o hand!i.ly won the GGC and as a result t he selectors The Jags have looked good in their births. San Jose placed only one felt they warranted a complete dominance of the fabled s q uad. Jus t scrimmages so fiar and hope to do not want to glve t he Sen.hawks Alan Hancock . The J ags open their pool. t he satisfnetlon of winnjng ~· galn confere nce play in Janua ry. They The local water boys dropped a man on the secOnd team nnd this ~bou t every one of their star ters w as given som e sor.t ofi con sideration. c halk up some victories. t h is year. Menlo just barely lost travel to San Francisco on Jan. 4 5-4 decisi.o n to the Beavers from was f reshmnn Wayne Reek, Jim San J ose was jockeyed o u t unjushly in this year's ba Uoting, but it's tbo late to do any thing ·a bout it now. T he J ag footba llers will just T he Seah awks invade the Jaguar to t he h osts last yen.r :.m d hope to to play one of the best contenders American River to be dropped from Triplett gurne rcd un honor a ble in the conference. contention. The Jags.flad numerous mention vote. Am e rican Riv e r have to come up with s uperb ef fotlts next cafl'!paign to show league den Friday and will try to leave set t h e J a.gs in t h e Joss column. ~:.__::~_:_::~~:_:::_:::__::::::___:::::_:::::::::___:::..__::::::...:::.::::.::.:.::.:.:::..._ _ _ _ _ _ scoring opportunities to tie the placed two players on the second Oftidals that they are truly worth~ of All-League consider ation. with a victory under their belts . Playing without any scouting reports on the visitors the locals only one . will have to pla y the game by ear. The Clay-Patterson bout strayed away r-rom fix aspects this time L ast year the team from Salllta arbund, and resulrtantly it developed 1nto one of the most boring title Cruz beat a )lighly rated SJCC to four. The score was tied 4-4 at an outstanding crop returning t hat fights in many a year. squad that was rated fifth in the half time with the visitors scoring wUI have a yea r's experience. "" Patterson won the firs t round, but after that it was "K!atie bar s tate , with a last second shot. the winning tally midway in the Coac h Bob Jones will ricld a n o utt he door." Cla.y, pardon me--Moh a mmed Ali, toyed with th e ex-champ third quarter. standin~ team next year and th e Me nlo College comes into the to su ch a state tha t it borde red on sadism. San F1~ancisco is basjcall y the T he locals th en bow 1ced bu.ch: t.o "'''Y it iooks on paper this wi lt be San Jose gym with one of its best By PAT CAVATAIO The r eferee stopped t h e bou t in the twe lfth, as P a t terson w as teams ever. Havlng one of the best After much deliberation as to same type of team as L ong Beach defeat l\l odosto 9-6 for filth place one of the school's best te~tms. prn.cticaUy out on h.is teet. T he areru.~, which had been very stu ffy, players on the coast in S tu Wat- who would be a suitable opponent in that they h ave an All· American in t he t.o umey. T he Jagna_rs put sud<l en{y becam e a.ir eond.ltlonetl as Cla.y began fla pping hls ja ws. H e terson who is a retw·nee from 1ast for the powerful O.ty College of candidate in 0. J. Simpson. Simpon a. fo urt h q uarter ra..Hy to subpraLiiOC(l P atterson a s a g re at fighter , which only we n t to prove that year's championship team. Mel Sa n Francisco ''Rams," the Cam - son is a 9.7 s printer and holds the merge t he Pirates as the visitors Ali ca.n rea.Uy tell som e w h oppers. Ott is the quarterback of the bdan Park Jaycees, s(X)nsors of N a tiona l Single Game Rushi ng were leadin g at t he end of the Clay showed in the course of. eleven ronnds thart: he really does Oa ks. Ott is a left-handed guard the Prune Bowl game have se- Mark of 304 yards (break ing Motthird qu a.rter 5-3. The Aq uajags know how to fight. Even though he is regarded as an outcast by the who feeds Watterson and can also Jected Long Beach City CoJlege ley' s record) , and also leads the tbCn struck qulclc ;md fast as 'Mop ublic, one h as ~ admit tpat the~e isn't a heavyweigh t today w.ho can shoot from the outside wi th con- "Vikings" as their opponent De- nation in scor ing ~rith 128 p:Jints desto could ~ot retaliate an<l got match the ability of the c h ampion . The only individual who possibly sistency. The vjs.itors are looking cember 4 on the Sp.a'rtan Stadium in nine games. 0. J. ·is blessed TIMES prognos ticators have Itself into fo ul t rouble . could put up a good fight_a;.,aainst Clay~is- Ernie 'l'errell,--1mt-thi.! prqb- for another state birth witll" 'f;lie'y.. turf. with tremendous balance a nd is ' Tourney fa vorite Foothill sucess- completed their 1965 pigskin picka bly won 't come off for quite some time 'a s t he waiting period between went to last year and want to ha ve The Vikings finish ed second in very adept at following his block- fully defended t heir tournament ing with some top-notch records to h eavyweigh t titl€. fights usually drags o n for months . In the meantime the Jaguar s carved out as Josc rs the p owerful l\fe tro L eague, just ers. The Rams have another fine crown by edgi ng San Mateo 9-·i their credit. Sports E ditor Bob we'll just have to l·i sten to Clay in a m anner t ha·t lets it go in one ear on their record. one game behind Cerritos, whom back in Ron Fassler, who will in the game that seemed to be the Borzone raJlied to nab the crown a.n<l out the otlher. Th e wa.y it looks the st~U'tlng t hey lost to 21-15- Long Beach drive any defense ragged if they game between t he favorlt es. The by going 9-1 in the final week. Fred Jones, who held a two·game f ive for t hese encounters will be: closed out their season with a fine solely conce n trate on Simpson . The Owl s now go to the State Tourna.. Rams passing attack is currently v ASSORTED BALONEY: Fred J ones weekly Beaver Scouting Paz Rocha a.n<l Bruce Rabidou at 7-1-1 r ecord and ha..., a w eiJ-bal- not equal with the Vjkings and ment to try and take home a s tate bulge going into the finale, h ad a crown. The Bulldogs from San 5-5 week which dropped him into Report: San Mateo-nice, but non.existen t . . . . Special J ·a gged Jot- gua rds; Rod Bruck and Steve anced team. The Vikings vassing this may prove to be their downMateo may have a chance to re- second place two games off the tings bonus r e port: Squaw Valley-ver y frigj.d .. . . It's inter~league Blaser at fonva.rds; and Jim Khul- attack is led by Greg Barton who falL deem themselves. They might ha ve pace. Ray Harrison went wild on trading time in the ma-jor leagues, 1b u t apparently tihe Pittsburgh man at the center s lot. A lso going has completed 93-184 tosses lor This is the third Prune Bowl another chance at Foothill if they the upse ts to clip Pal Ca vataio for P irates don't understand the meaning. It's reported that they traded t o see a lot of action is 1tt the 1,:154: y ards ~md 10 touchdowns; game, the first one 0961) , Allan keep winning. The Stale Tourna- the third position. Paz Roch a conex·Giant Jooe Pagan to S a n J ose for 1wo crates of prunes . •. . guards l)OSitioiL'!t Da.ve Bruni and his f :worite receiver is e nd Ron Hancock beat San Mateo, 7-0, and ment is being held at Long Beach. tinued hi s fine pace, and easily Osca r Reyes; at forwards D :tvc Drake who has caught 42 pa.sses in 1962 Foothill beat Santa Rosa, I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I Olson and P ete Kendall and at th e for 485 yards and three touC"hThe third place spot was up ·for wound up in the cellar. J)OSt Den nis Reynolds. downs (Drak.e holds the National 42-13. This game is played for the grab s in the Delta vs. American The final seasonal stundings ~lre The Jaguar quinte t is losing Record of 45 r eceJ>tions) . O n the beneflit of "Children's Blood D is- River game. This was a real crowd as follows: Bob Borzonc (59-27), Cliff Walker for a questionable injured list, but t rying to come orders" and all proceeds will go to pleascl" as tl) e two teams finished Fred Jones (57-29), Ruy H a rriso n number of g ames, as he is ine1igi- around fo r this gnroe is All-Amer- the Stanford Medical Ce nter of as co-champions of the Valley Con- (53-33), Pat Cav:ttaio (52-34), a nd ble in residence rules. The league lean halfback 1\fa.rv Motley, who Research in Palo Alto. ference. The Mustang-s upended th e Pa'Z Roch a (49-37). The e ntire officials will vote on his eligibility held the slngle game rushinJ:" mark Beavers from American River by TI!.\LES sports staff will come o ut F1·iday afternoon and Cliff may go of 300 yanls. This year jn eight Go To Sc hool Ni g ht s? the score of 7-6, although it took with their bowl predictions 11ri or against the Sea.hawks from Ca- ga m es Motley has rush ed for 828 Live in and tend fwo a sudden dea th finish to do it. The to the break !'or Ch.ri ... tmas vaca· brillo. yards. children d.. ys & very score was knotted up at 5-5 at tion. small sa l11 ry the end of regula tion time. Della's
FInI'S h FIfth In T0 urn ey
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••. By Carl
We rn er Zolle n ~opf
•• • A STUDY IN LUXURY
BASCOM AUTO ELECTRIC Tune-Ups
GARAGE EUROPA
The 1965 All-GGC footbal l picks, which have recently been reoa J ames Bond thrille r , a nd as funny as a Ieased ' ar e as mysteriousti if\S JfilUrel a nd Hardy sla ps k
!"~~~.::: ~·:.~;;,hes:~a;~~ ~:~ ~:·~h~::.:.urnered Torr.•d Battle To Rage ~:~e~~:~~~=a::::ls R~~chsc:~nt~ fo~::~~o= ~~~: ~:~~e;.: ~~:;o~~i~~~~ In Prune Bowl Cia me
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Borzone Nabs Pigskin _Crown
/ j~~~~~~jii!i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliilii~liioiuis[ieiijoiiijeijeiaimip iiaii'i- gn ii Francisco of th e loop ehnmpionshiJl by San 11 (48-s f . 1
~-
Harriers Qualify for State; Take· Fifth Place in Nor-Cal
A BLACKE D-OUT JAG performer rela..xes after taking a. soothing mud -bath in the San Francisco game. He s il ently meditates to himself what a great game football rf:"ally is.
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G rapplers Boast ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l jc~o~n~ta~l~·n~i~ng~t~h~e~B~o~a~v~c~r~a~s~lh~e~y~lo~s~ll l Impressive Mark 1 297 _8648
r"'erves did an outstanding job .,r
SAN J OSE HEALTH CLUB
San J ose City College attemp ted to bel te r the ir 3-1 record when they m e l the \ Vest Valley Vi kings o n 'W ednesday December 1. The Jags recently dumped Modesto by a score of 26-21 in a big match f01· t he Jags. Top winners in the Jag triumph . were Dick Vaughn
Pe rsonal Atfention and
each victorious by way of a pin.
GJRLS
MEN Just arrived! New For beginners sweaters pants
• • • parkas • turtle necks
Look Great This Fall
Ski merchandise and Experts
• skis • poles • boots • After
SAN JOSE HE ALTH CLUB RESULTS I N 60 DA YS Ga in: 3'' on Chest 3" off Waist
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Ja·guars
Ge·t - s-h~afted ·
Jagged Jottings·
In Conference Picks B y F R E D JONES Golden Gate Conference champion, City College of San Francisco completely dominated the all-conference picks, which were named las t week during a meeting of the eight league CORches and their ass istants. San Fr-ancisco landed tUne players on the confe1·ence's top 22 of-
fensive a nd defensive performers , while garnering a total of 11 participants among the 44 men picked to the mythica l aggregation. Seco nd plaee fini s hf" r s San Jose a nd Foothill fa r ed less we ll in t he voting, wi t h Sa n Jose finis hing wi t h n o first clu b J)erfo 1·m e rs a nd seven se<:o ntl s t r i n g n ominees. Foothill o n t.he othe r h a nd woun d
******************************************* ****** ALL-GO LDF~N G A 'r E CONFERENVE SELECTIONS F l ~-t Team Offf"nse Second 'l'e..'lm Offense Brad R onsonette. Diablo................. E ..... ................... .. C ra ig S hupe, SJ CC MiJ<e Taylor, CCSF....................... ... T .. ... Steve Hanraha n, Chabot
Dave Malae, CCSF -·--·-----------··--· .. ... G............. -- -· --· -.. Bob BradJey, F oothill Mike Dunne, CCSF .. Fred Wenger, San Mateo..
~':t 6~=~~~~~bot..
.. ....C ........... Ric h l\'filla n , SJ CC ... G .... ...... ... ............ Rich Colombo, CCSF
....::::::::::~::::::·:::::::::::::J~h·~T~:~~~~~i.a,F~:~11~
Bill Lerch, Foothill
np \li fh t hree fi r~t team berth s a nd fo u r sf>co nll f' lub spots.
0. J. Simpson of San Francisco and his teammate Ron Fassler paced
the
conference's
By BOB BORZON E 4----CITl' COJ.LEGE THIES
run ning
backs. both garnering the most va luable back award. CCS F 's lineman Dave MaJae \Vas also voted as the confe1·ence's most ou tstanding line stalwart. San Jose' s record setting signal caller Bob Toledo, got aced out of the first team bert h by Foothill's more versatile field general Bill Let·ch. To l c d o on the season copped GGC marks in most passes attempted, most passes comple ted, most yards accumulated passing, and most touchdown passes thrown . Lerch on the o ther hand
...........B o b Toled o, SJ CC picked up the conference standard ....... .. ... i\-Iik e Goodman, SJCC in total offense. .... .... Fred Cariss, Chabot Conference coaches also blindly ........ Larry Dumas, Oakland overlooked Jaguar end Jim Heckendorn, who led the league in reFirst T eam Defense Second T eam Defe nse Lee Evan s, FoothilL ______, ...... ...... . lnt L.. . ............Jeff Adams, Chabot ceptions and yards gained recei vTom Greerty, Diablo ...................... Int L. ...... ..... ......... ...F rank Dully SJ CC ing, not even giving him a second Curlee Robinson, Oakland ..... .. ..... I n t L. ................... B ob Kuh lma m.: SJ CC club position. Craig Shupe, SJCC's Dave M a lae .......................... ... ....... Int L ....... .. ... .. ..Jack O'Donnell Foothill speedy fla nker, was also given a Don Coppinger, Foothill . .. .... LB ......... De n nis Ha~, SJCC second team nod despite his eight Ch1·is Dav is, CCSF ................. ......... LB. ............. ............Jim Evans Foot hi1J touchdown r·eceptions. Vic Livingston, Oakland ..... .. ......... LB ....... ......... John Jenkin s, S~n Mateo Walter Harris, San Matco............. .LB. ......... .... .......... Ralph Val tis Diablo Pat Ozenne, Chabot ..................... .. ... B. .... . ....... Sa m Germany, Oakland Ron Fassler, CCSF ............................ B .......................... Eddie Muniz, Chabot Brad Ronsonctte, Di a blo ................ .. B .................. .... E u ra l S mothe r s, CCSF Most Valu able Back-0. J . Simpson, CCSF, Ron Fassler, CCSF. Most Valuab le Lineman- Dave Malac, CCSF. ~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~· ~~~~~~~··~~~~~~~~ ~ ·~·~+¥~~~ M.-~to-~~'!'#;~~
By CrRTIS HYDE
FAGGED-OUT PA RTICI PANTS in Jast week's Turh:ey Trot smile hearti ly after bag-bri.ng delicious turl;;eys fo r their J)erformance in the tro t. S hown a bove a r e: Top Row (l-r) Ben Lyo ns, fifth; Du.ve O.lsen, fourt h;
~md
Les Ta.ylo1·, sLxth. Bot tom Row, Bruce Rabjdo u, t hird;
l\tarv P arsons, second ; a nd Drwe Rojas, first . Hend gobble r Si Simonj term ed t he even t very s uccessful .
Gridders Surge Past San Mateo; Finish Campa ign w ith 5-4 Record
A clutch interception by linebacker Dennis Hagins in the final minute of play saved the day for W IRE W HEELS - R & H the San J ose City College J aguars in their season fina1 tilt wi t h ColReal Good Co nd ition lege oF San Mateo by scm·e of $100 or Best Offer 18-15. Haglns' timely t heft h:l.lted the Owner Drafted s u.rgiJ)g Bulld og'§ effo r t to score Special St ud ent Rates ln t he fi na l sec!onbs. San MateG Call 967-0406 llad g:tinetl t rem end ous mo me ntum or DEPENDABLE TV RENTALS 1 l:l.to in the fo urt h can to, clriving 25 1-4445 after 6 P.M. 386 Race Street fo r a. score wi t h less than four ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Jl!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ minu tes rem aining in the game, a ud a ppea red to be off for t he whmin g tnlt ies, befo re Hagins inter ruvt.ed t he sc hem e. San Jose drew first blood in the fray, capping a 77 yard drive in 18 pl ays with a four yard aeriaJ Wilmas Beauty Salon from Bob Toledo to end Craig Shupe. The Jaguars ke pt their ' 8 12 So. Bascom dominance in the opening period by recovering an on-side kick and ( Ae ross From County H osp. ) controlling the ball for another two minutes. High Styling Our S p~eialfy
'58 M.G. ROADSTER
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295-8488
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
Thursday, December 2, 1965
Footba lls and Turkeys ~ Dominate lntramurals
....... QB
0. J. Simpson, CCSF ...........HB Ron Fassler,CCSF -------... -......... _____ .HB Jack Layland, Contra Costa . ......... FB..
The locaJs scored again after a fumble recovery by Ed Rossette. Quarterback Bob T oledo moved the J ags in on two plays, the final being a three yard hook-up with Shupe, San J ose took the baH again on the very next series of downs. a fter Rossette and tackle Frank DuJly blocked a CSM punt. Toledo again engineered the drive which carried the Ja gs to pay dirt in six plays, with the bell r·inger a six yard flip to 1tackle Dully. Hagins, Du ll y, an d nossctte were all cited for t heir dutch per fo rma nces, but R ic h l\lillnn, B arr y Shoda. a nd Lar ry Willi:uns we re also given Kudos fo r to1) notch e f'furt" in. the line. Coach Jim Wheelehan also felt that ~udy Guzman, who subbed inthe m1ddJe of the game for injured Mike Goodman in the backfield was worthy of praise.
At th
t t
the J aguars were favored to finish in t he cella r of the Golden Gate Conference, but as t he season progressed the San Joseans took on the role as the league's Cindere11a team. Led by the fine throwing arm of Bob T oledo, the catchi ng of Jim Hecke ndorn and Craig Shupe and the inspired running of Mike Goodman, the loca 1 g ridders hammered to a second place finish in the loop their hlghcst finis h 1-ver in GGC competilion, with a 5-2 m ark. San Jose d id have trouble in t heir initial tilts losing to Fresno (14-24_) a nd Ueed ley (14--38); Reedley g-arnering a t}c rth in the Lions Bowl in SllJlh~ Barha ra. Th e J a gs then.- got un t r acked dwnping Jeugue roes Diablo Valley (2J-12), Foothill (2 '1 -l4), Oakland (32-19, Contrn. Costa (36-13), :md San Ma.teo ( 18-15) , bn t were sadly u1le nd ed by Chabot (26-6) und for a pie<:e
The San J ose City College Bowling League, conducted at Fiesta Lanes, is rolling in fine sty le with the Wee VVillies in first place with the Champs and Rafters closing in fast. The Mudchocks, Cossack s, Keglers, Unknowns a nd Misfits follow in tbat order. Stanley of the second pla ce champs copped the high game a nd high series with a 247 mark and total of 671. Stanley has an average of 184 a nd proves to be a valuable asset to his team. l\'lein e n of t he fift h place Cossacks takes t he second plu ce hono rs with a. 233 h igh gnme a nd l\'Ia r h:s of the Champs )Jinces third with a 228 score, The first place Wee W illies stand out in the total pin category with 11 ,144 bagged pin s.
The s portsm e n seem to dominate the r ace in th a t Robi diou and Ols e n played bask etba ll a nd Ben L yons pla yed football for t he Jaguar g rklders . Les Taylor, diving champio n for the past two years, got a t ur k ey for h is efforts as shth pl ace. An interesting s ide note is that Fred Jones, ch\ssy Beaver scout, tr iJ)I)ed his way to 11th place. Bette l' luck n toxt year. Men's doubles tenni s tournament wiU be starting soon and interested r acketmen should sign up witb Coa ch Si Simo ni as soo n as pos~ s ibl e. Last date fo1· entering this event will be next Monday.
grid action ut City Cn iJ f'J.:"e has been ha.mpe retl hy rain the pa!O;t ff'w dayfo) hut J)lay will re!-OUme slwrtly. The E le ment11, The Annual S,JCC 1'ur1wy Trot hcad1•d hy l~on BrooiLc; antl Len ended last weel{ with D:wid Rojas, Gillen, grabbed th e first place t itle with a. time o·r 4:.4_9, taking first of the open 1eabrue. place. Rojas r unning a ve ry fast The Club League with topped by first lap time of 60 second8. The t he favor ed Campu s Brass, headed speedy Rojas tir ed his worthy op- by versa tile Jim Ga m a, wit h a 4-0• )JOnen ts after the first quicl;; lap m a r k The standings of both Hnd th en proc.ed ed to take t.h e t OJl leag ues a re as rollows: spot t rophy. Secontl Jllacf" w e nt to 'fhe OJtcn L eng ne 1\farvi.n Parsons who W1'estled with w L Rojus fo1· the Jag ma.tme n. 1. E lemenL<:; ..... 4 0 Bruce Robidiou sped to thir d 2. Lio n s 2 2 place a nd a tu1·key with David 3. J unkies 2 2 Olsen, Ben Lyons and Les T aylor 4. W hiz Kid s ....... following close behind. 5. Beavers .. ...... 4 lntramnr~LI
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By JIM GA.MA
San Jose City College's cross country squad qualified for the State Meet, held at American River Junior College in Sacramento, on November 27 after running their best team race of the season . The Jags quaJificd for the State Meet two weeks ago at the Northern Californi a finals, which were held at Sacramento State
c ·
for some un explain able
r eason J aguar gridd ers were . totally
fslighted in the selections. The selec tion oi Foot hill's Bill Learcl1 over san J ose's Bob T oledo ~t the q~ant~rback spo t is a_ p rime example of pali t ics bearing a weig h1ng pos1tion 1n Al l-League p1cks. Toledo wa.s by fa r the best slgnul-c11.lle r in the league, setting Je..'lglle sta-ndards 1n various depnrtme nts. \Vhe n the Jags fac ed. Foothill and Learoh , Toledo fired three touchdown bombs to pace a 21-14 vic~ tory. It is r epor ted tha t Learch d r ew t he n od because he is more of a complete ba.UpJa ye r tiL'Ln Toledo. Another word, the so called experts felt t hat t he Owl fie ld g e n e ra l was m ore of an all~aroWld t h r eat on the gridiron. A mere look at the statistics shows that th e "experts" screwed up! Toledo threw a record 17 touchdown aeria ls during the confe r en ce sea~ son and also set new mark s 1n p asses a ttempted!, p asses compl eted., yards gained by passi ng. Lea rch was far behind Toledo in all ol these categories, however, he picked up a fantas tic 190 yards on the groWld. This tremendous r u shin g effo rt, which is about h alf of what 0 . J . Simpson pick s u p ~n a sin gle game, a pparen tly js what gave h im
and
the fiirst team berth. It is also possible t hat due to the fiact fuat Foothill received a
College. Little Bob S n n d o v a. I lookc<l m ighty big as he letl the charge of'i:he locals by taking filt h among the 130, or so, Norther n Cnlif or'I nia runners and second among the BOB S ANDOVAL, t he J agua rs outsta nding ha rrier, r omps h ome to a. Golden Gate Confer ence e ntries. fifth pla ce f inish ln t he No rth er n Ca lifornia at Sacra me nto last week. The overall wi nner \vas Foothill Sandoval finished fHth out of m ore thi.m 130 entries in tliC race.
Co llege's Russ 'Ma hon . Mahon finlshed the 3.4- mile r ace with u time 9f 16 :32.5. Snndo\'al, who a ,·eraged 4: :55 pe r mil e, finis hed wit h a 16:45. Bobby a lso m ade t he AllNorthe rn Californi a\ team by finishing in t he top ten. Another bright spot was the finish of all-leaguer Don Hand. I n the words of coach Charles Baker, "Don r an his finest race ever for City Co1lege." Hand finished 16th overall and was fourlli among the GGC participants. His time of 16 :55 was · only six seconds away from the number ten man. Rounding out the rest of the field for the Jaguars were Humberto Hernandez, also an allJeaguer, taking 31st: Ralph Kearns with a time of 17:39, 47th; and
a1so had two men who didn•t fig. ure in the final scoring ( they only count the first five finishes) , they were Lee Caery 78th and Gil P a lacios 9lst. The team title we nt to F resno City c.>Uegc, who racked up o nly 36 llOints. Rh·n l I"oothill Co ll ege finish ed seco nd with G9 points. The final three teams in the to p [h•e we-re, Sacramento City College, totaling 117 points; A llle rJcn n Rive r, running their score to 147; and our own Jags who a massed 166 points to capture the munber nve spot. On Thursday, November 16, the Golden Gate Cross Country finals were held at the College of San Mateo. San Jose did very well o n the Bulldog's all weather track, Jim Rocca finishing ve• ry strong, taking s•econcl in the team stand-
•llo,. Cabrl Host Hoopsters Menlo in Weekend Frays J~~s Dl~appornt . Fa ns; ,
grabbing
67th.
The
Cinderjags. ings for the t hree mile race.
bid to the Lettuce Bowl, a game in which they wer e solidly 1:rolU1ce-<:4 the Ati-GGC selectors appare nt ly felt t h·a t the selection of Learch would be a boon 10 t he publicity angle of the g>ame. As the result ot superior ignorance on the part of the selecting: committee '8) gross injustice has •been created. All~Star picks must be based solely on the performance of the i ndividual and ·his e ffect on the- team, as outside The SJ CC record against t hese thD e uJraignsgtrtahveel ctoh't"h·;mFaosot: ;llidaanyd forces m ust be dis counted . Jaguar basketball is on !Jhe move "' this week . The San J ose five teams last year was one win a.nd T he pick of Lcareh w asn ' t t he onJy spot whe re pla ye r s of top- · two losses. The Bronco's ha.d their Alan H ancock Tournaments. In By PAZ R-OCH A four men via the fou l route. notch talent w ere overlooked in favor of J esser -tights. F o r example~ s tart ed their season last night best te..'l.m last year losing one and the NOFth-South classic the locals San Jose City College concluded San l\lateo a.nd FootJ1iU conJim Heckendorn, t he leading pass r eceiver in the GGC and in t he t op against the Santa Clara Bronco completely smashed the Jags. The start off with Long Beach CitY its water polo season on a rather trolled the Ali·Tournament selecFrosh at the Civic Auditorium. locals are gurming fo r a. win to CoiJege. \ They are the defending drab note. The Jaguars finished tion...~ as nU th e selections we re fr om ten nationally , dld.n?t e ve n r eceive h onorable m en tion . Howe\•cr, suc h The hoopsters play host to CabrilJo compe nsate for last year's loss. champions of t he last two years. fifth in the Northern Ca lifornia Foothil l or San l\-lateo. Foothill performers u.s FC>OthiU's John Callahan landed berths e ven though Co1lege and Menlo P ark this FriThe Cabrillo five beat t he hoop- In the Hancock tourney the SJCC Junior Coll~c Tournament over placetl three men on t he t.eam, t helr pass catching records we ren?t. too note wor thy. day and Saturday night at 8:00. sters In a. squeaker and the Jags five play the host of the tourney the weekend at the City College while the Bulldogs gnlned f our San Francis·c o hand!i.ly won the GGC and as a result t he selectors The Jags have looked good in their births. San Jose placed only one felt they warranted a complete dominance of the fabled s q uad. Jus t scrimmages so fiar and hope to do not want to glve t he Sen.hawks Alan Hancock . The J ags open their pool. t he satisfnetlon of winnjng ~· galn confere nce play in Janua ry. They The local water boys dropped a man on the secOnd team nnd this ~bou t every one of their star ters w as given som e sor.t ofi con sideration. c halk up some victories. t h is year. Menlo just barely lost travel to San Francisco on Jan. 4 5-4 decisi.o n to the Beavers from was f reshmnn Wayne Reek, Jim San J ose was jockeyed o u t unjushly in this year's ba Uoting, but it's tbo late to do any thing ·a bout it now. T he J ag footba llers will just T he Seah awks invade the Jaguar to t he h osts last yen.r :.m d hope to to play one of the best contenders American River to be dropped from Triplett gurne rcd un honor a ble in the conference. contention. The Jags.flad numerous mention vote. Am e rican Riv e r have to come up with s uperb ef fotlts next cafl'!paign to show league den Friday and will try to leave set t h e J a.gs in t h e Joss column. ~:.__::~_:_::~~:_:::_:::__::::::___:::::_:::::::::___:::..__::::::...:::.::::.::.:.::.:.:::..._ _ _ _ _ _ scoring opportunities to tie the placed two players on the second Oftidals that they are truly worth~ of All-League consider ation. with a victory under their belts . Playing without any scouting reports on the visitors the locals only one . will have to pla y the game by ear. The Clay-Patterson bout strayed away r-rom fix aspects this time L ast year the team from Salllta arbund, and resulrtantly it developed 1nto one of the most boring title Cruz beat a )lighly rated SJCC to four. The score was tied 4-4 at an outstanding crop returning t hat fights in many a year. squad that was rated fifth in the half time with the visitors scoring wUI have a yea r's experience. "" Patterson won the firs t round, but after that it was "K!atie bar s tate , with a last second shot. the winning tally midway in the Coac h Bob Jones will ricld a n o utt he door." Cla.y, pardon me--Moh a mmed Ali, toyed with th e ex-champ third quarter. standin~ team next year and th e Me nlo College comes into the to su ch a state tha t it borde red on sadism. San F1~ancisco is basjcall y the T he locals th en bow 1ced bu.ch: t.o "'''Y it iooks on paper this wi lt be San Jose gym with one of its best By PAT CAVATAIO The r eferee stopped t h e bou t in the twe lfth, as P a t terson w as teams ever. Havlng one of the best After much deliberation as to same type of team as L ong Beach defeat l\l odosto 9-6 for filth place one of the school's best te~tms. prn.cticaUy out on h.is teet. T he areru.~, which had been very stu ffy, players on the coast in S tu Wat- who would be a suitable opponent in that they h ave an All· American in t he t.o umey. T he Jagna_rs put sud<l en{y becam e a.ir eond.ltlonetl as Cla.y began fla pping hls ja ws. H e terson who is a retw·nee from 1ast for the powerful O.ty College of candidate in 0. J. Simpson. Simpon a. fo urt h q uarter ra..Hy to subpraLiiOC(l P atterson a s a g re at fighter , which only we n t to prove that year's championship team. Mel Sa n Francisco ''Rams," the Cam - son is a 9.7 s printer and holds the merge t he Pirates as the visitors Ali ca.n rea.Uy tell som e w h oppers. Ott is the quarterback of the bdan Park Jaycees, s(X)nsors of N a tiona l Single Game Rushi ng were leadin g at t he end of the Clay showed in the course of. eleven ronnds thart: he really does Oa ks. Ott is a left-handed guard the Prune Bowl game have se- Mark of 304 yards (break ing Motthird qu a.rter 5-3. The Aq uajags know how to fight. Even though he is regarded as an outcast by the who feeds Watterson and can also Jected Long Beach City CoJlege ley' s record) , and also leads the tbCn struck qulclc ;md fast as 'Mop ublic, one h as ~ admit tpat the~e isn't a heavyweigh t today w.ho can shoot from the outside wi th con- "Vikings" as their opponent De- nation in scor ing ~rith 128 p:Jints desto could ~ot retaliate an<l got match the ability of the c h ampion . The only individual who possibly sistency. The vjs.itors are looking cember 4 on the Sp.a'rtan Stadium in nine games. 0. J. ·is blessed TIMES prognos ticators have Itself into fo ul t rouble . could put up a good fight_a;.,aainst Clay~is- Ernie 'l'errell,--1mt-thi.! prqb- for another state birth witll" 'f;lie'y.. turf. with tremendous balance a nd is ' Tourney fa vorite Foothill sucess- completed their 1965 pigskin picka bly won 't come off for quite some time 'a s t he waiting period between went to last year and want to ha ve The Vikings finish ed second in very adept at following his block- fully defended t heir tournament ing with some top-notch records to h eavyweigh t titl€. fights usually drags o n for months . In the meantime the Jaguar s carved out as Josc rs the p owerful l\fe tro L eague, just ers. The Rams have another fine crown by edgi ng San Mateo 9-·i their credit. Sports E ditor Bob we'll just have to l·i sten to Clay in a m anner t ha·t lets it go in one ear on their record. one game behind Cerritos, whom back in Ron Fassler, who will in the game that seemed to be the Borzone raJlied to nab the crown a.n<l out the otlher. Th e wa.y it looks the st~U'tlng t hey lost to 21-15- Long Beach drive any defense ragged if they game between t he favorlt es. The by going 9-1 in the final week. Fred Jones, who held a two·game f ive for t hese encounters will be: closed out their season with a fine solely conce n trate on Simpson . The Owl s now go to the State Tourna.. Rams passing attack is currently v ASSORTED BALONEY: Fred J ones weekly Beaver Scouting Paz Rocha a.n<l Bruce Rabidou at 7-1-1 r ecord and ha..., a w eiJ-bal- not equal with the Vjkings and ment to try and take home a s tate bulge going into the finale, h ad a crown. The Bulldogs from San 5-5 week which dropped him into Report: San Mateo-nice, but non.existen t . . . . Special J ·a gged Jot- gua rds; Rod Bruck and Steve anced team. The Vikings vassing this may prove to be their downMateo may have a chance to re- second place two games off the tings bonus r e port: Squaw Valley-ver y frigj.d .. . . It's inter~league Blaser at fonva.rds; and Jim Khul- attack is led by Greg Barton who falL deem themselves. They might ha ve pace. Ray Harrison went wild on trading time in the ma-jor leagues, 1b u t apparently tihe Pittsburgh man at the center s lot. A lso going has completed 93-184 tosses lor This is the third Prune Bowl another chance at Foothill if they the upse ts to clip Pal Ca vataio for P irates don't understand the meaning. It's reported that they traded t o see a lot of action is 1tt the 1,:154: y ards ~md 10 touchdowns; game, the first one 0961) , Allan keep winning. The Stale Tourna- the third position. Paz Roch a conex·Giant Jooe Pagan to S a n J ose for 1wo crates of prunes . •. . guards l)OSitioiL'!t Da.ve Bruni and his f :worite receiver is e nd Ron Hancock beat San Mateo, 7-0, and ment is being held at Long Beach. tinued hi s fine pace, and easily Osca r Reyes; at forwards D :tvc Drake who has caught 42 pa.sses in 1962 Foothill beat Santa Rosa, I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I Olson and P ete Kendall and at th e for 485 yards and three touC"hThe third place spot was up ·for wound up in the cellar. J)OSt Den nis Reynolds. downs (Drak.e holds the National 42-13. This game is played for the grab s in the Delta vs. American The final seasonal stundings ~lre The Jaguar quinte t is losing Record of 45 r eceJ>tions) . O n the beneflit of "Children's Blood D is- River game. This was a real crowd as follows: Bob Borzonc (59-27), Cliff Walker for a questionable injured list, but t rying to come orders" and all proceeds will go to pleascl" as tl) e two teams finished Fred Jones (57-29), Ruy H a rriso n number of g ames, as he is ine1igi- around fo r this gnroe is All-Amer- the Stanford Medical Ce nter of as co-champions of the Valley Con- (53-33), Pat Cav:ttaio (52-34), a nd ble in residence rules. The league lean halfback 1\fa.rv Motley, who Research in Palo Alto. ference. The Mustang-s upended th e Pa'Z Roch a (49-37). The e ntire officials will vote on his eligibility held the slngle game rushinJ:" mark Beavers from American River by TI!.\LES sports staff will come o ut F1·iday afternoon and Cliff may go of 300 yanls. This year jn eight Go To Sc hool Ni g ht s? the score of 7-6, although it took with their bowl predictions 11ri or against the Sea.hawks from Ca- ga m es Motley has rush ed for 828 Live in and tend fwo a sudden dea th finish to do it. The to the break !'or Ch.ri ... tmas vaca· brillo. yards. children d.. ys & very score was knotted up at 5-5 at tion. small sa l11 ry the end of regula tion time. Della's
FInI'S h FIfth In T0 urn ey
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••. By Carl
We rn er Zolle n ~opf
•• • A STUDY IN LUXURY
BASCOM AUTO ELECTRIC Tune-Ups
GARAGE EUROPA
The 1965 All-GGC footbal l picks, which have recently been reoa J ames Bond thrille r , a nd as funny as a Ieased ' ar e as mysteriousti if\S JfilUrel a nd Hardy sla ps k
!"~~~.::: ~·:.~;;,hes:~a;~~ ~:~ ~:·~h~::.:.urnered Torr.•d Battle To Rage ~:~e~~:~~~=a::::ls R~~chsc:~nt~ fo~::~~o= ~~~: ~:~~e;.: ~~:;o~~i~~~~ In Prune Bowl Cia me
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Borzone Nabs Pigskin _Crown
/ j~~~~~~jii!i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliilii~liioiuis[ieiijoiiijeijeiaimip iiaii'i- gn ii Francisco of th e loop ehnmpionshiJl by San 11 (48-s f . 1
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Harriers Qualify for State; Take· Fifth Place in Nor-Cal
A BLACKE D-OUT JAG performer rela..xes after taking a. soothing mud -bath in the San Francisco game. He s il ently meditates to himself what a great game football rf:"ally is.
* *
G rapplers Boast ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l jc~o~n~ta~l~·n~i~ng~t~h~e~B~o~a~v~c~r~a~s~lh~e~y~lo~s~ll l Impressive Mark 1 297 _8648
r"'erves did an outstanding job .,r
SAN J OSE HEALTH CLUB
San J ose City College attemp ted to bel te r the ir 3-1 record when they m e l the \ Vest Valley Vi kings o n 'W ednesday December 1. The Jags recently dumped Modesto by a score of 26-21 in a big match f01· t he Jags. Top winners in the Jag triumph . were Dick Vaughn
Pe rsonal Atfention and
each victorious by way of a pin.
GJRLS
MEN Just arrived! New For beginners sweaters pants
• • • parkas • turtle necks
Look Great This Fall
Ski merchandise and Experts
• skis • poles • boots • After
SAN JOSE HE ALTH CLUB RESULTS I N 60 DA YS Ga in: 3'' on Chest 3" off Waist
ski boots
I" on Arms
2" on Thighs
Ga in or Lose
• gloves
12-1 5 lbs.
Complete Renta_l And Children's departments
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MEN MEN
MER IDIAN A VENUE JO SE 2 4, CALI FORNIA
go
(
b~~th Coke --· Botlleel under th@ authority of The Coca·Cola Company by:
Coca·Cola Bottling Company ol San Jose, San Jose, California
ll
When Glenn Yarbrough sings, the room vibrates with pulsating excitement. This new album is a superb display of his ability to sing any kind of song and make it seem as if it were composed just for him. It's a complete evening's entertainment with twelve different numbers including the title song plu s "Ring of Bright Water," " An Island of the Mind," " Down in the Jungle," "So metime s," "Never Let Her Go"and " Half a World Away:' Sit back in the best seat in the house and treatyourselftoa really great show~
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SPECIAL SKI PACKAGES
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286·6100
' 244·7300
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(115!, Bob Gow (123), Terry Stager (137 ) , and Irv Rosenberg (167), Jim Blatt (145) and
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Ma~-v Par-
sons (167) won by decisions of 6-3 and 8-7. By the way this was the first match for Irv Rosenberg since returning from active duty as a Jaguar gridder. Parsons, Va ughn. GO\v and Rosenberg are all sporting unblemished records.
~
TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU :
Town & Countr y 840 Town & Country Villa ge San Jose, Calif.·
Lo se: l " off W 8ist I" off Thigh 3'' off Hip 12-15 lb•. Wt.
2" on ] 11 en 2" on 3" o n
Lift Safety Cable ...................... 8.95 Regularly $45.40
Downtown 244 So. 2nd st. Sa n Jose, Calif.
RESULTS IN 60 DAYS
Ga ifl :
Fischer Alpine Delux~ ................ $29 •95 Flair Toes by Markt;r ................ 6.50 Head Re pair 1: S.rvl ce Do pt.
lOOK YOUR BEST FOR FALL
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Charq•
••
THE SKI O UTFITIERS
EXERCISE IN
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San Jos~ Health Club
San Jos~ Health Club
413 E. Santa C lara St. Call 29S-9910
41 3 E. Santa Claro St. Call 295-991 0
Fin•d selection of ,k; equipment and c;lo~th01
, • CDfl'tplv!a r .. ntJJI ~l!r'f'ICiit
4-lD s w,n~;h e ste r • 244-0860 Opposi te M~sl erJ Hou,•, Su Jose
Thurs~ay, becember 2, 1965 r ·~e·ceive
Turiey 'Dinner
Needy Families Happier
law Enforcement Training Acad~my
Women Form Cage Team
Thanks to Campus Clubs ~~~~:~~~~~ "Les Bluettes," the women 's honor society, and the Cosmetology Club of San Jose City College, made some needy f-amilies a little happier Thanl<sgiving Day, by pre~ senting them with complete ''tur~ key and all the trimmings," dinne1·. The families were selected from the Woodrow \Vilson Junior· Hjgh School area, and t he Brandon H ouse of the Sanla C1m'a Welfare Agency. " \Ve provided the e nti re tlinTHANKS TO THE COMBINED _E FFORTS of Les Bluettcs women's honorary society, and t11e Cosmeto logy Club, needy r~tmiJie~ in San ta ners," said 11 LCS Bluettes" c hairCla r a .comtty we re tl·eated to a Tha nksgivi ng dbmer with aJJ t be mfill Lore tta Reyes, "including t h e tTinumngs. Shown he r e a r e Lc:s lUnettes members Loretta R eyes a nd tablecloth and d ecorations." T h e Geam1e 1\'fort.1.one displayin g their food basket. --"'-""=::::...===::::..."-'-""-"X::J!~~C!_..~~~~~----------1 25 member group co ntributed S1 e<LCh wor t h of canned goods and other dinne r preparations. The tur-
keys were contri buted by Jten a Fru.bon y and Linda. Davis, so<'iety ad , ;sors. For the Cos m e to 1 o g y Club, Thanksgiving baskets have been
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COLLEGE RELATIONS Dl RECTOR 1 cjo Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
I I I
Please rush me a free She raton Student I D Card (or a free ~ac~lty G~ es t Card) in time for the holidays. 1 understand 1t will ent1tle me to generous discounts all year long at most She rato n Hotel s and Mo tor In ns .
1
Address
N am~---------------------------------
L
_D_ St_ ud ont
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____ __ Te.>cho. o _ _ _ _ _ ...J
Keyed·up students unwind at Sheraton ... and save money with this free Student ID Card Sheraton Hotels &Motor Inns@
given annually for the past six years. They have received many letters of "thanks," from t'he de· servin g an d very appreciative fam · ilies. All the s tudents in the Cosmetology Club partjcipatcd by filling a basket containing enough
SPECIAL'!!
V2
Pric:e for a week to anyone bringing in two new people.
POCKET BILLIARDS 1719 S, Bascom
San J ose
grad uated 32 law enforcement offood for a family of six. 1\.'farlia ficers recenlly. The 32 graduates Dodson. was hospitality chairman J'epresent four police agencies in of the clubs Thanksgiving Day Santa Clara Coun ty. charity. The 10·week training course is Lois Lf'e , of the Co~meto l ogy co nducted by CC's d epart111ent of Club said, "They're a lways e ntllu· Ja w enforcement, and is atte nded si!tstic nOOut he lr,ing, nnd Utey ar1• b_y fu ll -time Jlolice officers who Ute first to thJnk or it. I never hn.ve been st."lt>C'tt-d by their own h iLVe to prompt them." deJu\rtment..s to :t.ttend the t'la'-;ses duJ'ing their workin g hours. Representin g the San Jose Police Depat·tment in lhe ce,·emonies wh ich took place in the college theater: Jerry Albel"icci, Rjchard Area, Dave Batholomew, Charles New pledges for Beta Phi Gama Belveal, Charles Blackmore, Louis Honorary Journalism Fraternity Cobarruviaz, Dave Crandall, Mich~ have been announced tcx:lay in a ael Destro, John Diehl. Bruce Fair, Paul Farlow, who was the clasS membership meeting. , Rob Borz.onP, Bill Bny1ey. Rosa- president; Pete Guedn, Ken Herrlie Castello, Linda Czuj, Ron Gree n, mann, Bruce Hodgin, John Kracht, Curtis Hyde, Kathy Moore, L ee Jack Morris, James McElgunn, Norman, )fike O 'Co nnor, and Jim J ames Silvers , Gary Thompson. Schroeder are t he students under Joseph \>Veinreb, J ack Woodal, consideration. Ron Williams, and John Trussler. The graduates who represented To qualify, students must have a 2.6 grade point average, l1ave t he Santa Clara County S heriff's taken at least two journalism Department ~lr e: ~ li c hae l Fine, COUI'Ses, and "express interest an(} Ja.m es 1'ower-s, and Je.l;Ulue Vogel. enthusiasm fOT· journalism." J an Duke, Timothy Hart, Mi~ The High Sch6ol Press Associa- chael Koop, Floyd Worley, and tion and the Ladies Man on Cam- Myron Zaccheo J'ept·escn ted the pus conle:-.t ar-e included for this C ity of Sa n ta C lara Police Depart· •1l€\.'ll''s slate of f1·atel'nity uctivi· mcn t, and Don Stefcmi hailed f1'0m ties. _!--he Campbell Police Depurtment.
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WHITE STAG
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MEGGI
l!)
UJ
BOGNER
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I )>
z
tB"'
2
SKIING TIME
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IS HERE!!
"'0
0
"T1
r )>
(Ski Reports : Good to Excellent)
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UJ
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Stop in a t Son Jose's largest and finest · ski headquarters and get ac:quainted.
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"ComplPte line
of all Sports
Sport Shop 3151 Alum Rock Ave.
REG.
10.00
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Equ.ip~nf•n t "
•
Ski
Shop Pho ne: 258·5305
· Under Collier Bill
P,etitions Due For Spting ASB Offices
TRO.l"H~
WJNNIXC? S'I'YL}: is displaye_<l by Shirley Silveria, gradu-
ate of Ctty Co_Uege _m 1963. :\Irs. Silverm is returnJng to campus 88
a teac her tramee 111 t-h e cosrnetolog-y depa1·tment. Fo llowing two years Jn the fi e_ld as a licensed bca uticia.n, !\Irs. Silveria will be in a te1\Cher training progra m for two semesters and in vocatlonat tra.tnJ (()r one semest er befo1·c co mple ti ng he r teachlng require ments at thn: Uui vt! rsiLy of Cali (orniu.
Cosmetology Trainee Silveria Returns to City in New Role Returning to her alma mater, not as a student but as a teacher trainee, Shirley Silveria, 22, of San Jose, has realized her life's fondest dream . An outstanding cosmetology s tudent, Shirley received her AA degree fmm San Jose City College in 1963. She has been very success· ful as a licensed beauty operator for the past two years.
"I h.:we received su,>eri or trabt-
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29!z.
6
ing ns a. student. and would lilie to
WE RENT HEAD SKIS
(See Page 2)
~-~-.-~----------~N~o-.:9--------------------------------~~S~A-N__J_O-SE-.-C-A~_.L-IF_O_R_N_I_A_,-TH_U_R~S~D~A-Y-.-N-O_V_E_M_B-ER--IB-,-~-9-65----------~------~---,.-.~ --------------~P-no_n_e_2-98--2~1~8-l/~a-t.-2~3~0
Journalism Society Announces Pledges
"'0
<lii t~ ([olltgt .~i mt1t
(See Page 4}
Unusual English Class
be a ble t.o give my futnr e stud en ts t he same kind of trai ning," Sh irley expJained, as her drc:t.n1 to retu rn to t he San Jose City CoJiege Cosmetology Department came true, The [eachcr trainee program Shirley is involved with consists of two years of actual work experience in the field after receiving the AA degree, ~wo semesters of
FRE
teacher training in a jun ior college, one semester of vocational classes. She will complete the vocational course requlrements at the University of Ca li(ornia next semeste r. \Vh.ile a. s tml ent, Shirley woa t wo t rollhies !'or outstanding hair· styling, as well as n $1 00 sch.larship t o 'fm·ther her studies in advanced styling. Carrying her excel· lent work and interest into t ile professional field , she won tour more trophies in hairstyling competitiOn. As a member of the San JQ!E! affiliate of the Natio na l Cosmetology Association, Shirley was sele·c led to be a member of the San Jose Hairstyling Panel. The 2()-.member panel is respon sible for introducing ne\\1( hair styles to the association. · Sh~ley, a native San Josean. hopes to teach at a junior college in the area wh~n she completes her training program. "My prefer· ence,'' she sai_d, "is naturally San Jose City College." and
,~,
HONDA
~~~1._,-1-
.it:
0
t/1
q,.
'f;.C E~"-{c;
••
THE SKI OUTFITTERS
~~
fine~t selectio n of ski equi pment artd clothes . . complete renta l service. 440 S. W,inchester e 244.(JBIO Opposite Mystery House, San Jos•
Drawing Christmas Eve ($2.00 Mini{l'l um Purchase for Ticket)
·sMART'S MOBIL SERVICE 610 S. BASCOM AT MOORPARK 298-4864 10% Discount on all items (except gasoline} for students and faculty of San Jose City College.
f:Ulo:sJEREOS
!. "'
i
$6995
• Tapes $2.98 and up
I
• Complete Line of Pre-Recorded Tapes • Custom Recordings for All Models • SOc Discdount to A.s.1. Card hol ers on a 11
~ ~
iTAP~;to;;~~~;~~E
l
3144 ALUM ROCK AVEN UE
Phooe 259·5488
~ ·
Typewriters as little as
20' PER DAY
Quality tune-ups, brake adjustment, ·lube and smog control units serviced - tires, batteries and accessories.
TRY OUR RENT TO OWN PLAN-HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM
MODERN OFFICE MACHINES C:O.
124 E. San Fernando Next to Calif. Book Store
a
Students May Have To Repay State For Their Education '
"PetitionS for Associated- Student BodY omces must be filed by Mon· daY, November 22, in the Student services o.f.fice. Flfty s ignat ures o f activity card h olders are nec':sary to place a person on t he pr1mary pallot. There are five offices open to nominees. ASB President, ASB Vice-President, ASB Correspond~ iJlg SecretarY. Freshman Class ~de:nt, and Sophomore C~ass president. Candida tes -are requiTed to have a 2.0 grade point average for t he semester previous to tho o ne in which they seek office. They mus t also have a 2.0 GPA on their work ~in-progress at the time they file their petition to run for office Or become a write-in candida te. Aspirants mu st have activity cards.
be due when his income reaches $4,000 per year, if he is sing le, or $5,000 per year if he is married. A person holding a masters de~ gree will not be required to begin payment'i until his income reaches $5,000 per year if he is sing le, or $6,000 if he is married. DOC•rORATE F or persons holding a doctorate, VAJtlABL}J R EPAYMENT the paym.e nts wi ll begjn when l1is The bill provideS for a variable income 1·eaches $7,000 per· -year, rerepayment pla n .based on Lhe de· gardl ess of his marital s t a t u s. gree the student earns, his madThese figures reJa[e only to l he ta l status, ana his income after time 1hat paymenL'> ·begin. In adgraduation. r n the case of a perdition there is a maximum income NOMINATIONB son holding a bachelors degree or lhut, when reached, makes th e less, ten per cent of the note will The Nomhuttion Assembly will FOUR EDUCATIONAL LEADERS from Gertnnny on tour of the United St~:Ltes und er the auspices of tota l note balance immediately be held 'ru escl-a y, Nu \1ember 20, a.t t he Depnrtment ol Health, Education a nd Welfare came to Sa.n J ose yestercJa.y to inSJ1~t the program payable. This is in the a 1-ea o f offered at San Jose City Coll ege. H er e City Coll ege President H. R. Buchser, s~ond fl·om left, greets ,1 ~ :t.m. in the Quad. The Crutdi~ the visitors, leJt to right: Dr. Ha.us H. Deis.~,jJer, stn,te ins1:.ector or secondary s c h o o I s, DeutSch land, $21,000 per yem~ for bache iOI'S and masters degtee holde1-s, and> $3·1,000 dates' Ra ll y is s c h e d u l e d for Germa.nJ; D1·. R-olf E. Hauer, Ueput:y state director, school section or Dowe r s:--xony, Hannover, ~~r ma.ny; Hanns J(essel, state supervisor of schools, Bremen, Germ any; and \ylnJneU Borg1~n1nn, Engln;h, ~r year for doctors . Thu.rslhLy, D ecember 2, s11Jlle time, Latin :md Physkal Education instructor a.t a coll ege pre pnrut.ory schoo1 m Mwtster, Ger!ua ny. City NJ;W C O;NCEI~ _aame phiee, as is the President',s College is the only junior college t he group will visit during tlwlr two-month tour of A1uencn.. 111is i s a new concept in educa· Debate, 'l'uesdu.y, December 7. lion as far as California is con ~ cerned, but 45 out of the 50 s tates The primary election, Wednes.day,\December 8, will decide t hose Leland L Medsker, vice-chairman of the Univers ity of California have a progrnm simila r to this one. contests where there are o nlY' two Center for• the Study of Higher Educa tiion at Berkeley, called fol' Although the bill failed Lo gain enOugh support at the last sess ion nominees. In those with more tJhan more job tra ining courses in California junior colleges in a talk to 500 of the legisla ture, it may be r·etwo candidates, a general election j unior college officials and fa cul ty members recently. in tnxluced ,in future sessions. Monday, December 13, will pit the Medsker, the state's leading exAny person interested in obtW n~ two in each div is ion receivi ng the pert on junior college education, it is h ard to decide which studen ts Plan~ to redesign t he SJCC cam · build another one. The Evergreen ing information about this bill, ~reatest number of votes in t he t old the assemb1y that in th e con- should go to them. The present pus and construct a n associ a~e area, in east San J ose, seems to J ack E llis, chairma n of t he San temJX)rary world, most young peo- junior college, he added, is the the "Learn Earn, and R eimburse primary. Plan," rna; receive a. copy o f the college are soon to be negoti ated, be a li kely site for the next cam:Jose City Co11 ege Business De- ple need an education be-yond high place where many students face EXPENSES bill by writing to the California says Richarcll Goff. The Citizens pus. partment, has stated the dire need sch ool. However, he continued, for the first time tile decision Campaign expenses per camll- Advisorjll Committee recently met legdslature and asking for assemb~ "Our campus can not h old the most junior colleges tend to ignore whether to pursue an academic or date may not exceed $70 for both. and determined that City College fu ture growth of this district," of a two-year curriculum for an ly bill number 600. the primary an<l general election~. not only needs to redesign its accordi ng to Richard Goff. assist- Associates in Arts degree in the vocational programs and maintain a vocational curriculum, and both techni cal a nd academic programs, sh ould be available there. An rite.mized expense sheet is to 1Je current campus, but also needs to ant superintendent of business Real Estate field for students in {rom w~hich rq.any student s cannot turned into tile Commissioner of services. " Therefore it is manda- the- San J ose etey· ollege '!liS"' benefit. Eiections by 5 p.m. t he day of the ~ tory tha£somethi ng be dorfe aw." H e proposed that the California B id s for the Sophomore class SJCC has called u pon the inter~ trict. primary and aga in the day or the Peter Fraus ich, CC counselor. ,. Winte r Formt~l s h oul d be ordered nationally know firm of Skidmore, Charles WUcle r, a lso nssocin.teil Junior College Association conduct &Cneral election. 1n advance of sule da ys, class Owjngs and Merri ll to do t he job. the business depart m ent of tills a study of students wilh culturaJ h as been asked by the Jun.i or ColA survey of City College student Limits on campaign materials President Tom Bouska a-nnounced An example of their wol'k is ill'le college, called a. meeting to deter- and educa tional defic iencies to de- lege Council to ser ve as chairma n counseling s hows 17,304 contacts termine h ow lhe present program of tJhe personnel Policies and Pro-!1-re: 15 posters, 22" x 28"' or 15 in ICC last Tuesday. "There are Crown Zellerbach building in San mine whether a R ea l Estate curwere m ade during !Jhe 1964-~5 photos, 8" x 10", or any combina~ bids available for only 150 (',ou ples, Francisco. riculwtl! WitS n.eec.lccl a nd w h a . t can be changed for their benefit fessiona l Standards Committee- of year. Progra m planrung a nd cha ngH e said that many young people the CounciL t;ton; -§,000 throw-a.ways, not to ex- an<l since t ills is the biggest dance SJCC has, in the last month, courses ami. other aspects would ing appears as t he student's main Because of his "exceptional tal~ ceed 4" x 6"; and five banners, or the year, t hey go fast and should h ad p eo p 1 e 1irom six different be~t serve t h_e needs or both the today aren't emp loyable immediconcern, accoun t ing for 48.2 pel·ately after leaving hjg h school, 2' X 8'. be reserved." Sales be~;in Decern- countries on campus gettin g ideas studentB and th e real estate incent of the survey. Long range ber 6. Cost will be eith er four or (rom th e cam pus curriculum. dustry. A Real Estate Advi.sory and that social pressures will inPROSECT APPROVAL educational planning covered 10.2 creasingly require n early all All plans for special projects nve dollars per couple !or th e States Goff, "We are curricularly Com.mittee inc luding E<lward V. youngsters to continue their edupercent, and generaJ informatio n, must be approved by the Commis- floating dunce, which will IJe held one of the leading junior colleges Jacobsen, Char I e s D . 1\lonroe, cation beyond high school. 8.9 percent. Poor scholarship counSa.tu.rda.y, December 18. The Har· in the state, and t herefore one of Howanl W. Ra.thbLm, Bill Gilbland, seling accoun ted fo1· 4.1 percent Of sioner of Elections five days beMedsker is opposed to separate bour Prince will leave Fisherman's the best in the n at ion. "Conse- It h e t t Dcehan and Rlcha rd ~f. the total, while outs tanding schol. fore the e lection. vocational schools because, he said, Failure to eom()Jy with nny one \Vharf at exactly 9 p.m., and r e- quently, we h ave chosen excellent Stark, who are loca.l San Jose arship sessions were li mited to 5 of these regulations will c:mse dis- turn to the dock at midnight. architects to design buildings we banks, in suril-llce (•omp~mJes, and percent. Students counseled for personal can be proud of." commercia.l and inve stm ent r ealties Inst ructors Starting ::_ Once a contract is received from we re ))resent a t t he m eeting. problems amounted lo 4.6 percent, B'lo og'lca useum Skidmore, Owings and Merill, a and t hose with complaints about master plan will be drawn up a nd Stark pointed out that the Uni~ John Hassur and Leon Papkoff personnel or policies came to j ust a bond electio n wi11 take place in versity o( California was no long~ of the City College biology de1Jart6 percent. Those seeking employ.. February 1966. Construction will er offering the basic Re'al Estate ment a1-e slarting a mounted bird ment counseling were unusuaJly cbeesg·si·n[uli.n 1969 if lhe bond is sue- certificate program it once did. and an imal museum al San Jose small in number, totaling only 8 Instead the Uni versity left this State College. percent. The survey also discloses one sidelight. Apparently spring causes students lo feel much less conPete r FranusiclJ . .. the S J h a lready taxiderm man Ue pieces of birds or cerned about their schooling, as Pbet Alan Ginsberg a Buddhist debate. Most or t he motorcyclists expres:d animals. They are wi lling to put·· ents" the Council would like hlm voluntary interviews for the month peace ch ant, and tw~ t iny brass came from t~e San Jo~~e g~oyu;~ aL jobs that aJ·e open and! ready chase or accept as a gift, any con- to attend the CT A ( CalifmTria of April were extremely lower than cymbals drew attention, as 3,000 the Night Rid ers a nd (or real estaet degree students. Te'B.chers Association) m eeting on the rest of the year. tributions. November 19 al Parnada Inn, near Students called in for counsel· •tucten ts, including many Ci ty Col- J okers. the International Ail"JX)M. ing,- as well as those w ho came In lege studen ts, crowded in to the Ginsberg contended that the The Council is composed of JC volunta1'ily were covered by the San J ose State cafeteria last Fri· H ell 's Angels would physically at· . . CI'A chapter p1-esidents. CfA is survey. lt was released by May day to escape the rain and to heal' bl" Laws agamst lhe burrung of ' tack pol ice, the press, the pu IC, taking care of aU the expenses, Duignan, Dean of Studenl Services. debat es between molorcycle gmups draft cards could be deemed una nd the Vi et Nam Day Committee. Ol" the marchers dul'ing a which includes flight both w ays. constitutional, according t_o Rep. The meeti ng will discuss teacher There was only one representa· peace march, Fl'iday, Nov. 20, m Don Edwards, San J ose congress' central theme was provided by the evaJ ua tion. tive of the H ell's Angels at the Berkeley. man. That rai n that poured down One Gypsy Joker rerused lo give He said that it a test case went over the weekend did not dampen book "Wa lden U," which had to do . name as other than Rich , fo1- before the U.S. Supreme CoUJ·t, the spirits of the 64 students and with a positive utopia. '11 ltls- semester's i\f erchandislng 1liS Discussions centered around the f the court would probably rule the faculty members who pat•ticipated Club is in the mldst of a. very Vandalism in the student union '"g a motorcycl ing custom o questions would such a utopia 10\v u• federal Jaw was un constitutional in the Fall Academic Retreat. actl\·e season, according to Ea.rlia- is becoming a problem, according work, as presented by the authO!;', onJy g iving his nickname. "It's because it violated the right of free The towering t-edyvoods and rus~ to Dave Di Benedetto, commis~ B. F. Skinner; would it have nega- menta rU•n AI P eponls. . eas ier that wa y when the trOUble speech. tic log cabins of Camp \Vasiata, tive- or positive value; would il be · Club members are look a~ for· sioner of the student union. In a starts," he expla ined. "A person has the right to make near La Honda, set the scene for a possible solulion to lhe problems wa.rd to their annua l nustletoe recent motion before the s tudent ked if he would fight in Viel a gesture of pt-otest. such as s hak· in tense discussion of the theme, · · t ., hunt t"lae end o f November. Alter council. Di Benedetto asked for As m our socte y . · . ing his fists," stated Edwards. "The Future: Ma n vs. Society.'' "Growing Up Absurd," the olher co llecting large quan.btles of mls-- special powers to deal with the Nam, Rich, a Navy veteran, re· Some college students th roughout Discussions or variations on the book providing djscussion material, t ie toe in the motmta.ins, ~ost:! problem. · plied, "I'd go over right now to the country h ave demonstrated cen tral theme were not limited to Di Benedetto said that while at presented the ills of OUI' society as be so ld for profit to reta ou e fi ght if _I could take mY motor~ theil· protest against American the formal periods held Saturday · in San J ose. the present time vanda lism is not military action in Viet Nam by morning and afternoon, but were its author, Paul Goodman sees Also on t he agenda for this se- serious, he feels that it is increas~ cycle." burning the ir draft cards. This is continued informally all durin g the them. mester is a Christmas Banuuet ing. H e wanted authority to deal He said the VDC's protests were j ust another symbol of protest, two days. No specific conclusions were Decem ber 8, which wiU be at the with the trouble without going because "They have equated with shaking one's fists, Tbe retreaters viewed the Japa - reached by the participants, but Prelude Dinner Club. The club through the council. not J.US tif"ed I ' nese film, "Dd Ru" on Friday most felt t h at the opportunity of members will work off the calories a right to vote, the President is in some people's opi nions. ASB p resident Tom Beatty apMr. Edwards is a member o[ the night, after which there was an exchanging ideas had been very gained u.t th.is dJnner-aad-danCing pointed a fi ve man committee to ed so t hey should stick by I t , eec House Judiciary Committee and informal discussion over coffee be n e f i c i a I. The weekend was evening by going on two club work in conjunction with the union him." termed "a great success' by He. sponsored ski trips to Lake Tahoe director a nd Robert Ryan and the also chairman of lhe Americans and cookies. during Christm:.1s vacation. for Democratic Action. After th e English movie, ''The treat Chairman Curt Hodgkinds. commissioner. Marc Marcus, P sychology inThe club, trying for the chab A German co nve rsa.tiona.l grou)l CC ALU!Ul\'US K en n e t h E. Speaking of the Viet Nam con- Ang ry Silence," shown on SaturDi Benedetto reported Lhat dam· Stephenson has been named gen- will meet every T uesday in Room troversy, t he congressman said day evening, t he g roup sPent the structor, received the title "Was- spi ri t trophy awarded e' 'ery semes· age was due to "irres}X)nsibiUty eral agent .f or the Bankers Life 27 according to Doctor Charlotte that he was definitely a gai ns t fur- time in relaxation and casual con- itata W arrior" for contributing ter. has worked for the blood and a Jack of concern for student 0.f N ebraska.'s San Jose office. 1\(~ntandon. Anyone interested In ther bombing of North Viet Narn. versation, while some of the mem· most tb the discussions. "Watiusa dri\re, put on a. Dr. Casey-Kildare property." ~tevhen son, who now resides in Witch" was the title a w arded to skit ror the blood drh·e rally last He plans to place "subtle .. signs OS <?atos. joined the insurance one hottr of speakin g entirely Ger- " While I'm not the get-out~of- bers furnished en ter tai nment. ~rm rn 1957 after attending San man is invited sh.e s~tid. Vietnam-type,' Edwards said, "I The conversations were anythi ng student, Susan H aas, for havi ng week worked a.t the pledge card around the union. If th is move is received the most benefit from lhe tal}les' ami'' Iona.'-"DU •-• 18 ·" ~e quantities jneffective then he may remove ~se City College. .He is a. n1en1Thi:l provill.e s a n op)lOI'tuni ty to feel that a ny esca lated bombing of bu t casual during the day, when th r of Delttt. Sign1a frat.e rnity, discussions. The titles were award~ of blood. Private club-spOnsored any piece of damaged furniture, North Vjet Nam will bri ng both those on the retreat J)ractice broke the up into trmguage, in addition e Campbe ll Chamber of Com\•ltles. are a.lso well atte ncJ.e,d. · th 1 .. ~rce, the l\·Ten 's Club of St. to nmulenlic study_, arcordin.g to commucist China and Russia into five formal discussion groups in ed at an informal party after the fes't' :;.;;"~..;_~========;;;;· eventually emptyJng e ounge. iii a:~nels. Co.brini C hurch, and is Sl)()kesmen. t he conmct." the morning and afternoon. The group returned Sunday evening. V ve m the Red C ross. the nited lfuntt, and the l'lliCA.
New legislation t.h at would re-quire students to reimburse t he state for lheir use of public institutions of higher learning h as been proposed. Assemblyman J ohn Collier (R-Pasadena) recenlly introduced a bill to the California legislature that would! require students attending state colleges and universities to pay a spec i fie d amount rf()t" the instruction they receive. The prop6sed program wou 1d require studen ts who we1·e unable to pay for instruction at lhe lime of enrollment to reimburse the state
Go//
Discloses Plans To Redesign Campus
AA Degree Sought In Rea IEstate f •leld SayS Jack EIII•S
on an installment basis, aft er leaving t he college. The student will be required to sign a nole in fa vor of the state, which will carry a six per cent interest, and will be- issued a life insu rance policy, with the state named as be neficiary for the duration of his indebteQness.
Vice Chairman of UC Asks More Job Training
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franusich Gets Post
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Survey Examines Student Problems
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• v DC c IStS, I students Hear CY /Dtbate US Viet Nam Policy Solon Cla·1ms Anti ~;:"c;f~ii~i=~::::;:~~=t~: ~~::~~::~~:~~:~::~1~~:~~1~ While Poet Chants
• Laws :;,seSJ~~a thea~~fessionCard Burnlng May Be Held Illegal R . F .I t p t D a In a I s 0 u am per 0 n Fa II Aca dem I•c Re f reo t plann~d
Vandalism Plac:~ues CC Student Union
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