Sacramento City College - Pioneer Yearbook (Sacramento, CA)

 - Class of 1967

Page 2 of 168

 

Sacramento City College - Pioneer Yearbook (Sacramento, CA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 2 of 168
Page 2 of 168



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Page 2 text:

GREAT TRAGEDY took over the stage of the Audito¬ rium this fall. Drama students of Faculty Director George Anastasiow staged the play “Antigone” October 25 through the 28th in an impressive production. For more photo¬ graphs, see pages 21 through 23. (Photo by Sherman Stanley)

Page 3 text:

ir’. PIONEER Sacramento City College January 1967 Vol II, No 1 Table of Contents 50th ANNIVERSARY:. 2 see Begins Second Fifty Years PHOTO ALBUM:. 4 Looking Backward ENROLLMENT:. 7 3% Drop Shakes Oampus PANTHER MAROHING BAND: . 8 Strike It Up! STUDENT GOVERNMENT: . 13 Panther Politics GLUB SIGN-UPS:. 17 How To Become A Joiner FINE ARTS: . 18 SGG’s Not-So-Hidden Talent “ANTIGONE”: . 21 The Cover PRETTY GIRL PLUS—As magazine publishers have always known, the face of a beautiful girl helps to sell copies. Although PIONEER magazine does not have’ to worry about sales (they’re free with SA cards), we have 15 pretty girls on the cover. They are female members of the Rally Committee. The Rally Girls add vocally to the spirit at football games. Everywhere they make an attractive sight. The members of the Women’s Rally Committee are Robin Bahr, Cheryl Bouressa, Judie Bryan, Donna Fer¬ nandes, Kathy Hays, Sue Laugenour, Connie Logue, Candy Long, Linda Metz, Jocelyn Morrison, Nancy Rivett, Joanne Seibel, Marlene Smith, Barbara Waddock, Carolyn Wold. Highlights The Tragic Fi gure CAMPUS LOVELIES:. 24 How Sweet They Are! DISTRICT MAP: . 26 Los Rios in Throes of Growth 33 YEARS HENCE: . 28 see in the Year 2000 A. D. HOMECOMING: . 32 Floats, Football, and Girls COLLEGE SPIRIT: . 38 Rah! Isn’t Dead! FOOTBALL: . 42 The Biggest Kick of the Semester WRESTLING: . 48 Men Not to Tangle With CROSS COUNTRY:. 49 First VC Championship WATER POLO: . 52 see Mermen Aren’t Swamped BASKETBALL: . 53 A New Valley League Campaign PUBLICATIONS:. 54 Big Doings in the Little Brick House INQUIRING REPORTER:. 58 Should Students Dress as They Please? PHOTO PSYCHOSIS:. 60 Foto-men on the Loose FRATERNITIES: . 61 The Big Men on Campus ‘‘OKLAHOMA!”: . 64 Meanwhile—Back at the Ranch CANDID SCENE:. 67 The Roving Cameraman Strikes Again CHRISTMAS BALL: . 78 “Wonderland By Night” DEAD WEEK:. 80 The Night Before the Morning After BACK COVER: From campus loitering in front of the Auditorium, to the Library, to Final Exams, to the ski slopes. That is the usual route at this time of year. Following some relaxation and play in the Sierra wilds, collegians return for registration again and another semester. Students of the future may have to re¬ adjust psychologically because an academic change to the quarter system looms on the horizon. PIONEER Magazine is published each semester by journalism students of Sacra¬ mento City College, 3835 Freeport Blvd., Sacramento, Calif. Los Rios Junior College District Superintendent Walter T. Coultas, SGC President Harold H. Stephenson, PIONEER Advisor J. N. McIntyre. Magazine staffers named on Page 57. CAMPUS UNLIMITED—Brief glimpses of City College’s golden past can be found in Photo Album (p. 5). A look into the future—in the year 2000 A.D.—has a fas¬ cination for Editor Ann Russell (p. 28). For the 1966-67 fall semester, “Pioneer” Magazine presents 76 other pages of hap¬ penings. ★ ★ ★ MANY of the “costumes” that City col¬ legians of both sexes have been wearing on campus have provoked discussion about “appropriate” attire, as outlined by the office of the Dean of Student Activities. For many, it is difficult to ignore the lack of taste in campus wear. (De gustibus non est disputandum). Read some student and faculty opinions on Pages 58, 59. ★ ★ ★ TO OUR CRITICS —The purpose o ' PIONEER is not clearly understood. Some erudite readers seem to think this student magazine should fill the void on campus for a publication featuring controversial issues of the day or it should serve as an outlet for student creative writing. To these readers, we are “juvenile.” Others would like us to be more sophis¬ ticated—or risque, ala a college humor magazine. Since there is taste in humor, too, and “we editorials” do not want to be censors of any kind, we shy again. However, this semester magazine (which in fact is a substitute for the traditional yearbook) is designed to be a pictorial record of college ac¬ tivities each term. Those budding student poets and writers should contact Mr. Jerry Fishman, faculty sponsor of the Cre¬ ative Writing Club, who plans to publish the works of young literati next semester. Remembering what The Man said about pleasing the people, we go our way as a student pictorial publication, recording the events of the college community, with¬ in the limits of space and talents of all. In the meantime, you will pardon us if -the “poetry” here is light instead of provocative or scholarly. Pardon us, too, if we do not discuss the proposed changes in the abortion law or Existentialism or the philosophical positions regarding the war in Viet Nam. We ain’t anti-intellectual, honest! ★ ★ ★ 1

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