The Telescope 20.10

Page 1

Palomar College

Volume 20

Number 10

A PUBLICATION OF THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS

November 15, 1966

San Marcos, California

Human ities

Sherriffs covers psychological view Considering psychological aspects of the New Student phenomenon, Dr. Alex C. Sherriffs of the University of Californ_ia will speak at Friday's Humanities Lecture. The lecture will be at ll:OO, taking the place of 3:00 classes on the minimum day schedule. Dr. Sherriffs, a psychologist, has had an opportunity to observe student activism. As Vice-Chancellor of Student Affairs at the University of Berkeley 1958-1965, he witnessed the disruptions on that campus.

The audience listens attentively to the memorial service while the color guard

Photos by Mario Jimenez stands by during the Veteran's Day ceremonies Friday by the flag pole.

Flag raising and memorial service highlights Veteran's Men's week Veterans Day was observed on campus Friday at an 8:00 a.m. program sponsored by the Veterans Club. Part of the program was a memorial ceremony honoring a former Palomar student, Lt. Cmdr. John Wallace Tunnell, 32, who died last June in an aircraft accident aboard the USS Ranger off Viet Nam. His name will be added to the memorial plaque commemorating former students who have died in military service. The program was held by the flag pole, opening with a presentation of the colors by a color guard of club members. The invocation was given by Reverend Father Galllger of Saint Mary's Church.

The memorial service followed, given by Lipari. Playing of taps by Phil Sands, a club member, concluded the program. From all of the Vets activities throughout the week, a total of $150.00 was raised. Over a hundred dollars came from the Slave Auction Monday and the balance of the funds came from the after-game dance Saturday. The dance featured Beat Inc., Steve Kahler and his "Go- Go" girls. Approximately 500 students attended the dance. The money that was raised during All Men's Week will be donated to the USO and Veterans hospitals.

13th annual speech tournament at Palomar Friday, Saturday The Thirteenth Annual High School Invitational Speech Tournament will be held on campus Friday and Saturday. Nearly 400 students from 30 high schools in the San Diego, Imperial, and Riverside counties will be competing in the tournament. Phi Rho Pi, Palomar's speech organization, is in charge of the event. Susan Shields and Sharon Waldorf are the cochairmen. Judging will be done by current and previous speech students, with faculty members judging the final rounds. Ushers and guides for the twoday tournament will be representative~ from the Veterans Club. Last year 380 students from 26 high schools participated. Grossmont high school won the perpetual sweepstakes trophy for the third year. Mt. Miguel, Sweetwater, and Oceanside high schools were first, second and third runners-up.

Christian Fellowship supplements lectures Three special lectures will be offered next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday on the topic "God Looks at the New Student." The series, planned to add perspective to the current Humanities series, is being sponsored by the Christian Fellowship Club. Paul Eyer, an InterVarsity ChristianFellowshipstaffer from Pasadena, will speak. Eyer is a graduate of USC, majoring in Architecture. The three lectures will be held in F-li at 11:00 a.m. Eyer will be on campus during the three days and will be available for conferences with students.

Third Forum covers draft All stand at attention during the presentation of colors opening the Vets ceremonies.

Richard Lipari gave the memorial service honoring Lt. Cmdr. John Wallace Tunnell Friday.

Student discounts for Old Globe to boost college attendence by Barbara Sage The Old Globe Theatre in San Diego is offering a special ticket price for their performances to college students. Reserve seat tickets may be purchased at a 40% reduction. A Sl. 50 ticket price is available for a ll performances except Friday and Saturday nights. This enables more college students who have an interest in drama to view plays put on by professionals at a reasonable price. "The Subject Was Roses" opens a four week run November 15 through December 11. This triple-prize-winning comedy-drama will be the pre-holiday attraction on the Old Globe Theatre's Main Stage. The three character play features Donna Woodruff as the bitter but loyal wife who lost the love of her husband, as s he has lost her love for him. James Ashton will play the seemingly unaffected husband. Dick Shea will portray the role of the twenty-one year old son, dis-

charged from the Army following World War II. He attempts to reconcile his parents and give fresh spirit to the family relationship. Miss Woodruff played leading four Shakespeare productions old Globe. Ashton played the role in the Globe's production body Loves an Albatross."

roles in at the leading of "No-

Future plays which are planned for through May 1967 include "Any Wednesday," January 10- February 5; "You Can't Take It With You, " February 21- March 19; and "The Owl and the Pussycat," April 4- April 30, all of which will be Main Stage Productions. Performances showing at the Arena in Falstaff Tavern include: "The Birthday Party," November 24, - December 11, 1966; "Next Time I'll Sing To You," February 2- February 19; " Incident at Vichy," March 16 - April 2; and "The Doctor's Dilemma," April 27May 14.

Dr. Sherriffs took his A.B. in Economics at Stanford University in 1939, and later earned his M.A. and Ph.d. in psychology also at Stanford. In 1944 he became a Research Associate at the Institute of Human Development at the Univeristy of Berkeley. Since 1946 he has taught at the university as a member of the Department of Psychology. Dr. Sherriffs is also a management consultant, psychotherapist, and lecturer. His research specialty is "Social Stereotypes and their effects on Human Behavior. "

Palomar's third Forum meeting, discussing the draft problem, will be held November 23 in F-22, reports Mark Violet, Forum c hairman. The committee hopes that at this m eeting two sides of the controversy will be debated, rather than the one-sided discussion on the war policy in Vietnam. Again, if the Forum participants wish the discussion to be extende d, an extension will be set up, probably some time after the Thanksgiving holiday.

This year's competition categories include debate, original oratory (men and women,) extemporaneous (men and women,) impromptu (men and women.) humorous interpretation, dramatic interpretation, and oratorical analysis. First and second place trophies will be given for all divisions except debate, which will be awarded a third and fourth place in addition to first and second. The money coming in from the entry fees will pay for the trophy costs . The students in charge of the divisions are Niki Kester and Anthony Connelly, debate; Mark Violet and Sandy Udov, original oratory; Dave Sullivan, Shari McFarland, and Tom Wood, extemporaneous: Diane Landfear and Cheryl Starr, impromptu ; Andy Saenz and Tim Chambless, humorous interpretation, Kim Mltterling and Mary Tucker, dramatic interpretation; Mitties McDonald and Pam Knox, oratorical analysis.

Debate elects Kim Mitterling haes recently been elected Pre!:!ident of Phi Rho Pi, Palomar's national honorary speech fraternity. Miss Mitterling is also the National Phi Rho Pi Secretary-Treasurer. Mitties Me Donald is the new Vice President Other officers are Armando Saenz, Secretary; Nicola Kester, Treasurer; Sharon Waldorf, ICC Representative. Ray Dahlin is the organization's advisor.

ALEX SHERRIFFS

Because of the speech tournament, the college will follow a minimum day schedule Friday. Classes beginnng at: will meet from 8:00 - ~ : 25 8:00 8:30 - 8:55 9:00 9:00-9:25 10:00 12:00 9:30- 9:55 10:00- 10:25 1:00 10:30-10:55 2:00 3:00 classes will not be held, the assembly will take place

Yardley products sponsors A WS show AWS and Yardley of London present Palomar's first cosmetic show for the fall semester Thursday at 11:00. Nancy E. Tuck is the representative from Yardley's and will speak in P-32. Some of the topics to¡ be covered will include''What goes into the well-groomed look,?" "Bringing out assets and hiding flaws through correct make-up use," "How to :Q'lake fashion fit your personality,'' and ''How to wear fragrance and accessories successfully." At the end of these discussion periods, there will be a question and answer period . For each girl present at the show, there will be a present waiting for her. Girl of the Month and Best Dressed Girl of the Month will be presented.

Council introduces car pool to help campliS parking ¡ In an effort to alleviate the parking problem on campus, the ASB Council intends to start a car pool program next semes.ter. This type of program is now successfully operating in other colleges. During r egistration the Council will have a booth set up with car pool information. Two sets of cards will be used, a "need ride" card and a "want rider" card. Students, both day and evening, may fill these cards out and return them to the Council booth. The cards will then be filed and be available for students to refer to in order to find

rides or riders in their areas. A student desiring a ride or r ider first checks the file fo r other students in his area or near his route. After finding the information he needs, he may call the students and work out a schedule with them. The information on the cards will include the area one is traveling from and the route, his daily schedule, how many riders he can accomodate if he drives, his name, address, and telephone number.

Rothman sculptures on display Thursday An exhibit of the ceramic, sculpture, and pottery works of Jerry Rothman of Los Angeles opens Thursday in the Dwight Boehm Gallery. The exhibit will be on display through December 2. A public reception for the artist will be given at the college at 11:00 a.m. Thursday. Trained as a potter, Rothman supervised design and concept for development of various products in Japan from 1958 to 1961. His one-man shows have been exhibited in many cities in Japan. Rothman is a former assistant professor of art at California State College and is the designer of architectural tiles for Interpace in Los Angeles.

"And a- one, and a-two, (snap, snap)" seems to be this individual's thoughts

Photo by Gordon Stubbelfield during the after-game dance Saturday, sponsored by the Veterans Club.


THE TELESCOPE Profiles

1 - - - Page 2 San Marcos, In 1962. the Student Publications Board established a Code or Ethics wlth the cooperation of the members of all campus publications. Local newspaper publis hers were asked to comment and they said the code was complete. Two statements from that code are 1 pertinent today: •wtthln the framework of school coverage. sensatlonallsm. glorification, and favoritism should not be tolerated. • Coverage of national or International occurrences s hould be governed hy the proximity of the event and the direct relationship of the event to the students. These events should be considered

Contrary to popular opinion, strange happenings continue to prosper in this world of ours. Just the other day Joe Wu claimed he saw a flying saucer and Ronald Reagan was elected governor. Perhaps the strangest of all happenings that have occurred within the last week is that the Palomar cross-country team fell to defeat, and the Comet football squad rose to the occasion to beat a hapless Imperial Valley College eleven. Speaking of the cross-country mishap, it seems a shame that the local runners were without the services of their number one runner, Randy Hartman. Certainly with a healthy Hartman, the chances of success for the Comets would have been much better. As it was, Palomar had to rely on the capable legs of Dave Funderburk, Jim Adkins, Bill Brown and Rick Fox. The harriers almost pulled out the victory. but a powerful Grossmont distance team squeaked past the Comets 27- 29, and Larry Knuth's fine athletes fell by the wayside for the first time this year. Knuth's soldiers still get a shot at the State meet and Hartman is expected to be able to perform in this important encounter. If all of the Comets can stay healthy and fit, watch for Palomar to emerge as the over-all victor. Since the cross-country team tasted defeat, the grid squad thought it would be appropriate if they won their last home outing. The footballers reversed the tables on Imperial Valley and whipped the Arabs 7- 6. It is remembe·red the last year that the visiting Comets were subdued

__ November 15, 1966 _ _~ when they occur on campus or broughllntothe college program directly. • Opinions expressed In this paper In signed editorials and articles are the views of the writers and do not necessarily represent opinions of the staff, views of the Associated Student Body Council, college administration. or the Board of Governors. The TELESCOPE Invites responsible •guest editorials" or letters to the editor. All communications must be s igned by the author. The TELESCOPE as a student newspaper must represent the entire spectrum of student thought.

California

by their host and beaten by a score of 7-6. The Griffins literally shocked the life out of San Diego City College Saturday night by downing the highly touted Knights 19- 13. Whenever Palomar tangles with Grossmont there are usually fireworks to spare , and since this is the last contest of the year for both teams, next Saturday's battle should turn out to be quite a "barn burner."

Cross Country Ioses PSC ti tie Coach Larry Knuth's Cross Country team was beaten by Grossmont Friday, 27- 29, in a battle for the Pacific Southwest Conference championship, losing the chance for Palomar's fi rst Conference title. Palomar's Dave Funderburk was the individual winner in 20:07 for the 4-mile 103-yard course. Jim Adkins placed third, running the course in 20:21. The Comet harriers were forced to run without their No. 1 runner, Randy Hartman, who is out with a leg injury, and then, during the closely run meet, lost Rich Williams after receiving an injury. Other finishing runners for the Comets were, Rick Fox, 6th, Bill Brown, 8th, Frank Lomeli, 11th, Felipe Serrato, with, and Sal Castro, 13th. Palomar will try again to defeat the Griffs at the Southern California JC meet a week from today at Pierce Junior College and at the state JC Championships November 26 at the same site.

THE TELESCOPE PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF PALOMAR COLLEGE SAN MARCOS, CALIFORNIA

744-1150 EDITOR- IN- CHIEF

727-7550 PENNY HILL

ASSISTANTS: BU~NESS

MANAGER •.•••.•••.•.•. ,BARBARA SAGE NEWS EDITOR . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . • . • • • JEAN PEASLEY SPORTS EDITOR •. . . . . . . . . . • • • . • . • JERRY GUEVARA REPORTERS:

Joan Kattelmann, Jay Carter, Gary Shoemake, Buzz Ponce, Joe Wu CARTOONISTS ..•. •• , ..• , , .•.•.• , • Mike Pickens, Brad Stoddard ADVISOR . .•• . • • ••• .••.•.•• , , ••• , •• , ••• THEODORE KILMAN

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Lampe and Raybould

A pair of stand-out performers· on the football field for Palomar College have been Barney Lampe and Grant Raybould, a tackle and tight-end, hailing from San Marcos and Ramona high schools, respectively. Raybould, after seeing most of last season's grid action from the Comet bench, has developed into a top-flight tight-end for Palomar and is currently a leading pass receiver in the Pacific Southwest Conference. Proving that he can catch a football has been little of a problem for the Ramonian, and his blocking ability on running plays has also left nothing to be desired by the Comets. Rated by line coach Mack Wiebe as, "Perhaps one of the team's better blockers," Raybould seems to be all over the field knocking people down. Raybould won the Maltese Cross Award for laying flat several Mesa College Olympians in the recent meeting between the two teams . Grant was also named Player of the week for his performance in that encounter. Lampe, who handles a tackle position, is in his second year of drawing starting assignments for the Comets. An outstanding defensive performer at the San Marcos campus two years ago, Barney has earned the load of both offensive and defensive duties for Palomar this year. As a prep at San Marcos, Lampe was selected to the All-Palomar League first team for two years running. Big Barney was also a track star for the Knights , running the 440 and 660 yard dashes. Sprinting in high school may attribute to the fact that Lampe is the Comet's fastest lineman. He has been clocked in a soaring 5. 9 in the 50 yard dash. Lampe, who like Raybould, is a Maltese Cross Winner, won his award against San Bernadino Valley College. It was the Arizona Western College contest, however , that Lampe showed his true form and won Player of the Week laurels. Last season while concentrating on defensive line play, Barney has been used at offensive tackle for the Comets this year, strengthening Palomar's forward wall. However, Lampe is duplicating his demanding' defensive skill of last year and may be set for All-Conference honors on the defensive unit. Certainly anyone who is interested in watching fine line play should keep an eye on numbers 70and86fortheComets.

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20- yard line. A punt by the Arabs and an interception by Arab defensive back Paul White, found IVC marching as fa r as the Comet 1-foot line, minutes into the second quarter, before the Comet defense held for no score . A beautiful 31yard run by Noriega added to the possible score. Gann marched the Comets as far as their 47- yard line before he was forced to punt. With both teams exchangingpunts twice, Mike Cory ended the first half with a hair- raising 35- yard run with seconds left, cutting back across the field numerous tim~s. following his blocke rs, in an attempt to score before the gun. Imperial Valley had to give up the ball with 8:11 left in the third quarter because they couldn't move the ball for the 1st down. In another attempt to s core, Cory ran for 8, a Gann pass to end Grant Raybould clicked for 8 yards and a first down, Ed Marty added 1 yard. Gann at this point dropped back to kick but, following blockers, fooled the Arab defense and ran to the IVC 31-yard line before being brought down. Cory ran the ball all the way to the IVC 1- yard line ...before the Comets wJ;re denied the score by the Arab defensive line. Both teams then punted to e ach other until the fourth quarter, where Palomar and IVC both s c ored their only touchdowns of the game .

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•we didn't come close to our other games," was the commentofCoachCecil McGehee, following the 7-6 win over the Imperial Valley College Arabs last Saturday night. There were approximately 500 blankethuddled fans on hand to watch one of the •very mediocre efforts as a team" win their second conference game, at the hands of outgoing Imperial Valley. Imperial Valley, along with MiraCosta, will be leaving the Pacific Southwest Conference at the end of the school year and will join the Desert Conference . The Palomar Comets were first to score during the bone-chilling night, withl0:30 left to play in the game. Neither team was able to score during the first three quarters of the game; the momentum wasn't sufficient enough to warrant a score. A Gann lateral to tailback Mike Cory provided the score momentum from 8 yards out. Rick Trestrail's extra point was the one-point margin the Comet s needed to win. Those who remember last year's game against the Arabs, found the table reversed; the Comets lost with seconds remalning on the .try. for a.. win with an attempted field goal., .but failed. With 4:15 remaining in the game, Imperial Valley's left halfback, Joe Noriega, scored from the four yard line. Noriega tried to run it over for the tiebreaking score, but was swarmed under by a host of Comet defenders. Palomar's quarterback Leonard Gann marched the offensive team as far as the Arab 21 yard line, with tailback Junior Morton, gaining a hunk of yardage during the 64-yard drive, before defensive back Alex Rivera intercepted a possible touchdown pass in the end zone, setting up the Arab's ball on their

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Comet quarterback Len Gann finally gets dragged down by Imperial Valley defenders after running for a six yard gain. Laying blocks for Palomar are Grant Raybould (86) and Sam Oliva (16).

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