The Telescope 21.32

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FRI D A Y

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THE TELESCOPE Palomar College · Volume

21

Number

32 ·

A Publication of the Associated Stud~ts ·

March 29 1968 ·

San Marcos, Calif.

92069

Earth science expedition discovers ancient artifacts .

What might Po s sib 1 y be among the oldest man-made artifacts ever to be found in California were located by students from the earth sciences department during a field trip. March 13-16. Arrowheads made ofobsedian(ashiny. black stone used to make jewelry and tools by Indians) were located in an area known to be inhabited by Indians as long as 9,000 years ago according to Richard Noble, earth science instructor. He and Joseph Willis,.. also of the earth sciences departmen~ led an expedition of 20 geology students on a 1305 mile. four

day field trip which took the group over a three state area. The group's first stop was at Mountain Pass, California. Located at Mountain ~ass is a "unique quarry". The quarry 1s the only spot on earth where certain rare earth3 can be found in any abundance. These earths are used in the manufacture of color television sets. The rare earths, once identified as granite , are now mined extensively. The second day of the trip found the four station wagons at Hu!:_ricane Cliffs, utah. A sample of oottery_, found by a student,

Women needed to help AWS host area high schod senior girls

Richard Noble displays fossilized specimens gathered during recent four day. 1300 mile geology field trip. Twenty

earth science students took part in the trip, which covered a three state area. Future field trips are planned.

Sixweek study inMexico City offered by San ilego State Interested students can register by April 15 at San Diego State College for six weeks' study at the University of the Americas in Mexico City. Classes in Mesoamerican culture, Latin American history. and Mexican crafts are among those available in anthropology. Otller studies include art, business administration, geology and economics. Classes in Spanish. music , history and the performing arts will also be open. All classes will be taught in English for six units of college credit. Instruction begins June 17 and concludes July 26. Students will live in homes of selected Mexican families. Special side trips have been planned to Oaxaca Cuernavaca, Taxco1 the Pyramids of Teotihucan and the Basilica of Guadalupe. Approximate total cost of the program is $455. Mode of travel is optional, but round-trip air transportation is recommended. Dr. John H. Wilding, associate pro- .

fessor of education at San Diego State, is director of the special Mexican program,

Women are needed to help host the annual AWS Senior Women's Day. The yearly event, scheduled for April 25 , hosts women from the area high schools for the afternoon. Beginning about 3 p.m., the program will start with tours of the campus. "We hope to have girls from the Girls' Service Club act as guides," said Mrs. Marjorie Wallace, AWS advisor. "Once the high school girls reach a certain area, we will provide an AWS member to show them around. ~some of the areas we hope to cover will be the various science labs which will be in session at the time. ~A WS girls will show the seniors through the Art Department, artgallery, ceramics, p hot o-j ou rna 1 ism and any other department that especially interest the seniors. "Also, 'Mother Courage' Ieharst:Hs

Unveils spring film series

'The New Cinema' set for tonight This semester's film series will unveil a new aspect of the motion picture industry with tonight's onset of "The New Cinema''

A collection of short films, "The New Cinema" will be shown tonight through Sunday at 7:15 p.m. in P-32. The fourth and final pre_:;entation will be

Students worth $250 during census week If you are a student at Palomar College, you're worth $250. You're especially valuable during the week of April 1-5. That is the time the final census of attendance will be taken. The State pays Palomar approximately $250 per student on an overall daily attendance and on the average ofthe four times census week occurs during a school year. ~The actual cost is a little over $750. per year and the approximate $250allotted by the state is only about 1/ 4 of the cost." according to Dr. John Schettler, ASB financial advisor.

and 'King David' practices perhaps will be in session. We want the girls to see things in operation," Dean Wallace commented. The feature event for the afternoon will be a panel of women who will give brief talks and answer any questions that the senior women !laj' have. All of the panelists will be women who are now attending or have attended Palomar," Mrs. Wallace said. "Both women who have left Palomar and are attending a four year college and women who are now in the professional field will be included. "We will attempt to aim the program at girls who wish to attend college for two years onl~ gaining a certificate; girls who plan to go the whole four years; and girls who plan to attend for awhile and later enter a career or marriage."

One of the short films featured in "The New Cinema" tonight in P-32 is "Corrida Interdite." The films is a

study of the movement of a matador in a bullfight. Admission is free and open to the public.

Tuesday in ES-19 at 7:15p.m. Admission is free and open to the public. Ranging from two to 30 minutes in length, the films are directed by such leading new men in the field as Clive Donner,~ Jean-Luc Godard, Richard Lester, Roman Polanski and Francois Traffaut. The series has had sell-out showings at the Lincoln Center in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the San Francisco Museum of Art.

employed methods used by Indians as long as ~000 years ago, said Noble. In addition to fragments of potte~y1 the group found chips of arrowheads and petrified wood. At Zion National Park, utah, the group found sandstone deposits indicating that the now mountainous parks may have once been a dune-filled desert. Ancient mud cracks long ago turned to stone , were also found. Many fossils, once thought perhaps to be a shark's tooth, were unearthed along with samples of obsedian. The four day expedition returned via Death Valley, where the group camped near the lowest spot in North America, located 280 feet below sea leveL "Death Valley is a tremendous thing geologically ." said Noble. "It's very complex. tts topography yields rocks from the oldest known in the earth, maybe three billion years old, to the youngest, to recent deposits. For instance, we walked out onto the salt flats at Badwater and looked at the salt c r y s t a I s and the m i n e r a 1 s recently deposited there. And off in the distance you could see mountains made of possibly three billion year old rocks. It is an incredible area." Weather for most of the trip was a major factor. Storms threatened most of the time, but in Death Valley, the weather was "summer-like." During the return trip from Death Valley to P a 1om a r, the group drove through the Owens River Valle\}' and the Sierra Nevada mountains. A storm was coming over the mountains, accordingto Noble creating a "dramatic effect." During a final stop, the group found nbornbs" volcanic debris ejected from a volcano in solid form and scattered "all over the countryside." Samples of the bombs displayed for photographers were about the size of a football, and shaped like a bullet. It is here the students found the arrowheads dating back more than 91000 years. Asked if the eartn sciences department had any further field trips planned, Noble said, "We'd love to go on a lot of them; it's really the only way to learn geology. I thought, in spite of the limitation of time, it was very fruitful. Yes, we have plans possibly closer in our own Mojave desert and Borrego desert area. where we collect fossils and rocks."

NEWS BRIEFS

One 10 minute film "Renaissance." presents inanimate objects which take on a life of their own. A study of the movement of a matador in a bullfight is the essence of "Corrida Interdite." This particular movie, which runs 10 minutes. required tens of thousands of feet of film be shot to produce its slow motion effect. Some films are in color, others in !:)lack and white. One four minute movie contains a sing 1 e spoken word. Each film contains what is considered to be a totally new dimension _in cinema, a dimension which will probably continur. through the next decade. The films are provided by the adult education and community services of Palomar.

Ron Simecka and John Robirds were elected Circle K vice-president and sergeant -at-arms,, respectively, at the club's weekly Wednesday meeting.

Playing for tonight's inter-campus dance-concert are "The Seeds.", The event will mark the third inter-campus

dance with MiraCosta and the first on the· Oceanside campus. The dance begins at 8 p.m.

Today is the last day to see the Day Faculty Art exhibit in the Boehm Gallery. The mass media show features the work of Palomar faculty members. The gallery closes at 4 p.m. Opening at 11 a.m .. Thursday, April4 , with a reception, will be the drawing and printmaking p u r c h a s e a ward exhibit. Attracting works from across the nation, the exhibit will show winners of the $750 award money allotted by the spring 1967 council.

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Senior citizen drop-out, AI Fleek, learning how to think once agazn •

"I'm a senior citizen drop-out," said AI Fleek, a 63 years young full time student at Palomar, Veteran of 28 years' Marine Corps service, Fleek is attending school on the GI Bill. Fleek is an enthusiastic booster of both Palomar College and the younger generation. "I tried to join the senior citizen groups, but they bored me stiff! After 28 years in a young man's outfit, the Marine Corps, I was used to being around y"o ungpeople. If you ask me, those retirement communities are graveyards. Fleek's return to school came about because of a chance remark made one day last summer by Morse Olmstead, President of the Governing Board at Palomar. Olmstead suggested. "Why don't you give college a try?" During his years in the Marines, Fleek traveled all over the world. but spent most of his time in the Philippines. China, Siam - and India. It's not surprising that his major is history of the Far East, and he is working toward a degree. "My family was all in favor of my going back to My wife, Bertie, wrote proschool.

fessionally and taught at Oceanside high school. My son. Dan. attended Palomar' and is now a child psychologist. His wife Janet. is Dean of \\'omen at Texas Chris-

tian University, so I'm surrounded by degrees." - Tieek admits it was tough going at first, ' 'learning to think again, but I never quit anything in my life. Now, I'm enjoying every minute of it. It would do the older generation a lot of good to attend school or just to visit school for awhile and really get acquainted with the younger generation they throw rocks at, ".M said. With his many interests, it's difficult to imagine Fleek as ever being bored. Besides hunting, fishing, golf, skin diving and making custom guns for friends, Fleek likes to tinker with hot rods. He used to tune up racing cars and still attends the races. His current project involves putting an Olds-12 engine into a pick up which will give the truck a 325 horsepower engine. While in the service Fleek was a sprinter and has won three gold medals for track. He also played football in high schooL When he decided to attend Palomar, Fleek's wife put one restricti~n on him. "This time I won't let you play football," she said.


Mesa games this weekend key to baseball, track contentions

Ernie Oli va

Thi s is the big weekend for the first p lace P a 1om a r track and baseball te am s . both vi s iting t heir bigges t compe t itor . The trackmen wil l start at 2:30 (fie ld eve nts) today and bas eball at 11 a.m. tomo r r ow in the firs t game of a scheduled doub leheade r. Pac ific Southwest Confe r e nce s tandings show P alomar and t he Olympians are t ied for first in basebal l wi th 5- 2 recor ds and, in track_. Palom ar is 2- 0 a nd Mesa 1- 0. Track coac h Doc Ma rr in said "the

Nelson strikes out side in 8-2, 8-6 twin sweep How sweet it is! F irst place in the P acific Southwest Conference baseball standings was achieved by the Comets Saturday as they swept a doubleheader against San Diego City College , 8-2 and 8-6. Ernie Oliva went the distance in the opener, picking up hi s third conference triumph. Tom Johnson won his first game of the season in the second contest (he hasn't lost a game, being out with an injured arm). But the afternoon's hero -- not the two mentioned hurlers or any of the healthy swatt e r s at the plate -- but, reliefer Don Nelson. The strong righthander took over for Johnson with runners on first and third in the bot tom of the eighth. Palomar had regained its lead in the top of the inning by plating thr ee runs fo r an 8-5_ lead . On Nelson' s fourth pitch the batter

Baseball stats show Murphy top batter, Oliva rest on mound With the baseball team reaching the .500 mark (9-9) Saturday for the first time; statistics reveal that an equal number of runs have been scored by both Palomar and the opposition (76). Res e rve catcher Larry Murphy has the best batting mark for the season at .361 and E rnie Oliva is leading in the pitching totals . Oliva has won five of seven decisions, .all complete game s. In 65 innings he has struck out 7o, walked 33 and given up 49 hits . In his nine games the fre shman from Orange Glen has allowed 22 runs ( 17 e arned) for a 2.35 earned run average . Murphy is followed in average by Bill Briscoe's .333, Oliva's .328 , JimDean's .320 , Bob Snead's .286 and Jack Ashby's . 271. Oliva has the most hits with 20, Ashby with 19, Briscoe 17 , Dean . 16 and Snead 16. Rick Adkins leads in runs scored with 12 , followed by Sne ad with 11 , Briscoe with 10 , Greg Abney with nine and Ashby with eight. Adkins also is ahead in runs batted in 9 RBI's with 12. Oliva , Dean and Briscoe each have nine . Murphy has socked five doubles, Oliva and Dean three, and Ashby, KentDawson and Briscoe, two. Oliva has the only triple and the only home run besides Adkin's three. Abney's four stolen bases is first in that department 1 while Dean ( 12) and Ashby ( 11) are first in base on balls. In conference games Dean's .476batting average is followed by Murphy's .455 , Ashby's . 357 , Oliva's .350 and Gil Pumar's .303. Oliva's . 714 pitching percentage is topped by Tom Johnson· and Jeff Dawson with 1.000 records (each 1-0) , Ed Warseck's won-less record is 2-3,with Jerry Carpenter 0-1. Don Nelson 0-1 , Greg Abney 0-2 and Nick Arcuri 0-0. Arcuri has the best earned run average, 0.00 (in 1 1/ 3 inning) . Others are Warseck's 2. 08 in 39 innings , Oliva's 2.38, Dawson's 3. 75 in 12 innings . Abney's 3. 79 in 9 2/ 3 innings,Johnson's4.91in22innings 1 Nelson's 6. 23 in 8 2/ 3 innings and Carpenter's 15 .4 3 in 1 1/3 innings .

g round ed into a doubleplay with the run s cor ing. T he Knights loaded the bases with two s ingles and walk . but Nelson r etired the next hit ter. In the ninth inning all NelSOJ\ did was s trike out all thre e batte rs . The double win boosted Palomar' s c onfe rence r eading to 5- 2, whil e the Knights we nt from fi rst pl ac e to third in the conference. In the first game Oliva and San Diego s tarter Dennis Webb we r e in a pitc her's · battle for five innings , but P a 1om a r s c ored three in the sixth two in the e ighth and three in the ninth. Oliva allowed .seven hits and the same number of walks , strik ing out nine . Palomar c ollected 13 hits in the game. Bob Sne ad' s 3-for-5 batting with two runs s co red Jim De ans's 3- for- 3 with thr e e RB I' s and Oliva's 2- for- 5 including a two run home run we re the top offensive performances . Palomar filled the sacks with none out in the first and failed to score in

mee t is a big toss up. There ' s so many key events that it boils down to which team ha s the most adr en alin pumping into it s athletes . " In t he baseball contest between the t wo r ival s , Er n ie Oliva and Tom Jo hns on will toe t he rubbe r forPalo m ar . In the only previous meeting between the two squads .1 the Olympians c la imed a 12-1 confer ence decision. Jack Ashby, Bob Snead Rick Adki ns , Bill Bri scoe, J im Dean Oliva . and Ke nt Dawson have swung the heavy bats. (see baseball Sfatis ti cs- story).

1

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M~;~;:,::~~:::w TRACK -- at :.~~~Z2,30 p.m

GOLF -- at College of Desert at 1 p.m. TENNIS -- at Col ' ege of De sertat 3p .m. TOMORROW BASEBA L L-- at Me s a (2) a t 11 a .m . MONDAY GO LF -- SDCC here at 1 p .m . TUESDAY T ENNIS -- Naval Training Cente r he r e at 2:30p. m. WEDNESDAY BASEBA LL -- a t Grossmont at 2:30p .m. T ENNIS -- Mt. San Ja c into here at 2:30p.m .

WiJiiams and Lewis King. Will iam s does the 440 in 50 0 or better. the 330 intermediate hu rd les in 38.8 and goes 47 fee t in the t riple jump . King has a m a r k of 14. 6 in the highs and 39 . 5 in the interm ediates the two Mesa hu rdle r s fo r m ing a s trong tes t for P al omar's group of Mike Quirk, Le n Thomps on and Tom Ries. In a ddi ti on , the Comet s may be without the se rvi ces of Thomps on , who has a pulled muscle.

Ries, three others pace track win over Apaches A four man track team ? Well , Palom a r certa inly has more talent than four on coac h Doc Marrin's undefe ated squad , but four of the athletes c ombined for 57 points in their latest outing. The foursom e ' s total is the same as the entire Southwestern team rece ived in Palomar's 88-57 triumph over the Apac he s . Tom Ries, Rick F ox and Doug Price (all e x-Vista High trackmen) claimed nine of Palomar's 10 fi rst place s , while Mike Quirk from Orange Glen place d in seven events . Ries t ied Palomar _records i!} the 120

P ACIFIC SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE BASEBALL STANDINGS W L Pet. Team GB . 714 2 5 Palomar 2 .714 5 Mesa .625 1/2 3 5 SDCC . 200 3 4 1 Grossmont .143 3 6 Southwestern 1 the second game . A double and triple by San Diego in the second gave the hosts (the game was played at the San Diego High School field) a 1-0 lead , but Palomar got four runs in the fourth. The big blows for the Comets in that uprising was back to back singles up the middle by Jack Ashby, Gil Pumar , Larry Murphy and Dean. In the decisive three run eight frame for Palomar1 doubles by Puma r and Murphy w.ere most instrumental. Again Palomar collected 13 hits , with Pumar going 2-for-5 with three RBI's, Ashby 4-for-6 with two RBI's and Murphy 3-for-4 with three RBI's the top marks.

Archers in state tournament tomorrow The arc hery team ., recent winners of a telegraphic archery match, travels to Long Be ach tomorrow for the state college tournament. The telegraphic archery matc h, sponsored by Arizona State University, was won last weekend by Palomar archers. Fifteen Colleges and 1Jniversities participated. Each week a different yardage was shot, from 30 to 60 yards under tournament shooting conditions . New tournament re cords were set by P a 1om a r archers for each of the distances. According to Arizona, this new record may stand for many years as they were near p e r f e c t scores on each yardage. Jim Kinley set new men's records on the 30, 40 and 50 yard distance with perfect rounds . Men on the winning team we re Jim Kinley, James Crafts , Dan White , George Ward and Terry Mayberry.

high hurdle s and 33 0 intermediate hurdles in times of 14.9 and 39.5. He also won the long jump at 20-11 , triple jump at 43-3 , and finished third in the 100. with a time of 10.1. Fox had a grueling triple , winning the 88 0 (1:57 . 7) , mile (4:30 .3) and two-mile (9:56 . 2) . Price took the shot put at 47-5 1/2 and di sc us at 123-11 3/4. R ic k Trestrail took the othe r Palomar first place , throwing the javelin at 173. 1. The versatile Quirk placed second in the inte r mediate hurdle s and long jump and third in the jave lin, shot put , discus , t riple jump and pole vault. 0 th e r Palomar t r ackme n p 1 acing we re Dan Zukaitis's third in the 220 , John S c hnarr's s econd in the 440 , Hartman's third in the 880; Lee Me Comb's second in the two-mile , Le n Thompson's third in the high· hurdle s, Henry Strandbe rg's third in the long jump and s econd in the triple jump, Otto Ray's second in the discus , Bruce Galloway's second in the javelin, Pat Hallman's third in the high jump , and Wingo's second in the pole vault.

National JC thine/ad list includes Comets Thirteen Palomar athletes are listed on the National Junior College track and field marks list released this week.

Coach Ray Love's tennis force , which won its first Pcific Southwest Conference meet severai weeks ago forms its hopes around these players (left to right);

Mark Tuttle , John Pegg, Blair McKinney ~ (back row) Mike Shaw, Bob Austin Bob Simpson, Fred McClain and coach Love. The squad travels to COD today.

Golf, tennis teams visit College d Desert today in non~oop tilts Journeying to the de sert, both the Comet golf and tennis squads will en• counter College of the Desert today. Sporting a 7-1 record and sharing a first place in the conference , the Palomar golfers furthered their gains last Friday when they stroked to a 47-7 win over their host Grossmont. In defeating all of their pairing, Comets Zem Hopkins (77) , Phil Stoewer ( 78) , Jeff Blankenship and Terry Reiff

THE TELESCOPE Editor-in-Chief . . . Cecelia Lodico Page 1, Tuesday . • . Jerry Nicholas Assistant. . . . . . Steve Krueger Page 2, Tuesday. . .Joan Kattelmanrt Assistant. . . . . . Jan Donoho Page 1, Friday. . Steve Schneider Assistant. . . Corky Wisniewski Page 2, Friday. . . Rick Monroe Assistant. . . . Dave Conrad 1 News Editor. . . . . . . •. Joe Wu Exchange Editor. . . . . Sherri Hall Reporters. . . . . . . Neil Hoffman, Ken Kline, Tom Wheeler Advertisements . • . . Dianna Houser, Jim Reeploeg Photographers . .... .' . ........ . Don Bartlett!, Ted Karounos , Bob Nelson Journalism Advisor. . . Fred Wilhelm Photography Advisor. • Justus Ahrend Graphic Arts Advisor . . James McNutt

GENO'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

(81), Gary Ethe;redge (86) and again low medalist Neil Gudgeon (75), the Palomar six went on to strengthen their lead and crush the Griffins . The !inkster's latest success was Wednesday, a 29-25 decision over Mesa. Played at the local San Luis Reycourse, NeU Gudgeon was the medalist with a 78 ._ Returning to the Palomar College netters Thursday 's away tennis meet against Grossmont was an 8-1 defeat at the hands of coach Ray Love and his team members.

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Palomar athletes and their latest national rankings are Rick Fox, third in the 880 at 1:54.4 and fourth in the mile at 4:12.4; Randy Hartman , sixth in the mile at 4:15 . 2 and fourth in the 2mile at 9:17. 2; and TomRies and Len Thompson, tied for tenth in the 120 high hurdles at 14.9. Also Mike Quirk, ninth in the 330 intermediate hurdles at 39.5; Rick Trestrail and Bruce Galloway, fifth and ninth in the javelin at 182-10 and 179.11 ; and the Comets' eleventh in the two mile r elay, third in the four mile relay, and sixth in the distance medley are the others listed. Fox's 880 mark and Hartman's twomile time are the best in Southern California. Fox 's mile i s third; Hartman's mile is seventhj Ries' and Thompson's marks are seventh; Trestrail is fourth; and Galloway is fifth. Quirk is tenth in southern-California marks in the javelin and is joined by Thomps on and Ries in the intermediate hurdles top 10. Ries is thirteenth in the 220 J John Schnarr twelth' in the 440, Ries twelth in the triple jump and Doug P r ice twelth in the shot put.

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