Pots go on sale Thursday If you don't like the pot, bring a kite and get high.
Palomar's semi-annual Pot Sale (rechristened Student Art Sale), will get under way in the Music Complex Patio Thursday at 9 a.m . And for those who can't find the art they want, there will be a kite "fly-in" sponsored by the art departme nt. Two previous "Pot Sales" packed the complex with c rowd s of pot-mad bargain hunters. Last Spring's sale was named "Pot Sale and Chalk-in" and came com plete with a rock group, chalk, and sidewalks. Although this year' s effort will
not feature a chalk-in, the art objects will still be there. Around Christmas , the artdepartment held its second sale . T his was billed as a bargin hunter 's dream. And well it could be- -objects ranged in price from less than a dollar to nearly $20. Most fell in the $3 to $5 category. All objects placed on sal e have been made by students in the various art and ceramic classes. Last Christm as's sale featured over 300 works by s tude nts . Items included in the sale run the gamut from as htrays to large pots big enough for a small child to hide in. There wi ll be hangung mobiles, bowls, covered
pots with lids, vases, and animal-like figures that range from realistic to "Whatizit?" design. A percentage of the sale proceeds traditionally goes to the student guild fu nd for benefit of students enrolled in art c lasses. Last year's c halk-in drew a spread in FOCUS magazine. Heralded by them as ". . . a different thing, an experience for Palomar", the sale, c halk- in, and group drew milling throngs to the music department's patio. Though thi s year's sal e maybe quieter, students need onl y follow the kite string to find "where it's at."
T H E TELESCOP E Paloma r College · Volume 22 Number 49
· A Publication of the Associated Students ·
May 13, 1969
· Sa n Morc os , Calif.
92069
News At A Glance All ASB candidates are asked to be in R-1 tomorrow at 11 to have their picture taken and fill-out a data sheet.
Agnes De Mille
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DeMille speaks Friday evening One of America's foremost choreographers, authors, andlecturers, Agnes De Mille will close the 1969 Community Lec ture Series at 8 p.m. Friday night in the Student Union. Her topic will cover her fie ld of specialty, "The University, the Community, and the Performing Arts ." Miss De Mille, choreographer for the ballet, Broadway musicals, and televis ion-writer, crusader, and lecturer, has become a symbol of "determination cour age , and vision", in the words of a New York columnist, and is a source of inspiration to all those who are interested in the Am erican dance. She has established many innovations in the world of musical theatre, beginni ng in 1943 with her pioneering and revolutionary efforts in introducing the dance as a major aspect of the now famous musical, "Oklahoma." After her great success in this venture (for which she also did the movie version), she received wide acclaim fo r such works as "Carousel", "Brigadoon" , "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", "Paint Your Wagon", "110 in the Shade", and many more. Her work has not been limited to dancing and choreography. She has been a member of the National Advisory Council on the Arts , to which she was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson. She is also a well-known writer and lecturer. Her articles have appeared in Vogue , Atlantic, The New York Times and Esquire. She is the author of numerous books, inc luding "Dance to the Piper," (translated into five langua ges ), "Promenade Home", "To A Young DaJlCe", and "The Book of the Dance", (translated into two languages ). Born in New York City, and educate9 at the University of California , Miss De Mille has been deeply involved in the American dance from an early age . She has appeared in dance concerts in England, France , and Denmark, as well as the U.S. Since its ve r y beginning in 1940, she has played an active role with the Ballet Theatre, both in doing the choreography as well as dancing many of the leading rolls, Some of these are "Black Ritual", "Judgment of Paris", "Three Virgins and a Devil", "Tally- Ho", "Fall River Legend", "The Harvest According", "Agnes De Mille Dance Theatre ", "The Rib of Eve ", "Bitter Weird" (at the Royal Winnipeg and Cologne), "Wind in the Mountains", and "The Four Marys" . As a lecturer at colleges and universities across the United States, Miss De Mille ranks among the best. It has been said that she "gives young people the historical perspective concerning the i ntellectual, spiritual and moral stamina that makes cultured and competent citizens."
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Tomorrow will be "Forgi ve ness Day" at the college library. Overdue books , no matter how long overdue , may be returned on a 'no questions asked' basis with no fine whatsoever. The "amnesty" is part of an effort by t he library to retrieve irreplaceable books to its stacks, which might otherwise be lost due to reticence on the part of delinquent borrowers to shell out a heavy fine for a book with not much actual dollar value.
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Friday is the deadline for those planni ng to graduate to order their caps and gowns for commencement exercises . Cost of the rental of the graduation gear is $4. 25. Orders should be placed through the ASB bookstore.
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There will be an important meeting of students who have filed application for graduation held tomorrow at 11 a.m. i n room P-32. It is essential that all prospective graduates attend this meeting, according to Robert Bowman, dean of student activities.
* * *workload in the Due to the excessive printing plant of the Graphic Arts Dept. there will be no Friday editon of THE TELESCOPE this week only.
Associated Women Students are looking for interested girls who would like to model in a fashion show to be held here May 23 . The s how, to be he ld at 7:30p.m. in the Student Union, will feature clothes from five area shops. Interested girls s hould contact Dean Marjorie Wallace or Diane Scheckle as soon as possible.
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Girls planning to graduate this semester or to transfer to a four year college are invited to a mother-daughter tea s ponsored by the Escondido City Panhe llenic Association on May 18.. at the home· of Mrs . Eleanor Gousha 1791 Summit Drive, in Escondido. The tea, to he ld from three to five, will afford girls and their mothers an opportunity to get acquainted with the national sororit y program.
Drama lab imports 'Bananas' Eric Christmas will bring "Shakespeare's Second Bananas" to Palomar Thursday at 10 a. m. in the drama lab. Christmas, trai ned at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, has, in his words, played most of Shakespeare's "second bananas" during his 30 years in theatre. Now a Senior Lecturer in the department of drama on the San Diego campus of the University of Californ ia, he has, in recent years , acted e xtensively at the great Stratford Festi val in Ontario, as well as on the Broadway stage , and in such outstanding television specials as the Hallmark Hall of Fame and Talent Associates. The term , "banana", the actor explains com es from burlesque and vaudeville, where the top star is the top banana,
Racial discrimination topic for discussion " Education, Religion, or LSD- -Which is the answer to racial discrimination?" This provocative question will be the topic of a panel discussion next Monday, May 19, at ll a.m . in P-32. The four -member panel will consist of advocates of each of the alternatives in the title plus a moderator. Siding with "Education" will be Curran Carlson, Dean of Black Student Affairs at UCSD. For "Religion" the panel will include Allen Pee l, who is an ordained minister of the Jehovah's Witnesses and a Bible student of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. Discussing the view from the drug scene will be Palomar student Bill Hahlbohm. Sociology major Nolan Jones Jr. will moderate the discussion. The discussion is a project of the Sociology branch of the Behavioral Sciences Department under the direction of Byron Gibbs. All students are invited and encouraged to attend.
patio Thursday at 9 am. are all made by students.
The pots
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The Vet' s Club will hold a car wash Saturday in front of Builder's Emporium in Escondido from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to raise money. On Sunday, they will sponsor a Vet'sFaculty picnic in Felicita Park in Escondido. Hot dogs, hamburgers, and drinks will be served. Participants are invited to bring a dollar and a pot-luck lunch if something other than the menu is desired. All veterans are invited to attend, according to Pat Sm ith, Vet's secretary.
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Palomar's sem i· annual Pot Sale will get under way in the music complex
and the lesser, but very necessary, comic is called second banana. In this one-man show, he interprets several such secondary characters by presenting various motivations for their actions . In a recent interview, Christmas likened thetheaterto Lewis Carroll's garden which Alice saw through a tiny door at the end of along corridor, stating, "the evening in the theatre should seem one tiny segment of a fascinating life" --the audience should feel that a character in a drama wande r s down another path of that magic garden. Scenes from this garden, many of the "wonderful little people that scuttle through Shakespeare's plays, make up the program that Christmas has prepared for his performance."
'Pink elephant' fair tops $1,400 in sales Nine North County college and high school students will benefit directly from scholarships financed through the area's bi!:gest rummage sal e-- the "Pink Elephant" event that brought out big crowds of buyers last weekend. The Patrons of Palomar, who stage the annual harvest of variety bargains, reported that tabulation of proceeds indicate the sale income topped $1,400.
Atki ns, Mrs. Warren Fox, Mrs. John Schettler, assisted by administration and faculty wives including Mrs. Frederick R. Huber, Mrs. James Soules, Mrs . Howard Brubeck and Mrs . Virgil Bergman, Mrs. Adolph Heyne, Mrs. John Hamacher, Mrs. John Cosh, Mrs. Francis Schields, Mrs . Mary Y Connors, Mrs. Maurine Lines, Mrs. Chris Jenkyns, Mrs. Claude Bowers, Mrs. Jerome Davis, Mrs . Grace Burns.
Mrs. Carl Wass , general chairman of the sale , said the Patrons would be enabled to again present these annual scholarship awards :
Ex- radical Luce
Three scholarships of $100 each to three Palomar College freshme n students who enroll for their second year there . Three $200 schol arships to be awarded at commencement to t hree Palomar students transferring to a four-year college or unitersity. Three scholarships of $100 each for three high school students planning to begin their college work at Palomar in September. The $1,000 in scholarships from the Patrons organization are financed largely from the annual Pink Elephant sale. Other Patrons projects include student aid and support of various undertakings of benefit to the college. More than 40 members helped to staff the various departments of the sale held in the college dome gymnasium. Mrs. Bertha Adkins, is Patrons president, and Mrs. C. D. Ruetter was sale co- chairman with Mrs. Wall. Sale section chairmen included: Mrs .
speaks Monday Phillip Luce, once a prominent member of the radical campus movement, will speak here Monday at 10 a.m. Classes will be on assembly schedule. Before defecting from the Progressive Labor Party in 19 65 , he was the editor of the PLP magazine. In 1963, he was a leader of a s tudent trip to Cuba, in violation of State Department travel restrictions . He was an originator of the first declaration calling on young men to refuse to enter the armed service. In his appearence at the University of Wisconsin, he drew larger crowds than either the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., or the late President Dwight D. Eisenhowe r. "I defected not because I was reconciled to the injustices of American society as I saw then, but because I realized that communism would bring infi nite ly worse justice," said Luce in the February. 1967 issue of Reader's Digest . Luce's appearence was approved and is s ponsored by the ASB Council.
RAISED TO $20
Student card fees increased Student body card fees will be increased beginning next fall due to action taken yesterday by the ASB council. The five dollar increase to $20 per year came about at the request of ASB president Lloyd Walker. The raise in price will incorporate a new process of card production. The new cards will have a color picture of the s tudent body member that will bepermane ntlyaffixed into the card. Walker said that he had talked to several of the merchants in the area and they have expressed a willingness to offer reduced prices on some purchases and services, such as hair cuts. It was suggested that t he ASB owned bookstore offer a five percent reduction i n book prices to students with cards, thereby extending another benefit to card holders. Another consideration in the raise in price is the rate of inflation now sweep-
ing the country and the c ontinued granting of r aises to ASB e mployees. The r esolution to raise prices by five dollars passed by an 11 to 2 margin. The council yeste rday approved of two assembly schedules for the remainder of the year. The first assembly is to held May 23, if final pe rmission is granted by the Administrative Council today. It will feature Reverend Clarence Rivers,guitarist and singer, to refute the arguments of William DuBay. Cost of the speaker will be covered by the Newman Club. The original request originated in the Newman Club, but the backing of the ASB council is required for an assembly schedule request. The other approved assembly is to allow a panel of black youths from Southeast San Diego to speak to students.
The assembly was suggested by William Hahlbohm a private student. Both requests face final decisions today in the administrative council. Beginning in October, Palomar will have' a regularly established Dialog Day Session. The sessions will be held ever y first and thi r d Friday of each mont h. Members of the boar d of governors, administration, and faculty would receive written invitations to attend all the sessions. The meetings are open to the public and will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in room F-22. The final piece of work accomplished by the council was the granting of free books to the ASB president in office. The books would be used books, when available, and would be donated from the bookstore and would be returned at the end of the semester. T he pl an takes effect next fall.
KtOUTH'PeAce
Brotherhood of Students By Jim Strain ASB elections will soon be upon us again and once again the students here will act out the slightly grim parody of •Democracy in action" which we must endure twice a year. A few predictable students will sign up for offices , paint a few predictable posters, possibly make a predictable speech or two and then be elected by a few other predictable students. Hurray for student power. The whole structure of the ASB council leaves something to be desired. I'm not attacking the people on the council this semester as I think they have done a pretty fair job within the framework of the existing system. It is the system itself that's the joke. Until a couple of years ago councils were merely administrative puppets in which a few unsuspecting students were conferred with the dubious honor of coordinating and organizing student activities. Recently this has been changing and efforts have been made to make the job of ASB representative more meaningful. But the organization of the council itself is still set up the same way and finds itself incapable of dealing with these new responsibilities. Consequently we fi nd a small group of harried individuals trying to do a hundred different jobs at once and only occasionally and almost accidentally doing any of them really well. Witness the passage recently of the ASB budget for fiscal 1969. A committee of students from difterent departments worked for weeks to c ome up with a balanced budget which would be fair to all interests on the campus. Cuts had to be made and we may assume that a good deal of serious thought went into what these cuts should be. Then in a single meeting of the whole council certain representatives saw fit to make additional cuts against an alread y balanced budget. One wonders, fo r example, how much thought went into the obliteration by the council of the c ampus literary magazine which many of them had never even seen. If it was the will of the majority of the students, I would like to see the ASB council immediately dismantled. In place of it I would call for the
Formed along the lines of a labor union, the Palomar Brotherhood of Students (or c all it what you will) would involve maximum participation by a large number of students with expertise in their various fields. A central autonomous council, all of whose members would be equal, could be directly elected by all of the students on a semeste rly basis. The Council could then be empowered to appoint commissioners to various boards which would meet on a regular basis and report to the central council on its activities. Besides the rather obvious and mundane boards such as athletics and economics, a grievance board could be set up to investigate complaints of students and, perhaps, empowered to act in arbitration involving student-faculty or student-administration disputes. Naturally the new union would need money and so dues would have to be paid much as ASB fees are today. Membership should not be compulsory
though and the union should represent .even those who do not elect to join, but on the other hand, membership should be made as attractive as possible. This could be done by such schemes as soliciting area merchants for discounts for uni6n members and using the lever of our collective economic power to its full advantage. The organization would necessarily have to be non-partisan and extremely responsible in order to maintain the respect of all (or a majority) of students, and care would have to be taken that no one faction could use it for its own narrow interests . I am not trying to lay down any sort of master plan for some kind of revolution with this, but merely pointing out a general direction that I think would be extremely advantageous to take. Such a plan, if adopted on even a state-wide basis would once and for all weld the now formless concepts of student political and economic power into a formidable nonviolent weapon which could be effectively used aginst the foes of education and academic freedom. PEACE
Members of the art department "go fly a kite, "---a project for the ir de-
sign class . It was rumored that to pass the test the kites had to really fly.
organization of a national Student Union for which this school could be the model.
Final xam che d u ENGLISH ONLY
COURSE
INSTRUCTOR
SECTION
PROCTOR
ROOM
English 45B
Language and Ideas
Staff and Team
3080
English English English English Englis h English English English English E nglish E nglis h English
Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition Freshman Composition
Cole man Hollington Peacock Webb Hollington Jackson P eacock Quinte r o Ward Bohanan Norlin Jackson
2710 2720 2730 2740 2750 2760 2770 27 80 2785 2790 2800 2810
English lB English 1B Engli s h lB
Intro. to Literature Intro. to Literature Intro. to Literature
Bohanan Col eman Ward
282 0 2830 2840
Bohanan
English lB E nglish lB
Intro. to Literature Intro. to Literature
Ward Bohanan
2850 2860
Coleman
P-16
English 1B English 1B
Intro. to Literature Intro. to Literature
Webb Norlin
2870 2880
Norlin
P-9
English lB English lB
Intro. to Literature Intro. to Lite rature
Quintero Carli
2890 2900
Webb
P - 11
English 1B English 1B English 1B
Intro to Literature Intro. to Literature Intro. to Literature
Quintero Kilman Carli
2920 2930 2940
NOTE:
1A 1A lA lA lA lA lA lA lA lA lA lA
Peacock & Ward
Stud ent Union
Carli &
P-32
Quintero
&
F - 22
Hollington
Kilman
P - 30
Eng. 45B - 8 a . m.-9:30a. m. All English 1A and 1B classe s 8 a.m. - ll a.m.
MWF, MW, MF, MTWTh, and Daily
THURSDAY, June ' S, 19 69
- 1 p.m.- -4 p.m .
10 a.m.
MWF, MW, MWThF, and Daily
FRIDAY, June 6, 19 69
- 8 a.m. - ll a.m.
8 a.m.
TTh
FRIDAY, June 6, 1969
- 1 p.m . - 4 p.m.
8 a.m .
MWF, MW, MTWTh, and Daily
MONDAY, June 9, 19 69
- 8 a.m. - 11 a . m.
MONDAY, June 9, 19 69
- 1 p.m. - 4 p. m .
TUESDAY, June 10, 1969
- 8 a.m. - 11 a.m.
T UESDAY, June 10, 19 69
- 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, June 11, 1969
- 8 a.m. - 11 a.m.
WEDNESDAY, June 11 1969
- 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.
THURSDAY, June 12, 19 69
- 8 a.m. - 11 a . m.
THURSDAY, June 12, 1969
- 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.
12 NOON ~-
and~
2 p.m .
TTh
MWF, MWThF, and Daily
MWF and Daily
9 a.m., 9:30a.m., and 10 a.m.
FROM THE RIGHT SIDE
A sad state of affairs By Steven A. Krueger In the closing Right Side for the fall term, this columnist called on the new student government to end Palomar's biggest shortcoming: apathy by the students. They have done a magnificent job! Just look at the terrific turnout of people for the upcoming ASB elections. Frank Mott is running unopposed for president. No one is running for vice-president. Ruth Eicher, incumbent, runs unopposed for secretary. Pat Smith, incumbent, also is unopposed for treasurer. Four students, Joseph Rehm, John Faires, Barbara McKelvie, and Charles Perkins, have filed for representativeat large offices. If we were electing for two berths, this wouldn't be bad. But the fact is, there are six positions open No one has filed for either AMS or AWS president. As this is written Saturday morning, no decision -has been made on whether or not to extend the election deadline. Tradition says that the deadline will be extended. It has been in virtually every recent ASB election. It is time to break the tradition. One of two new roads should be tried. First, have the election with just the candidates for the offices that have now signed up. Second, postpone elections until t he fall. But, in all likelihood, the deadline will be extended and some poor sucker with a high enough GPA (candidates must have a 2. 5 or better) will sign up to chal-
lenge Frank Mott for president. Perhaps a radical will file for vice president, so an ADCOP member or a veteran will file at the last minute to oppose him. That would seem to be the history of student elections. The only time Palomar has had a respectable turnout at the polls was last year for the spring election when four slates of divergent views ran against each other. In other words, the only time this campus gets up off their tails is to react, not to initiate. This is not to say that those now with their hats in the ring would not make good officers. Ruth Eicher has done a great job this year as secretary. But no one should ever be elected unopposed. That is not a free election. That is a Russian election, where only one name appears on the ballot. This columnist again calls upon our supposedly active clubs and organizations to pressure qualified people into running for ASB office. If some pressure is not brought to bear soon, then there is no point in considering ASB government as a relevant organization here. ASB could be the voice of the people. But to be that voice it requires vocal cords (candidates) and wind (voter turnout at the polls.) It is the hope of this columnist that we will get our vocal cords and our wind in the May 21 election. If the only reason ASB government e xists is to dole out the money, then it should be destroyed. Dr. John Schettler, financial advisor to ASB, could hand out the money without the help of students.
Community colleges need SB 588 As has been stated in a previous TELESCOPE articl e , Palomar faces ext ensive spending cut- backs next year as a r esult of decreased state aid. These cut-backs may com e in the form of fewer faculty me mbers and the lack of new equipment. There is one and only one bill now before the state senate that will come to the aid of junior colleges. SB 588, authored by State Senator Claire Burge ner, would provide a needed $39 million increase in state aid to junior college. Palomar would receive at least an additional $22 0,000. Accord.ing to Sheridan Hegland, presid ent of Academic Senate for California Community Colleges, this bill, SB 588, is the only bill that would help junior or community colleges. All other education bills are aimed at " K-1 2" or state colleges or universities or a combination of these . In a letter sent to all community college newspaper e dito:r>S, Hegland said, "Community Colleges enroll twice as many students as do the state colleges and the s tate university combined; yet they are the most inadequately financed .• Hegland has endorsed this bill, as have the newspapers at Mesa and Grossmont c olleges. THE TELESCOPE joins these in endorsing this bill, SB 588. We urge our readers to write to Assemblyman John Stull and Senator
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1:30 p.m.,
held in the Dome. The sale was sponsored by the Patrons of Palomar.
Burgener and other elected state officials to voice Palomar's support for t his measure. (SAK)
• •• Announcelnent • • •• WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW announces the opening of its new campus in
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e e
2 years of occtptablt college c,...4its (60), or are O¥U 23 aM have aHoint cl in h•flllectu ol a~ ility t he e11uivalent of eltove (to be 4etermine4 bJ' tnt).
The l l.B. degree con be earned in 4 yeors of po rt lime clones : 3 clones per week, 3 houri per do u.
A P P LY NOW FOR SUMME R AN D FALL SEMESTERS (Both Ooy ond Evening Classes} write or plto•efor htforlltetlte trutelotwt
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232-6S06
•
The degree of l LI. or J .D. will b e conferred upon g roduo lio n h om the 4 -yeor progra m of the Colleg e of Low, operating os o non-profit ed uca tional institution, under Charter of the Stole of Ca lifornia . Grad ua tes are eligib le to tah the California Sta te l or b aminotion.
FINAL EXAMINATION WILL BE IN REGULAR CLASSROOM:
CLASSES THAT MEET :
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Bargain hunters peruse the merchandise at the recent Pink Elephant Sale
TTh
MWF and Daily
11 a.m., 11:30 a.m. 12 Noon, 2:30p.m. and 3 p.m. 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Special Arrangement
MWF
TTh
EVELYN
WOOD
READING
DYNAMICS
Why should I le<:~rh to
Come to a free Mini-Lesson® ·· Speea. t-eod? We want to show you l€1'lj0~ \"eadin<j what a speed reading slow!,y: course is like. Thursday May 15 11:00 AM Room P-32
r--------------------------------------------, NAME 1 STREET_________________ I
1 MAIL COUPON TODAY to: I Reading Dynamics Institute, I 2550 5th Ave., Suite 616, So n Diogo, Ca lif. 92103 1 o Ptme m~ ~mri,ti•e ret~er. 1 0 Ptem sed r~&i stratiuler• ad sc•dtle tl classes.
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CITY TELEPHON
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