The Telescope 23.36

Page 1

$4,750 in scholarship awards available The following awards and scholarships are presently available to Palomar students either while they are enrolled at the college orupongraduation. Addition-al information on these and other state or national scholarships and special scholarships and special scholarship funds is now in the office of the Dean of Women. Deadline for filing application for any of thise scholarships is May 1.

to compete for a $100 State Award. CALIFORNIA SCHOOL EMPLOYSES ASSOCIATION, PALOMAR COLLEGE CHAPTER NO. 402, SCHOLARSHIP A cash award presented annually to a deserving student who is a dependent of a member of the Palomar College C.S.E.A. Chapter. CAMP PENDLETON NON-COMMISSIONED OF FICER:)' WIVES CLUB A $100 scholarship offered to an incoming freshman stude nt graduating from Vista, Escondido, Orange Glen or San Marcos high s chool who is a de pendent of active or retired military personnel. Renewable.

ADCOP A $150 award offered to an outstanding student planning to transfer to a fouryear college who is a dependent of active or retired military personnel. AGNES E. SPEERS MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP A $100 scholarship awarded annually to an outstanding graduate majoring in journalism. BANDY-SQUIRE -NESSiN SCHO LARSHIP Two $100 scholarships presented to freshmen business majors continuing as sophomores at Palomar College. BANK OF AN!EHJCA JUNIOH COLLEGE BUSINESS AWARDS Two annual awards of $200 each presented to outstanding students majoring in Business Admini stration or Banking, Secretarial or Clerical fields. CALIFORNIA JUNIOR COLL EGE MAN & WOMAN BANK OY AMERICA AWARDS Two $100 recognition awar::ls prese nted annually to deserving students who have demouatrated outstanding leadership, scholastic achievement and community service. Each loc al winner is eligibl e

Palomar College

CATHERINE ANN (TIMJ SAWDAY MEMORIAL BOOK FUND . A schol arship awarded annually to a deserving freshman continuing as a deserving freshman continuing as a sophomore at the College. An art or science major is required. COPLEY NEWSPAPERS A $200 scholarship presented to a graduate majoring in journalism at a four-year college . A $100 scholarship awarded to a freshman journalism major continuing as a sophomore at Palomar College. DAVID R. CLEMENT CITIZENSHIP AWARD A perpetual award presented to the student who has displayed outstanding citizenship during his two--year college career at Palomar. DEL MAR LIONS CLUB Two $100 scholarships presented to deserving freshmen students continuing as

sophomores. San Dieguito residents are required . DENNIS WOODWARD MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP A $100 scholarship presented to a woman graduate majoring in retailing or merchandising. DOUGLAS HOLMAN BUTTERFIELD MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP A SlOO scholarship presented to an outstanding graduate interested in ecology who is transferring to a four-year college. EDITH L. WEBSTER One $300 scholarship given annually to a graduate transfering to a four-year college. Two $100 scholarships given to freshmen students continuing as sophomore s at Palomar . ESCONDIDO CITY PANHELLENIC A $250 scholarship offered to a freshman or sophomore woman student transfaring to a four-year college. A resident of the Palomar College District is required. Spec ial application required. ESCONDIDO DELTA KAPPA GAMMA A $20 0 scholarship offered to a woman graduate planning to complete a teaching credential at a four-year college. ESCONDIDO JAYCEES WIVES A $50 scholarship offered to an evening student between 21 to 35 years of age who has completed at least 15 units. Financial need must be demonstated. ESCON1JIDO .J AYCEES Four $75 scholarships offered to evening students over 21 years of age who have completed 24 units with a "B"

average. Financial need must be demonstrated and recipient must enroll in a minimum of four units during the following fall semester. FACULTY CLUB AWARD A recognition award presented by the Faculty to a student whose unusual initiative and service advance the interests of the College.

NATIVE AMERICAN SCHOLARSHIP A $50 scholarship offered to a student of 1/4 or more degree Indian Blood who has completed 10 units with a "C" average. Financial need must be demonstrated and recipient must enroll in minimum of 10 units during the following semester.

FALLBROOK A.A.U.W. SCHOLARSHIP A $300 award presented to a woman graduate planning to attend an A.A.U.W. approved college or university. A Fallbrook High Scholl graduate is required. LAKE SAN MARCOS KIWANI S CLUB Two $100 scholarships offered to deserving male freshmen continuing as sophomores at Palomar College. MARGARET RUTHERFORD MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND A scholarship awarded annually to an outstanding sophomore majoring in business.

THE MEHCANTILE, ESCONDIDO A $100 sc holarship presented to a continuing sophomore woman planning to enter the field of merchandising and/or fashion.

FROOD SMITH MEMORIAL A $50 scholarship offered to a deserving graduate student planning to transfer to a four-year college. JOHi\1 PAUL MARKEN, JR. MEMORIAL A $150 award presented to an outstanding graduate majoring in busines s. LADIES AUXILIARY OF THE FLEET RESERVE ASSOCIATION A $100 scholarship offered to a freshman continuing as a sophomore at the College who is dependent of active dury or retired U.S. Navy or Marine Corps personnel residing in the Poway, Escondido, San Marcos or Vista area. Special application required.

Volume 23 Number 36 · A Publication of the Associated Students

April 7, 1970

PATRONS Two $200 sc holarships, including the Reba Chamness Scholarship, given annuall y to graduates planning to transfer to four- yea r colleges. Two $100 Scholarships given each year to freshmen continuing as sophomores at Palomar. SAN DIEGUITO BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S CLUB A $100 scholarship presented to a continuing sophomore woman planning a career in business or a profession. A San Dieguito area resident if required.

San Marcos , Calif.

this campus a r est! I took the cans home before Easter because they were n't get-ting any more money, and that proved to me that I had done enough, at least, at Palomar!" Sue has personally raised over $1,000. She commented that the biggest percent of the donations came from strangers on the street and from the cans in the Big (Continued on page 2)

CAMPUS CALENDAR TODAY, April 7: WRA, ll a.m., 0-13 WEDNESDAY, April 8: aws, 11 a.m., F - 23 Gamma Sigma Chi, ll a.m . , F -23 Inter-Club Council, ll:l5 a.m., R-3 MECHA, 11 a.m. , F - 3 Varsity Club , ll a.m., 0-12 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, ll a.m., R-1 Students International Meditation Society, 7:30p.m., R-5 Student Advisory Curriculum Committee ll a.m . , R- 5 Naval Aviation Counselor, 10-2 p.m., Student Union F RIDAY , April 10: International Club, ll a.m., B-1 Young Democrats, ll a.m . , P-18 Young Americans for Freedom, ll a.m., B-5 2nd Palomar Invitational Archery Tournament, 8-5 p.m., Here USC Concert Choir, ll a.m., Dome SATURDAY, Aprilll : Community Lecture by Clinton Rossiter in Student Union, 8 p.m.

100 donors needed for Blood Bank San Diego's Mobile Blood Bank, sponsored by the Palomar Business Club, will be on campus Thursday. The purpose of bringing the blood bank on campus is to recruit donors to add units to Palomar's reserve account. Any Palomar student who gives blood will be eligible for a transfusion in case of emergency, even after he has graduated. However, the donors immediate family is eligible for the free transfusion only while the donor himself is attending college. Members of the San Diego Blood Bank will set up cots in R- 3 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free coffee, tea, juice, and doughnuts will be offered. At least 100 donors are needed.

92069

Crafts show on display in art gallery

Campus coed fights to save Torrey Pines

To Sue Beere. Palomar fre shman, this poem is symbol!:: of the proposed extention of the Torrey Pines Reserve located on the southern end of Del Mar . She is a very active campaigner in the "Save the Torrey Pines" drive, which would require purchase of approx!mately 165 acres of land for preservation along with the construction of a nature study center within the reserve area. "I first becama interested in the fight to save the trees last Christmas when I ran into some kirls in La Jolla asking for donations," Sue said. "After reading the leaflet they gave me, I decided to do what I could to help." She then contacted John Burke, who handles publicity for the Torre y Pines Association hearlquar ~ e r.s located in La Jolla, and who works wlth students involved in saving the trees. Bur~e explained how $180,000 was needed to meet the $900 , 000 goal to stop the area from being built up with tract homes. "My first attempt at soliciting money was in the Speedy Mart par\ing lot in Del Mar , after receiving literature . pictures and poste rs from Larry Bac:t, Chairman of the youth group for the Torrey Pines Association. I collected $25 that night from s trangers who didn't even know about the "Save the Torrey Pines" campaign! This convincecl me that people really were interested and that personal contact is much better than say, a newspRper article." Also over Christmas vacation Sue visited Santa Bar:nr'i and attenderl the "Oil Moratorium" at the City College in Santa Bar:Jar:t where Dr. Paul Erlich, author of "The Population Bomb", spoke . At the rally she spoke about the Torrey Pines and collected about $200 from people there and from othars on the streets in Isla Vista, "While I was in Santa BarJara during Easter vacation I met the associate producer of a record company who became interested in our campaign. He is ar-ranging for the Torrey Pines Association to receive I/ 2 of the profits of a new album a San Francisco band is planning to make!" she said. "As soon as I get the name of the band and find out the title of the album I'll let everyone know.'' Here at Palomar Sue often spoke in the student union at lunchtime and also distributed cans for money donations all over campus. She added, howeve r, that "After two weeks of stopping everyone and anyone for money, I decided to give

PALOMAR VOITURE #1406 A $175 scholarship offered to a student enrolled in the two-year Nursing Education Program.

ETELESC

~~~~~~~~~~------·----------------------------------~

By Jan Gustina "There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a r:tpture on the lonely shore, There i.s society where none i nt1"1des, By the deep sea, and music in its roac·: I love not· man the less, but Nature mOJ:e . '' -Lorrl Byron

VISTA JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB A $100 scholarship presented to a man or woman graduate planning to continue at a four-year institution. A Vista resident is required.

•california Stitchery 1969/70" is now on display in Boehm Gallery. Examples of furniture making, glass blowing, cer-

amics, jewelry, and stitchery by a number of we~l-known craftsmen will be on display until April 24. ---Eden photo.

News Briefs The Ceramic Guild of Palomar will present its first glass- blawing s a minar April 13 and 14 in the art depar ~ ment. Each day will feature a compl et.e pro .. gram of demonstrations, talks and slides, together with observances of students actually being instr:.~cted in this ar~. Well known glass blower Steven Zachofsky is lending his talents, obscrvati ons, and experience to the two-day seminar He has been a glassblower at Paudu Hills for three yeara. and has spent over four months studying and touring glass factories and schools in Europe . A show of his works is now on display and sale until April 14 in the show·· case adjacent to the Palomar Art Department. Because of limited s pace, the sessions are by invitation only.

*

*

*

Dr. Arthur Brodbeck will be speaking today at ll a . m. in ES-19. Dr. Brodbeck is in Southern California to participate in a seminar at Kairos, and to take part in the lecture series at San Diego State featuring J. Krishnamu rti. Dr. Brodbeck has done resear·J h in the fie ld s of chilj psychology 9.nd anthropology, and is an advocate of new approaches to education. He has recently authored a new book e ntitled, "Value Sharing: A Creative Strategy for American Education."

A meeting to organize instructor Dick Peacock's campaign for assemblyman in the BOth district will be held Friday at 11 a .m . in P-11. Interested students are needed in the Escondido, Fallbrook, and Vista areas.

Now on display in the Boehm Gallery is a showing of crafts open to the public. According to Gallery Director Harry Bliss, the show will remain open until April 24, and includes examples of furniture making, glass blowing, ceramics, jewelry, enamelling, and stitchery. Many well-known craftsmen are being featured in the show. Commenting on the contributors, Bliss said, " Many people in the show will be in the Design Two Craftsman Exhibit Show, which is the largest crafts show on the west coast." The gallery is literally packed with many different forms of crafts. Some pieces include a laminated wood carved chair-table by Jack Hopkins, a fiberglass rocker with ramskin fur by Larry Hunter, and several pieces of wooden furniture made by Sam Maloff, a nationally known craftsman. Maloff was the subject of the cover story in the September 28, 1968 issue of Home Magazine. Some non-functional jewelry is also on display in the gallery. The pieces are made by Arelene Fish and Jack Hopkins, both well-known craftsmen. A large part of the show is devoted to a trave ling exhibition called "California Stitchery 1969/70." The exhibit is sponsored by the California Arts Commission, and includes a variety of different stitchery and weaving techniques.

USC Concert Choir will perform in dome Friday Dr. James H. Vail will direct the Uni ve rsi.ty of Souther'l California Concert Choi r in a performance in the Dome Friday 'l.t 11 a.m. Born in Los Angeles, James Vail re<Jei vad his early musical training in Glenclala, California, and first studied orgau and choral musi c with John Burke. He r e.:::eived the Bach~lor of Music degree fcorn the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia in 1951, where he was a student of Alexander McCurdy. His graduate r, tudy, under the guidance of Charles C. Hirf:, was at the University of Southern California, where he earned the Master of Music degree in 1956 and the Doctor of Musical Arts in 1960, with a church musk major. Since 1961 Dr. Vail has been on the USC School of Music faculty, where he is Associate Professor of Church Music and conductor of the Concert Choir. An organist and choirmaster for fifteen years at St. Jol-]n's Episcopal Church,

Los Angeles, and more recently at St. Alban's Episcopal Church, Westwood, his pr-asentation of major choral-orchestral works and organ recitals has received wide acclaim. Dr. Vail is also Vice President of the Los Angeles Chapter of the Choral Conductor's Guild and a past dean of the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Guild of Organi3ta, has taught at Immacnhte Heart College and Harvard School ~or Boys, and served as organistchoirmaster at La Jolla Presbyterian Church and for several churches in the east . In addition, he frequently appears as a and guest conductor at choral festivals :lnd at choral, organ, and church music works hops both in California and other :Jarts of the nation. The public is invited to the performance, for which no admission fee will be charged. le ~t uree


Drive to save Tarrey Pines aided by coed

ASB BOX SCORE Council Members Present: John Donnelly, Pat Smith, John Kealy, Terry Meyers, Linda Causey, Jeff Chamberlain, Terry Green, Jackie Easley, Charlie Ayars, Bob Rickman, Bob Olson, Greg Salo, Terry Geiger, Linda Buendel, Maryanne Cheung, Steve Meyer.

* * Absent: * Council Members RuthAnn Eicher, Jim Carter, William Thomas (excused) .

(Continued from page one) Bear Market in the Del Mar Pla1.a. The ASB at Grossmont College has donated $50 to the Torrey Pines cause and Sue also has collected about $300 at UCSD by speaking in fro nt of audiences such as "every Friday night before a movie I'd expl ain the story and would have a barrage of coins thrown down into a bucket at the front . It was really quite a happening one night when $150 worth of coins filled the plastic trash can."

* * *

Legislation Enacted: Approval of budget for fiscal year 1970-71. Vote: 10 Yes, 3 No, No abstentions.

I

Prese ntly Sue is worri:ing on two concerts. she hopes will come through as planned. The first will be April 17 at Mesa College and the sacond May 23 at Aztec football stadium at San Diego State. She can't guar'l.ntee Crosby, Stills, and Nash anymore, as originally, because of the time lost in planning it. "Before you put on any kind of a gig you have to have a sponsor, a place, and some organization. Unfortunately, none of those have come through yet! But I'm still trying to get at least one going." Sue's major is Art, and she is presently getting back into "creating" as she put i t. "I intend to make a sculpture to commemorate our campaign to save the Torrey Pines, even if the goal isn't met. The goal will be reached though, I know it. We got an extension until June, so if you would like to help we would really appreciate it." Her campaigni ng was slowed up a bit when she got strept throat for three weeks not too long ago. "I was putting the Torrey Pines work above everything else and I guess I just wore myself out. and, I might add, the people around me! But we are saving the trees, there are so many people behind the movement, perhaps not out in front, but they're there! It would kill me to sae tract hom es on that hill , have you ever seen it? It's beautiful. .. they' re out of their minds to want to build there!" "I was looking through a magazine the othe r day and saw a picture of a guy sitting on a giant tree stump and at the bottom a small sign read "People and trees belong together."

Letters to the Editor Dear Editor: Those who were surprised at last semester's censure of various council members, do not be surprised this semester. There is presently a two-point plan in action to compromise, if not totally weed-out certain ''undesireables. '' 1. Unannounced council meetings are held at such wierd times that the "undesireables" could not attend even if they knew about the meetings. 2. No record of excused absences is any longer kept in the minutes. (Whether one is in class or in a hospital, one is considered "absent". Three absences and a council member is due for censure . No matter what the official reason, it is no secret that the real reason for such an ostracism is personality conflict or the simple fact that there are a few council members unwilling to sit back and watch the ASB Council screw the students. So don't be surprised, fellow students, when you read of some missing votes on the council and then discover soon after how well the ASB Council can screw you. Terry Meyer #32360 Jeff Chamberlain #32616

*

*

*

Dear Ed itor: I will compare our present ASB with a sleeping tiger just arousing from a fitful nap. The once-peaceful sleep of the Tiger has been pinched, poked and needled with the sharp points of criticism. This has been good, for what good is a student government which sleeps? So the Tiger has been aroused. He's yawned his last yawn and is now out to get his bod on the move. Many projects, many things will come to pass, and soon . .. all to give a meaning, a value to the ASB cards. There's only one problem: The prowling cat is the Associated Students of Palomar. It's time to come together People! Time to all work together, work hard, be createive in building a strong student association for betterment of all students and their interests, their education. Just walk right in, R- 3, that's where it's at. Linda Causey ASB Representative- at- Large #28040

The Torrey Pines Reserve and Extension preserve the area in its natural state. No playgrounds, bicycle paths

wo~ld

or roads other than access road would be allowed. The woodland is strictly for walking, wondering and enjoying the

richness ot tne area. The 1ana rs wcatea near the southern end of Del Mar. Photo courtesy of Torrey Pines Assoc.

DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOU'RE EATING?

S~cope

I

TUESDAY, April 7: Moon in Taurus, a good day for the old. They remain seemingly unmovable today. \VEDNESDA Y, April 8: Bull-headed action can dispell any stagnation resulting fro\D yes terday's ferm entation. . THURSDAY, April 9: Moon enters Gemini. A good day for getting together with someone you like for articulate rapping, or whatever (heh). Good time for FRIDAY, Apri l 10: s ocializing, friendly folks will astound you, once the y have found you. Don't let them down. SATURDAY, April 11: Jovial subtlety can win over many things tonight. Although yo u may want to stay home, don't. Many wild trips on the outside.

Student explains 'food pollution' By Alex Hinds Today virtually every bit of food you eat has been chemically treated and processed. Preservatives, dyes, bleaches, emulsifiers, artificial flavors, neutralizers, moisturizers, drying agents, hydrogen·· era tors, artificial hormones , antibiotics, chemical fertili zers, pesticides, fungicides and disinfectants are a partial list of the ever-increasing chemicals added to our food supply. Commercial interests use these food additives for a var iety of reasons, though basically food additives are used to make s tale produc ts appear fee::;h, and to disguise inferior quality products by substituting cheap; nutritionalally inferior or worlhless chemicals for more costly natural ingr·ed ients. For example, chemical fertilizers increase the size o( many crops by "force feeding" the plants nitrogen. This r esults in larger sized produce with les s nutritional value. Also, art ificial sex hormones are give to livestock to make them qu i ckly and cheaply add weight. One example, sti.lbestrol, a hormone given to cattle and other meat animal3, chemkally upse ts their hormonal balance and rt:Jsults in their emasculation and rapid weight gain. The dangerous implications for man, who is the next step in the food chaL1, seem obvious . It is ind ee•i a nr:ty for chemic als to become i.ncorpor.1le J into our food supply because of the consJmer's actual nutritional needs. Nevertheless, an examination of a typic al meal would reveal a myriad of pos sibly dangerous chemical additives ; For example, the white bread you eat has had the mofli valuabl e nutrients milled out and then was chemically bleached , aged, softened and preserved. Proces r>ed cheese is artificially stabilized, often with sot] .. ium car'Joxymeth, which is also used in rain emulsion paints and printer's ink, artificially thickener! often with methyl celluose which is also used in cosmetics and adhes ives , as well as art ificially preserved, flavored , and colored with various other synthetic chemicals. Your meats contain the highest con·· centration of DDT and other related clorinated hydrocarbons due to a process known as biological magnification. Everyone knows that there are federal standards regulating the limit of DDT in parts per million in milk t ran,:;ported across state lines. What you probably did nol know ·: s that dairy animals that exceed the federal standads for DDT concentrati·)n are then used for meat. The ice cream you eat for dessert may contain several cheap chemicals including diethy glucol used as an emul sifier. It is also used in anti-freeze and paint removen, and, depending ou your flavor , c hemic al s such as pipernal for vanilla flavoring, a c hemical also used to klll lice, and for cher r y flavor·· ing, ethyle aldehyde Cl7, also used as a cleaner for leather and textiles, whose vapors have been linkerl to chronic l ung liver, and heart damage. Refined white sugar, found in most all desser.ts, packaged foods and soups, is the result of a chemical process which has enabled man to strip natural sugar produci ng crops of their original nu-

trients until there remains only isolated pure carbohydrate, empty calories devoid of vitamins, minerals, and protein. In fact a greater amount of body energy is required to digest and assimilate white sugar than what it produces. Experimental evidence by Dr. Russell Wilder, a Mayo Clinic physician, shows that the increased use of white s~gar leads to a vitamin B deficie ncy. A diet ordinarily sufficient in vitamin B will become inadequate with an increased intake of white sugar, The list goes on and on, becoming mora and more frightening. Dr. Edward J. Ryan, editor of "The Dental Digest", states that "Everytime a natural substance is r emoved from a food, everytime an adulterant is adde d to a food, the balance in nature is disturb .. ed. . . The chemical and cellular processes within the body cannot react to the passing whims of chemistry without disturbance in function. It took thousands of years for the body to adjust itself to changing environmeutal conditions . When these conditions are suddenly altered by the actions of men, the cells cannot make the adjustment--disease is the result." All of us have heard at sometime in our lives that the American way of life, our technology and food products, has provided us with the highest standard of healthful living. Contrary to public opinion the American people are not the most vital, healthy group of people on earth. Granted our life expectancy has increased by 22 years since 1900, but the prime reasons for this increase were, first, decreases in infant and maternal mortalities, a result largely of improved sanitation, medical facilities, an tibiotios and, two, a reduction in the numher of deaths from infectious di seases, again due largely to improved sanitation, antibiotics, and sulfa drugs. Statistics show that in the last 70 years we have not appreciably increased the life expectancy of adults 40 years or ove r. We have mere ly reduced the number of premature deaths from infectious disease and infant mortality and have substituted prolonged, degenerative diseases in their stead. In many cases doctors keep their patients alive and little e lse . Biologists state that mammals should live 5- 6 times longer than the length of time it takes for them to reach maturity. By this formula, based on the life cycles of all other mammals, man should live to be about 120. Where is man going wrong? The answers are c e rtainly many and complex, and doctors, supposedly the guardians of our health, are too often entrenched in their own chemically-

based medi c al culture , which is more oriented towarJs "curing" sickness (treating symptoms) than offering substantial advice on the maintenance of health. Obviously the pollution of our air, water and food plays a large part in the increased occurences of such degenerative diseases as cancer, linked to some synthetic dyes, preservatives, pesticides ; emphysema, linked to air pollution and cigarette smoke; coronary artery diseases, linked to animal fat, cigarette smoke, and hydrogenated oils which are found in many items such as commercial peanut butter. Unfortuantely, big business interests, due largely to stupidity and commeroial expediency, are employing deceptive testing methods and political lobbyists to insure the continued use of their processed, adulterated products. Too often the attitud e is a little poison--very diluted--won't do substantial harm, completely ignoring the cumulative effect of three meals per day containing a little poison, as well as the great variation in tolerance levels among different humans. Too often the test researchers have an insufficie nt backgt'ound in toxicology and biology and succeed in proving only the specific function asked them by their industrial employers, who likewise may be unaware that their researchers are not qualified to j•.1dge the safety of oue product or another. "The growing custom", according to Dr. William E. Smith, "of introducing an endless series of biologically fore ign molecules into the human organism is not unlike throwing a collection of nuts and bolts into the most delicate organism known.'' What then can we as ind i victuals do to limit our intake of c hemical food additives and pesticide:>, better known as biocides in that most of them in sifficient quantities will kill all living organisms? The most obvious answer would be to grow much of your own food without using insecticides. Many people, however, have neither the time, backyard, or inclination for hom e gardening. These people then must purchase unadulterated food from a private commercial source .

DEL PLAZA BARBERS

317 Fifteenth Del Mar, California 92014

\~

~

957 Jlouuu Jan/a lfe ,Sola na 1Je al'li 755-1564

WANT TO BUY Electric trains. See Mr. Archer--Room P-17

FUN 'n SUN !fieated Pool, Billiard & Card Room Sauna, BBQ & Picnic Area, Landscaped & 2 Br. , GE Air Cond & Refrig. Magi :; •::; 1l(,f Range & Oven, Disposal Carpe L & Drapc '3, Laundry Room. TH r::; IMP f:IUAL 744- 2450 San Mar(!'r::

LEATHER GOODS

Coats: $39.9 5 ~1 occasins: $4.95 Vests: ~8.98 to 14.98 Purs es : $3.98

l?l/ fJ/l l1 0f'ltjlftitUJ

~

Ski llful organic growers substitute biological control methods for insecti cides, relying upon suc h practices as the importation of natural predators for certain insect pests and the use of a diversified c rop which includes some flowe r s or herbs known to be deterents to s pec ific pests, as well as many other techniques . The Escondido - San Marcos- Vista area, well known for its healthy climate, is doubly blessed by having numerous sources of organically grow11 produce. Reasons are few why the student cafeteria could not add a natural food section featuring unsprayed fruit, vegetables, and whole grains (brown rice and whole wheat bread) to their facilities. Our age is in the midst of decadence and e nvi ronm ental crisis. Soil fertility and food poisoning are known factors in the rise and falt of past civilizations. It ' s high time we begin defining OU!:_ne~ds with .!_he needs of the earth.

Gem, Stone and Gift Shop

a 11 d 13nut It; r~ a/ a tt

~ wtfi/ cl/pti1 1JJ.'

Organically grown food is not pure magic, but it doe s taste better, and is of higher nutritional value than its plastic, adulterated c ounterpart. Proper organic agricultural methods do not disastrously upset ecological balances or reduce soil fertility like chemically oriented agriculture.

~~~~~

13{'}u/uf-LU cl/le :x:.andet

25%

Fortunately, "organi c growe rs", farmers who use natural fertilizers, putting more back into the soil than what they take out, are becoming more and mo:ce numerous. However, before the general public can be provided with wholesome high quality food on a large scale, the commeecial intere s ts that be (whos e common denominator is cash) will have to be convinced that the market alread y exists .

JEWELRY 38 N. llroad"·ay Escondid o,Calif. 746-5711

Parts

Sales

Service

520 West Mission San Marcos

744-3984

~~~~~~


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.