The Telescope 23.48

Page 1

ETELESC

Palomar College ¡ Volume 23 Number 48 ¡ A Publication of the Associated Students

San Marcos , Calif.

Aviation course will tour area space facilities

Football coach speaks here next Tuesday

Tours of aviation centers and guest lectures by representatives of leading space agencies will be among the features of the summer Aerospace Workshop for Teachers at Palomar from June 22 to July 3.

Wes Fesler, three-time All-American football e nd at Ohio State University and a member of the National Football Hall of Fame, will speak at the Palomar Student Union June 2, at 7:15p.m.

Kent Backart and Joe Hydock, of the college science department faculty and directors of the workshop, said enrollment will be limited and that early registration is advised.

Ward Mye rs, college director of physical education, said the public is invited to hear Fesler and there is no admission charge.

A similar course last yea r drew an enrollment of llO.

The noted athlete is touring the country to speak before groups and civic clubs of "Youth~, under the auspices of Investors Diversified Services, Inc., the Minneapolis- based investment-management firm.

The directors said the purpose of the workshop is to introduce area teachers in elementary and secondary schools to "the ideas, concepts and materials available, relative to the fields of aviation and aerospace will find it useful." Five quarter units of graduate credit will be granted through the University of California at San Diego Extension Division. The course is a continuation of the workshop conducted last year but does not require the prior course as a prerequisite. Backart and Hydock said guest speakers for the workshop will include representatives from the National Aviation and Space Adm inistration (NASA), the Federal Aviation Administration, and from aerospace industries. The field trips will include tours to the Jet Propulsion Laboratories, Pasadena; the North Island Navy aviation installation; the headquarters of Pacific Southwest Airlines, and to Lindbergh and Palomar airports. Exhibits, panels, discussions and films will be utilized in classroom presentations during the two-week workshop. Enrollment details and other information on the couse may be obtained from Backart or Hydock.

CSEA schedules slide trip show A "Round-the-World Travelogue," with color slides and narration, will be presented tomorrow at Palom ar as a .feature of the state- wide Classified School Employees Week. The program is sponsored by the Palomar chapter of the California School Employees Association, and will begin at 7:30p.m. in Room P - 32. Mrs. Joy Day, president of the college c hapter, will describe her month's travel in a globe-circling tour of eight countries, from which she recently returned. In her travels, Mrs . Day went to Japan, Hong Kong, Bangkok, India, Greece, Austria, Switzerland and England. It was springtime around the world, she said, "but the trip included being s nowed in at Grinde lwald in the Swiss Alps." The public is invited to the program. Donations of $1 for adults and 50 cents for c hildren.

CAMPUS CALENDAR TUESDAY, May 26 WRA, 11 a .m ., 0 - 13

Palomar's mixed-team archers won second place in the U.S. Inter9ollegiate Archery Nationals, to add another big trophy to a string of honors. Team members, front row from left: Carol Goep-

SATURDAY, May 30 MEMORIAL DAY

son, one of the top stars of the meet and who won third in national ranking; Dan White, Miss Mildred Ayars , coach, Rudy Folds, Dave Moser, Tim Costanzo, Al Navarro, and Rick Ris l ey.

Over population subiect of poll Over population and birth control was the subject of an opinion poll taken recently by Jo-San Anear, Palomar student. It was done for a biology project for her Biology 10 class with Mr. Wayne P. Armstrong. "The main reason I took the poll was to see how aware and concerned people were about the problem of birth control. I was mainly concerned with the social aspect of it," Miss Anear said. Only general education classes were polled, so that no specialized things would be brought out in the opinions . Out of approximately 283 people who were sampled, only about five felt that the poll was useless. About 70 percent rated overpopulation as an extremely serious world problem, 24 percent rated it as very serious, and five percent moderately serious. Eighty percent said that they would use artificial contraceptives except when attempting procreation. Out of the 19 percent who answered ''no'' to this question, 13 percent said that it was based on a religious belief and 87 percent said it was not. To the question of sterilization, only

25 percent of the males said that they would allow themselves to be sterilized after having two children, while 43 percent of the fema les said they would allow their husband to be sterilized afte r having two children. About 76 percent said they would plan their families according to their income, and 72 percent thought that the government shold have incentive programs, such as tax exemptions and reductions, for not hav~ng children. While 76 percent thought that some government regulation of births would be necessary in the future, 19 percent thought it would not. On the question of abortion, 82 percent thought that abortion laws should be liberalized to allow any woman who doesn't want to have a baby to legally receive an abortion. About 36 percent thought women on welfare should be sterilized after having more than a given number of children, whi le 52 percent were against this and 12 percent had no answer or were undecided. The most popular government regulations thought feasib le and desirable for the future were free artificial birth control means, tax penalization for an overamount of children, and government

Nurses plan second annual 'Family Day' grad celebration "Family Day", Palomar's second annual celebration for graduating nursing students, will be held Sund ay, June 7 at 2 p.m. in Room P-32. T he event, sponsored by the Nursing Department Faculty, is held especially for the family and frie nds of the graduates, but the program is open to the public.

WEDNESDAY, May 27 I nt er -Club Council, 11 : 15 a . m. R-3 AWS, 11 a.m . , F-23 Gamma S igma Chi, 11 a .m., F-23 Varsity Club, 11 a .m., 0 -12 Students International Meditation Society, 7: 30p.m . , R-5 S tudent Advisory Curriculum Committee, 11 a.m., R-5 Vets for Peace, 11 a .m., P-9 These students will take the State Spring Sports Banquet , 6 :30 p.m. Board of Nursing Examina tion in July and upon successfully passing this will Stude nt Union be legally designated Registered Nurses.

FRIDAY, May 29 LOCAL HOLIDAY

pinger, Gay Gilchrist, Jeannette Lopez, Monica Grage, George Plocic, who finished 9th nationally in individual scores, Dan Jago . Back row: Frank Pallan, 11th nationally; Bob Inisko, Terry Gib-

STUDENT SURVEY

The 21 students to be honored are: Martha Anderson, Ann Blanchard, Lynn Frances Craig, Kristine Colwell, Crouse, Teresa Dorland , Patricia Dunlap, Pamela Fahring, Ilona Guimmayen, Roberta Hadden, Linda Hopewell, Suzanne Litterio, Sylvia Messin, Lois Motz, Carol Mowrey, Miriam Peevey, P e nnie Phillips, Bar bara Rickabaugh, Karen Sc hul z, Bettye Jo Scribner, and Caroline Veach.

THURSDAY, May 28 Mecha, 11 a.m., F-3 ASB Danc e , 8:30p.m., Dome

92069

A department announcement said, ''The faculty extends appreciation to the hospitals and other health agencies who have participated in the program by providing facilities for the students' clinical experiences. These include Palomar Memorial Hospital, Tri-City Hospital, Oceanside Community Hospital, Mesa Vista Hosptial, the Country Day School, the North County Child Development Cen-

ter, and the Public Health Department of Escondido." The next step for the c lass in becoming registered nurses will be to take the State Board of Nursing examination July 9 and 10. Upon successfully passing the examination the class members will be legally designated Registe red Nurses. A recapitulation was presented at a recent Student Nurses' Association of California (SNAC) meeting on this campus concerning events at the convention April 22- 26 in San Francisco. Four local student nurses who attended were Pat Dunlap, Pennie Phillips, Barbara Rickabaugh, and Karen Schul z. The convention's main theme '"Nondering about tomorrow with. . . THE CHANGING ROLE OF THE NURSE ," included: the nurse's role in treating the mentally r etarded, in a s peec h pre-sented by a speech pathologist, the adolescent drug use r, panel discussions on heart transplants, legis lation with regards to licensing examinations. ~nd reduced hours of experience and trammg required to gain a nurs ing license. One film viewed "Sex in Today's World," surveyed the changing sexual attitudes in the United States , along with comments of the personal and sociological changes portrayed.

subsidy for not having children . Adoption would be considered by 87 percent, while 10 percent we r e against it and 3 percent had no opinion. Views voiced on overpopulation from the females included: considering our moral responsibility to the rest of humanity, free birth control and information on overpopulation to make people a ware, making birth control devices easy to get such as in vending machines and free, education, large tax exemptions for first child born and less or none after two or more, and adopti ng birth control methods as a means of survival. Some male views (not all serious) on birth control were: educating the masses about the consequences, baby chips (each mature female would be given 2.3 chips to be cashed in when she has a child), a progressive income tax on any children after two, legalized abortion, exterminating all people over 35 for the next 15 years, abortion, and wisdon-guided self-control over the procreative instinct. The Abortion Counseling Service from San Diego asked for a copy of the poll. Copies of the results were sent to Dr. Paul Erhlich, author of ''The Population Bomb'', Senator Allan Cranston and Senator George Murphy, both from California, and to President Richard M. Nixon. Miss Arrear sent these to them because ''I thought they would be interested in knowing what young people thought about government control of birth control." "It was hard work, but lots of fun , " said Miss Anear.

Fesler earned three letters each in basketball, baseball and football at Ohio State. He later coached football and basketball at Harvard, Wesleyan and Princeton Universities and in 1947-1950 was head coach at his alma mater. His 1949 Ohio team won the Rose Bowl game. He ended his illustrious coaching career at the University of Minnesota where he coached from 1951 to 1953. Fesler has said that his extensive coaching background has given him s ome insights into youth, its problems, and its goals . He does not hesitate to relate some of those instances when ''what the coach said in the locker room did not exactly come off that way on the playing fie ld, ~ a problem he feels is similar to what most parents are confronted with at one time or another.

Spring Awards Banquet slated for tomorrow Palomar's athletic department will hold its annual Spr ing Awards Banquet tomo rrow night at 6:30p.m. in the Student Union. Baseball, golf, tennis, track and archery will be the athletic teams honored at the dinner. Awards for the evening, along with the certificates of participation, will be Most Valuable, Team Captain, Most Improved, Sportsmanship , and so on for eac h sport. Along with these awards will be presented three major awards covering this e nti r e athletic year. They a re: Outstanding Athlete of the Year, sponsored by the Vista Press; a Sportsmanship Award s ponsor ed by Stanley M. Cook, Jr., and a scholarship for this years top student-athlete by the Escondido Daily Times-Advocate. Tickets for the banquet have been set at $2. 25 . The dinner will be MC'd by Dean of Student Activities Robert Bowman. The agenda for the evening will inc lude remarks from each ofthe coaches, Mr. Myers, athletic director and entertainment provided by the Vista Sing-Out.

!News at a Glance! Application forms are available at Palomar for the Mary A. Romanowitz California Indian Scholarship grant of $250 to the student selected . Mrs . Marjorie Wallace of the Palomar staff says the application forms and list of requirements are available at her office. According to Mrs . Wallace, the scholarship is offered through the California State Society of the Children of the American Revolution, in the amount of $250 for 1970-71, payable at the rate of $125 for each of two semester. The r ecipient, under the rules of the award, must be a California-born resident with at least one-quarter Indian blood.

*

*

*

Election polls in front of the Student Union will remain open until 3 p.m. today to elect ASB officers for the fall, 1970 semester. Any student with an ASB card is eligible to vote.

Deadline for purchasing cap and gown is June l. The list of those participating in the graduation ceremony will be determined by the names of those who buy caps and gowns.

* " *really have the Does "The *Colonel best legs in town? Circle K and Phi Rho Pi challenges that statement and invites Palomar students- -both girls and guys--to prove it is wrong. Next Wednesday, June 3, at ll a.m. in the Student Union the two clubs will spons or a "Mini-skirt and Legs Contest". Students may register to compete in the ASB office or the business office, and tropies will be given for: The Shortest Mini (measured on ratio!) The Prettiest Legs, The Best Thighs, Knees, Ankles, The Hairiest and The Ugliest Legs. Let's show the Colonel that Palomar has the best legs in town. Gals sew up those minis and defeat the midis. Guys show your legs and win a trophy! Register now to be a contestant. Come on students--shake a leg!


FINAL EXAM SCHEDULE EY.AMINATION SC'·IEDULE FCR ALL CLASSES EXCEPT ENGLISH

~

M'WF, MH , MF, MT.-ITh, and Daily

Thursday , June 4, 1970

1 p.m . - 4 p.m .

10 a .m.

MWF, Mlv, l•1VTThF , and Daily

Friday ,

J une 5, 1970

8 a . m. - 11 a.m.

8 a . m.

TTh

Friday,

June 5 , 1970

1 p.m. - 4 p .m.

8 a .m.

l,JWF, MW , M'IHTh , and Daily

t.fonday,

June 8 , 1970

8 a . m. - 11 a.m.

Monday ,

June 8 , 1970

1 p.m. - 4 p . m.

M\-TF, MWThF, and Daily

Tuesday ,

J une 9 , 1970

8

a.rri. - ll a. m.

~

~lVJF

Tuesday ,

June 9 , 1970

1

p.m. -

and Daily

* * Dear Editor: * I wonder whether a middle aged night student can borrow some space in the TELESCOPE ? My pee rs tell me that the younger· generation has a difficult time in which to grow up and that they are confused etc. e tc. I assure you that it is just as difficult a time for a middle aged pa r e nt becaus e no one could be more confused than we are. Young people te ll us that the older generations will not listen. But their s logan is "Don't trust anyone over 30. '' Young people tell us they are for peace and accompany the statement with a rock to the head. Young people tell us they a re for freedom and shout down, with o"Qscenities those who would present an opposite view.

A study of histor y ought to convince anyo ne that you can c hange the system from absolute monarchy to limited monarchy to democracy to dictatorship but that c hanging the system does not change human nature and that most of the faults of any system ar e doe to human nature . Communists and Socialists have their military clique that will march into Hungary, Czechoslavakia, Poland, or East Germany. They have their industrial bosses who control what the workers have and how much they have, they have their privileged cl asses · who r ide in large cars and the systems because human nature has not c hanged much since P lato and Socrates lived. The flower c hildren of Haight As hbury become the Manson fam ily. Of all systems yet devised by m an our d emoc ratic form offers most hope because it allows for peaceful change any time you can convince a majority. Until you can c hange basic human nature and remove the drive for power that i s in most leaders of any type of system, remove the selfishness that is born into most of us, remove the violence that remains from our primitive sources you will not be ab le to c hange the 'System'. And, until that time when you can change hum an nature, it seems to me that the id ealist will always be disillusioned in the end. That does not mean that we should not work and strive to improve things. I hate to harp on history, but all in all, the world is a far bette r place for the little fellow than it was in 1930 when the majority of the world ' s population lived under dictators hips or colonial government, when there was no welfare or social secu ri ty , when world leaders were far more cynical and . dishonest than they now dare to be . Youth is always in a hurry. Age always tends to go too slowly. A certain amount of prodding by the young does older people no harm at all. If age has any wisdom it is usually in the reali zation that one cannot be absolutely certain about anything in this world and that most of the world's troubles for centur ies have been c aused by people who thought that they had the one and only truth, whether it was religious truth, political truth, or philosophical truth. The conceit of youth is that it thinks it has all the answers . The tragedy of age is that it realizes it had very few right answers . If violence continues bullets will be replaced by tanks and democracy by dictatorship of either the r ight or the left. If anyone believes he has a right to violence he automaticall y grants his opponents the same right. I can' t believe that most of our young people want to live in a society where force rules but so many of them invite force by using force. Bruce Hoffman

TTh

an d Daily

4 p.m.

Wedne sday, June 10, 1970

8 a.m. - 11 a.m.

lvednesday , June 10, 1970

1 p.m. - 4 p .m.

11 a . m. , 11: 30 a .m. , 12 Noon , 12 : 30 p.m., 2 : 30P .m., 3 p .m. , and Special Arrangement

TTh

Thursday, June 11, 1970

8 a .m. -

11 a.m ., 3 p.m. , and Special Arrangement

MWF

Thursday, June 11, 1970

1 .p .m . - 4 p.m.

C0 URS E

So we are confused. But the young people are not going to get anywhere that they will want to be by using force or violence. At a .certain point such tactics will produce a dictator who will gain popular support by promising 'law and order'. All people of all ages must realize that no one can have one iota more freedom than he willingly grants the other fellow ...

TTh

12 Noon

~' MWF

Young people tell us they are against violence and take over public buildings by force or burn them down.

and 100 .

Fl'NAL EXAMINATION HILL BE IN REGULAR CLASSROOM

9 a .m. , 9:30 a .m., and 10 a .m.

Dear Editor: In the p as t five years, since the deployment of American troops to Viet Nam, attitudes at home have undergone a steady and significant c hange toward the war. Dissension on university and college campuses, is presently at a new high, resulting directly from the use of American troops in Cambodia. This action also seems to have created much dissension from within President Nixon's machine-like adm ini stration; and our nation' s vast "silent majority" seems to be rather confused on the subject of our national purpose concerning this war. In view of present attitudes on the war, I fe e l President Nixon is making an enormous mistake in stretching his executive powers. It is also my opinion that any escalation of our presence in. Southeast Asia, either militarily or politically, could be hazardous to world peace. In March of 1965, Presid ent Johnson sent American troops into South Viet Nam to insure that its present government would r emain intact. President Johnson's actions s temmed not from fear that American li ves were at stake or that Ame ri can soil was at s take, but from a long and frui tless cold war with the communists that this country has never fully tried to face . Since that decision more that 40,000 Ame rican lives have been lost in that conflict. One should also keep in m ind that the negative attitude of this nation toward its communist counterparts has caused the killing and wounding of over one million Vietnamese. In the final analysis , the respons ibility for the actions of the United States must rest with every American. It is often difficult for me to understand why it is so hard for an American to face the mistakes he has made with forei gn countries and peoples . President Nixon proved to be suffering from this inadequacy when he stated, ''We will be conciliatory at the conference table, but we will not be humi liated . We will not be defeated." To take a stand now that would admit our mistake would indeed cut deeply into our national pride and heritage that history has made so vestal. I feel it is time for Americans to develop the guts necessar y to face this war realistic all y. I am a veteran of Viet Nam and I can conceive ofil.o man- .. ner in which to justify national pride at the cost of Vietnamese and Ameri can lives. I seriously doubt that any person who disagrees with me is willing to give his life for national pride . Les Egge

~'

CLASSES THAT MEET:

1 p .m., 1:30 p.m., and 2 p .m.

I LEITERS TO TH~_EDITOR l

!•

English English English English English English Engli sh English English Engli sh Engl is h English

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Fre shman Freshman Freshman Fres hman Fres hman Fr esh.ma:1 Fr e shman Fr es hman Fresrunan Fresrunan Fresh.<nan Freshman

PROCTOR

SECTION

Composition Compos i t ion Composition Compos ition Composit i on

ROOM

11 a.m.

INSTRUCTOR Carli. Coleman Bellington Perldns 1-Jright Webb Perkins Peacock McCormick Bellington Qui ntero Hebb

Comp osit i on Composit ion Composit ion Compositi on Cor3p osi ti on Composition

3295 3300 3302 3305 3310 3315 3320 3325 3330 3335 3340 3345

Peacock Bellington Jackson

Student Union

English 2 Introducti on to Lit. English 2 Introduc tion to Lit . English 2 Introduct ion to Lit .

3355 3360 3365

Norlin

F- 22

Norli n Qui nt ero Bellingt on

English 2 I nt roduction to Lit.

3370

Webb

P- 9

Norlin

English 2 Introduction to Lit,

3375

Wright

P- 15

Wright

E:1glish 2 Intr oduction to Lit.

3380

Quint ero

P- 30

Quintero

English 2 Introduction t o Lit .

3390

Carli

P- 20

Carli

~it ,

3395

Coleman

P- ll

Coleman

English 2 I ntroduction to Lit . English 2 I ntroduction to Lit .

3400 3405

McC ormick

P- 16

Carli Col eman

English 100 Language and I deas

3470

Peacock Belli ngton

P- 32

Staff and Te3!ll

Cor~position

English 2 Introduction to

Note: English 100-9:30-11 a.m. All English 1 and 2 classes 8- 11 a.m.

Pickens' memorial plaque dedication set tomorrow Mike Pickens, former Palomar art student, will be r emembered tomorrow at 11:30 a.m. in memorial services to be held by his sculpture in back of the library. Mike i s remembered as one of Paloma r 's first non-conformists, a real individual liked by everyone. A dedication plaque will be placed on his unnamed rusted-ring sculpture. In a letter t o fellow artist Rick Cole, that appeared in the Fall 1967 Focus magazine, Pickens explained about the sculpture . ''The sculpture in question doesn't have a title, obviously. . • it s houldn't it never will , it doesn't have a t itle . . . or r eally need one , to me at l east. I didn't build a title, I built, yeah that's the word I mean too, I built that thing. "You know I made it for myself and maybe that's why it is whatever it is or isn't. I'm sorry truly that not everyone can just look at it and say its nice. ''For the record or whatever or technically . . . it is amovement---two actually, with a bit of confus ion as to whic h way or why. One , horizontal flat away, the other up scrambling not so fluid but up. . . and off a bit maybe to the right or left or which ever way you The confusion happen to look at it. lies in the middle where, either both movements meet or make their transitions . I wish I could seeitfrom above, I could tell you more." Mike's wish came true. He now can see it from above. He's gone now, but he has left the rings for us to wonder about. The next time you a re captured by its charm, say something nice about it. • . because Mike will be watching.

u• ohnitt It

llhrtry lilly hll hy J.••••

Mike committed suicide three years ago.

NEVER VtfAX

YOUR

CAR

AGAIN!

THE TELESCOPE Published Tuesday and Friday of each school week, except during final examinations or holidays, by the Communications Department of Palomar College, San Marcos, Calif. , 92069. Phone: 744ll50, Ext. ll9. Advertising rates are $1.50 per column inch.

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