ETELESC
Palomar College · Volume 24 Number 30 · A Publication of the Associated Students ·
Ulman named as new head
Public service programs begin "Operation Up-Date," fifth annual public service program series will begin tonight, jointly sponsored by North County chapters of the American Association of University Women and the college. Opening program in the series will preserrt Dr. Frederick R. Huber, Palomar president, as speaker at a non-host dinner at the Student Union beginning at 6:30 p.m . His subject will be "Higher Education---A New Appraisal.'' Dinner price will be $2.50 and reservations are necessary. They may be made by telephone to the president's office at Palomar. Next in the series will be a program at 10 a.m. March 5, presenting Buddy Ashbrook, of the speech- theater faculty, and his drama class in a series of scenes from forthcoming production. The meeting will be held in the drama lab at the college. Dennis Bostic, of the college zoologyphysiology faculty, will be the speaker at the March 12 program, at 7 p.m. His subject will be "New Horizons in Marine Biology." The concluding session in the series, March 19, at 10 a.m., will feature Arthur John Wilks, Fullbright Exchange Professor from England, who will speak on •comparative Education. "
Ex-congressman speaks tonight Jerry Voorhis, recently retired head of the Cooperative League in this country and a former congressman during the New Deal era of 1936-46, will speak tonight at Lincoln Junior High School in Vista. His topic for the 7:30 p.m. presentation will be the "Challenge to the Young Voter." Young people in the 1721 age group are especially invited to learn some of the issues they will be facing in 1972.
San Marcos , Calif.
92069
Speech depart~nent hosts high schools
of languages Timothy W. Ulman was recently named to succeed Mrs . Marilyn Crist as chairman of the foreign language department. Having taught German at Palomar for a year and a half, Ulman has a BA and a MA in German from UCLA, He previously taught German at UCLA as a teaching assistant and asssociate. Basically an administrative position, the chairmanship is mainly concerned with coordinating funds in t he department. It also invol ves representing the department in committee meetings and c oordinating instructors with the classes. "Right now the main thrust of the department is in the planning of alternate and supplementary c ourses to our regular program. Last year we introduced the cultural heritage course. Right now it is a half travel guide, half cultural guide to the various countries. In the future this class may develop into one class on cultural history and one on the literature of the various languages in translation. "We would also like to offer Russian as a day course and add Latin to the curriculum. Another possible addition could be c onversational courses in German and French similar to the current Spanish 11 course, conversational Spanish, where students are individually exposed to conversations with native speakers. However, without e nough student interest we can't organize these c l asses. "The problem that concerns us right now is the fact that more and more four year colleges are seriously reforming their language programs. In some cases old programs are totally abandoned while others have been reduced to a great extent. We ar e slightly apprehensive a nd quite curious as to how this will affect enrollment in future language programs."
Feb. 26, 1971
Mike Carpender (L), and Timothy W. Ulman, new head of the language de-
partment, are pictured reading the German magazine, Stern. (Photo R. Mamiya)
Approximately 75 debate teams representing 20 high schools have accepted an invitation to the first Palomar College High School Invitational Debate Tournament tomorrow. First and second place trophies will be awarded in both the championships and consolation brackets. The awards assembly will be culminated by presenting the "outstanding debater" trophy. Co-chairmen of the tourney will be Wendy Wetzel, Larry DeBoever, and Terri Miles. Assisting will be Dave Duggan, Carmella Magpayo, Darlene Laskowski, Jan Caswell, Becky Green, Pat Wilson, Joe Cosenza, Chuck Jackson, Steve Kildoo, and Hazel Chamlee. At the recent Palomar Intrepretation Festival, Oceanside High School captured its sixth consecutive sweepstakes trophy. Fallbrook placed second and Chula Vista tied Castle Park for third place honors. The first place dramatic trophy was won by Emiko Dobson of Washington Junior High, Vista; Christie Rodiger, Fallbrook High, won the first place trophy in humorous. Ann Loree, Oceanside High, was named outstanding speaker of the tournament as winner of first place in both oral interp and oratorical interp. Dahlin said it was a fine showing for the North County high schools in a tournament which included 400 entries
Instructor departs for Barrier Reef Four months of research at the Great Barrier Reef and on the northeast coast of Australia began this month for Fred L. Elliott, Escondido, biology and botany instructor at Palomar College. Beginning his spring term sabbatical leave of absence from the facu lty, Elliott departed by airline from San Francisco Feb. 19 as assistant director of an expedition sponsor ed by the College of Idaho and headed by Dr. Lyle M. .stanford:. Elliott's duties with the expedition will include class lectures on reef formation tropical plant families, ecology and birdlife. He will also be in charge of transportation details while the party is in Australia. Seventeen students are making the trip. "One objective is to make intensive study of plants and animals on the northeast coast of Australia and adjacent islands," said Elliott. Another is to make special study of the Barrier Reef, an area chosen because it is regarded as the one region in the world least altered from its original characteristics." One month of the stay in Australia will be spent in working at the research station at Heron Island and utilizing the facilities of the University of Queensland . In traveling, the class will be transported by leased cars and by train. Elliott said that during a part of the trip the expedition will be camping out and doing their own cooking "as a matter of economy." Elliott will make a large number of
both still and motion pictures during the research travels and will also collect specimens. Upon his return home June 5, Elliott will prepare for a second expedition
starting June 12 when he will accompany another College of Idaho study group on a 10-week exploration in Mexico. Elliott has participated in five previousexploration expeditions into Mexico.
Palomar debaters Wendy Wetzel and Larry DeBoever won the first place trophy in men's debate by defeating teams from Rio Hondo, Long Beach City, E. Los Angeles, Orange Coast, Riverside, and Cerritos College. Miss Wetzel became the only tournament competitor to win three championship trophies. She also won first place in extemporaneous and impromptu . DeBoeve r climaxed the Palomar awards by winning fourth pl ace in the championship round of extemporaneous speaking.
Electronic music concert Sunday A concert of electronic music will be played by Frank McCarty and Allen Strange in room C-6 at Palomar College beginning at 3 p.m. Sunday. The program, to which the public is invited, is sponsored jointly by the College Community Services and Music Departments. Both musicians are music instructors at Fullerton State College and working toward doctor's degrees at the University of California at San Diego. McCarty is a native of Escondido and has been active in musical circles in the San Diego area. Also sponsored by the two departments are the following spring concerts: March 7, Room C-5, 3p.m.: Piano recital by Dr. Arthur Lambert, professor of piano at San Diego State College. March 12, Room C- 5, 8 p. m.: Joan and Ron George, clarinet and percussion. March 24, Dome Gymnasium, ll a.m. : Cal Poly Symphonic Band. April 21, Room C- 5, 11 a. m.: Joseph Marx, music lecturer. May 2, Room C-5, 3 p.m.: Peter Midd leton, flute. May 9, Room C-5, 3 p .m.: Wilmar Wall, tenor. May 16, Dome Gymnasium, 3 p.m.: Palomar College Concert Band. May 23, Dome Gymnasium, 8 p.m . : "Elijah," with professional soloists and symphony orchestra and 200-voice community chorus.
"Liberation," the first of five rock musicals to be produced locally will open Monday night at the Palace in San Diego. The play deals with the college political temperament in this country today. Action centers around a student who returns to college to confront the changed ideas and actions of his former friends. ''Gnarly Beast'' supplies the music backup. "Liberation" will run nightly through Sunday. All five musicals will leave San Diego to tour college campuses across the country.
pass measures During Monday's meeting of the ASG's executive council two resolutions were passed. First, it was decided that a request would be made to the administration to open the faculty dining room to students as a faculty-student lounge where students could meet with faculty members in an informal way.
Planetarium sho w starts Wednesday
The second resolution concerned opening up the faculty restrooms to the general student body.
Members of the student assembly will vote on these two measures today during the regular meeting of the assembly at ll a.m.
The Palomar College debate team, meanwhile, placed sixth in a field of 25 teams in the recently held Riverside Spring Invitational Speech Tournament.
First rock-musical in San Diego opens
• ASG executives
These measures were brought up in an attempt to promote better studentfaculty relationships, and discourage the separatist attitude between the two group·s due to formal classroom situations.
from 25 San Diego and Imperial County schools.
Joe Willis, earth science instructor, Kent Backart, c hemistry instructor and Joe Hydock, earth scjence department chairman (L to R), are shown with the aeronautics department's new 1971
Cessna 150 training-type aircraft. The privately owned plane is for use by Palomar students working towards private or commercial pilot licenses. (Photo by George Elgin)
"Signs of the Zodiac" is the name of the planetarium show to be shown every Wednesday night in March. . This program deals with the story of the beginnings of astrology and the constellations through which the sun's annual path passes . Performances begin at 7:15 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Admission is free ·and open to the public.
Spikers travel to dual meet at San Berdoo Comet spikemen will try to make it ten in a row today as the track team is on the road to meet San Bernardino Valley. The Palomar team now has a two-year dual meet win streak of nine. Today's meet will take place on the Indian's Grasstex all-weather track. Last week, the thinclads captured three first places in the Mission ConRelays at Citrus College. There was no team scoring. Ian Cumming, Vaughn Lord, Les McFadden, and Wilbur Wester won the twomile relay with a new meet record of 8:08.4. Gary Stines won the 16-pound shot with a lifetime personal best of 50-4. Barry Houchin took the triple jump for the Comets at 43-3. Jay Larkin anchored the sprint medley team to a second place time of 1:55.8. David Edgar, Rich Hunt, and Calvin Smith ran the other three legs on the rain-spaked track. Gene Chaffin and John Duffy are shown scrambling for a loose ball in a contest
during Palomar's winning season. The Comets end their season tomorrow night.
Cagers end season at San Bernardino The Comets close out their regular season on the road against San Bernardino tomorrow at 8 p.m. A win could put the Comets with a second place finish all to themselves. Palomar's Comets rolled to their fifth straight win to beat Chaffey College Wednesday night, 73-59 . The Comet defense was too much for the Panthers to break. After a 26-16 halftime lead, the Comet's Marty Bojorquez displayed some fine outside shooting and ended with 20 points for the night. Other Palomar players in double figures were forward Jon Cnossen with 10 points, center Roger Wright with 12 points and center Steve McRae with ll. Playing in their last home game were sophomores Marty Bojorquez, Mark Embrey, Gene Chaffin, Jon Cnossen and Steve McRae. The locals' win over Chaffey brought their season record at 15 wins and 15 loses . Palomar won its; fourth straight basketball game Saturday night, by stopping Saddleback College 71-62 at Mission Viejo High School. The Comets took the lead midway through the first half and never trailed. playing its best defense of the season.
Golfers to play at Saddleback Saddleback will be Palomar's opponent in their first conference golf match today, at Saddleback. The new team line-up will be Bob Hunstman, firstman, up from the fifth position, John McDonald to second ; Scott Dunbar held at third; Korby Eiland stays at fourth; John Heramb nows holds fifth place, and John Barendregt remains in sixth place. In the first three matches played, the Comet golfers have felt the burn of a loss only once. The first match the linksters took was a 38-16 win over San Diego Mesa College. In best ball matches, the Me Donald- Heramb team pounded over Mesa 13-5 . The Dunbar-Eiland twosome lost ¡to the Olympians 11-7, while HuntsmanBarendregt walked over Mesa's team 18-0. Low player for the match was Bob Huntsman with an 18 hole score of 73 . The second match, played at Palm Springs Canyon Country Club, against College of the Desert was the only loss the golfers have felt so far. The team score was College of the Desert 33- Palomar 21. Medalist for this match was again Bob Huntsman with a 74. Then came Palomar's 48-6 rompover Mt. San Jacinto's team at Soboba Springs Golf Course. McDonald-Heramb fairly jumped on Mt. San Jacinto's first and second place men 18-0. The Dunbar- Eiland combination stepped on the Eagles 12-6. Then again the 18-0 win popped up for the Huntsman-Barendregt team. Medalist for this match was John McDonald with 78.
The Comets limited Saddleback's leading scorers to only three field goals. Forward Gene Chaffin led the Palomar attack, hitting six of twelve shots from the floor, while dumping in seven more points at the free throw line for a total of 19 points. He also was the game's leading rebounder with 17. Other Comet players who hit for double figures were Marty Bojorquez (14), Mark Embrey (10) and Steve McRae (10). The Comets led at halftime, 38-33, and opened up that margin to as many as 20 points midway in the second half. The Gauchos closed the gap when Coach Andy Gilmore started substituting and the officials started letting the game get out of hand. "I was extremely pleased with our defense tonight," stated Coach Gilmore, "especially the job we did on their Eric Christensen. We made him force a lot of shots. Chaffin had a great game and both (John) Duffy and (Steve) McRae came off the bench and played well for us.
The four-mile relay team, consisting of Mark Blakeslee, Lord,McFadden, and Wester, received a second place for their 18:41.4 effort. Wester led off with a time of 4:33.7. McFadden anchored the relay team with a 4:31.9 run. Don Buss, Jerry Matlock, Ken Ries, and Wayne Rule placed second in a team effort in the 480 shuttle hurdles. Each ran 120 yards in college 42-inch high hurdles. The shuttle relayers were timed at 1:00.5. Another second place was captured by the Comets by Dave Lewis who threw the javelin 167-7. Larkin and Wester placed third and fourth in the junior college mile last Friday in competition in the San Diego Indoor Games. Both had lifetime bests of 4:21.1 and 4:25.9, respectively.
SPORTS CALENDAR Today-February 26: Baseball: Imperial Valleyhere, 2:30 Golf: Saddleback-there Track: San Benardino-there Wrestling: Mission Conference Tournament Monday-March 1: Baseball: MiraCosta-here Golf: Grossmont-here Tuesday- March 2: Tennis : Citrus-there
Gibson, Hasegawa pace archers A bone- chilling drizzle last Friday, falling halfway through the match, prompted officials to end the season's first archery encounter between Palomar and San Bernardino. The early pacesetter and overall top shooter in the men's division was San Bernardino's Gale Cavallin. His deadly accuracy quickly gave him an early lead which he maintained as the weather conditions worsened. In the women's division, Palomar's
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talented Terry Gibson, shooting with precision and accuracy, clearly was the overall first place winner. Some of her records established as the California Junior College Champion still remain intact. For the Comet Archers, Gene Hasegawa, a first year varsity draftee, looms as a possible new star. To the delight of Coach Mildred Ayers and other team members, Hasegawa placed third in the men's division. His strong finish is attributed to long arduous hours at practice and a desire to excel in the art. Coming in at fourth and fifth place were veteran George Plocic and Pat McCollom another first year varsity team member.
John Stephens 1 (top photo) is congratulated by a host of Comets after hitting a homerun during a recent scrimmage. Hank Krautter(lower photo) is shown taking a powerful cut at the ball
in a Mira Costa scrimmage. Hank continues to be consistent in his hitting and should be the team's leading hitter. (photos by Ted Karounos)
Base bailers at San Diego after Yuma tourney losses Following an 8-0 loss to Mesa College Wednesday, Coach Jim Clayton's baseball team will try to down San Diego City College today in a game that has twice been rained out. The Western Desert Classic Baseball Tournament, played last weekend in Yuma Arizona, proved to be a windy disasterfor the Comets. Playing in winds sometimes as hard as 30 miles per hour, the Comets dropped all three of their tournamentgames, sinking their non-conference record to 1-5. Palomar committed 13 errors in the three loses, mostly in the outfield where wind- blown fly balls were misjudged. Arizona Western took advantage of two Palomar outfield mix-ups for a five- run second inning that led to a 6-2 win over the Comets in Friday's opener. Palomar collected seven hits including a triple by Dave Stacy, a double by Hank Krautter, and two singles by Art Warren. Phoenix College went through four Palomar hurlers in the first game on Saturday, and went on to a 9-4 victory. Bill Holterhaus and Steve Schmidt led
the Comets hitting attack knocking out two hits apiece. The Comets' final loss of the series came Saturday afternoon as San Diego Mesa College handed them a 7- 3 loss. The Comets committed four big errors which allowed the decisive runs. Jim Romero and Rick Whyte were the big sticks for Palomar with two singles apiece and Romero added a triple. The Comets next Monday will play Mira Costa on Palomar's diamond with another scrimmage set¡ at Glendale on Wednesday.
Mat toumey today Riverside CC is the favorite in today's Mission Conference wrestling tournament in the Dome. According to Ward Myers, director of athletics, Riverside will have close competition from Grossmont, San Bernardino, and Southwestern. Palomar standouts are expected to be Mark Karges and Mickey Ferric. Weigh-ins will begin at 12 noon with matches getting under way at 4 p.m.
Services held for former grid star Mass was recited Monday at St. Nicholas Catholic Church for former Palomar College football star Kevin Kelly, 22, who died of cancer last Thursday. Funeral services followed at Ascension Cemetery in El Taro. Brown Colonial Mortuary of Santa Ana is in charge of the funeral arrangements. As a 148-pound middle linebacker, Kelly was an all-conference selection for Palomar in 1968 and a JC AllAmerican honorable mention. He also played football at Vista High School. He went on to the University of New Mexico, was injured late in the season and it was later discovered that he had cancer. Kelly died Thursday night in a Camp Pendleton hospital.
WANT TO BUY Lionel Electric trains See Mr. Archer--Room P-17
GRAND OPENING 'THE BARBER SHOP' March 1, 2, 3, & 4 Monday, March 1 .. . Jam session, continuous entertainment from 8:30 p.m . Tuesday, March 2 . . . Champagne bust, come early, bring a date half price Wednesday March 3 . . . Harvey Wallbanger is having another party Thursday, March 4 ... Dance contest, first place prize, $25. 6 nights a week for your dancing pleasure "The Slick Nickel" No one under 2~ years of age Open Daily from 5p. m. Closed Sunday Interstate 5 & Santa Fe Drive Encinitas (Formerly The Crest Room)