Palomar College
Volume 27
Sexuality Week includes talks, films, speakers "Human Sexuality Week." a se ri es of lectures and discu ss ions spon sored by the Student Help Center, will be held Monday- Thursday . Highlighting the wee k' s events w ill be presentation s by Jud y i el se n , a director of Planned Parenthood; Av i Kaufman, a stud ent of Taoi s m ; and Jan Lueken, an expert in mas sage techniqu es . On Monday at 2 p.m . in 0 -12 , Ni elson will show the film " Se xuality and Communication s ," whi c h fo cu ses on Masters and Johnson' s sexual therapy . Following the movie , s he w ill l ead a discu s sion period. "Sexuality and A wa r eness " w ill be the topic of Kaufm an Wed nes d ay at 12 noon in L S-15. The qu ali t i es o f strength and sens itivity, and o f m as culinity and feminity will be di scussed . Lueken, who uses m ass age to brin g ~ -about an expanded s tate of aw a r eness in the participants , will spe ak Wednes day at 1 p.m. in 0-11. She has trained in polarity mass age and has clone wor k with Arica Institute in San Di ego . "I would like both s tud ents and community m embers to take p a r t in thi s program of self-discover y , "sa id A ngi e Mack , co-ordinator of the He lp Center. Other p eakers include M artha L ehr. who will discuss rape and its e ffec ts Monday at 1 p.m. in 0 - 11; Gene Sage r. who w ill explore spirituality and exuality Tue sday at 9:30 a.m. in -5; and Dave Chittock. who wi II l ea d a workshop on sex and its person al m eanings Tuesday at 1 p.m. in 0-11. A l so taking part in the progr am are Lois K ees l er . an instruct9r at San Diego State University who will speak on female sexuality Wednesday at 9:30a.m. in 0- 12. and John Wood. who will di scuss "closet he terosexuals" Thursd ay at 12 noon in P-ll. On Friday the Help Center will have its own presentation in R-3 from 9 a.m.3 p.m. All activit i es during the week ar e free.
Student help needed os instructional aides Students interested in becoming Instructional Assoc i ates for Early Childhood in el ementary schoo l s may submit their names to the Palomar Chil d Development Department. The one - year cou r se offers field experience in el em entary ECE programs in the morning and c l asses at Palomar in the afternoon. Thirty s tudents will be se l ected for this begi nning class, to start in September. Call the College Depa rtm ent of Con tinuing Education . 744 -11 50. ext. 255. for an applic ati on.
Breakfast tabbed for orientation In order to acquaint high sc hool seniors and juniors with the Palomar campus. the Latter-Day Sai nt StudentAssociation is sponsoring a "Palomar Orientation Breakfast" next Friday at 6 a.m. Breakfast will be served in the Student Union, followed by a sho rt orientation and tour. Guest speakers will includ e Palomar Presid ent Dr. Frederick Huber : Dr. David Chapple, dean of stude nt services; Dr. Byron Gibbs, Counseli ng D ep artment chairman: and Dr. Walter Brown, dean of vocational education.
Number 27
A Publication of the Associated Stuaents
April 26, 197 4
San Marcos, Calif.
92069
Candidates state issues in ASG campaign Christiansen, Sharp, Worsham, Jones in running for president By Gl a
Thi en
Conce rn fo r the ni ght s tu de nt . be tt e r co mmu nica ti on. and m o r e s tud ent ac ti v it ies a r e the majo r irle8s proposed by th e fou r presirlen ti al ca nrl irl 8tes in th e .-\ SG e l ec t io n 1\l o n rlR I ' - T h u r s rl a ~ · . \ 'y in g for th .-\ SG' s top o ffi ce a t·c E ri c Chr is t ia nsPn . .J e rr ~· .Jo nes . Ste1·c Sharp and Ira \\'o r s ham. .-\l so inc luderl in the el ec t ion a r c co nte s t s for v i ce -pr es irlc nt . tll'o ex ecu tive cou nci l r presen t at ives and treasu r er ll'i th one ca ns t i tut ional ame nrlm ent appe8 r i ng on t he bal lo t. Eri c Chri s ti ansen
Jerry .Jones
Rep1·ese nta t ion l ack ing " \\ 'e have l ackcrl ac tua l sturlt'nt r epresentati on thi s year . " Ch ris t ia nse n saicl . "becau se m os t o f the s tucl ents haven 't r ea ll y go tten in vo l ve d. 1\luc h o f the probl em has been n l ack o f pu b! i c ity by th e ,\ SG." Chri s ti anse n. who is runn i ng on the s11 m e ti cke t as v i ce -pres ide nt ia l ca ndid at e Ben G i l l. wou l cl l ike to incrPasc c ommuni cR t io n next yea r. "I would al o li ke to c r eate a be tte r r el ati onshi p between t he s tucl <'nts and the admini s tr ati on. es pecia ll y i n the• d ec i s ion m ak ing process. " Chri s ti ansen added. Now a m embe r of the s tud <' nt asse mbl y . Chri s ti anse n al so bel ongs to th e LO SS,\ and i s th e c h11 irm an o f the I CC ' s Henai ssanc e week sc hedul ed fo r l\1 ay . Gill i s al so a s tud ent asse mbl y m an and h as bee n ac ti ve in t he deve l opm ent of the arboretum (n atur al p ark) and th e fre e l egal aid program . ight ac tivities nee decl
Steve Sharp
Ira Worsham
Management speaking series continues tonite Herman "Red" perling, director of stati stics for th T eam s ter's Joint Council o. 42 in Lo s Angeles, will be featured spea k e r at the third sess ion of the Mid-Managem ent Seminar tonight. fie will speak on "Union-Management Relations~ and answer ques tions posed by persons attending the seminar. Sperling graduated from Wichita Univers ity with a BA in Economics and rec e ived hi s MA in L abor Economics from UCLA . While doing hi s gr11du ate work at UCLA. he served on the s taff of the Institute for Indus tri al R el ation s. He has been with the T ea mster's s taff for ten years and helps provide services to the 165.000 T e am s ter members and 47 loca l unions in th Southern California and C l ark County. Nevada. territory served by the Joint Council. This ses s ion wi II be open to the
Kobialka duo will play violin and piano sonatas Daniel and Machika Kobialk a will present a concert of violin and piano sonatas Monday Rt 'l p.m. in room P-32. The program is part of the Music Ensembl e Series . Admissio n is Sl. The duo will perform Pergolesi's Sonata No. 12 in E Major. B r ahms' Sonata No. I in G Major. 1\lozart's Sonata No. 6 in G Major. k. 301 and Ives' Sonata No. 2.
AGS offers tutorial service "Finding ways to help their fe llow students is a mai n goal of Alpha Nu, ~ says President Tom Rutherford .
located on the outsid e of room F - 3. or contact the tutorial chairm an. David Hurtado (7 24 - 8848).
"Say you're a student who puts forth an honest effort towards your studies. One day you're faced with a "heavy" that is just too difficult to hand l e alone. Maybe an AGS volunteer could help you bridge the gap.~ AGS offers a free, volunteer tutorial service for all day and eveni ng students. Arra ngements are made between the helpee and the instructor. Anyone wishi ng assistance in a p articular subject should read the list of subjects, instructors, and directions
"Our volunteers are only rewarded by the personal satisfaction they receive from helping another. Everyone needs help occasionally, and we're stretching out our hand to help those in need." AGS welcomes any suggestions from the student body or faculty. or any instructor volunteers from i ts membership. Additional information can be obtained from the chapter advisor, Mrs. Marcia Shall cross, Room B-15.
public in P-32 from 7 to 9 p.m . Tomorrow's speaker will address the topic of "Minority Employm ent. " Cheryl Granby, a faculty member at National University and a communication con sultant for the Navy ' s Preventative Denis try Program in San D i ego . is a frequent speaker on this and re l ated subjects . She received her BA from Southern Illinois Un i versity and her MS from Illinoi s State University . She has done doctoral level work at Purdue and the Unive rsity of Cincinn ati. Her exp erienc e includes college l evel tea ching. seminars and conventions. and a wid e vari ety of community involvem ent and managem ent exp eri ence. The Saturday meeting wi II be in the Palomar Stud ent U nion facu lty dining room from 10 a.m. unti I noon.
Dancers give spring concert performance D ance s tud ents wi II prese nt a va ri et y of choreogr Rphi e s in th eir e ight annual Spring Dance Conc e rt on !\lay 2. 3. and .f. Performances will inc lud e se ve r al chor eographies pr epar ed by 1\liss Billi e Hutchings. director of dance. for large groups of dancers as we ll as a few stude nt originals. · A.mong dances to be pre sented are "Kale idoscope." "On the Lawn .., and "Walk in a Dark Drea m." The pe rformanc es will begin at 8 p.m. in the dome. Admi ss ion i s S1 for adults. S.50 for children .
Early applications will receive high priority All stud ents planning to enroll for the fall semester are requested to comp l ete an application for admission and r egistration. Registration priorities will be assigned on a first- come, first- served basis from the time at which the application is submitted. Appli cations are now being accepted and should be turned in as soon as po ssibl e. Appli cations may be picked up in the Counseling Office or the Admissions Office.
Expanding A G se r v i ces to inc lud e more activiti s for the ni ght s tud ent i s the aim o f Jones . who i s ass oci ated with Bob D ea n. anothe r v i ce -pres identi al candidate. "The night s tud ents r epresent half of the stud ent bod y and dese rv e having ASG sponsor ed progr am s . uc h as the Student Help Cente r. m ad e avail abl to them." Jones co mm ented. Othe r propo al s urged by Jones and D ean are an expan s ion of th e a rbore tum and the l egal aid fund. and compl etion of a di scount coupon hook for s tudents to use at loca l s tores . "In addition." Den n noted. "! fee l we should have more ca mpu s- ori ented activiti es at a l ow- c o s t to the s turl ent." Jones i s cu rrc ntl y an as si s tant to ASG pres ident .Jerry Broeck e rt whi Je Dea n i s a form e r judi c i al Rdvoc ate . Sh arp ancl John C aughey . hi s vi ce presid enti al running mate . fee l th at s tud ent governm ent mus t be more al e rt in se rving the s tud ent' s need s . Recent incid ent c ited The two c ite a r ec ent inc id ent in which fiv e euc al yptu s trees in the north e ncl of the c ampus wer e r emoved. The 1\ SG took no acti on. though . due to a l ac k of know l edge. ''\Ve are going to t ak e a good l ook at wh at i s going on and how it affects u s as s tud ents . And . if no one knows . we will surel y find out. " Sharp s aid . A SG c ampaign finan c ing has al so be en ques tion ed by Sharp and Caughey . who
fee l th nt th e el ec ti on is turning into a bat t l e o f monel'. \\'bil e th e ~· h~ ve o n!~· spent :3-±0 for pos te r s nncl a p ic ni c . th e ir opponents h aYe p ni d fo t· such item s as the appeRr an ce o f n bancl i n the s tucl ent union p ati o. "The i ss ues a n ' at s tak e .. , Sha rp sa i cl . "no t th e mu s i c. •· Sturl nt go1·e rnm ent shoulcl r epresent al l th e s tucl ent s . not onl y one group . saicl \\ 'o r s ham. the final pres icl enti al ca nd icl ate on th e hnll ot. "I r en ll y think ll'e nee d m o t·e c om m un ien ti on. ll' i thin the coll ege itse lf." he sa i rl . " ·ohocl y in th e ,\SG sec m ecl to k now 8 n ~· thing about the cutting of th e trees o r the nc1,. entranc e g11t es . '' " P eo pl e j us t n r en't ge tting toge ther on thin gs . · • he aclcl erl . \\ 'o r sham wou Jell ike to encour age mon· p a rti c ip ati on by s tucl ent s . hell e r c ommu n i ca ti o n anrl m o r e ac ti v itcs. He i s a m embe r of .-\lpha Gamma Si gm a. th e \ 'e te r Rns ' Club and .-\lpha I:ta llho . the nell' av iati on c lub. Besides G ill. Dea n ancl C augh ey . Don Eaton. w ho i s not alignN I with any pres id ent i al ca ncli date . i s al so vy ing fo r v i ce -pres id ent. Night s tucl ent s negl ec ted "I fee l we s hould exp ancl our stucl cnt se rvi ces. esp ec iall y for th e night stu d ents who m l lhinkhavc hec•nnegl ected ." he snicl Eaton has c on s i s tently attend ecl meetings o f th e Student .- \ sse mhl y and the Executi vP Counc il throughout th e sc hool yea r ancl initi a ted r e fo rm in th e procedures fo 1· fo rm ation of new c lubs. l\1i c hae l h:cn rn ey . Ha rry McGill ancl Rod Sta r k a r e t·u nning for the two r epresenta tive spot s . ,\n Pa rl y c ancliclate. M i ke Ti e ri. has withdrawn from the r ace du e to pe r sonal r eas on s . "I think it' s prett y s ari that s tuclents ha ve no inte r es t in s tud ent act i vities." J-; ea rney S8 irl. "I hope to try ancl inform more s tud ents on what i s happening on ca mpu s ." A ppo interl to th e Ex ecutive Council thi s ye:1 r, 1cGill ha s repr esenterl the 1\ SG at v;J riou s co unty anrl state- wiclc· s turl c nt go ve rnm ent m ec·tings . . ee k s to exp and service s "1 would like to c ontinu e the trencl of thi s yen r' s gove rnm ent by ex pand ing se r v i ces fo r th e s tucl ents ." he sa i d. A night s tud ent. Stark i s a m ember of th e Student A sse mbly. ,\Jpha Gamma Sigm a anrl A l ph a Eta Rho. " :\11 th e c lub s . the d ances . th e hands. that the cla y s tud ent tak es for granted a r e neve r ex pe ri enc ed by the night s tucl cnt bod y ." he sa id. "I hope to work with th ese probl em s and give the night s tud ent r eprese ntation ." See king th e tre11Surer's post are Nancy .Jord an and Patricia Yavors ky. The lone c onstitutional amendment conc e rn s th e l ength of eac h offi cer's te rm. Cnd e r the propo s al. the newly- el ected peopl e wou l d take office on the last day o f th e sem este r. rather than the first wee k afte r the el ection as is presentl y done .
!News at a Glance! "l\orthern Lights" will be the featured band tonight when the \ 'e ter an's Clu b has their " Spring Dance " in "The Barn" in San !area s . Sponsored by the San 1\Iarcos \'F\V, the d anc e will begin at 9 p . m . and continue until 1 p.m. Ther e will al so be a r affle dr awi ng.
*** Club and stud ent information for the Ac tivities Calendar must now be given to th e Dean of Student Ac ti vities office by Tuesday of the w eek preceding the event. The change from the Thursday deadline has be en mad e so that the Information can now appear in the Friday edition of THE TELESCOPE.
***
The new San Diego Regional Office of the Veterans Administratio n opened their office at 1250 6th Avenue, San Diego. For educational benefits information call 293 - 5733. For all other veterans information call 293-5724/8.
Manuscripts for Bravura, the Palomar Liter ary Magazine , are being sought. Eac h year the magazine presents poetry. fiction, and non-fiction written by stud ents at the college. The sel ections will he mad e by a student editorial board. Manuscripts should be typed (double spaced) on 8 1/2 by II inch paper. Papers may he left in the English Department Office, P-8 before May 17.
*** "The Swimmer" opens the final month of The American Film Ser i es. Directed by Frank Perry and featur ing Burt Lancaster. "The Swimmer" is schedu l ed for May 1. Other films included in May are: "Sweet Sweetback," the first in a long 1ine of Black adventure stories set in urba\1 America, May 8; and "Glen and Randa," a strange view of the future, May 15. All films begin at 7 p .m. in P-32. Admission is free.
New coaching
Locals top Riverside; notch ninth straight Sophomore Randy Robinson paced a 12-hit Palomar attack as the Comets won their ninth straight straight game by topping Riverside, 7-2, Tuesday.
Comet pitcher Don Johnson who ran into trouble in the second, fourth, fifth and ninth innings, pitched well, striking out seven.
Robinson smashed four hits and knocked in three runs in helping the locals up theri second halfleague record to 6-1. Overall, the team has a 22-9 mark.
Netters take part in tourney today
Other large contributors to the Comet cause were Chad Corcoran and Daryl Dunn, who each had two hits and scored twice. On the mound, Dale Dent started and went seven innings to earn the win. Dana Blalock finished the game to gain credit for a save. Comets come from behind Trailing 2-0, the Comets opened their scoring in the first inning as Chad Corcoran led off by smashing a double . He later stole third and tallied on a sacrifice fly by Randy Robinson. In the third, Corcoran singled and stole second, moving in position to tie the game on Robinson's double. The Comets moved ahead in the fourth as Ed Kristensen doubled, went to third on a ground out and scored on a sacrifice fly by Corcoran. Increasing the margin in the fifth, Palomar began matters with singles by Daryl Dunn and Robinson. Jim Odie advanced the two by following with a sacrifice bunt. Locals increase margin Bill Lackey then brought in Dunn with as ingle, and Doug Freeman knocked in Robinson on a sacrifice fly . In the seventh, Robinson and Odie singled. The bases became loaded as Odie reached base on a error. Freeman banged another sacrifice fly to score Robinson. The Comets concluded scoring in the eighth as Dunn singled and came in on Robinson's second double. Backed by some timely hitting and heads-up baserunning the Comets nipped Citrus 3-1 last Thursday. Palomar got only four hits to eight for the Owls but they made them count. They also received some unexpected help from Citrus which made three blunders in the second inning that helped stake the Comets to a 2-0 lead. Blunders fill bases Robinson walked, but was forced out at second when Jim Odie's sacrifice bunt failed to advance him. Lackey lined a single and Kristensen reached first on an error to fill the bases. Citrus righthander Eric Mustad then proceeded to unload two wild pitches with Rich de la Garza at bat. Odie raced home on the first and Lackey scored on the second. Triple scores Dunn In the fourth inning Citrus scored its run on three consecutive singles and a sacrifice fly. Palomar retaliated in the sixth on Dunn's infield hit and a booming triple by Robinson.
roles announced Three changes in the coaching assignments for next school year have been announced by Athletic Director Mack Wiebe. Head Track Coach Doc Marrin will assume the additional duties of cross country coach. Marrin previously coached the Comet harriers from 1967-68. The first year's squad won the conference championship with a 8-0 record. Mike Curran. who this year served as the cross country and assistant track coach, will be head tennis coach. The move was made in order to allow Curran more time for his duties as coordinator of the health program. During college at Cal Poly, Curran was a championship intramural singles player. In 1969 he helped Ed Collins, an associate of tennis pro Vic Braden, produce an instructional film on the fundamentals and techniques of tennis . Andy Gilmour. who coached tennis this year. will remain as the head basketball coach.
After finishing third in the Mission Conference, the local netters travel to Ojai today to take part in the Ojai Tournament. Monday the Comets knocked off College of the Desert 8-1, upping their season record to 17-6. Gary Peterson began the day with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over his challenger, while Roger Hulbert, Marco Fernandez, Ken Peet, and Mike Conner followed the same route. In the doubles competition HulbertFeet won by default, Fernandez-Conner were victorious 6-2, 6-2, and PetersonVanoni prevailed 7-6, 6-7, 6-2. The Comets then preceded to shock Mt. San Jacinto Tuesday 7-2 there . Leading the local's attack was Peterson who blanked his foe 6-0, 6-0, while Hulbert also won 6-4, 6-2, and Fernandez, Peet, and Conner posted easy victories also. In the doubles things didn't change any as the Comets picked up victories from Hulbert-Feet, Fernandez-Conner, and Peterson-Vanoni. After the Ojai Tournament, the racketmen will p articipate in the Southern Sectionals, and conference finals next Thursday.
Golfers power past Grossmont 39-15 Grossmont became the equalizer Monday for the Comet golfers as they evened their league record at 3-3, and upped their season tally to 8-5 with a 39-15 shellacking of the Griffins at Meadowlake Country Club. Jim Kronus showed the way for the locals, firing a fine four under par 68, followed by Steve Wickliffe's 75, which was enough to defeat his foe, while Bill Goneau, Larry Netherton, and Brian Putnam also picked up victories over their opponents. In the best-ball competition, KronusUrquhart annihilated their challengers with a blazing eight under par 64, while Goneau-Netherton edged their counterparts with a two under 69. Recently the linksters traveled to Arizona to take part in the Yavapai Invitational and finished seventh among 12 other schools. Wickliffe was singled out as being the teams' number one man as he put forth a fine showing. Monday the locals lost to San Diego City College at Meadow Lake Country Club with the match beginning at 1 p.m.
Swimmers grab 4th in conference finals Comet base runner Jim Odie slides safely back into first base as the San Bernardino fielder leaps to retrieve an errant throw
I
Profiles in Sports BY GLAE THIEN
Students from Palomar will be among those participating as competitive bicycling comes to the North County on May 5. The occasion will be the annual Escondido Criterium, an open race sponsored by the Hidd en Valley Bicycle Club (HVBC) in the Grape Day Park area. From some local students, such as Jim Allen, the event is a special stop on a 11-month race schedule in the Southern California area. Allen, who began racing as an extension of his usual riding, belongs to the Southern California Cycling Association. People young and old take part in the organization's weekly races which sometimes last up to 100 miles. Each rider is classified in a category according to his ability. Among the divisions are midget, junior (for those under 18), novice (for beginners over 18) and three classes of seniors. Races are held on either a track, where a rider's speed is tested in a relatively short race, or the road, where endurance plays a major role. Riders in the local area belong to the HVBC and are coached by Ted Kirkbride of Escondido . During the season, the racers participate in a training program that involves a combination of running and exercise. "When we condition," Allen explained, ''we try to improve on both our strength for a long race and our speed.'' Diet is another consideration of each rider since he needs the right kind of
CONFERENCE PRELIMS BEGIN TUESDAY
Spikers wind up dual meet play "We accomplished what we set out to do," said Palomar track coach Doc Marrin of his team's 95-50 Mission Conference loss to powerhouse Grossmont last Friday. â&#x20AC;˘we wanted our guys to work on getting their personal bests and many of them did." By rolling over Saddleback 129-12 in last Friday's double-dual encounter and taking San Diego City 79-66 last Tuesday, the Comet spikers finished the conference dual-meet season in third place behind Grossmont and Citrus with a 6-2 record. They were 9-2 overall. AI McClure, Lee Dick and Cary Cotten headed the list of top performers in the Grossmont meet where many Comet trackmen came through with lifetime best performances. McClure held the distinction of being the top junior college triple jumper in the nation with a leap of 49-10 1/2, over a foot farther than his previous best. Unfortunately for McClure, the honor of being number one passed to Grossmont's Doug Baldwin five minutes later when he flew 50-2 1/2, leaving McClure in the nation's number two spot. Cotten hurled a lifetime best in the shot put (52-91/2) to outdistance his opponent, Greg E!aer, by nine inches.
Cotten's throw was just short of the scho,ol record of 53-2, set by Don Tucker in 1970 Dick held off Grossmont's Terry Cotton to win the mile in a season-best 4:13.0 to Cotton's 4:15.8. Steve Laird was timed in 4:26, finishing fifth in an excellent mile field. Other personal bests included Ken Iacuaniello, first in the 100-yard-dash (10 .0) and fifth in the 220-yard dash (22.5); Derek Scallett in the 220 (22.3); Greg McMahon, third in the 440-yard dash (50 .2); Alan Magoon and Jim Kelley in the 120-yard high hurdles (16.3 and 16.9); and Rob Thornburg, second in the 440-yard intermediate hurdles (57.5). Outstanding field-event lifetime bests included Mark Goodman and Greg Stines in the discus (149-8 and 146-5 1 ' 2), Stines in the javelin (1 82-9) and Thornburg in the high jump (6-4). Field-event men paced the Comets' victory over San Diego City Tuesday. Of Palomar's 79 points , 52 came from the seven field events. Cotten led sweeps in both the shot put and the discus by hurling the discus 142-0 and throwing the 16-pound ball 48-9 3/4. Bill Breisacher (47-0 1/2) and John McFadden (43-6 3/4) placed second and third in the shot put, while
in recent action. The Comets have a nine game winning streak going and carry a 22 -9 mark. (Photo by Clarence Brown)
Stines (139-5 1/2), Goodman (138-10) and Mark Truncale (134-9) took the next three places in the discus. Mike Damewood was a double winner for the Comets, capturing the javelin in 190-3 and the long jump in 21-4. Rick Jackson placed second in the javelin (183-7). In other top Comet field event marks , Thornburg and Mark Berg both cleared a personal-best 6-4 to place 1-2 in the high jump, Bill Jorgensen and Bill Clare went over 13 feet for first and second in the pole vault and George Golden took a second in the triple jump with a lifetime best 42-10. Palomar's two running event victories came in the 440, with Greg McMahon clocking a 50.7 for first, and the mile, with Humberto Barajas winning in 4:20.8. Steve Laird turned in a 4:24. 5 for third in the mile, and Cleveland Stuart had a lifetime best of 10 flat in the 100 for top non-winning marks. Following today's Mt. San Antonio College Relays, Palomar will begin the series of eliminations for the state track meet with the Mission Conference preliminaries Tuesday at Citrus. Conference finals will be at Citrus next Friday.
energy to meet the demand of a race. In a sixty mile race, for instance, each participant peddles his 20-30 pound bike at a speed of 30 miles per hour. "On a race day, I load up on carbohydrates," Allen said. "And, during the competition, I try to carry food with me, such as gatorade or orange juice."
Careers in transportation topic of panel discussion Interested in a transportation career? Careers in the field of tr ansportation are the subject of a panel discussion Tuesday at 11 a .m. in S-5. Panelists represent several areas of work in sea, air and land tr ansportation. Included on the panel are : Tom Talbot, Merchant Marine Academy graduate presently with the Coast Guard; Glenn Elliot, educational director of PSA; James Taificona, stewardess with PSA; Bill Ammon, civil engine er and transportation planner for the California Department of Transportation; and Barney Schenoller, owner of Greyhound in Oceanside . All students interested in hearing and meeting these people are invited to attend.
After taking fourth place in the Miss ion Conference Championships over the holidays, the Palomar swimmers are now competing in the Southern California Finals through tomorrow. The 400-yard free-style relay team of Mike Rohm, Jim Sones, Glen Duncan and Jinx Olson took second place honors with a time of 3:25.5 . Rohm also took individual seconds in the 200-yard backstroke and the 400-yard individual medley. Olson grabbed second place in the 100-yard fre estyle. Comet coach Don Hubbard expects the competition this year will be tough and adds, "our best chances are with Olson in the sprints, Rohm in the butterfly and our freestyle relay team." Palomar wound up with a 7-2 conference record, good for third place.
Proble1n Pregnancy? For Help With All 'T'h e AI ternati ves
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