Palomar CQIIege · Volume 28 Number 10 · A Publication of the Associated Students ·
Lonesome IJag' will find home during Fall Fling Live bands, dancing, food, a carnival atmosphere, and the giving away of a brand-new Jaguar will highlight Project Palomar's Fall Fling. Described by Project Palomar direc~or Jack Schwerin as "the biggest fun thmg ·That Palomar has ever done," the Fall Fling has been set for Decem her 7. It will be held in the college's main parking lot. A variety of activities are scheduled for the event in accordance with a type of Mardi Gras atmosphere. Booths will be --sefup, some serving as "fun booths." At least four live bands will provide music for dancing enjoyment. There will be food and drink, and, of course, the Jaguar XKE will be given away. Booths will be operated by different community and college groups. Black Students Alliance is in charge of hiring the bands. This is the first time that the college has held such an event. It is open to the public, not just to students. The Fall Fling is a fund-raising activity sponsored by Project Palomar. Proceeds will go to the project for the child care center. Tickets are $2 and can be acquired from the Student Activities Office or certain groups on campus. According to Schwerin, Project Palomar is a multi-faceted fund raising effort directed toward establishmg a child care center on campus. A recent student survey showed that nearly 300 children would use the center while their parents attended classes, demonstrating the need for such a center. The project has set a goal of $150,000 to cover site, facilities, furnishings, and staffing.
'errazas 1.0.IRS Student Assem bly
David Terrazas was the only candidate in the Student Assembly run-off election who received the majority of votes cast required to elect him. He joins five other persons who were chosen in the general election: Archie Howell, Eric Christiansen, Ken Knight, Sarah Osborne and Cindy Koopman. These six people will make up the new Student Assembly. A meeting of the Student Assembly was scheduled for yesterday. The primary duty of the new representatives at this meeting was to fill the four vacancies left by the run-off election in which none of the other nine candidates garnered a majority. According to the ASG constitution, the vacancies are filled by a vote of the present assembly with the approval of the -Executive Council. The constitution does not stipulate that the persons chosen received the most votes, or even that they were candidates for the position. This choice is left completely at the discretion of the assembly. The final vote tabulation for the runoff election was as follows: Terrazas, 142 (but of 253 votes cast), Sally MacFarlane 113; Michael Tieri, 108; Jim Hawn, 108; Butch Olson, 104; Inez Brown, 91; Bonnie Eastman, 82; Frank Falkenberg, 71; Keith Wilson, 70; and Elvira DiRinaldo, 67.
Film classia scheduled "The Maltese Falcon," a film classic, will be shown Tuesday at 1 and 4 p.m. in P-32. It is shown in conjunction with English 26, Literature and the Film, which is taught by Ann Maioroff and Dr. Robert Coleman. The 1941 film is directed by John Huston and stars Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre and Sidney Greenstreet. Also shown next week will be "The Molly Maguires," this week's film in the En_glish DeJ>artment's class "The MotiOn .t'i~ture ~s Graphic Art." It will be shown Wednesday at 7 p.m. iri P-32 and Thursday at 1 p.m. It is directed by Martin Ritt and concerns the struggle between owner and worker in a small coal mining town in Pennsylvania.lt is based on actual events which occurred there in the 1870's. The film was shot in Eckley, Pennsylvania, the only coal mine in America that exists today exactly as it was a century ago.
Nov 8, 1974
· San Marcos , Calif.
92069
Homecoming headlines 'Beauty,' 'Beast,' game Five Homecoming Queen finalists and the same number of Beast finalists were chosen in an election Monday and Tuesday in the Student Union.
Women's Intercollegiate Athletic Association; and Trejo, SHARE. The Beast candidates were Bloodgood, sponsored by AGS; Busby, sponsored by
The Queen finalists are Sandi Bartlett, Marlene deLeon, Debbie Donahue, Sue Felton and Monica Trejo. The Beast finalists are Roger Busby, John Caughey, Grant Bloodgood, Fred Miller and Scott Nichols.
ADCOP; Caughey, SCIDS; Miller, SHARE; Nichols, LDSSA; Robert Wright, Business Club; and Vince Yee, WIAA.
American Indian art on exhibition
The King and Queen of Homecoming will be announced before tomorrow's football game at 7 p.m. This year the theme of the festivities was designated "Beauty and the Beast," accounting for the king candidates running for the title of "Beast."
One of these young women will be crowned Queen before the Homecoming football game against Citrus tomorrow. The finalists are
(front, L toR) Marlene de Leon, Debbie Donahue, Monica Trejo, (back) Sue Felton, Sandi Bartlett. {Photo by Rick Gommel)
fiSh preparation demonstrated by Mulanmad's Temple No. 8 Muhammad's Temple No.8, the San Diego Chapter of the Nation of Islam, put on a demonstration of how to prepare, cook and serve H&G Whiting fish last week. Repre~entative Pola X explained t~at the N at10n of Islam has a contract With the Peruvian government to fish off the coast of Peru. The fleet flies the flag of theN ation of Islam. Pola added that the
Utes presenting nat"IVe myth 0Iogy Native American mythology and folktales wiH be presented by the Southern Utes oflgnacio, Colorado Sunday at 7 p.m. in P-32. The public is invited. The Ignacio Indian Repertory Theatre erases many misconceptions people might hold about the Indian. The program is filled with wit, slapstick and situational comedy. The theater was established to preserve the Indian legends, to erase the cigar-store image of the Indian, and to replace stereotype associations with reality. The project was funded in part with a grant from theN ational Endowment for the Arts. The Indians themselves were responsible for the playwriting, staging, acting and designing the production.
Artist continues lecture series November 13 Artist, writer and UCSD instructor Allan Kaprow will .present a November 13 lecture entitled "New Art and Thoughts on the Education of the UnArtist" as part of the lecture series presented by prominent artists. Eleanor Antin will discuss "The Au to biography of the Artist as Autobiographer," November 26. These lectures offer an opportunity for professional artists to exchange ideas about the vital issues and new directions of recent American art with students. Instructor Joyce Shaw, artist and contemporary art lecturer, has developed the lecture series, "Art and Artists: New Directions." She will summarize the program on November 20. Her exhibits have included those at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art. Her most recent installation was a 263-foot wall transformation "N amewall at the Los Angeles International Airport. Lectures will be held from 7 to 9:30p.m. in the Dwight Boehm Gallery of Fine Arts. Individual lecture prices are $2.50 or $1.50 with a student body or gold card.
Today the final homecoming events before the game will wind up with an "old-fashioned" pep rally to be held in front of the Student Union from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The candidates for Queen were Bartlett, sponsored by SCIDS; Liz Bogenrife, United Native Americans Club; de Leon, Business Club; Donahue, Alpha Gamma Sigma; Felton, ADCOP; Kathy Gibby, Latter Day Saints Student Association; Linda Holroyd, Dental Assistants; Kathryn McLeod, Black Students Alliance; Valerie Sheriff,
Annual LA field trip coming for artists
waters off Peru are not as polluted as waters bordering the US. Along with the demonstration of fish preparation, the Muslims lectured on "How to Eat to Live." "The followers of Palomar students associated with the Honorable Elijah Muhammad can James Hulbert will travel to the Los eat the foogs of the orthodox Jew." Angeles area next Wednesday for their revealed Pola X. But the diet restrictions annual art field trip. of the Muslims go further than that. Art students, includiJ;Ig some studying Muslims fast three days every month, graphics and advertising, will visit the eat no pork, and have one meal a day. Long Beach State Art Department, the White sugar and white flour is forbidden LA City Art Museum where they will for cooking and baking and ordinarily observe a presentation "Narrative Art," the Muslims eat foods which are grown and finish at the Art Center College of on one of their famrs. They urged Design. everyone to be very careful about what Hulbert terms the field trip an essenfood they eat. tial part of art education and states that Minister Amos X was also on hand to observing finished and advanced art answer questions about the Nation of projects creates additional goals for the Isliim. He said he would be bacK on cam- graphics or art student. pus November 13 at 9 a.m. in S-2 to talk Further, he offered that without such about the tenets of the Nation oflslam. goals, art students' aims remain fuzzy. Those traveling under Hulbert's direction will meet Wednesday at 8 a.m. inC43 _ for map instructions and leave promptly at 8:15a.m.
8-week program offered to vets
Joe Stanford featured in faculty concert hour
An eight week program designed to prepare qualified veterans and veteran's dependents to achieve their goals in an academic or vocational program will begin here November 12. It is sponsored Joe Stanford, head of the Music by the college Veterans Education OfDepartment, will perform at fice. A schedule of classes for evenings Wednesday's Concert Hour faculty recital at 11 a.m. in C-5. and Saturdays is being planned. These Stanford, a baritone, willsing"AnDie classes will give veterans an opportunity to become involved in the college ex- Feme Geliebte" composed by Ludwig perience gradually. van Beethoven. James Weld will accomVeterans who wish to enroll will be cer- pany him on the organ. Carol Green, a new member of the tified for educational benefits by the college.With the Veterans Ad- faculty, will perform on the violin. Acministration's approval, the individual companying her will be Brenda Montiel, can draw benefits without having them also new to the faculty, and Mildred Nydegger, both on piano. deducted from his basic entitlement. More information is available by contaCting the Veterans Education Office, Palomar College, 744-1150 or 727-7529, : ext. 365 or 383.
'High Sierra' premieres
Indian Art of the Americas, the largest single exhibit ever displayed in San Diego, will go on public view in the Fine Arts Gallery November 23. A major national traveling exhibit on loan from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, New York City, Indian Art ofthe Americas is funded by matching grants from the National Endowment of the Arts and Phillip Morris on behalf of Marlboro. The exhibit offers a unique opportunity to view in depth the varied accomplishments of American Indian artists. With 500 art objects representing 100 major tribes from the Arctic to Tierra del Fuego, exhibition is scheduled for the Gildred, Parker, Grant Wing through January 26, 1975. Frederick J. Dockstader, director of the Museum of the American Indian, selected the 500 exhibit pieces to call attention to the varied aesthetic accomplishments of the American Indian artist from 2500 B.C. to 1970 A.D. The display includes objects of wood, stone, metal, clay, textiles, bone and whell- in fact, every medium in which the artists worked, according to Dockstader.
Campus club in national airplane competition Alpha Eta Rho, Phi Alpha Chapter, the campus flying club, is flying to Concord for theN ational Interstate Fly-In at noon today. Palomar will be sending four planes carrying 12 people to this national contest. Tim Ware, president of the club, is hoping that the flyers will advance to the national finals, to be held in New Mexico at a later date. The Phi Alpha Chapter of this international organization, is composed of 45 men and women interested in flying. Although based on flying, Ware points out that the purpose is to provide a gathering of people, and to entertain and relax. Currently, Alpha Eta Rho is working on getting open hearings for the expansion of Palomar Airport facilities.
SDSU transfer advice Penny Wright, undergraduate advisor from San Diego State, will be on campus November 15 at 11 a.m. in B-2 to discuss transfer problems with business students. Wright will advise the students on problems such as what courses should be taken for transfer to SDSU.
Servicemen awarded diplomas
Seventeen servicemen stationed at Camp Pendleton received high school diplomas from Escondido High School in ceremonies held on the base October 30. Certificates of achievement were "John Muir's High Sierra," a film presented to 22 servicemen during the about a mountain range, a man and a vi- afternoon program. sion that "in wildness is the preservaThe servicemen completed retion of the world," will be presented by quirements for the diplomas and cerDewitt Jones Monday at 8 p.m. in P-32. tificates through the PREP Program, a Admission is $ 1. federally-funded educational program The third in the college Community administered by Palomar College. Presenting diplomas and certificates Services Travel Film Series, "High to the PREP graduates was General McSierra" introduces the viewer to the Sierra Nevada, which filled Muir's life Cullough, commanding general, First and inspired him to found the Sierra Marine Division, Camp Pendleton. Also participating in the ceremony was Dr. Club. Frederick R. Huber, President, Palomar Jones in his narration traces Muir's College. first summer spent as a sheepherder in The 90-day PREP Program involves the Sierras. Quotes from Muir's journals the military students in classes held on recreate his experience. the Palomar campus. Courses in
Monday at 8 p.m.
l
mathematics, English, United States history and American government are included in the curriculum. Angelo Carli, coordinator of Veterans Education here, stated that applications for enrollment in the next 90-day PREP program beginning Aprill4, are now being accepted. Service personnel who have completed 180 days active duty are eligible. Information can also be obtained from the Palomar College office in the same location. A short-term 45-day on-base program is also offered through PREP, with the next cycle beginning February 12. This partial program, Carli stated, assists servicemen to partially fulfill requirements in math and English for a high school diploma. It also serves as a refresher in those two subjects for those who taketheGED equivalency examination.