Broadcaster to $49,589.30 speak Tuesday Board approves ASG budget Norman Corwin, noted broadcast writer, director and producer, ~ speak to Palomar broadcasting students and the general public at 2 p.m. Tuesday in room Q-4. Corwin wrote "The Court Martial of General Yamashita," a 90-minute special which aired on ABC-TV nationwide. He was the creator and host of the 26-week series, "Norman Corwin Presents," for Westinghouse Broadcasting several years ago, and received the Davies Award of the Writers Guild of America for "contributions to the motion picture community which have brought dignity and honor to writers everywhere." For his radio work, Corwin received the first a ward of the Institute for Education by Radio for his series "Words Without Music."
Goveming Board members recent- 889.30 and there is $1,800 in the ASG ly approved the final 1976-77 trust fund. Expense accounts include ArAssociated Student Govemment boretum, $1,000; Assemblies, $1 ,000; budget of $49,589.30. Total income for the year is Awards, $250; Awards Program, projected at $42,900. These income $200; Bad Checks Expense, $100; accounts and their proposed Bravura, $450; Cheerleader, $1,800; amounts are Dance and Other Commencement, $350; Conference, Income Producing Events, $1,500; $800; Dances and Other Income Miscellaneous, $200; Student Activi- Producing Events, $2,000 and Dues, ty Cards, $4,500; Student Help $800. Center, $100; Identification Cards, Other expenditures are Focus and $1,000; Vending Machines, $7,200; Telescope,.$2,950; Forensics, $6,800; Bookstore, $27,500 and Interest, Honors Day, $700; Insurance, $100; $900. Intramurals, $600; Miscellaneous, The beginning balance was $4,- $650; Music Activites, $4,000; Office
Bxpense, $750; Postage, $400; Publicity, $900; Recognition of Scholastic Achievement (Alpha Gamma Sigma), $250; and Secretary, $2,500. Also included on the expenses side are Social Events, $600; Student Activity Cards, $600; Student Help Center, $7,500; Student Parents Advisory Board, $400; Travel, $500; Radio Station, $300; Interclub Council, $1,200; Identification Cards, $400 and Student Emergency Fund, $2,000. Excess income over expense is $50.
THE TELESCOPE P81omarColl. . .
Vol. 30No.SI
A Publication of tha A•oclatad Stuclenta
San . .,cos,CA
Dac. 3,11178
Local Indian education Folk-rock music will high~ight
conference successful Indian Education Association Clyde Mathews of the Office of members met on campus last Civil Rights led a civil rights weekend for the tenth annual workshop. Other workshops includCalifornia Indian Education ed forums on community involveAssociation Conference. ment in elementary and secondary education and a discussion of the Coordinating the meeting was J. American Indian National Science Ben Lucero, director of EOPS (Ex- Foundation School and Research tended Opportunities and Services) Center. at Palomar. Lucero is also the president of the Califomia ComBirgil Kills Straight of Pine Ridge munity Colleges Extended Oppor- led a workshop on "Coalition-Indian tunities Programs and Services Controlled School Boards" and Association. lilliam Morales, dean of student The student president of services, office of the chancellor, CCCEOPSA, Emiel Jaramillo, is Califomia Community Colleges moderated a panel discussion on the also from Palomar. role of the Califomia community Speakers for the conference in- college in Indian education. Staff cluded Dennis Banks of the members of the State Department of American Indian Movement, a Education made up a panel on Title leader at Wounded Knee and VII (Indian Education). Patricia U>cke, program director for A caucus workshop for American planning resources in minority education, Westem Interstate Com- Indian professional educators and a look at the Coalition for Califomia mission of Higher Education. Indian Education was moderated by Indian recording artist Floyd Dr. Dean Chavers of San Jose. Dr. Westerman provided entertainment Bill Dae and Camelia Collins of the together with the Calac Brothers, State Department of Education the Kumeyaay Dancers, the Peon conducted a workshop on American Players and Pala Children Dancers. Indian Education Council.
Sculptor will exhibit work Intemationally-known sculptor Tony deLap will lecture at Palomar at noon December 9, opening a month-long exhibit of his work in the college Boehm Gallery. The lecture will be held in room C44 of the college art and music complex. DeLap, who is also an accomplished magician, sees a relationship between sculpture and magic and will use this relationship as the subject of his lecture. The artist is a professor at the University of Califomia at Irvine. DeLap's work was included in the
p:tet~m:~.~~?f~k-·=~~~~~. !?.~to~~~!s._m
singer whose records are about to be released on the Motown label in Califomia, will appear for a one-
Henry VIII play opens 111•sclay Anne of A Thousand Days will open next Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. in P-33. The play, written by Maxwell Anderson, concems the short 1,000 day life of Anne Boleyn, the second wife of King Henry VIII of England. Buddy Ashbrook, Drama Department chairman, stars as Henry VIII and Leah Avery as Anne. Prices for students with ASG cards are $1.50. For those without cards, they are $2.50. The play will also run December 9-11 and 16-18.
in room P-32. Samson's appearance coincides with a holiday visit with his parents, local country and westem entertainers "Sam and Whitey and the Country Blue," who reside in Vista. Samson is better-known in the midwest and east where he has been quite successful. He has been touring the U.S. with his group, "ROADMAP," doing concerts and television appearances in major cities. Although "ROADMAP" is a high energy sound, approaching hard rock, as a single Pete Samson leans towards folk rock in which his songs tell a real and definite story. He not only writes his own music, he also produces and arranges it. The Motown studios see Pete Samson as a very talented and promising singing star. Samson's Palomar appearance is sponsored by the Palomar College Associated Students Entertainment Committee. Admission is $1 or $.75 for students and Gold Card holders.
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Today is the final day of the Patrons of Palomar annual booksale. The books on sale in the Student Union until 9 p.m.
"Artists from U>s Angeles" show at the Museum of Modem Art in New More than 4,000 art and ceramic York City in September, and was objects created by Palomar art part of the summer show at tl>e students will be displayed and sold Robert Elkon Gallery, also in New during a three day sale here York. He was represented in the December 9-11. "Painting and Sculpture in California: The Modem Era" exhibit which The final workshopsessionsofthe was shown at the San Francisco "Holistic Health" series are Museum of Art in September and scheduled for tomorrow from 9 a.m. will appear at the National College to 5 p.m. in room ES-19. The fee for of Fine Arts, Washington, D.C., next the day is $5. May. The lecture is open to the public During the week of December 13 and there is no charge for admissiOn. through 20 the library will accept all
***
***
***
overdue books and there'll be no fines, no questions, just thanks and official forgiveness for your trespasses.
*** Developing Personal Power, a workshop sponsored by the Student Help Center, will be offered next Wednesday from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in the Dome Film Room. There is no charge.
*** December features the Christmas story at the Planetarium. Due to the extra interest in the December show there will be extra dates offered. Shows will be given tonight and December 8, 10, 15, 17, 22, and 29 at 7:15 and 8:30 p.m.
Editorials: Pish! By J.C. Raedeker I can solemnly pity those poor souls whose pabulum consists of immersing themselves daily in the platitudes of newspaper editorials, wading assiduously through the bilge of Time and Newsweek, and taking in Walter Cronkite with supper. That we have such individuals in the Republic is why Jimmy Carter will be moving to Washington shortly. The astute observer of current affairs can easily discern such bastions of claptrap. He laughs at the pompous piety and emptiness of most newspaper editorials. He chuckles at the standardized posh bosh churned out
OPINION
,¡
by the computers at Time and Newsweek. He simpers back at that silly old patriarchal figure, Walter Cronkite. Some of my most glorious moments of mirth have been caused by reading newspaper editorials. Consider, for example, the homogeneous editorials on the FordCarter transition business. If you have yet to read one of these models of intellectual pish-posh, then do so, and you'll no doubt burst into uproarious laughter. I haven't had so blithesome a time since the Los Angeles Times, in its usual highfalutin sobriety, endorsed John Tunney for the senate. The possibilities for parodizing these editorials on the Ford-Carter transition are stupendous. They could start out like this: We would hope that President Ford will cooperate fully in making the transition to the Holy Peanut Administration a smooth one. He could, for example, give as a housewarming gift an abundant supply of Ex-lax, which would counteract the hazards of President-elect Carter's inordinate consumption of peanuts. Or, Mr. Ford could be so thoughful as to have Mr. Carter's bed mattress stuffed with peanut shells, the purpose of which would be to help Mr. Carter maintain his heretofore down-to-earth demeanor .... The comic effect of such parodies is shortlived, precisely because its intent is comic. But one can crack-up forever at the highminded drivel that is ground out by numskulls in newspaper offices, precisely because its intent is so serious, and its substance so shallow and obvious. And this is what I'm getting at: Are editorials worth the space they take up? Should they, perhaps, be placed below the obituaries or classifieds? I say no; they should be dropped completely, and be replaced by sprightly written articles by individuals. This would obliterate much of the pomp, flab, aloofness, and sheer banality that characterizes most editorial pages. Not only is the editorial restrained in content by advertisers and subscribers (because it represents the viewpoint of the newspaper and is therefore cautious not to offend many), but the very nature of its collective tone gives it invariably a vapid and insipid quality. This is why I never take editorials seriously, and can often be seen snickering at their pompous piety and overwhelming nothingness .
Hold the preservatives, please By Beth Foehl In the time I have gone to Palomar, I seem to continually run across two particular types of people: Those who appreciate the wonder of a Big Mac, french fries and Twinkies for breakfast, and those pure of stomach who come from Encinitas. While statistically inaccurate I realize, those persons I know from the area tend to follow a pattern. They're all lean, glowing and tend to clutch their throats in horror at the
HUMOR mention of the word "preservative." I decided I wan ted to look like them too for a change and was advised to buy a book by one of the nation's leading health food fanatics who weighs 12 1h pounds and lives atop a compost pile in Julian. The first thing any self-respecting health food nut must do , according to the author, is to find a nice shady corner surrounded by nature and all her beauty for your daily floggings. The purpose of these floggings is to incite such torture upon your body that the things you are forced to eat will seem like fun in comparison. For this reason, the author suggests starting your regimen at five minutes a day and working up to two hours as your craving for grease and petit fours grows stronger. The next basic requirement is to reconstruct your former (and fatal, the author states emphatically) ideas about food. First off, "If it isn't organic, your body should panic . . . " The author cleverly composed a little ten-page dirge out of this phrase (while he was on a wheat germ high) with a moving five-minute ocarino solo which I have omitted here for the sake of sensitive digestive tracts. In other words, if the food you buy in the store looks fresh, heal thy, and unblemished, it has been grown by artificial means and can do only artificial things for your body (such as keeping you alive longer than 28 years) . But, if in your next bag of groceries, the bugs look healthy and the only thing fresh is the manure- congratulations, your food is organic and you are doing the "natural" thing in eating it (the "natural"
thing will be to wheeze and turn green by morning). Next the author says that food supplements are an imperative addition to the organic diet (mainly because you won't be able to leave the house on breezy days without an anchor unless you start getting something your stomach can hold down). Included in this list of tempting treats are brewer's yeast (he suggested three capsules daily; I found three six-packs more rewarding) and desiccated liver (available in drug stores but cheaper from prairies during droughts). He also warns against adverse reactions to such things as fluorescent lighting, synthetic clothes, margarine, hairspray and gnomes carrying clubs. The author goes on (and on) to more clearly explain his organic philosophy, but I would like to close with what I consider his most practical comment. He highly lauds the preventative powers of garlic and urges its use with every single thing you place in your mouth. He says he found it prevents headaches, eyebrow loss and normal breathing. I found it prevents people from coming up to you and telling you how terrible you look.
Published on ~1-iday of each school week, except during final examinations or holidays , by the Communications Department of Palomar College, San Marcos, California 92069. Phone: 744¡1150, Ext. 306. Advertising rates are $2.50 per column inch. Opinions expressed in signed editorials and articles are the views of the writers and do not necessarily represent opinions of the staff, views of the Associated Student Government, college administration, or the Board of Governors. The Telescop e invites letters to the editor. All communications must be signed by the author. Names will be withheld upon request. Letters may be submitted to The Telescope editorial office, R-4. Editor-in-chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... ... J.C. Raedeker News Editor ............... ......... ... .. ...... Erin Thien Editorial Page Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Tom Wilson Sports Editor. . . ........... .. . ... ..... ... Rick Hoff Advertising Manager .. . . ....... ....... ... .. . Pam Martin Reporters ...................... . Brian Adams , Pete Brill, Ed Buker, Herb Claggett, Frank Csaszar,Mary Dickinson, Vince Hunt, Charlotte Lindner, Karen Morales, John Murphy Photographers . . . . .... ....... .... ...... . Chris Cotter, Marcia Earnshaw, Tom Kelly Journalism Advisor . . ... .... ........ Fred Wilhelm Graphic Arts Advisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. Jim McNutt Photography Advisor . . .. .. .. ............. Justus Ahrend
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Hopes are high for Hoopsters on road Tuesday powerful wrestlers t~. ~.:~.!. ~~:m~.:iv~a~ne~!y~~~~~.~!~y . By Richard Hoff With two early season wins under the direction of coach John Woods Palomar's wrestling team seems U: be on its way to living up to the high expectations credited to the squad. Woods was highly optimistic going into the season, hoping to post one of his best records at Palomar. ,d that's following a season in
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John Woods which the Comets placed second in the state dual-meet tournament. Palomar has only four veterans returning from that Mission championship squad, but with the depth the Comets have, Wood's hopes might not be unfulfilled. Palomar started the season in explosive fashion last week in the Dome Gym. The opponent was Grossmont, always a JC wrestling power and ranked third in the state last year. The Comets won six of the 10 matches and picked up draws in t~ree others to score an easy 31-11 Win. The locals ran their record to 2-0 Tuesday with a 25-19 win at Cerritos. Against Grossmont, Ed Dilbeck opened at 118 pounds and scored one of the two pin wins of the night. Dilbeck did not wrestle last season but has proven his ability as a Sa~ Diego CIF high school champion at 106 pounds while attending Orange Glen two years ago. Tad Overmire, another Patriot CIF champion of two years ago, scored an easy 10-3 win over his 'iriffin opponent. After winning the
co~ference
championship C'ne we1ght up last year, Overmire has dropped to the 126 class. At 134 pounds, the Comets have Rick Fileman, who has seen his share of CIF action at Poway High School. Fileman attended Humboldt State last year before returning to the North County. Fileman decisioned his foe, 3-1. Brian Canada has the starting nod at 142 pounds, and he was one of the Comets who drew with his Grossmont opponent, the score being 12-12. Canada is another sophomore letterman who won the conference title in his division last season. Palomar's best in a long line of quality wrestlers is probably 150 pound Mike Burgher. He has already shown what he can do being the defending state champio~ in his division. Burgher hails from Fairfield High near Salinas, and scored the Comets' other win by fall at 3:11. Rick Worel, a freshman who placed second in the state as a prep from Napa, will get the nod at 158 pounds. Worel started his season with a 7-1 decision victory. In one of the night's more interesting matches Wednesday, Glen Thoreson picked up a 10-10 draw iu the 167 class by scoring two points late in the bout. Thoreson has lost weight from last year and has dropped from the 177 division where he took honors at Escondid~ High. The man who takes over at 177 Steve Pell, did a lot of scoring to wi~ his match, 18-13. Pell is a sophomore by way of Poway High who sat out last season with an ankle injury. Filling the 190-pound division at the present time is Craig Gordon. Gordon is another ex-Titan from Poway and picked up a lot of experience as a Comet freshman last year. In the heavyweight class, always a popular division, Woods has Alan Tanner, who drew with his man, 1-1. Tanner is a freshman from Orange Glen, but didn't wrestle last season due to a fractured arm suffered during football season. Rounding out the Comet squad which will be wrestling as an in: dependent this year, is a cast of 22 back-ups, all quality grapplers. Palomar will participate in the Southwest Tournament tomorrow before coming home for Moorpark next Friday.
theu. record dip to 1-2 after an o~nmg round loss to Long Beach City College, 69-62 Wednesday night at the Antelope Valley Tournament. They were scheduled to meet Rio Hondo in last night's action. After the Antelope VaHey Tournament which began December 1 and continues through December 4, the Comets will journey to Mira Costa Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. The team travels to the Cuesta Tournament beginning the next night December 8 through December 12. Coach Andy Gilmour's Comet basketball team opened their regular season by splitting two games last weekend. Against College of the Canyons l<'riday night they suffered a 88-79 loss and then Saturday came back to beat East Los Angeles 76-72.
6'2" Tyrone Davis who scored 20 points and by 6'6" forward Ken Jackson who had 13 points and a game high 13 rebounds. But Coach Andy Gilmour was not pleased with his team's play. "Overall we've been inconsistent and unorganized. We made too many turnovers (48 in the two games) and played sloppy basketball." Davis again led the team in scoring at East L.A. with 23 points. pel vi~ Moore and Don Joy chipped m With 11 points apiece, while Marcus Hays scored 10. Even after their first victory Coach Gilmour wasn't too happy. "I was disappointed with our rebounding, we didn't block off very well at all."
20-7 win ends grid season The gridiron season ended in good fashion for Coach Mack Wiebe's football team as they evened their record at 5-5 by beating San Diego City College November 20, 20-7. The Comets used three short touchdown runs and played good defense to come up with the win. Overall Palomar gained 315 yards in total offense, with 283 of hat coming on the ground and only J2 yards coming through the air as quarterback Greg Hadfield threw only five times, completing three. Leading the team, as he did the entire season in rushing, Dale BUS I NESS
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Wilhelm amassed 571 yards on 136 carries and a 4.2 average. Willie Ramirez was the year's leading receiver with 26 catches for 499 yards and three touchdowns. Kicker Ken Putnam led the team in scoring with 24 points.
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Anderson named Comet grid MVP Defensive tackle Bob Anderson was named as the Most Valuable Player of the 1976 Palomar College football team at the annual Football Awards Banquet Tuesday night at the Escondido Elks Lodge. Also honored were Doug Tracy and Chris Brooks, co-captains; Greg Hadfield, most improved; Skip Relyea, most inspirational (Kayle Henderson Memorial Award); and
Bob Botstord, Kevin Kelly Memorial Award. Other awards were presented to Dale Wilhelm, outstanding offensive back; Willie Ramirez, outstanding receiver; Brooks, outstanding offensive lineman¡ Botsford outstanding defensiv~ back; Bruc~ Watson, outstanding linebacker; and Anderson, outstanding defensive lineman.
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