Palomar
ege
Volume 36 No. 2
San Marcos, CA
A Publication for the Associated Students
Pianist presents recital
'Norway' first film • • 1n ser1es
"Norway," the first in Palomar College Community Services' travel film series will be presented in room P-32 at 1 and 3 p.m. October 10. Produced and narrated by Stan LaRue, the film shows Norway as a northern fairy-tale land of beauty and solitude with beautiful seacoasts, towering mountains, and glaciers, far-flung forest, and rushing rivers, and wondrous waterfalls. Rugged mountains and narrow valleys give way to rolling farmlands and fertile coastal plains. In early summer, the sun never sets on nearly one-third of the countrythat portion north of the Artie Circle. Each of the couQtry's six diverse geographical regions, the Oslo Fjord, the Eastern Valleys, Telemark and South Coast, the Western Fjords, Trondelag and North Norway, are visited in the film as it moves north from Oslo, the capital and southern gateway, to the North Cape, Europe's northenmost point. Season tickets for the series of eight films may still be purchased through Palomar College's Community Services. Single tickets may be purchased at the door, $3 general and $2.50 students and senior citizens. For information call 7441150 or 727-7529, extension 2155.
Top 10 will be Glamourized
Young women from colleges and universities through tout the country will compete in Glamour Magazines's Top Ten Women competition. A panel of Glamour editors will select the winners on the basis of their solid records of achievement in academic studies and! or in extracurricular activities on campus or in the community. Not only will the 10 winners be featured in the August, 1983, college issue of Glamour, they will receive $1000 cash prize.In addition, each winner will be representing her college in the most effective way. Cherie Baker, Director of the Women's Center, feels this is an excellent opportunity for women on campus to receive recognition for their achievements, as well as compete for the cash prize o.f $1000. Those interested in finding out how to go about entering the competition, or who would like additional information should contact the Women's Center between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. The Women'n Center is located near the Student Union in R-2. Or simply call 744-1150, extension 2278.
Petitions available for AS candidates Students wishing to run fm: office may pick up petitions from the Judicial Advocates office in room R26. A candidates' meeting will be held October 13 at 12 noon. The election will be held October 19, 20, 21 and 22nd. There are three vacancies on the board. ASG president Jeff Urry urges, "that all students become involved, for only if students become involved will we have an active student body."
RELAXING - Pianist Peter Gach leans against a San Francisco Golden Gate Park statue. Gach will present a recital October 10 in
the performance lab, commemorating the onehundredth birthday of a Polish composer.
METAL, STONE, PAPER EXHIBITED
Gallery features modern art Recent works of internationally known artists Seiji Kunishima and Ann Takayoshi Page will be on exhibit at the Boehm Gallery from October 26 through November 17. The new works of Kunishima shows his familiar metal and stone sculptures, but, according to Chuck Nicholson in a recent Artweek review, Kunishima expresses a more equal balance and a more complex relationship between man and nature than before. Most of Kunishima's works on view will be his horizontal arrangements of iron sections with stone. The stones appear to be naturally set into their iron stratalike layered homes. The sculptures
are comparatively small, ranging from 81/2 to 44 Ya , hallmarks of Japanese design. Also included in the Kunishima exhibit will be this "Mizukagami" (Water Mirror), in Swedish black granite. Ann Page's work will lend a nice contrast to this two-ar,tist exhibit. Page uses delicate layering of rice paper over an understructure of string. Where Kunishima's works rest on the floor, Page's works are hung. Her eight sculptures range from 34" to over 8 feet tall. Suzanne Michnic of the Los Angeles Times said of Page's wotk in a recent review, "The sculptures are symmetrical but their wrinkled surfaces and ragged protrusions
Fictitious business thrives on campus By Sarah Grimes Despite high interest rates and a flat economy, one business is thriving on campus. Camphrey Distributors, a fictitious book distributing company, is providing college credits to students seeking experience in General Office Procedures. Although the company is makebelieve, the experience gained by students is very real. When a student enrolls in General Office Procedures, Advanced Typing,orMachine Transcription,he or she leaves the traditional classroom and becomes part of the Camphrey Company. As an employee, the student is required to fill out a job application and a W4 form. Class attendance is recorded by punching a time clock and a factitious paycheck is issued at the end of every· week. "We try to tailor the course to a student's skills and needs," says Lorraine Doering, office manager at Camphrey Distributors and senior instructional assistant. The courses are structured into three one-unit modules. Tests are administered to gauge a student's skills. If a student can prove proficiency in typing or machine
transcription, these courses are not required. Students can set their own hours for learning. The office lab is open from 8a.m. to 4p.m. and students can come in anytime to a accomplish course re·quirements. Under the glare of fluorescent lights and amidst the din of clattering typewriters, students rotate through a variety of job simulations during the course of the semester. In Business 51, module one, a student works five hours as receptionist, five hours as mail clerk, and five hours as typist. In module two, students rotate as travel secretary, payroll officer, and financial officer. In module three, an advanced student could achieve executive status, and perform the duties of the office manager. Besides office time, formal classes meet in the "Bored Room." This executive boardroom is used to lecture students on the duties they must perform in each module. "We are working on getting people into the job market," reports Lorraine Doering. Pauline Rossmaessler, instructor and president of Camphrey Distributors added,"This is an opportunity for people to learn a paraprofessional skill."
make them look more organic than geometric. More important than formal qualities is the fact that the artist has wrought strong visual images from delicate structures." Several of the artists' work come to the Boehm Gallery through the courtesy of the Space Gallery in Los Angeles, while the rest are on loan from private collections. Because of budget restraints, the new hours for the Boehm Gallery are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.
Course offered to songwriters for fun, profit "Songwriting For Fun and Profit," a course dealing with the creative and business aspects of songwriting is being offered here. This six-week evening course will meet from 6:30 to 9:30 in room D-3 in the college music complex and has a user fee of $22.50. The course includes song structure, lyric and melody writing, protecting your work, making demos and marketing your rnaterial.Also covered are all categories of popular songs, including middle-of-the-road, country, rhythm and blues and rock. The students will share their music with each other and learn to evaluate each others' songs as well as their own. Instructer Dorthy Beck says, "Whether you write forthejoyofitor you are planning to make it a career, you can always benefit from learning more about your craft." All songwriters, composers and lyricist, no matter what their level of experience, are welcome. The previous class finished the semester by forming the North County Songwriters' Guild. Students may register at the Admissions Office Mondays through Fridays from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. There are no evenings hours on Fridays. For more information, contact the division of Continuing Education, 7441150 or 727-7529, extension 2155.
Pianist Peter Gach will present a recital marking the one-hundreth birthday of one of Poland's most significant composers since Karol Szymanowski October 10 at 3 p.m. in the performance lab. One of the most original figures in Polish music in the first half of the twentieth century, Szymanowski was the composer of a substantial body of compositions which are still little known and recognized outside of his native Poland. Revered as that country's greatest composer since Chopin and as the father of twentieth century Polish music, Szymanowski was a widely traveled and well known figure in music circles prior to the second world war. His death in 1937 and the political changes in Europe after the war served to put his name into obscurity. At the time when the centennial of Bartok in 1981 and those of Stravinsky and Haydn in 1982 are being celebrated with many concerts throughout the world, the rich variety of Szymanowski's compositions has been somewhat overshadowed. Dr. Gach, a Polish-American on the faculty of Palomar, is attempting to remedy this situation. In addition to his recital he will repeat the program for the Polish Arts and Culture Foundation in San Francisco on the composer's birthday, October 16, as well as giving concerts in locations in the Bay Area and northern California. Dr. Gach's program will consist of the early and very romantic Etudes, op.4, the massive, virtuosic and rarely heard Third Piano Sonata, and the neoclassical Mazurkas from op.50. Gach is both by heritage and interest a specialist in the piano composition of Szymanowski. His fluency in the Polish language earned him a Koscuiszko Foundation grant to study at the Warsaw Conservatory (the institution where both Chopin and Szymanowski studied) and it was here that he first encountered the music of Szymanowski. Rich in texture, complex and distinctively original, the piano music especially captured his interest and he began a special study which he has carried into a Doctoral studies at the Universities of Indiana and Arizona and nation wide concert tours. The recital will be held in the performance Lab of the Music complex. For directions and ticket information, call the Music Department at 744-1150 or 727-7529,ext. 2317.
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Instructor wounded at Vista restaurant Anthony Gregory, oceanography and geography instructor in his first semester here, was shot in the hip during an attempted robbery of a Vista Carl's Jr. October 4. · Gregory underwent surgery twice at Tri-City Hospital in Oceanside after the Monday night shooting which apparently was triggered by his failure to respond quickly to the suspect's orders, said sheriffs Sgt. Bill Baxter.Gregory was reported to be in fair condition Tuesday following surgery. One of the restaurant employees chased and caught the suspect, Kerry George Allen, and held him for sheriffs deputies.
The Telescope, Friday, October 8, 1982
2
EDITOR VIEWS .THE NEWS
Environmentalist returns to horse and buggy days By Bill Tharp Environmentalist the champions of the clean world. Nemesis of all things that corrupt the clean air and the earth . Let us take one of their main targets. Generating electricity . The newest method of producing electricity is with nuclear energy. If there isn't problems with the plant, such as burnout or radiation escaping from the reactor, then we can live with all the comforts of the modern age. But the dangers outweigh the good. The next method would be generating electricity with steam from the core of the earth. Darn, if that doesn't sound like something from H.G.Wells. Let's look at this method . First, you have to build one of those ugly rigs that dig wells. Then, while you are digging the well you also have to build a massive generating plant . Meanwhile, you have to find a way of disposing of the alkali that, after cooling adheres to the pipes, limiting the flow of steam to the generating plant. Did I hear someone mention "generate with solar cells". If so, you would have to buy up all of the Salton Sea, fill the valley with solar cells, which would produce enough electricity for transmitting to the consumer . Lets hear it for HG.Wells To get the electricity from the source to the consumer, all you need are transmission lines . If you think the enviromentalist gave us a bad time when we built the steam plant, think of all the help they will be when planning the route for the transmitting lines to the large cities that need the power . Why not use oil, you say? Plants can be built next to the metropolitan areas, however, there is one problem. Some of the oil has a sulfur content that burns dirty. Clean burning oil is not readily available . Another possibilty is to drill off shore . However, if there is a rupture in one of the conduits that carry the oil to shore, the end results would be the death of our wildlife . Ultimately, the oil would reach our beaches, and you know how hard it is to get tar off your feet . Then there is the cheapist way for generating electricity. It is readily available and easy to get to . All you have to do is dig it up, load it on railroad cars or trucks and deliver it to the steam plants to generate the electricity. I am speaking of coal. Solid black gold. Wait a minute, environmentalist say, we have to put the ground back the way we found it. If they would wait a minute, we can put the ashes and "clinkers"back in the hole, put a little dirt over them, plant a little seed and we are back to normal. No, environmentalist tell us that we have to fill the hole we
dug to fill the hole that we dug to get the coal out. Dams could be built to generate electricity, but would put our sportsment out of business . I mean the white water boys . Therefore strike the dam idea. Since the nation is getting low on fuel, we have to save fuel to cook and heat with. The auto plants would have to re-tool and return to making horse-drawn vehicles. Wait! We can't do that! We don't have the energy to use to re-tool. The mode of transportation is to walk or ride a' horse, or a cycle with wood tires. Just think of it, a horse for each adult and a pony for each child. Think of all the natural fertilizer the manure will make for our gardens. Come to think about it, the nation will have to walk ve-r-r-ry carefully. Then there is all that manure contaminating the drinking water. Come to think of it, that is what our energy problem is a lot of manure.
LETTERS I wish to remind students that we are looking for opinions and letters to the editor. We have received some letters but we are unable to use them. The letters were unsigned and not typed. The letters and opinions have to be typed with double spacing and signed .
THE TELESCOPE Bill Tharp Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor ............ Betty Hollman Sports Editor . ....... ·......... Mike Pedretti Reporters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thomas Barbee, Stephen Derbes, Colleen Fetters, Sarah Grimes, Dale Haines, Radine Hayes, Wendy Hayward, Louis Knapic, Mike Miller, Anthony Sciumbata, Doug Skinner, David Truax, Bill Wilson Journalism Advisor ........... Fred Wilhelm Photography Advisor . . ....... . Will Gullette Graphic Arts Advisors ....... Neil Bruington, Letty Brewster, Gary Cohen Advertising Editor ... . ........ Geoff Morris Opinions expressed herein are the individual writers' and do not necessarily represent those of the TELESCOJ;JE. · However, unsigned editorials do represent the opinions of the TELESCOPE. Letters and articles can be submitted to the TElESCOPE one week before publication. The TELESCOPE is a weekly appearing on Fridays, published throughout the semester, except during final exams and holidays.
BUR6l~R\ZED OFFICES~~~
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FOR YOUR INFORMATION
Transfer Center advises Students intending to transfer to fouryear institutions have long had the need for a center where they could meet with representatives from their college of interest. The elaborate transfer process as well as specific questions regarding individual majors could be handled in one~on one counseling and advising sessions. With a few adornments, a little polishing and some concentrated effort, the EOPS TRANS/SEND project has taken this simple idea and turned it into the transfer center, a place where students and representatives from SDSU, UCSD, National University and other four-year institutions can gather and meet on a regularly scheduled basis . If you plan to continue your education beyond Palomar and you need some firsthand information regarding the transfer process, please stop by TCA-3 or call extension 2234 . A TRAN/SEND representative will gladly help you . Picture a working alliance of four-year universities and Palomar founded on goodwill, blessed by the spirit of cooperation
and dedicated to the needs of transfer students and you have the EOPS TRANS/SEND project's transfer center. Having surmounted the period of difficulty that accompanies any undertaking in the beginning, this unique organization is celebrating its founding and success with an open house to be held in TCB-1 October 13 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Refreshments will be served. "If your hunger for tasty treats coincides with your appetite for tidbits of knowledge regarding the transfer process," says coordinator Phil Baum, "please stop by and m~et with professional representatives from SDSU, UCSD, USIU and National University. All of us are looking forward to helping you with your transfer needs." The transfer center represents a cooperative effort involving Palomar and four-year institutions of higher learning. It is designed to provide personalized advising and counseling to students who intend to transfer . If you are considering a transfer, stop by and check out our operation .
POETRY CORNER THOUGHT EMBRYO Nothingness, everythingness simultaneous, I, in a bubble, hang in the atmosphere Waiting the flow that will carry me Up-draft, down-draft, straight ahead or wavering. The bubble, Of sky stuff, Of sea stuff, Of earth stuff, Of plant and animal stuff, Is part of the ALL - spun thin. Small as an atom, feeling, not knowning, I wait within. Mary Spence TROUBLE A tree, old before its time, Stands hunched against the wind One our rocky hillside. Fog, rolling like smoke, overtakes, Climbs among its branches. Obliterates. Hands clenched, toes dug in, I defy. "Take the tree, slicken the rocks, Cancel the outbuildings, Smother me, Goose-down wall, I will not run for coer." Blinded, I stand waiting For this to pass on. Hair and garments dripping, I wait. Mary Spence
NIGHT PICNIC: PACIFIC BEACH Blush rose, the color of the sky, Blue clouds edged with gold As sky and water meet And embrace the sun. The brilliance fades, A somber veil prepares us For the coming of the night. Along the beach, the glow of flames Like signal fires regularly spaced Lights up the figures outlined there. A hum of voices complements The lap of waves along the shore And darkness spreads a mantle over all. One by one the fires disappear. A night-bird calls and then is still. The picnickers desert the beach. The last sparks sputter, flare :and die. The soothing sound of surf alone remains. · A lonely moon rides high Oblivious to the scene below. Irene V. Dayton SUMMER IDYLL Tall grass beside a dried-up stream Bends and bows this way and that Fanned by a tranquil breeze. The leaves of shading pepper trees Wave a polite response To the nodding grasses Lazing in the peaceful quiet Of a summer afternoon. Irene V. Dayton
NEWS
The Telescope, Friday, October 8, 1982
Counselors from National University will be on campus for free transfer information on degree programs in North County. National University is the only fulltine school for working students. Counselors will be in room TCB-1 from 10 a.m. till1p.m. on Thursdays. For further information call 9416200 or 941-6252 for a personal 'interview or Palomar, Ext. 2449.
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Are you worried, depressed, have study problems or family concerns? A psychologist will be available in Health Services this semester. There is no charge. You can make an appointment by coming to Health Services or calling 744-1150, extension 2380.
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NOONTIME CONCERT - "Sure", a North County rock band will be appearing free as part of the noon time concerts sponsored by the
Associated Student Government. The group will appear at noon October 20 in the Student Union.
CLASSES OFFERED FOR FEE
Real Estate courses resurrected Recent announcements of the Real Estate program's demise have proven to be premature. A new Real Estate program beginning October 26 was recently announced. Courses which meet the requirements for real estate broker exam preparation, and correspond in length and description to Palomar College real estate credit classes, will be taught by instructors active in the real estate market and qualified by college standards to teach in the discipline.
Upon completion of each class, all students will receive a Certificate of Achievement.
Legal Aspects of Real Estate will begin October 26; Real Estate Appraisal on January 6; Real Estate Finance on February 22; Real Estate Economics on March 5; and Real Estate Practice on May 17. All are six-week courses and classes will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6 to 10 p.m. in suites 1,2 and3 at 1605 West Mission Road in San Marcos.
According to a directive from the Chancellor's Office, real estate broker preparatory courses offered at community colleges can no longer be state funded. Therefore, a fee of $135 per course will be charged to cover instruction and administrative costs.
Dr. Omar Scheidt, Palomar president, reminds the public that this is the time to prepare for a role in California's future. "If you believe that people will continue to move west to California, then invest in your own future by earning a real estate broker license. Even if you do not want to become a broker, these courses will assist you to participate in real estate transactions as a knowledgeable consumer."
Palomar College will accept the new courses to fulfill the unit requirements for an Associates in Arts degree or a Certificate Program in real estate for those students who have been enrolled in these programs prior to September, 1982.
To register, send a check or money order in the amount of $135 for each class to Continuing Education for Professionals, Palomar College, 1140 West Mission Road, San Marcos, CA 92069-1487, or register in person in Staff Building 2, Room 34.
Art program carves 19 classes because of summer budget cuts Absorbing as much as it could without being cancelled, the Art Department was still forced to cut 19 classes from its program. 13 classes in art and five classes in photography were dropped due to budget cuts, while one photography class was dropped due to lack of enrollment. In all of the budget cuts two new teachers were hired. William Gullette was added to the photography department, replacing Justus Ahrend. He was hired for his ability in photojournalism. ¡ Louise Kirtland replaced Donna Sakanney in the Art Department. She will be teaching studio classes
and co-teaching Seven Centuries in Sight and Sound, covering both art and music. Despite the budget cuts three new classes will be offered at Mt. Carmel high school by popular request. The classes offered are: Introduction to Art, Drawing and Composition, and Two- dimensional Design. All three are general education courses, the latter two required for art majors. Val Sanders, chairperson of the Art Department hopes that people who were unable to get the art classes they wanted will register next semester for those classes.
l<'ifteen persons must be registered before a class will be conducted. It is essential to register as soon as possible. All monies will be refunded in case a class is cancelled due to low enrollment. For information regarding this program, escrow classes and real estate continuing education information, call Continuing Education for Professionals, extension 2346.
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Lifeline, a non-profit service agency in Vista, will offer free counseling training sessions to interested volunteers beginning October 8. The training will equip the volunteers to perform friendly visiting to homebound seniors, bus escorting for Lifeline transportation clients and reception work at the Lifeline office. Those people chosen to do the training will be asked to make a six month commitment of four hours per week to their volunteer service. The public is invited to apply for the training. Phone Cath Webb at 7266396 for further information.
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Art and Craft of Alfred Hitchcock - Lifeboat (1944)
Chinese Roulette Rainer Werner Fansbinder died this year and even though he was still in his 30's he left a score of great films behind. Probably more than any one man, he created the splash of the renaissance in German cinema. He always surprises, not with endings, but with his very approach to the subject. This all-out Gothic thriller is no exception.Shows Thursday, October 14 at 2 and 7 p.m. in P-32. Admission free.
We don't readily think of Hitchcock as an experimental filmmaker, but in this film he creates for himself the challenge of creating an engaging drama in the most limited of locations - a lifeboat. Some excellent performances from Tallulah Bankhead, John Hodiak and William Bendix. Screens Wednesday, October 13 at 4 p.m. in P-32.
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Classified Ads
San Diego special campus tours and group counseling and information sessions will be offered at UCSD, November 11. In addition to the special events planned for that day, regular tours of the campus will be conducted this fall on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and on Saturday mornings. For further information, call the Office of Relations with Schools, (714) 452-3140.
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Art faculty paintings, sculptures, photography, and printmaking are on display until October 12 in the Boehm Gallery. Russell Baldwin, gallery director, with the help of Karen Warner, set up the exhibit. Due to budget cuts the gallery will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays only.
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TEST PREPARATION BOOKS Latest Editions! Practice tests identical to actual tests in format scope, time frame and level of difficulty to insure your exam-readiness. All questions are answered in detail. Complete review material in each book, plus many new features never before included in a test preparation book.
Palomar Collegs Bookstore
Services Offered Guitar Study with a professional. Beginners or advanced. Theory, melody chords, improvisation, harmony, orchestration. Andy Riley 746-. 8669. Palomar Accredited. Pregnant? Troubled? Explore the alternatives to abortion. Free professional counseling and services available. San Diego Pro-Life League 24-Hour Hotline, 941-1515. For Sale 1969 VW Fastback. Rebuilt Engine. Very clean, excl. running condition. $1500 or best offer. Call 7449546. '77 Toyota Celica Liftback. 5 speed. 76,000 miles, good condition. Must sell. $3,000 or best offer. Call 4368615. 55-trail Honda. Two new tires, runs good. Home- 727-1173, work- 7441150, ext. 2450. Ask for Bill. Help Wanted Campus Representative National company seeks socially active/ motivated person who has need and desire for $6.21 average hourly income. Write now for details. RC Publishing, P.O. Box #71181, New Orleans, LA 70172. Earn really big $$$ with our lightning selling product that sells itself in campus social center or cafeteria. Send name, school and address, and phone number for full details. Write TSF, 136 Lakeshore Drive, Marlboro, MA 01752. Full time - part time applicants being accepted at Camppost Pizza, 695 South Rancho Santa Fe, San Marcos (744-7050). Housing - County ParadiseConvenient location in Valley Center. Access to Olympic size swimming pool & facilities. Spaces offered at $200 a month, including electric, water and sewer hook-up. Park your camper, trailer or mobil home. Please call (749-1158) before 10 a.m. or (741-1004). Leave messages for Mr. ~lehm. Announcement Anyone knowing the whereabouts of a pair of brown hom rimmed glasses please contact David Mays at 789-3283 or 747-1341; he needs them desperately.
__ SP-ORTS
The Telescope, Friday, October 8, 1982
4
Gridders fall to l-2; snap stalls drive B~
Mike Pedretti
For the first 13 plays of the October 2 Antelope Valley game, it was a drive worth remembering. But on the fourteenth play, it was something better off forgotten. After the play in question had forever switched the momentum to the opposing side, the final score showed the Comets on the short end of a 10-7 score. lt began when Palomar forced AVC to punt after three plays. From their own 26-yard line, quarterback John Peterson hit four consecutive passes to bring the Comets to the AVC 10. There, the drive stalled and placekicking specialist Rich Watkins was called in to attempt a 26-yard chip shot. He never got the chance as the snap from center rolled along the ground and into the hands of the Marauders, who then drove 62 yards to a field goal and seemed to put the Comets in a daze from which they never recovered. "That was definitely the turning point of the game," sighed head coach Mario Mendez. Shortly after the special team's blunder and AVC's 37-yard field goal by Doug Crew, the Marauders scored again on a nine yard touchdown pass from Sam Fromhart to fullback Floyd Singleton. After another Comet drive was stopped, AVC got to the Palomar five yard line when tailback Sam Pinchem, who ran for 144 yards in the game, fumbled the ball to defensive end David Lerma. Peterson again got the hot hand, hitting five straight passes to four different recievers. The big gainer was a 21-yarder to Pat Lane, who leads the conference in receptions with 19. The Comets got on the board after Peterson scrambled 20 yards to the 32 before running back Dave Willoughby ran behind the ·block of tackle Rich Heide for the score. There was to be no more scoring in the game, as both offenses could not sustain a long drive. Palomar only penetrated A VC territory once after intermission. "Their defense was tough and they were really hitting hard," offered Mendez. "We couldn't put a drive together in the second half."
Peterson threw for 142 yards on 17 of 33 passing and Willoughby ran for 61 yards on 15 carries. "They got a few more breaks then we did," said Mendez. "They have a good team, and when we weren't able to move the ball, they kept getting more jacked up." .. _ " I can't help but look back on that first drive. To put a series together like that and come away empty really hurt." Palomar will face College of the Desert tomorrow at Palm Desert at 7:30 p.m. hoping to even their 1-2 record against the 0-3 Roadrunners. Saddleback, currently ranked seventh in the nation, will then host the Comets October 16 in the Mission Conference opener.
Volleyball team faces
Saddleback After splitting their initial two games, the volleyball team lost an October 1 match to Santa Ana 15-10, 9-15, 15-12, 15-11. The Comets · had previously beaten Fullerton and lost to UCSD in the season opener. Coach Duncan McFarland's squad was down 12-1 to Santa Ana in the fourth game, but rallied back. Thr.ee missed serves in the final minutes halted the rally, however, and spelled Palomar's defeat. "Santa Ana-played well and was a little more physical than we were," said McFarland. Lisa Lessman paced the Comets with 13 kills, followed by Paula Marshall with 11. Server Pam Myers accounted for 10 points and played a strong back row defense. "We will have to play scrappier defense, get better serving and passing, and continue to improve if we're going to stay with the teams in our conference.". MiraCosta and Saddleback. appear to be the top teams in the Pacific Coast Conference this year and the Comets will face the latter today. The game will be played at Saddleback College at 3:30 p.m.
EXTRA POINT- The Comets' Rich Watkins successfully adds a conversion as the Antelope
Valley linemen are unable to block his (Photo by Vince Baworouski)
WOMEN'S SOCCER
Kickers best Pasadena Sanders said that her players did Coach Judy Sanders' women's soccer team triumphed over not play well during the first half. Pasadena City College 3-1 here "They were not moving, passing, and were kicking the ball out of October 1. Suzy Jakovac began the Palomar control and without a purpose." scoring by driving down the middle After a blazing halftime speech by of the field and booting a goal into the Palomar coach, the Comets the righthand corner of the net. The first Pasadena goal was improved with better control imd scored when Palomar goalie Julie passing. Flick made the initial save only to Sanders added that "The team is have a rebound kicked into the net. not in good physical condition due to During the second half, Shanine Bergman scored a goal from the 40 the three shots on goal which yard line while the Pasadena goalie occurred in the last ten minutes of was playing too far forward. · the game." Bergman added an insurance goal Goalie Diana Cavender made when she kicked in Palomar's third three saves on those shots. and final goal.
Coach Bev Johnson of the Pasadena team said that her team also did not play well during the first half. "We were bunched up and Palomar did not take advantage of this. We played much better towards the end of the first half." The Palomar team now has a 2-1 record which includes a 4-0 loss to a powerful El Camino team September 28. The Comets play Orange Coast here today at 3 p.m. on the baseball field.
Harriers split dual meets: run at Hancock tomorrow Winning their first meet, the men's cro~s country team beat San Diego City College 17-43 and lost to San Diego Mesa 20-37 October 1 at Balboa Park in San Diego. The Comets' Dan Stupar finished third at 21:47, followed by Chris Jones in sixth place at 22:27. Other top finishers for Palomar included Dan Escher, who was seventh in 22:37, Steve Lucas, eleventh in 23:06 and Dan Forbes, twelfth in 20:16. Coach Doc Marrin said, "We've still got some . people sick, but I'm very happy with Stupar's and Jones' performances. Forbes is also continuing to improve." The next meet is the Hancock Invitational to be held tomorrow at 9 a.m. in Palo Alto.
36-21, but were defeated by City 3025. Sheila Green was the :fastest Palomar harrier, finishing fourth in a time of 20:53 for the three mile course. Other top Comet runners included Trudy Schmutzler who finished sixth in 21:23, Martha: Baez, seventh in 21:41, Teresa Baker, eighth in 22:14, and Lee Gracey, eleventh in 22:50. Coach Tracy Wiedenhoefer said, "Sheila ran a great race for us. Baker was sick, but ran very well." The team will run again tomorrow at the Hancock InvitationaL
e local veteran• group.
Women's cross. country split a double dual meet with San Diego Mesa and San Diego City College October 1 at Morley Field. The Comets beat the Olympians
Courts open to public
MAD DASH - Todd Sheppard turns the corner, returning a punt. After losing to Antelope Valley, the Comets will travel ~o College the · · · (Photo by Vince Baworouski) Desert tomorrow.
Raquetball courts are now open for public play during the following hours: Monday through Thursday 25 p.m., Friday 2-7 p.m ., Saturday 125 p.m. The fee is $2 per person , unlimited playing time. For reservations, call the racquetball courts at 744-1152.
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