Palomar College
ETELESCOPE Volume 33 No. 11
A Publication for the Associated Students
Andy Warhol exhibit shows
30 nurses get graduating pins Thirty Palomar nursing students received their caps and pins in a January 18 ceremony in the new Palomar College Theatre. After successful completion of the State Board examinations, the graduates will officially hold the ¡ title of RN . The program includ ed a ¡welcoming address by Lina Mendenhall, president of the Student Nurses' Association of Palomar. Her topic was "Where Palomar Nurses Are Today. " Walter Brown, the college dean of vocational education also welcomed th e class. Graduating student Aliene Duvalian spoke to her class on " Nursing Today. " Graduates are: OCEANSIDE: Freda E. Alu , Mary Ann Batcher, Dan R. Briones, Dorest N. Cox, Regina Gail Epple, Jerilyn M. Gawel, Gisele M. Lalonde, Martha Meis , Sandra Ontiveros, Laura Jean Elwing Poole and Prestone Virginia Rowland. ESCONDIDO: Jan alee L. Brown, Linda L. Cole, Aliene L. Duvalian , Darlene Hall , Maryann J. Hoftiezer, Barbara Holterhaus, Juli e Linden, Rita McCool , Jerald Rzatkiewicz and Diana York. SAN DIEGO: Patricia Arena, Bruce E. Cartier, Sheila M. Daniels and Wendy Karr. VISTA: Debbie E. Bockes and Jeannie McCollam. ENCINITAS: Linda Brant. CARDIFF: Nellie Costello. PALOMAR MOUNTAIN : Charlene E. (Lina) Mendenhall.
San Marcos, CA
Spring elections near; committees formed
at Gallery Andy Warhol, leader of pop art in the 1960's, will exhibit recent work entitled "The American Indian Drawings " at the Boehm Gallery until March 6. Through the assistance of Ace Gallery in Los Angeles. the Boehm Gallery has acquired 12 works, originally from a suite of 24 pier.es. These pencil on paper drawings are approximately three feet by four feet. Warhol, one of the fathers of pop art, is most famous for his silkscreen images of Campbell's soup cans, Marilyn Monroe , Jackie Kennedy, liz Taylor, etc. He would select a popular, everyday image, photographically enlarge it and then transfer it to canvas, thus giving importance to the common and banal. Artist-filmmaker Andy Warhol was born in 1931 in Cleveland. He was raised in Pittsburgh and studied at the Carnegie Institute of Technology. He moved to New York in 1949 and during the 1950's he worked free-lance for I. Miller as a shoe illustrator; for BerndorfGoodman as a stationery designer; designed Christmas cards for Tiffany's and jackets fo e Columbia. He a lso worked for several magazines including McCalls , Ladies Home Journal, Vogu e and Harpers Bazaar. Warhol dressed windows and wrote and illustrated several books . Warhol was, and still is, very involved in filmmaking . In the 1960's he produced numerous 16mm black and white films. He later incorporated sound and color into some of them. His titles are intriguing: Kiss, Haircut, Eat, Vinyl, Bitch, Bufferin, Couch, etc. Boehm Gallery hours are 7:30a.m. to 8:50p.m. Monday through Thursday, 7:30a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
Friday, Feb. 22, 1980
By Derace Orput
INDIAN ACTIVIST - Russell Means is the subject of an Andy Warhol exhibit in the Boehm Gallery running through March 6. (Photo by ,James Co lford)
Chase conducts La Jolla Symphony here March 2 Choral instructor David Chase will conduct the La Jolla Symphony Chorus March 2 in a program that will include pieces by Marenzio, Shoenberg, Mont everd i , Rachmaninoff and Jergensen. This event will be a contrast to February's performance by the 24voice Chorus Musicae. The La Jolla Symphony Chorus is a 100-voice choir, the main difference being the difficulty of the pieces. Whereas the Chorus Musicae is more intimate, the La Jolla Chorus will perform demanding pieces that req uire at least 100 voi ces. This music combines secular and sacred type pieces. Ending the performance will be some humorous sea sh anties, followed by traditional fo lk songs. The performance will begin at 3 p.m. Admission is $2.50 to the general public and $1 to students and senior citizens. Upcoming co ncerts in March and April include two orchestral performances featuring music by Tschaikovsky, Verdi and Corelli. A children's concert will be given April 27 at 3 p.m. featuring Prokoviev's Peter and the Wolf and Fantasy on Hungarian Foil? Th emes by Liszt. Admission is free. The Music Department holds a series of mini -co ncerts every Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 12 noon as part of the co ll ege's mu sic appreciation course CNED 375. This course is design ed to deve lop the educated listen er with musi c from al l historical periods presented. There will be opportunities for discussion with the per-
formers. There are no prerequisites or fees, and no minimum attendance is required. It is ope n to all members of the community as well as Palomar students a nd staff. Contact the Music Dapartment, ext. 349, for further information . The San Diego Symphony has agai n made available reduced-price tickets for Palomar students, staff a nd their families. Th ese coupons are valid for any co ncert and are redeemable at the Civic Theatre Box Office one month prior to each co ncert or on the day of the concert. The best available seats will be issued to coupon holders. Students should stop by the music offices to pick the their tickets.
Financial aid applications are available immediately Students who are planning to attend Palomar in September should fi le the Student Aid Application for Californ ia right away. The priority date for compl etion ot financial aid appli cations and for the submission of a ll necessary documents is May 16. All required documents for Student Aid Application for Ca liforni a SAAC and addit iona l documents requested by the Financia l Aids Offi ce must bE> received in the Financial Aids Office by this priority date in order to receive priority fund in g. Fi les co mpl eted after this date wi ll be awarded on ly if funds a re ava il ab le.
of all Palomar students. A third co mmittee will study the ASG constitution to determine if there are enough necessary revisions to hold an election. It has been discovered that the Constitution names the student council not the Associated Student Government (ASG) but rather the Associated Students of Palomar College (ASPC). The committee will study this also.
Deadline for ASG spring election applications is March 12 at 5 p.m. Ca ndidates are required to attend one candidate meeting. or they may send a representative with a signed note. Contact ASG for dates and times. Campaign week will be March 5 to 15, and elections will be held March 26, 27 and 28 from 9 a .m. to 2 p.m. and 5-8 p.m. This meeting was the first to be All executive a nd legislative held in the new facilities behind the positions are open including three Student Union. Room R-4, where vacancies on the judicial council. Candidates are required to carry a meetings were previously held , will minimum of six units (which have be turned into an academic advisebeen reduced from 12) and hold a 2.0 ment center headed by counselor Jim Bowen. This will preclude stuGPA. Qualification packets. which in- dents from having to make apclude a statement of intent and a pointments with the counseling copy of the Constitution are avail- office just to find out simple academic information. able in the ASG office, room R-3. "I was glad to see so many clubs All present at the meeting were there interested in getting ICC asked to write down convenient together and planning activities," times for the ASG to meet. It was remarked ASG president Greg decided that Thursday at 4 p.m. was Heffernan regarding the first ASG too inconvenient. The new time is meeting of the new semester. Wednesday at 2 p.m. The first order of business was the At the February 13 meeting, the resignation of chairman Neil Peder- student activities report indicated son, who was replaced by Dale that the Co unselin g Department is Heffernan in a secret ballot vote. offering a course which will work on Members of the Inter-Club Co un- an "independent study" system. All cil (ICC) were asked to attend the students will arrange their meeting in order to voice problems curriculum individually with the and opinions, especially in regard to instructor. They will attend the new Student Union facilities. It Palomar comm ittee meetings and was emphasized that all clubs are work with ASG among other things. eligible for rooms in the Student Union and everyone is welcome. Clubs and organizations reHowever, clubs may not use the questing the use of room R-22A-bfor facilities for meetings only. Many meetings and workshops must clear clubs have a library or literature to it with Frank Hankin in the Student be stored and that is what the rooms Activities office. Pam Taylor will be should be used for, in addition to available for questions on events holding meetings. Clubs must have and issues. a minimum of ten members to be part of the ICC. Three committees were formed , one to study the trash problem People with newspapers stacking around the Student Union and what up can deposit them in the bin in can be done about it. Student Parking Lot #12 beginning Another was formed to discuss the March 12. The Chi ld Development policy and procedures manual, Center is holding their newspaper started by the council for the benefit drive.
Drive benefits Center
Biology field trip planned "Spend the Easter holidays with the whales , birds and seals of Baja California," suggests life science instructor Lester Knapp. Knapp is planning for the tenth annual spring field trip to study the biology of the islands and gulf waters of Baja California. The field course, Biology 99 (for two units of credit), focuses on the fauna, flora and wildlife communities of insular areas , especially the Sea of Cortez islands and lagoons. Observations of marine mammals , birds, fish , and invertebrates and their inter-
relationships to their environment will be stressed. Transportation, food , and accommodations for the seven day boat trip, scheduled for March 29 to April 5, are provided at a cost of $325. A $100 deposit is necessary. Registration is limited to 18 persons, and "Anyone of any age group is welcome," adds Knapp. The first organizational meeting for the field trip will be held at 7 p.m. March 15 in room LS-15 on the college campus . For further information or reservations, contact Knapp or Dr. Nancy Jessop at Palomar, 744-1150 or 727-7529.
'Women in Film' series continues " Women" with a capital W will be the focus for several spring semester classes at Palomar. "Women in Film" is the subject of a fi lm humanism class which meets on Wednesdays from 4 to 7 p.m. in P32. instructor Dick Peacock has compiled 15 films on a variety of universal and contemporary issues. All of the films are about women and controversial topics intended to generate serious discussion. The first two h ours of each
Wednesday session are devoted to viewing each film. A discussion period will follow . The public is also invited to view the films , space permitting. Joanna is the last film of the February series and will be shown February 27. It concerns a very young woman in modern London testing the waters in her innocence. The film begins as a trendy story, but becomes a complex study of contemporary attitudes a nd morals through its fine writing and unusual cinematography.