'Levi' kicks off spring theatre schedule Levi, a world-premiere musical comedy, will be the Palomar College Theatre spring production . Performances are scheduled for March 20, 21 , 22, 23, 27, 28 and 29 at 7:30p.m. In addition , a matinee will be held March 29 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $2. 50 for students, senior citizens and Palomar College staff a nd $3.50 for the general public. For reservations call the theatre box office Monday through Saturday, 2 to 5 p.m. at 744-8860. The box office will open two weeks prior to the first performance date. The play,· under the direction of Buddy Ashbrook, is in its third week of rehearsals. The cast includes: Vicki Lipscomb as saloon girl, " Hasta Luego ," "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Keith Neblett as Hank; Craig Stearman as second h aw ker, miner, bandit; Steve Sturm as Slattery, miner, bandit; Anita
Weldon as sa loo n girl, "Pants" dancer, " Dream Ballet."
day as Levi's mother, saloon girl; Stormie Clarkson as saloon girl, "Pants" dancer, " Dream Ba llet:" Bill C urtis as Foghorn; Bill Biss as Luis, sailor, passenger, Terri Lon gnecker as saloon girl, " Pants" miner; ,Jim Burrows as townsman, miner, da ncer , "D ream Ballet;" Simon McGee as passenger; Greg Coad as Gomez, townswoman. passenger, seamstress. townsman, min er; Toby Eiferman as Mrs. Fenorton; Sherry Feltner as Swany Ochoa as saloon girl, "Hasta townswoman, passenger, bandits' Luego," " Dream Ballet" ethnic; woman, "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Liana Christina Overson as townswoman, Fields as saloon girl, "Dream Ballet" passenger, bandits' woman; Marcella ethnic; Morry Flansbaum as Levi's Radovich as townswoman, passenger, father, townsman; Charles Flood as bandits' woman; Echo Strong as saloon townsman , min er, passenger; Rosemary girl, "Pants" dancer, "Dream Ballet;" Kanester as saloon girl, "Dream Ballet" Alisa Vander-Ruiz as townschild, banethnic; Judy Konochuk as Lily; Don dits' kid; Paloma V ander-Ruiz as Krout as Joe; Bob Nanninga as sailor, townschild, bandits' kid. bandit; Rick Pallaziol as Pete; and Bob Quinn as Levi. Joe Abreu as policeman, sailor, miner; Michelle Abreu as townswoman, Barbara Anderson as saloon girl, passenger, bandits' kid; Chris Aguilar as "Pants" dan cer, "Dream Ballet;" Buddy Snake; Robin Berry as townswoman, Ashbrook as Alkali Ike; Daphne passenger, bandits' kid, "Dream Ballet" Ashbrook as Patience; Dan Bennett as ethnic; David Bleth as sailor, miner; Hogan, Ramon , miner; Theresa Cassa- Laurie Coopper as townswoman,
passenger, bandits ' woman, "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Jason Sonvico as Lopez, sailor, passenger, miner; Susan Waiter as seamstress, townswoman, passenger, "Dream Ballet" ethnic. Tammie Dean as townswoman, passenger, bandits' woman; Carl Foster as first hawker, miner, bandit; C'Dell Foster as townswoman, passenger, hawker, "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Larry Hager as bartender, sailor, miner, passenger; Jennifer Moore as saloon girl, "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Bob Blomgren as Jason, townsman . Mary Peters as saloon girl, "Pants" dancer, " Dream Ballet;" Dana Hayward as saloon girl, "Pants" dancer, "Dream Ballet;" Betty Parker as saloon girl, "Hasta Luego," "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Lorna Maxwell as hawker, townswoman, passenger, "Dream Ballet" ethnic; Russ Harvey as Gonzales, John Mensching as Joaquin.
ETELESCOPE
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Palomar College Volume 33 No. 12 A Publication tor the Associated Students Friday, Feb. 29, 1980 San Marcos, CA ~~~~~~~--~~~-~--~~------~~~==~~~~~----------------~-----~--------------
Jewelery exhibited
WOMEN RECEIVE AID
Center plans activities
An unu sua l exhibit of jewelry by Toza and Caro lyn Rosser Radakovich is on display in the Boehm Gall ery through March 5. Now E ncinitas residents, the artists h ave lived a nd traveled throughout the world a nd h ave been involved in various art forms throughout their lives. Toza was born in Yugoslavia and emigrated to the U.S . in 1955. He has taught sculpture and jewelry making throughout southern California for many years and has exhibited in the U .S. , Europe a nd the Orient. He h as taught classes in lost wax casting at Palomar for the past five years. Carolyn is a California native who has taught jewelry and metalsmithing for the past ten years at California State University in Los Angeles. She h as exhibited on both coasts a nd in Mexico. The Boehm Gall ery is open to the publicfrom 7:30a.m. to 5: 15p. m. and 6 to 8:50 p.m. M onday t hrough Thursday; 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday. Admission is free.
I NewsScope I Spaces a re available for children in the Chi ld Development Lab Sch ool. Th ere are openings for fouryear old children Monday thro ugh Friday from 8 a.m. to 12 noon and for three-year olds M onday through Friday from 8- 11 a. m . Interested parents should call Nadine Abbott at ext 462.
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One Sings, The Other Doesn 't is the next film offered in the Women
in Film series held by Richard Peacock Wednesday. March 5 a t 4 p.m . in room P-32. In this film Director Agnes Varda will ex plore the friendship of two young women over a period of 14 years, during which each on e seeks to control her own destiny and even t ua ll y fin d contentment.
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Blood donations are needed for the San Diego Bloodmobile which will be at Palomar March 5. The Bloodmobile will be in the Student Union area from 9:30a.m. to 1:30 p.m . to receive don a ti ons to build up Palom a r 's bloodba nk acco un t. A list of donor req uirements ca n be found posted on bu ll etin boards
FOILED AGAIN Telescope editor-in-chief, John Pierce, discusses his short two-week term with last semester's editor, Derace Orput. See J oP's editorial, page 2. (Photo by Richard Schatzman)
Economist sees prosperity "The economics of the 1980's will be a time when you will realize yo urself becoming the sole agent of your future. Big business will no longer provide t he structured e mploym ent opportunities of decades gone by." This is the theory of Bill Harnett who lectured on "Prosperity in a New Time Frame" last Friday . An ex-college professor a nd eco nomics co ndultant, Harnett has lectured at college campuses across the U.S. Sponsored by the ASG. Harnett was introduced by ASG president Greg Heffernan . He began by warn i ng the· a udience that some radica l concepts wou ld be discuss!:'d a n d for t h1!m to keep an open mind . "As t h e U.S. movrs in to thP 1~11-Hl"s we will enter a higher nrdN of affairs. "A n electromagnPtic fiPld of energy s urroun ds th!:' f'arth , and s urro und s yo u and m<• . It is t hi s energy through thP powpr of positive th inkin g that ed uC<lt.f'd peop iP will be!;i n to tap.
Midway through the lecture Harnett mentioned that "liberating principle, the fact that yo u cannot possibly be better off than yo u are right now. The point is - selfacceptance. Never h as there been a better time than the present to s tart applying yourself to your future." In closing. he summed it up, "Prosperity in a new time frame is t here. for those with the positive thinking to grasp it and remember -the future is now .''
Election dates scheduled ll efinit (' p)('ctinn dates for th e 19HO-H l ;;pring eiPctions are as follows: Tlw qualification deadline for applic<ltions isM arc h I ~ atfi p.m. Cand idat(' mP<'t.ings will he held March ]:l and 14 at ~ p.m. Ca ndida tes an• requirPd to attend one of the;;P nH'l't i ng~:< or thf'y may se nd a repre;;!'ntat iw with a sign1~d note. Campaign W<'<'k wi ll hr· March l G· ~ I . a nd l' i<:'ctions will he• h <' ld March ~ (i. :n <1 nd :!i-1 .
Several workshops, classes and demonstrations are scheduled by the Women 's Center for March . First on the agenda a re the Consciousness Raising Gro ups for women. Two separ ate classes , a lready und er way, are offered Mond ays from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m ., directed by Nonie Bradley, and Tuesdays from 1-3 p.m., run by Caroline Theiss. These ten-week sessi ons are to help women become more aware of themselves and h ow they relate to wom en's issues. The staff of theW omen's Center are all participating in the classes so that they can better h elp the women they serve at the Center. Call or com e in to register. For those who want to lose weight, the first meeting of theW eight Loss C lub (H.A.S.) will begin on Monday from 6:30 to 9 p.m . No fancy diets or gimmicks will be used. Instead , the s ubj ect of overweight will be approached from th e emotional standpoint. Why peopl e overeat a nd why they can 't keep the weight off once they lose it will be discussed. Awareness exercises, guidance and open discussion with oth er overweight people will begin each meeting in order to get to the issues of why people are overweight. After the first few meetings, g uest speakers in cluding a s urgeon, chiropractor, a nd physical fitness
expert will provide information and en couragement in the last hour of the meeting. Contact the Women's Center or Harriet Staton to register. " Nuclear Energy as a Feminist Issue" will be presented in a program March 13. Tanya Winter from the Community Energy Action Network will be the guest speaker. A film , I Have Three Children of My Own, by Dr. Helen Caldicott, mother and well-known pediatrician, will be s hown with time for q uestions afterward. Wat c h for announcements regarding time and location . For women leaving or changing their rela tionships, two support groups have now been formed. One meets on Mond ays from 1-3 p.m. and is directed by Martha Lehr from the Co unseling Department and Lynette Trier from the Women's Center. The second group meets in the eveni ng fro m those who are not free during the day. It begins March 4 from 6:30 to 8: 30p.m. Cynthia Poole from the Counseling Department a nd Lynette Trier are facilitators. Sign up at the Wom en's Center for these ten-week sessions. Stop in at th e Wom en's Center for m ore information or any help needed, or to meet new friends, socialize a nd relax.
La Jolla Civic Chorus performs La Jolla's C ivic Chor u s, cond ucted by David C h ase of th e Palomar music fac ulty , will make an experimenta l excursion from its home territory. the Mandeville Center at UCSD. wh en t h ey will present two large-scale concerts in Pac ific Beach a nd San Ma rcos. On Ma rch l the ch orus wi ll appear at 8 p.m . a t S t. Andrews by the Sea, Pacifi c Beac h: on Ma rch 2 a t ;) p.m . at the Palomar Co ll ege Theatre. The 100 vo ice ch orus h as existed in co nn ec tion with th e La J oll a Civic U niversity Symph ony si nce 1966, a nd traditionally h as perform ed in La ,Jo ll a a nd a t UCS D's Ma ndevill e Ce n ter. Th ese two co ncPrts are a n attempt to widen th £>ir performance a rea. whi c h C h ase fePls to he a n important a nd logic a l stPp forward, as th e ch oir itself,is dra wn from a wide geograp hi cal a rea. C h ase is clea rly a imin g towards m ak in ~ the choru s felt. as a m ajor c ultu ra l force in th e North Co unty a nd is planning pven more a m-
bitious programs for future seasons. The program they will present at these two con certs is design ed to exhibit the complete gamut of choral music. It includes a work for chamber choru s from 1607 by Mon teverdi ; a monum ental classic of the early Twentieth Century: Friede auf Erden by Schoenberg; Romantic melody represented by the four quartets of Brahms and the three a nth em s by R achmaninoff. To rou nd off the selection there will be sea s hanties and folk song a rrangement Anoth er unu s ua l aspect of the progr a m is th at a great deal of variety will co me from the spatia l use of the singers. The two works best illustrating this a re the sacred motet for tripl e ch or us by Italia n Ren aissance composer Marenzio a nd a rece nt composition by J ergensen based on the poem Big Fat Hairy Vision of Evil by San Fran c i sco poet Lawrence Ferlingh etti .