The Telescope 33.22

Page 1

Palomar College

ETELESCOPE Volume 33 No. 22

A Publication for the Associated Students

Women focus on literature this summer

Palomar now has two Guidance Information Systems. One GIS has been located in the Career Center adjacent to the Counseling Center since February. But recently a portable GIS was purchased for use in outreach efforts, at satellite centers and in classroms. When not being used for these functions, it is available for use at

Authors to be studied include Joyce Carol Oates, Carson McCullers, Mary McCarthy, Anais Nin , Doris Lessing, Margaret Atwood, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Denise Levetov and Zelda Fitzgerald.

$500 leadership awards available

Ann Mairoff, instructor, has had the advantage of personal consultation with the textbook author and did research of the topics during her sabbatical study in Cambridge, England.

from National U Three scholarships of $500 each are now available from National University.

Ms. Ma1roffsays that men are also most welcome in the class, not only to learn more about women , but how the women pictured in the literature and the women who wrote it regarded the men in their lives and imaginations . The class is English 3 7, and meets daily from 10 a .m . to 12 noon, June 23 to J uly 29 . with three units credit available.

UP AND AWAY - The hot air balloon, one of the many features of last month's May Fair, hovers in the background near the clock tower. Also shown are some of the va rious exhibits displayed.

Co ll e ge president tours facility Community Access Network (CAN) volunteer Joe Tuck's tour of the Palomar College Theatre with President Omar Scheidt last Wednesday proved a fruitful effort. After a long battle with San Marcos city officials to make improvements on handicap facilities, and several letters, including one

with Dr. Scheidt, he pointed out these thi,ngs. "He (Dr. Scheidt) didn't rush; he went through the entire facility with the others present, and was very cooperative and understanding," Tuck says. "He said he would discuss the matter with Dr. Schettler. I am sure some corrective measures will be taken."

published in the Telescope, he is finally getting some action. Tuck stated in his letter in the Telescope that many aspects of the Theatre were lacking, such as drinking fountains, ramps, main entrance doors, exits, and steep aisles. In his wheelchairtouroftheTheatre

wheelchair

Home aid offered through Gateways Program

I

This eight week course will be held Tuesdays through Fridays beginning June 24. Nursing 165 will be held from 8 to 11 a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Nursing 166 Campus Lab will be held from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Nursing 166 Clinical

NewsScope

Students are asked to "Lend An Arm" and donate blood in the Student Union tomorrow, June 4 from 9:30 to 1:30 p .m .

*** Telescope editor-in-chief Derace Orput recently won the Palomar College $200 Copley Newspaper Scholarship and the $200 Joe Heredia Memorial Scholarship given by the North County Press Club. Orput is a sophomore majoring in journalism. She has been accepted at the University of Missouri, where she will prepare to enter the School of Journalism.

*** In the last issue of the Telescope, fo ur recent Bravura winners were incorrectly named . They are Margaret Bradwell Simpson, first place in fiction ; Don Adams , second place in photography; D. Ray Turner, second place in poetry; and Victoria Stabenau for cover design .

ASG sponsored a dance May 23 featuring the group Killer Watt. They will sponsor a series of dances throughout the summer, including groups such as Incogn ito a nd The Bratz.

Too btain the National University Leadership Award, candidates must be Palomar graduates who meet the following qualifications: 1) each candidate is to be selected on a basis of civic and academic excellence, and show promise of continued excellence of civic and academic achievement, 2) each candidate must have demonstrated an interest in the area of either business administration or behavioral science, 3) financial need will be considered.

(P hoto by Richard Schatzman)

.1n

Certification for home health aid and n urse assistant will be offered through the Gateways Program at the Palomar summer session. The course consists of Nursing 165 - Core Concepts for Health Personnel (3 units of credit) - and Nursing 166 - Campus Lab and Clinical Lab (3 units of ('r<>rlitl

San Marcos, CA

Advising Center has new system

Women will be able to read about th emselves at Palomar this summer. The class, entitled Women in Twentieth Century Literature, will explore the meaning of being born female in this age of change, and students will find a deeper selfknowledge from learningofthe roles of women in literary works and of the lives of women authors.

Registration for summer session will be held June 17-20. Call? 44-8850 for an enrollment application.

Monday, June 2, 1980

Lab will be held from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m . on Wednesdays and Fridays.

One scholarship will be given in the area of business administration, one in behavioral science, and one to a veteran, subject to the eligibility requirements mentioned above. These awards are for attendance at National University beginning in the 1980-81 school year. The Award Committee is to be composed of personnel from the Financial Aid Offices of Palomar College and National University. The amount of each award is to be applied toward tuition fees. Application should be made through Palomar's Financial Aid Office.

the Advising Center in room R-14 of the Student Union. The GIS is being used in 3200 locations in the United States today. It stores millions of pieces of information on occupations, colleges, financial aids, graduate and professional schools . The system speeds up the searching, the checking, the reading and the comparing. GIS has detailed information on over 850 occupations. It can be used by students as a career exploration tool; or to find out which occupations are related to the majors offered at Palomar; or to search for occupations related to individual interests, aptitudes and lifestyles. The system can list and describe colleges for students who are going to transfer. It can tell which have services for the handicapped, are approved for veterans and other necessary information. Students interested in using the GIS should go to the Counseling Center in the Administration Building or the Advising Center in the Student Union.

New summer course offered "Understanding the School-Age Child and Adolescent" is the title of a new course being offered this summer by the Child Development Center. Hulda M. Goodson-Flores will be teaching this class Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. Registration for the class will be held June 17 through 23 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. The class is listed as CHDBV0373J WKSP- School-Age Child / Teen in the Summer School catalogue. The three unit class will explore the growth and development of children ages nine through 18, in all areas of the child's life, including their relationships with parents and peers , interactions with school and other community institutions, as well as their feelings about themselves. This is a class for parents and teacher aides as well as the helping professions.

Continuing Ed aids community By Margaret Salah It contains a no unit value. It is not applied to seeking a unit requirement, for certificate or degree. It is beyond fulfilling a traditional, educational goal. And yet, about 2700 out of the 15,000 students attending Palomar are enrolled in this program.

The above is part of a program called Continuing Education classes and it is under the direction of Angelo Carli, assistant dean of *** Continuing Education and ComThere will be an outdoor concert in munity Service. the Student Union Patio today at 11:30 a.m. According to Carli, "Continuing Education consists of non-credit *** There will be a n ewspaper drive classes that have appealed to June 11 in Student Parking Lot 12 enough members of the community on the west side of campus. The who want them offered." drive is sponsored by the Child Classes vary from stained glass Development Center production to the health oriented ¥-¥-¥type of class. "You do not have to be Enumerators are desperately majoring in the field to take these needed to work for the Census classes," said Carli. "The reason Bureau. Workers will be compen- why th e classes vary is because sated 20 cents a mile by the govern- members of the community apment if they drive their own vehicle. proach us to start a certain class They will be paid at a pace rate for which they are interested in. If there the amount of work done. Interested is enough demand, we will run it. persons m ay contact the Vista office Also, if we think there is a group of of the Census Bureau at 941-1025. people who would like to see a class

get started, we go ahead and fulfull their needs. "We provide as much as our budget will allow us. The Community Service entails such services as speakers' program and community information on current topics in the form of presentations," said Carli. "Many of our courses invite seniors to participate. That is what we are aiming for. It is supported by students' attendance." To be enrolled in the Continuing Education classes, you need not be enrolled in a credit program. All the school requires is that "You are interested in the course you wish to attend. It is a segment of the institution. We are not here only for the community members who want to seek a degree." Carli adds that this program must not be confused with the Continuing Education for Professionals, who have credentials and experience in their fields and who seek new techniques and literature. "Sometimes the continuing Education classes are cross-listed with credit classes, thereby allowing non-credit oriented students to parti cipate in the more traditional curriculum on campus. "For example, if a person is

interested in art, the student might not want to have the responsibility of doing homework or taking exams. Their main interest is to learn and acquire knowledge about that subject for their personal growth. "A person who enrolls in this program will not receive a grade," said Carli. "It is more or less for self interest. Each student has an idea of his or her progress. A student can enroll in non-credit classes as much as he or she wishes. They simply enroll by the same process of registration that each student goes through ." Many of the classes are off campus, because Palomar does not have the facilities, plus, it brings the community closer together. Besides working with bringing the members of the community closer together, Carli finds time to drive his MGTD , Austin Healey and Studebaker GT Hawk around Carlsbad, where he resides with his wife and two children, ages 17 and 15. When he is not driving these old special interest cars around, you (Continued on page 5)


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