The Telescope 57.09

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A glimpse into Palomar's new play

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College president to retire in July Palomar College President Dr. Sherrill L. Amador has announced that, effective July 1, 2004, she will retire from the position she has held at the helm of the 33,000-student district. Following the closed session of the Governing Board Nov.11 , Board President Darrell McMullen reported out in public session that the board "unanimously accepted with regret the request of Sherrill L.Amador, Superintendent/President, to officially retire from the district effective July 1, 2004. We wish her well and will begin the

"Professor f' talks to Roy Latas ii1CI Jack Qlirtero about pilt-tine facdly ileqtities at a demonstration Nov.ll He wore a bill cosblne to syn,oize the pigfJt of 'freeway flyers" - instructors who must teach at ~ coleges to make a hi1g.

Part-limen demand equity Bv Andrew Phelps

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Part-time instructors dressed in tom graduation gowns - one donning a white sheet on his head to resemble a ghost marched on the San Marcos campus Nov. 11 to protest inequities for Palomar's adjunct faculty. Protesters complained about unfair pay for adjunct faculty

Bv Noelle Ibrahim

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Flames that swept through San Diego County last week may have died down, but images of ruined homes and charred mountaintops are forever burned into the minds of fire victims. Palomar students and faculty members from all parts of the district were among those directly affected by the Paradise and Cedar fires, which burned more than 336,975 acres. Cindy Sabato, communications director, said eight of Palomar's 30,000 students and

part-time English professor. "I'm not paid an equitable amount - 40 cents on the dollar," he said, in comparison to full-time pay. After a march on Mission Road, demonstrators gathered around the clock tower with banners and flyers. Videos broadcast part-timer issues on television monitors. 111

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SEE PRESIDENT, PAGE 3

Palomar affected by fire tragedies

IIIIDIEW PHELPS I THE TELESCOPE

compared to full time faculty, as well as the district's failure to release nearly $3 million in funds reserved for part-timers. "Teachers' work conditions equal students' learning conditions," said Mary Millet, co. president of the Palomar Faculty Federation. "Our ghost costume was symbolic of the fact they (administrators) ignore the needs of part-timers," said Roy Latas, a

search process immediately for a new superintendent/president." Amador shared her resignation with the school's 2,000 faculty and staff members via an emailed message Nov. 13. "In the short time I've been with Palomar College, my two children have both married and I will become a grandmother in March. My husband has been retired for 10 years and my parents are aging. The recent fires in San Diego . County and the events of 9/11 have given me a

SEE EQUITY, PAGE 3

three of its 2,000 employees have been confirmed as victims of the blazes as ofNov. 7. "We're fairly sure there are additional students and staff affected by the fires, but they haven't come to us in any official way yet. There are only rumors at this point," Sabato said. Jason Roach, an Associated Student Government senator at Palomar, was hit hard by the flames that engulfed his family's Valley Center home Oct. 26. Roach, 22, was fleeing his 111

SEE TRAGEDIES, PAGE 2

Fire h.eroes emerge from flames Bv Miko Kudo

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It was 3 a.m. on the morning of Oct. 26 when Palomar student Travis Plash's phone rang. It was his nephew, calling to tell him fire was coming to Valley Center. Plash and his sisa series ter had to evacuate. Plash only had five minutes to pack up and leave. ''The fire was on top of the hill coming over towards our house," Plash said. He said the fire was the most amazing thing he had ever seen. "Those flames were 100 feet high just right next to our house," Plash said. "I was praying

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all night to God that he watched over our house." Plash and his sister went to their grandfather's house in Escondido and they could not get back to Valley Center until 4 p.m. that day. He did not know whether or not his house was OK Watching houses bum down in his neighborhood on television made him think his house was doomed. Fortunately, he was wrong, and his house was saved. Plash wanted to help. He went out with hoses and buckets and watered down nearby , houses. While Plash was helping his neighbors, he was still worried about his mother, who lives in Valley Center by herself.

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Tom Hanington, Laura Allen, Mark Barnett, Jennifer Pursley and Chris Alvarez are among Ill SEE HEROES, PAGE 2 Palomar fire instructors who helped fight the San Diego County firestorm the week of Ocl26.

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