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Defying gr11vity

Faculty: prof review board not doing job By Charles Steinman

Tlfi TELESCOPE

Several professors at Palomar College say the committee responsible for overseeing faculty evaluations is refusing to do its job. The Tenure and Evaluation Review Board is in charge of the teacher review process, and can have a hand in determining whether or not a professor receives tenure. The TERB is supposed to meet twice per month to hear complaints and problems the faculty have with their evaluations. Some faculty members, however, claim the board is not living up to these responsibilities.

They say TERB coordinator Anne Voth has been making decisions in conjunction with administrators and not consulting the faculty. "She's been skating around doing nothing while other people get laid off," said Dan Finkenthal, a physics professor. "TERB is a board that is supposed to meet twice monthly, like the faculty senate or governing board funded by taxpayer dollars," said Shannon Lienhart, a math professor. "But unbeknownst to anybody, TERB stopped meeting," Lienhart said. • SEE TERB, PACE 3

Child development teachers get long-awaited pay raise By J ennifer Mathiasen

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IIDIEW PHELPS l THE TELESCOPE

Takashi Okamoto, a Palomar student from Japan, practices his dance moves alone in front of the Dome Feb. 24. Okamoto is a member of two traveling dance teams - 047 Breakers and the Great Chicken Power Move - that perfonn in international competitions in the United States, Europe and Japan. Despite the heat and his visible exhaustion, Okamoto continues to contort his body to music in seemingly inhuman ways to prepare for his next challenge.

After more than a year of negotiations, Child· Development Center teachers will be receiving a 49 percent pay raise and retroactive payment for the past two and a half years. The Palomar Community College District and the Palomar Faculty Federation reached a salary agreement in summer 2002 over this issue. The district agreed to give CDC teachers a pay raise. However, those funds remained

locked until Jan. 27. "The center teachers were very underpaid," said Mark Evilsizer, a member of the governing board. "They were losing teachers and unable to hire replacements," he said. Nancy Chadwick, another governing board member, agreed. "The center is one of the best I have seen. They have been underpaid for far too long," Chadwick said. Funds were to be held until all • SEE PAY

RAISE, PACE 2

Arboretum in need of more green By Rachel Keeler

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Twisted branches weave their way up a large archway beyond the northeast hillside of the San Marcos campus. The shadowed landscape creates an air of mystery for most students. Faded yellow block letters spell "Arboretum" across the arch's aging wood, but few students choose to enter as they hurry past toward class. The Arboretum was built in 1973.

Today, the five-acre lot is overgrown and neglected, with no attempts by the college to restore it. Today only a very small percentage of students use Palomar's five-acre arboretum, said Palomar grounds supervisor Rick Kratcoski. Dwindling student interest coupled with decreased funding over the past two decades has resulted in minimal maintenance and concern for the Arboretum's appear-

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ance, he said. The botanical garden devoted to trees was developed when then-student body president Brian Hawthorne convinced Governing Board it had more to offer students than replacing it with another parking lot. In the 1970s, student support for the Arboretum thrived, and a 15-25 person staff maintained it. MELISSA COllEY I THI TElESCOPE

• SEE ARBORETUM, PACE 3

Carrie Mcintosh (left) and Todd McCord walk through the Arboretum Feb. 24. The forest and botanical garden on the San Marcos campus is in a state of disrepair because of budget cuts.

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