The Telescope 57.22

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STUDENT PAGE 16

Palomar College, San Marcos, Calif.

www.palomar.edu/telescope

Vol. 57, No. 22

Lame-duck student gov't fails to pass new budget Outgoing le•ders pledge to edue•te new members on existing rese•reh By Charles Steinman

Till TELESCOPE

The Associated Student Government still has not finalized its budget for the 2004-2005 school year. The ASG Budget and Finance Committee had proposed a plan in which they would recommend changes to the budget at the May 5 ASG meeting. The budget was tentatively approved April14. However, committee chairman Ariel Zeballos said the process got held up at the office of student affairs, and the committee wound up not voting on any recommendations at all. "It's a slap in the face," said Andrew Phelps, co-editor in chief of the Telescope and one ofthe key movers behind the committee's actions. The budget planning committee originally intended to recommend that the student govMELISSA EWELL I TH£ TILESCOPE

• SEE BUDGET, PAGE 3

Clockwise, from left Welding students Catalino Alonzo, Chad Hanger, Jason Fell, Gary Good and Micah Hall and professor Jay Miller don a variety of colorful hoods during a practice weld in Miller's evening class May 3. Awide variety of projects await students with diverse skill levels. • SEE MORE SNAPSHOTS

Confidence and concerns about tuition increase

OF PALOMAR, PAGE 12

Student president elected; 80 vote By Charles Steinman

TKE TELESCOPE

A fraction of one percent of Palomar College's student body elected a new student government pres1dent in an online-only election April 26-30. Paul Charas beat his sole opponent by capturing 75 percent of the vote. Only 80 students out of about 29,000 voted. The turnout at the polls was down 71 students (47 percent) from last year. Outgoing Associated Student Government Senator Ariel Zeballos attributed the low turnout to the lack of action in the race- four people were running for three positions. "The only ones who were offering a choice was the president position," he said. Charas said he thought the low

turnout was because students had a hard time figuring out how to vote. The only link to the online voting page on Palomar's Web site was hidden in a moving banner along with a dozen other items, he said. Student Chad Bradbury said the election was under-promoted. "I didn't even realize they were going on," he said. Bruce Bishop, the director of student affairs and ASG adviser, said he was not disappointed with the results of the election. "This is pervasive at every community college in California. It is not at all uncommon that less than 1 percent of the student body votes," Bishop said • SEE ELECTION, PAGE 5

SKY'S THE U IT Avittlion eltlss ltlkes studlllts up high.

By Jaime Harville

Till TELESCOPE

ARTHUR ANDERSON I THE TELESCOPE

Outgoing Associated Sudent Government President Amador Soto swears-in Paul Charas, the newly elected president.

• SEE INCREASE, PAGE 20

TtophiiS lor Ptllomtlr's top sports st11rs.

Summit tr11ve/ e11n be eduelltionlll, too. • PAGE IZ

With fee hikes at community colleges looming, Palomar College students have mixed reactions. "Palomar is a great school," said business major Scott Harlan. "It sucks they are hitting up college students for money, but community college is still a lot cheaper than a state school and is still worth it." Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger proposed a tuition increase of $18 per unit to $26, which could be approved this month in the state budget revision. Students with bachelor's degrees will pay a fee of $50 per unit in addition to $26. The state faces $22 billion of debt. Jerry Patton, Palomar's vice president of finance, said the extra money students would pay would go to help other state

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• Pl&E 28


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