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ALL ROADS LEAD TO PALOMAR tom1ts pitthll brings Division ltxpllilntl to th1 mound. • PAGE 10
www. the-telescope.com
Community
Palomar shows its colors
turns out for
60th bash By John Asbury iHE TmSCOPE
STEPHANIE TOMBRINCK I THE TELESCOPE
Every spring the poppies in front of the Student Center begin to bloom. Palomar College is home to plant life from all over the world. Dozens of different flowers line the college's walkways and parking lots. • SEE PHOTO ESSAY PAGES 10 &11 '
As Palomar College turns a page to plans for growth and expansion, it also turned another page in its history books as it celebrated its 60th anniversary. The college started with 150 students studying farming at Vista High School, 60 years later it has grown into what it is today. Dusting off the Dome and gathering under the clocktower, Palomar College officials, staff, Palomar a& students and ,,, ~ alumni gathered April 8 to celebrate the college's 60th anniversary. More than 500 people turned out from around the community to share in the Saturday event that saw an alumni breakfast and luncheon, a department fair and other campus-wide events. The 60th anniversary celebration was one-year in the making with an advertising campaign with local media. The college paid $8,000 to radio • SEE ANNIVERSARY, PAGE 5
Segregation film personal for one Palomar prof.
Importance of education stressed at migrant event
By Leslie Simpson THE TELESCOPE
By teslie Simpson THE TELlSCOPE
Swirling skirts, fragrant food, parenting classes and community services combined into an event tailored to migrant families' needs and interests. Palomar students and staff helped host the 8th Annual North County Latino and Migrant Parent Conference on the San Marcos campus. Despite drizzly weather, 400 adults and 200 children attended the bilingual event on April1 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Migrant Education Program Specialist Patricia Wilcox said she defined migrants as immigrants who move due to agricultural crop picking. She said their priorities include family and work more than politics and protesting. "Political issues didn't come up today," Wilcox said. "Migrants are here for a specific reason - to attend parenting classes. They have their own agenda." Migrants came from Oceanside, Imperial and all across North County, said Anne Stadler, Palomar's director of EOP&S pro-
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LESLIE SIMPSON I THE TUESCOPE
More than 200 children and 400 adults attended the 8th Annual North County Latino and Migrant Parent Conference held Aprill on Palomar's San Marcos campus.
gram. She said Palomar's participation in the conference was a focal point for migrant families. "This is helping parents and children realize the college is theirs," Stadler said. "We want them to participate, to access the services the college offers." The value of education underlined Irma Cota's keynote address. The CEO of North County Health Services grew up in a migrant family and said she credited her upbringing for her business success. Stadler called her inspiring. "She talked about picking strawberries and grapes, and people
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could relate," Stadler said. "She also said her mother talked to them about money and how much they needed to make for school in the fall. That's being a responsible parent." Parenting workshops were held throughout the morning in Palomar classrooms, addressing topics such as "Two Cultures and Education" and "Habits of Highly Effective Teens." Between sessions, attendees explored information and grabbed freebies at various community service exhibits.
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Ftlllen Witttln soldier deserves s11me rights liS other veter11ns. • PAGE 4
Sm111/ th11nges tlln le11d to big s11vings.
• SEE MIGRANT, PAGE 6
Two student protests in San Diego, 75 years apart, converged during discussion at the March meeting of Palomar's Cine Club. Recent student walkouts in North County protesting proposed immigration policy created a backdrop for "The Lemon Grove Incident," a docudrama about a student walkout in depression-era San Diego. The March 31 screening of the film for the college community celebrated the 75th anniversary of the related landmark court case. Palomar professor of Multicultural and Chicano studies, John Valdez, explained his personal interest in the case as he led the after-film discussion. He said he was born and raised in the quiet, rural community of Lemon Grove. His aunts were among the segregated students at the Lemon Grove school, and his godfather protested the segregation as a representative of the Lemon Grove Neighbors Committee, Valdez added. "These were very special people because they had courage," he said. "They saw an injustice and addressed it." Heralded as the earliest school desegregation case in the United States, "Roberto • SEE L
MON GROVE, PAGE13
'NECESSARY Gn5' P111y ex11mines h11rsh ret~lity of life in 11 refugee tllmp. • PAGE 14