The Telescope 29.09

Page 1

Palomar College

Volume 29

Number 9

A Publication of the Associated Students

November 21, 1975

San Marcos, Ca.

92069

Boehm Gallery features former FBI agent talks

~~!.!~~~~~~P&~h~~~¡~.~~~~~.;~~~~~~~: on 'Spy State' Monday Fine Arts Gallery now through Okulick has had numerous one-man December 2. and group exhibitions. His latest have His sculptures have a fascination ofil- been at the Nancy Hoffman Gallery lusion to the viewer which is not easy to New York City; the Jack Glenn Gallery: explain. They are sculptures and yet Corona Del Mar; the Newport Harbor they carry on like paintings. Art Museum, Newport; and at the InOn exhibit are seven wall sculptures dianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana. and three paintings. Okulick's media is Anyone interested in purchasing any primarily organic materials such as of Okulick's work may contact him at boards, bark, branches, burlap, rope, 213 / 548-4107, or contact Russ Baldwin and hay. Some are left in their natural gallery director. ' state, while others have been processed. His sculptures are assembled in 'perspective illusionism' giving them the appearance of being much more threedimensional than they actually are. Mythological titles such as Raft of Acheron and Earth Magician are given to some of his sculptures. Art critic Melinda Wortz says "Okulick is interested in the literal meaning of myth David Villasenor will demonstrate rather than a symbolic interpretation. and describe the art of sandpainting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in room C-5. Admission is free and open to the public.

Artist displays sand paintings

Corky Carroll

concert slated Corky Carroll and the Funk Dog Surf Band will perform a concert in the Student Union tonight at 8 p.m . Carroll, five-time U.S. National Surfing Association Champion, has recorded two albums and has numerous concert and television guest show appearances. "Carroll's band plays a mixture of Dan Hicks and the Hot Licks and the Beach Boys ," says Dana Ward, Recreational Intramural Program director. "They're really good too." Among the instruments played by the Funk Dog Surf Band are a three-part female vocal section, an electric violin, drums , bass, piano, and Carroll on guitar. "Part of the proceeds will go to the intramural fund, supplementing our ASG budget," said Ward. "Hopefully we'll be able to buy T-shirts and other prizes to award at our events." Gabriel Wisdom, KGB radio discjockey, will be the guest master-ofceremonies. Also appearing will be Marico, a band made up of Palomar students. Pre-sale tickets are available in the Student Activities Office and Hansen's Surfboards in Encinitas for $3. General admission at the door is $3.50,$2.50 with an ASGcard.

Villasenor has developed sandpainting into a permanent art. Sandpainting consists of different colored rocks which are ground to the consistency of sand, then blended into a beautiful painting. Villasenor perfected, with the special use of glue, sandpaintings which can be hung on a wall. His work has been displayed across the country, from the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena to the Museum ofN atural History inN ew York City. Villasenor and his wife, Jean, have authored three books: How to Do Nature Printing, Tapestries in Sand, and How to Do Permanent Sandpainting.

December book sale aids clock payments Back by popular demand, the Patrons of Palomar bargain book sale will be held December 3 from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. and December 4 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the campus conference room. All proceeds from the event, which was first held last April, will go toward payments on the carillon-clock tower. Various items such as Chri's tmas decorations will be on sale in addition to books, which include classics, the arts, history, biographies, philosophy, psychology, foreign language, law and an assortment of old, rare books.

Former FBI agent William Turner will speak on "The CIA and the FBI - The Spy State" in the Student Union Monday at 8 p.m. Turner's lecture here is the first in a series of appearances by nationally known personalities, co-sponsored by Palomar and MiraCosta Colleges. The programs are open to the public and there is no admission charge. Turner was dismissed from the FBI in 1961 after ten years of service when he wrote letters to individual Congressmen seeking an investigation of the FBI. It was Turner who caused the American public to begin to suspect the FBI of irregular activities at that time. While serving in the FBI, Turner specialized in criminal and counterespionage cases, and was selected for the FBI's Sound School to learn the techniques of bugging, wire tapping¡ and breaking-and-entering. "I did it until I changed my mind," Turner said, "When you use totalitarian methods, you evolve into a totalitarian state." FBI agents used to make their own lock-picking devices, according to Turner, and practiced using them on

William W. Turner

Equal opportunities in nursing advocate will speak Tuesday Marie Branch, noted authority on minority needs, is scheduled to speak in Q-3 at 1 p.m. Tuesday. Branch has been nominated by the Nursing Department for the Mary Mahoney Award. Striving for equal opportunities for minority groups in nursing, Branch has written several papers on the subject. She has also served many years as a program director in this field for the

Kurah talk scheduled CBS news correspondent Charles Kuralt will discuss The American Behind the Headlines at MiraCosta College on December 2 at 8 p.m. Winner of an Emmy award for his On the Road series, Kuralt is noted for collecting stories about unusual people and places. The lecture is sponsored jointly by Palomar and MiraCosta Colleges.

SDSU session

Western Interstate Commission on High Education. "We were asked to participate in Mrs. Branch's project and the result has helped to make us more sensitive teachers," stated Ruth Murphy, Nursing Department chairperson. "There was a need for more minorities in our program and once they were in, we wanted them to be able to complete the course," she addd. "Mrs. Branch is a tremendous person and we fully expect her to receive this honor." The American Nurses' Association Mary Mahoney Award was established in 1936 and was named for the first black graduate nurse in the United States. It is presented every two years. Selection criteria includes contributions to advancing equal opportunities in nursing for minorities, to the nursing field and to the integration of minority group nurses. Branch's talk is open to faculty and students interested in cultural diversity.

front page news in 1973 when he revealed that the FBI had committed burglaries against such varied groups as domestic radicals and the Japanese consulate in Seattle. His first book, The Police Establishment, was the first to unveil police lobbying and propagandizing on a national scale. Invisible Witness tells of the conflict between police technology and ci vii liberties. Extreme right wing groups of the 1970's, such as the Ku Klux Klan and the American Security Council are described in Power on the Right as embodying the military-industrial complex. Hoover's FBI had such an effect on the American public that FBI agents began to appear on TV and radio, trying to keep Turner off the air. The Palo Alto Times called the book about J. Edgar Hoover "one of the most provocative exposes of the past decade." The 10-Second Jailbreak, which Turner co-authored in 1973 is the true story of Joel Kaplan's helicopter escape from a Mexico City prison and how a CIA-Cuban exile plot framed him in the first place. The story has since been made into a motion picture starring Charles Bronson. Now a private investigator living in San Rafael, Turner is working on The Cuban Connection: From the Bay of Pigs to Watergate. Turner has appeared on several television program, including "The Tomorrow Show" with Tom Snyder and "The Advocates," and has written articles .for major magazines and newspapers including The Nation, The Progressive, Cavalier and Playboy. Turner currently serves as a consultant to the National Wiretap Commission in Washington, DC.

Ecology lectures set Joan Jackson of the Coastal Commission will speak on campus Wednesday on the present interests of the commissiOn. Earth Science department chairman Dick Noble will speak on geologic hazards in our area and building problems to beware of on December 3. The two lectures are the final two of a series of four sponsored by the Student Help Center. The lectures will be held at 11 a .m. in front of the student union, or in case of rain, in room F-3.

News at a Glance

here Wednesday

Because of the Thanksgiving holiday, classes will not be held next Thursday and Friday. The next issue of The Telescope will be published December 5.

Representatives from San Diego State Univ:ersity will be in the Student Union Wednesday to answer questions pertaining to transfers, admissions, major study areas and other pertinent matters. The session is tentatively set for 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Further information may be obtained from the Counseling Office. SDSU is being forced to limit admissions by major in a growing number of departments. For the fall , 1976 term, admissions will be limited in the following majors: art, business administration, music, nursing, public administration, recreation, social welfare, speech pathology and audiology, and telecommunications and film. Students with interests in any of these majors should be urged to make application for admission during this month.

*** James Joyce's Ulysses will be shown December 4 at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. in room P-32, as part of Dick Peacock's " Art of the Cinema" class. Peacock's "Nonfiction Film" class will feature Tokyo Olympiad on November 26 at 4 p.m.

***

Mae Fenton, an Escondido attorney, will speak on "Women and the Law" at the north San Diego County chapter of the National Organization for Women's monthly meeting December 4. All women and men interested in the feminist movement are welcome to the 7:30 p.m. meeting in the Orange Glen High School Library in Escondido.

Frederick, Cheshire place in aviation meet Bruce Frederick led the aviation team with a first place in shortfield landing and a tenth in navigation at the annual Pacific Coast Intercollegiate Flight Association air meet at Palomar Airport November 8, 9 and 10. Ken Cheshire took fifth place in the computer accuracy competition, and the team was presented the sportsmanship trophy. Mike Van Laere, Dee Ann Disney, Sandra Scheetz, Tim Ware, Rusty and Lyla White and Betty Webber complete the Palomar team.

locks in the Justic Department building in Washington, D.C. Turner made national television and

***

"An Evening of Mexican Folk Dance" will be presented by the Community Services and Bilingual Education Departments tomorrow night beginning at 7.: 30 p.m. in the Dome. Admission for the occasion is $1.

All students interested in trying out for the golf team are requested to attend a meeting Tuesday at 11 a.m. in room 010. Coach Robert Lusky will discuss the upcoming season and the qualifying tournament.

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Sundance will present a flash and roll concert today from 11 a .m . to noon in the patio area.

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Musical works of Handel, Nelhybel, Beethoven and Brahms will be presented by the Palomar Community Orchestra Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Dome. All tickets are $1 and are available from the Music Department or at the door.

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ROP will celebrate National Vocational Guidance Weekwithanopen house through 5 p .m. today. Career information, testing, counseling, placement assistance and ROP registrations will be featured at ROP's Career Counseling Center, 1605 W. Mission Road, San Marcos

***

Student legislature meetings have been changed to Mondays at 2:30p.m. in Volunteers from the American Red the faculty dining room. All students are Cross will take donations of blood con- invited to attend. tributions in the Student Union December 10 beginning at 9:30 a.m. According to Gene Jackson, assistant "Curious? - Read" is the theme of dean of student affairs, the con- Children's Book Week, which begins tributions of blood will go to a fund used Monday. The bookstore will have a by students and their dependents should special children's book section with the need arise. publications for children age two and up.

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(Photo by Bob Hoover)

An unidentified student appears to finish off what's left of a Lincoln Continental. Actually, he is par-

ticipating in Alpha Gamma Sigma's Car Bash. The event was held last Thursday as part of Homecoming.


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