'Week of Young Child set for Aprill9-27 Workshops , speakers, displays, and a photo contest highlight th is year's "Week of the Young Child." This event will be celebrated by Palomar College during the week of April19-27. One of the major attractions will be a photo contest. The contest is open to anyone who wishes to enter. Entries may be submitted anytime until April 17 at 4 p.m. Subject matter should be concerned with young children, ranging in age from birth to seven years. The top twelve
Palomar College
First prize will be $25, second, $15, and third, $10. Entry blanks can be obtained from the Children's Center, the Student Union, or from Mrs. Smith in StaffBuilding 1, room 3 or 4. Winners of the contest will be announced on April 21 and their photos will be exhibited in the library the week of April 21-26. "This is an attempt to involve entries will be published in a calendar to benefit the Child Development Center and Palomar Association for Childhood Education.
students campus-wide with the Child Developm ent Center an d a lso give students with a special interest in photography the chance to display their work," said Mrs. Smith . Other activities celebrating th e "Week of the Young Child" are:
parents are invited to attend. An Open House, held in the Lab School and Children's Center and a show presented at 10 a.m. in the quad by S hirley McManus called "Puppets P lease" is planned April 22. The puppet show will be a 35minute presen tation.
On Aprill9, Mary Quill will hold a "Make It - Take It" worksh op, which will run from 8 a .m. to 4 p.m. In this workshop people are encouraged to make different items and take them home with them. Public, students, staff, children and
Dorothy Andrews, a uthorofmany children's books, will give a talk on children's books from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on April 23 in the Palomar Theatre. On Apri l 24, th ere will be a book display and story telling from 11
ETELESCOPE
Volume 33
No. 1 6
A Publication for the Associated Students
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Friday, April 11, 1980
Film series will feature four flicks
by 3 votes With a 1.8 percent voter turnout (slightly up from last year), William Nelson edged out incumbent Greg Heffernan for the office of ASG president by a narrow margin of three votes. The breakdown of votes were as follows: Nelson, 158; Reddig, 324; Hamerdinger, 146; Heffernan, 140; Basener, 132; Waack, 131; Alvarado, 125; Peters, 119; Bickley, 115. Other offices were filled by Abby Reddig, vice-president, and legislators Dian Hamerdinger, Ernie Basener, Karl Waack, Manuel Alvarado, Brett Bickley and Frank Peters. There are still three legislative offices open which will be filled at a later date by appointment. The office of treasurer is also open to be filled by appointment, as is secretary, which will be filled during the summer. The new legislators take office April 28. "I think the elections went very well," states ¡c urrent president Greg Heffernan. "If William Nelson runs the ASG as well as he did his campaign, he should do very well."
I NewsScope
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Patrons of Palomar will sponsor a "Special Afternoon" here Sunday, from 1 until 3 p.m. Ethel Toll, Patron. president, said conducted tours will begin at the Boehm Art Gallery and highlights of the afternoon feature a tour of the arborteum conducted by Dean Gene Jackson. David Boyd of the Theatre Arts Department will present live entertainment in the new college theater. The public is in vi ted and refreshments will be served.
*** Anyone interested in
heading a Palomarcampuscampaign for John Anderson for President may call Terri Hart at 481-6667 or Jim Losgren at 455-1996.
***
"Dr. Einstein and the Universe" will be the planetarium show subject for April 16. Show time is 7:30 p.m. Admission to all shows is free. For further information contact the Earth Science Department, ext. 348. Japanese Masami Teraoka will have his works displayed in the Boehm Gallery beginning April 21 and continuing through May 12. A "McDonald Hamburgers Invading Japan" ::;crica and a "31 Flavors Invading Japan" series will be included in the exhibit.
San Marcos, CA
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Nelson wins presidency
*** pop artist
a.m. to 1 p.m . and a Paren t's Lunch for the children of th e Children 's Center. Victoria Michaels will presen t a program call ed "Using Clay with Children" fr om 1 to 3 p.m. on April 25. The week wil l be fini f; hed off with a children's concert ;_'1 -~he Palom ar T heatre at 3 p.m : or: April 27. "Everyone is urged to participate and to attend these activities to make 'The Week of th e Young Child' a mem or able occasion for all ," said Mrs. Smith .
I READY TO LICK - An astonished geisha attempts to enjoy an ice-cream cone in Masami Teraol:w 's exhibit "31 Flavors Invading Japan"
Earth Fair features full day's activities Ecology and conservation will be the theme of the Earth Fair to be held Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m . on the green in front of the Student Union. Music, talks, a solar panel tour, workshops, films, and a women's skateboard freestyle demonstration are among the events. The Ecology Club is also sponsoring a benefit dance April25 from 8 p.m . to 1:30 a.m. The band will be Freelight, and the dance will raise money for the Mayfair. A different energy event will take place on Tuesday called "Energy and the Way We Live," co-sponsored by Palomar and MiraCosta Colleges. The main speaker will be Philip Vermeulen from the Conservation Division of the California Energy Commission in Sacramento. The presention will cover assessing conservation and solar energy needs at home.
National Poetry Press deadline Tuesday Tuesday is the last day to submit manuscripts of poetry to the National Poetry Press. Any student at.tcnding either Junior or Senior College is eligible. There are no limitations as to form or theme. Entrants should also submit the name of their English instructor. Manuscripts should be sent to the Office of the Press in Agoura, 91301.
showing in the Boehm Gallery April21 through May 12. Te raoka specializes in Japanese Pop art and has been a California resident since 1961.
Contemporary musical group, SONOR, kicks off Arts Festival SONOR, theContemporaryMusic Ensemble, will kick off the 1980 Palomar Contemporary Arts Festival Monday at 12 noon in the Performance Lab. A short lecture/ demonstration will precede the concert at ¡11 a .m. as an introduction to the music to be
Course offers dental skills Dental assistants wishing to learn the manipulation of dental polishing instruments may attend a Coronal Polish workshop tomorrow, April 19, and 26 in room S-11. Directed by Dental Assisting Department chairman Jean Landmesser, the course will begin at 8 a.m. Assistants will comprehend techniques, demonstrate application of learned skills, manipulate polishing instruments correctly, and encounter patient experience providing a competent skill level. Interested persons must certify that they have successfully passed the Registered Dental Assistant Examination , and must bring two patients who are calcul us free to the clinical session. Costs are $90 for coffee, study materials, and certifi cates. Checks may be payable to Palomar College and mailed to Continuing Educatio n for ProfE!ssionals.
played. The group will present a program of music by Robert Erickson and Bernard Rands. Soprano Carol Plantamura will be the soloist in Erickson's Idea of Order at Key West , a work based on the poem by Wall ace Stevens. Second on the the program will be Scherzi by Rands, a piece which is a series of short movements and mobiles wh ich are fleeting references to the Scherzi Musicali of Monteverdi. Following this will be deja 2, a work for the full ensemble which was stimulated by the Balinese gamelan and dancers. SONOR , descrioed as a "remarkable ensemble" playing "with stunning prec1s10n and m usical insight" is now accepted as one of the premiere contemporary performing ensembles on the West Coast. The second concert in the festival wi ll be April 28 and will feature the Five Centuries Ensemble at 12 noon in the Performance Lab. Admission is free to all events and all are welcome.
Real estate seminar set "Current Economic Factors and Their Effect on Real Estate" is th e s ubject of a seminar to be held Monday at Oceanside Federal Savings and Loan Association in Fall brook, and May 6 at the Ranch o Bernardo Inn in Rancho Bernardo.
The next fi lms in the Wo m e n in Film series will be Face to Face, showing Apri l 16, and No Time for Breakfast, sh owing April 23. Both will be presented at 4 p.m . in room P 32. Discussion will fo llow in room P30. The first film stars Liv Ullman and is unusuall y intense. Th e second is a straightforward story about a wom an doctor wh o must cope with a crisis in her personal life when faced with her own illness. T he American Motion P icture series will feature Key Largo April 17 at 2 and 7 p.m. This 1948 fi lm by John Huston stars Edward G. Robinson , Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. Sunset Boulevard will screen April 24 and is an intelligent drama of the complex reality of the city of dreams. The cast encompasses th e history of the movie industry. Billy Wilder directs this 1950 film.
Retail course begins Monday Robert Murphy will teach the only retail-sales-ch ecking course in North County beginning Monday from 6:30 to 9:30p.m . in room E-6. The course will prepare students for employment and/or a career in Retail Sales in food, discount, drug industry, and federal civil service in military commissary stores and exchanges. It will provide instruction in all basic skills to become an efficient checker with an overview of fundamental retail, grocery and discount operations. Students may register in the Admissions Office under Section Number 65140. Three college units are given. Costs are $9 for parkin g and insurance fees, and approximately $12 for textbooks . For further information contact th e Family and Consumer Sciences Department, ext. 487.
Forgiveness Week will end tomorrow Tomorrow is the last day of Forgiveness Week in the Palomar Library. Now is the time to return a ll those materials to the library th at students have been putting aside and waiting unti l pay day to return. No questions will be asked, no fines charged. The materials are needed so others may use them. Materials may be dropped off during the regul ar ho urs today until 4 p.m. and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m . T he bookdrop in front of th e main library may be used for those who find it im possible to get there during regul ar hours.