The Telescope 65.14

12
FIGHT FOR OUR RIGHTS Vol. 65, No. 14 • Monday, March 12, 2012 1140 W. Mission Rd, San Marcos, Calif. on the web: www.the-telescope.com Palomar College’s Independent Newspaper the telescope t DISPUTE TIMELINE JAN. 2012 ARTIFACTS FIRST FOUND NEAR ROAD TO FALLBROOK SITE FEB. 22 MEMBERS OF LUISENO TRIBE START CAMPING OUT NEAR SITE, BLOCK- ING CONSTRUCTION FEB. 28 JUDGE DENIES RE- QUEST BY LUISENOS TO STOP CONSTRUCTION SOURCE: TELESCOPE EDUCATION PROTESTS Ian Hanner/Telescope IAN HANNER THE TELESCOPE REPORTING FROM SACRAMENTO Five thousand students -- including 28 from Palo- mar College -- descended on the state capitol on March 5 to tell legislators they wouldn’t accept fur- ther cuts to the education budget. Organized by the Associated Student Govern- ment, Palomar’s students traveled on a bus for a 26 hour journey to Sacramento and back at no direct cost to participants. The ASG paid the bill. In the past, ASG members have flown north to take part in similar events; this was the first time they had paid to bring out- side students along on the trip. “I went on this trip because school budgets and financial aid [have been cut] and the state is tak- ing the funds away from colleges and universities,” said Je- sus Gaspar, a 21-year- old psychology major from Palomar who attended the march. “There are many stu- dents that need their support and that money--I’m one of them. Taking this away is not a good idea because it makes me fall behind.” “It’s important because students will see on a state level how the ASG goes and represents students,” said Evelyn Lucero, president of Palomar’s ASG. Starting with Palomar’s arrival at 6 a.m., charter buses gradually brought in students to Southside Park in Sacramento. At about 10 a.m., the crowd stepped off along 6th Street and ended after moving down the Capitol Mall. The student activists, who were met by a small turnout of Occupy protesters, cited tuition hikes and class cuts among other reasons for their growing dis- contentment with the educational system. Though students from a diverse range of conditions were present, the overall consensus was that the reason for the protest was a failure on the part of the govern- ment to prioritize higher education. TURN TO MARCH ON PAGE 8 WHAT’S INSIDE 3 6 10 NEW TECH BUILDING OPENS NEWS / New space to house automotive and other technology programs considered vital to college future, admin says. BULLYING STOPS HERE LIFE / Palomar admin takes a serious stance on bullies. We find out what the consequences are. FOOTBALL Q&A SPORTS / We sit down with star WR Nigel Westbrooks to discuss his future. FALLBROOK CAMPUS Work moves forward despite Indian concerns MIKE PETERSON THE TELESCOPE A judge denied a Native Ameri- can group’s request to stop con- struction at a Palomar satellite campus last week. The Vista court said work could could continue on Horse Ranch Creek Road after a temporary re- straining order was filed concern- ing the construction of a road over what has been discovered to be an Native American burial ground. The construction of Horse Ranch Creek Road, a road that will eventually lead to a Palomar Col- lege education center in Fallbrook, has reportedly uncovered human remains and artifacts that are be- lieved to be part of a Native Ameri- can village called Tom-Kav. TURN TO FALLBROOK ON PAGE 9 Contested Fallbrook construction site. • Ebony Avery/Telescope There are many students that need (the state’s) support and that money -- I’m one of them. JESUS GASPAR • STUDENT TAKING OVER TWITTER Tweets detailing student protester’s efforts poured out of the capitol March 5. 90 students flying out tomorrow, 60 on the bus now, and that’s just from PCC. Don’t let anyone tell you we’re not engaged. #marchinmarch @MARY-MENVILLE 12:07 PM Very awesome- thousands of us rallying for educa- tion at Capitol bldg - felt like opening credits of Invader Zim. #INVASION #MarchinMarch @KESTERRAMBLES 1:10 PM I commend students, faculty, workers at #MarchInMarch Protests in #Sacramento. I am proud to always vote agnst cuts. @LELANDYEE CALIF. STATE SENATOR 1:10 PM Palomar students march on state capitol to protest budget cuts and fee hikes More special coverage of March in March inside on Page 8 & online at the- telescope. com PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY DEB HELLMAN & DAVID LEONARD

description

The Telescope Newspaper / Volume 65 / Issue 14 / March 12, 2012 / the-telescope.com

Transcript of The Telescope 65.14

Page 1: The Telescope 65.14

FIGHT FOR OUR RIGHTS

Vol. 65, No. 14 • Monday, March 12, 2012

1140 W. Mission Rd, San Marcos, Calif.

on the web: www.the-telescope.com

on twitter: @telescopenews

Palomar College’s Independent Newspaper

the telescope

t

DISPUTE TIMELINEJAN. 2012ARTIFACTS FIRST FOUND NEAR ROAD TO FALLBROOK SITE

FEB. 22MEMBERS OF LUISENO TRIBE START CAMPING OUT NEAR SITE, BLOCK-ING CONSTRUCTION

FEB. 28JUDGE DENIES RE-QUEST BY LUISENOS TO STOP CONSTRUCTION

SOURCE: TELESCOPE

EDUCATION PROTESTS

Ian Hanner/Telescope

IAN HANNERTHE TELESCOPE

REPORTING FROM SACRAMENTOFive thousand students -- including 28 from Palo-

mar College -- descended on the state capitol on March 5 to tell legislators they wouldn’t accept fur-ther cuts to the education budget.

Organized by the Associated Student Govern-ment, Palomar’s students traveled on a bus for a 26 hour journey to Sacramento and back at no direct cost to participants. The ASG paid the bill.

In the past, ASG members have flown north to take part in similar events; this was the first time they

had paid to bring out-side students along on the trip.

“I went on this trip because school budgets and financial aid [have been cut] and the state is tak-ing the funds away from colleges and universities,” said Je-sus Gaspar, a 21-year-old psychology major from Palomar who attended the march. “There are many stu-dents that need their support and that

money--I’m one of them. Taking this away is not a good idea because it makes me fall behind.”

“It’s important because students will see on a state level how the ASG goes and represents students,” said Evelyn Lucero, president of Palomar’s ASG.

Starting with Palomar’s arrival at 6 a.m., charter buses gradually brought in students to Southside Park in Sacramento. At about 10 a.m., the crowd stepped off along 6th Street and ended after moving down the Capitol Mall.

The student activists, who were met by a small turnout of Occupy protesters, cited tuition hikes and class cuts among other reasons for their growing dis-contentment with the educational system. Though students from a diverse range of conditions were present, the overall consensus was that the reason for the protest was a failure on the part of the govern-ment to prioritize higher education.

TURN TO MARCH ON PAGE 8

WHAT’S INSIDE 3 6 10NEW TECH BUILDING OPENS

NEWS / New space to house automotive and other technology programs considered vital to college future, admin says.

BULLYING STOPS HERELIFE / Palomar admin takes a serious stance on bullies. We find out what the consequences are.

FOOTBALL Q&ASPORTS / We sit down with star WR Nigel Westbrooks to discuss his future.

FALLBROOK CAMPUS

Work moves forward despite Indian concerns

MIkE PETERSONTHE TELESCOPE

A judge denied a Native Ameri-can group’s request to stop con-struction at a Palomar satellite campus last week.

The Vista court said work could could continue on Horse Ranch Creek Road after a temporary re-straining order was filed concern-ing the construction of a road over what has been discovered to be an Native American burial ground.

The construction of Horse Ranch Creek Road, a road that will eventually lead to a Palomar Col-lege education center in Fallbrook, has reportedly uncovered human remains and artifacts that are be-lieved to be part of a Native Ameri-can village called Tom-Kav.

TURN TO FALLBROOk ON PAGE 9

Contested Fallbrook construction site. • Ebony Avery/Telescope

There are many students that need (the state’s) support and that money -- I’m one of them.

JESUS GASPAR • STUDENT

TAKING OVER TWITTERTweets detailing student protester’s efforts poured out of the capitol March 5.

90 students flying out tomorrow, 60 on the bus now, and that’s just from PCC. Don’t let anyone tell you we’re not engaged. #marchinmarch

@mary-menville12:07 Pm

Very awesome- thousands of us rallying for educa-tion at Capitol bldg - felt like opening credits of Invader Zim. #INVASION #MarchinMarch

@Kesterrambles 1:10 Pm

I commend students, faculty, workers at #MarchInMarch Protests in #Sacramento. I am proud to always vote agnst cuts.

@lelanDyeeCalif. state senator

1:10 Pm

Palomar students march on state capitol to protest budget cuts and fee hikes

More special coverage of March in March inside on Page 8 & online at the-telescope.com

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY DEB HELLMAN & DAVID LEONARD

Page 2: The Telescope 65.14

2 • NEWS Monday, March 12, 2012

THIS WEEK ININ STUDENT GOVERNMENTBY JOEL RAMOS

ASG removeS Student SenAtor

KEEP AN EYE ON YOUR STUDENT GOVERNMENT. ASG MEMBERS SPEND YOUR MONEY AND REPRESENT YOU ON CAMPUS. IT’S YOUR JOB TO KEEP THEM HONEST AND TELL THEM YOUR NEEDS.

PRESIDENT Evelyn [email protected] x3766

SENATORRocky [email protected] x2605

Visit the student government executives in their offices on the ground floor of the student union.

Attend their weekly board meetings every Wednesday at 1 p.m. in SU-204.

The Associated Student Govern-ment voted last week to remove a student senator from his post.

At the Feb. 29 ASG meeting, the board voted 2 to 5 against the ratifi-cation of Sen. Armando Telles.

Telles was enrolled in only 6 units, but an ASG senator must be enrolled in 7 units to serve on the board, which caused his suspen-sion from the ASG. At the Feb. 29 meeting Telles’ ratification was a motion on the agenda brought fourth during the meeting’s Board Appointments section.

“He has a tendency of trying to do everything on his own without going through the necessary pa-perwork,” Sen. Rocky Brady said during open discussion. “I really don’t think that he deserves a spot at this table,” Brady added.

ASG President Evelyn Lucero re-cused herself to speak to the board about Telles during the open dis-cussion.

She described two separate events where Telles made mistakes that affected ASG. In one instance, she said “miscommunication and misinformation to the administra-tion” caused the ASG to come close to losing their invitation to attend Palomar’s annual fund-raising Gala last November.

She added that during a sec-ond event, the African-American history event, there was a similar problem.

“I was getting calls everyday that Sen. Telles didn’t have paper-work, and he was not organizing the event right,” she told the board. “I got these complaints from all of you. I just want you to think about that when you make your decision and vote.”

In an interview after the meet-ing Telles said the comments made by Sen. Brady and President Lu-cero were irrelevant to the motion at hand and should have been ad-dressed outside of the meeting beforehand, not used to influence board members’ votes.

“(I think) they should have ratified me under condition that I undergo some form of training or perhaps leadership develop-ment,” Telles said. “They took (a) capital punishment approach to discipline.”

UC BUDGET PROTESTS

LARRY GORDANLOS ANGELES TIMES

An Alameda County Superior Court judge on Tuesday temporar-ily blocked the release of a Uni-versity of California investigatory report about the controversial pep-per spraying of UC Davis student protesters by campus police in No-vember.

The matter is scheduled to re-turn to court March 16 for a hear-ing on whether the temporary re-straining order should be dropped or a permanent injunction granted.

Tuesday’s ruling came at the re-quest of the UC police union, which wants to make sure the report does not reveal information it believes should remain confidential, including the names of UC Davis campus police officers and personnel information garnered from interviews with them.

Union attorney John Bakhit said that he was not seeking to block the entire report, which was written by a task force headed by former Cali-fornia state Supreme Court Justice Cruz Reynoso with help from a se-curity consulting firm headed by former Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton. But Bakhit said he wanted UC to follow state law that restricts the public release of some police personnel information, simi-lar to restrictions on releasing a pa-tient’s hospital records.

He described Judge Evelio Gril-lo’s ruling as “the right thing in the interest of caution.”

The report originally was sched-uled to be released Tuesday online and at an afternoon public forum at UC Davis. However, administra-tors canceled those plans Monday after learning of the police union’s request for the restraining order.

Reynoso said in a statement Monday that he would keep push-ing for the report’s quick release in its original form and that he was disappointed by the police union’s legal action.

Dianne Klein, a UC spokeswom-an, described the ruling as putting the university “in a holding pat-tern.” Last month, UC Davis stu-dents and alumni who were pepper sprayed or allegedly roughed up by campus police in the Nov. 18 inci-dent filed a federal lawsuit against campus administrators and police, claiming their civil rights were vio-lated. A video showing an officer spraying the seated demonstrators at close range triggered national outrage and debate about police tactics against Occupy movement protests.

REPORT FROM INVESTIGTION OF PEPPER SPRAY INCIDENT BLOCKED

PALOMAR NEWS IN BRIEF

Sally Dean conducts the Palomar Chamber Singers at Mission Hills High School on March 4. • Brian Korec/Telescope

GRAPHIC COMMUNICATIONS CAREER DAY

The Graphic Communications De-partment is set to host the 15th annu-al Career Day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on March 14.

The department has invited speakers and industry experts in multimedia, web and print. Each industry will have speaker talking for one hour simultaneously in the Multi-Disciplinary Building and in rooms MD-119, MD-133 and MD-135, according to a flier on the event.

Former Palomar student Josh Al-lard, who represents NAS Produc-tions will be one of 12 speakers on the theme Bypassing Hollywood…for the Independent Filmmaker at 11 a.m. in MD-119.

Guest speakers Ashley Garner and Victoria Jones, from the San Di-ego Women’s History Museum, will speak on promoting nonprofits in honor of Women’s History Month.

Promoter Vanessa Allen, from Ac-tive Network, is scheduled to speak on the theme of Results-driven On-line Marketing. Allen will demon-strate how Active Network succeeds with the use of the web.

For additional information, visit http://www2.palomar.edu/graphics or 760-744-1150 ext. 2452.

DEB HELLMAN

FITNESS AND WELLNESS CENTER OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS

The Fitness and Wellness Center, located on Palomar’s main campus in San Marcos, effectively attempts to lower the membership costs for all students and faculty. Exclusive prices are for those students in the nursing program as well as all staff at Palomar.

Every member of the gym is en-titled to three free visits per year. Members may also invite guests and first time users for three complimen-tary visits, promoting socialization among students.

JESSICA BROOKS

EXPANSION OF LOTS 3 & 5

Palomar’s Facilities Department will be expanding Parking Lots 3 and 5 on the San Marcos campus, but the expansion may not be happening as soon as the department had origi-nally planned.

The project, originally slated to occur over this summer, will add about 200 more spaces to student parking. Both lots must be closed to accomplish grading and paving, giv-ing reason for facilities to push the project to a time when classes will be at a minimum, or not in session at all.

The original goal of the project was for the grading to be done at the end of this semester and have both lots completed by the beginning of Fall 2012.

The project most likely will have to be pushed, because official plans will probably not be approved in time for both lots to be completed for fall classes.

At this point, facilities are aiming to complete the project during win-ter break of Fall 2012.

NATALIE SOLDOFF

Students protesters demonstrate on Nov. 21, 2011 at UC Davis. MCT Campus

BUSINESS FORUM TO BE HELD IN SU BUILDING

The ASG unanimously approved the use of the Student Union for the Palomar Foundation’s Fourth Annual Business Forum. The event is sched-uled from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. on May 11.

Foundation Coordinator Pam Grasso requested the Student Union be unoccupied from 5 p.m. May 10 until 5 p.m. on May 11 to allow for setup and cleanup. Last year there were celebrities like Ben Stein who spoke at the forum.

“It’s good for community mem-bers to come on to the Palomar Cam-pus and see what the college is all about,” Grasso said.

Tickets for the forum will cost $45 per seat in advance and $60 at the door. According to Grasso, 30 tickets will be set aside for students and will be given out free of charge. For more information contact Grasso at (760) 744-1150 ext. 2732 or [email protected].

JOEL RAMOS

Page 3: The Telescope 65.14

NEWS • 3the telescope

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CAMPUS CONSTRUCTION

New technology building makes debutNATALIE SOLDOFFTHE TELESCOPE

There was standing room only at the grand opening ceremony for Palomar’s new Industrial Tech-nology Center on March 2.

Members of Palomar’s gov-erning board, facilities industrial technology departments and the community gathered to celebrate the opening of the campus’ new-est building which cost $7 million and was funded by Prop. M, the college’s $694 million construc-tion bond.

“Welcome to our new home, it’s been a long time coming. I stood here before many of you two years ago at the groundbreaking, filled with hope and excitement about this new facility,” automo-tive technology professor Steve Bertram said.

Proud students attended the event, each wearing their auto-motive, diesel and auto body polo shirts.

“Everything is so new; the hand tools, the machines we’re working with is brand new,” second-year diesel student Rafael Cerillo said.

“We worked in the old shop last year, and this is just totally differ-ent, it’s exciting,” fellow diesel stu-dent Freddie Manalo added.

The grand opening not only celebrated a new beginning for

Palomar’s IT department, but cel-ebrated those who played a pivot-al role in the department history.

Bertram made sure to pay tribute to Larry Bertram, his fa-ther, who attended the event and worked at Palomar when the IT department was first created in 1967. Steve Bertram presented a newspaper article of his father at the grand opening of the original

IT building. The article will hang in the new shop as a reminder of the department’s history.

Bertram also presented a me-morial plaque in honor of Mark Coppedge, an automotive tech-nology professor who died sud-denly last semester.

“Mark was passionate about working at Palomar and passion-ate about this building,” Bertram

said. “This plaque will be dis-played with pride in the new shop to remember one of Palomar’s fin-est.”

The ceremony emphasized the importance that the new building will play not only in student’s fu-tures, but also in the region’s eco-nomic future.

“When we think about the eco-nomic conditions of the state, we

know Palomar is part of the solu-tion,” Palomar College President Robert Deegan said. “People who are looking to upgrade skills, to change careers, to obtain mean-ingful employment…that’s what we’re about. We’re here, we’ve been here, and we’re here for the long run.”

[email protected]

Associate Professor Steve Bertram spoke during the open-ing of the new ITC building in Lot 12 of the San marcos Campus, on march 2. The photograph he held with pride shows a news-paper clipping of his father at the ribbon cutting of the original ITC building in 1964. Prof. Bertram was involved with what seems to be becomming a family tradition. • Allyson Wat-son/Telescope

VETERAN’S CENTER

WARRIORS OVERCOmE STRUGGLES BACK HOmECYNDI LUNDEBERGTHE TELESCOPE

Veterans returning from ser-vice face the difficult task of as-similating to life as a civilian. For Palomar students Jose Martinez and Serena Reib, that task is fur-ther complicated by the added pressures of being a student.

Adjusting to the a regimen of studying, exams and work books is quite different from that of mili-tary life but Martinez and Reib said Palomar staff help with the transition.

“Palomar is the best kept secret in San Diego for veterans,” Reib said.

For one thing, Palomar’s Veter-ans Center, located in the Student Services Center, has a lot of pro-grams and opportunities designed to help out these veteran students.

“The Veteran Center is really helpful, they even have a tutor and a veteran’s lounge. And they speak the same language as me: military language,” Martinez said.

The resource center isn’t the only resource.

“[The professors at Palomar] respect me as a veteran, and I seek them for personal stuff as well. There’s a deep trust,” Martinez said.

The training and discipline Reib gained serving as a captain in the Marines have helped her make the transition from the service to the classroom, she said.

“Veteran students have a dis-cipline. There’s a mission, it’s the

class and you don’t have a choice but to accomplish that mission,” she explained.

While serving “we had to do the most impossible tasks with little-to-no resources and as a stu-dent it’s almost a piece of cake. Ev-erything is right there for you, you just need to use it.”

Some transitions from the com-bat world to the student world aren’t so smooth. For Martinez, who served as an Army Ranger for six years in Iraq and Afghani-stan as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom, adjusting to the rigors of school wasn’t such a simple task.

“You can’t focus. You can’t concentrate. Mentally you’re still traumatized and have such a lack of sleep. Sitting in class you can-not focus. You’re going to strug-gle,” he said.

According to Marinez it was more than just re-learning how to study and finish assignments. “I had to not only rehab my mind, but my body and heart… because to be honest my heart wasn’t over here. I left my soul in uniform.”

Even with all the help made available by the campus, these students said they can still hit some turbulence.

“Sometimes students can be rude and immature to me, but I know it’s the time I’ve served fighting for our country that al-lows them the ability to do that,” Martinez said.

TURn TO WARRIOR On PAGE 9

GET THE WORd OUT TO THOUSAndS Of LOYAL COLLEGE REAdERS. PUT YOUR AD IN THE [email protected]

Page 4: The Telescope 65.14

4 • OPINION Monday, March 12, 2012SPEAK OUT

How are the high gas prices affecting your life?

EDUCATION

- Rick Cobb

- Matt Mancuso

- Katie Adams

- Jamisha Washington

- Taralyn Hemphill

- Sarah Michell

Dental Assistant student Sonia Hinojaosa prepares her exposed x-ray film for development on Nov 21, 2011. Hinojaosa and other students in the Dental Radiography class performed full mouth x-rays on mock-patients as a part of an exam. • Dan Chambers/ Telescope

“They haven’t affected me too much yet because they haven’t been going on for too long, but if they continue I’ll have to drive less.”

“They suck! Gas takes about half of my paycheck.”

“Its makes it harder to get places. I might start asking other people for rides or carpooling, or take the bus.”

“People don’t want to drive you (around) because of the higher gas prices, or you have to give them gas money.”

“It’s just adding to the cost of us having to pay for books and tuition, things that we need. Having to pay a lot for gas on top of that just isn’t good.”

“My boyfriend just got in an accident so he doesn’t have a car, so I have to drive down there to see him. And I haven’t seen him in three days because I can’t pay everyday to go down there. It’s only 15 miles, but it adds up going down there and back”

Colleges need more career training based education

Gio NietoTHe TeleSCoPe

There are not enough learn-ing experiences in the educa-tion system now in California.

The California educational system needs to offer more on-campus occupation experiences courses for students.

Aside from the high de-mand for science technology, math and engineering classes, students need more vocational courses. Courses that not only educate, but also train students and prepare them for jobs at various levels.

Californians need commu-nity colleges that provide more hands-on training in jobs such as dental hygienists, medical laboratory technicians, carpen-ters and plumbers, to list a few.

According to Silicon Valley Leadership Group CEO Survey, a deteriorating infrastructure in areas like public education have added to the difficulties of recruiting the best workforce, finding housing and educating children to become tomorrow’s workforce.

The best way to help the ca-reer seekers is to show them how to work. School admin-istrators have to collaborate more with business officials to find what businesses are hiring, instead of just cutting courses blindly. Properly training the younger workforce is vital for the future of California.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics report of em-ployment outlook for occupa-tional employment projections to 2016, as the Baby Boom gen-eration ages, the segment of that population ages 55 years and older is expected to increase by 20 million. This change to the U.S. population means the Baby Boom generation will retire and job opportunities will open for new employees.

Seven out of 10 new job openings will come from replac-ing existing workers, according to Stephen Levy, director for the Center for the Continuing Study of the California Economy.

Due to the recession in the first decade of the 20th Cen-tury, an enormous number of employees lost their jobs.

In December 2006, school teachers and bus drivers were reported to have 14,000 lay-offs, and over 15,000 in January 2010.

California has one of the worst unemployment rate at 11.2 percent, with only Nevada being worse at 13 percent in De-cember 2011, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Some Californians have gone back to school to receive certifi-cation for certain employment. Even then it is hard to find a career to make a comfortable living.

If school administrators re-ally want students to succeed, they must bring major market-ing and advertising specialists and try to bring mayors and city council members to the campus to talk to students.

Palomar staff should host fo-cus groups, go to local business organizations and find out what is happening off campus. After all, it is their job to help stu-dents find jobs.

[email protected]@GIo_NIeTo

If California offers more occupational based learning programs, our state will be able to avoid the large gaps in employment that are looming ahead as the baby boomer generation age

Page 5: The Telescope 65.14

OPINION • 5the telescope

the telescope Focused On Palomar

Monday, March 12, 2012Vol. 65, No. 14

Palomar College, San Marcos, CA

MATTHEW SLAGLEeditor in chief &

PAGe deSiGner

KAITY BERGQUISTMAnAGinG editor &

PAGe deSiGner

IAN HANNERneWS editor

JOEL RAMOSneWS editor

GIO NIETOoPinion editor

KELLI MILLERLife editor

COLLEEN PETERSSPortS editor &

coPY editor

DAVID LEONARDdeSiGn editor &

inStrUctionAL ASSiStAnt

NATALIE SOLDOFFPAGe deSiGner

DEB HELLMANPhoto editor

BRIAN KORECASSiStAnt Photo editor

ERIN HIRO AdViSer

KIIGAN SNAERBUSineSS MAnAGer

STAFF WRITERSApril TesTermAn, Cyndi lundeberg,

dAnielle TAylor, emmA mAliszewski, JessiCA brooks, JACqueline Coble,

lexy perez, miChAel AsTorino, mike peTerson,

peTer behr, shAun kAhmAnn & sTephen keCk

PHOTOGRAPHERSChArles lugTu, Allyson wATson,

Aden websTer, dAn ChAmbers, ebony Avery, krisTen

CAmpbell,phyllis Celmer, russell whiTe, sergio soAres

ADDRESSthe teLeScoPe

PALoMAr coLLeGe1140 W. MiSSion roAd,SAn MArcoS, cA 92069PHONE / 760-891-7865 NEWSROOM / Md-228

EMAIL / [email protected] EMAIL / [email protected]

THE TELESCOPE WELCOMES ALL LETTERS TO THE EdiTOR. Letters must be typewritten, under 300 words and incLude

the author’s first and Last names, major and phone number. phone numbers wiLL not be pubLished. Letters

shouLd be emaiLed to [email protected] teLescope reserves the right to edit Letters for space

and grammaticaL errors and not to print Lewd or LibeLous Letters. Letters must be receieved one week prior to the newspaper’s pubLication to be considered for incLusion.

THE TELESCOPE iS PubLiSHEd 11 TiMES PER SEMESTER. opinions expressed in the newspaper are those of the

individuaL writers and do not necessariLy represent those of the entire newspaper staff, paLomar facuLty and staff

members or the governing board trustees.

ttVOICES OF REASON

BY KAITY BERGQUIST & COLLEEN PETERS

Accidents happen, take responsibility

We don’t know who among us hasn’t sat in the parking lot for what seems like hours waiting for a parking spot. We all know the pain, but it is something that most of us have learned to cope with.

But, the thing is, we don’t search and search for a parking spot with the expectation that while we are in class our car is go-ing to be vandalized.

Yet somehow, it still happens.We think that some Palomar

students have forgotten the Gold-en Rule; “Do unto others as you wish to be done to you.” It’s a basic concept of reciprocity. You don’t want your car hit, so don’t hit someone else’s car.

It’s a really simple concept, so why do people have a problem fol-lowing it?

The parking lot is an inherently frustrating place to spend half of the morning. Usually, by the time a parking spot is found, we’re frus-trated and exhausted. Sometimes we’re even running late and need to head into class. But, there is no excuse for hitting someone’s car and pretending that it didn’t happen.

We think that people hate tak-ing responsibility for their own ac-tions. Sometimes hitting a car is an accident. Things happen. If you do hit a car, it’s not just a good idea, but also the law to leave a note. In the state of California, if you hit a car an flee the scene without so much as a note, the punish-ment is no more than one year in prison, and a fine of no less than $1,000 and up to $10,000, accord-ing to deadlyroads.com. Is saving face worth $1,000? With cameras in nearly every parking lot, the likelihood of getting caught in-creases with every camera that is installed.

It’s not the easiest thing to do, it’s embarrassing to admit what you have done wrong, but the owner of the car you hit will have much more respect for you than if you just hit and run. Wouldn’t you like to go to sleep at night with a clean conscience in knowing that you did the best you could do to make amends?

We hope that if you ever do hit a car, that it’s an accident and not on purpose. If it is an accident, you need to understand that these things happen. They’re not fun, but taking responsibility saves you from feeling guilty and helps out the owner of the car.

We’ve said it a million times in our column (okay, that’s a to-tal exaggeration): we’re college, students, we need to start acting like it.

Life is frustrating enough, why make it more difficult?

[email protected]@the-telescope.com@kAitybergquist@colleen_teresA

COUNSELING

Seeing a counselor will keep you on track

Jessica Brooksthe telescope

If I would have spoken to a counselor early on in my col-lege career, I wouldn’t be back at Palomar after graduating from a four-year school.

Here I am, still attending classes although I have official-ly earned my bachelor’s degree and celebrated those achieve-ments with family and friends.

Speaking with a

c o u n s e l o r does not take much effort or time, and in turn, can make the big-gest turn in your educational voyage.

I graduated from Palomar and transferred to Cal State San Bernardino to work to-ward receiving my bachelor’s degree in mass communica-tions. Despite my many edu-cational achievements, I failed to seek any type of profes-sional help prior to graduating last year.

I followed the recommend-ed course sheet, enrolling and passing the specified classes required to achieve my degree. I qualified to walk in gradua-tion yet did not schedule the recommended appointment with a counselor to perform a graduation check.

I quickly learned that I lacked just a few units need-ed to receive that diploma in the mail.

So here I am, back at Palo-mar taking that last class -

writing for the campus newspaper - while

trying to get a job in

j o u r nalism.

D o n ’ t let this hap-

pen to you.L e a r n

from me: Don’t procrastinate when

seeking help in graduating or transferring to a four-year university or you will prolonging your stay at Palomar.The district requirements

have set guidelines for stu-dents to follow to transfer or graduate. Competence in courses such as American his-tory or California government, health, mathematics and mul-ticultural course are demand-ed to receive an associate’s degree of any sort. Students must meet general education requirements such as; science, humanities, English, social and behavioral sciences as well as

sociology and psychology.The importance of plan-

ning an education plot at a college level is vital. Students have to follow guidelines that are necessary to achieve higher learning. Enrolling and passing classes is a responsi-bility that acquires much at-tention, every step has to be carefully addressed.

Students have to consider what their educational goals are early on in their college ca-reer so they can craft an educa-tional plan.

Counselors can help by giving recommendations and tips. Students should not pro-crastinate when it comes to searching professional help

especially when plan-ning for the future. The counselors at Palo-

mar are busy so book your appointment as soon as you can.

The counseling advice is particularly crucial at graduat-ing time.

Schools reside in different districts that have varied rec-ommendations for students in terms of graduating and transferring.

When deadlines are not met, students do not advance to graduation nor success-fully transfer at a quick rate. The most productive way to understand the specific deadlines for Palomar Col-lege is to speak with counsel-ors and professors regularly to be aware of the necessary steps to getting a degree. Start by visiting the website at palomar.edu/counseling/ so you don’t end up back here like I am.

[email protected]

A graduating class wait to receive their diplomas at a university commencement ceremony. • photo courtesy of u.s. news and World report university Directory

Don’t get stuck having to put extra time toward your college degree, meeting with a counselor is the key to ensure a successful college career

CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER’S ASSOCIATION

ASSOCIATED COLLEGE PRESS

Page 6: The Telescope 65.14

6 • LIFE Monday, March 12, 2012

Living with four guys has been quite the experience. Not only have I picked up on a whole new vocabulary but I can now shot gun a beer and spit out useless football facts on demand (my mother would be so proud).

Most of the time I try to tune the boys out because a girl can really only handle so much, but lately it’s been getting harder to avoid them and their newly acquired hobby of growing facial hair.

Meaning Mustache March is now in full ef-fect.

For those of you who haven’t had the plea-sure of being introduced to this hairy celebra-tion, I envy you. But just to keep you in the loop, Mustache March is a month-long move-ment where guys put down their razors and grow a sleazy ‘stache.

It’s not just guys who are sporting ‘stach-es either, the mustache trend seems to have rubbed off on the ladies too. Mustache appar-el, accessories and tattoos are popping up all over websites like etsy.com and pinterest.com featuring shirts, jewelry, party favors, station-ary and much more.

I’ve even attended a themed ‘stache bash party where the guys showed off their cre-atively grown ‘staches and the girls sported colorful, glittery fake ones.

As hot as the trend is right now, it’s almost as if it emerged over night. So me being the nosy girl that I am, I wanted to find out a little bit more about all this mustache madness. So naturally I googled it.

There are dozens of websites and Facebook profiles promoting Mustache March as a fun way to compete with their buddies to see who can out grow who or come up with the sleazi-est ‘stache.

Even Palomar’s own baseball team has joined the craze to not shave their upper lips for the entire month of March.

Although, I will never fully understand the inter-workings of the male brain and what they consider fun, I have to appreciate the creativity.

Some organizations have even jumped on the bandwagon. The Follicle Freedom Foun-dation is putting the facial hair to good use. According to mustachemarch.com, the group is raising money for the Midwest Athletes Against Childhood Cancer, the group opted out of the traditional fundraising practices and came up with a creative way to have fun and raise money.

“Our goal is threefold. Revive a once-glori-ous grooming practice, humiliate ourselves in the process, and raise some cash for a worthy cause.”

The group adds “next, we bring back the cape.”

[email protected]

LIFE, LOVE & LIP GLOSS

the madness

behind the ‘stache

BY KELLI MILLER

JACQUELINE COBLETHE TELESCOPE

Palomar Student Caitlin Aubuchon said she once witnessed someone in the Student Union being bullied during Halloween of 2010. The man was handing out pixie sticks in costume to all the students, and one woman took it upon herself to grab not one but several. She said he was nice and allowed her to do so, but afterwards when he sat down to eat that same woman started throwing the pixie sticks at him and laughing.

“I felt so bad because I kind of let it happen. I really regret not saying anything to stop it,” Au-buchon said. “But that girl was friends with one of my friends, and I was afraid to start anything because I didn’t want to start drama.”

While the issue of bullying has not been a major problem at Palomar College, the episode shows that it still occurs. Sherry Titus, the director of the Office of Student Affairs, explained that part of her job is to take a look at student behavior and to investigate all accounts of misconduct reported to her.

“We take all incidents very seriously,” Titus said. “But, bullying alone I’ve only had a handful, because for the most part many cases are not re-ported.”

Director of the Disability Resource Center Rob Haines said he believes that a reason why bullying often goes unreported could have something to do with the issue of self-esteem.

“A lot of people put up with it, maybe because they don’t know what the procedure is and there is also the assumption that if you report bullying it makes you seem weak,” Haines said.

Titus and Haines also both expressed concerns that maybe the term bullying has not been clearly defined.

“In handling student conduct, I do my best to show that bullying, even at the lowest levels, is not acceptable behavior and the faculty helps to rein-force that idea,” Titus said.

While the classroom can be a place of learning and interacting with different people, it can set the stage for drama that one might not think pre-vails on a college campus.

“It’s usually petty things like name-calling (and) not so much violent lashing out as we have seen time and time again in the media,” Titus said.

Students also have a right to due process, which Titus explained is a short-term suspension.

“If I am unable to meet with the student right at that second they are removed from campus,” Ti-

tus said. “(They) arrange to meet with me the next day so that they can give their account of what happened. It is very important I find out the truth because the consequences of being kicked out of school can be life changing.”

If the behavior continues, the student is sus-pended, Titus said. She emphasizes that it is also something that the staff tries to avoid, because they understand that the students are here for an education.

“It has worked so far, the students are very good at following the directions I have given them,” Ti-tus said. “We want to make sure that campus is safe by handling these incidents immediately and nipping them in the butt so that they do not lead to something greater.”

As a result, for the most part bullying is not seen as a big problem on campus.

“In grade school and high school, everyone wanted to be uniform and not be seen as the out-cast,” student Carol Colclasure said. “In college, most have found themselves. They don’t need to be a part of a particular clique to feel important,”

Palomar is a commuter school, so not too many people stay around campus unless they are wait-ing for another class or involved in some other ac-tivity.

“Nobody really has to be here,” Haines said. “You don’t have to deal or interact with people that you don’t want to so there is not as many bul-lying reports as you would think.”

The biggest reason Titus said she believes bul-lying isn’t a major issue is because how open and diverse Palomar already is. There are a number of forums available to promote discussion as well as clubs, almost 30, she said that offer students a va-riety of things from hobbies like dancing to advo-cates for Lesbian, Gay, Bi-Sexual, Transgender and Questioning Alliance (LGBTQA).

“Across the state, Palomar is known as the most supportive in meeting student needs,” Titus said. “Bullying only occurs when people are afraid of someone else or something different, but we offer a lot of programs to students that invite diversity and tolerance.”

Since witnessing the candy throwing bully in the Student Union, Aubuchon has been an active member of the LGBTQA. Part of the priorities as a club is to raise awareness about things like bul-lying. Through some of their events and forums, people are able to come together and share their stories to promote anti-bullying.

[email protected]

THOUGH RARE AT PALOMAR,BULLYING HAS CONSEQUENCES

BULLYING ON CAMPUS

HOW TO REPORT A BULLYING

INCIDENT ON CAMPUS: 1. FIRST OF ALL,

DON’T BE AFRAID TO REPORT IT

2. TALK TO SHERRY TITUS, DIRECTOR

OF THE OFFICE OF STUDENT AFFAIRS

3. TITUS WILL HAVE A PRIVATE MEETING

WITH THE REPORTER TO HEAR HIS/HER

SIDE OF THE STORY

4. STUDENTS HAVE THE RIGHT TO DUE

PROCESS, AKA SHORT TERM SUSPENSION

5. IF TITUS DOES NOT HAVE TIME

TO MEET AT THAT EXACT MOMENT,

SHE WILL SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT

FOR THE NEXT DAY. IN THE MEANTIME,

THE STUDENT WILL BE REMOVED FROM

CAMPUS

6. IF THE BEHAVIOR CONTINUES, THE

STUDENT WILL BE SUSPENDED (THOUGH

THIS IS SOMETHING THE STAFF TRIES TO

AVOID)

Photo illustration Deb Hellman/Telescope, photo courtesy Doreen Salcher/fotolia.de

Page 7: The Telescope 65.14

LIFE • 7the telescope

AND... SPRINTER CONSTRUCTION IS NOW COMPLETE!ARRIVES AT PALOMAR

COLLEGE EVERY HALF-HOURDISCOUNT TRANSIT PASSES AVAILABLE AT THE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING --

JUST $47 A MONTH!

lexy perezthe telescope

North County is anticipating the arrival of St. Patrick’s Day with parties from San Marcos to down-town San Diego.

Jumping TurtleSan Marcos’s very own Jump-

ing Turtle will host a St. Patty’s Day bash at 8:30 p.m. March 17 at 1660 Capalina Road. For $8, visi-tors can enjoy drink specials such as green beer all day and night. Three bands will also be ready to rock out, including Symbolic, Froghead and hard rock band, Trailerpark Rockstar, according to thejumpingturtle.com.

ShamrockDowntown San Diego is also

ready to kick off their fan favor-ite celebration. The street event called Shamrock runs from 2 p.m. until midnight on March 17, ac-cording to sandiego.org. For $35-45, visitors can receive food and drink specials from restaurants and nightclubs in the Gaslamp quarter against a backdrop of live entertainment.

Irish band favorites such as The Young Dubliners, Irish Punk Rock

and Irish Rock will perform on the Field Irish Stage. At Fifth Avenue and F Street Shamrock will introduce a new electronica stage where San Diego and Los Angeles DJs and over 25 Irish River Dancers will perform next to a re-created 150-foot Irish pub.

Originally from the East Coast, Palomar student Calvin Gilliam said he plans to be there for the first time this year.

“I will most likely celebrate downtown San Diego with my friend,” Gilliam said. “We are going to go clubbing.”

r. O’Sullivan’s Irish pub and Steakhouse

According to dguides.com, R. O’Sullivan’s Irish Pub and Steak-house, located on Grand Avenue in Escondido, will host a celebra-tion offering drinks and Irish food favorites such as corned beef and cabbage. Live music will also be performed the entire week.

“I’m just going to hang out with my friends and see where the night takes us. If there’s a rockin’ party, we will probably go,” said student Erica Windham.

[email protected]

CyNDI lUNDeBerGthe telescope

Getting into the spirit of St. Patty’s Day might not require a drink, so put down the Irish whiskey and cheers with a cupcake. Irish or not, the Guinness Cupcake is a choc-olaty, sweet delicacy that will make every-one want to celebrate the holiday.

This dessert is a sure hit with any beer lover. The thick stout beer adds richness to the treat as well as extra flavor. This recipe is super simple, which leads to a moist light, perfect for St. Patty’s Day treat!

What you’ll need:• 2 cups Guinness• 4 sticks unsalted butter• 1 1/2 cups unsweetened cocoa powder• 4 cups flour• 4 cups sugar• 1 table spoon baking soda• 1 1/2 teaspoon salt• 4 large eggs• 1 1/3 cups sour cream• 2 cups whipping cream• 1 pound chocolate chips

What to do:First, preheat the oven to 350 degrees

and place liners in a cupcake pan. Bring 2 cups of Guinness and 2 cups of

butter to a simmer on the stove, add in the cocoa powder and whisk until texture is smooth

Next whisk the flour, baking soda and 1 ½ teaspoons of salt in a large bowl. Using an-

other bowl beat the eggs, sour cream and add in the Guinness, butter and chocolate mixture. Then add the f lour and mix together. Using a rubber spat-ula, fold batter until completely com-bined. Lastly, fill the cupcake bins ¾ of the way full.

Bake the cakes for about 35 to 40 minutes.

For the icing bring the cream to a simmer in a saucepan. Then remove the cream from heat and add chocolate chips and whisk until completely smooth. Refrigerate it for about 2 hours until the icing is spreadable.

Ice the cupcakes evenly and enjoy!

[email protected]

The Guinness CupcakeSt. Patrick’S Day: What to Do St. Patrick’S Day: What to make

the Guinness cupcake. • Deb hellman/telescope

CeleBrATING GreeN

NEED A RIDE TO CLASS?YOU’VE GOT NEW OPTIONS!NEW BREEZE BUS ROUTE 347

Page 8: The Telescope 65.14

8 • NEWS Monday, March 12, 2012

MARCH IN MARCH

Calif. Lieutenant Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks to a contingent of protesters gathering at the state capitol building to speak out against budget cuts and fee hikes for attendees of public colleges and universities. • Ian Hanner/Telescope

MARCHCoNTINued FRoM PAGe 1

“I’ve been in the United States for a month and I’m studying at a public university,” said Valentina Lopez, a student of Cal State Ful-lerton. “I realized that some people cannot afford the tuition for a pub-lic university here and I consider that unfair. Education is the key in this society. If you compare the costs, a public university here costs the same as a private university in Columbia. Things aren’t perfect in Columbia, but there are some pro-grams in place to help people afford school.

“[Before coming to the US] I studied at a public university in France and it’s much cheaper there. It’s like 200 euros for the whole year,“ Lopez said.

Flanking the crowd on all sides were organizers in shirts bearing the words “Peace Keeper” whom were tasked with ensuring the tone of the event remained peaceful. Other than a brief tense moment when self-identified anarchists with home made riot shields were being questioned by police, the overall conduct of the event remained re-spectful and free of violent action.

It was at the foot of the Capitol Building that students gave ear to various keynote speakers includ-ing Kevin Feliciano, president of the Student Senate of California Com-munity Colleges. According to Feli-ciano, the march was to show that students will not idly accept further slashes to education spending.

Following Feliciano and several other speakers, Lt. Gov. Gavin New-som took to the podium to address a crowd he described as rightfully disenfranchised.

“You’re here today because our words are not matching our actions here at the state capitol,” Newsom said.

Newsom talked about the neces-sity of California to produce well-educated citizens to compete with

other countries that have educa-tional systems increasing in quality.

“They understand the value of education,” Newsom said. “That’s the world we created and that’s the world we’re competing with right now.”

Newsom wasn’t the only speaker of notoriety: Van Jones, former ad-viser to the Obama White House and founding president of the Re-build the Dream organization, spoke to students about the current state of budget prioritization.

“[California’s educational sys-tem] should be the best in the world,” Jones said. “We have the most diverse population. We’ve got Hollywood, we’ve got Silicon Val-ley, we’ve got the Bay Area, we’ve got the agricultural region.

“We should be the best, stron-gest economy in the world but we’re throwing it in the garbage can be-cause we don’t want to do right by young people and that’s wrong.”

Jones said he remains hopeful that simple measures could be tak-en to remedy the situation.

“The most important thing we should do is pass this “millionaires tax,” Jones said. “The millionaires and billionaires in California should be willing to pay California back. We created a situation and a context for them to do well. And now, when you do well in a state, you should do well by that state and pay the state back by being willing to pay higher taxes for our young people.”

After the keynote speakers were done, the majority of activists dis-persed, but a contingent of pro-testers stayed behind at the capitol building on behalf of the Occupy movement. After several hours of a sit-in inside the capitol building, nearly 70 protesters were arrested and escorted out.

[email protected]@IAN_HANNeR

ANATOMY of a PROTEST26 hours.480 miles.

28 voices for change.

ROAD to UNRESTMONDAY10 p.m.Depart Palomar on chartered bus

6 a.m.Arrive at Southside Park in Sacramen-to; discuss tactics for protest

10:30 a.m.Start march down 6th, ending on capitol mall

4 p.m.Reboard bus and head south

TUESDAY12 a.m.Arrive at Palomar

TYlER SchOENiNg

Electrical Engineering

Age: 21

“I feel we’re at an age where

personal finance really starts to

take hold of your life.”

NAYcARi DE lUNA

EcologyAge: 19

“[I came on the trip] so our tuition doesn’t increase in the next few years. We have to fight

against this.”

JESUS gASPAR

PsychologyAge: 21

“There are many students that need their

support and that money --I’m one of

them.”

ANgEl JiMENEZ

English WritingAge: 36

“I went on the trip because I

believe that edu-cation shouldn’t be stressful for

students.”

JOSh SiMMONS

Computer Net-work Admin.

Age: 18

“I went to the March in March

... to fight for a better future

and a better tomorrow.”

1

2

3

MARchiNg on the cAPiTOl

WhY DiD YOU MARch?

A quick 34-minute march landed the group of 5,000 statewide protesters on the steps of the state capitol.

1 2 3March begins at Southside Park near downtown

Police accompany march up shuttered 5th street

Protesters stop on capitol steps

Page 9: The Telescope 65.14

NEWS • 9the telescope

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FALLBROOKCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

The event that has become central to the controversy oc-curred on Feb. 22, when con-struction workers reportedly began pushing dirt over the site of the remains as early as 6:30 a.m., according to tribe mem-bers who heard the bulldozing.

Because of these actions, the judge had denied the tem-porary restraining order. The judge felt that the burying of the remains had taken away the urgency of the situation, according to Merri Keifer-Lo-pez, a member of the Luiseño Indians legal team who was in-volved in the hearing.

“Extraordinary measures couldn’t be done to stop any-thing because they already did it,” said Merri Keifer-Lopez. “They’ve already done the harm.”

Mel Vernon, chair of the San Luis Rey Band of Luiseño Indians, described this particu-lar event as a “shameful act” and “an intentional, aggres-sive, violent move” by Palomar College and the construction workers on-site that was com-mitted without concern to the spiritual sensitivity of the site.

Laura Gropen, a spokes-

woman for Palomar College, declined to comment on the events because it is district policy to not issue statements about active or ongoing law-suits.

Along with the temporary restraining order, the tribes also filed for a preliminary in-junction that would last until March 19. This would stop the construction until the full re-sults of the medical examina-tion of the remains becomes available.

They are also currently in-vestigating other legal avenues, according to Keifer-Lopez.

The Bands of Luiseño Indi-ans have accepted an invitation extended by Palomar President Robert Deegan to discuss the events and requested the date of March 12 to hold the discus-sion, according to Merri Keifer-Lopez.

The Tom-Kav village and burial site is part of the Luise-ño creation story and cultur-ally significant to the tribes, according to savetomkav.word-press.com, a website set up by the Bands of Luiseño Indians.

[email protected]

WARRIORSCONTINUED FROM PAGE 3

Besides having lived com-pletely different lives, students who’ve served come back to school a little more mature than those fresh out of high school.

“It’s hard; there’s a barrier, a kind of language barrier. They just cannot relate to the things you’ve seen, done and experi-enced so it makes it hard some-times,” he said.

But both students are on track to achieving their goals. Reib is current serving as the radio manager at Palomar Col-lege’s radio station, KKSM and hopes to get a career in radio in the future. Martinez is now working at a San Diego-based media company as the compa-ny’s first camera and assistant editor.

[email protected]

TECH LIFE

COPING wITH THE MISCHIEF OF INTERNET TROLLSJOhn TImpAneTHE PHILADELPHIA INqUIRER

PHILADELPHIAAs long as there have been

bridges, trolls have hidden beneath them. Same for the Internet.

As long as there have been message boards, dis-cussion groups, and com-ment strings, there have been “trolls” -- people who, under cover of Web anonymity, post bullying, lewd, or off-point comments, disrupting and demeaning the whole enter-prise.

Some comment strings are moderated, so trolls can be blocked and deleted _ but most of cyberspace is, in the words of one anonymous wit, “free range for idiots.”

Just one example, to stand for many, from a Harry Potter site: “ENOUGH already with all this Harry Potter (exple-tive)! What sort of LOSERS think this stuff is cool??? I swear, the little (indelicate term) should be carved up with rusty scythes and his remains poured into a ce-ment mixer. I am so sick and tired of hearing about Harry (extreme epithet) (other ex-treme epithet) POTTER!”

It’s been a problem for years. Julie Spira, an expert on Web etiquette and author of the book “Netiquette,” said, “It started with some of the early usenet groups, where some of the first ‘flame wars’ broke out among users.”

Some sites _ newspapers and entertainment venues _ are so encrusted with trolls, like malign barnacles, that comment threads become all but useless. Jolie O’Dell, a re-porter for the tech-business blog VentureBeat, said: “I don’t read comments any-more. I’ve learned there’s nothing anyone’s going to say that’s going to meet me at a professional level of dis-course.”

Julia Hobsbawm, who runs the British media, analy-sis, and networking business Electronic Intelligence, said comment strings are “fertile ground for those who prefer to vent spleen rather than offer rigorous, fair, and bal-anced argument.” Spira said: “There’s no doubt that ano-nymity has turned the World Wide Web into the Wild Wild West.”

People are looking for solutions. Some, like Gayle Lynn Falkenthal, media col-umnist for Washington Times Communities, have called for an end to anonymity. “And you should have seen the trol-lery after I did,” she said from San Diego.

“It was jaw-dropping.”

She said she values the First Amendment, “but any venue with a public responsibility, such as a newspaper, a me-dia site, anything with public money behind it _ no place for anonymity there.”

The past five years have seen the rise of what O’Dell calls “a new breed of em-ployee called the ‘commu-nity manager,’ a big part of whose job is policing com-mentary, allowing for free-dom of speech, but deleting profanities, offensive things, trollery.”

More and more venues are hiring community managers because they see their repu-tations tied to the quality of their online communities.

Where is the comment the smartest and best behaved? Much-copied moderated websites include the Huffing-ton Post and ABCnews.com. Papers such as the Philadel-phia Inquirer and the Wall Street Journal do not mod-erate comments, but other papers, such as the Boston Globe and the San Diego Union-Tribune, do.

Trollery has inspired much experiment.

Chris Satullo, a former Philadelphia Inquirer edi-tor who is executive direc-tor of news and public dia-logue for Philadelphia radio station WHYY, was a main force behind NewsWorks, the station’s news site. News-Works has an admirably well-thought-out and explicit poli-cy about comments, based on that of NPR.org.

When comments are re-moved, the producer of the page announces the move and explains why it was made. Satullo said it seems to work fairly well.

Spira and O’Dell praise the discussion platform Quora. “They’ve tied your reputation to how smart and substan-tive your comments are,” said O’Dell. Spira likes how sites such as Quora “give users a stake in making the site work. Users are invested in the com-munity and want to keep it clean and authentic.”

Hobsbawm said that mere “peer pressure is often insuf-ficient to self-regulate abu-sive comment strings,” but she, too, likes media plat-forms that tie quality to at-tention.

Web-lovers are leery of all this policing and pressur-ing. But courtesy expert Spira said, “All of us can only gain if, when we comment, we stay on topic, show respect and provide a new perspec-tive on the subject that other users might find interesting.”

(C) 2012 THE PHILADELPHIA INqUIRER

Veterans deal with the problems of everyday life

Page 10: The Telescope 65.14

Matt HustonThe PhiladelPhia inquirer/ MCT CaMPuS

The world’s most popular website started in a college dorm room, and for some users it stops there, too.

Though Facebook currently claims a tenth of the world’s pop-ulation in monthly users, many in its original demographic _ young adults _ have attempted, some-times successfully, to go against the grain. Call it Facebook fatigue, social network sickness, sensory overload: It’s not unusual for col-lege-age users to call it quits.

At least for a little while.Colleen Andrews, 24, a graphic

designer from Far Hills, N.J., was spurred by a breakup: “I didn’t want to be tempted to look at his profile,” she said. She dumped her own Facebook profile in Septem-ber.

Laura Amatulli, a senior at the College of New Jersey, has given up the site for Lent four times.

Dan Granados, 17, of Levittown, Pa., stopped using his account a few weeks ago. For him, it’s a personal challenge.

“I just decided to deactivate it, see how long I could go,” he said.

The social network, along with competi-tors like Twitter and the recently launched Google-plus, is ingrained in the everyday lives of students and young professionals who came of age as social networking was on the rise. But Facebook, with a huge ini-tial public offering expected this spring, looms largest.

Those who quit Facebook give a variety of reasons: superficial connections, inap-propriate posts, distraction from work or other activities. Stepping away from the constant data feed can be a relief, they say.

According to Zizi Papacharissi, head of

the Department of Communication at the University of Illinois-Chicago, the reason people leave Facebook is tied to the reason they start using it in the first place. They are “balancing social opportunity with risk,” she said. Those who give it up are the ones who decide that the costs outweigh the ben-efits.

“Maybe it’s taking up too much time, maybe it’s taking up too much effort,” Pa-pacharissi said. Another complaint is over-sharing. The average number of Facebook friends per user is 245, according to a Pew Research Center sample. But these connec-tions don’t always amount to information that users actually want to pay attention to.

“I’d say there was a good 200 people that I either didn’t know very well or didn’t know at all,” Granados said.

Derek Snyder, 20, a student at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, said he was un-happy with the amount of drinking photos

and other posts he deemed inappropriate.He prefers Twitter: “No pictures, easier

to use, nobody talking drama on you or any-body else.”

The pull of Facebook, however, is not al-ways easy to escape. So prevalent is the site among young people, some ex-users face personal temptation and even complaints from their friends.

“People get angry at you,” said Cara O’Keeney, 22, a College of New Jersey se-nior. She deactivated her account in Sep-tember and said her friends are still sending her text messages about it.

Papacharissi stressed that Facebook is a real domain for friendship.

“You want to think of Facebook as just a different place where people interact,” she said. “Just like you go with your friends to the bar or to the movies ... Facebook is just another place.”

This is O’Keeney’s second hiatus from

Facebook, and she plans to reactivate her account in March, around the time of spring break. She recalls the inconveniences from the first time around.

If she wanted to send a friend a quick message, she used e-mail.

“I felt sort of in the Dark Ages when I had to do that,” she said.

Admitting the possibility that they might go back, for-mer Facebook users cited the desire to keep in touch with graduating friends, meet new roommates, and maintain a social connection that they started to take for granted.

“When I got rid of Face-book, I found myself wanting to reactivate almost immedi-ately after I got rid of it ... I found myself really needing a

social outlet,” O’Keeney said.Andrews said Twitter, her current out-

let of choice, had started to take up her time in ways Facebook used to.

“It became second nature to click the Facebook thing on my phone,” she said, attesting to the automatic behavior that several ex-users described.

Not every young person frequents bars, and not everyone will stay glued to Facebook. Some might even ditch it all together.

But the social media giant is undoubt-edly here to stay, Papacharissi said. Col-leges and universities themselves are on Facebook these days.

“It is more and more difficult for peo-ple to leave Facebook because it’s become very much a social institution,” she said. “A service like Facebook will continue to the point of ubiquity. It will be like social wallpaper.”

Closing the ‘book: Some users have had it with Facebook

Ben FritzloS angeleS TiMeS/MCT CaMPuS

“The Hunger Games” is poised to slaughter the box office competition with an opening that could surpass $100 million.

On Thursday, Lionsgate’s adaptation of the best-selling book came onto “tracking,” the survey data used by Hollywood executives to measure pre-re-lease interest, and the numbers are massive. People who have seen the numbers but were not autho-rized to discuss them publicly said the film, which debuts March 23, could have a domestic opening weekend of close to, and possibly more than, $100 million.

More consumers rate “The Hunger Games” as their first choice film to see than any movie com-ing out in the next four weeks. Typically, the movies that get the highest “first choice” ratings are ones closest to their release dates.

Currently, the three biggest companies that provide tracking data are estimating that “Hunger Games” will open to between $70 million and $90 million.

However, Lionsgate still has to roll out most of its marketing for “Hunger Games,” which stars Jen-nifer Lawrence. If ads on TV, print and the Internet along with billboards and publicity help to increase interest in the film, it could end up opening to more than $100 million, several people who saw the data said.

While “Hunger Games” is being compared to “Twilight” by many people, because both are based on book series that are tremendously popular with teenagers, Lionsgate’s upcoming film has one key advantage: While the four “Twilight” films have generated their nearly $1.1 billion in domestic box office primarily from women, surveys show that men are interested in “The Hunger Games” as well.

Females, particularly those younger than 25, are the most excited for “Hunger Games,” but more men over and under 25 also rate the film as their top choice than any other film opening in the next four weeks.

Already, “The Hunger Games” has broken the record for most first-day sales from online ticketing service Fandango.

‘Hunger Games’ could open at $100 million, surveys suggest

BOX OFFICE

SOCIAL MEDIA

Bill WardSTar Tribune/MCT CaMPuS

A recent survey found that iPad owners use their tablets in the bedroom more than any-where else. If the folks who fit that pattern are any indication, it’s not even remotely about any risque business.

“It’s just a lot easier to get cozy in bed with the iPad,” said Joe Alvarado of Minneapolis. Do tell. “It’s really convenient for searching the Web, reading newspapers, Facebook, Twitter, all that stuff.”

Mari Beth Ross of Hugo, Minn., said she “will do some shopping, catch up with people through social media and catch up on the news. I find myself winding down using it.”

Alvarado and Ross fit in with the 68 percent of respondents who told pollsters from the interactive marketing agency Rosetta that the bedroom got

more regular tablet usage than any other space, indoors or out. The living room was second at 63 percent, with “on the go” at 45 percent.

The Rosetta respondents strongly preferred reading pub-lications on a tablet rather than a computer screen or smart-phone. So do Alvarado and Ross, who agreed that lugging a laptop into bed had proven en-tirely too unwieldy.

Convenience is a factor, as well. “It’s sitting in the char-ger right on my nightstand,” Alvarado said, “so it’s easy to f lip open that cover and go at it.” Ross’ iPad “sits on my bed stand. It doesn’t really move around the house.”

Ross said it hasn’t prompt-ed her to head to the boudoir earlier than she used to, but admitted that all of that Web activity and interactivity “sometimes keeps me up too late.”

Now I lay me down to sleep, with my iPad

TECHNOLOGY

10 • TECHNOLOGY Monday, March 12, 2012

Page 11: The Telescope 65.14

YOU NEED TO STAY IN THE KNOW.

ON THE WEB

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Call Attorney Bradley Corbett at 760-201-9839

THE LAW OFFICES OF BRADLEY R. CORBETT380 South MelroSe • Suite 300 • ViSta

Shooting the breeze with WR Nigel Westbrooks

maTTHEW SlaglEthe telescope

After being a standout receiver at Mission Hills for two years Nigel West-brooks came to Palomar with one goal in mind, to play Divsion-I football.

After two years with the Comets, 91 catches, almost 1,200 yards and 12 touchdowns, he is a semester away from achieving his goal, playing in D-I at the University of Nevada-Reno on a full ride scholarship.

Q: Go back to your senior year of high school at Mission Hills, were

you recruited out of high school? Talk about how you ended up at Palomar.

A: I was a qualifier for D-2, I was getting looks from D-1; I had

most of the Pac-10 come to see me. Then they would look at my transcripts and it would be over at that point. Then toward the end of the year, coach started bringing in D-2 schools. I re-ally didn’t even want to go to a D-2 be-cause I though I was better than that. Then a coach from Palomar called me and asked ‘who is talking to you, who do you have offers from?’ I said I have a bunch of offers from D-2 schools and he was like ‘promise me right now you won’t commit to a D-1AA or a D-2 school and I will make sure you go D-1 from here (Palomar).’

Q: As a student athlete commu-nity colleges get a bad rep. Talk

about your experience here and would you recommend athletes come here.

A: Definitely. It is a second op-portunity and a good chance to

start from scratch, because once you graduate and whatever has happened you have your eligibility, you will be the same as a freshman out of high school (academically). You can be a 20-year-old doing dumb things and get into a JC and get another oppor-tunity.

Q: What are your expectations going into Nevada.

A:They have high expectations for me that I am supposed to

be coming and competing for the No. 1 spot. I got to go in there and work as hard as I know I’m supposed to and let everything take care if itself. They grad-uated four of their seniors and their No. 1 guy is going to the league and was in the Combine... When you bring in a JC guy, they really bring them in to make an immediate impact because they want a more mature guy to fill in.

Q: Lets talk about the NFL a lit-tle bit... realistically what are

your goals going into the NFL.

A: Earlier in my life, I didn’t think it was that big of a deal, I just

wanted to go to college and play foot-ball for free. But now I am starting to realize the NFL is a real serious option and that’s a dream you always dream about, so there is no reason not to ex-plore it... It’s a viable option... If the NFL didn’t work out I would play in the CFL (Canadian Football League), I’ll play any professional football that will pay me.

[email protected] @matthewslagle

Discussion included playing at palomar, transferring to a four-year college and the potential to play in the NFl.

westbrooks goes out for a pass against southwestern community college on sept. 3, 2011. In that game he had six recep-tions for 61 yards and two touchdowns. • Deb hellman/telescope

Year GP Rec Yds Avg TD Long Avg/G2010 8 39 458 11.7 1 52 57.22011 11 52 729 14.0 11 47 66.3

To listen to the entire interview visit:tsne.ws/w8EU5v

2008-2010Mission Hills HSVarsityAll-Avocado LeagueAll-North County

2010-2011Palomar CCAll-StateAll-Conference first teamTeam Offensive POY

2012-?University of Nevada-RenoFull-ride scholarshipTwo years of eligibility plus a medical redshirt

westbrooks talking to the telescope editor-In-chief on march 5. • Brian Korec/telescope

Westbooks’ stats with the Comets

SPORTS • 11the telescope

Page 12: The Telescope 65.14

12 • SPORTS Monday, March 12, 2012

It’s fun to see everyone in their own world, but still acknowledging their team-mates.

Jennifer Williams • TEAM COACH

TRACK AND FIELD

KELLI MILLERThe Telescope

With a team only half the size of last year’s, Palomar women’s track and field team is starting the spring season off on the right foot.

According to Coach Jennifer Williams last year’s team finished second at the Con-ference Championship and had 33 student athletes. This season the number has been cut in half, leaving only 15 women to make up the 2012 track and field team.

“We don’t have as many returning be-cause of grades, marriages, just some re-ally random reasons,” Williams said. “I wish we had more numbers, but we have good talent.”

The lack of athletes hasn’t affected the team yet, the women placed second at the Conference Preview on Feb. 24 in San Bernardino.

“We were so close, we were only behind by two points,” returning thrower Deanna Doss said. “At first I wasn’t too sure about this season, but after our first meet we were all kind of like ‘whoa, we can compete.”

With coming so close to Conference Cham-pions last year, Williams says she still aims to take the title. Because of the small team size, her goal has shifted to take as many athletes to regional and state meets and qualify for as much as she can.

“I think we can do just as good as we did

last year; we had a lot more people on the team, but we didn’t have quality, we just had the numbers,” returning long distance run-ner Kate Bouvatte said. “This year the girls on our team are good and motivated, and I think we can go really far as a team. We definitely can place in conference again.”

This season Palomar will compete against Southern California Community

Colleges and four year universities. Among those is Southwestern College out of Chula Vista, Calif., who came from be hind last year at Conference and won. Ac-cording to the women and Williams, the long-time rival is the team to beat this spring.

“They’re a very strong team, so there’s a lot of competition when you go out there and race a Southwestern girl,” Bouvatte said.

Williams also added that because of the size of the team, the women have formed a tight, close bond. They are not only support-ive of one another, but motivate their team-mates to the best they can.

“The chemistry is pretty strong between the ladies,” Williams said. “At our last meet, our jumper was jumping while our distance runner was cheering her on as she was run-ning around the track. It’s fun to see every-one in their own world, but still acknowledg-ing their teammates.”

So far Williams says she is pleased with the performance of the women. The team as a whole is very excited for what’s to come this season.

“I think we’re going to surprise a lot of people,” Bouvatte said.

[email protected]

Tues., March 13 Baseball

Imperial Valley 2 p.m. myers Field

Tues., March 13Men’s Tennis

Victor Valley 2 p.m. palomar

Wed., March 14Softball

southwestern 3 p.m. palomar

Sat., March 17Softball

long Beach cc 10 a.m. palomar

SPORTSON DECK

vIsIT THE-TELEsCOpE.COM And sEE HOw THE wOMEn dId AT THE

UCsd sAn dIEgO CHALLEngE On MARCH 10.

Half the size, twice the motivation

Top: palomar field athlete Deanna Doss throws the hammer during practice on march 5 at cal state san marcos. Doss placed first in hammer on Feb. 24 at the sBVc conference preview with a distance of 130.11.• Deb hellman/Telescope Below: palomar hurdler katie Dever practices for the 100m intermediate and 400m low hurdles on march 5 at cal state san marcos’ track. • Deb hellman/Telescope

coach Jennifer Williams believes this batch of women hold the talent to claim victories in both state and regional meets