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Santa Cruz Sentinel du lieu suivant : Santa Cruz, California • Page 40

Lieu:
Santa Cruz, California
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40
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iuiiuay, uciwoci iyy Santa Cruz Sentinel 3 What's Happening On Area High School Campuses the music building. All juniors considering college and the SAT should take the I'SAT this Saturday, Oct. 27. Check with your counselor about it. Have a good week! around the corner.

"The Matchmaker" will be performed on Nov. 15-17 by Redwood's Repertory Theatre. The play will be performed at the Park Hall. The cast includes Colby Matte, Benson Hoagland, Peter Hudson, Chris Shoub, Anthony Mancebo, Cheryl Melter, Tonya Morgan, Andy Hudson, Steve Root, Debbie Reichle, Juliette Carillo, Denyse Lawson, Scott Hovey, Scott Morrison and Liza Donaldson. The play will be fantastic, so don't forget it.

There will be a meeting for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Oct. 25 from 8-10 p.m. at Intel Corporation, 2825 Walsh Santa Clara. They will discuss college applications and financial aide and it would be a good idea to attend. Another good thing to attend is a girls' volleyball game.

On Oct. 16, the girls beat Marello. The girls will play Aptos and Harbor this next week so come and watch the fun and excitement. Last week, Oct. 19, was the last day to sign up for the PSAT.

If you didn't sign up, you better just study for the SAT next year. At Santa Cruz By CARYN COLLOPY Attention all parents living within the S.inta Cruz High School attendance area: The SCHS Title I program is forming a Parent Advisory Committee. Any parent living within our attendance area is welcome to serve on this committee. The first meeting and elections will be held (kt. 25 from p.m.

in Hoom 78 at SCHS. The 1 Mastic Zen Society is very proud to announce that it has now been olficially recognized by the ASH as a Santa Cruz High School club. They are a literary and spiritual organization. The main purpose of this club is to provide a channel of expression in this high-tech society, for the ancient poetic art form of haiku. The club has approximately 20 members, and will be publishing a volume of contemporary haiku near the end of the semester.

Considering the rainy weather and coldness last Sunday, the senior and junior car wash went well. The senior class made approximately $200 and the junior class approximately $150. Thanks to everybody who sup-Ported them. Oct. 22 there will be a school board meeting at 7:30 p.m.

at the county building. A new club was formed at SCHS, the Spanish-American Club. Their advisor is Mr. Martinez and if anyone is interested, see him in his room in lated operations. Dale Hold-erman.

the head forester, showed the group around the facility. He gave a tour and told how they cut the wood, process it. stack it. etc. He also spoke to the group about the ecological selection of trees.

Big Creek, at this time, doesn't use any herbicides. However, they feel, if controlled and used property, herbicides can be beneficial. Every Friday Loma Prieta presents a special program, featuring guest speakers of our community. A recent guest was Daniel Lopez of the American Indian Council and the Ohlone Cultural Association, as public relations representative. Mr.

Lopez showed slides of the longest walk" the walk from California to Washington. DC. He also gave much valuable information concerning various stereotypes imposed upon Indians, and also offered information regarding the American Indian programs at L'CSC. All seniors at Loma Prieta will be taking the competency-tests starting on Oct. 22.

Last year, Loma had a most successful trip to Baja, for the whale-watching season. This was successful, mainly because of parent participation and student staff cooperative efforts. Last Friday's program was the showing of the Baja whale slides from their trip. Loma Prieta High School will continue to keep the community informed on what's happening on campus. At Loma Prieta By VANESSA ELLDREGE There's been a lot happening at Loma Prieta High School.

We would like to share some news of major events that have taken place in the past few weeks. Loma Prieta has initiated a schedule change. Last year, there were both morning and afternoon sessions; this year there is one session with six classes. The reason for the changes, says principal Lee Olin, is to bring more unity to the school so it will be more of a group effort. Also, we now have a morning and afternoon tutorial period.

Seniors are tutored in the basic skill areas where they need help to pass the district competency tests. Teachers Mike Brison and Dennis McGinley led a trip to Yosemite and it was an especially unique experience for the students who had never been backpacking before. Many of the students who went also attend the Knvironmental Studies class at school. It was a good learning experience concerning survival, man's relation to nature and also English, since some students kept journals on the trip. The day after they returned, Loma Prieta had a welcome back pancake breakfast for all Loma students and staff.

The students helped cook and set up the serving lines with some of the teachers and the cleanup was accomplished on a volunteer basis. There was also a day trip to Big Creek Lumber Company, where students learned about logging and other various re coming Queen on Friday, highlighting a week long 10th anniversary celebration which included campus decorating competition between classes, a box lunch raffle, in which the highest bid for a lunch went at Pi. and an all-school rally where the winner of the Homecoming Queen contest was announced. Aptos High will host parents and the general public in an open house Oct. 24 at 7:30 p.m.

This year's open house will feature a different program than in past years. Jazz and theater performances, art exhibits and a variety of other events will show off the talents and accomplishments of Aptos students. Timothy Cuneo, Aptos' new principal, will be on hand to meet parents and also to answer any questions. Mr. Cuneo will deliver a brief talk.

"Where We Are Going" and then introduce administrators and counselors. Visitors will then go to classrooms where they will attend four 10-minute long sessions in which teachers will explain their classes and discuss curriculum in the cafeteria. A reception will follow the classroom meetings and coffee and dessert will be served. The change in the night's program is the result of suggestions made last year by parents, students and staff. Students still are being encouraged to purchase student body cards to help support student government activities throughout the year.

Cards will be sold in the administration At Aptos By SUSAN ARONOVICI Cary Mitchell was elected Aptos High Football Home Colleges Tying Courses More Closely To Jobs PANORAMIC OCEAN office every Friday for the next three weeks. At IVIarello By TRACT MARCHI We have a lot of exciting news this week at Marello. Congratulations to Katie Orlando for receiving the "Prep of the Week" award. She played a mean game of tennis and came out a winner at Aptos and SLV. It finally happened! With a lot of hard work and training, the tennis team won their first match of the year.

The football team played a good game against Soquel at SCHS on Thursday. Congratulations on the hard work guys. Spirit Week begins this Monday. Among the many activities are "Nerd Day" and "Blue and Gold Day." Many people are looking forward to the carlight rally scheduled for Thursday night, which all the alumni of Marello are invited to attend. The volleyball team has conquered many obstacles during their season.

They have greatly strengthened their defense, even though they have had many injuries. There is a very important GAA meeting Tuesday. All girls please come and contribute your opinions. The PSAT for juniors will be held next Tuesday. Don't forget and good luck! College and scholarship information has been filing in for perspective high school graduates.

The Counseling Office is gaining more information as to how to understand foreign student transcripts as a result of attending a foreign student workshop in Berkeley. Haste Luego! 7474 1 i i IS 'L'--'z V' At Harbor By VAL ROSS and SUSAN LEVIN Good Sunday morning to you all. Harbor has a busy schedule this coming week. There are many PhDs when the job market for them is very tight, he says. Reduce the time required for an undergraduate degree.

A three-year program would enable schools to use facilities year-round, a definite cost saving. Students can reach the job market sooner, thus beginning to get a return on their investment sooner. Increasingly, administrators are looking to consolidate courses among colleges in a particular region. State university systems in Illinois and California are trying to cut down the number of similar degree programs that uneconomically duplicate each other. Officials 'of public and private colleges are beginning to work together, coordinating efforts to help cut costs.

But this central planning process has only begun, say many administrators. It will require more support from the federal government, much as regional health agencies receive. Education, however, is traditionally a local matter, and there is huge resistance to federal participation in the planning process, Boyer says. "How much Washington should be involved is one of the key questions of the 1980s," he says. At SLY By PATTY McGUIRE Good morning! There has been a great deal happening at, San Lorenzo Valley High this past week.

On Oct. 17, we celebrated "Back to School Day." On Wednesday, parents attended school with their children. The prize for the most parents attending a class is a whopping barbeque. Second prize is an ice cream bar. The results were not in at presstime.

Parents who attended school on Oct. 17 may not have seen all of the students who attend SLV High as some students were working. SLV's work experience students have a seminar to attend on Oct. 25. Work experience students get credit for working out of school.

Don't forget about the seminar on Thursday. Don't forget about Christmas either. Christmas is just around the corner and the perfect, most thoughtful gift a parent could give to his her child would be a 1980 yearbook. There are only 60 books left and you can get one at school during sixth period in Room 20. Something else is also just blow.

That's clearly not possible." Even before Proposition 13-type waves hit, a clear trend was developing. State aid across the nation actually dropped between 1975 and 1977, from 12.2 percent of all college revenue to 11.2 percent. This erosion has gone relatively unnoticed, when compared with heart-wrenching stories of small, private schools closing their doors in a rural hamlet. "It is wrong to believe that the public system is all that well," says former U.S. Education Commissioner Ernest Boyer.

"I predict some of the sharpest fall-off will occur at newer public institutions that lack long tradition and esprit de corps." Harvard economist Richard Freeman cites several long-range solutions that have gained considerable interest in the higher-education establishment: Link liberal arts programs vocational training, including work with unions. This would achieve two goals: Attract students who seek a more functional education and encourage blue-collar workers to study and pay for academic pursuits. Alter tuition charges to better reflectthe costs of different education programs. Too often, says Freeman, undergraduate fees subsidize graduate programs. Not only is this discriminatory, but it encourages graduation of too Back-To-School At Aptos High Aptos High School will hold Back-to-School night Wednesday from 7:30 to 9 p.m.

The evening will begin with a brief welcome by newly appointed principal Timothy Cuneo and will be followed by student-led tours of the school. PINERIDGE 1 many activities you should know about. Reminder, this coming Tuesday the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test (PSAT) will be given here at Harbor High. This test gives juniors a feel for what the SAT will be like and a chance to predict how they'll do on the SAT. The PSAT can betaken at Soquel High School on Saturday, Oct.

27. A representative from Josten's Yearbook Company will meet with seniors on Tues day at 10 a.m., to design graduation announcements. Also on Tuesday, Harbor High, in conjunction with the Parent's Club, will sponsor the annual "Back to School Night." It starts at 6:45 and will begin roughly at 7 p.m. in the Little Theatre and there will be a performance by the Jazz Ensemble. The parents will follow their child's schedule of classes and the teachers will take about 15 minutes to give a presentation outlining the class and grading procedure.

The parents will go to periods one, two and three, followed by a 30-minute break, then finish with periods four, five and six. Refreshments will be served during the break and anyone wishing to donate baked goods or their time, please contact Arnie Levine anytime on Tuesday at the school. It would be greatly appreciated! Picture retakes will be Oct. 24 on the stage in the Little Theatre. Any student who didn't have his her picture taken on Oct.

11, must have it taken on Oct. 24. Yearbook pictures are free. Color packages range from $3.50 to $10.50. Also, on Oct.

24. the band "Mereey's Cadillac," will be giving a free concert at noon. The concert was arranged by Todd Ackerman who is still at home recovering from a knee injury. We wish him well. Parents, don't forget that Oct.

27 at 6 p.m. the Pirate's Club, under the direction of Mr. Winston Moore, will sponsor the annual barbeque. For $10 per person, you will be able to indulge in steak, beans, salad, bread and dancing. To reserve a spot, call 438-3121 or 438-2873.

Harbor's alumni classes of '73 and '75 have had their five-year reunions and now are helping the class of '70 with their 10-year reunion. Those in the class of '70 interested in attending a planning meeting, should be in the Harbor High library, Nov. 7 at 7:30 p.m. The Alumni Association is under the direction of Arnie Levine. Attention seniors: it is vital you make an appointment with your counselor this week to make out your senior contract.

The Harbor Band participated in the Surf City Band Review on Saturday. The band is under the direction of Robert Simmons and the drum majorette is Barbara Ririe. If eyes are willing: the poop deck (no, not where seagulls sit, but the captain's quarters) is abuzz with plans for spirit week Nov. 4-9. A charming family or vacation home sooooo close to the water.

Super Patio with lots of windows, large but easy care lot, 3 bed. 2V2 beautiful wood interior, 2100 sq. ft. much potential and the last of its kind. Exchange possible.

$325,000.00 For children and horses large family home located on 5 acres. 4 bedroom3 baths, large family ranch kitchen with wood stove, living room has beamed ceiling and fireplace. Land has green house for winter gardening, fenced dog run and small corral for ponies. Garden area, fruit trees, privacy and seclusion. All this only $149,500.

Call for appointment M.H. NICHOLS REALTY 7359 Empire Grade, Santa Cruz 427-3883 By GLENN RITT WASHINGTON (AP) education's edifice complex is rearing its ugly head," says John Phillips, president of the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. During the 1960s and early 1970s, colleges and universities particularly in the public sector overbuilt. "This expansion must stop now," says Phillips. Mark Curtis, president of the Association of American Colleges, counsels: "It's much more responsible for colleges to operate based on declining enrollments and make the proper adjustments.

They shouldn't try to keep plugging up the holes with less-than-suitable replacement parts." But this is easier said than done. Most college administrators were weaned during the post World War II era, when the GI bill spurred unprecedented growth in higher education. "Administrators' careers were made by building and shaping," says Patrick Callan, executive director of the California Post-Secondary Education Commission. "Now, they're being asked to cannibalize what it took years to build up." Nowhere, possibly, is this process more painful than in California, where passage of tax-cutting Proposition 13 threatens the flow of higher eclucaton funds. This occurs while the state still must pay for huge construction projects of the late 1960s and early 1970s, says Callan.

And many future en-rollees will be minority students who require more intensive, more expensive teaching, he adds. "It's amazing to me that until Proposition 13, there was no evidence of planning for the demographic crunch. We knew it lor five years," says Callan. "Maybe people believed we were rich enough to cushion the IN BEAUTIFUL to its 476 assies i ruiiiiiji.ij.niiwuii muni ii fci.imm.j mil. iW.

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