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The Metropolitan is a weekly, student-run newspaper serving the Auraria Campus in downtown Denver since 1979.
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Volume20 Issue 14 November 21, 1997
The Metropolitan State College of Denver student newspaper serving the Auraria Campus since 1979
CCD paper stops the presses jam session
Timothy Batt/77te Metropolilan
Dan "Mr. Downtime" Treanor blows smooth grooves on the harmonica Nov. 19 In the Tivoli Atrium while David Booker strums the guitar. Treanor and Booker performed as part of the Gig Series featured In the Tivoli each Wednesday. Some student leaders, administrators and business owners, have complained about the noise of the concerts. See story on page 3 and edltorlal on page 16.
News Form.er Metro student could face burglary charges in police shootout
Page3
Community College of Denver student newspaper loses editor, stops publishing for second time By Perry Swanson The Melropoluan
The Community News died when its editor resigned Nov. 12, citing the stress of the job and an uncooperative staff as the reasons for his departure. It marks the second time this year the paper has folded.
Dennis Archuletta quit less than a month after the Community College of Denver student newspaper put out its only issue since spring semester. Controversy has plagued the newspaper for the last 2 years, mostly because of objections to the paper's content.
A memo taped to the door of the newspaper office in the Tivoli cited Archuletta's resignation and said that as of Nov. 12, "the Community News is no longer operational."
Archuletta explained his resignation by listing his complaints against staff members at the paper and others involved with its operation. He said the job demanded too much and paid too little for him to continue.
One complaint topping Archuletta's beef list was a conflict with Felicia Sykes, director of Student Activities at CCD, because he said she had the locks on the office door changed Nov. 7 without notifying him. Two days later, Archuletta said he was able to get into the office. Then he was confronted by Auraria Campus Police, who, he said, threatened to charge him with trespassing.
Campus police said it has no record of the incident. Sykes confirmed that she had the locks changed but wouldn't com-
Features Metro anthropology professors helping to fight illiteracy
Page 11. Dave Parson
ment further. Archuletta also said someone is try
ing lo frame him for the theft of a laptop computer and the forgery of a purchase order asking for the product.
He said someone used his name to sign a bogus order for an Apple laptop computer from a vendor called Mac Warehouse.
All transactions for schools at Auraria go through a purchasing office. Roberta Miiller, who supervises the Auraria purchasing depart!lJent, said she has no knowledge of the incident. A vendor could be fooled by a fake purchase order, she said.
Officials at the Denver Police Department confirmed the incident is under investigation.
Archuletta said he's had lo deal with one crisis after another with only minimal support from others at the college.
'Tm just not paid enough to deal with this crap," he said.
But even with Archuletta's complaints, Sykes said he could have been removed anyway, because he didn't meet job requirements set by CCD's Board of Publications.
Editors of the paper are required to take certain courses at the college, a minimum number of credit hours and maintain a minimum grade point average. Sykes wouldn't say which of those requirements Archuletta failed to meet.
"There were personnel issues, there were security issues, there is a criminal investigation," she said.
Spom Volleyball team takes 3rd in RMAC, advances to regionals
Page19 Audra Llttou
GC't so'l'ethi'lg to s:ii·? E-mail the erlitor ;it hcd<:n@'rr.scd.ert•• 'lr c .111 55'.i 8353. Vis it c,ur Wt::b s it~ at v. \'IW, m~ c cLec l : - t '1• ·111 ""
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2 The Metropolitan November21, 1997
JR.
THE PEACE AWARD WILL BE GIVEN IN THE FOLLOWING CATEGORIES: • MSCD Student • MSCD Employee
(Faculty/ Staff/Administrator)
• Member of the Community
NOMINATION FORMS ARE AVAILABLE AT: • MSCD OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE
• MSCD DEPARTMENT OF AFRlCAN
AMERICAN STUDIES
•. MSCD OFFICE OF STUDENT
PUBLICATIONS
• MSCD INSTITUTE FOR WOMEN•s
STuores & SERVICES
RETURN NOMINATIONS TO: MSCD OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE
P.O. Box 173362, CAMPUS Box 74 DENVER, Co. 80217-3362 ATTN: Yolanda Ortega-Ericksen
NOMINATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY MONDAY, DECEMBER 8TH, 1997
F OR M ORE
INFORMATION CALL
556·2507
f
PEACE BREaK,.FA.:S5E THURSDAYt J~,NUARY I 5. 1998 .. · ~:· ":aitt'"' l 0:30a
ST. CAJ El:_~~~~~~!i!_~~----------------~-;~-----=~~-------~ "· TICKETS eN SALE · ....... . Nov·EMBER 25T·H, 1: 997 .
• MSCD INSTITUTE FOR WOMEN'S STUDIES & SERvlCES 1033 9th Street Park A@:
• MSCD OFFICE OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Tivoli Student Union Suite 313 . • · ,> ••
,. MSCD DEPARl'MENT OF AFRICAN AMERlcAN'.STUDIES .. ,,, Rectory.109 , " ··· Y,;n~~i :''.
• MSCD EDUCATIONAL EQUITY CENTER . Terrace Center'800 " OFFICES OR DEPARTMENTS SNTERESTED IN BUYING BLOCKS
, OF TICKETS SHOULD CALL 556~2~0]. "' '
r ,
:0::
•
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_______ .. __________________ News -----------~N-ove-m~be-r~2~1.~1~99=1~ri~'he-M-e1_ro_r_o1~ita-n-~3 Gig sound level agitates Tivoli employees By Lori Vaughn The Metropolitan
When the band Mary Madness performed on campus Nov. 5, it rocked the student union and racked the nerves of many people who work and own businesses in the building.
Metro Student Activities sponsored the band as part of its Gig Series. Every Wednesday from 1 I :30 a.m. until I :30 p.m., various musicians and bands are invited to provide lunchtime tunes on the Tivoli's first floor, next to the Food Court.
But not everyone likes the bands. One detractor is Yolanda Ortega-Ericksen, Metro's dean of Student Life, whose office is on the third floor in the Tivoli.
"It was so loud that it ceased to be music to me and turned into noise," Ortega-Ericksen said of Mary Madness.
Student Activities Programmer and Gig Series organizer Richard Alexis Smith said he will not compromise with critics who resent the volume level and genre of the musicians.
"I will change absolutely nothing, and I would tell those people who complained to get used to the idea," Smith said. "The Gig Series is going Lo happen one day a week, and if' you don't like it, then you need to take walk.
Ex-Metro student is burglary suspect in police shootout By Perry Swanson The Metropolitan
A former Metro student could face charges of . second-degree burglary in connection with the shootout Nov. 13 that left dead Denver police officer Bruce VanderJagt and the man who police think shot the officer.
Demetria Soriano, the student, attended classes at Metro during the spring semester. Soriano, 22, was unavailable for comment on the case, but her attorney, James Dodd, said he expects an investigation will clear her.
"Given the actual facts of what my client knew and all the rest, she'll ultimately be exonerated," Dodd said.
Soriano's family posted a $10,000 bond and she was released from police custody Nov. 14.
"People just have lo get used lo the idea of il happening, period."
Dennis Bryan, the Tivoli's program and conference manager, said the Tivoli doesn't have a formal policy for sound levels and several people working in nearby businesses and student lounges have complained about the noise level of Gig Series bands.
Tim Batt/The Metropolitan
STRUMMING ALONG: David Booker plays his Guitar during the Nov. 19 Gig Serles In the Tivoli. Booker's two-member band doesn't have a name.
Press reports said Soriano went to Pine, Colo., on Nov. 12 to pick up the belongings of another suspect, Lisa Auman. They brought along two 111en, Dion Gerze and Matthaeus Jaehnig. The Jefferson County Sheriff's Department investigated a call reporting a burglary that afternoon. Officers from that department and Denver's ended up chasing two of the suspected burglars up U.S. Highway 285 and into the apartment complex at 3323 S. Monaco Parkway, where Soriano lives.
Soriano was reported to have fled with Gerze toward Colorado Springs. Al the apartment complex, police entered a stand-off with Jaehnig, which resulted in the shooting death of Vanderjagt.
Assembly's vice president of Student Organizations. "They need to respect students' wishes."
Jaehnig was later found dead of gun shot wounds to the head.
"The primary concern should be the opinions of the students and if the students complain, then something has to be done," said Jim Hayen, Metro Student Government
"I think the music ·can be distracting," Hayen said. "They should search for music that is entertaining without
see GIG on 6
"When we get done this will be a real tragedy," Dodd said. "But the tragedy will be the kind of mean-· inglessness of it."
AIDS quilt holds special Ineaning for Metro einployee Memorial comes to Auraria this month; panel of quilt will honor 1980 Metro graduate B Deborah'Wiig ~Metropolitan
The AIDS Memorial Quilt, which will be exhibited on the Auraria Campus next week, has special meaning to a Metro employee who lost her son, a Metro graduate, to AlDS.
Ruth Calderon, who works in Metro Accounting Services, is looking forward to seeing the panel created in her son's memory by his family and friends.
Her son, Tim Calderon, was a 1980 Metro journalism graduate who worked at the Auraria Child Care Center and the campus bookstore. He died of AIDS-related complications on Aug. 27, 1991. He was 34.
The second oldest of seven children, Tim was the first to graduate from college, but not the last. He lived to see his mother graduate with a degree in accounting just before he died.
Ruth said doctors tried several treatments, but nothing slowed the progression of his illness.
"He was in a lot of pain, but he tried to make each day count, tried not to dwell on anger," Ruth said. "He loved to garden,
and together we planted the flowers that were in full bloom when he died.
"His illness brought the family closer. His sisters took turns taking him to (doctor appointments) and caring for him. And he had a very supportive group of friends and co-workers from his job at AT&T. They would take him to the zoo and the movies and bring him food. He was alert to the end, until he went into a coma and then was gone."
Ruth said Tim's friends and family members spent many weekends creating a panel in his honor for the NAMES ProjectAlDS Memorial Quilt.
The exhibit is sponsored by the newly formed Colorado chapter of the NAMES Project in collaboration with the colleges at Auraria.
It will open Nov. 30, with a Commemorative Observance and Candlelight Procession at 5 p.m. at St. Elizabeth's Church on the Auraria Campus.
Opening Ceremonies will follow at 6: 15 p.m. at the Auraria Events Center.
Students of instructor Julie Mower, who teaches a Metro nursing class about AIDS, also created one of the panels. It
was dedicated to a high school teacher who taught one of Mower's students.
"Every time it is displayed, it makes people feel vulnerable," said Billi Mavromatis, a coordinator of the project. "You see yourself represented there, when you see the birthdates and death dates, the
moms and the children, the loss."
Mavromatis said people at the NAMES Project have spent a year to bring the display to Denver. The exhibit is only a small repre-
Tlm Calderon sentation of the entire project, which consists of 43,000
individual panels honoring people who have died from AIDS. If the all the panels were sewn together, the quilt would cover 16 football fields.
The Denver display has almost 1,000 panels. The panels are 3 by 6 feet. Eight panels make a block, wh~ch is J 2 feet by I 2 feet Jong, and each block represents people from the same geographic area.
The NAMES quilt project began in
1987 when the first 3-by-6 panel, which is about the size of a grave, was created in memory of a man who died from AIDS complications.
More than 77 ,000 names, which is 2 1 percent of the 360,000 Americans who have died from AIDS complications, appear on the quilt.
The quilt will be displayed in the Tivoli Student Union Turnhalle on Nov. 23 from 6:45-9 p.m.; Nov. 24, which is World AIDS Day, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. ; and Nov. 25 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Closing ceremonies will be Nov. 25 at 5 p.m.
Volunteers are needed to help set up the exhibit, assisting with opening and closing ceremonies for the candlelight procession. People can also help as greeters, assist with educational activities or sales of NAMES Project merchandise.
Contributions made during the exhibition will be shared among four local organizations: Children's Hospital HIV Program, Empowerment Program Women Against AIDS Project, Howard Dental Center, and Project Angel Heart.
To volunteer, contact the Student Health Center, 556-2525.
~I. n••-••u~ • •••-~••'•.ww 1 u 11 n~: ••• ~: ~ 11nl'l: t •n•1111•1 au 1a1aa11a11 1 a a, I b1~1~ttfliilit" td: JU 11 I
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4 The Metropolitan November 21, 1997
Women Helping Women Egg Donors Needed ... For infertile women.
If you .are 21 to 33, healthy, and a non-smoker you could have the satisfaction of helping
someone in a very special way.
Contact the Center for Reproductive Medicine
(303) 788-8300 Compensation of $2000 Provided
•
Student lobby group sets its agenda for 1998 legislature By Meghan Hughes The Metropolitan
Members of a student lobbying group chose financial aid, tuition rates and student fees as their top priorities Nov. 16 at a meeting in the Tivoli.
The Colorado Student Association is an non-profit organization that lobbies for student interests in the state legislature.
The group is supported by student fees from its 14 member institutions around the state. Colleges that are members of CSA pay a fee based on full-time student enrollment.
Metro pays approximately 50 cents for every full-time student enrolJed, according to Tony Young, CSA's director of campus affairs.
That comes to about $12,000 from Metro each year.
The organization's annual budget is about $89,000, said CSA Chairman Andy Nicholas. The budget pays for five staff members, rent for the CSA office and other operating costs.
CSA representatives hold one meeting each semester to nominate and introduce new representatives, as well as vote on and discuss platform issues which affect college students across Colorado. The CSA board of directors, made up of one student from each institution, meets mon~hly at member campuses around the state.
Nicholas and Greg Benn, a fellow CSA representative, made a presentation endorsing lower tuition increases and more financial aid, two issues the CSA has been involved with on an ongoing basis.
According to the CSA 1996-97 Annual Report, the average statewide
tuition for residents increased by 1.5 percent from the previous year. CSA's lobbying efforts resulted in one of the lowest tuition increases in history last year, the report said.
The group named other goals at the meeting, including adding more resources for graduate and non-traditional students. These students need better child care and
Andy Nicholas
more financial aid, and graduate students need housing, the representatives agreed.
Colorado colleges need more money to build and maintain their campuses, and students should have more influence on that
process, the representatives said. The group also said Colorado col
leges should make it easier to transfer course credit from one institution to another.
Metro is one of the largest members of CSA and has five student representa-lives.
Metro's representatives at this month's meeting were Chuck Bennett, student government representative to the college Board of Trustees; Krystal Bigley, Metro's student Judicial Board chief justice; Sean Brailey, student government vice president of Administration and Finance; Matt Johnson, a representative on the Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board; and Nicholas.
Perry Swanson contributed to this story
The Denver Women's Chorus presents:
Handel, d}far:ps ·
Guest Artist: Dr. Kathy Moore, harpist
Artistic Director:
Marla Wasson
. .-:.:;:· A delightful evening of down home fun and splendid classics
so"!ething for everyone!
Saturday, November 22, 1997 at 6:30 and 9:00 p.m.
Sunday, November 23, 1997 at2:00p.m.
Shwayder 'fheater at the Jewish Community Center 350 S. Dahlia (7 blocks east of Colormlo Blvd. between Alizmida lllid Leetsdale) AU Saturday "tickets $15 . Sunday tickets $10, $6 seniors 55+ and children under 12
Tickets available at: The Book Garden, Denver The World is Out, Boulder Denver Women~ Chorus members The Door To order by phone call 274-4177
For inf onnation contact: The Denver Women's Chorus
274-4177 [email protected]
http://www.tde.com/-dwc/
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November 21, 1997 The Metropolitan s
Metro flight team aims ~o beat Air Force By Sean Weaver The Metropolitan
Some professors might complain their students' heads are in the clouds, but aerospace science professor Bruce Christian, the advisor of Metro's Precision Flight Team, encourages it.
The team, which has been at Metro since the 1970s, competed Oct. 11 in a five state regional compet1t1on in Colorado Springs. It placed second overall behind the Air Force Academy and was invited to compete in a national competition next semester Kansas.
The team is adamant about beating the Air Force in the Kansas.
"If we beat Air Force, I will buy everyone on the ·team an expensive dinner," Christian said. "My wife doesn ' t know that yet."
Breezy Franson, a Metro aerospace technology major and the team's co-captain, said it will have to work hard to take tops in the national competition. Not only will the team have to put in long hours practicing, it also must raise money to go to the competition.
Franson said the cost for the team.. will be about $9,000, some of which will be covered by the Student Travel office and Metro Student Activities. She said the club will make up the difference by wash-.
ing planes at local airports, and selling pizzas and T-shirts on campus.
Franson said in addition to attending a mandatory 3-credit-hour aviation class during the week, the team also spends 5 hours on Saturdays practicing at the Limon airport and in Metro flight simulators.
"We try to have a lot of fun ," Franson said. "You'll never have a 3-hour class where you will work as much as here. We have to get up at 5:30 a. m. to go to Limon."
Christian said the team practices in Limon because its lack of arr traffic. Christian said when most people think of air competitions, they think of speed competitions or acrobatic competitions.
In the regional and national competition, the pilots compete in nine events that simulate the challenges pilots might encounter on a day-to-day basis.
The competitions include precision landing and navigation exercises, in addition to ground events like preflight inspections. For those, a mechanic sabotages the aircraft and the contestant has 15 minutes to find the problem.
Christian said the competitions pay off for the flight team members because
-they can put it on their resumes. He said most students on the team will eventually take jobs as airline pilots after graduation.
Tun Batt/7he Metropolitan
SMOKED OUT: A University of Colorado at Denver business major who did not want to be Identified sits outside the Plaza bulldlng for a smoke break Nov. 19. The student said he wa~ to quit soon.
Sean WeaverrThe Metropolitan FLIGHT OF FANCY: Metro student Justin Gines, a member of Metro's Precision Flight Team, takes off in one of Metro's Aviation department flight simulators.
Students get ready to quit Health center helps people to kick their butts
By Deborah Wiig The Metropolitan
Smokers trying to kick the habit for the "Great American Smokeout" on Nov. 20 got a little help from the Auraria Student Health Center.
Health Center employees passed our survival kits and presented a "Calling it Quits" workshop as part of the annual Smokeout.
The event is sponsored by the American Cancer Society. The health center also offers counseling and discountpriced Nicorette gum.
Attitude is everything, said Linda Wilkins-Pierce, a counselor at the health center who taught the workshop.
"People trying to quit have to believe in their ability to be successful," she said. "They need to identify themselves as a non-smoker, not as a smoker who is trying to quit.
"The Student Health Center offers ongoing individual support. We show them that they have coping skills they may not know they have. They can get through a class or an 8-hour workday without a cigarette. We can help them identify how they do it.
"A pack-a-day smoker puts their fingers to their lips 200 times a day," said Wilkins-Pierce, who is writing a booklet of success stories. "It is important to be aware of these powerful habits in order to overcome them."
Quitting requires defeating not only
the psychological and chemical addictions but also behavior patterns.
"Oh, God, it's hard!" Metro student Jessica Robbins said. "It takes a lot of work."
Robbins, a senior English major, said she smoked her last cigarette six weeks ago. She credits the nicotine patch prescribed by her doctor, as well as her personal resolve.
"I'm under so much stress right now, I can't believe I'm still doing as well as I am," she said. "When I've tried to quit cold turkey, I'd get really irritable, and that would make me go right back to the cigarettes. The patch helps a lot."
It was cold turkey or nothing for Metro freshman Clint Bingham, who quit his pack-and-a-half-a-day habit. On his 19th birthday, he tossed out his cigarettes and didn't look back.
"I think anybody who tells themselves, 'I'll just finish this pack, and then I'll quit,' or uses a nicotine patch, is just fooling themselves," he said. "My fiancee smokes, and it would be real easy to start again, but it's not something I want to do."
Most smokers start as teens, WilkinsPierce said.
"Generally, if they haven't started by the time they're 18 or 19, they won't," she said. "Many of those who are ready to quit are those approaching graduation. They don't want to carry the habit into their new careers."
see QUIT on 9
:'.'I "'I • • -. &. • • - . ..... .... . ' ... P' --· ... •• • • .11 • ' .... i-:.
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6 The Meiropo/iiQll Novei116Cr 21, 1997
0 Auraria ParkWay ' At The Tivoli Student Union
Across From The AMC Theaters (303) 893-0745
Free Soda with the purchase
ofanyWrapp
Hours Monday-Thursday
7:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Friday 7:00 a.m . ..:10:30 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m.
Sunday 12:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
Offer Expires December 31 , 1997 Offer Not Good With Any Other Coupon
••••••••••••
• • • • • • • •
Attention Junior and First Semester
Freshman Majors and Minors in Psychology,
Human Services, Behavioral Science,
and Social Work Participants are needed for a /,ongitudinal research study
evaluating studenJs' thinking about complex problems .
•••• • • Participants will be paid $I 0.00 or • • $15.00, depending on measures taken. • • • Participation this fall will entail about I • to l lf2 hours of your time . • • • 'The present study is being conducted • by Dr. Karen Kitchener, Professor, : College of Education, at the University • ofDenver . • • • Metto professors will not have access • to individual scores. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Friday, November 21 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 :00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m . Tuesday, November 25 11:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
,
Tivoli Room 322 For more inbmalioo,or an aternate lime, please cal
871-7456
••••
TivOli's structure ainplifieS· gig sounds-GIG from 3
being overly disruptive." Student government President
Karmin Trujillo offered another perspective.
"I think the problem is a mixture of both the type of music and the sound of the music," said Trujillo, who also works in the Club Hub on the third floor of the Tivoli. "People have double standards. If they like the music, then it is OK to blast it. But if they don't, then it is not OK."
Smith said the Gig Series' main problem is finding musicians whose music can deal with the acoustical problems plaguing the Tivoli. These problems are blamed on the building's structure.
The sound is amplified as it rises through the main atrium of the Tivoli and reverberates through the
form have also come under attack. 'The music is not exactly what the
students want to hear," Metro freshman hallways, Bryan said.
"This building is extremely difficult to accommodate soundwise because of the dynamics of the building," Smith said. "We are actually fighting the acoustics, and I think the acoustics are far more important than the people who complained."
Volume standards
"If they like the music, then It's OK
to blast It. But If they don't, then
It's not OK." - Karmin Trujillo, Metro SGA president
Marquis Jiggitts said. "Yes, it is diverse and cultured, but I believe that student groups/bands would be much better."
Overall, Series has excellent Bryan said.
the Gig received
feedback,
were not the only criticisms Smith has encountered. The musicians invited to per-
"I have seen many positive visual responses
to the music, such as students bending over the railing to ·see bands play," he said.
PASS UP THESE LOW FARES AND YOU'RE
THE TURKEY
~ DllMR
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STUDENT FARE TO: STUDENT FARE TO:
Chicago/Midway, Dallas/Ft.Worth, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Portland, San Diego,
San Francisco, Seattle
Atlanta, New York/Newark,
Orlando, Wash.D.C./Dulles
FARES SHOWN ARE EACH WAY
We don't think you'll find lower fares ... any way you slice it. But they're definitely for students, only. So make your reservations on our Student Hotline, 1-800-556-2914, or give your Travel
Agent a call. (Plan to show current student photo ID before boarding. Other restrictions
are hiding in the small print.) And hang on to that phone
number. Our super low Student Fares Program will be in
effect through May 21, 1998. Our Can Do Spirit
is always in effect. It helps make flying us ... easy as pie.
THE CAN DO SPIRIT IS BACK!
Restrictions: Student fares shown are each wwy, and do not require a round·trip purchase. Advertised far"' are valid f., travel out of Denver or Colorado Springs. Advertised fa res are valid f., travel on Tuesday, Weanesday, and Saturday for the period of November 1. 1997 through feb<uary 11, t998. and on Monda~ Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday for the period of February 12 through May 21, 1998. Fa1es for travel on peak days are available for a S20 premium over off.peak days. All uavel at these fares must bo completed by May 21 , 1998. Ad..rused fares do not roqu1re an advaoce purchase, but must bo purdlased within 24 hou1' aher reservations are made. Fares lisl~ do not i~U to S 12 in additional Passengt1 Facility Charges. All purchases are non~efundable. Changes may bo made for a SSO chang• fee per peooo. per changt, plus any 11CJease 111 now fare. All fares. fare rules. and change fees are subit<t to chango Without notice. Seats a1 al advertised tares are Kmir.d ill1d may not bo avaiable on .al fl.ighls. Fares are valid only lor sllldents of an acaedtted University or Coltgf btlweon the ages of 17 and 28 years.. Passenger must present proof of age such as buth cenifirate, drives hcense. sbJdenl 10 showing"!!!· "'US fasspor1 at t"'.'.' of~~ ched·1n plus prool of stlJdent status. such as collecJe .m Add~I restncuons may apply. E"':" !owe< published !ares may bo available to set.a destinatlOl!S. Not aR flights operate 7 days a woek. Service betWeen Otnver and'tciloradii Sjinngs is operated by code-shale partner Mountain Air Expiess utili21ng Domiet 121rtlJlb<!.ptoj1 a~a3h~Cl!ie$ ~'lril scheduler are sullje(I to dlangt witlioill riOtice. C 1997 Wtslem Pacific Airlines.
·,
" November 21, 1997 The ~etrqpolitan 7
Peti~~on does little to change. esp~esso cart's fate . By Reem Al-Omari
The Metropolitan
A Metro student has gathered 3,000 student signatures on a petition asking that Auraria extend the lease for Higher Grounds coffee cart or allow the business to oper-ate on campus from a new location. .
This summer, Auraria administrators decided to terminate the coffee cart's lease on Aug. 17 but changed their minds after students opposed the decision. The cart's owners now have until June 1998, when their lease was originally slated to expire, to take their operation elsewhere.
"This is about students being heard," said Mark Sedlacek, a Metro student who started the petition and has been collecting signatures since October.
Metro's Student Government Assembly and the Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board met Nov. 14 in the Tivoli to discuss the petition.
Dwayne Taylor, a member of SACAB 's food service subcommittee, explained that Auraria already decided to honor the full term of the lease and slammed the cart's owners for not bidding to renew their lease. Taylor said the petition misrepresents Auraria's dealings with the cart's owners by placing all the blame on Auraria.
Although the cart has generated a lot of interest, the student government won't be doing much to change the situation, said student government President Karmin Trujillo. ·
Since this is an Auraria issue, not Metro's, it is best addressed by SACAB, which represents all three -schools at Auraria, she said.
Barb Weiske, director of the Tivoli Student Union and Campus Auxiliaries, said Auraria decided to end the cart's lease this summer so. it could find a vendor to run both the cafeteria i~side the..§puth Classroom an~ t~e,f of-
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ESPRESSO YOURSELF: Jeff Diiworth, an employee of the Higher Grounds coffee cart, steams milk for a cappuccino on Nov. 18. Diiworth Is the half-brother of one of the owners of the cart.
fee cart. Leah Johnson, co-owner of Higher Grounds, said she didn't bid again because she didn't have the money or knowledge to run both the cafeteria and cart.
'Tm not interested in that at all," Johnson said. Bidders would have to shell out $50,000 up front to
take over operation of the cart and cafeteria, she said. Weiske offered the lease for both the cart and cafete-
ria to eliminate competition between the two and to attract a vendor that could offer a wider variety of food.
Weiske said moving Higher Grounds somewhere else on campus is not an option because Auraria has already chosen someone to take over the operation of the cart and the cafeteria. Weiske said the new vendor was picked out of seven bidders.
Cash for your books! Fall semester textbook buyback at these locations:
South Classroom - December 10, 11, &12; 9-4 North Classroom, Arts Building- December 15-19; 9-4
Tivoli Student Union December 15-20; M-Th 8-6, F 8-5, S 10-3
AuRARIA BooK CENTER·TrvoLr STUDENT UNroN·556-3230 • I .- .... ~ • • •• 1·1' ... .1" · .... . .. a lJ 1.11L,D~t.:nc . .. . ,,...,, •• .,-. 1 .,. . 1t1i'l;"!fll-Ji ,._~#9•.-•,,..J1•'a•....,.•=~•..,.,.•¥& 1 , 1 .......,..
8 The Metropolitan November21, 1997
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Campus paper finds new homes By Bill Keran The Metropolitan
A student legislative newspaper that was booted out of its old office early this semester found two new places to operate.
The Capitol Reporter's editors learned in September they would be losing the larger of the two rooms the Rocky Mountain News was letting them use rent-free at the 400 block of West Colfax.
The News is now using the space to house its own staff.
The Capitol Reporter is moving its computers into the basement of the Rectory building on campus between St. Cajetan's Center and the Golda Meir House.
The paper is also getting a desk in the state Capitol's press room, a privilege it never had before. Movers began moving office equipment Nov. 19 into the Rectory.
Being spread out between the Capitol, the News and the campus office will not be a problem, said Bob Bums, the paper's chief editor.
Burns said computers at the News office and the Rectory Building
will be connected by modem and by fax machine. The newspaper will likely get a laptop so reporters can write and e-mail stories from the state CapitoL The laptop will be at The Capitol Reporter's desk in the press room.
"We're pretty excited that we have space," said Deb Hurley-Brobst, chairwoman of the Metro Journalism department, of the Rectory space.
"It's a nice space in that it's open and we're going to be able to set up the equipment we need," she said.
In September, members of the journalism department were worried about finding a place to set up shop for the newspaper that would be close enough to the state Capitol and big enough to house several computers.
Doug Bell, who teaches editing classes at Metro and will be the assistant editor of The Capitol Reporter
. this year, said it's better that the newspaper is on campus because his students will have a convenient opportunity to get hands-on training.
"As an editing teacher, it's going to be a lot easier for me to involve my editing students in the work of The Capitol Repol'ler," Bell said.
• • . .
Smokeout strategy QUIT from 5
Tips for kicking the habit Ready: • Notice when and why you smoke and
change your routines. When you want a cigarette, wait a few minutes.
• Buy one pack at a time. Set: • Throw away your cigarettes, hide your ash-
trays. • Clean and deodorize your house and car. Quit: • Drink lots of liquids, but avoid caffeine. • Chew on something such as carrots, gum,
hard candy or straws. • Exercise for energy and to keep your mind
off smoking. • To reduce cravings, eat high-alkaline
foods, such as apples, carrots, potatoes and avoid acid-producing foods, such as bread, rice and eggs. (The Student Health Center can give you a list.)
• Sit in non-smoking sections of public places.
•Keep a pen in your free hand when you're on the phone.
•Avoid fatigue and hunger. Reward yourself at the end of the day.
Staying quit: • Put the cigarette money you've saved in a
jar on the table. • If you slip, don't be discouraged. Others
have slipped and succeeded. • Give yourself credit for each small success. Source: The National Cancer Institute; the American Cancer
Society; Linda Wilkins-Pierce, Auraria Student Health Center
November 21, 1997 The Metropolitan 9
Apply for an MSCD Student Award Each Year Metropolitan State College of Denver honors students who are shining
examples of academic and personal achievement.
• Student Leadership Award
· • Special Service Award from Academic Affairs
• Special Service Award from Student Services
• American Association of University Women Award
•Outstanding Student from eaeh School
•Outstanding Students at Large
•President's Award
Awards are limited to Seniors Graduating by August 1998. The criteria for these awards are influded in the application form available in the office of your major
departdlent. Completed forms are due by Friday, February 6, 1998, ,, in the office of your major department.
For more information, please ra1l the Student Life Office, 556-3559, or your major department.
t ou t,Q shine!
--------~------~ -~-------~-----~-
10 The Metropolitan November 21, 1997
SUMMER STUDY IN
July 6 - July 27, 1998 s PA IN SIX HOURS OF CREDIT Spanish 180, 280, .380 CGraduate credit may be possible)
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TUITION: $95/HR TRAVEL: $3,020
Includes airfare. housing with 2 meals a day. transfers, ftealth lrlsurance. admission to museums and events. transportation on scheduled excl.lf'Si.ops. __ -
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(Financial Aid availllble if nonnallyeligibfi)'i 'J' ·· ', ·
APPLICATION DEADUNE: JANUARY 10, 1998 For further lnformo1loo contact:
Dt Rodolfo Garcia: Plaza 360
Campus Box 26 ,
P.O. Box 173362-3362 Denver. CO 80217- 3362
INFORMATl<;lN MEElilNG· , 1
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Place: Plaza Building, >Room 310
For more information call (303) 556-2908 or come to Plaza Building 360
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November 21, 1997 The Metropolitan 11
Metro faculty members help low-income residents learn to read
. o +-
Jenny Sparks/The Metropolitan
TRUST: Volunteer Dave Parson takes time out to help some of the center's youth with conflict resolution at Metro's Family Center.
By Linda Hardesty and Perry Swamon The Metropolitan
0 n a recent Friday night, Adriano Wycoff was alone at the Hope Six building at North Denver's Quigg-Newton subsidized housing
project. She was working on the computer, trying to load an ancient program onto an ancient machine - and she was so absorbed in her work, she hadn't noticed how late it had become.
"I heard shots outside, and people started throwing rocks at the window," she said.
She closed the blinds and moved away from the window. She checked the phones.
"Yes, sometimes I'm afraid," Wycoff said. But Wycoff and Arthur Campa are dedicated to help
ing people at Quigg-Newton learn how to read and how to live in a world that demands cultural literacy.
Wycoff works for Metro's Family Center. Campa is a professor in the Anthropology department. The two have worked together for J 2 years.
They have a grant to develop a Family Literacy Center at Quigg-Newton, which is near 46th Street and Pecos, and home to 1,300 people.
Wycoff said some families have lived at QuiggNewton for generations and are illiterate. She described one woman who did not know that two dimes and a nickel equaled a quarter. Apparently, when this woman went grocery shopping, she just laid her money on the counter ~n'1 )pt th~ r-"\C'hiPr rnu~t-;; ... - - - - ...
One service the center provides is an after-school tutoring program for students at Remington, Smedly and Horace Mann elementary schools. Sometimes more than 20 children attend the program, which is held four days a week and staffed by volunteers.
"You really see here, working with these kids, the absolute lack of structure in their lives," said Fraser Ohlgren, a volunteer at the tutoring program and graduate of the University of Denver. 'They have zero conflict resolution skills. The minute somebody says something, they fight."
Ohlgren said the children have a hard time imagining what life is like outside their community. He described an incident following a drive-by shooting where a victim lay dead on the ground for 20 hours before police arrived.
When Ohlgren asked the children what they did that day, they responded, "We went to see the body with the head·blown off," he said.
Ohlgren and his friend, Dave Parson, who also volunteers at the center, said they try to reach school-age kids - when they haven't given up yet.
"It definitely is a rough crowd, but you can't get frustrated," said Ohlgren. "If I quit on them, I'm just one more in a long line of people that said 'You suck."'
Parson said it's important for children living in a housing project to realize they have a choice of what to do with their lives. He helps run a dance group for students at Horace Mann Elementary.
Another volunteer at the center, Dee Britton, is a res-
council. She said illiteracy is a family problem. If parents can't read, they are not likely to have books around the house, and they don't read bedtime stories to their children, who get a message that reading is not important. Even though the kids go to school for a while, they aren't encouraged to do their homework and they may end up illiterate. "It's a cycle," Britton said.
She said her own family came from a small MexicanAmerican community in New Mexico where everyone spoke Spanish. Her family moved to Silverton right before she started school.
"I started first grade and didn't know how to speak any English at all," she said.
Out of 13 kids in her family, she was the only one who graduated from high school.
She didn't have her own bedroom where she could find a quiet place to study. Besides, she said, the bedrooms didn't have heat, and Silverton has very cold winters. The whole family of spent their evenings around the wood stove in the kitchen-living room area.
She wanted to graduate because she saw how her parents had to struggle. She would help them pay their bills. Her dad would set out his weekly wages and all his bills on the kitchen table. She would fill out the money orders to pay the bills.·
Although her siblings can read, Britton said, they regret not finishing high school. Her brothers ended up going into the military and her sisters got married.
Britton said the cycle of illiteracy can be broken, but it's best if the parents do it.
Wycoff and Campa agree. They said family learning is much more effective than teaching the parents and the children separately. That's why Wycoff and Campa have established a home-based family literacy program. There are 32 families at Quigg-Newton in the program.
Each week, two teachers visit each of the 32 homes. The families are typically a single mother with pre-schoolaged children. The teachers give assignments to the whole family, and then the homework is reviewed at the next visit.
In-home education is effective because parents can help their children and learn for themselves at the same time.
Britton says that illiterate adults often have feelings of self-loathing. They consider themselves stupid. She suggests that support groups help these people because they need to know they aren't the only one who can't read.
Metro's family literacy program includes English as a Second Language and GED instruction. Child-care is provided for these programs so adults can concentrate and work together.
The Metro family literacy program also holds a homework clinic for school-age kids each day after school. Wycoff says quite a few kids come to the clinic, partly because they don't have anything else to do.
'Tm real pleased," Wycoff said of the program. "Of course I'd always like to see more. But these kinds of programs take a long time."
Wycoff and Campa have spend hundreds of hours at Quigg-Newton that they call "face-time," which simply means becoming a familiar face at the complex to gain residents' trust.
Campa once spent so much time there, he was nominated for an office at the residents' council. He explained that he was ineligible because he didn't live at QuiggNewton. The people at the meeting said, "You don't?"
Wycoff does her grocery shopping in the neighborhood. Once, she ran into a resident who was looking at all the varieties of teething biscuits at the local Safeway. The resident couldn'.t read English very well and asked Wycoff for help. The two discussed biscuits for half an hour.
'"Tnu·t ic: ~ hio fp~turP n r"'"'""' " .... iA
12 The Metropolitan November 21, 1997
CODE N = e,•p;
Atfli:
OTIS The Boller Room Tivoli Student Union Happy Hour: 4-7 Mondays-Fridays
~ The last time I was at the BR, some
body, I recall it was the bar manager, kicked me out, saying something to the effect of, "don't ever try to come back here again ."
It was after attending a Broncos game and I was totally sober, so I don't know what the problem was.
So with that in mind: The BR is OK. It has cool new video games, and it used to have cute waitresses. If the BR were anywhere but on campus, it just wouldn 't be like Mayberry.
"I just called the campus police, and they have your description," someone said. Good thing I didn't become just another statistic.
Not that getting kicked out of bars isn't bad enough, last week the Rocky Mo1.1:ntain News reported that JO students were cited on Auraria Campus for liquor violations.
If I could get JO people up in Sheriff Taylor's jail, we'd be havin' a par-tay.
Here, future and past student drinkers, is the Top 10 Ways to Get Caught Drinking at S.chool (because present student drinkers already know what's up.):
1. You do all your homework for next hour at the bar.
2. When your prof asks if you got No. 40 right, you say, "You should have asked, I finished it in the car."
3. You leave your tab open at Soapy Smith's while attending Feminist Theory (WMS 230).
4. You keep referring to your notes as "My gin and juice."
5. You think there's enough time between 10:50 and 11 to make it to the BR.
6. For Speech JO I, you explain the subtle difference between a Bombay and tonic vs. a Tangueray and tonic.
7. You ask your photo teacher if it 's OK to take a break for happy hour.
8. You think it's safe to have "only one martini and a $7 cigar" before night accounting class.
9. You count drinking with an associate professor as "extra credit."
JO. You buy E&J Cask and Cream to mix with your coffee and forget to add the coffee.
The BR is, of course, located in the Historic Tivoli, otherwise known as "Taco Bell and McDonald's." For more information, consult this newspaper staff or look for an ad in your spring class bulletin.
-by Frank Kimitch
Swingin' 9th Avenue West makes dancing fun despite snotty attitude
By Ricardo Baca The Metropolitan
9th Avenue West 9th Avenue and Acoma Street 572-8006
9th Avenue West. The name just emits pretentiousness. When describing a location, people would normally say
"West 9th Avenue." People may ordinarily spell out "ninth" when writing it
down. But the Izod-wearing Ken-doll-look-alike who drives his Lexus sports utility vehicle down Cherry Creek Boulevard with his Starbucks coffee in his leather cupholder would probably say "9th Avenue West."
As proclaimed on its stationary and answering machine, the club is "Denver's premier swing supper club." True enough.
It is also true that it is Denver's only swinging supper club. One thing they should be concerned about is the lack of
space - not only for eating and socializing, but for swing dancing, too.
A swing club should have sufficient room to swing dance - a form of dance that requires space, especially for people just learning. Visitors on any average Friday or Saturday night will find it an adventure finding a table and, subsequently, room to dance.
As a swing and big band afi-cionado, I can appreciate their ~ .J.
bringing quality local and national music to a Denver stage. But the attitude they do it with leaves much to be desired. The wait service is bad, and aside from a few really friendly bartenders, the entire staff treats customers like dog poo.
A few waitresses, with characteristics that make them hard to for
get, look so perturbed and distraught@ that "you want a whiskey sour and f. also need change for a fifty?!" They ~ ..... bring new meaning to the cliche, "the look of death."
It's true that they have to work their
way through the bustling club, which is small but still draws crowds over 1,000 people nightly. But they still are there to serve and please the customer.
The staff aren't the only elitists at 9th Avenue West. The crowds are equally stuffy. Not to say that all the visitors are pompous, but the majority of people standing around are as full of themselves as the Stay-Puf Marshmallow Man.
Their $1,000 smiles sparkle and. their Gavin Rossdale-esque hair glimmers.
Even with all of these vile characteristics, the club has its pluses.
It's been instrumental in bringing good bands to Denver. They have brought Indigo Swing in from San Francisco a couple times and had the Cherry Poppin' Daddies here for its grand opening celebrations.
The lessons available at the club, taught by Joan and Les Cooper, are also very good. They often deal with large crowds of people and do a good job informing people abou.t the basics of swing in only an hour-long lesson.
The experienced swing dancers at the club are very humble and courteous and always willing to help the lesser-experi
enced dancers. As unofficial ambassadors of the club, they keep the people coming back for
more. Lord knows it's not the cocktail wait
resses. The 9th Avenue West schedule:
Mondays - Live big band music.
Tuesdays - DJ K-Nee spins acid jazz.
Wednesdays Vintage swing and rocka
billy music with dance lessons at 9 p.m ..
Thursdays __: Latin jazz and salsa music.
Fridays and Saturdays -Live music. Nov. 21 and 22 is the debut of the club's house band, Papa Grande and His Double-Wide Jumptet.
Sundays - Live music by 17-piece big band Spectrum.
Graphic by Lara Wille-Swink
Student new teller .of old tales By Kendra Nachtrieb The Metropolitan
Storytellers have been retelling mankind's history and giving explanations for the unexplainable since the first human walked on the surface of the earth. Ancient people's only textbooks were the elders that surrounded them.
This ancient art of storytelling is coming to Metro on Nov. 23 with Tellabration '97, "Carriers of the Dream Wheel."
Tellabration is a storytelling event that began in 1988 when storytellers came together for a weekend of sharing and listening. Since then, it has grown into a worldwide event involving people from all walks of life.
Metro' s Tellabration was organized by Sky Walker, a senior who will be the first • student in Metro's history to graduate with a degree in storytelling,
Walkei:, J1a_s achiev~~ thi~ !Jlroug~-
Metro's Independent Degree Plan, which offers students the choice of creating their own degree in areas that Metro does not offer degrees.
She combined elements from communication, anthropology and English; along with storytelling internships with professors.
She became interested in story-
Sky Walker telling while doing work study at the
Denver City Theater. She saw a brochure for a black woman who was traveling around the country as a storyteller.
A friend gave her Storytelling: Process and Practice, a textbook by University of Colorado at Denver professor Norma Leivo. It inspired Walker to continue_ into !1!,e_ ~rea of _s!orytel~~~·
"I just love storytelling," Walker said. "It covers different areas, and I have lerned a lot of interesting things."
Walker got involved with Tellabration last year but wasn' t satisfied with the events.
She approached Metro theater Professor Marilyn Hetzel, who found budget money for Walker to hold an event this year.
Her goal is to attract many diverse Metro students.
''I'd really like to see a lot of students there to experience storytelling," Walker said. "I also am hoping to get some Spanish speaking peoples to come because we have two tellers from Mexico who will be speaking in Spanish and bilingually."
"It will be a unique experience, especially for those who haven' t been to a storytelling event."
Tellabration will be held from 3:00 to
6:0~ P·~·- ~-T~o~i_2_6_1. The event is free.
~- --------~--
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November 21, 1997 The Metropolitan 13
Not just mountains and sheep anymore
Jamie Jarrettflhe Metropolitan
REFLECTIONS: Face No. :11. by Joseph Amram, photo and mixed media, part of Visions: Contemporary Colorado Photography, at the Emmanuel Gallery through Dec. 21.
'Visions' show details growth of contemporary Colorado photography
By Ryan Bachman The Metropolitan
Contemporary Colorado photography has certainly come a long way from the typical postcard shots of mountain landscapes and bighorned sheep.
Visions: Contemporary Colorado . Photography, a statewide juried exhibition of 40 photo-based media artists, has examples of this progress.
The exhibit, at the Emmanuel Gallery through Dec. 21, is being sponsored by the
a sepia-toned photo by Terry Maker. The tower is essentially a birdhouse fashioned ou.t of the dictionary, Grimms' Tales and other books winding around one another. It makes a monument out of words, cheapening them into a habitable fortress of nesting grasses and wooden pitchers.
Also poking fun al culture is John Davenport's Modem Icon #5. Davenport takes blue prints of American favorites such as a Barbie doll, a syringe, Marilyn Monroe, all topped off by a .45 caliber pistol.
Davenport really does a number on pick
Colorado Photographic Arts Center and the UCO Fine Arts Department.
Tower of Babble ... ing apart the America's pop culture of the last 50 years, which sadly has taken itself a little loo seriously and occasionally needs to be knocked off its pedestal for a moment.
Visions features a wide array of works, including five innovative prints by John Bonath. His pieces all have wooden settings and jointed mannequin arms, which seem to play intricate roles.
makes a monument of words, cheapening them into a hab
itable fortress of Davenport seems to realize a definite need for iconoclasm in art.
nesting grasses and wooden pitchers.
In In The Kingdom of Fate, marionette strings support a ptero-dactyl skeleton mOdel. In another of his pieces, Death, The Final Blessing, one of these arms has been severed at the wrist by an ax.
Perhaps Bonath's most animated piece is . An Eventful Life is a Book With Many Chapters, which centers on an old woman hugging a thick old b~k with her skinny little arms. She seems like something out of the children's fairy books with her bony frame and synthetic, wild green hair standing on end.
Another literary piece is Tower of Babble,
On a more sensual scale is Mark Sink's Lani Above Shanon.
This piece bears a serene emotion all its own. Four women make up the image, covered only in sheer white fabric and a thin fog, all swimming and floating in air as if they were part of a ritual exotic dance.
The show was juried by Patrick Nagatani, an art professor at the University of New Mexico.
Emmanuel Gallery hours are MondayFriday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and Saturday, noon-4
p.m.
Want your ass kicked? Find out how Last Monday, At A Concert.
which would be J. Being much more interested in more specifically conversing with your friends than in Nov. J 7, I went to watching the show. You can talk to your go see Stereolab. damn friends anytime. That's why the They were great - phone was invented. I'm not talking transcendent, even. about the occasional comment here and So what am I com- there, I'm addressing the fine folks out
B. Erin Cole plaining about? there who chattered the entire duration of Why am I even writ- the show. Specifically, I'm talking about ing this column? the two guys in front of me who would
Well, ate crowd at the aforemen- just not shut up, no matter how many tioned show was easily the worst that people glared at them. I've seen at a Denver show in a very long 2. Being obnoxious. In every large time. And believe me, I've seen some bad crowd, there is at least one incredibly ones. I didn't have to punch anyone annoying person who everyone wants to (which I have done before), but I esti- hurt. This show's shining example is the mate that a good number of the folks I guy in the back who kept yelling, "Fuck saw a few days ago deserved a good ass techno! Bring out the guitars!" at Mouse whuppin' . on Mars, the opening band. OK, every-
So, because I know how fascinated one is entitled to their opinion, but dumb you all are about the topic, I present - people shouldn't share theirs. If he dido 't Five Way~ ;rp ,Get- Me To Kick Your Ass • •• ~nt to be'C'xposed to such horrors as -
gasp - electronic music, why did he come to this particular show?
3. Dancing with malice. I don't mind dancing at shows. I do it a lot myself. But there is always the occasional moment when what may be fun to you invokes hatred in the eyes of others. An example would be the person in front of me who kept bumpin' her ass into my side. She needed to be hurt, especially after she said to me:"Honey, if you were dancing harder, then I wouldn't *need* to keep rammin' into you." (Note: I was
dancing. And I'm not your honey.) 4. Beiog incredibly pleased with
your own particular subculture. This concert brought together the weirdest mix of camps that I've seen in Denver for awhile. Shiny rave kids, scary emo boys, band shirt-clad indie rockers , ·we ird goofy "I just wanna see their Moog" technophile goofs ... they were all there. I heard enough of "my God, why are
IUJ!, >I] )' 11) , j
those people here" al the show to last me a lifetime.
5. Bon king the heads of people coming up the stairs with your fist. For some reason, these two guys who were standing on an overhang over the stairs going up to the exit/bar/restroom/whatever. About halfway during the show, they thought it would be a good idea to slap everyone who came up the stairs on top of the head. Slapping turned to poking, and poking turned into honking, and there became some very, very pissed people. One of the guys was sitting in a very precarious position on the rail, and I spent a lot of time during the show mulling over whether or not I should push him off.
I had a good time, even though it may not seem like it. But beware. If I catch any of you out there doing these things - well, you know. You've had ample warning.
=- ,... -
4: •••
14 The Metropolitan November 21 , 1997
$2 , ··11" · ,, -
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Southern charm apparent in Eastwood's 'Garden' By Tracy Rhines The Metropolitan
Clint Eastwood takes the director's chair once again to present his version of John Berendt's novel Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. A tale that starts out simple and gradually becomes a complicated web of murder and intrigue.
John Cusack plays John Kelso, a New York writer sent to Savannah, Ga,. to cover an elegant Christmas party. The lavish event is hosted by Jim Williams (Kevin Spacey), a very influential and eccentric ' Southern gentleman, with a taste for collecting expensive baubles and rare art.
John finds a culture in Savannah that amazes him, referring to it as "Gone With the Wind on mescaline!" It's a place where they walk dogs that are no longer alive and old women wave firearms at parties, exclaiming, "I can't wait to shoot a man!"
The kid gloves are removed when young Billy Hanson (Jude Law) is killed after the festivities. Jim Williams holds
the smoking gun but claims self-defense. Kelso, who witnessed Billy drinking
heavily and threatening Jim earlier in the evening, immediately drops his story for the magazine and decides to write a book aboutthe events surrounding the death.
Being an outsider and especially a 'Yankee,'. John finds it difficult lo get information, until he meets The Lady Chablis. She's the ex-roommate of Billy 's ex-girlfriend and can attest to Billy 's penchant for violent behavior.
Kelso, along with Chablis and other characters he meets, embarks on a mission to find the truth that will free Jim and get John the information for his book.
The movie's story was fascinating and the characters were interesting, but didn't inspire sympathy for their dilemmas.
The end, where the characters' secrets are revealed in public court, was not as strong as expected.
This is a pity, considering the strong cast of Academy-Award winners and a location with as much charm and flavor as Savannah.
concerts----bluebird theater 3317 E. Colfax Ave. 322-2308
Let's Go Bowling, Nov. 21, 6 p.m., $7. Emilio Emilio, Nov. 22, 8 p.m., $7.
Manga Japanimation Film Festival, Nov. 24, 7 p.m., $5. Lunachicks, Nov. 25, 8 p.m., $6. Lord of Word and the-Disciples of Bass, Nov. 26, 9 p.m., $7. Wayne "The Train" Hancock, Nov. 27, 9 p.m., $7.
Leftover Salmon, Nov. 28-29, 8 p.m., $14. Indigo Swing, Nov. 30, 8 p.m., $8.
boulder theatre 14th and Peait Streets, Boulder, 786-7030.
Moby, Nov. 28, 8 p.m., $12.60-$14.70.
Tony Furtado Band, Nov. 29, 9 p.m. Bulgarian Women's Choir, Nov. 30, 7:30 p.m., $23.10. Dee Dee Bridgewater, Dec. 3, 8 p.m., $16-$22.
cricket on the hill 1209 E. 13th Ave., 830.-9020.
Sans Sobriety, Slewhounds and
Sector 7-G, Nov. 21.
Smokin' Tweed and the Wigfarmers, Nov. 22.
Johnson, Nov. 22. Teresa Lymr, Nov. 24. Freak Hunger and Floodline, Nov. 25. Tequila Mockingbird and The Novembers, Nov. 26.
1..Sth street tavern 15th and Welton Streets, 575-5109
The Dismemberment Plan, Nov. 22.
The Promise Ring and Compound Red,
Nov. 29.
fox theatre 1135 13th St., Boulder. 443-3399
Freddy Jones Band, Nov. 21, 9 p.m., $16.75.
Zigaboo Modeliste and Leo Nocentelli,
Nov. 22, 9 p.m., $15.75. Vena Cava, Nov. 23, 9:30 p.m., free. The Reverend Billy C. Wirtz, Nov. 23, 9 p.m., $I 0.50-$11.55. Eric Burdon, Nov. 24, 8 p.m., $14.75. Furious Howard Brown, Nov. 26, 9:30 p.m., $1.
Tuck and Patti, David Arkenstone, Liz Story and Lisa Lynne, Dec. I, 8 p.m., $23. Agents of Good Roots, Dec. 3, 9 p.m., $4.25.
Everything, Dec. 4, 9:30 p.m., $3.
mercury cafe 2199 Callfornla St., 294-9821
The Mercury Chamber Ensemble, Nov. 21, 8 p.m., $12-$18. Dick Keeler, Nov. 22, 8 p.m., $6-$8.
Jazz West, Nov. 23, 7:30 p.m., $5. Chuck The Funk and the MH2 Funkers, Nov. 25, 9 p.m., $4. The Hot Tomatoes, Nov. 28, 9 p.m., $ I 0.
Jazz Spectrum, Nov. 29, 8 p.m., $5.
mcnichols arena Denver Sports Complex, 830.-TIXS
Motley Criie, Nov. 30, 7:30 p.m., $22.50-$28.50.
ogden theater 935 E. Colfax Ave., 830.-2525
The Sundays, Nov. 22, 8 p.m., $20.
Ben Folds Five, Nov. 24, 8 p.m., $13-$15.
Green Day;Nov. 28, 8 p.m., $20.
GusGus, Nov. 29, 8 p.m., $13.50.
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• Optional Full-time Course Loads in the Summer
• Contemporary Art Facilities
•Academic Classes with Other Art Majors ... 6875 East Evans Avenue. Denver, Colorado 80224 • 303-753-6046 • www.rmcad.edu
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16 The Metropolitan November 21, 1997 Commentar Gig series let there be rock
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·-'~lfbm ·· ·· Editorial News: The Gig Series in the Tivoli,
'"a 2-hour band 'performance each Wednesday, is creating controversy.
Views: Students and businesses should find other things to complain about.
performed Nov. 5.
Hey, kids, do you like the rock-n-roll? Apparently not.
Some people in the Tivoli have complained about the volume of the music performed each week in the Tivoli Atrium. The Gig Series, which brings a different band to the student union for 2 hours each week, has drawn fire from student leaders and administrators.
Metro Dean of Student Life Yolanda OrtegaEricksen complained specifically about Mary Madness, the group that
"It was so loud that it ceased to be music .to me and turned into noise," Ortega-Ericksen said.
Student Government Assembly Vice President of Student Organizations Jim Hayen said the organizers
Drastic measures to noise reduction .....
of the event should "search for music that is entertaining without being overly disruptive."
Granted, sometimes the music reaches ear-shattering proportions. And no band is capable of pleasing everyone.
But come on. This is a college campus, and 2 hours a week is not an exorbitant time frame.
The performances attract attention. This does _most Tivoli businesses justice by bringing interested students into the building.
Perhaps a maximum volume level limit could be established to avoid breaking glass or making life miserable for those doing office work for the 2-hour period each week, but calling for a particular style of music that is "entertaining" is far too subjective to be realistic.
Closing one's office doors will eliminate the brunt of the distraction if the music is too loud.
The Gig Series is one of few events that can entertain students without forcing undivided attention. You still can eat. You still can shop. You still can study in one of the lounges in the Tivoli .
Or if you just can't stand the music, you can leave for 2 hours and let the band play on.
New Metro president? Pick one The recent hiring of former
U.S. Sen. Hank Brown as president of the University of Northern Colorado got me thinking.
Maybe if we convinced some high profile candidates to express their desire to head up
Travis Henry Metro, we could get rid of
The Lowdown Metro's Queen Sheila Kaplan once and for all.
The job pays $137,500 a year and gives you the power to destroy whole Journalism departments on a whim.
I am sure that several people in the public would find running Metro both challenging and rewarding.
Many fine prospects jump to mind. In no particular order, here is the Metro wish list
for a new college president and why each individual is qualified:
• Rush Limbaugh. He can manipulate statistics like no one else can. Never again will Metro's enrollment or standards decline. Rush will just blame such a perceived decline on scare tactics used by democrats.
• Fidel Castro. Already adept at running a dictatorship. Also will bring in many fine Cuban cigars, all the rage these days down in LoDo.
• Dan Quayle. Because "The Met" is easier to spell than potato.
• The lead singer for the rock group No Doubt (don't know her name, don' t care). Because she's Hot!!
• Bill Gates. No more Apple computer problems. Actually, no more Apple computers at all.
• Agent Scully or Agent Mulder. Let's face it. There are some strange occurrences around here that go unexplained. If they can't figure it out, no one can.
• Manuel Escamilla, former assistant vice president of Student Services. So protesting students who have no clue will quit their ignorant whining.
•Princess Di. Oh wait. She's dead. • John and Patsy Ramsey. They can keep a
secret. • Hillary Clinton. Because she used to be Hot,
and she's smart, too!! • Walt Weiss. Can turn a better double-play .than
Sheila. Come back to Colorado, Walt! •Travis Henry. So I can really piss you off. You
think it's bad now? • Steven Spielberg. We really, really need a
Planet Hollywood in the Tivoli. • Saddam Hussein. Loyal to the death. Down
with godless, greedy capitalist state legislators! Give us the money or else!
• Ascent Promoter Barry Fey. We really need some good bands down here at Auraria. Not to mention scantily clad Las Vegas showgirls. Nobody's going to see them at Nuggets games, Barry, nobody.
•Ted Kennedy. The Boiler Room has been having a slow month.
As you can see, there are many fine candidates out there to replace the president we have now. If you come into contact with any of these fine individuals, please urge them to announce their interest in Sheila's job.
The sooner, the better. Travis Henry is a Metro student and a columnist for The Metropolitan
America doesn't have to deal with Iraq or Saddam
Dave Romberg
Jive
country's children.
And history repeats itself once again.
Last time, we made the mistake of letting him live. Now, Saddam Hussein is thumbing his nose at the American government, daring us to make him obey the rules - live between the lines.
He's using families to protect his interests. He's setting up schools at military objective points, cowardly shielding himself with the lives of his
A despicable act from a despicable man. And what does America do about it? Some would say it's not our business. "America is
not the world's police force," they say. But when a madman feels no compunction threaten
ing the lives of his own people to secure his sovereignty, he poses a threat to the rest of the free world. Therefore, someone must take action.
But it doesn't have to be America. Many times in the last few years I've heard or read
Americans' complaints about how much funding this country provides Israel.
"What. do we get in return for this?" they ask. Simple. A Middle East police force.
Israel has proven time and time again that it has no problem keeping that area of the world under control. With the planet's No. I air force, it has beaten back attackers on several occasions. Often, those attackers have included many nations at once.
And, in the past, it has taken as little as 6 days to accomplish that. So America withdraws all of its troops from the gulf. It then fashions a contract with Israel, deputizing the country as a Middle East peacekeeping force. Objectives come from American command, however, tactics and military control are retained by Israel.
"What about the U.N.?" those people ask. Let me digress. Did you know that there is only one member country of the United Nations that is ineligible to sit on the Security Council? Iraq is eligible. Libya and South Africa are both eligible. But Israel is not. The U.N. is like communism. It looks great on paper, but when it comes to the real world°, it just doesn't work.
The United Nations is little more than a way for America to pull itself from a decision-making process while leaving itself financially and militaristically responsible for the outcome. In other words, America is the U.N.
With that semantic bout out of the way, back to what this plan does. It accomplishes a few things:
•American soldiers are pulled from harm's way. • Funding for Israel is justified. • The Middle East is forced into a peace it hasn't
seen in more than 50 years. Arab world, relax. This plan does not give Israel the
chance to expand its borders, turning the Arabian peninsula into the Jewish peninsula.
Israel isn't being given free reign. It will not be allowed to act from its own compulsion, so Arab nations have no need to worry about a misuse of power.
Don't want to have to deal with Saddam, Am·erica? Then don't.
Dave Flomberg is a Metro student and a copy editor/columnist for The Metropolitan · · · - ~ - - - · - · - - - - - - - ..
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STAFF EDITOR
Michael BeDan MANAGING EDITOR
Rick Thompson COPY EDITORS
Dave Flomberg Claudia Hibbert-BeDan
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Tlie Metropolitan is produced by and for the studenlS of The Metropolitan State Colle&e of Denver serving the Auraria Camp!U. The Metropolitan is supported by adver~ revenues and student fees, and is puhlished every Friday during the academic year and monthly during the summer semester. The Metropolitan is distributed to all campus buildings. No pel'S(}n may take mare than one copy of each edition of The Metropolitan without prior written permission. Direct any questions, complaints, complimenlS or commenu to the MSCD Board of Publications do The Metropolitan. ·opinions expressed within do not necessarily refl«t those of The Metropolitan, The Metropolitan State Colle&e of Denl>er or its advertisers. Deadline for calendar items is S p.m. Friday. Deadline/or pressreleases is IOa.m. Monday. Display advertising deadline is 3 p.m. Friday. Classified advertising deadline is 5:00 p.m. Monday. The Metropolitan~ offices are loco red in the Tivoli Student Union Suite 313. Mailing address is P.0.Box 173362, Campus Bo:i 57, Denver, CO 80217-3362. 0 AU fi&hu reserved. The Metropolitan is primed on recycled paper.
Let.ten .--~ _ .. -........_...N-----ovem_,..--ber......-----.-21. l==-997 -=-r1ie .-.--Metro~polit-a11 ~1,
U.S., Iraq policy fatally flawed Seven years after the Gulf crisis, as
the U.S. weighs its options, including military strikes, the Iraqi people continue to suffer under the sanctions. The crisis is of unprecedented proportions. The sanctions against Iraq have shattered civil society, the economy and the educational system.
The U.N'. International Children's Fund estimates that 4,Soo· children are dying every month - one every I 0 minutes. Dr. Hala Maksoud, president of the ADC, Arab-American AnliDiscriminalion Committee, said, "There is exactly one big loser in this - the Iraqi people."
While there have been levels of noncomplianc~ by Iraq, the regime has conformed with most of the requirements to
dismantle its weapons of mass deslniction. National Security Advisor Sandy
Berger noted on CNN that UNSCOM has destroyed more Iraqi weapons than the Gulf War. There should be recognition of this and the sanctions should be eased.
Indeed, the humanitarian crisis is so grave, Iraqi compliance with UNSCOM should be decoupled from the devastating sanctions regime. The sanctions prohibit items, ·including pencils, sewing machines, agricultural pesticides and chlorine to purify the water. Food and medicine should not be used as weapons. Twenty-two million Iraqis should not be held hostage to international political maneuvering.
The issue at hand must remain
between Iraq and the U.N. Security Council, not Iraq and the U.S. The U.S. should not unilaterally act against Iraq. All the parties concerned, including the Arab League and the Islamic Conference, should be consulted and these bodies should also be used lo distribute humanitarian relief to Iraqis. There are diplomatic options in this crisis, and the U.S. should refrain from using force.
U.S. policy has been to insist that the sanctions remain in place so long as the Iraqi regime remains in po.wer. This undermines the U.N. resolutions and creates a disincentive for the Iraqi regime to comply with the resolutions.
lyad Allis Metro student
Complaints of dismount policy extreme Editor, The editorial (The Metropolitan , Nov.
14) on the new skate/bike policy was extreme. Do you really expect us to believe that because of these new barri-
· cades that people will now choose lo spend extra time driving to school, paying
$2 to park, and then walking five to 10 minutes to class. Come on.
The extra minute it will take for you lo walk from the bike rack (which is where I presume you park your bike, or do you just park it outside your classroom door?) should not be the deciding factor on
whether you drive or bike. During that extra minute, think of the potential accident you have just eliminated.
I ride my bike to school, and I do dismount at the blue signs.
Jill Jaeger Metro student
PC is, about respecting ourselves, others . ~ Editor, This is in response to Dave
Flomberg's little ditty about the blind and PC (The Metropolitan, Nov. 7).
Your headline, "PC blindly goes nowhere, everywhere," insults the blind by insinuating they can go nowhere. This reinforces negative perceptions of· the blind like using "black" as a negative connotation.
As you continue your casual observations, yes it may seem odd to have Braille at drive-through ATM machines. But how do you know it may not be useful at times? What if a blind person is with a driver who has learning disabilities who cannot operate an ATM but the blind person can? This is a possibility, not to mention, God forbid, that we may include blind people in everyday activities such as asking them to help us with our ATM transactions when they are with us in our cars.
Then we wind to your paragraph crit-
1c1zrng the mall of their exclusion of Hebrew, and I wonder how you can be insensitive toward blind people and then demand equal treatment for yourself. Your actions are not consistent. You'll fight for your people but attack other marginalized groups?
And then we have your superficial wail against differences and respect. Maybe you haven't noticed yet, but many people are uncomfortable with those they perceive as different to the point where they do not discern any commonalties. As for singling out differences, it is usually the person in a more privileged position who does the singling. This creates a pecking order so his or her false sense of superiority remains intact.
Yes, respect ourselves is one step; respecting others is another. That is what PC is: plain courtesy, plain respect. That is all PC ever was until people who felt their privilege was threatened and started co-
opting the '70s feminist tenn "political correctness" by using il derisively as if compassion and the need to connect with our human family across all races, classes, genders, sexual orientations, etc., is sus-pect. \
Although at times I feel that the mainstream media has belittled the term "political correctness" ad nauseam, at least it is obvious that feminist/womanist consciousness has prevailed so soundly that even a national TV show is dedicated to "Politically Incorrect." I would just like to witness a few less talking heads, and a few more talking hearts. As a people, Americans have not learned to love each other unconditionally and that is one of our greatest crimes against humanity.
Kathy Hovis Metro graduate
Editor's note: Dave Flomberg did not write the headline for his column
Semester ending, SGA's work continues Editor, Your Student Government Assembly
has been working all semester on a variety of issues. These issues include fighting forthe rights of disabled students, revising Metro's student fee plan, creating a student fee brochure to be mailed lo all students, researching the Faculty Senate's fall break and plus/minus grading system resolutions, investigating the funding disparity between Metro and the other state colleges under the Board of Trustees and finding a food vendor for South classroom.
The new nickname for the college
'The Mel" is also an issue we have been working on. The issue here is not only the new nickname, but also the administration's blatant denial of student participation on such a major change. Not only do we have a new nickname, but we also have a new image.
The SGA has been working for protection of students' rights. Students do have rights! Isn't il amazing?
We have also been doing other things. If you want to meet your student government representatives and find out for yourselves what we have been doing, then
come lo our town hall meeting Friday, Nov. 21 from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. on the second floor of the Tivoli Student Union in the Multicultural Lounge (south entrance of the Tivoli). We will discuss issues surrounding Students Right to Know and The Future of Metro. We will also have a question and answer session.
Come meet the students who are representing you on this campus.
Jessie Bullock Metro SGA
vice president for Student Fees • ,, t ;\ , . "' • . ' ' ... t . ,, ... " ' . ' , ..... ., ~ t , ' ., , • '
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_........-~~~~=--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 18 The Metropolitan November 21, 1997
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November 21, 1997 The Metropolitan 19
No. 13 Roadrunners reach regionals Volleyball team in national competition after taking third in RMAC event By Michael BeDan The Metropolitan
So much for rebuilding. The Metro volleyball team's future is now.
The expected growing pains of a young, vulnerable collection of talented but not-quite-ready-for-Prime-Time athletes quickly exploded into a bona fide contender -two matches away from reaching the Elite Eight.
And with a 3-0 regular-season victory over Regis, top seed in the Division II volleyball regionals (Nov. 22-23 at Regis University), the Metro volleyball team proved it can play with almost anyone. The real test, however, will come in the its opening regional match against the University of Southern Colorado Nov. 22 at 5 p.m.
USC, a team with a four-match winning streak over the Roadrunners, including a five-game victory Nov. 15 in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference tournament semifinals, stands between Metro and a regional title bout with Regis or Hawaii-Hilo.
The Roadrunners enter regionals as the No. 2 seed. Regis is No. 1, Hawaii-Hilo is No. 4, and USC is No. 3.
''This is great to be this far so fast," Metro coach Joan McDermott said. "We are probably the only team in the region with a shot at beating Regis. For some reason, we match up really well with them."
Metro's berth into regionals didn't materialize until it ~ocked off the University of Nebraska-Kearney in the third-place match of the RMAC tournament Nov. 15.
The Roadrunners lost 15-11, 9-15., 8-15, 15-9, 15-13 to USC in the semifinals after beating Adams State College in the opening round.
"We could have won it, but we got stuck and made a lot of hitting errors," McDermott said of the semifinal loss. "But it was a great match."
The loss put the Roadrunners in a do-or-die situation heading into the UNK match and a four-game win (15-8, 8-15, 17-15, 15-7) over the No. 13-ranked Lopers earned Metro a spot at regionals.
"If we lost, there was a good chance we weren't going to go (to regionals)," McDermott said. "It scared me a little bit, but I had to tell them. I told them after our (USC)
Jenny Sparks/The Metropolitan
HANG TEN: Metro senior Laurie Anderson (left) and freshman Mlchelle Edwards reach to block a ball during a conference tournament third-place match with Nebraska-Kearney Nov. 15 at Regis University. The Roadrunners won the match and quallfled for the Regional Tournament Nov. 22-23.
match. And I said, 'All we've got is today, and if we don't win, we don't deserve to go."'
Metro responded with only its third win ever over UNK and second this season. The first win came in 1989.
Michelle Edwards earned RMAC freshman of the year and lived up to her billing in the third-place match . Edwards led the Roadrunners with 16 kills. Holly Rice and Shannon Ortell chipped in with I 3, Kelly Young had I 2, and Audra Littou finished with I I.
Facing a possible 2-1 deficit with UNK leading 14-13 in Game 3, Metro fought off game point to tie the score. After fighting off another game point at I 5-14, the Roadrunners responded with three-straight to take Game 3
and take command.
Rice, a senior, said another shot at No. 3-ranked Regis is all the Roadrunners can ask. Metro lost to Regis 3-1 Oct. 30.
"I just think if we have one more chance at them ... " Rice said, alluding to the fact that Metro has nothing to lose now since it's advanced further than even its coach could have predicted. "Totally no pressure. That's the way I feel, and that's how any team plays its best."
The Roadrunners, ranked No. I 3, return to regionals for the first time since 1993 and make their first appearance as an RMAC school. Metro's last appearance came as a member of the now-defunct Colorado Athletic Conference. The Elite Eight is slated for Dec. 6-7 at Michigan Tech.
McDermott, Edwards earn RMAC honor roll By Kyle.Ringo The Metropolitan
to her teammates. "I was mad," Edwards said. "We
deserve some respect, and no one is Metro volleyball coach Joan McDermott and standout giving us any."
freshman outside hitter Michelle Edwards are happy with McDermott and Edwards are the awards they have won, but not all together satisfied. especially baffled when it comes to
The Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference named what they view as a snubbing of McDermott its co-Coach of the Year, and Edwards as junior Audra Littou. Newcomer of the Year on Nov. 15. Joan McDennott Littou ranks among conference
Still, McDermott and Edwards aren't all smiles. leaders in several categories, includ-1 They are a bit miffed that no Metro player made the ing kills and digs, but was left off the
first team all-conference team. and "shocked" that no team in favor of players from schools Roadrunner made the first team of the East Division squad. with lesser stats.
"Either the vote got spread between our players, or McDermott said she has spoken someone voted us low," McDermott said. to conference officials about retooling
McDermott shares her award with Regis University the system used in deciding the all-coach Frank Lavrisha. And she gives her team the credit it conference teams. didn't get from the RMAC coaches who vote on the Edwards led the Roadrunners in awards. Michelle Edwards kills with 523 and attack percentage
Jenny Sparks/The Metropolitan "It's a credit to our team," McDermott said. "It was a at .241. McDermott earned her award BUMPED: Metro Junior Audra Uttou goes after a nice honor." by taking a mediocre team the past b~ll during a confere~~e ~~ur?a?'e~ mat~~ ~~v: ••••• ~..yards is low-key when ~l\s~ussipg,"er ...a~~ql~d,e~._ ... N'Q ~~~91JS. ~qp. grp~tic,iQ& i ,µ~itJbat has only lost eight 1 ... 1:. uil+h Nahr""•11""-1t .. ~:..L:v Gt J!!lt~Jt Unlyera[t .. • • • "-'·t ..... •· 't fra"d t t 11 't l' k h · · · '"t '··h· · •t• • • ' 1 .. • • .1.t• e. ' ' th" · ' ' • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ... • ~!.t..~~A~'""" ~~ , r uu :me 1sn a 1 o e 1 1 e s e sees 1 w en 1 come:. m" cues is year.
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20 The Metropolitan November 21, I 9'J7
Puri( oy assaults recordbook By Kyle Ringo The Metropolitan
Dan Purifoy waited patiently. He practiced hard but mostly he waited.
Then all the patience and practice paid off. Purifoy qualified for the Division II national swimming and diving competition Nov. 15 in Metro's dual meet with the Colorado School of Mines.
Qualifying has been Purifoy's dream for four years now as a diver at Metro. He finally made it despite some tough scar-ing.
"These judges, I think, were pretty tough," Purifoy said. "And I made it any-way.
"I think I deserve this one. I called up my dad and told him I made it. He was screaming and hootin' and hollerin' ."
In the process, Purifoy managed to set a school record in the I-meter diving with a score of 271.7.
He is getting accustomed lo setting school records, though.
The record he broke was his own and one he had set earlier this season. He credits coach Brian Kennedy for any improvement.
"I think his work speaks for itself," Purifoy said.
It is the second time in a young season that one of Kennedy's divers has qualified for nationals while setting a school record. Freshman Cari Lewton did it Nov. 1 in 3-meter competition.
Kennedy said he is pleased for the pair but not satisfied.
'Tm comfortable with it," Kennedy said. "B.ut I always feel like I ha_ve to push them one step further.
"The first of the season started out slow, but I think they realized they had to learn some harder dives, so the intensity of practice picked up."
Swimming coach Rob Nasser said he expects similar results to start coming soon from his athletes.
"They need to build up their endurance and rest after that," Nasser said. "So it's a hurry-up-and-wait thing.
"There could be that one meet where they just break out."
Todd Schmitz (backstroke), Leslie Heath (butterfly), and Angela Hillsten (100 fly) all did well against Mines , Nasser sa~d.
He expects them to join past national qualifiers Kristin
Event 50 Free
100 Free
200 Free
500 Free
1000 Free
Swimmer Christbell Nieman Kaan Berberoglu
Nancy Rowell Mike True
Kristen Schweissing Mike True
Cari Mudget Shawn Smith
Cari Mudget Kyle Cook
1650 F~ee Ranita Novak
100 Back
200 Back
Kyle Cook
Nancy Rowell Kaan Berberoglu
Kristen Schweissing Todd Schmitz
100 Breast Cari Mudget Chris Ogden
200 Breast Cari Mudget Scott Watson
100Ry
200Ry
2001M
. 4001M
200 Free Relay 400 Free Relay
Angela Hillsten Chris Ogden
Cari Mudget Chris Ogden
Cari Mudget Scott Watson Kristin Schweissing Scott Wat5on Women Men Women Men
Women Men ' . , ..
Time 25.50 21.98
56.56 48.74
2:02.30 1:47.22 5:26.56 4:54.64
11:10.81 10:15.87
21:35.00 18:04.05
1:01.59 55.64
2:11.83 2:07.21
1:11.34 1:00.05 2:33.51 2:14.26
1:03.69 51.65
2:19.84 1:57.84
Quentin Hunstad/The Metropolitan Schweissing and Scott Watson in this
800 Free Relay
200 Med Relay
Women Men
2:20.47 2:00.15
4:48.52 4:22.61
1:44.31 1:29.25 4:10.27 3:17.21
8:24.90 7:29.70 1:58.91 1:38.95
season's push for the springtime event. COILED AND BOILED: Metro freshman D.J. Hummel (top} curls Into a dive during Thanks to Purifo , the now know a Nov.-15 swimming and diving meet at Aurarla Pool. Senior Leslie Heath 11 th
1. Y ffy
400 Med Relay
Women Men
4.:24.71 3:41.55
(Inset) powers through the 200 butterfly event at the same meet . a e pa 1ence can pay o .
. Allen opens as MVP, Dunlap secures first By Kyle Ringo The Metropolitan
. where the fans refuse to sit until the visi-tors make a basket. Sometimes it can take a while .
Before the season started, Metro "One year I told them to sit down after women's basketball coach Darryl Smith we made one in the warm-up," Smith said. did his best impression of Lou Holtz. · That happened to be the season when
Holtz, the former Notre Dame foot- the Roadrunners lost to the Buffaloes by ball coach, is renowned for playing up the 70 points. competition while frowning on his teams' Sophomore guard Stephanie Allen led skills. Metro with 23 points in the championship
Smith had said his team had little game and said the atmosphere can be chance of winning in its first action of the intimidating. year at the West Texas A&M Invitational "There was a big crowd," Allen said. in Canyon, Texas. He was wrong. "They're all rude and mean, and they
The Roadrunners took the tournament scream at you. crown after a stunning upset of West Texas "We talked about not being timid." A&M University 60-53 in the champi- Allen's effort earned her the touma-onship game. ment's Most Valuable Player Award.
The West Texas Buffaloes hold an "She played great," Smith said. "She National Collegiate Athletic Association controlled the game." record home court advantage, winning 119 Metro defeated MidWestern State of their last 123 home games. University 63-52 to advance to the cham-
The record is good at any leyel of pionship game. NCAA competition - men or women. Smith praised the play of his post
Afterwards, Smith called it one of his players, including Farrah Magee, who program's biggest wins. joined Allen on the all-tournament team,
"We got every loo~e ball, and we took Heidi Lake and Kristin Weider. like three or four charges," Smith said. "They were way bigger than us," "We just played great defense." Smith said. "I can't say that we dominated
Smith said he was impressed with the them on the inside, but we controlled way his teaml .. ahdlM pfaYfrig"ih"ab"irena· • tliem." • 1
• • • • • • • •
The winds of change that have blown through the men's basketball program at Metro since the end of last season now seem dwarfed by the blow-out the 1997 Roadrunners laid on the College of Notre Dame in the Nov. 15 season opener.
The Roadrunners gave coach Mike Dunlap his first win at Metro in grand style 95-65.
Apparently, Dunlap hadn't given it much thought.
" I expect to win," Dunlap said. "Adrian Navarro came up to me and shook my hand.
"If it wasn 't for that I wouldn't have
Phillip DeGraffenreid
paid it much mind." Navarro is one of only five holdovers
from last season. The Roadrunners wasted no time Nov.
17 getting Dunlap win No. 2 by defeating Cal-State Stanislaus 89-80 in Turlock Calif.
Starters Navarro, Lee Barlow, DeMarcos Anzures, David Adler and Phillip DeGraffenreid handled the bulk of the scoring for the Roadrunners.
DeGraffenreid nailed nine of 12 threepoint shots and led all Metro scorers in the two games with 32 points.
Barlow hauled in 18 rebounds.
dropped in nine of 12 , , f ,,
three-point shots in two games for a .750 ~hooting percentage. He led all Metro scorers with 32 points.
DeGraffenreid transferred to Metro this season from Utah Valley College where he made more than _50 perctnt of his three-point attempts last se;ason.
~ ., He is an iiEcounting major with a 3.4 GP~: .... ~ / 1';;;. ,,, 1 "It's ih._r.hythm thing," DeGraffe~ ,.sai~fl
">,fter you ha\te hit a couple in a row, it siems.:.a•totJ easier." \ . Phillip
· · ,{!'. . DeGraffenreid i . . ~---···~.J! - -.. - - - - .... - - ..... - ... - - .... .. - - • - - ... - .._.,. ..... -----..... ;-...- •
•
- <.
•
-.
From ranked to spanked Penchant for burnout a concern for womens soccer team
Kyle Ringo
Watching the women's soccer season deteriorate into what it eventually became was nastier than staring at the open cadavers in a forensics class.
At least that is
having a home field to practice or play on until two-thirds of the season was gone. The fatigue brought on by all the travel between practice and school, school and games and what not ruined the Roadrunners, he said.
Certainly, some of the poor play was borne out of being a homefieldless team. But not all of it. Or any where near all of
what Metro senior it. Shannon Wise seems
to think. Wise finished her career at Metro
when the Roadrunners lost their season finale Nov. 8 at Regis. She is a criminalistics major, and spends some of her class time viewing the dead.
And now she knows how they feel. "That's my release," Wise said. "It makes me sick to my stomach
knowing how this season went." What is sick is how Metro managed
to go from a No. 5 national ranking to a 10-9 final record and far from the elite.
This included a stretch where the Roadrunners lost nine of their last 13 games.
Some players have been quietly complaining for weeks that they are not challenged enough by coaches in practice, while others prefer to place the blame for the second major collapse in four years on the players themselves.
"It's kind of a hard way to end," Wise said. "We had the opportunities and skill to win.
"I don't think we had a lot of discipline. I don't think we had a lot of heart."
Alarm bells should be blaring in coach Ed Montojo's office.
Such a collapse occurring once might be a fluke. But twice in four years? Sooner or later it becomes a trend.
Montojo has his own ideas of what went wrong.
His ideas have more to do with not
Last season a group of players went to Athletics Director William Helman to complain about Montojo's coaching style. Helman turned a deaf ear saying in effect that Montojo's record speaks for itself.
Exactly. Montojo has been extremely success
ful if winning percentage is all that is taken into account. But what about the bottom line? Finishing.
• Twice in the past four years the Roadrunners have been in the top five. Twice, the other being the 1994 season, the Roadrunners have experienced a monumental collapse. And the 1994 team had a home field and Rosie Durbin (second
· all-time scorer in Metro history and one of two Roadrunners to be All-American).
• Players, this year and last, say that Montojo just isn't tough enough in practice and that his game day decision making is questionable.
Montojo is an excellent recruiter and his teams are fast out of the gate. But in sports, it's not about how you start. It's all about how you finish. Maximizing potential is the most accurate gauge of a coach's ability.
Montojo's teams, namely the 1994 . and 1997 squads, had the potential for
greatness. . Both flopped, and it' s time for
Helman and Montojo to do a bit of soul searching and figure out why women's soccer can't finish what it starts.
That is the bottom line.
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November 21, 1997 The Metropolitan 21
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The MSCD Counseling Center Institute for Multicultural Understanding is pleased to present the fourth in a series of symposia focusing on diversity and multicultural issues for the fall 1997 semester:
A~nluio9 ~iversitu
7hrou9h the d\pprecintive Jo'luiru process //
by Dr. Madison Holloway, Assistant Professor MSCD Management Department
When: Monday, November 24, 1997 Noon - 1:00 P.M.
Where: Golda Meir Center (two houses south from St.Cajetan's)
Appreciative Inquiry is a flexible process that focuses on human growth and development by having individuals express, through dialogue, "The Best Of What Is" and the "Best Of What Can Be." This process looks at the organizational and personal barriers that keep people from attaining the "Best Of What Can Be." In this symposium, Dr. Holloway, who in the capacity of organizational consultant has extensive experience in developing programs for the reduction of racism and sexism in employment, will focus on the often-flawed process that we have beeii "trained" to utilize to reach common, human goals. The session will also involve dialogue toward bridging cultural gaps through effective team-building and analysis of different communication styles.
Please join us for what promises to be a thought-provoking, learning experience.
These symposia are free and open to all in the Auraria and neighboring communities. Gasses are welcomed. Refreshments will be served. For more infonnation, call Jose at 556-3132. Future symposia will be announced via campus newspaper ads, flyers, and on E-mail.
These symposia are presented with funding assistance from the MSCD Diversity Initiatives Program Committee.
' . I I I . . .. .. ,
~ .
..
- -- -- -- - - - -- - - - ----
22 The Metropolitan November 21, 1997 Calendar- ------
Visual Arts is seeking volunteers to work with disadvantaged Denver youth in its Art Builds Communities program. Volunteers assist artsists during art workshops on Saturdays and Mondays after school. Training is provided. 294-5207.
A.A. Meetings: Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 11-11 :45 a.m. at I 020 9th Street Park. 556-3878. Also Tuesdays and Thursdays at noon, Auraria Library 205. 556-2525.
Bible Study: Held weekly by the Baptist Student Union. 11 a.m., Tuesdays and Wednesdays, St. Francis Center, room 4. 750-5390. .
The PROS: Public Relations Organization of Students is looking for new members. Meetings are first Wednesday of every month, 6 p.m. at the Denver Press Club, 1330 Glenarm. 329-3211.
The Spirit of West Africa: Art ·show at Metro's Center for the Visual Arts showcases West African textiles and sculptures. Through Dec. 17. 1701 Wazee St. Open TuesdaysThursdays 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Fridays, 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturdays noon-4 p.m. 294-5207.
- FRI. Nov. 21 -Faculty Upside Down: Meet and talk with professors outside the classroom. 11 a.m.noon, The Daily Grind, Tivoli. 556-2595.
Student Government Meeting: 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Senate Chambers, Tivoli 329. Join student government in working towards change on your campus. Contact Gabriel Hermelin, vice president of Communications, for more info. 556-2797.
Journey of the Hero: An open-ended group devoted to examining the hero archetype. Sponsored by the Metro Counseling Center. 2-3:20 p.m., Central Classroom 203. 556-3132.
Sleepout: Join CoPIRG in a sleepout against homelessness and hunger. There will be speakers, activities and breakfast. 6 p.m.- sometime Saturday morning, by the flagpole, I 0th and Lawrence Street Mall. 556-8093.
- SuN. Nov. 23 -Tellabration: "Carriers of the Dream Wheel," a multicultural celebration of storytelling. 3-6 p.m., Tivoli 261 . Free.
Sunday Night Club West for Singles: meets each Sunday, 6-8 p.m. at the Clements Community Center near W. Colfax and Wadsworth. This week: talent show. Cost $6. 639-7622. http://members.aol.com/sncw/.
Get Out of Town ... Study Abroad
... For FREE!!
The National Securiry Education Program (NSEP) scholarship is awarded for study in foreign countries and world regions not
traditional!Y visited. If you are interested in studying in Africa. Asia. Eastern Europe. Latin America. or in the Middle East attend one of the following informational meetings:
Informational Meetings: Wednesday, November 26 2-3 p.m. Rectory ~~z.!~09 Tuesday, December 2 3-4 p.m. Rectory ~1 #209 ·-·"'
~ -~ !. ,,,/?if°/ ..
Key~l~~e.~ts.i1pf this program.are: . !ApPlicants :piust be American citizens
~~~tmi'ln, Sophomo'ks, Juniors, or Seniors . ti~~i?-~~d .~o participa . ~Su.dy MUST includ foreign-language
. £ stucty ~omponent ·'- '(\
•r<;Js.are $8 per sein~!!tet~r .$16,000 ,..per.>acade •
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. . . . . . · -- ---- · · · .. ···-· .. ........... ....... .. .. .......... -........ . ... ..... ........ .
- MON. Nov. 24 -Student Recital:" 2 p.m., Arts Building 295, free. 556-3180.
Student Government Open Forum: Come share your views and concerns. 3:30-4 p.m., Tivoli 307. Call Gabriel Hermelin, vice president of Communications, 556-2797.
- TUES. Nov. 25 -Forum: "Women Who Run With The Wolves," presented by Juli Redson-Smith. Sponsored by Metro Baha'i Club. Noon-I p.m., Tivoli 320C. 798-4319 or 322-8997. http://www.bahai.org/
- SuN. Nov. 30 -AIDS Quilt: Candlelight procession, 5 p.m., St. Elizabeth's Church. Opening ceremonies, 6:15 p.m., Tivoli Tumhalle. General viewing: 6:45-9 p.m. 321-0811.
Sunday Night Club West for Singles: meets each Sunday, 6-8 p.m. at the Clements Community Center near W. Colfax and Wadsworth. Cost $6. 639-7622. http://members.aol.com/sncw/.
- MON. DEC. I -AIDS Quilt: General viewing 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Tivoli Tumhalle. 321-0811.
Student Government Open Forum: Come share your views and concerns. 3:30-4 p.m., Tivoli 307. Call Gabriel Hermelin, vice president of Communications, 556-2797.
- TUES. DEC. 2 -AIDS Quilt: General viewing, JO a.m.-5 p.m., Tivoli Tumhalle. 321-0811.
Nooners: "Wine Tasting I 01 ," with Scott High of Classic Wines. 12:30-1 :30 p.m., Tivoli 329. 556-2595.
- WED. DEC. 3 -Gig Series: North High School Jazz and Dance Team. 11 :30 a.m.-1 :30 p.m., Tivoli Atrium.
Nooners: "How To Microbrew," with Todd Tooch of the Breckenridge Brewery Noon-I p.m., Tivoli 329. 556-2595.
- THL7RS. D EC. 4 -Rap Session: "The Myth About Welfare Recipients: A Panel Discussion," 2-3:30 p.m., Tivoli 320A-C. 556-2595.
Toads in the Garden: Weekly poetry readings. This week: "Going to Extremes 1997," a reading by the members of Lost and Found, a residential treatment center. 8 p.m., The Daily Grind, Tivoli. 722-9944.
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.t CLASSIFIED INFO Classified ads are 5¢ per word for students currently enrolled at The Metropolitan State College of Denver. For all others - 15¢ per word. Maximum length for all classified ads is 30 words. We now accept Mastercard and Visa. The deadline for classified ads is Monday at5:00p.m. Call 556-8361 for more information.
HELP WANTED BEAUTIFUL, NAEYC ACCREDITED Preschool in OTC ha5 immediate openings for teachers,aftemoons, part-time. Group leader Qualified preferred. Start at $8.00 I Hour. Call 290-9005. 2/13
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THEATRE TELEMARKETING. GOOD callers earn $15-25/hr. Telephone sales experience required! Sell tickets for local theatres. $7 guaranteed + commission + bonus. Evenings 5-9pm, Saturday 9:30am-1 :30pm. 16-24 hrs/week. 832-2791.
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RUN FAST - DRIVE SLOW. YOUNG women and young men. Valet Parking Attendants. Flexible schedules, great money. Call Allright Valet 698-4378. 1/23
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Tutoring elementary/intermediate Spanish & French, all levels of German. 10 years of experience, 2 B.A:s. On Auraria campus _______________ _.
Mon-Thurs by appointment Reasonable rates. FORA FRH
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Leonore Dvorkin: 985-2327. 1123 co~~~~:~~N l<AREN RUSCIO AT
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820.5585 The Denver fust your learning endeavors! MATH -A- MATIC: MATH TUTORING.._ ____________ _., ____________ _.
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and premium channels. Call Don@ 361-6658 ----------------------------'~--......! or page 281-5278. 12/5
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...
fun~to theAuraria Camuus L_ - - ;_ ~vember. 30-December 2, 1997
~~- ~ ---------.... . \!~The NAMES Project Tiv L
1.4IDS Menwri<il Quilt ----------~
Sunday, November 30, 1997
Commemorative Observance and Candlelight Procession 5:00 p.m. St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church, Auraria Campus
Opening Ceremonies 6: 15 p.m. Recreation Center,
Auraria Campus
General Viewing 6:45 p.m. to 9:00 p .m. Tivoli Turnhalle
Auraria Campus
Monday, December 1, 1997
World AIDS Day and HIV Education Day General Viewing
10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Tivoli Turnhalle Auraria Campus
World AIDS Day Benefit Concert - Denver 8:00 p.m. Montview Boulevard, Presbyterian Church 1980 Dahlia St.
• • THE NAMES PROJECT FOUN D A T I Oll
1987-1997
Tickets are avai.lable by calling 355-9941
Tuesday, December 2, 1997
General Viewing 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tivoli Turnhalle
Auraria Campus
Closing Ceremonies 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Tivoli Turnhalle
Auraria Campus
Beneficiaries:
• Empowerment Program Women's AIDS Project
• Children's Hospital HIV Program (CHIP) • Howard Dental Center • Project Angel Heart
OpL'ning C:rcrnonic" fl11· tllL' Dem ~r "Quilt" di ... p l a~ \\ill h~·gin at ) :OU p.rn. llll Sunday. \'\l\\.' lllhL·r .~O. 1997. C'itiLcns should arri 'c at -1-:45 p.111. al St. Eli1ahL'lh's Cathol ic Church to tal-.c pan in a \cry ... pecial interfaith ob ... __,n ,11Kc. L\ llldklight proc1..·.., ... illll and the npe111ng ceremonies. Viewing of the Quilt " ill 01.:cur 1111 1111..·diatl..'!~ alkr opening ccr\.' nllllli6. Adrni ...... ion i ... free. as is pa1l ing on Nn,·1..·mh\.' r 30th. \'oluntccrs arc nc(.•ckd to participate in creating a ··Pat Im ay of Light. Hope and Rcmcmhrancc" for the candlelight procc ...... ion to \\alk through on ~o,cmlwr JO. 1997. call Oa\\11 Boyd at 556-.25.25.
::~::.::~~~:~~t4L"'.-.... :.-"' ..-~ .-. ,,- .. -, -, .-. -r . - . -• • - • • - . , - , -•• - . ,,- ,, ...... ..-•• -•• ..-••• -••• -,.~ ......... .. ~,., ....... ~,., ...... , .~, •• • ~.~ . ....... ~ .... ~ .. ~'"="' .... ~.'"="'. •=""=~'"="'• •=""=•"'="., ~~.~ •• ~- .---:-. :-: • • -:-. :-: •• -:-. :-: •• "":"'. :-: •• "":"". :-: •• -:-. ':"": •• -:-. ':"":. , "":"", '.:"":, ,-::-, '.:"":, , "";", ,~,"";",. .:=-::. ··~:~ ,:'!""'. ~-- • :!~· _.;., : I