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InSight MetNews 3 Met Sports MetroSpective Poetry festival celebrates Delgado 10 Theater in SSB takes education to new level Last week’s tragedies 6 ThunderWolves sink teeth into Roadrunners 4/20 rally ends less than peacefully Shawn Eash sits in shock after three people were shot at the record-breaking 4/20 celebration April 20 at Civic Center Park in Denver. Photo by Trevor L. Davis • [email protected]. 5 The Metropolitan Volume 35, Issue 30 www.metnews.org April 25, 2013 Serving the Auraria Campus since 1979 15

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Page 1: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

InSight

MetNews

3

MetSports

MetroSpectivePoetry festival

celebrates Delgado

10

Theater in SSB takes education to new level

Last week’s tragedies

6

ThunderWolves sink teeth into Roadrunners

4/20 rally ends less than peacefully

Shawn Eash sits in shock after three people were shot at the record-breaking 4/20 celebration April 20 at Civic Center Park in Denver. Photo by Trevor L. Davis • [email protected]. 5

TheMetropolitanVolume 35, Issue 30 www.metnews.orgApril 25, 2013 Serving the Auraria Campus since 1979

15

Page 2: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

2 April 25, 2013 MetNews TheMetropolitan

JOIN THE URBAN LEADERSHIP

PROGRAM

Page 3: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

MetNewsTheMetropolitan April 25, 2013 3

Hi-tech theater offers education in 3-D

Spring Fling moves indoors to escape winter weather

Maalikah [email protected]

Kaylin [email protected]

MSU Denver is getting more high-tech in its education with a new $3 million dollar theater located in the Student Success Building, room 420.

The CAVEA, or Center for Advanced Visualization and Experiential Analysis, combines a theater space with advanced technology, allowing users to make better decisions through the use of computer modeling and simula-tion and allows users to analyze their decisions and policies before they’re applied.

Features include three-dimen-sional video, hi-fi audio, seven 103-inch projection screens positioned 270 degrees around the seating area, video conferencing capabili-ties, on-site and remote access, and two adjacent conference rooms with connecting audio and video.

The theater’s cost was already included in the budget for the SSB, which all comes from student-approved fees, according to Cathy Lucas, associate to the president for marketing and communication.

While visiting Arizona State University on a leadership exchange program, Denver-area leaders agreed that a cutting edge decision-theater, like the one at ASU, would be right for MSU Den-ver as part of its role as an urban land grant university committed to community betterment.

“The mayor — now governor — said, ‘If you don’t build this, then we will figure out a way for the city of Denver to do this,’” Lucas said. “It really is a significant investment in our academic excellence. This is really giving students the oppor-tunity to work in this environment and gain this experience where they can’t gain anywhere else in Colorado at this point in time.”

On April 17, Professor Jose Lopez, of the aviation space department, successfully used the theater to create a 3-D simulation of air flow going over the wing of a landing space shuttle for his orbital mechanics class.

“Front Range Airport is trying to get a license to be a spaceport. So they got to do analysis because Front Range Airport is between Buckley and DIA, so you have all that traffic. We’re trying to create some tools that will allow us to compare traffic and see what im-pacts,” Lopez said.

Lopez’s students have already simulated landing a spaceship at the airport and have presented to the FAA, Front Range Airport and local companies.

Lopez is thinking of creat-

ing a class around the simulation software.

The newly appointed director of the theater, Susan Lowrance, said students and faculty in almost every discipline, from nursing to sociology, would be able to use the theater for research, presentations and simulations, and that students can also learn to run the technol-ogy behind CAVEA to prepare for their futures in a high-tech world.

“We’d have participants remoting in to the theater. If we have complex data, we can break it down and have different images of it. We might have a PowerPoint or another kind of presentation that we would want happening at the same time. We may want to expand [Lopez’s] model and look at what are the elements going into

creating that visualization, so we better understand why the air is moving in the way that it is,” she said. “There’s so many different applications.”

MSU Denver mechanical en-gineering graduate and employee of CAVEA, Dan Ausmus, talked about the theater’s other capabili-ties.

“For example, access to areas in the coral reefs and the pyra-mids in Giza are limited,” he said. “What they can do, though, is have archaeology or wildlife students come in here and we can use the technology to give a tour of some-body who’s actually physically in Egypt, in the pyramids. And the students could take part in that without having to go there and damage the tombs or the reefs.”

Although CAVEA’s website says it can be used by different organizations for things like crisis preparedness or water manage-ment, Lowrance said it was initially geared for MSU Denver. Outside pricing hasn’t been determined, but it isn’t off the table. Grants or partnerships for funding are also possibilities.

“No one who needs to use the facility won’t have access to it be-cause of money,” Lowrance said.

The CAVEA faces little to no competition in the Rocky Moun-tain region, according to Low-rance, and will officially open for fall 2013. To access or reserve the theater, contact Lowrance through the website, msudenver.edu/cavea.

Susan Lowrence, CAVEA theater director, sits with the glasses necessary to experience the full effects of the theater. The theater combines a space with advanced tech-nology that allows users to make better decisions through the use of computer modeling and simulation. Photo by Philip Poston • [email protected]

Snow and cold weather caused the annual Spring Fling event to be moved from the Tivoli Commons into the Turnhalle.

“The last several years for Spring Fling, and even once for Fall Fest, we’ve had rain and we’ve had some cold days, but nothing has really looked like this year,” said Matt Brinton, assistant direc-

tor of student activities. “I’ve been in this position since the fall of 2010 and this is the first time since I’ve been here that we’ve moved it inside.”

The snowfall, which meteorolo-gist Mike Baker told The Denver Post, was between 2 to 5 inches in Denver on Wednesday, caused the Office of Student Activities to cancel many of the events planned. One such event was the zip line, which according to Brinton was a

favorite activity last year. After the student activities staff

decided to bring the event inside, they had to pick a space that could accommodate the tables they needed for participating groups. With more than 90 student organi-zations and almost 70 campus de-partments and non-profit vendors as well as the corporate sponsor and vendor tables, they needed to be strategic about picking a space.

However, the space in the

Tivoli wasn’t able to accommodate all of the original booths. Student activities staff brought only some of the vendors and corporate spon-sors into the Turnhalle.

As snow was falling outside on Wednesday, only eight of the 23 planned food trucks were scat-tered around campus. Thursday April 18 was sunny and brought a little more popularity to the trucks. Even then, only 15 or 16 food trucks showed when 24 were

scheduled. Luckily for students who were

holding their breath about the can-celled zip line, it will be brought in for a different event, Brinton said. Denim Day, an annual event where people wear jeans to protest the overturning of a 1997 rape convic-tion in Italy, will have the zip line instead.

Page 4: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

4 April 25, 2013 MetNews TheMetropolitan

FREE CLASSES • EQUIPMENT INCLUDED

Healthy MovesSpring 2013 Schedule

January 22–May 18 • No classes over Spring Break (March 25–29)

Please check online for updates: www.msudenver.edu/healthymoves @HealthCtAuraria HealthCenterAtAuraria

All classes are in PE 103 unless indicated below.Class participation is free and available on a fi rst-come, fi rst-served basis for the Auraria Campus community.

(Students have priority.)

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

10–10:55 Pilates

11–11:55Yoga for Stress Management

Yoga for Stress Management

Yoga forRelaxation

Class time: 11–12:10

Noon–12:55 Pilates Pilates Zumba®Class time: 12:15–1:10

1–1:55 Nia Nia

3:30–4:25 Flow Yoga Flow Yoga Yoga Nidra

4:30–5:20 Belly Dancing Belly Dancing

5:15–6:15 Zumba® Zumba®

5:30–6:30 Hatha YogaTivoli 640

Hatha Yoga

For more information, contact Health Center at AurariaPlaza 150 • 303-556-2525

Sponsored by Health Center at Auraria & Campus Recreation at Auraria

BELLY DANCINGWomen of the Middle East have enjoyed belly danc-ing for centuries, celebrating life and the joy of the soul through this expressive art. This fun and exciting dance form is a great aerobic and toning workout, providing the means for improving posture and self-confi dence.

NIAA creative, free-spirited and fun barefoot fi tness dancing form, Nia combines principles and concepts from the dancing arts, healing arts and martial arts.

PILATESPilates is a series of fl oor exercises that increase strength, coordination and fl exibility, while promoting uniform muscle development and enhancing postural alignment. All of the exercises are linked to a specifi c breath pattern that deepens core engagement and helps relieve stress. Pilates believes that all movement stems from the core and can therefore be performed safely.

FLOW YOGAFlow Yoga is an active style of yoga linking poses togeth-er with rhythmic breathing. Generally more physically challenging than Hatha Yoga, Flow Yoga calms the mind and tones the body.

HATHA YOGAPostures play a primary role in Hatha Yoga, as do specifi c breathing techniques and meditation practices. All are intended to calm the mind and uplift the spirit, and nourish the mind and body on every level.

YOGA NIDRA (DEEP RELAXATION)Take time out from your busy life to recharge your batteries. Yoga Nidra is a simple, deep relaxation and meditation practice done from lying down. It is a systematic method of releasing accumulated tensions, resulting in profound physical, mental and emotional relaxation. Use this ancient yogic tool to manage stress and improve sleep. The fi rst part of the class will prepare participants for deep relaxation through simple yoga asanas and pranayamas (posturesand breathing).

YOGA FOR STRESS MANAGEMENTThis class is designed for all ages and all levels of fi tness with a systematic and safe approach to yoga. Students learn simple yet poweful yogic tools for stress management at the physical, mental and emotional levels, and build abilities to cope with stress.

ZUMBA®Zumba® combines dance and fi tness exercises with international dance rhythms such as African, salsa, meringue, cumbia, and reggaeton. These awe-inspiring movements are meant to engage and captivate for life. Every class feels like a party!

Friday classes sponsored by: MSU Denver

First Year Success

First Year Success honors mentorsTwo student ambassadors presented

awards for peer leader, mentor and instruc-tor of the year at the First Year Success Student Choice Awards April 18.

“The student choice awards is basi-cally an event where the First Year [success program] students at MSU Denver get to recognize people, such as other students, faculty and staff who’ve made an impact on their first-year experience,” said Antonia Garza, the first year success lead student ambassador.

The event started off with socializing and food. Attendees were encouraged to sign in, lineup for food and wait for the event to get started.

Before presenting the awards, other stu-dent ambassadors spoke and offered advice.

“As first year students, we’re going to move on and want to hear more about what’s past the first year,” said Garza, who co-hosted this year’s awards ceremony with Ana Aguirre, another student ambassador.

Daralynne Harris, an ambassador and MSU Denver senior, encouraged students to build relationships with professors.

“[Professors] are the people that we speak with most and that know the material we’re studying so well,” Harris said. “They are so helpful and having that relationship is so great.”

Courtney Bruno, a student ambas-sador who has been with the program for four years, followed with advice on how to not feel pressured to graduate in a certain amount of time.

“If you’re not happy you should change your major,” said Bruno, who has changed her major twice.

Bruno urged those who feel over-whelmed to drop some classes and take it slower.

She also encouraged students to discover themselves through involvement, whether through a club or work-study.

“It made a big difference for me in the end, as far as feeling like I had a place on campus,” said Bruno.

Student Ambassador Dominic Rossi encouraged students to build relationships with other students, especially within their departments.

He said these connections make group work and new classrooms easier.

Garza warned that despite the many sup-porters one will encounter in their college experience, there will be negative people too.

“Don’t listen to what other people have to say, and follow your heart,” Garza said.

The first award, for Instructor of the Year, went to Amy Zsohar, a communica-tions professor at MSU Denver.

Zsohar’s nominations came from her public speaking students who said she made public speaking fun.

“They really showed that she actually cared about the students and that she en-gaged them,” said Garza.

The next award went to Alex Barragan for Mentor of the Year.

The award for Peer Leader of the Year went to Kevin Breidt, an MSU Denver avia-tion major.

Breidt thanked a few individuals, includ-ing Camille Armas and Ben Rastle.

Rastle, who nominated Breidt, has known him since they started attending MSU Denver and describes him as someone to rely on.

“I wanted him to know he’s a great stu-dent, a great friend and a great study buddy,” Rastle said.

All nominees received certificates. Among the nominees were Joey May, Erin Parrish and Garza.

Garza thanked the crowd for attending and encouraged attendees to hang out, eat food and network.

Kyle O’Neal, the First Year Success IT and assessment coordinator, said the pro-

gram serves around 1,200 students a year and continues to grow.

“We are planning on serving 1,600 stu-dents starting Fall 2013,” said O’Neal.

Bruno said the program was a good way for students to start at Metro.

“I feel like if the transition isn’t smooth, students can get frustrated easily,” Bruno said. “It’s important for them to feel involved and like they’re welcome, because if they don’t, they don’t want to stay with the school and finish their education.”

Since moving the first year success office from the Central Classroom to the Student Success Building, Bruno feels like it has

given the program staff more opportunities to do student outreach.

She said 65 percent of freshman who participate in the First Year Success program return for their second year at MSU Denver, which is 10 percent higher than students who do not participate.

Students in the program are offered additional resources, such as supplemental instructors and student ambassadors.

“Having these extra resources allows students to feel engaged in their classes,” said Garza. “It also instills a sense of commu-nity.”

Kristy [email protected]

Page 5: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

TheMetropolitan MetNews April 25, 2013 5

MAKING YOU SAFEFOR ROMANCE.

SHOW HER YOU CARE.GET YOURSELF TESTED.

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4/20 rally ends in gunfire, three injured

Trevor [email protected] [email protected]

Usually a peaceful gathering, this year’s 4/20 celebration at Civic Center Park in Denver turned violent when three attendees were shot.

Shots were fired around 5 p.m. when a fight broke out, sending tens of thousands of attendees scrambling for safety. Several min-

utes after the shooting, a group of Denver Police officers were observed running south on Lincoln Street.

The rally’s organizers suggested that Denver’s 4/20 rally was the largest in the country. They were expecting a turnout of 75,000 to 80,000 participants. Police said that less than 80,000 people were in atten-dance but did not give an exact number.

Shawn Eash said that he found himself on the ground defending himself. He then

claims to have seen someone pull out a gun and start shooting, hitting his friend in the leg and injuring a woman.

Eash said he didn’t realize he was injured in the right side of his torso until he stood up.

“Denver 420 shooting broken ribs and blood yeah id say it was a bad day [sic],” Eash posted on his Facebook page.

According to police reports, a man and woman were shot in the legs. A minor was

grazed by a bullet and walked to a local hospital.

All of the injured are expected to recover.Denver Police are looking for two

suspects. One was described as a black male with a light complexion, 6 feet tall and about 180 pounds. He was wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt, black pants and a Carolina base-ball cap.

The other was described as a black male wearing a black and white checkered shirt.

(Left) Two suspects run away after allegedly being involved in the shooting injuries of three people at the 4/20 rally April 20 at Civic Center Park in Denver. Photo by Alexander Pringle •[email protected]

(Right) Shawn Eash sits in shock after three people were shot at the 4/20 rally April 20 at Civic Center Park in Denver. Photo by Trevor Davis • [email protected]

Page 6: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

6 April 25, 2013 TheMetropolitan

� e Metropolitan accepts submissions in the form of topic-driven columns and letters to the editor. Column article concepts must be submitted by 1 p.m.. � ursdays and the deadline for columns is 9 p.m. Sundays. Columns range from 500 to 600 words. Letters to the editor must be submitted by 5 p.m. Mondays to be printed in that week’s edition. � ere is a 500-word limit for letters to the editor. � e Metropolitan reserves the right to edit letters for formatting and style. All submissions should be sent by e-mail to [email protected].

� e Metropolitan is produced by and for the students of Metropolitan State University of Denver and serves the Auraria Campus. � e Metropolitan is supported by advertising revenue and student fees and is published every � ursday during the academic year and monthly during the summer semester. Opinions expressed within do not necessarily re� ect those of MSU Denver or its advertisers.

MetStaffEditor-in-Chief

Brian T. McGinn: [email protected]

Managing EditorKayla Whitney: [email protected]

News EditorKelli Heitstuman-Tomko: [email protected]

Assistant News EditorsCollene Lewis: [email protected] Hartley: [email protected]

MetroSpective EditorNikki Work: [email protected]

Assistant MetroSpective EditorKailyn Lamb: [email protected]

Sports EditorAngelita Foster: [email protected]

Assistant Sports EditorZilingo Nwuke: [email protected]

Copy EditorsKate Rigot Luke Powell

Photo EditorRyan Borthick: [email protected]

Assistant Photo EditorHeather Newman: [email protected]

Online EditorNathalia Vélez: [email protected]

Multimedia EditorIan Gassman: [email protected]

AdviserGary Massaro: [email protected]

WebmasterDrew Jaynes: [email protected]

Director of Student MediaSteve Haigh: [email protected]

Assistant Director of Student MediaMarlena Hartz: [email protected]

Administrative Assistant of Student MediaElizabeth Norberg: [email protected]

Production Manager of Student MediaKathleen Jewby: kjewby@ msudenver.edu

Americans are facing an-other round of tragic injury and death with the April 15 Boston Marathon bombings. People are bonding together and setting aside di� erences as they try to recover.

Unfortunately, based on past tragic events, this bonding will be temporary for many, according to University of Arizona psychologist Je� Greenberg.

“When death is percolating close to consciousness, people become more ‘us vs. them’ — they become defensive of their belief system, positive toward those they identify with and more negative to those who espouse a di� erent be-lief system,” Greenberg told NPR in an article published April 17.

We all have beliefs and biases that in� uence our behav-ior. Countless studies show we gravitate toward those who share our views about race, religion, politics and social issues such as gay rights and abortion. Appar-ently this same pattern of behavior helped us determine friend from foe when we roamed the earth as early humans.

� e problem isn’t that we spend energy pursuing people and activities that reinforce our beliefs. � e problem is disliking,

mistrusting and even harming others who don’t share our views. And it’s getting worse, according to many political scientists and re-searchers who study these trends.

Why? Di� cult economic situ-ations can make us feel scared, so we seek safety in familiar envi-ronments. Ditto for situations involving violence and tragedy. However, there is nothing wrong with needing familiarity in tough times.

We believe what we want to believe, and we selectively � lter out information that contradicts our views, according to Steven Strauss in an Oct. 2012 Hu� ngton Post article. Sherman de� ned this as “con� rmation bias” as “seeking and � nding con� rming evidence in support of already existing be-liefs and ignoring or reinterpret-ing discon� rming evidence.”

� e Internet has increased our access to information in im-measurable ways. However, what many of us may not realize is that we live in a “� lter bubble.” A � lter bubble is caused by website algo-rithms choosing what information to show us based on our loca-tion, previous search history and browsing behavior. � at doesn’t sound so bad until you realize that these algorithms can prevent us from seeing information that

di� ers from our typical brows-ing behavior, so we remain in our ideological bubbles.

Sites like Google, Facebook and news media are “all � irting with personalization in various ways,” Eli Pariser said in a March 2011 Ted Talks video on Ted.com. “And this moves us very quickly toward a world in which the In-ternet is showing us what it thinks we want to see, but not necessarily what we need to see,” Pariser said.

Pariser described how he asked friends to Google “Egypt” and then take screen shots of their results and send them to him. � e di� erences in the results were remarkable. Some received many links about the protests that were happening at the time. Others only saw tourism-related links, nothing on protests.

What can we do about this trend toward further polariza-tion? Nothing is likely to cause Fox News fans to suddenly � ip to MSNBC for an alternative view of an issue and vice versa, but under-standing why polarization exists — and may be getting worse — is a start. Public outcry on algorith-mic � ltering of news would also help. Educating ourselves and our next generation on recognizing our biases and allowing them to be challenged is crucial.

Bound together through tragedy, for nowLee [email protected]

Zahara will probably never remember her father, but the rest of the world will never let her forget him.

Anzor and Zubeidat will never have their little boys back.

In the a� ermath of the Boston Marathon bombing, more stories of heroism and tragedy surface ev-ery day. What many forget is that there were far more victims than the three who died or the more than 250 who were injured. Every person who has ever cared about Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is a victim too.

Tamerlan, the 26-year-old suspect who was killed in a police shootout, was married with a 3-year-old daughter.

His wife, Katherine Russell, now will have to undergo intense investigation into her personal life, her marriage and her history. She will have to mourn her hus-

band while reliving all of his faults in front of the entire country.

His daughter, Zahara, will live the rest of her life under the shad-ow of her father’s crime. Chances are that because of her age, she won’t even have any memories of him, but that won’t stop people from judging her because of her relation to him.

Following the tragedy, CNN interviewed several of the high school and college friends of Dzhokhar, the 19-year-old suspect who is still in serious condition. All of them said that there was never an indication that he was anything but a normal teenager.

From here, there is nothing that any of his friends can do but analyze every interaction they ever had with Dzhokhar. Any memories they have of their friend now have a dark tint to them, and the meaning behind every word they ever exchanged will forever be in question.

� e parents of the two sus-

pects, Anzor and Zubeidat, now have to live with knowing that their sons are responsible for one of the worst terrorist attacks in the U.S. in the last decade. � ey have to rationalize through the lives of the children whose diapers they changed, whose tears they dried and whose hands they held. � e world is calling their sons monsters. Anzor and Zubeidat now have to handle their grief for Tamerlan and their worry for Dzhokhar all while answering to a world with a long history of a blame-the-parents mentality.

When tragedies like this hap-pen, there really are no winners – those present and those injured or killed at the marathon are the obvious victims. And they deserve all the respect and sympathy possible. � e hurt, however, goes deeper. � e actions of Tamerlan and Dzhokhar have damaged the lives of their family and friends more profoundly than anyone can imagine.

Nikki [email protected]

The true scope of tragedyTrue fear

Kayla [email protected]

In the shadow of the Boston bombing, a horrifying thing hap-pened in Washington D.C. — the House passed CISPA.

CISPA (the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act) had � rst been seen in the House Nov. 2011, but was botched a� er fail-ing to pass through the Senate. Now the bill is back. It passed the House 288-127 April 18 and is lingering outside the Senate.

As PC Magazine article explains, CISPA would allow for voluntary information sharing between private companies and the government in the event of a cyber attack. At the same time, companies like Facebook or Google could inform the feds if they notice unusual activity on their networks that might suggest a cyber attack.

Due to its vague wording, CISPA could potentially be an undemocratic breach of privacy, given that private companies could hand over personal infor-mation to the government if they deem it “unusual activity.”

Expect to hear more about CISPA in the coming weeks, but don’t feel like all you need to do is read headlines and vent on social media sites. You are more power-ful than you think.

Do some research, and if you feel CISPA is a breach of personal privacy, call your representative, write letters to Congress, and sign the petition. Know that we the people are the voice and the deci-sion makers of this country.

Signatures for the petition were due March 15, but if people keep signing it can make a difference. Visit the following website to

show opposition for CISPA: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/stop-cispa-cy-

ber-intelligence-sharing-and-protection-act/19sQhBpy

InSight

Page 7: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

TheMetropolitan InSight April 25, 2013 7

Plaza Suite 150303-556-2525

@BeWellAuraria

LIKE US, FOLLOW US

/HealthCenterAtAuraria

HIV Question and Answer Roundtable and Support GroupThis is an opportunity for all students who have This is an opportunity for all students who have questions about HIV/AIDS, know someone living with HIV/AIDS, or are living with the virus themselves to ask questions in a supportive, safe, and confidential environment.11 a.m11 a.m.– 12 p.m., For the exact room location, either stop by the GLBT or contact the group facilitator at 720-588-5188 with questions.

Substance Abuse GroupPeople interested in learning about their People interested in learning about their substance abuse issues or issues with a loved one are welcome to attend. For more information, contact 303-556-6954.12:30– 1:30 p.m., Auraria Library Room 206

EVENTS

THE HEALTH CENTER OFFERS IMMUNIZATIONS AGAINST DISEASES THAT ARE NOWPREVENTABLE THROUGH:

TDAPIPVMENINGITISCHICKENPOXHPV

PROFESSIONAL SERVICESLow-cost, student-focused medical servicesBlue Cross Blue Shield approved providerOn-site physicians and mid-level providersSpecialist physicians in psychiatry, gynecology & orthopedicsPrimary care medical servicesManagement of acute and chronic illnessManagement of acute and chronic illnessUrgent care medical servicesWalk-in and appointment availabilityCampus emergency response

Laboratory and X-ray servicesInfectious disease managementSexually transmitted disease testingAnnual physical examinationsWoman’s health careContraception resourcesPrescription medicationsPrescription medicationsHealth educationImmunizations

24/7 Auraria Campus Emergency Phone Numbers Protocol to Contact the Auraria Police Department

From any campus phone, CALL 911 From off-campus phones or cell phone, CALL 303-556-5000

Page 8: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

8 April 25, 2013 MetroSpective TheMetropolitan

11 a.m.–2 p.m. · Wednesday, May 1 Tivoli 320

Explore your housing options in the Denver area and get everything squared away, from

furniture to storage, before it’s too late.

s p o n s o r e d b y M S U D e n v e r S t U D e n t M e D i a

t i v o l i 3 1 3 · 3 0 3 - 5 5 6 - 2 5 0 7 · m e t r o s t u d e n t m e d i a . c o m

Free food & prizes!

Moving?W E ’ v E g o t y o u c o v E r E D !

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RESOURCE FAIR

Page 9: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

TheMetropolitan April 25, 2013 9

MetroSpectivePhilanthropy Day brings sweet opportunity

Top: Ambrosia McPherson (left) of CCD, and Anthony Tillman (right) of UCD explain “Snickerdoodles for Scholarships” to a student passing by April 23 in the Tivoli. The program is dedicated to raising money for academic scholarships for all three schools at Auraria to commemorate National Student Engagement and Philanthropy Day. Bottom: The Colorado Cookie Company made the cookies and offered them at a discount to organizers for the “Snickerdoodles for Scholarships” program. Photos by Amanda Sutherland • [email protected]

Nikki [email protected]

Add in a pinch of caring, and flour, sugar and cinnamon become ingredients for opportunity.

All it took was a dollar and a cookie to make a difference April 23 in the Tivoli lobby. “Snickerdoo-dles for Scholarships,” a project for National Student Engagement and Philanthropy Day, gave students a chance to give back while adding to each school’s general scholar-ship fund. There was a table set up in the Tivoli Lobby full of dona-tion jars and cellophane-wrapped snickerdoodles.

“It’s just for fundraising, just for scholarships for the three schools,” said Anthony Tillman, a UCD junior volunteering at the booth. “We have no set amount, we try to encourage people to donate a dollar, but if they only have a penny, if they only have a quarter, that’s fine. We allow them to grab a cookie.”

Spearheaded by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education, the national celebration was held officially on Feb. 28, but for the organizers at Auraria, any day seemed an appropriate day for giving.

“We’re really just raising awareness on the importance of philanthropy and giving back to the institution,” said Janell Lindsey, the director of alumni special initiatives at MSU Denver. “State dollars are diminishing, and maybe we can make up that num-ber with donors and to be generous and to give back to the deserving students.”

In one day of fundraising, “Snickerdoodles for Scholarships” raised $300 for the MSU Denver general scholarship fund. From there, the funds will be divided up among future scholarship recipi-ents.

“The big thing is for students who’ve gotten scholarships to give back to get scholarships for other students,” said Ambrosia McPherson, CCD sophomore and volunteer. “Their generosity gives other students the ability to get a scholarship.”

The event was put together by the Alumni Office at MSU Denver, the Alumni Office at UCD and the Advancement Office at CCD. This was the first year for National Student Engagement and Philan-thropy Day, and 150 colleges and universities nationwide partici-

pated. For Lindsey, the goal is that Auraria keeps the dough rising year after year.

“Almost 50 percent of our students are on scholarships, so chances are that those who are giv-ing are on scholarships and those who aren’t can definitely apply for scholarships,” Lindsey said.

This year, MSU Denver took the lead on the project, but organizers hope the schools will alternate over the next few years. In preparation for “Snickerdoodles for Scholarships,” Lindsey and her colleagues solicited donations for necessary materials, like aprons for volunteers and the snickerdoodle cookies themselves.

“In our philanthropic spirit, we tried to get as much donated as possible,” she said. The aprons were donated by ProCorp Images, and the cookies were given at a discount by Colorado Cookie Co.

Though “Snickerdoodles for Scholarships” was originally sup-posed to take place at Spring Fling, which cancelled their nonprofit portion due to weather, Lindsey thought the difference in venue might have brought an advantage.

No matter the venue, though, the purpose of the event was still the same — encouraging generosity and giving.

“It’s important to always give back,” Lindsey said. “It feels good to give back, we know that you always make a difference in some-

one’s life.”She also stressed the impor-

tance of college students remem-bering that we all need acts of philanthropy in our lives.

“None of us got to where we are without somebody’s help,” Lindsey said. “There are folks that say, well

you know, pull yourselves up by your bootstraps, but somebody had to make the boots, someone had to teach you how to put on the boots. You still never get anywhere by yourself, so you always have to remember that and give where you can.”

Page 10: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

Local Chicano poet “Lalo” Delgado celebrated posthumously at Auraria

Top right: Luis Torres, MSU Denver deputy provost for academic and student affairs, recieved a signed copy of Abelardo “Lalo” Delgado’s poem titled “Fast for Understanding, We Hunger for Education.” April 23 at the sixth annual poetry festival at St. Cajetan’s.Bottom right: A painting of Abelardo “Lalo” Delgado and his wife of 51 years Lola Delgado.Photos by Brian T. McGinn • [email protected]

Top left: MSU Denver senior Michael Diaz Rivera takes advantage of the food provided at the Lalo Delgado Poetry Festival April 23 in the St. Cajetan’s Cathedral. The festival was sponsored by the Metro State Chicana/o Studies Department. Bottom left: Native American crafts were on display and for sale at the Lalo Delgado Poetry Festival held at St. Cajetan’s April 23. The festival was sponsored by Metro State Chicana/o Studies Department.Photos by Philip Poston • [email protected]

Kailyn [email protected]

MSU Denver honored late activist poet Abelardo “Lalo” Del-gado with its 6th annual event and scholarship awarding.

On April 23, starting at 9 a.m. with a blessing and performance by Huitzilopochtli Aztec Dancers, St. Cajetan’s Center hosted a festival filled with homages to Delgado. Paintings and photos of the poet lined the front of the building, along with posters with his poems and even a small frame with the news clipping of his obituary from 2004. There was even a T-shirt with his photo.

“Lalo was my mentor, I knew him since 1972,” said Dr. Ramón Del Castillo, chair of the Chicana/o Studies department. “Lalo revived the concept of the tlamatinime, which were Aztec poets — we’re modern day tlamatinimes.”

The event was not only a cele-bration of Delgado’s life, it was also a celebration of poetry as a driving force for activism and change.

Before reciting some of her own poetry, Dr. Sandra Doe of the Eng-lish department gave testament to the importance of teaching poetry.

“We should continue to keep our students writing poems,” she said.

The event included several speakers, poetry performances and a musical section of Poe Jazz with Del Castillo and Freddy Rodríguez Jr.

Both of the keynote poets, Molina Speaks and Dominique

Ashaheed, who performed at the event, use the art form to drive social reform. Ashaheed has been doing slam poetry since 2011.

“Writing for me is a deeply per-sonal process,” she said. “I mean what I write, so I don’t really have to conjure up anything because it’s stuff that lives in my body anyway.”

There were also several differ-ent booths at the event, including one for the Auraria Campus Book-store and a booth selling Native American artwork. The Tamale Kitchen provided lunch for the attendees.

The winners for the Abelardo “Lalo” Delgado Memorial Scholar-ship were announced as the festival drew to a close. The scholarship promotes the school’s commit-ment to diversity and inclusion. The recipients received $500 for the 2013-2014 academic year.

A professor in Metro’s Chicano Studies department for 17 years, Delgado had a personal connec-tion to the university. He was an internationally known poet who received the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Lifetime Achievement Award in 2005 from the city of Denver and was posthumously declared Denver’s first poet laure-ate by Gov. John Hickenlooper in 2004. His most well-known poem is “stupid america.”

“Lalo brought [poetry] back to life, he reinvigorated poetry and shared with us and taught us that it was important,” Del Castillo said. “That poets played a role in society and that their role was to teach and to use poetry as a healing force.”

stupid america, see that chicano

with a big knifeon his steady hand

he doesn’t want to knife youhe wants to sit on the bench

and carve christfiguresbut you won’t let him.

stupid america, hear that chicano

shouting curses on the streethe is a poet

without paper and penciland since he cannot write

he will explode.stupid america, remember

that chicanitoflunking math and english

he is the picassoof your western states

but he will diewith one thousand

masterpieceshanging only from his mind.

“stupid america”By Abelardo “Lalo” Delgado

10 April 25, 2013 MetroSpective TheMetropolitan TheMetropolitan MetroSpective April 25, 2013 11

Page 11: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

12 April 25, 2013 Rants+Raves TheMetropolitan

Rants+Raves

Tobias [email protected]

Remember when the Yeah Yeah Yeahs promised that our heads would roll?

Well, with the release of their fourth studio album, the New York City trio has backed up that prom-ise with a new post-punk alterna-tive rock album called Mosquito.

Formed back in 2000, the group consists of flamboyant vo-calist Karen O, keyboardist/guitar-ist Nick Zinner and percussionist Brian Chase.

With three solid alt-rock albums under their belts, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have become one of the most sought-after acts in the “indiesphere” today.

Their lavish performances have been quite the spectacle to see and experience. The band has been able to constantly reinvent their patent sound with stylistic twists on that which made them popular.

Mosquito is an expansive and resilient album that picks up right where Karen O and the gang left off with the 2009 release of It’s

Blitz! Mosquito is an alluring yet

delirious fusion of pop songs that explore various musical genres that range from neo-psychedelic post-punk to good old fashioned indie electro-pop music.

The album’s passionate foot stomping opener, “Sacrilege” is quite possibly the best new song I have heard all year.

The mesmerizing track is luminously constructed with solid drum and bass work accompanied by Karen O’s radical vocals and a full gospel choir backing her soul-ful voice.

“Under the Earth,” the album’s fourth track, is a copacetic change of pace and brings the album to a down-tempo carnivorous feeling that sounds like an indie-electron-ic dance anthem.

With a number of amazing musicians like James Murphy of LCD Soundsytem and Dave Sitek of TV on the Radio helping out in the producer category, the Yeah’s music mirrors something that Iggy Pop was doing in the late 70s and into the early 80s.

Erik [email protected]

Director Joseph Ko-sinski delivers a raw sci-fi thriller with his new film

“Oblivion.”The movie surprised me with

the quality of production that went into the storyline, special effects and overall content of the movie. It reminded me of four other sci-fi films: “Tron: Legacy,” “Equilibri-um,” “Mad Max: Beyond Thunder-dome,” and “Independence Day.” “Tron: Legacy” was a no brainer, considering Kosinski directed both it and “Oblivion.”

It reminded me of “Tron: Leg-acy” because of the set design— both films had very contemporary and simplistic designs. The cos-tumes reminded me of Christian Bale’s white suit in “Equilibrium.” The location of the “bad guys” had the Mad Max feel. And the way the movie ended reminded me of “Independence Day” significantly.

The film follows Tom Cruise’s character Jack, a pilot/handyman that fixes drones. The drones protect giant machines that suck up oceans, convert the water into

fusion power, and leave the earth as a barren wasteland. By day, Jack fixes drones and fights off “scavs,” enemies of Jack and his employers. By night, Jack enjoys the com-pany of his wife Victoria (Andrea Riseborough) in their contempo-rary home above the clouds. Jack begins having flashbacks, even though his memory was suppos-edly erased, and begins to remem-ber a woman he knows but has never met. When Jack discovers a beacon in the wasteland that the “scavs” sent out, he destroys it and later finds out the beacon brings a secret his superiors don’t want him to know. The secret ties together his daydreams, the “scavs” and their intentions, and the truth about the organization he works for.

Tom Cruise proves once again that the talent he brings to screen is undeniable. The vehicles he pilots and drives are things only one can dream of owning. The special effects of the crippled earth and destroyed moon are painfully beautiful. The storyline invites the audience into its mysterious plot, and keeps them engaged from beginning to end.

Kailyn Lamb [email protected]

The band that was leg-endary for long song titles and the “emo” and “scene”

trends has made a comeback. Save Rock and Roll is Fall Out

Boy’s first album since the misera-ble failure of Folie á Deux, released in 2008, because let’s face it, we all lost faith in bassist and lyricist Pete Wentz when he married Ashlee Simpson.

The band has the same style of music that they did back in the day. Singer Patrick Stump can still belt and the lyrics are still long-winded.

Their first single of the album, “My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light ‘Em Up),” was enough to take me back to high school and remember why I loved this band. In particular, the power behind Stump’s vocals add to the quick rhythms of the verse’s thrumming guitar.

They’ve also kept up with their eclectic choices in guest artists that they had on previous albums. Courtney Love and Elton John both have tracks on the new

album. “Just One Yesterday,” the track

featuring Foxes, is a sort of love song, in its own way. The lyrics are sad involving the writer blaming himself for the lost love, say-ing he would give her all his love just to take it away. The harmony

provided by Foxes adds a sadness to the song that boosts the feel of the lyrics.

The split of Fall Out Boy may have ended the “scene kid” reign, but Save Rock and Roll shows that the band is back and they’re here to stay.

Tobias [email protected]

Oh Yoshimi, you’ve done it again. Wayne Coyne and the embryonic members of

The Flaming Lips have provided listeners with yet another psyche-delic space-rock album.

The Terror, released April 16, is one more piece of the Norman, Oklahoma natives’ rocky road to music stardom. Plagued with vari-ous road blocks, such as addiction, spider bites and rotating band members, the Lips have somehow overcome all of these seemingly endless obstacles. With the release of their thirteenth studio album, Coyne and Co. have summed up their roller coaster career in one superb album.

The avant-garde electronic music the Lips have been pro-ducing for almost three decades has now surpassed everyone’s imagination each time they put out a new record. 2002’s release of Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots saw the Lips’ status soar as they topped festival bills like Bonnaroo

and Coachella. Coyne’s trademark, crowd-pleasing “bubble ball walk” through the audience has made the neo-experimental rockers a house-hold name throughout the world.

The lyrically talented Coyne has given listeners another album full of eerie and synthesized sounds that mimic the popularity of The Soft Bulletin, Yoshimi, and Zaireeka.

The nine -track album flows from one song to the next like the grand score to a horror flick. It might freak some people out, but The Terror houses swirling fearful noises backed by a series of rigor-ously recorded instruments, giving it a truly epic musical experience.

The Terror is closely related to the psychedelic albums Pink Floyd once put out. Deep, mysterious voice-overs mimic early Dark Side recordings that only some can pick up on at the right time.

The album’s fourth track, “You Lust,” features indie electro-pop greats Phantogram, and clocks in at over thirteen minutes. The song bobs and weaves and takes you places as if you were stuck in a

labyrinth with Jack Nicholson, a la “The Shining.”

The Terror itself is a fantastic listen. It reminded me of why I listen to music in the first place: exploration and finding out new things about what artists are doing today.

The Flaming Lips have never stopped evolving and continue to inspire many musicians. That’s something that can’t be said for most musicians today.

FOB falls back into music

Photo courtesy of Island Records

“Oblivion” is quality sci-fi

Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ new album is no small bite

Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

The Flaming Lips turn heads

B C

A A

Page 12: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

TheMetropolitan Rants+Raves April 25, 2013 13

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Surf, shop, share New and notable social media sites to watchNew and notable social media sites to watch

As far as honesty goes, Pencourage is the George Washington of social media sites.

Pencourage allows users complete anonymity unless they choose oth-erwise, and thus fosters a blatant truthfulness not o� en seen in social media. It is an expandable and interactive journal where users can share their thoughts in 200 words or less, pictures, links, videos, music and more. Upon � rst glance, it looks like a glori-� ed Pinterest — however, once logged in, the user interface shows the website’s real potential. Pencourage is all the big sites mashed into one. � ere’s a little of Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest and Instagram — and a lot of heart.

Nikki [email protected]

a

As they describe themselves, Vine is “the best way to see and share life in motion.”

It is similar to Instagram, but instead of pho-tos, users can share short video clips. Vine allows users to create and share short, looping videos that one can then share to Facebook, Twitter, the Vine app itself, or online. Vine on the web only runs through Twitter, but for iPhone users, it is an app and social media site all its own. More accessibility would make Vine much bettter, but its novelty and utility make it at least worth a try.

c

Oh, the shopping. Wanelo, which stands for “want, need, love,” is paradise for anyone who

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b

I just don’t get Pheed. It’s trying to be a hipper Facebook, but

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shopping addict’s relapse. Not for the faint of wallet.

Page 13: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

MetSportsRunners split two against ThunderWolves

At least Metro doesn’t have to play Colorado State University-Pueblo any more in the regular baseball season.

Metro split a doubleheader April 21 against CSU-Pueblo at Auraria Field. In game one, sopho-more starting pitcher Nick Ham-mett pitched seven innings and allowed only one run. Despite hav-ing two throwing errors, Hammett struck out eight ThunderWolves on 114 pitches. Coming into the game he had the second lowest earned

run average on the team: 3.71. “I was just locating all of my

pitches for strikes,” Hemmet said. “I felt good in the bullpen. It felt good to translate what I did in the bullpen out on the mound. “

Along with the solid pitching, the hitting got the job done. In the bottom of the second inning, Met-ro sophomore centerfielder Mitch Gibbons hit his third triple of the season to score two runs. CSU-Pueblo responded by scoring two runs in the top of the third. In the bottom of the fourth sophomore first baseman/catcher Darryl Baca hit his first homerun of the season to give the Runners a 2-0 lead. The 2012 first team all Rocky Mountain

Athletic Conference player had 11 homeruns last year.

“I was really trying to do too much at the beginning of the sea-son,” Baca said. “I kind of lost the swing a little bit, trying to make things happen.”

The Roadrunners 6-2 win ended not only their six-game los-ing streak but their six-game losing streak against ThunderWolves.

In the second game Metro got off to a 1-0 lead off a single by se-nior third baseman Jacob Nelson. In the top of the second, CSU-Pueblo scored four runs, as Metro starting pitcher, sophomore Mike Thrill, struggled to find consisten-cy. Thrill only lasted 3.1 innings,

allowing seven earned runs and walking three. In the top of the fourth, however, things got uneasy. After Thrill was relieved, senior pitcher Carlos Luzon threw a pitch that was low and inside against CSU-Pueblo’s Evan Kenebrew and got ejected. Metro head coach Jer-rid Oates came out to defend his reliever and got ejected along with assistant coach Mark Martinez.

The Metro bench was scream-ing in disbelief, and just when it seamed the game would get back to normal, senior leftfielder Alex Schrupp was ejected as well. The umpires didn’t give any warnings to both benches. A few innings later, Metro freshman outfielder Reilly Mau was hit by a pitch, the umpires gave warnings. That fourth inning also had CSU-Pueblo score four more runs, the ThunderWolves were up 8-1. The ThunderWolves would go on to win 11-2. Despite the game two ejections and defeat, Oates was very optimistic about the remain-ing eight games of the season.

“We just have to go out and compete, and win, and find a way to get into the tournament,” Oates said. “We’re in the driver’s seat we’re in total control of our post-season right now.”

Metro has two series remain-ing on their schedule: Adams State and New Mexico Highlands. The Runners are 14-22 overall ,10-17 in RMAC play.

Compiled by Mario [email protected]

Runners Wrap-up

TheMetropolitan April 25, 2013 15

SoftballMetro softball took one of

four games versus New Mexico Highlands University April 20-21 in Las Vegas, N.M.

The Roadrunners jumped to an early 2-0 lead in game one before the Cowboys scored 10 unanswered runs in a 12-5 loss. Metro junior first baseman Stephanie Dunham and junior catcher Kelsey Tillery each col-lected two RBIs, as Tillery went 3-for-4. Junior pitcher Monique Hernandez took the loss, giving up eight earned runs on eight hits over 1.2 innings, dropping her record to 6-7.

Metro dropped game two, 9-8. The Runners scored seven runs in the top of the fifth inning to take an 8-4 lead. The Cowboys answered with two runs in the bottom of the fifth and three runs in the bottom of the sixth. Junior center fielder Dani Sandel went 4-for-4 in the game with one RBI and one run scored. Junior pitcher Alyssa Ramirez took the loss in 4.2 relief innings of senior starting pitcher Brit-tany Moss.

In game three, the Runners scored in the top of the first on a single by sophomore left fielder Mary Towner and again in the top of the fourth with an RBI single from Sandel. Metro car-ried its 2-0 advantage into the bottom of the sixth inning before N.M. claimed the lead with three runs. Hernandez took the loss, giving up three earned runs on 10 hits over six innings.

Metro claimed an 8-5 victory in the final game of the series. Tillery, Brew, and Towner scored, giving the Runners a 3-0 lead by the top of the second inning. The Cowboys tied the score in the bottom of the inning. Metro reclaimed the lead with two runs in the top of the third, when senior second baseman Annalyse Garcia added to the 5-3 lead with a single in the top of the fifth. Brew capped the inning with a two-run homer to right field. N.M. cut the lead to 8-5 with two runs in the bottom of the fifth, but Moss shut the door, pitching two shutout innings in the sixth and seventh earning her fourth win and the team’s 14th.

The Lady Roadrunners are 14-27 with four games remaining in the regular season.

T’Wolves sweep Roadrunners

Umpires give Metro baseball players a warning during the second game of a doubleheader against Colorado State University-Pueblo April 21 at Auraria Field. Roadrunners’ pitcher Carlos Luzon, assistant coach Mark Martinez and head coach Jerrid Oates were all ejected from the game. Photo by Cos Lindstrom-Furutani • [email protected]

Metro junior second baseman/shortstop Zac Baldini rounds third base during a doubleheader against Colorado State University-Pueblo April 20 at Auraria Field.Photo by Cos Lindstrom-Furutani • [email protected]

Zee [email protected]

Metro baseball dropped a doubleheader to Colorado State University–Pueblo April 20 at Auraria Field.

The first game was a challenge for the Roadrunners, losing 10-1 to the ThunderWolves, led by pitcher Jeremiah Struble, who kept the Roadrun-ners scoreless through the first six innings.

“Their starting pitcher, Strubble, is really good. He spots up well,” Metro senior pitcher Justin Arceneaux said. “We knew from the begin-ning that it was going to be difficult to string hits together against him, so we just tried to put good AB’s together.”

Alex Schrupp crossed the plate in the seventh inning off a pinch-hit from Chris Spirek for the Roadrunners’ only run.

The Roadrunners played a stronger second game against the Thunder-Wolves, losing 8-5.

The Runners scored one run in the second but the ThunderWolves led 5-1 after the top of the third inning, off of Roadrunner errors.

“We just came out with more fire and energy the second game, and just started to see the ball better, and putting the bat to the ball,” sopho-more pitcher Patrick Gojan said. “The hits started falling for us and runs started coming across.”

The Runners were down 6-3 going into the seventh inning, but the Wolves answered with two, making it 8-3. In the bottom of the inning, freshman infielder Andrew Paust had a pinch-hit home run, scoring two Runners, but ending the game with an 8-5 loss.

Nick [email protected]

Page 14: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

16 April 25, 2013 MetSports TheMetropolitan

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© 1 9 8 5 , 2 0 0 2 , 2 0 0 3 , 2 0 0 4 , 2 0 0 7 , 2 0 0 8 J I M M Y J O H N ’ S F R A N C H I S E , L L C A L L R I G H T S R E S E R V E D . We R e s e r v e T h e R i g h t To M a k e A n y M e n u C h a n g e s .

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GIANT club sandwichesMy club sandwiches have twice the meat or cheese, try it on my fresh baked thick sliced 7-grain bread or my famous homemade french bread!

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ok, so my subs really aren't gourmet and we're not french either. my subs just taste a little better, that's all! I wanted to call it jimmy john's tasty sandwiches, but my mom told me to stick with gourmet. She thinks whatever I do is gourmet, but i don't think either of us knows what it means. so let's stick with tasty!

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DELIVERY ORDERS will include adelivery charge per item.

Page 15: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

TheMetropolitan MetSports April 25, 2013 17

AccelerAte your degree

msudenver.edu/summer2013

Take classes this summer to shorten your road to graduation. Register now.Taking summer session classes can help you graduate sooner. And since summer classes are billed at the current tuition rate, you’ll save money over the cost of fall 2013 or spring 2014 classes.

Metro tennis wrapped up their season with the women earning third place and the men fourth in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference tournament April 20-21 in Grand Junction.

� e No. 2 seeded women fell to Colo-rado Mesa University in the semi� nals 5-3, but went on to beat Colorado State Universi-ty-Pueblo 5-0 for the bronze.

Freshman Cara Cromwell and senior Alicia Holm won at No. 1 doubles 8-1. Cromwell went on to win in No. 1 singles 6-0, 6-3, for her thirteenth victory at No. 1 singles, moving her into second place all time in Roadrunner history. Head coach Beck Meares holds the number ones spot with 14 wins as a freshman. Cromwell was

named RMAC Freshman Player of the Year, and Meares Coach of the Year.

� e No. 4 seeded men beat No. 5 seeded CSU-Pueblo 5-2 in the tournament quar-ter� nals then fell to No. 1 Western New Mexico 5-2 in the semi� nals. � e men then lost 5-1 to Montana State-Billings to take fourth in the RMAC.

� e women were 14-14, while the men ended their season 12-16.

� e women will graduate � ve of their six players, while the men will graduate three of their seven man squad.

Tennis Wrap-up

Runners from the Metro track and � eld teams set new school records and posted qualifying times for nationals April 18 at the SAC Relays and April 20 at the Beach Invitational in California.

Sophomore runner Kirk Harvey quali-� ed in the 3,000-meter steeplechase with a new school record of 9:01.50. Senior Eiger Erickson also quali� ed in the steeplechase with a 9:09.22. Sophomores Nick Kadlec, who ran the 10K in 30:16.15, and Michael Warburton, with a 1:52.37 in the 800-meter, rounded out the national quali� er list for the men.

Redshirt freshman Breanna Hemming

also set a school record, running 4:26.55 in the 1,500-meter. Hemming also broke the record with a 2:11.69 in the 800-meter, qualifying for nationals in both events.

Freshman Janelle Lincks ran a 16:55.55 5K for ninth out of 35 runners, giving her a provisional qualifying time.

� e Roadrunners will compete in a pre-conference meet at Colorado School of Mines April 27.

Track and Field Wrap-up

Compiled by Angelita [email protected]

Compiled by Angelita [email protected]

Senior Alicia Holm. Photo courtetsy of Andy Sclicting, MSU Denver Athletic Department

Redshirt freshman Breanna Hemming. Photo courtesy of Rachel Fuenzalida

Page 16: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

StudyBreak18 April 25, 2013 MetroSpective TheMetropolitan

ThisWeek

4.25-5.2

Sudoku

Brain Teasers

Last issue’s answers (top to bottom): Overseas Travel, Middle-aged, Hijacking, Back the

Winning Horse, Big Brother

Di� culty: HARD

Di� culty: EASY

Horoscope

AriesMarch 21 -April 19

TaurusApril 20 -May 20

GeminiMay 21 -June 20

CancerJune 21 -July 22

LeoJuly 23 -August 22

VirgoAugust 23 -September 22

LibraSeptember 23 -October 22

ScorpioOctober 23 -November 21

SagittariusNovember 22 -December 21

CapricornDecember 22 -January 19

AquariusJanuary 20 -February 18

PiscesFebruary 19 -March 20

You will � nd a mysterious treasure map that ends in an “X.” It will lead to nothing but a pile of pinecones and dog poop.

If you decide to get into the new TV show “De� -ance” and buy the counterpart video game, you may have more time for real life.

When you’re feeling uncomfortable with a situa-tion, it’s probably not OK to yell, “beam me up, Scotty” as a means to get out of it.

If you’re feeling stressed out, maybe you shouldn’t wait til the day before to get all your homework and assignments done. Just a thought.

Holy crap, summer is almost here and there’s still snow on the ground. Yup — you live in Colorado and the universe doesn’t care.

Go outside and look at the stars. Maybe they’ll speak to you.

If you think you’re overwhelmed now, just wait — � nals week is coming.

You will walk through a door, and an abnormal number of white doves will be released behind you. You will feel like a complete badass, even if you are just entering Wal-Mart.

Blackbirds don’t sing in the dead of night. � ey’re asleep, like most animals.

If you decide to go swimming with dolphins this week, you will realize that you are not Elijah Wood and not all dolphins are like Flipper and won’t save you from a shark attack.

If you read your horoscope o� of a whiskey-soaked napkin, you probably shouldn’t trust the stars this week.

As a Wal-Mart employee, you will have to clean up a lot of dove shit in the next week. You can thank those of the Aquarius sign.

Metro Events4.25Dodgeball TournamentAuraria Event Center @ 5-9 p.m.

4.26-4.27Spectacular Vernacular Public Speaking ContestTivoli 320 @ 8 a.m. - 4p.m.(Any Metro student who has completed or is currently enrolled in SPE 1010 Public Speaking)

4.30Job Search SkillsLearn the basic ‘how tos’ of starting a job searchTivoli 215 @ 12:30-2 p.m.

4.30Early Music EnsembleKing Center Recital Hall7:30-9 p.m.Free

5.2Cinco de MayoCampus-wide EventsTivoli Commons @ 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

5.2A Conversation with Supreme Court Justice Sonia SotomayorP.E. Events Center Doors at 5:30 p.m.

Events Around Denver4.27Mindless Self IndulgenceOgden TheatreDoors at 8 p.m. $23.50-$25

4.29Gaslight AnthemOgden Theatre Doors at 7 p.m. $20-$25

5.1-5.5Mary PoppinsThe Buell TheatreTimes vary by date$25-$130

5.2-5.4Chris HardwickComedy Works DenverTimes vary by date, 21+

By Kayla Whitney • [email protected]

The 4/20 rally gallery

Page 17: Volume 35, Issue 30 - April 25, 2013

TheMetropolitan April 25, 2013 19

ClassifiedAdsClassi� ed InfoPhone: 303-556-2507Fax: 303-556-3421Location: Tivoli 313Advertising via Email: [email protected]: www.metrostudentmedia.com

Classi� ed ads are 15¢ per word for students currently enrolled at MSU Denver. To receive this rate, a current MSU Denver student ID must be shown at time of placement. For all others, the cost is 30¢ per word.

Cash, check, VISA and MasterCard are accepted. Classi� ed ads may be placed via fax, email or in person. � e deadline for placing all classi� ed ads is 3 p.m. � ursday for the following week. For more information about other advertising opportunities, call 303-556-2507.

PUBLICATION FOR PATENTBasic electrical power strip adapted to allow print advertising capability. Includes USB options. Adapted power strips have ability to be secured to a surface with no damage

to that surface when anchoring equipment is removed. Critical Systems Protective Management, LLC. 10342 W. 59th Ave. Unit #3Arvada CO 80004

Buy & sell stuff with our FREE online classifieds.

t i v o l i 3 1 3 • 3 0 3 - 5 5 6 - 2 5 0 7

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METROPOLITAN

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claim their prize by 4/29. Sponsors and their dependents are not eligible to receive a prize. Supplies are limited. Passes are on a first-come, first-serve basis.

The screening will be held Wednesday, 5/1 at 7PM at a local theater. Passes received through this promotion do not guarantee a seat at the theater. Seating

is on a first-come, first-served basis, except for members of the reviewing press. Theater is overbooked to ensure a full house. No admittance once screening

has begun. All federal, state and local regulations apply. A recipient of prizes assumes any and all risks related to use of prize, and accepts any restrictions

required by prize provider. Sundance Selects, Allied-THA, 43Kix, The Metropolitan and their affiliates accept no responsibility or liability in connection with any

loss or accident incurred in connection with use of prizes. Prizes cannot be exchanged, transferred or redeemed for cash, in whole or in part. Not responsible

if, for any reason, winner is unable to use his/her prize in whole or in part. Not responsible for lost, delayed or misdirected entries. All federal, state and local

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There is no charge to text 43KIX. Message and data rates from your wireless carrier may apply. Check your plan. Text HELP for info, STOP to opt-out. Late

and/or duplicate entries will not be considered. Limit one entry per cell phone. Winners will be drawn at random and notified via text message with how to

claim their prize by 4/29. Sponsors and their dependents are not eligible to receive a prize. Supplies are limited. Passes are on a first-come, first-serve basis.

The screening will be held Tuesday, 4/30 at 7:30PM at a local theater. Passes received through this promotion do not guarantee a seat at the theater. Seating

is on a first-come, first-served basis, except for members of the reviewing press. Theater is overbooked to ensure a full house. No admittance once screening

has begun. All federal, state and local regulations apply. A recipient of prizes assumes any and all risks related to use of prize, and accepts any restrictions

required by prize provider. IFC Films, Allied-THA, 43Kix, The Metropolitan and their affiliates accept no responsibility or liability in connection with any loss

or accident incurred in connection with use of prizes. Prizes cannot be exchanged, transferred or redeemed for cash, in whole or in part. Not responsible if,

for any reason, winner is unable to use his/her prize in whole or in part. Not responsible for lost, delayed or misdirected entries. All federal, state and local

taxes are the responsibility of the winner. Void where prohibited by law. No purchase necessary. NO PHONE CALLS

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Example Text:RANSOM

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