Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

28
'- r, r Metropolitan State College of Denver student newspaper serving the Auraria Campus since 1979 VOLUME 18 ISSUE 14 NOVEMBER 17, 1995 AMC theater deal resurrected Auraria board announces rebirth of movie-complex expansion Page a INSIGHTS Metro athletics struggles to stay in the game. Pages FEATURES Songwriter's lyrics shaped by literature studies. Page 13 SPORTS Basketball is back. Women hope to repeat as conference champs. Page 21 Hole lot of trouble Workers repair US West phone lines in a sink hole at the corner of Colfax Avenue and 7th Street Tuesday morning. The repairs snarled traffic and made entering Auraria parking lots difficult. John Swiftlrhe METROPOLITAN

description

The Metropolitan is a weekly, student-run newspaper serving the Auraria Campus in downtown Denver since 1979.

Transcript of Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

Page 1: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

~ '-

r, r

Metropolitan State College of Denver student newspaper serving the Auraria Campus since 1979

VOLUME 18 ISSUE 14 NOVEMBER 17, 1995

AMC theater deal resurrected Auraria board announces rebirth of movie-complex expansion Page a

INSIGHTS

Metro athletics

struggles to stay in the game.

Pages

FEATURES

Songwriter's lyrics shaped by literature

studies.

Page 13

SPORTS

Basketball is back. Women

hope to repeat as conference

champs.

Page 21

Hole lot of

trouble

Workers repair US

West phone lines in a sink

hole at the corner of

Colfax Avenue and 7th Street

Tuesday morning.

The repairs snarled

traffic and made entering

Auraria parking lots

difficult.

John Swiftlrhe METROPOLITAN

Page 2: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

2 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

ivlsl a of St nt S nic I Metropolitan State Coll191, Stud11t Services Division b19an a starch process for a

number of positio1s wit•in t•• Division ia early summer 95 and laas j1st completed tlatsc processes. The Division is pleased to announce tht appoi1tmeats to the followin9 positionst

Director of Financial Aid Ms. Mary Ann Romero Received a Masters of Education from CSU in 1983. Prior to her new position at MSCD, she was the Director of Student Financial Services at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, CA. Statement: "As director of financial aid, It is my responsi­bility to assure that Metro students' needs are met, while also assuring that all funds are administrated properly, and that all operational and reporting requirements are met on a timely basis. Our staff will continuously strive to improve upon this process wherever possible keeping our stu­dent's needs in the forefront.·

Director of Career Services Dr. Phyllis McNickle Previously the Coordinator of Career Services at KSU, and received her Ph.D. from same institution in 1994. Brings over ten years of experience in planning and delivery of career services. Statement: "The Office of Career Services is committed to assisting students and alumni in the development and acti­vation of their career and educational plans. Career Services also provides comprehensive services including career counseling, graduate and professional school plan­ning, job search workshops, access to job listings, and electronic referral to employing organizations. •

Director of Student Activities Mr. Zav Dadabhoy Masters from University of Wisconsin in 1990, and previ­ously the Student Development Director at Longwood College in Virginia. Statement: "The Director of Student Activities is responsi­ble for creating and developing a stimulating, exciting series of co-curricular activities that reflect student inter­ests and needs. Student activities are key in creating a vibrant and spirited campus life. We look forward to bring­ing this excitement to you ... •

Student Finance Resource Center Director Mr. Thomas Muenzberg MSCD Alumni who received his B.S. in 1994. Previously served MSCD as the Director of the Short-Term Loan Program. Statement: "The Director of the Student Finance Resource Center will bring a new perspective to the student body at MSCD. For the first time students can get help in the areas of financial planning, budgeting and emergency financial needs. Jn short, the director is committed to find­ing solutions to immediate and long-term financial prob­lems.·

Admissions Counselor-Transfer Students Ms. Janet Spradley Received a Masters degree from Colorado Christian University in 1995 and is a MSCD Alumni from 1991 . Statement: "As the new Transfer Admissions Counselor I represent Metropolitan State College of Denver at !2-year college transfer programs throughout the state. Additionally, I meet with transfer students on a weekly basis at the five Metro-Denver community colleges for indi­vidual advising and counseling. J am also available for stu­dents in the Office of Admissions. •

Admissions Counselor - Minority Recruitment Ms. Valerie Gonzalez-Moscoso Graduated from UCO in 1991 and studied the Unlversldad de Guadalajara In 1990. She comes to us from CSU Educational Opportunity Center. Statement: "/ am pleased to represent Metro as the new admissions counselor for minority recruitment. This will include working with area high schools as well as the non-trditlonal market to enhance our enrollment of ethnic minority students. f bring with me a strong background and commitment to helping ethnic minority students access higher education and am looking forward to working with all of you.·

Mentoring Counselor Mr. Shawn Worthy Currently working on Doctorate from Northern Illinois University. Prior to new position at MSCD, he worked at the Mental Health Corporation of Denver. Statement: "/ have recently been hired by the Student Services Department to coordinate the Mentor and Summer Bridge Programs. / look forward to expanding the program. I also hope to revive the Mentor Program allowing the students to tap into the experience and wisdom faculty, staff and people in the community.·

Orientation Coordinator Ms. Elisabeth Brooks MSCD Alumni who received her B.A. in 1995. Previously held the position of Orientation Assistant at MSCD . Statement: "This position works with the Director of Orientation, Nancy Breckel, in all facets of New Student Orientation Including Freshman, Adult, Transfer, Women's and Parents' Orientation. Jn addition, this position has made it possible to expand the orientation program to include Campus Pals Freshman Events, and other new initiatives.•

Intervention Coordinator Ms. Melanie Acosta MSCD Alumni from 1990. She comes to us from the Mayor's Office of Employment and Training. Statement: "I will be responsible for the development, Imple­mentation and tracking of the Early Warning System (EWS) at Metro. This semester is the first time Metro wll/ provide early intervention services to increase awareness of campus resources while providing assistance to those students most in need. The primary goal of the program is to improve retention through supportive services and intervention.

Transfer Evaluator Ms. Dawn Fettig Received a Masters degree from UNC and a B.A. from California State University, Northridge. Statement: "The creation of an additional "Transfer Evaluator" position In the Office of the Registrar at MSCD should positively Impact student services by decreasing the amount of time It takes a student to receive a completed transfer evaluation. This w/11 allow the student to streamllne their degree seeking program.·

With these positions it is the mission of the Student Services Division to enhance recruitment and rttention efforts for the collest and provide improved senices to students.

Menqxfun ~ State~ofDenver

;.

.J .

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Page 3: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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NEWS NOVEMBER 17, 1995 TheMEl'RoPoUTAH 3

AMC deal back froID the dead Auraria revives controversial plan to expand Tivoli theat~rs Anne Hall The METROPOLITAN

AMC is once again negotiating with Auraria to expand its theaters on campus, said Manuel Martinez, chairman of the Auraria board of directors, at a meeting last Monday.

"I didn't believe in resurrection until today," said Metro President Sheila Kaplan.

Similar plans to expand the theaters over Auraria's tennis courts were torpedoed last June after coming under fire from Metro administration, students and Denver Mayor Wellington Webb.

"Dean (Wolf) and I have gone forward and initiated talks with the AMC individuals because we felt it was the right thing to do," Martinez said. Wolf is the Auraria director of operations and acting vice president for Administration.

Negotiations with AMC to expand the theaters could be vital to Auraria's finances, Wolf said.

"We need to put it in the context of the overall health of the student bond fund and operating dollars," Wolf said. "I think we need to stress that the integrity of the academic mission of the campus is foremost; the AMC deal must stand on its own merits. It's not a question of whether somebody likes the idea and thinks it should pro­ceed."

Wolf said the board hopes to examine all the options and reach a decision by early next semester.

The board intends to keep everyone informed on the status of the deal, Wolf said. Kaplan suggested the city be brought in early to avoid the same problems encountered last spring.

''The AMC deal must stand on its own merits.'

-Dean Wolf interim vice president of

Auraria

'I didn't believe in resurrection until

today.'

- Sheila Kaplan Metro president

"Just to get it on the record, I do support the need to review the fiscal viability of the student bond fund," Kaplan said. "Metro does support the review and talking to AMC. However, I think it's important to know, as I said last time, talking about it does not mean that we will agree when it comes down to the end."

Martinez held off on the announcement, which was not on the agenda, until the end of the meeting. While the heads of the three schools had been informed, many observers were surprised.

"I didn't know anything about it," said Amy Haimerl, a member of the Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board. "I hope they keep their promise to fully disseminate any information."

Kaplan also stressed the need to maintain Auraria's academic integrity and said the playing fields are part of that integrity.

'The question is, can those fields be reconfigured in a reasonable way, and is there enough money coming from any proposed deal to make it worthwhile," Kaplan said.

Martinez said he will hire an independent consultant to examine the AMC deal and look at alternatives such as other theater chains or retail outlets moving into the space. He said an architect will be brought in early on to redesign the playing fields.

Wolf said Auraria has retained a bond counsel to explore the possibility of refinancing the student bond fund.

"We need to look at the playing fields anyway because we have a maintenance request in excess of $1 million to repair those fields," Martinez said. 'This won't be time and effort wasted, either way."

Wolf said the current plan is to build a 50,000-foot theater complex on the other side of Walnut Street, which would allow AMC to expand from 12 to 24 theaters. The only structural changes from the original plan are a canopy over the street and a cement walkway between the two buildings.

Campus computers hit by 'Da' Boyz' 1 Entrance criteria stays low

File-cloaking virus found on 50 percent of students' diskettes Donna Hickey The METROPOLITAN

"Da' Boyz" have been booted off campus.

"Da' Boyz" is the name of a computer virus that prompted the systematic shut­down of the IBM computer labs across campus last week. The computers were disinfected one-by-one.

"Viruses are a part of life." said Mark Farkenhan, manager of Information Technology for Metro.

He said a new anti-virus software pro­gram has been installed in all the comput­ers and is available to students who wish to download it and use it to check their com­puters at home.

After the computers were shut down and the new anti-virus software was installed over 50 percent of the diskettes students brought into the lab had the "Da' Boyz" virus on them, Farkenhan said.

The virus was non-destructive which means it didn't destroy any data but pre­vented the user from finding necessary files. He said the virus switched the loca­tion of the directory on diskettes creating the appearance of a blank diskette. The

·data was only hidden, not eliminated. Farkenhan said viruses are always

coming through the computer lab because students share software or download soft-

John McDonough/The METROPOLITAN

VIRUS VERIFICATION: Rachelle Morrow, a computer lab assistant at Auraria, scans computer disks for a virus called Da' Boyz.

ware off the internet from unreputable sites in cyberspace.

To prevent from catching a virus, stu­dents need to use a virus-scan program which checks diskettes for viruses and be wary of free software, he said.

The virus was written specifically for Windows/DOS based systems, Farkenhan said, and the Macintoshes were not affect­ed. An anti-virus program is also available for Mac users.

Farkenhan said he hasn' t heard of anyone infecting their hard drive at home

but stressed the need for students to learn to live with computer viruses and take safety measures. When students see a sign on the computer that tells them there is a virus or there is a suspicious file on their diskette, they need to ask for assistance from one of the lab attendants, he said. He added that students who do not run anti­virus scans on their diskettes leave the virus in the computer memory for the next student to catch.

"Your playing with fire by not scan­ning your disks," he said.

Jodi Kotouc The METROPOLITAN

State education officials stifled Metro's efforts to tighten admission standards during a Colorado Commission on Higher Education meeting Oct. 27.

The Commission, which super­vises state colleges and universities, rejected Metro President Sheila Kaplan's request to raise admissions standards. The move is being inter­preted by administrators as a blow to Metro's image and success rates.

The plan to change various schools' index numbers, which is a calculation of an applicants' high­school grades and standardized test­scores for admission purposes.

For Metro that index number is 76, a number that is lower than all other state colleges. What Metro hoped to achieve at this meeting was to raise the index score to an 80. The raised index would have put Metro in a category that includes Adams State College, Fort Lewis College and Mesa State College, said Lucas Buxman, exec­utive vice president of the Colorado

Continued page 5

Page 4: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

4 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

Student government halts impeachment Dave Flomberg The METROPOLITAN

Metro's Student Government Assembly rescinded impeachment pro­ceedings against Amy Haimerl, Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board representative, at the assembly's meeting last Thursday.

The group voted 5-1-1 in favor of dropping the charges against Haimerl, which were filed last month in response to her admitted involvement in a prank that the student governments of the other two Auraria colleges played on Metro's assem­bly on Sept. 14.

At a meeting after the prank, the group voted unanimously to impeach Haimerl for violations of articles 3, 4, 5, 13, and 15 in the Standard of Conduct section of the Metro Student Handbook, which covers threats, intimidation, harassment, damage to property and hazing.

However, those charges were dropped due to the fact that the assembly has no for­mal policies or procedures for the impeach­ment process in place. Peter Rutt, chief justice for the assembly, said he was con­cerned because the procedure was being written during Haimerl's proceedings, which violated her right to a fair trial.

Yet, Haimerl contends that Rutt knew of, and informed the assembly of, that fact as far back as Sept. 16 at a meeting held off campus and in executive session.

Rutt was not available for comment. The vote against came from Lisa Scott,

vice president of Student Services. "I did not agree with the wording of

the motion to rescind," Scott said. "Who's definition of speedy are we going to use?" she asked in an interview. 'The judicial process takes time."

She said that if the motion was to just rescind the impeachment process with no reason given, she would have voted in favor.

Ky Lee, vice president of Academic Affairs, had the same problem with the

Jenny Sparks/The METROPOLITAN

OFF THE HOOK: Amy Haimerl no longer faces impeachment for her participation in a prank.

motion, and a few more. "Some punishment should have been

assigned for her role in the incident," she said. However, circumstances led her to abstain from the vote.

"My true reason for abstaining from the impeachment rescinding motion was due, in part, to the inconsistencies I have observed in student government, and (I) felt the process was flawed," said Lee.

Flawed though it may have been, it's over now.

"I just feel relieved that it's over," Haimerl said. "Now we can get back to business, which is helping students. Now we can stop wasting student fees on silly things like this."

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Meeting to discuss prank violated Colorado law

Metro's Student Government Assembly may have committed a viola­tion of the Colorado Sunshine Law.

The law requires any decision­making body of an institution of higher education to keep meetings open and public.

According to Vice Presidents Ky Lee, Lisa Scott, and Mel Munoz, the entire assembly body except for mem­bers Amy Haimerl and Ajayi Harris, was invited to attend an "informal gath­ering" held at Munoz's house.

The Sunshine Law defines a meet­ing as any kind of gathering of two or more members set up to discuss public business. either in person, by tele­phone, or by any other means.

"I didn't see it as a meeting," said Munoz. "It was a get-together to vent, a spiritual cleansing."

She said that after reporting the prank played on them Sept. 14 to Auraria Public Safety, the assembly members agreed they felt they "had no one to turn to except each other," so she invited them over to her house to "drink some wine and burn some incense."

"We had no agenda," Munoz said. "No official decision was made at the gathering."

However, this is contradicted by minutes of that meeting President Safa Suleiman sent to Haimerl in response to a request she filed Sept. 22, asking for all information involving impeach­ment charges levied against her.

Those minutes specifically call the "gathering" a meeting, in addition to

listing official actions taken during the course of that meeting, namely to "decide and accurately document (the assembly's) issue with public safety," as well as deciding what to do with Haimerl and the student government bodies of the University of Colorado­Denver and the Community College of Denver.

President Safa Suleiman said while she did write those notes, no offi­cial action was taken at the meeting.

Lebsock, who was not present at the meeting, said after the way the stu­dent government had been treated by public safety, they needed a little time together to collect themselves. The assembly called the police after APS refused to write a detailed report on the prank.

Haimerl said she did not find out about the meeting until Sept. 18, and Harris said he was never informed about the meeting.

"I had some questions about it and why I or the press wasn't informed," Haimerl said. "So I asked for the min­utes from Safa."

Lebsock said that up until that time, neither Haimerl nor Harris had attended many meetings, including a retreat and a barbecue, which is why they weren't invited.

Munoz said she didn't want Haimerl there.

"I felt personally attacked by Amy, there was no way I was going to invite her over to my house," she said.

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Page 5: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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- - -----

NOVEMBER 17, 1995 The METROPOLITAN 5

~i

Head case Revamped programs enjoy high enrollment Nguyen Pontiere The METROPOLITAN

Rebounding from near elimination ten years ago, the African American and Chicano Studies Departments are having a successful fall semester at Metro.

The two departments were reduced to program status and merged under the Institute for Intercultural Studies in 1985. The re-establishment of the departments can be attributed to the rising interest in ethnic studies, increased enrollment in such programs at Metro and the school's multicultural requirement, said C.J. White, chairman of the African American Studies Department.

Jane Raley/The METROPOLITAN

Pat Johnson, assistant professor at the the Human Performance, Sport and Leisure department, asks students for help finding the missing skull of a male skeleton. Johnson said the $2,000 genuine skull may be returned to the Events Center equipment counter In a bag or box with no questions asked.

"We have had a record enrollment this semester of students taking our class­es (African American Studies) for multi­cultural requirements and for studies in general," White said.

Request to raise acbnission standards nixed He said there are over 1,000 students

taking African American Studies who are listed as full-time students.

There has also been an increase in the number of majors and minors. From page 3

Student Association. Vernon Haley, Metro's vice president

of Student Services, attended the Commission's meeting in Pueblo and said he felt that the issue was enrollment man­agement, or retention and graduation of successful students.

"We are between a rock and a hard place," Haley said, explaining that a low index makes it difficult to follow the Commission's standards for graduation and retention.

The Commission requires that Metro graduate 21. l percent of enrolled ethnic minorities as a part of its affirmative action goals implemented in 1992.

When students are accepted on a lower index score, their ability to be suc­cessful at Metro State is also low. They often don't stay long enough to graduate,

fhe holiday season is upon us. Here are a few tips to help you have a safe holiday:

Haley said. All institutions are allowed a window,

which allows the school to accept up to 20 percent of their students below the appointed index score. In the past, Metro has not fully used this allowance and, according to the Commission, is currently using a 9.1 percent window. With a raised index score, Metro could use the allowance while choosing its students on a more selective basis to letting in only those that can succeed, Haley said.

"Performance is tied to success," he added. "We don't want to bring in those that have no chance for success."

In 1988, the entering freshman class was tracked for retention and graduation statistics. By their fourth year, only I 6 percent of those students let in under the window were still enrolled in school.

Robert Brock, assistant vice president

of Metro's College Communications, said that another side to the low index score at Metro is the impact on the public image.

"An 80 rank is where we should be because the vast majority of students at that level will be successful," said Brock. "I think that a 76 will give the impression of diminished qualities, which isn' t accu-rate."

"It would have helped our public rela­tions efforts if we could have gone up to an 80," Brock said. "But we have been fighting this for a long time and will con­tinue to fight."

The Commission feels Metro's mis­sion is to be an open-access institution that serves the urban community and should not raise standards, said Sharon Samson, officer in charge of the new admissions standards for the commission.

"I have on the average about two stu­dents a week who come to me and express interest in a major or minor," White said.

There are 15 majors and approxi­mately 20 to 25 minors in the African American Studies department, White said.

Luis Torres, chairman of the Chicano Studies and Native American Studies Department, said he has been satisfied with the change.

"There has been a lot of student inter­est in these programs and with the course content," Torres said. The content of the courses is very high quality said Torres.

There are about I I to 12 Chicano Studies majors and anywhere from 20 to 30 minors, Torres said. Torres said it is difficult to tell because some students have graduated and some change their

Continued page 6

• Lock your car- Thieves will be less tempted to take your belongings . •

• • • •

Be sure to lock all packages, backpacks, and other valuables in the trunk of your car, do not leave them in plain view.

Keep all valuables with you at all times- NEVER leave items unattended even for a minute . Report any suspicious persons in the parking lots . Don't flash large quantities of cash . Never walk alone at night- always walk with a friend or use the Auraria Nightrider .

If YOL an· the \ictim of an a~~ault or rohlH'ry on campus. report it DDIEDIATELY to the \uraria Campu~ Poli('t'. AURARIA CAMPUS POLICE 556-3271 LET'S WORK TOGETHrn FOR A SAFE CAMPUS! EMERGENCY 911

Page 6: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

6 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

Sound Financial Advice for Students

Dear Financial Connections, I hear short-term loans are

no longer available for this semester. I anticipate needing some extra money around the holidays. Are there any other options for me? Signed. I'd rather be merry than broke!

Dear I'd rather be merry than broke!

It is true that there are no short-term loans available inbetween semesters. Yes. most are along the lines of emergency help. There are many resources available throughout the community to assist people with public service bills. food and shelter.

If you don't have any money for gifts around the holidays. Try saving ~or next year. This year you can make gifts or send cards. sometimes these can be the most memorable gifts of all. Many banks have ~Christmas Savings" plans. A typical plan takes a predetermined amount of money out out of your checking each month and deposits it automatically into a savings account. At the end of the year you will have a nice amount to spend on Christmas. This plan will keep you away from the credit crunch that so many people feel during the holidays. If you have to use credit during the holiday season, be sure to come to the next ~Budgeting Workshop#.

Studert F1ronce Resource Center's "Budgs·:ng Sessicn" on

November 30tr Tivoli Student Union room 329

1-2 p.m.

Success increases majors in departments From page 5

majors and minors. When the departments were re-estab­

lished, professors who taught half time in African American or Chicano studies were given first choice to move to the new department or remain with the other.

White said the African American Studies Department employs two part­time professors and three professors who teach in other departments. Two profes­sors also hold administrative positions, White and Akbarali Thobani, director of the Institute for lntercultural Studies.

Torres said the Chicano Studies Department employs three to four part­time professors and six to seven professors who teach in other departments. He added that Native American Studies is also included in the Chicano Studies Department and employs two professors who also teach for other departments.

Thobani said the departments are in a growth mode right now, but he sees an increase in interest of the programs.

Torres said he would like to see the program develop more and increase stu­dent retention in cultural programs.

"I would really like to recruit more students for the program," Torres said.

White said that starting this spring, a search will be conducted to hire a full-time faculty member for the department who will teach four classes per semester. Torres said the Chicano Studies Department will also conduct the same type of search for a full-time faculty member.

Native American Studies does not have any definite plans for finding a full­time faculty member for spring, Torres said.

Because all-nighters

C> V i • • U.S.A. Inc. l~S

arerit always spent in

the librarY.

It's ever-ywh.ere .. you want to be.

)

Page 7: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

NOVEMBER 17, 1995 The METROPOLITAN 7

Students brave cold for homeless shelter Robert Arrieta Jenny Sparks The METROPOLITAN

Ten students spent Tuesday night braving brisk, 29 degree weather to raise awareness and funds for Denver's homeless on Tuesday night.

Members of Colorado Public Interest Research Group's Hungry and Homeless project slept in a small shantytown made of cardboard boxes, collecting pledges for the time they spent outside.

'The support was great, we've collected almost $600," said Kama Suddath, CoPIRG's campus coordina-tor.

The project, which was started in 1990, helps raise money for various Denver shelters.

One of the "provisional homeless," Chuck Bennett, a junior at Metro, said he is glad to be involved in ' the homeless cause.

"Students that could barely afford Taco Bell were donating a dollar to this. This is by far the best way I've known of to promote this cause," Bennett said.

* , .•

Each year CoPIRG votes on a different shelter to donate funds to, project coordinator Elenka Jarolimek said. 'This is always a popular event, it's fun and it's a great way to get people to see that there is a homeless problem around them."

John McDonough/The METROPOLITAN

CARDBOARD CONDO: CoPIRG members (from left) Elenka Jarolimek, Ajayi Harris and Kama Suddath spend the night in their shantytown built to raise awareness of Denver's homeless people.

The money raised during the sleepover will be donat­ed to The Darnen House, a shelter for homeless women and children.

''We decided on The Darnen House because women and children are becoming a larger number of homeless," Jarolimek said. 'The fastest-rising population in the United States right now is homeless families, women with children."

Raising the money for shelters is just one part of what

Your key to

the project is really about, Suddath said. "It's not just the money we' re raising, but the public's

awareness too," Suddath said. Jarolimek and Suddath said people need to see there

are others around them they could help. "People need to see, especially now around the holi­

days, that there are people going hungry when they don' t need to be," Suddath said.

The sleep out was not exclusive to Auraria campus.

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University of Northern Colorado's CoPIRG chapter held its sleep out on Monday night and raised $70 dollars.

Colorado State University participated on Oct. 25 with the objective of just raising awareness.

"We didn't do it to raise funds but mostly just to get people to see the problem," said Allison Halprin, CSU's project coordinator.

Auraria's CoPIRG chapter is also planning a trip to a homeless shelter to participate in volunteer work.

Contact Jay Brodell at 556-4672 for more information OPENING NOVEMBER 22No AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE!

__ .,, .. _ ... _____ _

Page 8: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

8 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

Few Metro athletes get

full-ride Becky O'Guin Nguyen Pontiere The METROPOLITAN

Metro athletes put as much effort into exercis­ing their minds as their bodies. Part of their success can be attributed to the Athletic Department schol­arship program.

Of the 150 athletes at Metro, approximately 110 are receiving some type of scholarship, said, William Helman, director of athletics at Metro. ·

. He said that most of the athletic scholarships given out by Metro are partial so that a whole team can split the money. Some of these scholarships include tuition and fees, but do not include room, board and food.

There are 23 students recetvmg full-ride scholarships from Metro's Athletic Department, said Joel Smith, assistant director of athletics.

For the 1995/1996 school-year, Metro Athletics gave out $278,766 in scholarships. Each in-state, full-ride recipient gets approximately $5,000 a year in scholarship money. · Metro's Financial Aid Office has a cost of attendance figure of $11,650 a year. This is how much an independent student needs to pay for room, board, tuition, books, transportation and per­sonal items, yet athletic scholarships are based on the needs of the team as decided by the coaches.

"We have a pool of money and the coaches decide how to allocate their funds," Smith said.

These scholarships consist of full tuition, fees, books and a stipend to each athlete for room, board and food.

Metro's full-ride scholarship consists of a $200 stipend for books each semester, $850 for room and board and $1, I 00 for food, Helman said. The Athletic Department leases several townhous­es at the Parkway Center to house some of the -ath­letes.

In order to be eligible for any scholarship, Metro students must first meet the standard finan­cial-aid requirement established by the college. Athletes along with all other students are required to fill out scholarship applications and meet the March I deadline for returning it to the Office of Financial Aid.

Once completed, an athlete must then meet standards established by the NCAA.

To receive a scholarship, athletes must have a 2.0 grade point average, must successfully pass 12 credit hours each semester and must make progress towards their degree. Most other departments require a 3.0 GPA to receive a scholarship.

'This means that an athlete cannot be taking all sports classes," Helman said. "They have to be making an effort towards getting their degree."

Metro's athletic department makes sure ath­letes are completing academic work by setting up study halls for the athletes.

"We want them to graduate, that's why we

recruit them," Smith said. "We've invested a lot of money in these kids and we want them to get their degrees."

One interesting aspect of the athletic depart­ment is that more women receive scholarships than men, Helman said.

"We are pretty unique, because normally it is the other way around."

Helman said the male/female ratio of Metro athletes is 47 percent to 53 percent.

Women are getting more money because there are NCAA scholarship restrictions on men's bas­ketball. The NCAA forbids colleges to give more than IO scholarships to male basketball players. Men's basketball has reduced scholarships from 12 two years ago to I 0 this year, Helman said.

One of the scholarships was applied to women's volleyball and the other was absorbed to cover the increasing cost of enrollment at Metro, Helman said.

INSIGBIS._

Athletic budget stagnant

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Page 9: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

NOVEMBER 17. 1995 The METROPOLITAN 9

Director's passion spans 17 years Michael BeDan The METROPOLITAN

Athletic Director in 1981 because Metro's two incumbent directors resigned after the men's and women's athletics merged.

"At that time all the programs were equally poor," Helman said. "We had a couple of vans but they were rick­ety. Everyone in athletics was working hard to raise their own money."

eball team for 11 years Helman coached baseball for the first 11 years of his focus his t>:iergy solely tenure as athletic director and he led by example when it

came to getting his hands dirty to better the athletic pro­its infan- grams. During those early years, the Roadrunners would

play any college willing to compete with Metro. "We would play mostly junior colleges and sleep· in

· e Univ~" ~their dorms with no bedding," Helman recalled. "We just of Nortliern"~olorado .-..::; nd ~dmi · tT;,ruon ". fi!. ed to keep it alive. We even had athletes sleeping on

..,. in ~977 and B~~- ess Admq,istr ijf 978-:--- ~i~. . m floors. While I was coach we built two dugouts our-t.."--..._ takmg the pos1uon Camp~,~ecr~llon Drre)Sf~tlt sel ,& ." ~

.·.·.~.· .•.. • •. · ... • •.•. ··.· ...• ·.'! 11 ~·

,

!(

.

Metro in 1978. It was dun this tl ~~J>egan hi$ · ·· en Helman stepped down as baseball coach he 4 t:::

ing ~:~rit~red to be ~ as"\· tant~~ - . pg~ Ip~~7,r :~~r~~~;~!;i~~- 2{.3 ~~:s;:ti~~~ ~

ball team _and ~~~-s~me~ter i; ~ .. h~~~. "" ,~ quit,". .... . ~.-.. gs ~n his office above h~s desk. ~e said it was ~ Helman said. "~e a~etJc _d1rector ·, t~e _«m~ed m~ · 1 ~pp1est moments when 1t was rettred._ , ~ to take over. I had no ex~ne. nee but I~ it f' ... ·.~ ·· "l:~as.··.~~. lly prou~ and touched," Helman said. '_It all a;

Helman 's first season"-, ould be consider &able e"ISQ f~~, All I did was go out and do somethrng I ~ by most standards- the tearQ,finished 17~8- bUt it ,was .·•·. t.<fdo, erery day." a: the most wins the Roadrunner..s had ever . gistJted and lnfan~d his greatest moment as a coach took ~ Helman has the plaque to prove'r t. ~ ~ \ ~ ace in the spri~g of 1988 in Cal_ifornia. ON DISPLAY: Athletic Director William Helman::l!E

"That tells you how bad we 'f"ere," Hel~n said~~·i .# "We had JUSt beaten Occidental (College), Los shows off his retired baseball i·ersey. was acceptable as a coach even though I had~no expYi- Angeles, California, near the end of a California road ence because-they never ha<t,aQyone*~tick with it We were trip," Helman said. "We had lost to Long Beach State 15- Helman said in the early years it was possible for him horrible.''. · . •.. .. J#: 'ffe}.,. • 2 thed~b_efore and we had to play them again that night to coach and be the athletic director simultaneously, but as

In his Second yeat· of coachlng,l the team qnly got under the'hghts. the program grew, so did the difficulty of the latter posi-worse, wi9ning just 12 games. ~ "On the next to the last play of the game they tried to tion.

Year"three was the breakthrough\ season, a$ Metro double steal on us. We threw to second and then home and "I stepped down when I thought it was time," Helman won 28 ~es and Helman said it w~ then that 'he first there was a collision at the plate. Then our catcher held up said. "I have no regrets. I enjoy doing what I'm doing and !et~p,mf.?'~ble as aeo~: .• He said of early y~arp we~e.~~~ll;W~w~3-2. . . rm still involved." tou~ ~se tire:•athletic p~~~tdn't recel\I~ mui bf" J ,1'.!e¢ ~~Lo~ Beach State) won the National Helman now spends his time running the athletic funding and the players and coacH · 'WOIJ<ed overtpne. (!liamptonsbip the ~ext year." department and said he expects Metro sports to continue

"Fami~y suffered .through so~tit oseLyea ~Js ~~ / rJ>'m ~ ~nfluence on baseball, Helman· was to improve and grow and he takes joy and pride in watch-Helman said "All we did was recrmt/ . '. Jl . res o 'le ljfor .~tung th~ men's basketball program ing it unfold.

"We put our hearts and souls J nto it andjhalf the n · mce that time, the men have won back- "My favorite thing is to see the players and coaches things we bought for the team, we p)lid for our,lves.~19;.~ack Co orado Athletic Conference Championships in be successful," Helman said. "It is satisfying to see them

v;~~rty app

7't ~ f ti!t~~90

t the only g;;;ili~reiiio"town

Ju-jitsu Coed water polo Men's volleyball Akido Ski club Roller blade hockey

a yearly budget of ets a portion of the

eeds and what its pur-

Anne McKelvey, director of campus recreation, said club sports couldn't meet

Intramural Sports

Coed volleyball Flag football Racquetball Tennis Spring Basketball Golf Tournament Floor Hockey Softball

the minimum "standards of care" for foot­ball, meaning the club couldn't afford to have enough coaches, a medical doctor on the field or proper equipment for the game.

Club football ended in 1990. "It was a very difficult thing to do at the time," McKelvey said when she recalled telling 60 men there would no longer be football.

FOOTBALL AT METRO? Not likely. Club football met its death in 1990 after enjoying huge support. The chance of another team is below zero.

Page 10: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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10 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

Hate is such a strong word Whom do we hate? For me that is an easy question to

answer. No one. Don't get me wrong. I get angry at

people and situations, but to say I hate an individual, a group or situation is far from what I feel.

Webster's New World Dictionary defines hate as: to have strong dislike or ill will for; loathe; despise.

Those are extremely passionate words; strong dislike, loathe, despise. I once heard that hate and anger were among the most difficult of human emotions to sustain for an extended time. From personal experience I would agree.

I suppose the appropriate ques­tion should not be whom do we hate, but rather 'whom or what would we rather not confront?', or 'who or what do we fear?'

I've tried for years to eliminate fear from my life and very often it seems like a futile effort, but I keep try­ing. Most often the things that scare me are the exact things that I would rather not confront.

I don't confront why 23-year-old Christy Martinez was gunned down trying to recover his car stereo Friday night. He died just because he wanted something back that was his. I fear this, not that it would happen to me,

Just a word of thanks

Dear Editor:

On Sep. 12, 1995, the Metro State College of Denver School of Business and Office of Alumni Relations presented "World Class: How Denver Can Thrive in the Global Economy," with keynote speaker, Dr. Rosabeth Moss Kanter at the Adams Mark Hotel.

Dr. Kanter's exper.ience and expertise proved to be valuable when considering the global economy in relation to various types of businesses in the community. Her knowledge of Denver's commercial, industrial, pro­fessional, and educational markets, demonstrated her commitment to excellence!

I would like to take this opportu­nity to thank US West for sponsoring a corporate table which they donated to the students of MSCD so they may participate in the luncheon.

US West is a true asset to the educational community!

-Gath Bongiorno V.P. of Campus Communications

Metro Student Government Assembly

Louis A. Landa

I 1

LOOKING AT

LIFE

'

but because someone is willing to kill another person over something as trivial as a car stereo.

I don't confront the homeless per­son lying in a doorway on Colfax. I fear this person, not for any harm they might cause me, but because of my feeling of helplessness at trying to change his life. I walk by and wonder why I did not stop.

I don't confront the slow death being imposed on certain members of society who suffer from the abuse of drugs. The wholesale destruction of minds is taking place in our country and I do nothing. I'm afraid, perhaps due to my own problem with alcohol. Perhaps I'm afraid to realize how con­nected I am to those dependent on other drugs.

So when I saw that the presenta-

Letters

tion "Faces of Hate: Demystifying the Separatist Mindser was coming to campus, I asked myself 'what is hate?'

It became easy for me to see that identifying hate against racial or eth­nic groups is easy. It stems from igno­rance, from that end I commend the people who organized this event. They are making an effort to educate us to the views and thoughts of peo­ple with saddled racial hate for others.

Some might say that racial hate is a difficult subject to confront. I think it is one of the easiest subjects to address in our society. You simply eliminate it from yourself. If we all did this, the problem would be solved.

But to do this we must be willing to ask ourselves, honestly, if we possess this emotion. The answer will come easier to some. Others will have diffi­culty being honest with themselves.

It is the small daily struggles we all face that deserve the most atten­tion. Those little dislikes and annoy­ances we encounter are what each of us must address within ourselves.

Eliminating the little fears that plagues us should be paramount in our lives. This is the way to end the bigger fears perpetrated by racial hate and anger.

Biscuits & Berries: sour over story

Dear Editor,

This letter is in response to an article that appeared in The Metropolitan on Nov. 3, 1995, regarding Biscuits & Berries and catering issues. Biscuits & Berries, one of the Tivoli contracted caters was asked to attend the Auraria Food Service Committee meeting on Oct. 30, 1995 to answer some ques­tions and concerns students had on prices and catering services. Biscuits & Berries felt that the article in The Metropolitan provided limited information on how the student's concerns were met. Therefore, we are submitting this letter to inform the campus community of what Biscuits & Berries is doing to work more closely with the needs of the campus.

Based on requests from the AFSC meeting Biscuits & Berries has decided to make some adjust­ments to better fit the needs of the college community. First, Biscuits & Berries has provided a catering brochure and a separate price sheet

specifically for cookies and punch for Auraria. In addition to meeting the concerns addressed at the AFSC meeting, Biscuits & Berries announced a new position for sales and marketing, which was designed for a student attending any of the three institutions at Auraria Campus. We were able to find an interested and fully qualified student rather quickly. In addition to expressing a true commitment to the campus, we are also offering a special deal to student clubs and organizations dur­ing November.

We are always willing to work with and hope to accommodate the catering needs of the campus com­munity.

-Sincerely, Management of Biscuits &

Berries

O tet1Sllf11Sl

STAFF EDITOR IN CHIEF

Louis A. Landa MANAGING EDITOR

Donna Hickey COPY EDITORS

Mike Larkin Jesse Stephenson

NEWS EDITOR Kevin Juhasz

FEATURES EDITOR Joelle Conway

INSIGHTS EDITOR Geraldine Haldner

Becky O'Guin SPORTS EDITOR

Michael BeDan PHOTO EDITOR

Jenny Sparks REPORTERS Robert Arrieta

Dave Flomberg Kristy Frei

Nguyen Pontiere Steve Titus

PHOTOGRAPHERS John McDonough

John Swift GRAPHIC EDITOR

Chris Mancuso GRAPHIC ARTISTS

Eric Deiss Cathy Gralow Kyle Loving

Rick Thompson CALENDAR Yoko Naito

ADVERTISING MANAGER Marfa Rodriguez

ADVERTISING STAFF Marr a Corral Jodi Kotouc

DISTRIBUTION Thornton Boy

OFFICE MANAGER Corina Landeros

ADVISER Jane Hoback

DIRECTOR OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS

Kate Lutrey TELEPHONE NUMBERS

Editorial 556-2507 Advertising 556-8361

Fax 556-3421 e-mail:

J

Louis Landa@SSD_STLF@METRO lnternet:[email protected]

n. &klropaliro is pr""'-I by uJ /"'ii.."""-of Mdrofl<lita Si.ie C.tlt&t of°"'"" ,.,,.,,, ti.. A.,..,;. C-pm. Ti.. llnropalila is ,.,.

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tlor ;,_ u Sp.• . F'riMy. 0..1UU..fa< fl"" rdtem u 101.IO. ,\/ootlay.

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line i1 5:00 P·'"· .tlonduy. The Mtrropo/ilan ~ ofJ1tt11re locai.J i.o IM 1i..ti S1n1/en1 Union S11i1t 313. Jluili"ll adtlren is P.O.Boi 173362, Campw Bo.

57,Dm~r. C0~217.J362. llAll ri&hll ,..,.,,,../. The.tlelropalita•upri11-td .. nq-dttl ,..,.,.

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Page 11: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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NOVEMBER 17. 1995 The METROPOLITAN 11

He's ready, he's willing, he's Able Lamm Stuart The Metropolitan was sent the fol­

lowing typed transcript of Able Lamm Stuart's presidential candidacy announcement. The announcement was made at a $1000-a-plate fund­raiser at the Browne Place hotel last Saturday night. Stuart is a third-party Candidate from Colorado . who has admitted that the only elected position he has ever held was as his private high school's 11th grade class treasur­er. Over the next few weeks we hope to shed some light on the candidate: his positions, aspirations and goals. The editorial staff at The Metropolitan strongly supports Able Lamm Stuart as our country's next leader (those on the staff who don't support Stuart will be dealt with accordingly when he wins the presidency).

The following are excerpts from the speech.

Fellow Coloradans, I am here tonight to announce my candidacy for the position of President of the United States of America. I have made this decision after Colin Powell, the only viable candidate for president, declined to run. We will not have four more years of government-as-usual ...

I will see to that! (wait for applause)

Those of you who know me know that I have limited political experience. My real experience comes from being governed for the last 43 years.

(wait for applause) I am an everyday Joe who knows

how the people feel. I am an everyday

Joe w h o knows what it is like to have a child to feed even though I have no children of my own!

(wait for applause)

My detractors will tell you that I am running because have to save my own tobacco interests. That I am worried about what would happen if Clinton had his way with tobacco com­panies!

Well friends, I have to say up front in my campaign that yes, yes indeed I have vested tobacco interests. I am the heir of a wealthy tobacco family.

This would come out in my campaign and I want you to know now. Know that I am not hiding anything from any-one! ·

(wait for applause)

So to those of you who say I am partial to special interests I ask you 'do you think you can buy a man who has

been knee deep in t o b a c -c o money from the day

he was born! (wait for

applause to die down)

Since I'm c o m i n g clean here, there is one

other thing I want the public to hear

from me before the media have a heyday

with it. In high school I dabbled a

bit in the black arts. Voodoo, witch­craft, the whole shebang.

It's not a time of my life I'm proud of but we were just kids and we didn't know any better back then. It was dif­ferent, crazy times in the ear1y seven­ties. I can stand here and honestly tell

you, however, that though I did dabble in black magic, I did not enjoy it!

(wait for applause)

I will lead this country as no one ever has. As a bold visionary, as a sympathetic yet tough international player, and as the man who turns our economy from the booming and pros­perous economy it is today to an even boominger, and more prosperous economy of tomorrow!

So I say to you tonight. I am ready. I am willing. (dramatic pause) I AM ABLE!

During the ensuing wild applause from audience walk to front of stage and shake hands with high-ranking local Politicos. Big smile for cameras.

(Woman with baby wrapped in American flag enters stage right.

Kiss baby. Return baby to woman. Turn to face crowd and give a big

thumbs up as "Proud to Be an American" is played on public address.

Exit with armed personnel.)

Student is angry at inability to effect change at Metro I am angry. This anger is mine, and it is one of

the few things as a student of Metropolitan State College of Denver, that I can call my own on this campus. It is a heartfelt, deeply painful anger. It is a "righteous" anger, if you will.

What exactly am I angry about, you ask? Is this just another rant about diversity or the College Republicans or wor1d politics? No. This is an anger about this school. I am angry about the things that I have let slide by me these past years. I am angry about the things that all of us as Metro students have been allowing to happen to OUR school.

Recently, I read in this very newspaper that Metropolitan State College of Denver suffers from an image problem. The idea that this school, my school, the place at which I spend most of my money, and the place that I spend my time and energy can have an image problem made me sad. Sad that I would be associated with a poor image, and sad that all of the work that I have done for the last year in Student Activities was for nothing. I took the call for letters about why this school has such an "image problem" seriousfy. I have written at least five letters, but I never submitted even one of them. The reason for my inability to show those thoughts to the public is this: they are self-pitying letters. Every word of those five letters is about how much energy and love I have put into this school, and how much Metro has done for me.

Let me tell you now, they were untruths. Yes, I care about Metro. Yes, I have put a lot of love and energy into the many leadership programs that I have done for this sc!lool in the last year. In fact, I can even say that I am proud of the education that I am getting here. Thes~ things are true, but in a purely superficial way. Underneath lies the obliga­tions that the faculty, staff and administration of Metropolitan State College of Denver have been

Emily Suslak

I ~

MY TURN

ignoring since I first set foot on this campus three years ago.

I am a student at Metropolitan State College of Denver. I am a staff member of the Office of Student Activities. I have almost no power to effect change on this campus. That is why I am angry. I pay thou­sands of dollars to this institution. I work hard for my GPA. I have little or no say about my own grades, and my own sense of personal security in the class­room. That is why I am angry. I spend time and ener­gy, above and beyond what I get paid to do, to cre­ate good leadership programs for Metro students. I take time and energy out of my day to be a strong voice for students on Auraria Campus. I have been supported by very few faculty members in my efforts to promote my programs. In fact, almost no profes­sors even bother to make a brief announcement, or pass the e-mail that we send monthly, in their class­es about the programs that Student Activities puts on. I feel I have no support from the administration of the school. In fact I am often struggling against them to support the Student Government Assembly in their struggle to promote positive change at this school. That is why I am angry.

My tuition pays these people! I want the admin­istration, faculty and staff of Metropolitan State

College of Denver to take some responsibility for their actions and inaction. We the students of Metropolitan State College of Denver need to open our eyes and our mouths and say something to· the professionals on this campus. I am worn out from trying to fulfill President Kaplan's ideas of what Student Activities should do to "promote student retention." I am literally exhausted from trying to keep up with my class work while at the same time trying to promote an event. The sad part of it is I can hang flyers until I'm blue in the face, and no one will show up for an event that I have put my heart and soul into because the students never hear about the events from the few people they listen to on this campus: their professors. It is very disheartening.

I refuse to give up on this school. Maybe I am stubborn. Maybe I am a fool. It remains to be seen. The only thing I know for sure is that when I gradu­ate from Metropolitan State College of Denver, I will know about a lot more than what I learned in my classes. I will know that when I first arrived here, and thought that there was nothing going on here, I was wrong. I will know that Student Activities, Student Government, and the other Student Life offices work hard to provide excellent service to Metro students every day. I will know that sometimes the effort is not worth the outcome. Most of all, I will know that I tried to make a change for the better on this campus, and I expected an equal commitment from the faculty, staff and administration. I have already learned that I do not always get what I expect. If you have any­thing to add to my comment please do. I am being open about how I feel about this school. I invite oth­ers to do the same.

Emily Suslak is a Metro student and works in the office of Student Activities

Page 12: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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Call for Nominations

Dr. Martin Luther Kin , Jr. Peace Awards

The Peace Award will be ~ven in the following categories: • MSCD Student • MSCD Employee (Faculty/Staff/Administrator) • Member of the Community

Nomination forms are available through any Student Services office.

Nominations can be returned to the above office or mailed to: MSCD Student Publications P.O. Box 173362, Campus Box 57 Denver, Co. 80217-3362

Nominations must be received by Friday, December 15, 1995

Celebrating the life and philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Thursday, Jan. 18, 1996 8:30 - 10:00 a.m. St. Cajetan's Center

The entertainment provided will celebrate culture of African Americans and focus on peace in our time. This event is produced with the cooperation of many MSCD departments and organizations with

assistance from the Tivoli Student Union.

Tickets On Sale Friday, December 1, 1995 - Tivoli Student Union Suite 313

$3 Students $6 Faculty /Staff

556·8361 for more information about nomination forms or tickets

~.

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Page 13: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

,._

F Women's Studies celebrates 10 years Yoko Naito The METROPOLITAN

metro's Institute for Women's Studies and Services celebrat­ed its 10th anniversary with an open house last Friday.

"I thought it would be nice to bring people over here within the institute because we are not located either in the Tivoli Student Union or Central Classroom or where many other offices are," said Tara Tull, the coordinator of Women's Services. ''We just wanted to have a party and have people come in and get to know us."

The institute's white building, located at 1033 9th St. Park, was filled with more than 40 Metro students and faculty. They enjoyed food, drink and conversation.

"I think this is a great event," said Christine Ilg, a Women's Studies minor at Metro. "Women's Studies has only been around for 10 years, but it is a great start.

Rose grows at Metro Feminist literature shapes singer's lyrics, attitudes

Roxanne King The METROPOLITAN

W etro English major Elizabeth Rose, discovered her rock band was nominated for a local music award while read­

ing the newspaper in her 8 a.m. literature class.

"I laughed out loud in class," 27-year­old Rose said. "I don't take music contests seriously. How can you judge which band raises spirits more?"

Rose's band, Sympathy F, won the best local pop/rock band category in Westword's '95 Music Awards Showcase. Winners were announccil Oct. 18.

"When I realized it was a reader's poll, it made me more appreciative," Rose said. 'Tm very thankful to all those who voted for us."

Rose, who sings and writes lyrics for Sympathy F, said her lyrics have improved as a result of her literature studies at Metro. Rose said she has been especially influenced by women's literature.

"The feminist literature I've read has shaped my attitudes and backbone," Rose said. 'The western canon isn't the only lit­erature. I'm more interested in women's voices than men's voices."

In addition to her literature studies, Rose has training in theater and music.

She's played piano since she was five years old and attended the now defunct Sercone School of Music in Aurora.

Every college and university across the cou.ntry realized it is important for women to get empowered and learn about where they came from, their history," Ilg said.

The institute for Women's Studies and Services was founded in 1985. It was and still is very unique to have two different offices in one place, said Jodi Wetzel, the director of the institute. "On most campus­es those two pieces are separated, and that makes them difficult to be cooperative," Wetzel said.

The Women's Studies program offers classes for general studies and multicultur­al courses, a minor and an independent degree major program. The enrollment of the classes increased by 298 percent in the last 10 years.

Women's Services helps all students, one of its jobs is to get scholarship money for students. Wetzel said about 85 percent of the students who get the scholarship money are not Women's Studies students.

The institute's goal now is to make woman's studies a major. Currently the

Jenny Sparks/The METROPOLITAN

SWEET SYMPATHY: .Metro senior and vocalist Elizabeth Rose takes a break during a set at the Tivoli last Spring.

In 1986, Rose studied theater at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. She left CSU in 1989 after landing a small part in the film Flashback with Kiefer Sutherland and Dennis Hopper.

"It was a bad film," Rose said. "Don't blink or you'll miss me."

Rose continued working as an actress for the next three years doing theater work and television commercials. She also appeared in episodes of Father Dowling and Perry Mason.

Prior to becoming a student at Metro, which is her parents' alma mater, Rose said she once had fun on the Auraria cam­pus as an actress.

"In a Perry Mason episode, I rode this little motorcycle around the Tivoli getting chased by bad guys," Rose said.

After working as a professional actress, Rose did not want to go back to

Continued page 19

NOVEMBER 17. 1995 The METROPOLITAN 13

Jenny Sparks/The METROPOLITAN

CONVERSATION PIECE: Joy Hart, left, Metro student activities promo­tions coordinator, celebrates Metro's Institute forWomen's_Studies 10th anniversary with Melissa Munoz and Cath Bongiorno Friday.

Women's Studies only has an individual degree program. The difference between an individual degree program and a major is that a recognized major has its own department but an individual degree pro­gram is self-tailored and faculty approved.

"We had 12 graduates last spring," Wetzel said.

"When you get that many people graduating in the independent degree pro­gram, it's about time for you to get a regu­lar major."

"We constantly increase our curricu­lum and diversify it," Tull said.

She said it will take a few years to get the program listed as a major.

Video tells woman's journey to afterlife Kristy Frei The METROPOLITAN

einee Pasarow answered the questions about life after death, in her video, My Near-Death Experiences, shown in the

Tivoli Nov. 9. The video was from a 1993 presenta­

tion Pasarow made in Denver on life after death.

Seymore Weinberg, vice president of the Baha' i Club on campus, presented the film.

The experience Pasarow spoke of happened in a small California town on May 20, 1967.

At the age of 16, Pasarow went- into anaphylactic shock after a severe allergic reaction. Her heart stopped beating as her mother and friend were taking her to the hospital.

As Pasarow's body was being pulled out of the car, she said she felt her soul lift­ing away from her body.

"It was a very pleasant feeling," she said.

While hovering over her body and the emergency team, Pasarow said she turned into a being that had an amazing feeling of oneness with the universe.

"I simply wanted to be left alone," Pasarow said, as she suddenly realized she was able to feel all of the emotions of the people beneath her. After trying to fight for life, Pasarow surrendered to the won­derful power sucking her into the afterlife.

She said she heard the medics pro­claim they had lost her as they performed CPR. She could feel the inner feelings and

sadness of the man pumping his own air into her. Pasarow said she tried communi­cating with the people who surrounded her body that she was free, but she simply had no voice, no figure, no body.

'That's when I called upon God for guidance," Pasarow said.

She felt as if she were ascending until she saw the entire universe, having a sense of being and knowing the entire earth.

Pasarow said she realized that nothing existed without a purpose while looking upon earth. Suddenly she saw a brilliant light and said she felt her soul entering it. As she entered the light, it first became a tunnel. 'The place of transition," Pasarow said.

"What moved me through the space of transition was love," she said, realizing it was God's love she was feeling.

As she appeared before God, Pasarow said she went through a life review.

During her review she said she saw the world heading for a great state of con­fusion filled with destruction and the breaking down of the world order. She also saw a group of religious people named The Just who were trying to rebuild humankind.

The great light spoke to her and told her that it was not her time to be in the afterlife yet, and her soul was miraculous­ly pulled back down to earth.

After being pumped with adrenaline, she was revived, after being confirmed clinically dead for 30 minutes.

Pasarow now lives in Durango, Colo., and has a strong faith in the Baha'i reli­gion. Weinberg said that The Just religion that Pasarow saw in her afterlife was actu­ally the Baha'i faith.

Page 14: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

14 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17. 1995

Various Artists Super Fantastic Mega

Smash Hits Pravda/Backyard

Records

All of today's most popular record­ing artists together in this specially pack­aged collection!

Pravda and Backyard records have assembled a disjointed but very listen­able homage to K-Tel compilations in Super Fantastic Mega Smash Hits.

"K-Tel brought all the hits together with brazen disregard for coherence," writes album producer Rick Mosher describing his inspiration for this new K-

-- - -~ --- ----~-

I

Tel-ish compilation , . ,,, . Fig Dish, Smashing Pumpkins, Poster Children and 12 other bands with not-so-h91f~oufnaines;:'

Alice in Chains Alice Jn Chains

Columbia

Unlike many of today's popular bands, Alice in Chains continues to make good music without selling out.

Their fifth release, a self titled LP, dis­plays their trademark depressing style with hypnotic guitar riffs and memorable lyrics.

Alice has matured a great deal since their debut, expanding their range over the course of two EP's, Sap and Jar of Flies and the full length Dirt.

They prove again on this album that they are here to stay.

The new release has a bluesy tone with bitchin' tracks like "Heaven Beside You" and "Shame in You." Both feature solid musicianship and solid lyrics.

The lyrics in "God Am" stand out as well. Here's an excerpt : All this respect I'm giving, Shared strength acquired by livin' All bloomin' life you' re feeding Can't hide sick ones you're weeding

Alice fans will not be disappointed with this album. When is the tour?

, '

-Michael BeDan

O.K. Who the hell are these guys? Junior M.A.F.LA., an East-Coast rap group

doing their damnedest to sound like hard-core West­Coast gansta rappers, has completed their second foray into the world of overused grooves and lack­luster lyrics. Atlantic's release of Conspiracy is 15 tracks of in-your-face, uncensored, unadulterated tripe.

From the start, it's obvious that these guys did­

. "

n't even get creative with their drum machine, with eighths on the high hat; nothing1 ing here. On the melodic side, well there is none. Track after track, the few melodiesi

are~:::;}~ little orno ~;~1tDave Aomb«g . f}

Page 15: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

____________ _,,,,..,,.. ___ _,,,, _________ ~--~-- -

tcit­eard

-

' NOVEMBER 17, 1995 The MmoPOUTAM 15

VariousiArtists TOWER OF SONG the

Songs of Leonard Cohen

A&MRecords

As tributes go, this one is not bad. It's not too mushy and no one tries

to imitate Cohen's self-described

that symphony is the London Philharmonic

-Mike Larkin

Various Artists Inner City Blues,

The Mus~c of Marvin Gaye

Mowtown

What other artist's music would attract so many differ­ent musicians to a tribute album than Marvin Gaye? Where else can you see Bono and Boyz II Men and Madonna all together at once, paying homage to one of the most pioneering of R&B stylists?

Only on this Motown release will you see all this come together. And come together it does, as all the artists featured here to some of their finest work in tribute to Gaye.

The Digable Planets settle into a groove that sticks to the roof of your mouth like a peanut butter sandwich, with "Marvin, you're The Man," while Stevie Wonder is as creamy as Cool Whip on his rendition of "Stubborn Ki d f F 11

" ,.,_<_ <-., •.•• n o e ow. .1l /. , .. >

In. fact, every ~c~ on this disc can ¥ .: '. , '>~ appreciated for what 1t is, was and always wdl · ·. · . .· f

be. ·\iC·· ; sjl This release, on the Point Music label, is a fantastic study into eclectic

arranging. The instrumentation truly allows the thickness of sound Floyd was trying to create itself.

The sounds of Marvin Gaye. "'·...... ,.. - Dave Flomberg

Arranged by Jaz Coleman, the best tracks to flip to have to be "Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)," and "Comfortably Numb," which appear in suc­cession on the disc. These two are the best examples of how symphonic · · arranging techniques can enhance something as outwardly simple as rock.

Get it. ,

-

Page 16: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

----~--~------------------------------_.. ______ _

I

l

16 The MmtoPoUTAH NOVEMBER 17. 1995

MSCD's award winning literary and arts magazine

m Js .\.Now Accepting Submissions for the

1996 Edition!

The categories are: • FICTION • NON-FICTION • POETRY • VISUAL ARTS

Here's l1ow to sul11nit you1~ entry • Submit all written work on a 3.5" high density disk, preferably Macintosh compatible.

File IIllW be created in a word processing program. If an electronic copy is not possible, please contact Heidi Hollingsworth to mal<e other arrangements.

• • • •

Please include your name, address, daytime phone number and student l.D. number .

Entries must be submitted by category (please mark category on disk label.)

Eligibility limited to MSCD students and alumni.

All submissions must be received by Friday, December 1, 1995 at 5:00 PM. Bring to the MSCD Office of Student Publications • Tivoli Student Union Suite 313 or call 556-3940 for more information.

Submissions that are not edited or properly formatted will receive lower scores; the MSCD Writing Center (CN 101) provides assistance for Metro students free of charge.

PJJ~~··· ------First place winners from the MSCD English Department's

'Writes of Spring' writing contest are automatically sub-miffed for blind review and are considered with all other entries. ____ _

Bring All Submissions to the MSCD Office of Student Publications · •Tivoli Student Union Suite 313 •

:\lailinµ Aclcht·~~= <:a111p11~ Box ~7. P.O. Box 17:~:~62 DPll\PI'. CO B02 I 7-:~;~(>2

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1995 AT 5:00 PM

_.,

-

Page 17: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

NOVEMBER 17, 1995 The METROPOLITAN 17

Frenzied skunk band tears it up Joelle Conway The METROPOLITAN

Un-your-face with intense guitar rifts and screaming lyrics, blending funk, punk, hard rock and reggae, they're the British quartet Skunk

Anansie. Outspoken, proud-to-be a lesbian

vocalist Skin, whose trademark is to paint eye-awing phrases like "Clit Rock" on her forehead or "Nigger Babe" on her stom­ach, concocts a mesh of raw frantic energy with other Skunks Ace (guitars), Cass (bass) and Mark Richardson (drums).

"Feel" are on the movie's soundtrack. Cass said the experience was fantas­

tic, but exhausting, as the band played for 8 hours non-stop on the set.

Skunk Anansie wants to provoke their listeners in an inspired original fashion. Their bizarre name reflects that purpose. Anansie is an eight-legged human protag­onist in the Jamaican equivalent of the American Uncle Remus stories.

"He's the king of mischief," Cass said. "And the Skunk aspect is just the stinkiest thing we could think of. It's one of those names that once you can bring your mind to remember it-you'll never forget."

Although they're fairly new, they've already terrorized the British Club scene and gotten a lot of attention due to their riveting lyrics that attack issues of sexism, racism and religion.

However, don't ca11 them a political band.

STINKY STYLE: From left, Mark (drums), Skin (vocals), Cass (bass), and Ace (guitars) are the explosive British quartet Skunk Anansie.

The band has been touring the United States since Oct. 17, when they kicked off in Washington, D.C. Cass said the major difference between touring in the United States and the United Kingdom is the size of the country.

"It's very much bigger," he laughed. ' "You have to do so much more traveling in the van." "We're just a band with social com­

ment, and politics in it. But we are not a political band," bassist Cass stressed in a telephone interview. "We're about a good time and emotion. We're about everything that effects us really.

"So to say we're a political band, gives us this straight-edged, up-the-fight­my-comrades image, and we're not like that," Cass explained.

"But we don' t ignore what happens around us. We have something to say about politics. We have something to say about racism, sexism, whatever," he said.

fo the track "Selling Jesus," Skin attacks organized religion for misleading people with lies in order to fatten their wallets.

Skin predominately writes the lyrics, but it really depends on how the song is born, Cass said.

Their debut album, Paranoid and Sunburnt, was recorded over six weeks in the fall of 1994 at The Manor House Studio in Milton Keynes, about 40 minutes from London. In order to capture their live energy on disc, they turned the recording studio into a makeshift war zone. With the room strewn with paper, Polaroid photos,

strobe lights, candles, graffiti and a muti­lated bust of Elvis hanging by his neck, they recorded the 11 chilling tunes in war paint.

Cass explained, "We were running around like madmen inside there while Skin was singing, to create that fervor, that adrenaline, and it worked."

The band is also gaining exposure due to their short-lived appearance in the Kathryn Bigelow film Strange Days.

"If you blink, you could miss us," Cass said, laughing. "We're in the film for about 1.7 seconds."

Their two songs "Selling Jesus" and

'Ace Ventura' answers nature's call

"My favorite show would have to be New York, absolutely," Cass said. "We smashed the house to pieces that night."

Skunk Anansie will play with For Love Not Lisa and Space Hog at 8 p.m. Nov. 18

at The Bluebird Theater, 3317 E. Colfax. Tickets are

$3-$6. Call 322-2308 or 830-TIXS.

Jim Carrey back with another energetic performance Dave Flomberg The METROPOLITAN

n llriiighty then! (I.I Jim Carrey is up to bat yet again in his sec­ond go around as Ace Ventura, pet detective, in

Ace Ventura, When Nature Calls. Riding high on the success of his brilliant diabolical

performance as Batman's nemesis, The Riddler, Carrey loses none of the energy and physical art that is his com­edy in this sequel to the movie that catapulted him into

super-stardom. The movie opens with a hilarious spoof on

Cliffhanger's opening sequence, except Ventura is trying to save a stranded raccoon.

Fast forward a few years and we see Ventura ill a Tibetan ashram, where he has retreated to seek spiritual guidance after losing the raccoon to a thousand-foot-drop.

He is sought out by Fulton Greenwall (Ian McNeice) to retrieve a bat that is sacred to the African Wachati tribe, in order to prevent a tribal war with the Wachootoo tribe. If the bat is not returned in time for the wedding of the first daughter of the Wachatis (Sophie Okenedo) and the

Continued page 18

MONKEY MAN: Pet detective Ace Ventura (Jim Carrey) hangs out with his new friends in the new Warner Bros. release Ace Ventura, When Nature Calls.

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Page 18: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

-

18 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

t .

) .

left There is only one issue of

The Metropolitan remaining in the

Fall 1995 Semester.

ADVERTISING DEADUNE

FRIDAY NOV. 24th at .3 :00 p.m.

ISSUE DATE

FRIDAY DEC. 1st

Advertise your event before its too late.

Call 556-8361 for more information.

'Ventura' whirlwind of riotous slapstick From page 17

, first son of the Wachootoos (Tommy Davidson), war will result. What happens from there is a whirlwind of riotous slapstick,

mirth and mysterious mayhem as Ventura follows the case to its inevitable conclusion.

While Hollywood has proven time and time again that sequels usually suck, this one doesn't suck nearly as bad. Yes, a lot of the movie is the same gags revisited from the first one, there is enough of a different take on those gags to make it inter­esting.

A definite welcome addition to the cast was Tommy Davidson, as he was able to match Carrey's inexhaustible supply. of energy in every scene in which the two appear. Their fight scene is just about the funniest thing I've seen on film since Mel Brook's inquisition scene in History of The World Part I.

Also rounding out the cast is the most focal point of the movie: the animals. First, there is Spike the monkey, who made his first appearance in the film's predecessor, and is back with a much juicier role. Then there's elephants, giraffes, lions and tigers and bears (oh m-.. . never mind), all adding to the feel of the movie and comedic effect

See it.

Ace Venture, When Nature Calls

Directed by Steve Oedekerk

Starring Jim Carrey Ian McNeice

Tommy Davidson Sophie Okenedo

SAVE THE PLANET

Actually, with Steamboat's STM card, you'll save more than just a little cash. You could save up to 50% off lodging and up to 40% off on lift tickets. And there's more.

STM lets you take advantage of aa:ommodations available as little as one week out. And lift tickets will

THE l'l..ACE "J"O SJ<J be discounted weekly, so we can guarantee our Front Range neghboo; the best deal pm;ible fNf$'/

.....,,._..,, time you visit

New this year, you can save $10 off a 2-day adult lift ticket. And the best part is, the card itself is free. All you have to do to get one is call l-800-1-SKl-SfM. Or if you stop by your nearest Diamond Shamrock, you'll find complete details on the Steamboat SfM program.

Wrth an STM card, Front Range skiers will have access to the lowest priced lift ticket available at Steamboat. And the discounts are always changing. In fact, lift and lodging discounts vary weekly so to keep up-to-date, call 1-800-475-4786 frequently to see just how much you'll save. We'll even send you a FAX on demand summary of current discounts.

So while you're out saving the planet, why not save a little cash too. With the STM card .

...

Page 19: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

.-

Vocalist comes_ full circle From page 13 academic theater, so she changed her major when she came to Metro in 1992.

Although she still 'loves acting, Rose said her main interest right now is music.

"Acting will always be there," Rose said. "Going into acting was a way of rebelling against my parents, now that I'm in music, it's like coming full circle - it's who I am."

Rose got acquainted with members of Sympathy Fin 1991 when she moved next door to them. Band members heard her sing and asked her to jam with them. Rose said she sang a song she made up about band member Tony Morales, a guitarist. Not only did the band ask her to join them, but Morales is now her husband.

Sympathy F appears at local clubs two to three times a month. However, to pay the bills, Rose and Morales also per­form jazz as The Elizabeth Rose and Tony Morales Acoustic Duo at City Spirit cafe in LoDo.

Not, however, during the month of November.

"November is when I need to write my papers," Rose said.

Rose is proud of the fact that once she · graduates, all Sympathy F band members . will have degrees. Not only has Rose's education helped her song writing - ' Sympathy F performs all original material - but she uses her education and training · in her performances as well.

Metro senior Liz McCarthy described a recent Rose performance as theatrical.

''Elizabeth presents a unique perfor- , mance," McCarthy said. "She makes each member of the audience feel as though she · is addressing him or her individually."

After she graduates in December, Rose plans to take a family trip to San · Diego with her husband and 5-year-old . son, Erial. Rose and Morales are taking Erial to see Shamu the whale before they leave on tour with Sympathy F, Rose said.

According to Rose, Sympathy F will tour through Nashville, Tenn., the Midwest and the Deep South.

The band has one internationally released self-titled CD and is considering other record labels, Rose said.

Get carded and.save.

Come to any Timberland® store from now until May 31, 1996 and show us your student ID. We'll not only let you in, we'll give you 15% off the price of everything

in the place-boots and shoes, clothing and accessories.

The Timberland store nearest you: Cherry Creek Mall, 303-322-3919

j

I ! ~ ! " .. 'j

~ ] e ~ 'i ~ a. ! ~ ! ! ~ ~ " ~ il. § ! ~ E

" ~ 0 € e ~ '2 ~ r ~

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NOVEMBER 17. 1995 The METROPOLITAN 19

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Page 20: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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Masterful 'Merchant' ntarks theater debut 1Louis A. Landa jThe METROPOLITAN

Take an old abandon church and transform it into a place of magic.

Sound easy? That is just what the Ad Hoc Theatre

. Company did at l 080 Acoma St. in down-1 town Denver, at the new Acoma City Center.

As its first production in the new ; space, Ad Hoc presents William 'Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice. The bold and imaginative interpretation gives this 400-year-old story a freshness and relevance to a 20th century audience.

The parallel stories of young love and ethnic hate tears human emotion to near exhaustion.

The young lover Bassanio (Richard Nelson) enlists the help of his friend Antonio (Kevin Bartlett) in his quest for the fair Portia (Rebekah Buric).

Antonio solicits a loan from the rich Jew, Shylock (James Gale). Shylock demands a pound of flesh as a bond for repayment. And thus the stage is set for a story that shows the cost of loving any­thing too much; be it people or money.

The play is abundant with masterful performances, the most notable being Bartlett and Gale. The physical and emo-

tional balance between the two is power­fully mesmerizing. They exchange little gestures and glances with the force of five page monologues. Gale's Shylock is the best performance I've seen in Denver.

The supporting cast crosses between the comic and tragic with amazing ease. Metro student Shawn Sherwood who plays Solerio is one of the better examples of this metamorphosis. Sherwood begins light-hearted and gay, only to end the play vindictive and cold.

Ad Hoc emerges as a growing force in Denver theatre and its debut production in their new home should not be missed.

-

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Page 21: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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NOVEMBER 17. 1995 The METROPOLITAN 21

High hopes for women's hoops Roadrunners return veteran line-up, hope to repeat last season's success By Michael BeDan

POST-UP: Vanessa Edwards will play the post and will be counted on to contin­ue her dominance in the middle. Last sea-son Edwards was the conference's leading scorer at 17 points per game.

While matching last season's 12-0 Colorado Athletic Conference record may be a tough act to fol­

low for this year's women's basketball team, if Metro coach Darryl Smith's evaluation of his starting five

is accurate, it may not be impossible. Smith said his five starters combine to

make the best group of first-teamers he's coached in his

five years at Metro.

"They have great

· chemistry," Smith said.

"They are as good or better

than any starting five I've had. I'm

serious." When the Road­

runners open their sea­son Nov. 22 against the

University of Nebraska­Omaha, they will return five

players from last year's regular season CAC champion team.

Four will start. The startin&: five:

Vanessa Edwards - last year's CAC leading scorer and player of the year - has come to camp in the best shape of

her life and Smith said she is capable of scoring 30 points a game if necessary. She will be the go-to-player in the post and with a year of Smith's sys­tem under her belt, she should only get better. Edwards can score at will on anyone and with her improved conditioning should have a quicker move to the basket this season. Edwards averaged 17 points and eight rebounds per game last season and led the conference in field goal percentage at .585.

"Vanessa is twice the player she was last year," Smith said.

A scary thought for CAC foes. Tammi Baumgartner will play

the point guard position this season, a switch from the shooting-guard position

she played last year. Smith said she has adjusted to the change well and will be the

heart and soul of the starting five. Baumgartner is a great shooter and probably

the most unselfish player on the team. She plays tenacious defense and is not afraid to take a charge or dive for a loose ball. Baumgartner averaged seven points and

three boards per game last year. "Tammi is one of the most competitive players

I've ever ha4,'' Smith said. "She will do anything within the rules to win. She's been though it all in

five years and her leadership is important." Chalae Collard returns for her second season and will play shooting guard for

the Roadrunners. Collard is deadly from the outside and can hit the three. Smith said he expects her to take 10-15 shots per game and hit for about 45 percent from the floor.

"Chalae shoots the ball as good as anyone we've ever had," Smith said. ''Tammi and Chalae both shoot better than any guards we've had before."

Collard averaged eight points and three rebounds in a back-up role last season. Both figures will increase markedly this season as she moves into a starting role.

Shiloh Justice was impressive as a freshman last year coming off the bench and playing in the post. She worked hard to polish her raw skills over the off-season and

Smith said he expects great things from her this year. "She improved a ton;' Smith said. "Shiloh and

Vanessa are as good as any post players we will play against."

Justice averaged five points and five rebounds per game as a freshman and like Collard, should see those numbers skyrock-et as a starter.

Ali Betcher is the only starter who wasn't on the team last year. She will play the small forward position and Smith said he is excited to have her on the team.

"She has a lot of talent," Smith said. "She doesn't even know how good she can be."

Betcher started for Regis University in 1993 and played on three-consecutive state-basketball cham-pionship teams in high school.

"She's a great player who knows how to win," Smith said. "She is very aggressive and can shoot the ball well." ·

Reserves: Amy Freeman

returns for her second year and will be counted on to play crucial minutes off the bench. Freeman played in 17 games last season and her experience at both guard positions makes her a valuable asset to the team.

"Amy is a tough kid that is going to have to play a bunch for us in a lot of positions," Smith said. "She's strong defensively but will have to learn to make better decisions offensively. She's a great kid and will con­tribute a lot."

Tamiko Medcalf is a transfer from Citcus College and will play the swing position and point guard. Smith said Medcalf was a surprise talent and looks forward to seeing her development.

"Tamiko has a chance to be a really good player," Smith said. "She's a real good athlete. If she develops discipline and matures she can play. She's learning really quickly and should do well."

Shelby Davis is a freshman who can play both guard and forward. Davis took six years off from orga­nized basketball before deciding to play this season. She earned three varsity letters in basketball at Niwot High School.

RUNNIN'THE SHOW: Tammi Baumgartner will start at point guard for the Roadrunners this season and will be counted on to provide leadership as a five year veteran of the program.

PhotographicslJenny Sparks and Chris Mancuso

"She has great skills, but is sort of a street-player," Smith said. "She needs to develop the skills needed to play organized basketball again."

Angela Milliard is a freshman from Eaglecrest High School and should help the Roadrunners in the shooting department. She can play point guard or small for­ward and is one of the best three-point shooters on the team.

Continued page 25

...

Page 22: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

-

For a career that makes a world of difference see Captain Castle NOVEMBER 21 ST in the Tivoli Hallway near Primo Pizza from 10-2 or phone 446-8353 .

. \1 .\ R I N E 0 F F I C E R

Wants you to meet Maria <f\_odriguez, our new <Public </\.elations <f\.epresentative

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Metro Administration is at it again. Another attempt to make you pay more for your education is at work. Is the proposed student fee increase fair to you?

. -a.

Metro Student Government Assembly (SGA)

•presents•

An open forum to discuss the student fee increase Tuesday, November 28, 1995

12:30 to 2:00 p.m. Tivoli Student Union Room 440

Panelists are as follows: Dr. Thomas Lazio, Cheryl Knibbe, Dean Wolf, Amy Haimerl and AHonzo Suazo.

Moderated by: Almeta Corbin, VP Student Fees, Metro SGA

ALL ARE WELCOME. ATTEND, TAKE ACTION. YOU HAVE A VOICE, USE ITU

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..

Page 23: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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.....

NOVEMBER 17, 1995 The METROPOLITAN 23

V-ball ends with loss Metro· experiences first losing season since '86 Michael BeDan The METROPOLITAN

The women's volleyball team ended its season the same way it began - with three consecutive losses. Metro wrapped up its first losing season since 1986 and its first ever under coach Rhonda Williams, finishing a dismal 13-20 overall and 4-8 in the Colorado Athletic Conference.

After losing to the University of Denver 2-3 Nov. 7 and to Colorado Christian University Nov. IO, also 2-3, the Roadrunners dropped a four-game decision to third-ranked University of Northern Colorado on Friday.

Metro turned in a solid performance against UNC but the Bears' firepower proved to be too much in crunch time. The Roadrunners finally succumbed 15-11 in game four after fighting back from a 14-8 deficit.

Williams said the difference in the game was experience. Metro started just one senior and has only two on the roster while UNC start­ed five.

and took the second game 15-12 and appeared to be en route to a three-game victory.

Metro fought back in game three from a 12-8 disadvantage and rolled off seven straight points to take game three 15-12.

Stacey Hoyt registered 27 kills to lead all players and added 28 digs for the Roadrunners. Corey Hostetler, a player Williams says has a bright future at Metro, finished with nine kills and 22 digs.

"They are gutsy and will be really good next year," Williams said. "Did you see how good number eight played?" Williams said, referring to Hostetler.

Williams said going through her first los­ing season as a coach was extremely difficult but added that it would be worth it if it helped the team next season.

'They have to come back next year and refuse to accept another season like this," Williams said. "Physically and mentally I could not make it through another year like this."

With all but two players returning next sea­son, Williams said the team will only try to address two positions in the off-season.

Jane Raley/The METROPOLITAN

SMACK! Metro volleyball playerTala Pole, No. 17, smashes the ball In Metro's 2-3 loss to Colorado Christian University Nov. 1 O at Auraria Events Center.

"Even though you hate to lose, when you play well and the effort is there, it's not as bad," Williams said. 'This is a young team and we will get almost everybody back next year."

UNC opened the match with a 15-10 win

"We will be looking for a freshman setter," Williams said. "We also want a middle blocker, probably a freshman unless we find an awe­some junior-college transfer." ·

Division of Student Services-Update Vernon E. Haley, Vice President of Student Services

I )c·parl 11lt'11l Pl101w# 4 )fnc·•·/S .. n ic ·c· Cha11g•· 11 .. ~ul Lo<'alio11 F\\# '\1•\\ Staff

Office of Admissions

Office of Financial Aid

Office of the Registrar

Student Intervention Services

• Formerly Admissions and Records

• New location and enhanced mission

• New head of office

• New head of office • Reports to VP

Student Services

• Early warning

Student Development · Summer Bridge/ Mentoring

Center • New location

Pauline Reece, Director of Admissions

Mary Anne Romero, Director of Financial Aid

Betty Vette, Director of Student Intervention Services

Manuel Escamilla, Assistant VP Student Support Services

CN120

CN 116

CN 105

CN 108

CN 102

556-3058 FAX 556-6345

556-4511 FAX 556-8049

556-3996 FAX 556-3999

556-4048 FAX 556-4035

556-3411 FAX 556-4035

Valerie Gonzalez-Moscoso Janet Spradley

Melanie Acosta

Shawn Worthy

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24 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

PICK UP TICKETS AT

CIAL SCREENING

METROPOLITAN Metropolitan Stele College of Denver sludent newspaper

TIVOLI STUDENT UNION SUITE 313

. l!J

l!J

• Challenge YourseH

Take a Chicano or Native-American studies course to fulfill various General Studies II requirements.

SPRING 1996 COURSE SCHEDULE

Course# Title Time Days Instructor CHS 100 Introduction to Chicano Studies 8:00-9:15 TR N. Morales

CHS 100 Introduction to Chicano Studies 9:»10:'45 TR l. Torres

CHS 100 Introduction to Chicano Studies 11 :00-12:15 TR A. Campa, Jr.

CHS 100 Introduction to Chicano Studies 1:00-1:50 MWF F. Gomez

CHS 100 Introduction to Chicano Studies 5:»6:45 TR A. Delgado

CHS101/ History of t.leso-America: Pr• 5:»6:45 MW D. Conde HIS 191 Columbian & Colonial Periods

CHS 2011 Survey of Chicano Literature 1:00-1:50 MWF l. Torres ENG 241

CHS211 The Chicano in Azttan 11:00-11:50 MWF G. Archuleta

CHS 2131 Mexico Revolution lo the Presenl, 1:00-1:50 MWF V. CdeBaca HIS 283 1910-1990's

CHS '320/ Chicano and the law 1:00-1:50 MWF A. Dela Torre CJC 372

CHS 321/ The Chicano Family 11:00-11:50 MWF A. Lucero SOC347

CHS390 Pol~ics of Chicano Film 11:00-12:15 TR N. Morales

CHS401 The Chicano Movement 12:00-12:50 MWF A. Esquibel

CHS485 Research Experience in Arranged Staff Chicano Studies

NAS 100 Introduction to Native American 10:00-10:50 MWF 0. Mascarenas Studies

NAS 320/ Native American Politics 2:00-3-15 TR 0. Mascarenas PSC 320

Please call the Chicano Studies office at 556-3124 or visit us in the Rectory building, Room 103 for additional information.

I ONECOURSE ·~ THAT COULD CRINGE

THE COURSE OF YOUR LIFE •

Look forward to the future with confidence. Enroll in Army ROTC, an elective that's different from any other college course. ROTC offers hands­on training. Training that gives you experience and helps build confi­dence, character and management skills. All the credentials that top employers look for.

Anny ROTC is open to freshmen and sophomores without obligation and requires about four hours per week. It will put your life on a whole new course.

For more information contact Captain Roger Linder, Army ROTC Department of Military Science, (303) 566-3490.

ARMY ROTC THE SMARTEST COUEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE

l!J

--~ ~ -~ ~ <.;

---= ~ ~ --~ ~ --~ ~ ~ ~ -~ l!I

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Page 25: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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Roadrunners have high expectations From page 21

"She is a tremendous ath­lete who will see a lot of play­ing time," Smith said. "She has great range but must improve her overall skills to compete at this level."

Outlook: With just nine players on

the roster, the biggest concern for the Roadrunners will be the play of the reserves. Injuries or foul trouble could

spell trouble for Metro. Smith said he has the ultimate mix of experience and inexperience going into the season.

"Vanessa and Shiloh are going to have to play 35 min­utes a game," Smith said. "Our bench players, even if they only play a few minutes a game, are going to have to step-up because every minute they are on the floor will be crucial."

The ability of this group

to shoot the ball with consis­tency could bail the Roadrunners out of trouble in tight games. Shooting has been Metro's biggest weak­ness in the past.

"We shoot the ball better than we ever have this year," Smith said. "We've never shot the ball that well, so that's not saying much, but we are pret­ty strong shooters on the perimeter this year."

If everyone stays healthy

through the preseason sched­ule, Metro should be in posi­tion to compete for its second straight regular season CAC title and its third overall title in three years. Metro won the CAC tournament in the 1993-94 season.

Smith will get his first look at the team in the Nebraska-Omaha game, which will be played at Auraria Events Center Nov. 22 at 5 p.m.

EDGE SALUTES INTRAMURAL EXCELLENCE

Campus Recreation at Auraria and CU-Health Science Center Volleyball League Standings

Division 1- Recreational Team Metro Leftovers Sjoberg Da Bomb! The Silver Bullets Random Diggers The Immobilizers

Division 2 - Competitive Team Multiple Cavitary Masses Narcoleptic Nerds The Pudendals Team Sideout Clunk and Slide North Going Zaks Court Confusion

C 1118<S.C.- &Son.ln<M-- oo.

Fall 1995 Week 6 - Ending Oct. 30

Won Loss 16 2 15 8 8 6 2

Won 13 10 9 9 9 3 0

3 7 7 9

13

Loss 2 5 5 6 8 12 15

NOVEMBER 17. 1995 The METROPOLITAN 25

w·E novE STARVING STUDENTS

All Specials 5pm - Midnight

• 10¢ Wings Sun-Wed

• 112 Priced Appetizers Tues -Thurs

• Monday Night Football Beer & Bratwurst for$2

REAJJA REDS In Glendale. 1 Blk E. of Colo. Blvd

4425 E. Virginia Ave

322-2863

The Metropolitan, now

welcomes letters from our readers

Submit letters (typed only) on paper or via E-mail. Letters should be 250-500 words. Letters may be edited for space, but it is our desire to publish all letters in their entirety. All letters must include name, student identifi­cation number, or title, school and phone number. Students and faculty are encouraged to respond. All letters submitted become the property of The Metropolitan.

Send letters to: The Metropolitan P.O. Box 173362 Campus Box 57 Denver, CO 80217 -3362 e-mail: Louis Landa@SSD_STLF@MSCD

[email protected]

Or bring It by our office at the TIVOii Student Union, suite 313.

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Page 26: Volume 18, Issue 14 - Nov. 17, 1995

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26 The METROPOLITAN NOVEMBER 17, 1995

GENERAL

Alcoholics Anonymous meetings on campus. Monday, Wednesday and Friday from noon to 12:50 p.m. in the Auraria library Room 205. Info: Chris at 727-9714.

Menorah Ministries hosts a Truth Bible Study every Monday, Wednesday and Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Tivoli Room 542. Come for the fellowship and Truth Bible Study. Info: 722-0944.

"The Great American Landscape," monumental landscape paintings are exhibited at Republic Plaza Lobby, at 370 17th St. Suite 3800, though Nov. 24. The exhibition times are Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. This event is sponsored by the Asian Multi­cultural Network.

Auraria Division of Public Safety, Campus Police Department is com­pleting an annual purge of its lost and found property room. If you believe your property is there, contact the department at 1200 7th St. by Nov. 22. After that date all items will be destroyed or contributed to a deserv­ing charity. Info: 556-3271 .

open to all resident poets of Colorado. Prizes: first $35; second $25 and third $15. Rules: form-free verse; theme­optional; · line limit-40 lines; entry donation of $3. The deadline is Dec. 1. Send your copies and your entry donation to The Poetry Society of Colorado, Inc., c/o Juliana Underwood 618 Soda Creek Drive, Evergreen, CO 80439 Info: 674-4657.

lnterVarsity meets weekly to share, pray, workshop, study the Bible and encourage each other in the work of God's Kingdom on every Wednesday from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. in the Tivoli Room 542. Come join us in our mis­sion on this campus. Info: Rod Pauls at 576-9782.

FRI. Nov. 17 Metro's Baha'i Club sponsors "Great Themes of Life in Best-Selling Books.~ starting at 7 p.m. at Metro Denver Baha'i Center at 225 E. Bayaud Ave. Today: Suffering as the Fabric of Life in Viktor Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning," presented by Duane Troxel, a UCO professor. Info: 798-4319 or 322-8997.

SAT. Nov. 18 The Colorado Open Contest, run by the Poetry Society of Colorado, Inc., is Metro's Baha'i Club sponsors an edu­

cational forum, starting at 7:30 p.m. at

1440 Market St.

10% DISCOUNT with Auraria ID on Parts, Servic e & Accessories

'I Blocks from campus on Market Street

Bike Sales • Service • Accessories • Financing Available

Open Mon-Fri l Oam-6pm Saturday l Oam-5pm

r----------I I I I I I I I I I With purchase of any size drink I LValid only at 1010 W. Colfax Expires 11/27/95 .J ---------------

Mefro Denver Baha'i Center at 225 E. Bayaud Ave. Today: China: Current Trends in its Economic and Social Development by Douglas Allen, pro­fessor at the University of Denver. Info: 798-4319 or 744-6456.

UCD's Music Department presents a multi-media concert "Failing," featuring art, rock music, video and flamenco starting at 8 p.m. at St. Cajetan·s'. Tickets are $5 for public and $3 for stu­dents and seniors. Info: 556-2727.

SUN. Nov. 19

Piano and violin concert by Arthur Ozolins and Rasma Lielmane is held in the Foote Music HalV Houston Fine Arts Center at 7111 Montview Blvd., starting at 5 p.m. Tickets in advance are $15 or $20 at the door. Info: 782-0436.

c FRI. Nov. 24

Bring your turkey scraps and trim­mings to a Shabbat Family Service and 'Left Over Supper' at Temple Micah, a Reform Jewish congregation, at 2600 Leyden St. The service starts at 6 p.m. and the potluck starts at 6:45 p.m.

MON. Nov. 27 Metro's Music Department presents a composition recital by students of Nancy Gunn, stating at 2 p.m. in Art Building 295. Info: 556-3180.

TUE. Nov. 28 Student Support Services sponsors Advocates of Trio Chili Lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Art Building Room

I 177. The lunch is $2.50. Info: 556-

T UE. Nov. 20 . 4722.

cco·s Student Activities presents a 1.-----=T=-H--U.-N-O_V_,_3_0-~ self-esteem workshop in South Classroom 136A. Info: 556-2597. Toads in the Garden, a Thursday night

poetry series at The Daily Grind, pre­sents a poetry reading by Steve Wingate, starting at 7:30 p.m .. A dona­tion of $2 ($1 with student ID) is requested. Info: 573-JAVA.

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HELP WANTED FAST FUND-RAISER- Raise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, Groups, Clubs, Motivated Individuals. Fast, Easy - No Financial Obligation. (800) 862-1982 ext. 33. 1/19

WANTED!!! Individuals, Student Organizations and Small Groups to promote SPRING BREAK '96. Earn MONEY and FREE TRIPS. Call the national leader, INTER­CAMPUS PROGRAMS. http://www.icpt.com (800) 327-6013. 1/26

ALASKA EMPLOYMENT -Fishing Industry. Earn up to $3,000-$6,000+ per month. Room and Boa~! Transportation! Male/Female. No experience necessary! (206) 545-4155 ext. A58791. 1/19

STUDENTS NEEDED! National Parks are now hiring seasonal & full-time. Forestry workers, park rangers, firefight­ers, lifeguards, + more. Excellent benefits + bonuses! Call: (206) 545-4804 ext. N58792. 1 /19

$35,000NR. INCOME potential, reading books. Toll Free (800) 898-9778 ext. R-7061 for details. 11 /17

$1750 WEEKLY possible mail­ing our circulars. For info call (301) 306-1207. 11/17

$40,000NR. INCOME potential. Home Typists/PC users. Toll free (800) 898-9778 Ext. T-7061 for listings. 11 /17

ABOVE THE RIM Seeking indi­viduals motivated individuals with competitive attitude to fill part-time/full-time positions. Flexible hours. For interview call Lauren 721-9624. 12/1

EARN $$$ - DAILY PAY Banquet Servers, Waitstaff. Flexible hours, work around your school schedule. Free ban­quet training. Hospitality person­nel 830-6868 Mon.-Fri.

12/1

COLLEGIATE ACHIEVERS Looking for hard working individ­uals with positive attitude for entry & upper level positions. Will work around schedule. Serious inquiries only. 721-9624 x 404. 12/1

DUFFEY'$ BAKERY CAFE. $6.00/hour. Flexible customer service hours available. Part­time. Full-time. Great Neighborhood/Atmosphere. Apply in person before 4 p.m. 4994 E. Hampden. (1/2 mile west of 1-25). 2/9

1996 ISRAEL SUMMER STAFF: Jewish religious teen tour, youth exp. preferred, must be 21, been to Israel as a teen/adult. Call Israel Study Tour 321-3191 . 11/17

BUSPERSON/HOST $6 hr Jup Waitstaff $10 hr./up Part-time evenings - weekends excellent opportunity for friendly, hard­working person. Apply in per­son. Garrison Street Station. 9199 W. Alameda, Lakewood.

12/1

TRAVEL ABROAD AND WORK - Make up to $25-45/hr. teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For infor­mation call: (206) 632-1146 ext. J58793. 12/1

BANQUET AND DELIVERY PERSONNEL needed for Biscuits & Berries Catering. Very flexible hours. All levels of experience needed. 277-9677.

1/19

$1000 WEEKLY, STUFFING envelopes at home. FREE INFO. Send SASE Box 6797-C, Stateline, NV 89449. 12/1

FOR SALE

IMAGE WRITER II Perfect work­ing condition. $100, 5 Breuer chairs $80. Tel. 763-9206. 11/17

I ANNOUNCEMENTS I ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS! Over $6 billion in private sector grants & scholarships are now available. All students are eligi­ble. Let us help. For more info. call (800) 263-6495 ext. F58792.

1/19

SERVICES

SING! TAKE LESSONS WITH a professional! Any style. Workshops and gift certificates also available. Weekday appts. only 11-5 p.m. Call Vocal Visions 584-0248. 12/1

NOVEMBER 17, 1995 The METROPOLITAN 27

INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS­Visitors DV-1 G reencard Program, by U.S. Immigration. Legal Services. Tel. (818) 772-7168. #20231 Stagg St. Canoga Park, CA 91306. 12/1

TUTOR FOR GERMAN AND FRENCH Qualified, experi­enced, reliable. B.A. in German, minor in French, 4.0 GPA. Students $1 O/hr, non-students $12/hr. On Auraria campus Monday through Thursday. Leonore Dvorkin - 985-2327.

12/1 WANT TO GET IN SHAPE? Award-winning instructor offers co-ed classes combining weight training, calisthenics and stretches. $4/hr. All equipment provided. Evenings and Saturdays in southwest Denver. Leonore Dvorkin - 985-2327.

12/1 :

ARE YOU TIRED OF THE RAT RACE? Want to supplement or even replace your income? Financial Freedom can be yours , if you want it. Call 987-3339 for · information 24 hours. 11/17

(LASSIFIED ADS ARt 0:--.LY 54 Pt:R

\VC!U FC~ METRO STUDENTS

\X/IT:- '"" VALID ID. DEADLINE ~oR

S.B\\ SSIONS .S MONDAY /<J

5 00 P.M. !!

TEACH ENGLISH IN KOREA Positions available monthly. BA or BS required .

. $18,000..24,000/yr. Aecom. provided, other benefits. Send resume, copy of diploma and copy of passport to: Bok Ji Corporation, Yang Chun P.O. Box 8, Yang Chun Gu, Seoul, Korea. TEL: 011 ·822-242-5627 FAX: 011 ·822-242-4329

W A N T Aerobics and Water Aerobics

Instructors to teach Spring semester at

Campus Recreation at Auraria. Stop by the PER Events Center

Room 108 or call Patty at

• 556-3210 • for more information.

Paid positions afld ficx1Ne class t.mes

~ BARTENDING , COLLEGE

• Leain from real bartenders • Full-lime money, part-time work • l or 2 week course • Job placement assistance • Financing available

HOUSING ' 1==='=7T7S=7~=~-=~~=5!==~~~ *LOOKING FOR A ,PLACE TO share? Call Nancy at Housing Helpers at 499-4499.* 11/17

PERSONALS

SEEKING INTERVIEWS WITH serious female sports fans, especially those who patronize hotel bars to try to meet players. Interviews are for a women's studies research project and possible publication. Please call Jeanie at 863-8117. 12/1

f A~YJ NO SELLING, NO APPOINTMENT

I SETTING

Sending information to potential customers.

Must be teachable and have good telephone skills.

Mon-Fri, S-9 pm $6-$10 per hour plus

bonuses and unique benefits at our Westminster Office

CALL 429-6805 ASI< FOR BRUCE OR BOB.

P.O.S.T. Certified Police Officer Training Recruiting for January, 1996 Academy

To Qualify: I Must be 21 or older I No felony convictions I Good driving_ record I High school diploma or GED

Orientation dates: Dec. 1 - 10:30 am & NOON

&1:30pm Dec. 12 - 1:30 pm & 5:30 pm

RoomA112- 797-5793

Cost: $2194.85 (Tuition & fees)

Women and minorities are encouraged to apply -

cf Arapahoe Community College 2500 w. College DriYe, Lllleton, co

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28 The METROPOLITAN November 17, 1995

The Student Health Center cordially invites you to,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,,

BEIJING AND BEYOND Colorado {-JerJpecliveJ on the (jfotaf 'Woman

- - - -- -- -- - - ----- ---. -- - ... - - ----- ----

Please join us for this inspirational and thought provoking seminar on women. Listen to parlicipants of the Fourlh World Conference on Women discuss issues affeding women

throughout the world Leam how to make changes in your community as well as your life.

WHEN: WHERE: TIME:

Quest Speakers:

You can make a difference now!

Wednesday, November 29, 1995 Auraria Campus, Tivoli Student Union, 320 A, B, C 1 :00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. (3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. - Dessert Bar/Resource Tables)

Karen Beeks - Program Chair, UCD graduate Laura Hershey - Writer, /\dvoaite for persons with disabilities Karen Moore - MSCD graduate, Member of the National Coundl of Negro Women Lori Lea Pourier - Executive Director, Indigenous Womens Network Dorothy Rupert - Colorado St.ate Senator Heather Warren - Photojournalist Loretta Warren - Registered Nurse, MSCD graduate

Student Perspectives: Almeta Corbin - MSCD Student Qovemment /\ssembly Vice-President of Student Fees Melissa Munoz - MSCD Student Qovemment /\ssemb/y Vice-President of Diversity

This free seminar is open to the publicl Seating is limited so please RSVP by November 22, 1995 to SSG-2525.

'•