volume 21, issue 6 - sept. 25, 1998
DESCRIPTION
The Metropolitan is a weekly, student-run newspaper serving the Auraria Campus in downtown Denver since 1979.TRANSCRIPT
The
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Faculty· fight published • review Student government goes ahead anyway By David Proviano The Metropolitan
Metro's Faculty Senate voted Sept. 23 to hire an attorney in a potential bid to protect professors from having their evaluations by students widely distributed.
All but two of about 60 members of the senate voted to retain attorney Bruce Bosky, asking him to obtain infonnatfon on Colorado's open records law.
'The attorney is being hired to interpret open record law in a way that will not defame faculty," said Monys Hagen, Faculty Senate president.
Metro's Student Government Assembly pledged last spring to publish a book listing the evaluation results.
"We were having a meeting to decide ways to keep lines of communication open, while they were having their meeting determining ways to close them," said Alvis Montgomery, chair of the assembly's Student Survey Committee.
Some in Faculty Senate say they worry the evaluations won't fairly portray professors, especially if the data is summarized, rather than presented raw.
Summarizing the data would be a "bastardation," Hagen said.
"We plan to use the same information that the Office of Institutional Research has compiled," said Jim Hayen, another member of the survey committee. "It really disappoints me. I don't understand why the members of faculty don't want students to know how other students feel about them as an instructor."
The Faculty Senate not only wants to keep results of the evaluations quiet, in some cases members won't even talk about it publicly. The Faculty Senate Executive Committee discussed the issue of student evaluations in a closed-
door session Sept. 16. "It was a general discussion about
student evaluations," said Jerry Boswell, a Metro finance professor and member of the committee. "We talked about using faculty evaluations for the purpose they were intended to be used. I don't remember what the need for a closed session was."
Hagen said information about student evaluations should be kept confidential, but a journalism professor and Metro's Office of Institutional Research say she's wrong.
"I can find no exemption in state law that allows a state-level body to go into executive session to discuss evaluations," said James Brodell, a Metro journalism professor, in an e-mail to Hagen.
Student evaluations of individual professors . are ~ready easily available to students. They're open for viewing at the Institutional Research department on the ninth floor of the Terracentre office building across Speer Boulevard from campus.
"All you need to do is come on over," said Tracy Carlson, a statistical analyst for the department.
The difference is that student government members want to publish evaluation results on their Web site.
The University of Colorado at Denver publishes a handbook every year detailing the results of the evaluations.
"It does help steer students when a tremendous amount of faculty are teaching (the same subject)." said Bill Wall, a CU-Denver senior. "I find it to be 75 percent accurate. A lot of the teachers really earn the grades that are posted in there."
Montgomery said the faculty's .resistance won't get in the way of the asse.mbly's goal.
"It is our right to publish, and we will go forward," Montgomery said.
FOUND AND LOST: PROTEST DEJA Vu: Police lose records of a man arrested on DUI . . susp1c1on
Recent protest at department of education reminds prof of 1960s
Thud
John Swift/7he Metropo/ilon
Metro sophomore Brett Manning takes one on the melon Sept. 18 during a men's soccer game against the Colorado School of Mines.
EARTHY ART: Emmanuel Gallery's latest venture comes via Mother Nature
UP AND COMING: Women's soccer team storms to No. 9 in national poll
2 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
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If you're ready to work, · we're ready for . you. Positions are now available in
several departments; read all ·about . them and complete an
application ' at the reception desk at the lower level of the Book Center .
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. Starting pay· $5.75/hour; . average 20 hours per w~ek.
Auraria Book Center offers an opportunity to work with great people a·t a convenient location
and flexible hours. Apply now! · ,
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METROBRIEf S Auraria access applauded
A report by the national magazine New Mobility: Disability Culture and Lifestyle ranked Auraria America's fifth-best campus in terms of disability friendliness.
The magazine sent out questionnaires to disability offices at 50 public universities and colleges and talked to students about accessibility concerns.
Other institutions rated high on the list were the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of California at Berkeley, Edinboro University of Pennsylvania and the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
SGA names new vice president
John-Paul Whitaker-Krcik was appointed student government vice president of administration and finance Sept. 17.
Whitaker-Krcik said he plans on holding an open forum for all work study and on-campus employees to find out what kind of concerns those students have.
He said he also plans on traveling to Metro North and Metro South so students there can learn more about what Metro offers those students.
Christian festival seeks awareness
Auraria's first Christian Fest '98 will be held Sept. 25.
The festival will offer bands, celebrity speakers and information that will bridge the gap between the religious and the secular.
The speakers include Janet Elway, Steve Kelly of KOA radio, former Denver Bronco Karl Mecklenburg and Miss Colorado Gina Waegele.
Jed McCl~lland, a member of Mentors in Life, one of six groups . sponsoring the event, said .the event is a coming out for Christians on campus.
"There's not a lot of awareness of Christian resourees on campus," McClelland said. -
The first half of the-event will be held in the southwest corner of the Tivoli from 11 :30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. The second half of the event is in the Tivoli Turnhalle from 4:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Twisted
September 25, 1998 The Metropolitan 3
Mexican author, diplomat
•· . to VISlt By Sean Weaver The Metropolitan
A Mexican novelist and member of Mexico's National Commission on Human Rights will visit Metro as the college's Chicano/Latino Distinguished Professor.
Carlos Fuentes will visit Denver Oct. 20-22 and will facilitate a seminar discussion for faculty and students in the Tivoli Oct. 22.
"He's an international figure," said Luis Torres, chairman of the Chicano Studies Department. "If there is anything as a citizen of the world, it is Fuentes. His insights really speak to Chicanos in the United States, and
Carlos Fuentes
his ·insights about Mexico are the most interesting and complicated of any today."
Kelli McWhirter!The Metropolitan Bennet Robinson, 3, watches the making of animal balloons at Oktober Fest in Larimer Square Sept. 20.
Fuentes, who received several international literary awards including Mexico's National Prize in Literature and the Miguel de Cervantes Prize by King Juan Carlos of Spain, wrote Old Gringo, which was the first book by a Mexican
DUI ·sus·pect·'lo·st. author to become a bestseller in the United States, and The Buried Mirrvr, a history of the Hispanic world in Europe and the Americas.
Fuentes also served as Mexico's ambassador to France. By Kerney Williams
The Metropolitan
Auraria police arrested a man suspected of drunken driving Sept. I 0 and . turned him over to the Denver Police Department. From there all traces of him vanished.
At 6:32 p.m., a parking lot attendant called Auraria Police to report a possible drunken driver. The police stopped the car and found the driver, Carlos Espinoza to have, "(A) strong odor of alcohol, slurred speech, unable to. m~intain balance, (and) a constant licking of lips." All were cited as probable cause in the report fillel out by officers Paul Rulla and Tony 1:-ucero, who arrested Espinoza on suspicion of driving under the influence, according to a report by Auraria Campus Police and Security. ·
"We called Denver (police) for transfer and DUI processing," said Chief Joe Ortiz. "Everything was in accordance with
, establish~d proc~dure. bet-:veen DPD and a uS." ~ "' ~ _ ~ -::· ·'- 1 ~ · c -
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Sometime after that, the suspect disappeared from the system. "We don't know where he is," said Ortiz.
"We have no record of him," said Darlene Besser of the Traffic Investigations Bureau of the Denver Police Department. "We spent four to four-and-a-half hours looking for it Friday, if not more. I also spent time on Thursday." She said her office receives records of all traffic stops in Denver, whether an arrest is made or not.
"He is an expert in U.S. and Latin American relations," said Olivia Lopez Hartenstien; associate dean of the School of Letters Arts and Sciences. "He will come to this campus not 'only as a novelist, but as a person who unders~ands the culture of Latin America and the United States. He is very much into making a difference in relationships between the United States and Latin America."
Fuentes will make several stops in Denver, beginning with a reception at the Museo de las Americas, 861 Santa Fe Drive, Oct. 20 at 5:30 p.m.
He will also speak at the Donald Seawell Ballroom at the Denver Performing Arts Complex from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Oct. 21.
All events are free and open to the public.
After checking with . Denver Police District Six, the district with jurisdiction over Auraria, Ortiz said, "The prisoner was not processed to the best of my knowledge. We asked DPD to account for why he was not processed, incarcerated, or accounted for that matter." He went on to say District Six was doing an internal investigation but wouldn't comment further. Before his visit to the campus, Metro
will hold a series of events including films, a library exhibit and lectures that
. will ~iscuss Fuentes' topic, multicultural' "' ' ism .. in the 20th and 21st centuries .
No one from District Six was available for comment. Denver County Jail
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also had no record, ~!" Espin2za. .. ........ : ~
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4 The Metropo/ilan September 25, 1998
Friendship festival brings a world
TV watching students
of food and music By Linn Hirvela Deerrose The Metropolitan
A festival to celebrate different cultures from around the world will be held at Auraria Campus Oct. I on the Lawrence Street Mall.
Auraria's World Friendship Day will highlight ways the campus connects to different cultures, said Zav Dadabhoy, director of Student Activities at Metro.
The "very successful tradition on campus," according to Dadabhoy, was held for many years, went dormant for a few, then returned and is now in its fourth year running.
Unique feature.s of the festival highlighted by Dadabhoy include plans by some faculty members to open their Oct. I classes so students not enrolled in a class can hear about topics of global interest. A job fair with more than 60 employers and organizations will provide information on employment and internship opportunities.
The festival will also showcase accomplishments and diverse forms of entertainment of different ethnic communities, said Yvette De La Cruz, student chair of the entertainment committee. The roving "Human Ethnic Jukebox" will play from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. From 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., accordionist Ron Tomocik, the Human Ethnic Jukebox, will perform as International Fever with a tuba player. Rhythm X, in its third year at the festival, is scheduled to play reggae at 10 a.m. at the flagpole.
At 11 a.m., the Flying Aces are sched-
uled to play swing music for lessons or listening. Combo Calliente will play merengue, salsa, mambo and rumba from 12:45 p.m. to 2 p.m.
The Human Ethnic Jukebox said he plays music from several areas, including Iceland, Ukraine, Mexico, Germany, Ecuador, Norway, Sweden, Ireland, Scotland, Peru, Argentina, Colombia, Poland, France and Croatia. Tomocik said, "If you give me a week, I can do at least one hour of non-repeated music from at least 15 different cultures."
A "Parade of Countries" led by a Scottish bagpiper is scheduled from 11 :45 a.m. to 12: 15 p.m., starting at the southwest corner of the Tivoli Student Union.
Ethnic cuisine at the festival is scheduled to include Dutch funnel cakes, spicy sesame chicken wings, jalapeno poppers, roasted corn, crab pita, pad Thai, brisket, clam chowder, bratwurst, spring rolls, and catfish, according to festival directors.
Diversity-intelligent workshops, multicultural arts and crafts and display booths are also planned.
"I hope people will take this opportunity to come out and experience this campus tradition and take advantage of seeing new and exciting cultures showcased," said Dadabhoy.
The event is sponsored by Metro, the Auraria Higher Education Center, Community College of Denver, University of Colorado at Denver, Spring International Language Center, Auraria Book Center and the Tivoli Student Union.
Jaime Jarrett/The Metropolilon
Photoiournalist Brad Houston, from KUSA-TV, films Bree Kutz and other students wakhing Pl'.esident Clinton's grand iury testimony on TV in a Tivoli student lounge.
Fees pay for new labs By Tom Malloy The Metropolitan
Fewer Metro students will have to wait to use computers at Metro's computer labs, thanks to a 100 percent increase of Metro student fees for information and technology that started this fall.
"We spent $750,000 dollars last summer updating and purchasing new computers. The lab we just finished in South Classroom 107 has 70 new computers," said John Reed, director of Academic Computing and User Services .
Metro also purchased 26 computers from Sun Microsystems and approximately 50 new Macintosh G-3s.
The fee increase is spread equally
over this current fiscal year and 1999. The information and technology fee was $17 dollars for a student enrolled for 12 credit hours last spring. This semester, the information and technology fee was increased to $25.50. The next increase in the information and technology fee will be during the fall 1999 semester. It will bring the total to $34.
In the past, Metro students have faced time-consuming waiting lists when wanting to use on-campus computer labs.
"When it comes down to finals week, just forget it," said Jeremy Buck, a Metro senior, commenting on the availability of computers on campus during the spring 1998 semester.
congratulates the 1998 Excellence in Teaching and
Outstanding Researcher /Scholar Award Recipients
Anthony A. Rockwood, M.S. C. Richard Scott, D.B.A. Excellence in Teac•ing Mohammed Akacem, Ph.D.
Outstanding Faculty Researcher Excellence in Teaching
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September 25, 1998 The Metropolitan S
Nuclear fears might still be reality By Tim Fields The Metropolitan
The Indian subcontinent is threatened by a possible nuclear war, said a professor from the University of Denver at a meeting in the Tivoli Sept. 21.
The professor, Minu Palani, said the bordering countries of India and Pakistan have a history of conflict and their underground nuclear bomb tests brings them closer to war.
The countries in close proximity to each other adds a greater risk of nuclear war.
Palani, one of three hosts of the meeting, "Who Will Nuke The World", said each country has less than a minute to retaliate with its nuclear weapons when confronted by a threat.
That time is not sufficient to make an intelligent decision, she said.
And a threat may only be a false alarm, said Scott Thomas, a political science professor at University of Colorado at Denver, who was also a panelist at the meeting.
A few years ago, Russians mistook a Norwegian satellite rocket as a possible missile launch from an enemy and came close to striking back.
"The stakes are still very high, if (the United States and the Soviet Union) had a nuclear exchange during the peak of the Cold War, roughly 140 million Americans and 113 million Russians would have died," Thomas said.
"That would've been the end of life as we knew it." These emerging nations are practicing a policy of
deterrence as did the supe1t powers during the Cold War,
he said. "You have to be willing to destroy the world in order
to save it," Thomas said. -Niels Schonbeck, a Metro chemistry professor and
third co-host, said countries with nuclear weapons can no longer go to war and expect to survive.
"Unfortunately, technology is more advanced than social management," he said.
Schonbeck said he was dismayed when India detonated five underground nuclear tests in the Pokharan mountain range between May 11 and May 13.
"The irrationality of nuclear conflict is still possible and (the United States) is responsible because we allowed them to get nukes," he said.
The Indian Embassy in Washington D.C. released a
post-detonation statement on May 11 , which confirmed the country's possession of nuclear weapons.
"These tests provide reassurance to the people of India that their national security interests are paramount and will be promoted and protected," the release said.
India and Pakistan refuse to sign nuclear disarmament treaties, Palani said.
Pakistan will not dismantle its nuclear program until India complies first, and India will consider a policy change once their national security is no longer threatened.
The peace process will be difficult, Palani said. Derek Boyd, 19, a Community College of Denver
freshman, said after the meeting, "Suddenly I don ' t feel too safe anymore."
New disability director to start Oct. 19 By Janet Christine Austin The Metropolitan
A new director of Disabilities Services for Metro and the University of Colorado at Denver will join the Auraria Higher Education Center staff Oct. 19.
Lisa McGill is a former director of Disability Support Services and International Students and Scholars for Oakland University m
Rochester, Mich., where she developed and implemented disability services. McGill also has worked as a counselor for a engineering and management institute and has three years experience as a mental health worker. McGill has a master' s degree in counsf?ling from Oakland University.
was necessary to hire a full time director because the previous director made commitments to work part time and because there has been a rise in enrollment of students with disabilities.
Wolf said he believes McGill will do a fine job.
"She comes to us well prepared and well qualified," Wolf said.
Dean Wolf, executive vice president for Administration, said it
a culty If you believe the old adage which says "those who can, do , and those who can't, teach,"
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Discover the hidden gems among the works and talents of the professors of the English Department of the Metropolitan State College of Denver.
The Alpha Psi Chapter of Sigma Tau Delta invites you to join us for a time to enJOy the literary and scholastic works of the professors of the MSCD English Department.
When: September 25, 3 to 5 pm
Where: The Golda Maier House 1146 9th St. Park
Refreshments provided by Sigma Tau Delta
Jamba is a way of working in harmony with the life nourishing qualities of fruits and vegetables - caring about the people and community
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We celebrate and value fhe contnbutions of our diverse workforce. f UN INTEGRITY BALANCE EMPOWERMENT RESPECT
6 The Melropolilon September 25, 1998
REGISTER NOW for MS6D .classes ' . .
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starting in OCTOBER! .It's no!too late to add an accelerated class to your fall '~8 .
schedule: The Extended Campus at The Met offers the
following accelerated classes at The Met South and The
Met North, and there's still time to register. Refer to MSCD's telephone registration instructions (page 22-23 of
the Fall Class Schedule) to ENROLL NOW!
The following courses begin October 24th & end December 12th, unless otherwise noted.
Dept.#
ACC 2020
CJC 190A
CJC 3700
CMS 3060
CMS 3270
GEL 1150
HSP 3220
HSP 390F
MDL 130C
MGT 3530
MKT 2040
SPA 1908
SPE 1010
WMS 234A
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WMS 234F
Dept. #
CJC 4058
EDU 3908
HSP 4540
MGT 2210
PHI 3360
SED 3600
WMS 234A
WMS 234B
WMS 234G
THE MET SOUTH 303-121-1391
5660 Greenwood Plaza Blvd., Englewood (near Orchard Road and 1-25)
Course Title Credit CRN # Day/Time
Principles of Accounting II 3 53284 S. 8:30am-3: 15pm
Lang & Cultural Awareness 2 53300 S, 8:30am-5pm
Civil Law 3 53045 S. 8:30am-3: 15pm
File Design & Database Mgt 3 53331 S. 8:30am-3: 15pm
Micro Base Software 3 53148 S, 8:30am-3: 15pm
Oceanography 3 52978 S. 8:30am-3:15pm
Conflict Resolution & Dec Making 2 53311 F&S, 8:30am-5pm
Assessment of Subsance Abuser 1 53212 F&S, 8:30am-5pm
Lang & Cultural Awareness 2 53330 S, 8:30am-5pm
HR Management 3 53289 S, 8:30am-3: 15pm
Managerial Communication 3 53290 S, 8:30am-3:15pm
Lang & Cultural Awareness 2 53341 S, 8:30am-5pm .
Public Speaking .3 52405 S, B:30am-3: 15pm
Time Management I 52140 S, 9am-5pm
Self-Esteem 52153 S. 9am-5pm
Sexual Harassmnt/Discrimination 53308 S. 9am-5pm
Dates
10/24-11/14
11/6-11/14
10/30-10/31
10/24-11/14
10/24-11/14
10/3-10/10
10/31-1 1/7
10/17-10/24
THE MET NORTH 303-450-5111
I 1990 Grant St., Northglenn (near 120th and 1-25)
Course Title Credit CRN# Day/Time
Youth. Drugs and Gangs 2 53299 S. 8:30am-5pm
Youth, Drugs and Gangs 2 53302 S. B:30am-5pm
Youth, Drugs and Gangs 2 53018 S. 8:30am-5pm
Legal Envmmnt of Bus I 3 53287 S, 8:30am-3: 15pm
Business Ethics 3 53086 S, 8:30am-3:15pm
Exceptional Learner in Classrm 3 53314 S. 8:30am-3:15pm
Time Management 1 52145 S, 9am-5pm
Stress Management ,,,;..<""' I 52149 S, 9am-5pm
Career Evaluation Work,Shep ,,, , . '
}., 53344 S, 9am-5pm ,~;,, ::~~ -~ 1"' :•.;: ,· -.. , }{' ~-* ;,,~ ' 1 f "
<·f
Dates
10/31-11/21
10/31-11/21
10/31-11/21
10/31-11/7
11/14-11/21
10/3-10/10
! ;,g ,/ THE,lVIB,,'Qi9POLITAN STATE COLLEGE of DENVER
Connecting you to a real future
NEED.
If you are a student. staff, faculty or administrator and find yourself in a
DISAGREEMENT or DISPUTE with an office, a department, or an
individual within the college, you can turn to the Ombuds Officer. That
person's role is to ensure that all members of the campus community
receive fair, equitable and just treatment within the campus system.
The Ombuds Officer considers all sides of g question in an impartial and
objective way in order to resolve problems and concerns raised ~ any
member of the college community. The name of the person requesting
help can only be used in the investigation of the matter with permission.
Records, contacts and communication with the office are also confidential.
The Om buds Office is located at 1059 Ninth Street Park (rear entrance) Ben Monroe Ill, PhD • 556-3021 • 556-8470.
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-September 25, 1998 The Meropo/ilon 7
.c.
China facing problems and promise By Sean Weaver The Metropolitan
China is becoming more of a major figure in the world's economic, political and cultural scene, said a Metro history professor.
-:• "You simply can not isolate one quarter of the world's population," said history professor Xiansheng Tian.
"U.S. leaders have paid a lot of attention to China: Nixon, Ford, Carter, Regan, Bush and now Clinton."
In his Sept. 17 speech, "China in the New Millennium", Tian outlined two problems facing China:
tlfpopulation and democratic reform. "Many politicians and religious groups criticized
(China's) one-child policy," Tian said. "China was forced to follow this policy."
Tian said while China has approximately 22 percent of the world's population, it only has 7 percent of the
' -world's land that is suitable for fanning. Tian added the
job market in China is also under strain. He said the Chinese government cut 12 million jobs last year and it is expected to cut an additional 11 million jobs this year. The official figure for unemployment in China is 3 percent, he said, while unofficial estimates place the unemployment figure at 7 percent.
Tian said scholars estimate the Chinese government must come up with 180 million jobs by 2000.
"Do you think any government can do that in such a short time?" he asked.
The large population also has an impact on the environment. He said the United Nations estimates out of 125 rivers in China, 62 are so polluted they can not sustain any type of life.
"Wildlife is wiped out in many areas," he said. "In many areas you can't hear birds chirping. I had a friend come to the United States, and I told him to look at the sky. He said, 'Oh my goodness ... a blue sky."'
Tian, who left China in 1988, said the country is on the road to democratic reform. He said the Chinese gov
ernment called out 300,000 soldiers to end the Tiananmen Square uprising in 1989, but in recent years a lot of changes have taken place.
'The government is more tolerant to criticism," he said. "People are criticizing the government openly, at least to friends ."
Xiansbeng Tian He said the younger generation
of Chinese is no longer interested in politics, but making money and
improving their social status. "China's younger generation is like the average
Metro student." The speech was sponsored by the Metro History
Department and the Metro History Club
German ,philosopher to speak at CU-Denver in Oct. Jly Linn Hirvela Deerrose Philosophy. The society will meet in
Denver, Oct. 8-10. scheduled to address a second session of the meeting.
expected to draw about 500 people. Mitchell Aboulafia, CU-Denver phi
losophy department chair, said he and CUDenver philosophy professors Catherine Kemp and Mark Tanzer were instrumental in bringing the society meeting to Denver.
The Metropolitan
A prominent German social theorist and philosopher is scheduled to speak in Denver this October, said Catherine
.. Kemp, assistant professor of philosophy at University of Colorado at Denver.
Habermas is the most important living member of the Frankfurt School, started in the 1920s by a group of neo- and postMarxist scholars, Kemp said. Some of his works include: The Theory of Communicative Action, Legitimation Crisis, and Knowledge and Human Interests.
The presence of Habermas brings considerable prestige and status to the CUDenver Department of Philosophy, Kemp said.
The Society of Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy provides the largest audience for European philosophy in the United States and is second in size only to the American Philosophical Association, according to Kemp. The meeting is
Students may register for the conference for $10, Aboulafia said. Further information may be obtained from professor Aboulafia or professor Kemp at the CU-Denver philosophy department at (303) 556-4868.
Jurgen Habermas will speak at a session of the annual meeting of the Society of Phenomenology and Existential
Rosi Braidotti, author of Patterns of Dissonance and Nomadic Subjects, is
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Coun_seling Center TIVOii 651 (303) 556-3132
"C1•lll llr W1rksll11 For anyone who mil1J be questioning their sexual orientation, or may be in the process of "coming out." We also invite friends, partners, and allies. Wednesday, October 14, 1998 3:00 - 4:30PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Denise McGuire, Ph.D. & Bobbi Vollmer, Ph.D.
HltlrlSIXIS• 11• -••lllbll: 1111-llPlll llSCISSlll The fadlitators will begin with some psyclweducation around heteroserism: definitions, what it looks like, how it sounds, lww it feels. Small group activities follow. Thursday, October 22, 1998 U:OO- Noon Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Suki Montgomery, M.A. & Cynthia Wang-Toxby, B.A.
1111rc111n1 & lllllrllD 111111111111&11: C• .. IClllllS. la111 & 111111111 This interactive session deals with the special challenges presented fly intercu/tural and interfaith rrlationships, and dealing effectively with negative judgements and stereotypes. Thursday, Octobet' 29, 1998 10:30 - Noon Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Cynthia Wang-Toxby, 8-A. &c Suki Montgomery, M.A.
............. _ ............... ..
....... ltl' ... nw.a-_..._..,. ........... '\•,Al ..... Plllla4UZ.
diversitysymposia F A L L 1 9 9 8
"Getting to Know You: A Series of Symposia On Appreciating Human Differences"
ATal11f"O" Come and experience a unique version of what ii is like to be different. Discussion will be encouraged on facilitating climates that are conducive to work and study both in and out of the classroom. Tuesday, November 10, 1998 3:00 - 4:30PM Tivoli 442 Facilitators: Gail Bruce-Sanford, Ph.D. & Paul Lam, M.A. (First part of a two-part video series.)
Wllll IS 1111 Mllllll II lbllil Evlml•V bllllll aall Pnl•lllCI Join in a discussion of how language illustrates our biases and learn nwre effective and respectful ways to get your message across. Monday, November 16, 1998 Noon -1:30PM livoli 651 Facilitators: Lisa Jacobs, Psy.D.
blllll"l's" This video is a sequel to A Tale of "O". lt sensitizes us to the
' myriad of diversity issues that do impact our outlooks, perspectives, decisions and lifestyles. Tuesday, November 17, 1998 3:00 - 4:30PM Tivoli 442 Facilitators: Gail Bruce-Sanford, Ph.D. & Paul Lam, M.A. (Second part of a two-part video series.)
....,,.,c ...... c11111 This mini-workshop will provide opportunity for exploring our biases m communiazting with others. Wt will examine issues of bias in gender, 11ge, llbi/ity, and others, to 111m1e a few. Wednesday, November 18, 1998 2:00 - 3:30PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Don Sugar, Psy.D. &c Gail Bruce-Sanford, Ph.D.
s.1ns ••• Mln1ri111s This session examines some of the stereotypes (and resulting oppressions) surrounding expected levels of performance in sports and expected levels of excellence in education according to minority group membership. Tuesday, December 1, 1998 10:00 - Noon Tivoli 651 FAcilitators: Tarrik Jackson, B.A.
Mii's llllUIBll SIVllS: DI Miii lllCI llllU•1cv This presentation will explore the subtleties of the malt voice of intimacy, and how society continues to stigmatiu it. Thursday, December 3, 1998 Noon - 1:30PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Peggy Bowman, M.S.W., LC.S.W. & Daryn Plancher, MA, M.S.W.
.... & ... CllllCllW 11 flllfl: SVS11•c lllresslll & IS •11ct •Elllh Learn about specific concepts, such as "tht mrportana of cognitive capital," "preventing and uvercoming internalized uppression," "moral exclusion and inclusion," and others. Monday, December 7, 1998 1:00 - 2:30PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Jose I. Rodriguez
The MSCD Counseling Center INSTITUTE FOR MULTICULTURAL UNDERSTANDING
AND SlRATEGIC TRAINING (I MUSI)
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8 The Melropo/ilan September 25, 1998
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1 of 6 students vote.
Celebrate the 25th anniversary of students' right to vote by registering and getting out to vote.
DEADLINE to REGISTER - October 5th NATIONAL VOTER REGISTRATION WEEK
Sept. 28 - Oct. 2 --Where and When -
Tuesday, Sept. 29/WemeSday, Sept. 30 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. • Tivoli (South Entrance and by Dominos)
• North and Central Classroom (Patio Areas)
Thursday, Oct.1 • The World Friendship Festival (Flagpole Area)
Boxes are also at: B - Movie Cofe, BC Surf and Sport. Boller Room. Club Hub. Auraria Book Center Ciwer ood lower level COLf'lteB). TIVOii Copies. the North Classroom. the Library. Daiy Grind and Student Financial Resource Center
-..w11r:W..CSA.Mtsca.asca.-.c.-ilr..., • ....., ••• s ............ a.
Those Who CAN •.• TEACB!
If you are interested in being licensed to teach:
Early Childhood (Preschool through 3rd grade)
Elementary (Kindergarten through 6th grade)
Special Education (Kindergarten through 12th grade)
Attend one of our weekly prospective teacher education information meetings!
Any Friday this semester (except Thanksgiving) I :00 p.rn. - 2:00 p.rn.
West Classroom 140 (except Oct. 23rd in WC 142)
Pick up a schedule of the information meetings outside WC 136
Find out the requirements early and save time later.
***Information on middle school, high school and K-12 (art, P.E. and music)
programs available in West Classroom 132.
This career fair is jointly sponsored hy the 3 higher .,[ucatioo institulioos on the Auraria Campus:
The UtWversity of Colorado at Denver *1be New Career c.mwr, 556-2250 *Hispanic Student Services, 556-2777
The Metropolilan Seate Colq;e of Denver *Career Services, 556-36M ~Studmt Support Stnires, 55647"22
For more information, fed fme ID contact any of these programs at your institution.
The NATIONAL COAUTION OF EMPWYERS
NETWORKING Job Fair
Date: Wednesday, October 7, 1998
Time: I O:OOam - 4:30pm
AURARIA CAMPUS - Denver, CO
Tivoli Student Union - Turnhalle
Free to students from UCD,MSCD, and CCD.
WE PROVIDE: -Personal introductions for emp/oy,,.,,nt. -Empwyers with job openings.
-Expert cowise6ngfor empwyment. -Empwyment information.
-Private interoiews for employrMnt. -Job networking.
Networking with the experts who actually do the hiring for:
• Internships • Cooperative Education • Career Positions • Scholarship Opportunities
Fortune 500 Corporations Government Agencies Non-Profit Organizations
Be pnpaed to intttview! Bring eevenl eopim ol your ..--!
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1-1
Auraria's Student Health Center held an open house Sept. 23 to inaugurate its new X-ray machine. This skeleton dressed
* up for the occa· sion.
Student Health Center offers high•tech X-ray By Alicia Beard The Melropolitan
Cutting edge medical technology made its way to Auraria's Student Health Center with a new digital X-ray machine.
Auraria's Student Health Center held an open house Sept. 23, promoting the film-less X-ray machine to students.
Stephen Monaco, director of the Student Health Center, said this is the first student health center in the country to have a computerized radiography system.
The new equipment allows students to stay on campus to be X-rayed and treated for fractures, instead of traveling to University Hospital at 4200 E. Ninth Ave. when they're usually immobile, Monaco said.
Michael Padilla, a radiology technician at the center, said 40-45 students have already been X-rayed by the machine, most of which involved sport related injuries.
The equipment consists of a moveable X-ray table with an overhead X-ray, a monitor that allows for precision adjust-
ments, an X-ray cassette and computers that digitally enhances the images.
Stacy Johnson, medical assistant at the center, said the X-rays are taken on a cassette that downloads the images onto the computer. The images are then developed in the computer and the cassette is reusable, she said.
Monaco said the images are then sent Lo radiology at University Hospital via a modem line where they are analyzed by a radiologists. The radiologists report their findings on a dictation phone line, which takes 45 minutes after the images are transmitted, he said.
David Odell, a staff physician at the center, said the equipment was installed over the summer and has been in use for a couple of weeks.
Monaco said he decided the clinic would purchase the equipment after students consistently asked for one in student surveys for the last four years.
· He said the equipment was paid for by the clinic saving internally-generated revenue over several years.
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September 25, 1998 The tVetropolitan 9
Quality &
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Look at your choices. More than 100 master's degrees, 20 doctoral degrees and 40 graduate-level certificates in the
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Graduate Admission, University of Denver Voice: 303-871-3119 Fax: 303-871-4942 Web: www.du.edu / grad/gradaca.html E-mail: [email protected]
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....
10 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998 {OMMINJlRY What do faculty fear?
THE MUIONIRAM EDITORIAL
Metro's Faculty Senate is seeking an attorney's opinion on the release of studenl evaluations of professors.
Vmws: The evaluations aren't a perfect tool for judging professors, but faculty have no right to suppress them.
Metro's Student Government Assembly wants to distribute the data compiled from student evaluations of professors. Fair enough. The more information available to students, the better.
Of course, students should remember these evaluations aren't especially reliable, and extremely quantitative.
It's likely that students who get high grades will evaluate a professor highly. Conversely, low grades are likely to result in a poor evaluation.
That said, the evaluations are clearly open to review by the public according to Colorado law.
If the student government ever completes its task of distributing the evaluations, students should make use of them, but with caution.
Faculty Senate should support releasing the information. The only ones who have anything to lose are professors who don ' t connect with students.
Those professors shouldn ' t be teaching anyway.
Good service is an illusion
John Swift
Maybe I'm deluding myself Lo think we have somehow lost any hope of getting decent customer service.
I know I am deluded. Recently, I actually
did get good customer service. That service caught my attention, and that irritated me.
I tried to buy tires, shocks and struts at Sears, but was confused in thinking that along with quality parts came quality service.
Three trips to Southwest Plaza and 13 hours is all it took for me to get the right size tires installed on my car. I was delusional, to be sure, after burning that many hours at the mall.
I did actually purchase the shocks and struts there also, but the shocks were "in the mail" for nearly three weeks before I realized that they mailed them to the wrong address.
I thought that the two-and-a-half hours at the counter that first day would have prevented that sort of mistake, but apparently pot.
When I complained about the delay, the man said to me, "Look, I've about had a belly full of this crap this morning, so I'm not in the mood for it."
Let me tell you about a belly full... Welcome ' to customer service - '90s
style. So, in my quest for a new suspension, I
called a standout among parts stores. Randy's Stuff in Arvada knew exactly what springs to order and got them to me on time.
I was shocked. Not that Randy's has a bad reputation among parts people, because they don't. Even the guy at Sears recommended them.
The car service nightmare continued with the brakes. At this point, I still only have the tires on, remember.
I put the brakes on. Oops. Everything was fine until the rear brakes
wouldn't fit. The parts store said there was only one possible part, and that was it.
The dealer, when I called, asked me if I
was sure it was actually an '82! What the hell sort of idiot do they think I am? They have no idea, but they still wouldn't give me any measurements or specs on the parts.
Apparently now, the customer is always wrong. I had wished this was just an acid trip at that point, but it continued ...
Disgusted, I called Midas. Surely these brakes professionals would happily take a look at the idiot things. Wrong.
Sure, they would look, but not happily. The man on the phone sounded irritated that I bothered him in the middle of his coffee break . .. 10 minutes after they opened.
I was livid. Would no one be able to get me the right part, be friendly, and perhaps do it this year? That's not much to ask.
I then called the people I have turned to several times for service on my trusty, old VW: Blazer Automotive.
Larry Blazer said, "Sure, we'll look at it. "Bring it in and we'll see. "You probably just mixed up the springs,
or something. "We have an appointment open on
Thursday." I could hear the smile on his face, and his
price was right. Now, I've never thought it particularly
convenient to set appointments to get urgent things like this done, but after 13 mind-numbing hours waiting for Sears to get their. act together, I gladly said, 'Thursday will work great."
So, I sat waiting for the last of the work to be completed, content at making the choice I should have made in the first place.
Then, Wednesday, I tried to catch the bus downtown. The driver waited at the light 30 feet from the stop. I ran up and knocked on the door.
A cold glare and a slern shake of the head was the reply.
I'm definitely not imagining it. Good service is nearly gone, if it ever really existed, and I'm still delusional.
John Swift is a Metro student and photo editor of The MetropoliJan.
100 percent of Metro Jive columnists polled •••
'f .•.. :·'··.· ,.
i~~ Dave Flomberg
JWE
Everyone probably expected me to come out with guns blazing.
"Where the hell do they get off!?" you expected me to scream.
Maybe you were looking for a long diatribe on the importance of open records and fully disclosed meetings.
Maybe you were hoping to see a few volleys of acerbic, cutting shots fired at the heads of those embroiled in this controversy.
Maybe you just want blood. Not this time.
The Faculty Senate has good cause for alarm. Not because I feel students don't have the right to see faculty evalua
tions. Not because I think it was right for the group to hold a secret meeting
to discuss the matter. It 's simply because these student evaluations are worthless. I talked with a Metro part-time professor whose opinion I respect as
much as my own father's. Actually, it was my own father. He pointed out several reasons-why, as faculty, the proposition of pub-
lished evaluations are less than desirable. "They're misleading as hell," he said. The problem is in the statistical analysis itself. To begin with, in a class of 25, say two students give a bad review of
the teacher. That's 8 percent of the population. What says more? That 8 percent of those polled hate the guy, or two people hate him? The process has been quantified and simplified way too much, just to provide an easily attainable average.
"Is an average what we want?" Pop said. "Evaluations mean much more to me when the students actually sit down and write something."
Student government President Andy Nicholas said that's not what the Faculty Senate wants.
"Monys (Hagen, president of the Faculty Senate) said if we publish any of the comments, she would sue immediately."
Seems to me, that's pretty stupid. Written comments are what the reviews should focus on.
That's what they used to do. Back when The Met was what we called the newspaper on campus and Metro was the name of the school.
"I was actually able to change and update my curriculum based on the feedback I received from those students," Pop said. "The numbers game doesn ' t tell me a thing."
How can it? To be fair, Pop said having everything open and public keeps people
honest and is the overall best policy. And Nicholas backed him up on that point.
"This isn't the end all way to pick your professor," Nicholas said. "But it's a damn good start."
And yet it still isn't that black and white. The Faculty Senate needs to understand that students are simply con
sumers, and in the American marketplace, it is against the law to misrepresent your product. Th~ only way to keep things honest is to keep them open.
But, at the same time, there must be a complete overhaul of the whole process. It's time to get back to basics, and make each student write a couple of paragraphs explaining why he or she liked or disliked the professor in any given course.
Sure, that probably means a lot more paper for publishing, but, then again, there's always our lovely new Banner System and the Web. Whatever the means, the ends must support a thorough and comprehensive review of the professors in this school.
The opportunity to provide feedback in the form of prose has all but been obliterated by the evaluation process. Numbers mean nothing but to statisticians, physicists and bookies. And only one of those three will bust your kneecaps.
Or is that 33 percent?
Dave F1omberg is a Metro student and a copy editor/columnist for The Metropolitan. His e-mail address is [email protected]
...
r
STAFF EDITOR
Perry Swanson
NEWS EDITOR Sean Weaver
FEATURFS EDITOR Tim Fields
SPORTS EDITOR Kyle Ringo
PHOTO EDITOR John Swift
ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR Jaime Jarrett
COPY EDITORS Dave Flomberg Ricardo Baca
WEB MASTER Brian Wilson
PRODUCTION MANAGER Alyssa King
GRAPfilC ARTISTS Tim Dohrman Christian Keller Anita John Rene Gillivan
REPORTERS Christine Austin Alicia Beard Michael Byrd Sharon Cating Gary Brady-Herndon David Proviano Rebecca Rivas Danielle Shook Tara Trujillo Kerney Williams
PHOTOGRAPHERS Kelli McWhirter Laurine Moore
ADVERTISING STAFF Ralph Rodriguez
OFFICE STAFF Bernadette Baca Kim Fronapfel Simon Joshi
BUSINESS MANAGER Donnita Wong
ADVISER Jane Hoback
DIRECTOR OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS
Chris Mancuso
TELEPHONE NUMBERS Editorial: 303-556-2507 Advertising: 303-556-8361 Fax: 303-556-3421 E-mail: [email protected]
Tbf. Metro1M11itan is produettl by and for rhe !ludenu of Melropolitan Swte Colle&e of Denver servin& rhe Auraria Campus. The Mrtropolitan is supported by advertis~ revenues and sllldenl fees, and is pubfuhed every Friday during the academic year and monthly during the summer semester. The Mrtropolitan is distributed lo all campus bvildiJl&s. No person may lake mare than one ropy of each ediiion of The Mr.lropolitan 111i1hou1 prior acritlell penniJsion. Direct any questiom, complaints, romplimenu or commenll lo the MSCD Boord of Publications do The Mt.tro1M11it1n. Opinions expressed within do not necessarily re.fl«t those of Tbr Mrtro1K1litan, Melropolilan Srare College of Denver or its adverrisers. Deadlin.e for calendar items is 5 p.m. Friday. Deadline for press releases is 10 a.m. Monday. Display advertising deadlin.e is 3 p.m. Friday. Classified advertising deadline is 5 p.m. Monday. The Mr.tropolitao offices are located in.the Tivoli Sllldent Union, room 313. The mailin& address is P.O. Box 173362, Campus Box 57, Denver, CO 80217-3362. 0 AU ~hts reserved. The Metropolitan is printed on recycled paper.
tlTTIRS September 25, 1998 The Metropo/ifon 11
Capitalism -- exploitation Editor: We write m response to the letter,
"Marxism is no solution" (The Metropolitan, Sept. 11). There's a saying: One third of the world are followers of Marx; two-thirds do everything they can to discredit him. The importance of this is two-fold: 1. The "first world" hasn't known a threat to its strength; 2. Criticism of Socialism is supposed to serve as a defense of Capitalism.
Is America "better" because it's rich? We should ask what a "high standard of living" is. Is it because we exploit for profit? Is it because we depend upon welfare to keep the poor quiet? Is it because we are Christians? Surely, we won't confuse the debate of "Capitalism or Socialism" with
the debate over the virtues of U.S. policies. The Capitalist game is to expedite the
process of globalization through extensive use of fables. The myth of wealth and individuality is prominent. No truth exists in the statement: "I'm an individual in society." The needs of the many always outweigh the needs of the few. Individualism has its setbacks when attempting to build an identity in which to live. You believe in capitalism yet believe in autonomy?
The author of the letter in question would have us believe that the U.S. is for those who think like he does - the American way. We not only depend daily upon the labor of others, we depend upon their kindness. The fonn of discourse in (the) letter undermines any sense of "free-
dom," as in "free speech." It undennines the integrity that each of us strives for as human beings.
Relating Socialism to the atrocities of totalitarian regimes is nothing more than a cheap trick in which to gain favor for the policies of the U.S. Remember: It's cheap labor we enforce upon the third world that allows us the ability to delay economic recession. What will we do when there are no foreign markets left to exploit?
It is good to be thinking about these social and political issues. Don't get carried away though. We're "free" only because we're bound to exploitation.
Ines Rodrigues, Metro student Gary Norris, Metro alumnus
Protest recalls a history of conflict
Metro students and professors marched on the state Department of Education Sept. 16 to protest a perceived exclusion of their history from public school curricula.
Ellen Lavroff, a Metro Spanish literature professor, participated in similar protests in Denver and California more than 25 years ago.
The Metropolitan - What were the activists in Denver fighting for in the late 1960s and early 1970s?
Lavroff-Well,just dignity. The same that they're still fighting for. People want to be recognized as being important in society.
Q - How did you become involved?
A- Because of my Spanish background. I became aware that there's a Ellen Lauoff
huge population of Spanish-speaking people in this country. And in the '-60s and '70s they became more self-aware and so that helped the rest of us who were interested in social change.
Q- Js the situation any bener today? A - When they decide to cut back
their budget, and I know the Denver Public Schools are pinched, they cut back things like music, art, and Chicano studies, and sometimes sports, but that goes last. The things that go first are all the things that the majority culture thinks are not important:
Q - Colorado's commissioner of education. William Moloney, said teaching
ethnic minorities basic literacy should come before teaching them about their culture. What's your perspecti11e on that?
A - What he's saying is we want to put all our resources into basic education. He has a point. That's what you call the bottom line.
But are we down to that? Bottom line only? I don't think so.
Q - At the protest, some were calling for a sort of economic self-sufficiency on the part of ethnic minorities. What do you think of that?
A - You cannot disassociate yourself from the economic system because you're tied to it. So you have to learn English and you have to learn how the system works.
But I don't think Latinos
Jaime Jarrett/The Metropolitan
Daniel. Salcido, a Community College of Denver student, marches Sept. 16 in a protest against the exclusion of ethnic minor· ity history and culture from public education.
want to bow out of the culture. I think what they want is for people to say, "Yes, you're here and you're fine. We like you. We respect you."
But they feel that they're working at a tremendous disadvantage.
I don't blame them for being discouraged because we're talking about what happened in the sixties and seventies and we see that things haven't changed very much.
Let me tell you a little story. Yesterday I went to see a friend. She's telling me about a friend of hers out in California who lives in a Spanish-speaking area. Her friend learned to speak Spanish.
What happened was that this Anglo
woman who learned Spanish began to enjoy the people she lived with. And she could communicate, and she began to appreciate the warmth of the Mexican people, the affectionate way that they have of dealing with others and the qualities, the good things that they have.
Until you start to open yourself, get into the culture, you don't understand that because you can't get to know them. So you see them as "others." So that's called racism, and it's accompanied by prejudice.
So that's what they're saying. "Just stop seeing us as 'those, those ones over there.• We're part of your culture but you' ve got to learn us enough to respect us. Because we give you a lot."
12 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
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• •"fhr« top r-.aungs uc NloleiJ on TIM 's cxccpi:Vm<ll fin.ll'l<.'i.d ..cn:ng.ih, cLum ... ·p21,1ng :ibihf'I· :1nd O\'\.'r.1U nptr;r.tmg rcrform.ancc 181.k-J Ofl .i.ssns undc:rmanlgcmtnt 1'S1n" •r" ¢/Wr'J l nt#r.nu RtAhN!f An•IJfiJ, 1997; L1rpcr Art.aluK.al .)<n-.ccc. Inc, l.1/1"J""l>1rtcto,.'s A11alwmJ [)as..._ l997 fQwnc:rl\). ( :Rff cntdic:itc:s ;and mtcn:~s m 1ht no\A Rc:.11 h.iucc A«ounc .vc d~ributcJ b)· TIM·C'..REF lndindwJ and ln§l1ru11oru.l Scn'JCO For more complete mfurmatton, mJuJmg d1ugc=s and cxrcnscs, call I 800 Ml 27J3. cucmwn-65~. ftw rhc CRl-.F a"d TIM R«al F...\Nfc ·"-'.rnunt p'nr;pcc1u.scs llcad them a.n:fullf bc'fott \Tiu 1n•·c~t or send m<>nC'\ •
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K> advertise-in The Melropoi<n call the Office of Student Publicatioos , AdYertising Department 303.556.8361. Visit our website @ dem.mscd.edu/ ...themet
"'"METROPOLITAN October is
I ti.. ga ........ " .y, l!••iiia.1,tr1::1
< ·trJ.11
Look For These Upcoming Evenls: • Queer Ancestry - Narrated Slide Preseulaliotl •·From Sin To Sickness To San/I( -
Presentation by MSCD Psychology professor, Dr. Janis Bohan
• 51h Annual High Teo For Allies • Presentation on Gender by, Kafe Bornstein • A Panel of Athletes from 1he Goy Gomes
Sip langUage llltfpnler """* ........ llGl!cl. Stop by GLBT S1udent Services In Ille Tlvoll S1udent Union, 6.
Suite 311 H to plcll " a calender or 1he mon111s even1S, or call 303-55M333
Metropolilan t3
To med tile many and varied Del!ds of students, W! ofter I wtde range of zvim:
• academic advising • individual & group tutoring • financial aid application asslslance • academic assessment • personal counseling • career guidance • graduate school counseling • student advocacy
Stadent Support Services Prog~111 • Arts 177 • 556·4722
Be an Auraria Health Advocate! The Health Issues Committee of Auraria
welcomes students to help us plan and participate in health related activities on campus.
Call Billi at the Student Health Center (303) 556-2525
. ~ ... 6--e-t "'U":f> i'I'1 -the l.VIi:x.!
Chicana/o Studies Join Student Groups and Get Involved in ...
• National Association for Chicana.lo Studies • La Xicana • MEChA (Movimento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan) • United Women of Color • Lambda Theta Nu Sorority
Major, Mirlor; or take Electives dNrblg S/n'htg Semester ro study aboNt Cblcanos au.. . ·
History & Politics, Literature cSt Tcatro,
Gender Studies cSt Family, law & Education, and much more!
Call (303) 556-3124 or (303) 556-3121, Rectory Office 101
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Iii The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
St Francis Center • 2nd Roar 303-556-8472
We Have Tutors in:·
• Accounting
• African American Studies
• Biology
• Coo1Jutm" MailQlmmt SciBIO
• aeni.\1ry
-~ • freldl
• Math
• Philosophy
• Physics
• Psychology
• Russian
• Spanish
Located at: St. Francis Cenrer
2nd Floor
~ L.E.A.D. Leadership, Education, Advocacy & ·Direction
for Students with Disabilities
Mission: To support, inform, and educate students, faculty and staff on disability related issues at Auraria.
lor more information contact: Brenda Mosby 303-556-6133 Julie Rummel (advisor):JOJ-556-3210
~ni s Join Golden Key For:
+ Academic Excellence + Recognition
• Scholarships + Leadership Opportunities
+ campus & Community Service
Next,..... meetinl: October Jlh, from 3-Spm, CN301
Far mare lnfurnwliuri1, c:onlact .. Geolp (303) 237-7031 ~Cbrn
METRO STATE SPIRIT
Clleer for Metro's Champion Teams
For additional information, con1act the
Metro Allllelic Deparlment
(303) 556-8300
In.terna tio na{ :Friends C{u6
Activities and Programs for all International Students on the Auraria Campus
contact Kraig at 303-422-5108 Ben at 303-973-3967
E-mail: Monday- Friday 8:00am-5:00pm [email protected]
~~ NEcnONS Peer Educatio Program
:>i
nd trains students with disabilities to ·of their disabilities on accessing the
or monitor.
nology, students with disabilities
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Counseling Center
Groups I W•ll'S JllrlQ: lur lldMdDll lld CIDlcdn bllrlllCU IS Wl•H This is a support and disa{ssion group for women intertSted in examining and sharing their personal experiences and roles as they an unique to women. W~eschyw, Sep~mber 23 - November 18, 1998 U.-00 - 1:30 PM Tivoli 651 Fllcilit1dor. Lisll /11robs, Psy.D.
Tn1S111111: Bl "111-Trldld1aal" SllU• This support group is designed to help the non-traditional stu-dent who is examining how to balance school, family, work, etc. Thursdays, September 14 - November 19, 1998 11:00 -1:30 PM Tivoli 651 FllCiliutors: P~ Bowmm, M.S.W., LC.S.W., & Cynthia W1111g-Thrby, B.A
llCIVll'I: Cllfnlllll 1111 1111 Yll This group is designed to pruuide support for yuu while discussing the emotional issues that drugs and alcohol have masked. Thur.1d.tyw, September 14 - November 19,1998 1.o()() - 3:30 PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Dll1yn Plancher, MA, C.S. W. & Cynthia Wang-Thrby, B.A.
l111VT1I• This support group is designed to educate women about the cultural and societal pressures to have"perfect" bodies & challenge those messages. Mondayw, September 18- November z. 1998 11:00- 1:30 PM Tivoli 651 Facilit11tor. . Dmise McGuire, Ph.D.
September 25, l9'J8 The lltetropo/ilon 15
, TiYoli 651
(303) 556-3132, call to si&1HIP
All .m1nars & ~ .. FREE & open to MSCO sludents,
facult:y & staff. Groups are open to MSCD students only, and .. also FREE!
lcdn Panat11g This is a six session video-based parenting program for parents of 3 - 12 ytar olds. In this fast-paced and fun program, we will focus on styles of parenting, effective methods of discipline, and family enrichment activities. Tuesdays, September 19 - November 3, 1998 11.o()() - 1:30 PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: Don Sugar. Psy.D. & Suki Montgomery, M.A
......... ,,.r Have you been involved in relationships that have not worked for yuu? TI1is group is designed to /ielp you identify relationship patterns, and to offer suggestions for changing if there is need. Tuesdayw, September 19 - November 24, 1998 3:30 - 4:50 PM Tivoll 651 Facilitators: Bobbi Vollmer, Ph.D. & Tarrik Jackson, B.A.
DI lllrlQ 11 lh llrl This group "examines the hero archetype as a source of personal power, determination, courage, hope, inner peace and transformation. Fridays, Begins October?. 1998 1:00 - 3:20 PM Tivoli 651 Facilitators: /= l. Rodriguez & Paul lam, M.A.
Seminar R11DI g s .. 111 Sllllaar 111is seminar introduces you to wrious counseling skills and interuiewing approaches to help you assist others to find their own solutions to their problems. Thursday, October 22. 1998 11:00 -1:30 PM Tivoli 440/540 Facilitator: Bobbi Vol/mu, Ph.D.
Workshops TISI 1111111111 IDlllV Slrllllles I.earn wrious approaches to reduce anxiety and increase your confidence. Times: Individually .arrangrd Call (303) 556--3131 for .appointment Facilitator. Bobbi Vollmer, Ph.D.
111rc1•l•1 Tilde P•l'llll Parents am sometimes disappoint us despite lofty dreams and goals for us. Share your frustrations & lmiinstorm effective responses. Monday, November 9, 1998 11.1!0 -1:30 PM Tivoli 651 Facilitator: Cail Brnce-Sanford, Ph.D.
c ............. . This workshop is for students, faculty and staff wlio are in the process of coming out as gay, lesbian or bi5afml to self or olhers. We also invite friends, partners and family membc's. No sign-up is necessary. Wednesday, October 14, 1998 3:00 - 4:30 PM nvoli 651 FllCilitator. Denise McCuirr, Ph.D.
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16 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
This is an announcement •
The 1998 Student Handbooks are here.
Student Handbook
1998 1998 Calendar• MSCD Student Rights and Responsibilities
A FREE, quick and easy reference guide to · important on-campus information, dates, locations, & services.
look for the Student Handbook at Student Servic:es Offices in the Central Ocmoom & Student Life Offices in the TIVOii Student Union.
•
THE METROPOLITAN SfATE COLLEGE of DENVER Office of Student Publications • Tivoli Student Union Suite 313
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ROACTIVE
By 1im fields - Photography by Jaime Jarrett
- some of the artists' work al the Emmanuel Gallery was left outside ... that's where it belongs.
The exhibition opened Sept. 23 and explores nature through paint
ings, photographs, art installations and environmental works.
Lisa Stanley, interim director of the gallery, said bringing the art out of the gallery engages a viewer in a different way.
Nature Re-Visited presents works from nine artists, mostly from Colorado, on the theme of nature and landscape.
Kimberlee Sullivan's Between Nature and Culture is a dominant piece in the show due to its size and interactive construction.
A green forest is painted on several paper strips that hang from the ceiling sideby-side and form a semi-circle. They each measure approximately 3 feet wide by IO feet long. Three pedestals, each with a book, stand in front of the panels and invite the viewer to step into the artwork.
Sullivan said the books consist of journal writings from her grandparents, old family photographs and a few X-rays.
"I hope Lo entice the viewer to enter the drawn landscape and to linger over the books," she said.
September 25, 1998 The Metropolitan 17 < .. ~ .. •• ~
Upstairs, David Sharpe's black and white photography presents nature as an ever-changing landscape and conveys a sense of time. Sharpe's theme of combining different photographic images was present throughout his work. Integrating small images into a large dominate image gives the impression of what the dominant image looked like during the past, or even what it
, will look like in the future . "H's a technique that I've been working
with for over a year, and it's a method of setting up a dialogue," Sharpe said.
Tony Diego, a Metro student, e~amines a book at Emmanue1 ~Dery Ori that is part of Between Nature ancl Culture, an art instqHation piece by artist Kimberlee Sullivan.· Severa( pieces in the exhibit, Nature Re-Visited are designed for interC:.ttion fro~ viewers. The show opened Sept. 23 and runs through Oct. 22.
Sharpe used a pinhole camera, made out of oat-
. meal boxes and tea cans, to capture these images of barren fields, urban landscapes and cows.
Jake Wilson's pieces are left outside.
He features four bowllike structures that measure approximately 2.5 feet in diameter and ate covered with rust and broken mirrors. The bowls are scattered across the lawn, east of the gallery. The
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come from the actual structures, but from the curious action generated by them.
'I hope to entice the viewer to enter the
drawn landscape.'
- Kimberlee Sullivan Artist
" I like the exhibit because of the outdoor sculpture," said Tara Lindsy, a Metro senior.
Other artists' work fea-. tured at the exhibit are: paint
ings by Jerry Johnson and Barbara Hinnenkamp, an indoor installation by Kim Steele in collaboration with Jan Longwell, an outdoor installation by Phyllis Constransitch in collaboration with Yvette 'Dede.
bowls are successful in getting curious passersby to stop and traverse the grass to investigate. A re-visitation to nature doesn't
Nature Re-visited runs through Oct. 22 at the Emmanuel Gallery on Auraria Campus.
., . ........... -. ~ ~ ......... ,. •• ~ .. - • ..... .......... -- .. .._ .. • • ~ ............. · • .. •1·r-•· , .... -.·
One of four bowls created by Jake Wilson for the Nature Re-Visited exhibit for the Emmanuel Gallery on Auroria Campus •
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18 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
A realization of oppression
white out
,be open season on , Ud it ain't pretty.
y· neft..Nubian brothers, was originally ignorant as to the extent of the white male majority oppression in our country today. I made sure that I didn't grow up like Martin Lawrence in Boomerang or Homey the Clown finding a white conspiracy behind my every shortcoming. But then I took a class to fulfill my cultural diversity rt'.quirement. After finishing a few readings from prominent authors, including Malcolm X and Robert Rodriquiez, my fellow minorities and I
By Michael Byrd
were thirsty for blood. The selections told of countless years of white majority rule, and minority and female persecution. We wanted some emotional restitution and a little institutional empowerment. Meanwhile, my white male counterparts squirmed helplessly in their seats, itching to
hard road. I wish Maya Angelou was here to write a poem or two about your struggles. After all, in a few years, with the continuing surge of immigrants entering this country increasing, you'll be a minority just like me, and I can tell you're not
ready. So, here's a few suggestions to help you on your way:
your own to deal with like spousal abuse, white collar (white on white) crime, and country music. Since your numbers are dwindling rapidly, let's not quibble over actual attendance numbers for the record books.
shake free these school-sanctioned chains of oppression and resume their dominate positions.
'I want to • The George
Wallace Memorial Majority Scholarship:
• Midnight Hockey: The suburban alternative to Midnight Basketball, and a good activity for whomever you are. We'll get a few learns together and. help keep young white boys out of their parents' Geo Storms and off the streets. Your hardearned tax dollars at work for you. I really did feel
for them. As more issues were raised on how the country had suffered so long on white male rule, more minorities chimed in and suppressed their white slave masters' ancestors into submission. They couldn't help the fact that they weren't ebony like me. That didn't make
reach out and hug you, my fine ivory
friend.'
- Michael Byrd Metro student
I think we can bridge the gap between us if we had a few more scholarships for white males just because they are white. I won't mind. There's bound to be a few sources of aid for the enterprising European-American student. Then you won't bother me about my scholarships.
• White Male Studies: This section of classes would be dedicated to exploring and celebrating the white males' contributions to society. Surprisingly enough, they have contributed quite a bit to modern living. But, this is an area that really has been neglected in cultural studies. Besides, why should we monopolize all the oppression confessionals in class? Remember, in the words of our great president, a white man, too, I understand:
"I feel your pain ... " them inferior. But I guess someone has to be oppressed in our society; better you than me.
• The Couple-of-Hundred-Man March: Why should only African- Michael Byrd is a Metro student American men get to see our grand capitol and a reporter for The Metropolitan. His and band together for a good cause? . e-mail address is [email protected] Believe me, you've got a few troubles of
I want to reach out and hug you, my fine ivory friend. You've traveled a long,
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step; to Absur. By Ricardo Baca
When talking about Metro's latest theater production, you might call it absurd.
Hell, go ahead and label it all-out absurd. Director David Kottenstette does.
"People say: 'Why do you do such plays?' Well, my answer lo that is: We
have an obligation to the students lo produce·work from the huge cannon
of literature that is available lo us," aid Kottenstette, professor of theater in the Speech Department.
And so he ventured, thinking what to direct this year.
..., __ And what he decided on is
commendable: The Stronger by August Strindberg, The Man With the Flower in His Mouth by Luigi Pirandello and The Review Sketches by Harold Pinter (together called Life & Death & ... ).
His. choices are commendable because they are all late- I 8th century, early-19th century works that are intellectual and, in some case absurdisl in its ' truest theatrical meaning -
ne that implies severe hidden meaning within seemingly trivial dialogue and staging.
To give you an idea, two of the one
acts contain two characters - only one of which
talks. Kottenstette has taken a subdued approach
lo the two, he said. But lo keep things interesting, the
review sketches are going to be done with vibrant lights and attitudes
reminiscent of the 1970s~ In a nutshell, The Stronger looks
at life caught in the middle of a hateful dichotomy. It's a two-sided conver
sation, even though only one character speaks, and it urges the
audience to find the stronger of the two.
September 25, 1998 The Metropolitan 19
The Man With the Flower in His Mouth is similar, yet the protagonist is terminally ill. He talks about how people take advantage of life's most wonderful pleasures.
And The Rev.iew Sketches are racy. Filtered and unfiltered sexual innuendo weaves its way throughout the skits, along with a look al interpersonal relationships that have become inane.
All this performed by a college theater company? This is no small task.
"The actors say they can't figure· it out," Kouenstette said. "Well, that's the problem. They ' re not supposed lo figure il out. They 're supposed to experience it."
And experience it they will. Thomas Wilkowski, a 28-year-old
Metro junior, has a couple roles in the sketches and said he was having problems with the confusion of it all.
"We were having a hard time developing the absurdity of our situation," Wilkowski said . 'Then we started beating it out to complex jazz rhythms, and it took on a new life that suddenly worked and allowed us to see what Pinter was saying about people."
Pinter is the most radical of them all, having written most recently, he employed many absurdist techniques.
"They're·not always people's cup of tea, but they' ll always get something out of it," Kouenstette said.
He went on to say the plays won't singularly entertain you or make you think - one or the other.
"I hope they make you do both. They all carry similar themes within them, and they are universal to us all. Sometimes it's comical, and sometimes it will make you think -hopefully."
Life & D«ah & ... plays at the Metro Theater at.7:3()p.m.
Sept 29-30, Oct. l-3; and at2:3(tp.nvon
Oct. 4. Metro students with student ID get in free, adults·pay $8 and other
students pay $4. Reservation.$ are recommended:
(303/556-3033.
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20 The Metropolitan September 25, l 9<J8
Register Now!!! 8412 Huron, Thornton
• Adult, Women only, High School and Co·ed
• Year round leagues • Teams and individuals welcomed!
• $950 team, 12 week leaaue
111 111 I ff ff flllll~
Register at the captain's and individuars rneetina; Oct. 4, 1998 • 7:00 pm
Take 1·25 north, exit 14th /liNe., then west to Huron, immediate ria;ht.
New! Full boards and glass Call the Hockey line 303-428-6268
~l! ~
~ amo. Jt Tivoli ·12 Theatres
STUDENTS $4.50
Show your valid student I.D.
to receive a discount of $2 off
the adult admission of $6.50.
SAVE $2
Call (303) 790-4262 for show times and updated listings
Un er 25?
If you' re 2 5 or under all tickets to the The Pulitzer Prize-winning Drama
The Young Man from Atlanta are only $ I 0. Why?
Because we like you. Call now.
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• Ripping through Regis Page 22
• Coach's comer Page 25
Familiar ground Women's soccer team
top 10 • • once again 1n By Kyle Ringo The Metropolitan
Poof. It's an apt description of what has happened to the
Metro women's soccer team's national ranking the past two times the Roadrunners have earned such an honor.
SeJUmber 25, 1998 The Metropolitan 21
Jaime Jarrett/The Metropolitan This season, poof more accurately describes the suddenness of Metro's appearance at No. 9 in the Sept. 22 national poll. The team hadn't even garnered a single vote only one week earlier.
Metro earned the ranking after two wins over Midwestern and Angelo State during a Sept. 18-20 weekend trip to Texas.
LOW BLOW: Metro junior Pam Deluca, above, takes out a Colorado Christian University player Sept. 23 during a conference game at CCU. Freshman Jennifer Kitano, below, fights off a CCU player. The two teams battfed to a scoreless tie after two overtimes.
"Our approach this year is we are not even going to look at the rankings," coach Ed Montojo said, after the Roadrunners' winning streak was snapped Sept. 23 at Colorado Christian by a 0-0 tie.
Metro (8-0-1) had its share of opportunities ~o score in the game but never could finish.
Senior midfielder Julie Ray slammed a shot off the left post of the Cougars goal in the first half. It was the Roadrunners best scoring opportunity to that point, but far from the best chance of the game.
"I thought I could beat (the goalie) to it and just poke it past her," Ray said. "Bad luck I guess."
Another chance slipped away when senior Ariana O'Neill centered a pass only a few feet in front of the goal line but just inches out of the reach of juniors Kari Pierce and Pam Deluca, both of whom slid into the play in an effort lo score.
Late in the second half, Deluca dribbled by the Cougar's goalie, but fired a shot wide left of an empty net. It was enough to send the Roadrunner sideline spinning in pirouettes of frustration.
"You have to think there will be teams who play us tough," Ray said. "We can't skate-walk through all of them."
Senior Katie Pierce missed the game at CCU after tearing her anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee Sept. 16 during a game with Regis University. Montojo said Pierce could have helped.
"We missed Katie a lot," Montojo said. "She is a motor and a team leader."
Pierce played in the weekend games in Texas despite the injury. She said she could have played against the Cougars but was held out as a precaution.
She said she intends to play out the season. Montojo said he spoke to his team about its surprise
appearance in the polls, but he doesn't intend to mention it again.
The coach said he doesn't put much stock in the polls, pointing out that several teams hadn't reported scores for pollsters to consider. One of those teams is Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference foe Mesa State College, which fell out of the top 10 when Metro broke in.
Metro plays at the University of Northern Colorado Sept. 27 at 1 p.m.
Player of the Week Kari Pierce earned the RMAC Player of the Week
award after scoring in each of Metro's games last week, including a game-winning goal in double overtime at Regis. Jaime Jarrett/The Metropolitan
Helman to retire after 17 years as AD By Nick Gamer The Metropolitan
"There is this o_ne ball player I had on my team thaJ I will n~ver forget. His name was BeUkz.i. During practice one day, Bellizzi wallcs out on the field and asks 'So this is a college baseball team?' I looked at him and said 'Yeah, it is. '
"He told me that he had some eligibility kft so we checked and sure enough he did. And from thal point on, he was our
catcher for the season. "One day, Bellizzi comes up and says
'Coach, you need a nickname ... Mayo, like Helman mayonnaise.' My response was, 'Ok. .. then yours will be Dizzy Bellizzi' He pulls out this match box, something that he was proud of. and the writing said "Dizzy Bellizzi". He said, 'Coach, you nailed it right on the head."
"Mayo" is William Helman, who once coached baseball at Metro and is the ath-
letics director. Now that too is coming to an end. Helman announced his retirement
Sept. 23, effective Nov. 1. "I've loved my association with the
college and enjoyed the challenges the job has presented," Helman said. "I'll miss college athletics, yet, it has been a passion to move to the beach."
Helman said he chose to leave now because he became eligible to collect near-
ly 80 percent of his retirement over the summer and he and his wife recently purchased a condominium in St. Augustine, Fla. Helman has been the athletics director for 17 years. During that stretch, he helped move the Roadrunners from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics to the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II in 1983. Six year-
see Ha.MAN on 24
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22 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
Hanlon kills the Rangers By Tom V1Skocil The Metropolitan
In a flash, Kelly Hanlon of Metro knew what it would take to overcome the second-ranked volleyball team in the country.
It's a good thing she and her teammates chose the right flash Sept. 19 as the Roadrunners defeated cross town rival Regis, 15-10, 14-16, 15-8, 10-15, 15-13.
The win propelled Metro to No. 18 in the current Division II polls, while Regis dropped to No. 3.
Hanlon, in her first year at Metro, has seen her team put forth a wide spectrum of abilities this season and was counting on a solid performance against Regis.
"Jn flashes, we've played great this year, and in flashes we've played poorly," Hanlon said after the Roadrunners ended the Rangers 21-game home winning streak, collected over the past two years. "If they were going to beat us, it was going to be our mistakes.
"We knew if we played our game we'd beat them." ·
added 25 digs, which led to being named the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference's East Division Player-of-the-Week.
It was the first time Metro had beaten Regis on the Ranger's home court since 1993, and it was only the second RMAC loss for Regis in the past two years. It almost had head coach Joan McDermott speechless.
"For us to win here is ... " she said. "It was a great defensive match. Neither team hit very well, but our blocking and defense was a big factor."
McDermott has had little to celebrate so far this year. Metro had lost three straight matches going into last weekends play and had won only one game in those lost matches. The Roadrunners now seem to have regained the confidence needed lo handle the rest of the league schedule ahead of them after defeating Chadron State Sept. 17 in three games, 15-1, 15-5, 15-5, and then pulling off the upset over Regis.
"We've been struggling the first part of the season, so this is good for us lo get back on track," McDermott said.
Metro continued its winning ways Sept. 22, disposing of the Colorado School of Mines in three straight games, 15-11, 15-7, 15-1.
Kelli McWhirter/The Metropolitan
THREE ON ONE: Metro senior Audra Littou receives a helping hand in blocking a hard hitting Regis player Sept. 18. Metro defeated the No. 2 Rangers in five games.
Metro made very few mistakes when it counted most, jumping out to a 2-1 lead. They trailed most of the fifth game, down by as much as 8-4, before coming back to tie the score at 9-9. After exchanging points to 13-13, Hanlon scored on a dink shot and then served a match winning ace. She finished with a match high 29 kills and
The Roadrunners are now 3-1 in the RMAC and 6-6 overall. They host Fort Hays State and Nebraska-Kearney at 7 p.m. Sept. 25-26 at the Auraria Events Center.
The rowdies rocking at Regis for riValry
Kell McWblrter/The Metropolilon
DIGGIN' IT: Metro senior Kelly Hanlon bumps a ball for a teammate during a Sept. 18 match at Regis University while Laura Darling keeps her eyes on the ball. Hanlon finished the match with 29 kills and 25 digs, which helped her eam the Player of the Week award in the RMAC.
By Jennifer Youngman The Metropolitan
For years, rivalries that have begun on the playing field or the hardwood have carried over into the stands.
There is the classic Denver Broncos and Oakland Raiders battle, for one. And, of course, the heated rivalry between the Metro Roadrunners and the Regis Rangers.
At the volleyball game Sept. 18 played at Regis, the tension between the teams was obvious, and that fire spilled over into the bleachers in the gymnasium.
Although there was not a large showing of fans for either team, those who did show up were passionate.
The Rangers had almost 30 fans in their student section called "The Pit," many with little yellow cups to amplify their sound. But Metro countered with a group of.about 15 men. cheering for the Roadrunners. They infiltrated 'The Pit" and deemed the Regis fans "nothing."
As the entourage of men walked into the
gym, one could tell that they were together and going to be a force to be reckoned with. Indeed, this force was the Metro men's basketball team plus "two suckers," said one basketball player.
Lead by junior Michael Alcock, the hoopsters helped cheer the volleyball team to victory over the No. 2 ranked Rangers.
Alcock is said to be the leader and "choreographer," beginning the chants of "M-E-T-R-0: METRO" and "Let's Go Metro." They were often heard stomping on the bleachers and creating all sorts of sound to distract the Regis team.
But the main reason the men's basketball team showed up to the volleyball game was to offer support, said Jody Hollins, a basketball team member.
The players said they try to come to every game - all sports included - that they can. Being that Metro is a commuter school, it is hard to get support at sporting events, even if the game is with a bitter rival.
And it must be added that the Metro volleyball team did not disappoint any of its fans Sept. 18 in a thrilling five-game upset over its most bitter rival.
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September 25, 1998 The Melropo/itan 23
.Money VP earned · solid gold By Lisa Opsahl-Lang The Metropolitan
In 1964, at age 16, Joe Arcese was in a car accident and lost the use of his legs.
In 1968, the basketball team he . played for won an Olympic silver medal, and in 1976, his team won an Olympic gold medal, both for wheelchair basketball.
Today, Arcese bikes, skis, golfs, swims and runs but doesn't compete professionally anymore. He has been Metro's vice president of Administration and Finance since 1989, and has overseen the athletic director since 1994. In that time, he has become a fixture at Metro sporting events.
At his New York high school, before the accident, Arcese played soccer, wrestled and did track and field.
When Arcese graduated from high school in 1968, his choice .for college was the University of Illinois, because it was the only college that was wheelchair accessible and had wheelchair sports.
"I had a lot of peers," he said, because anyone who was physically challenged and wanted to play college sports had little choice but to attend the University of Illinois.
The basketball team made it to the Olympics in 1968.
He explained, in his office on the 13th floor of the Terracentre, how someone in a wheelchair plays basketball and pointed to a magazine photo of a team at play.
The chairs' wheels are more angular, jutting out more, to give the players more mobility.
The squeak of the shoes is absent, but Arcese said there are lot more collisions. People smash into each other a lot more in wheelchair basketball, Arcese explained.
Normally, the wheelchair competitions in the Olympics compete in the same country as the regular Olympics, but at a different time. In 1968, the summer Olympics were held ir Mexico City. But the wheelchair divisions were held in Israel, and the Six Days War was just ending when Arcese
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John Swift/The Metropolitan
A CUT ABOVE: Metro vice president Joe Arcese refused to allow the car accident that stole his ability to walk to take away his passion for athletics. Arcese won two medals in the Olympics competing in wheelchair basketball.
never imagined how terrible the war would be to see, especially for a 20-yearold. Thirty years later, he still recalls the emotions.
the gold in basketball, this time in Toronto.
"We traveled all over the country," he said. "We went to the kibbutzes (communal farms) and the people would show us where the Syrians were bombing from, just over the hill .
"We would be driving and get stopped. A soldier would poke a machine gun into the car and ask us questions. Coming from this country and seeing
that..." his voice trailed off.
In 1968, his team won the silver medal in basketball.
The 1976 Olympics were the last for Arcese. He played for several national
teams after that and
'When we land-ed, the airport had just been
bombed and our tennlnal was still
smoking.'
- Joe Arcese, vice president ·of
Administration and Rnance
retired. from competitive sports in 1985.
He began to focus on his family Ii fe and coached teams that his son played on.
"When my son was younger, I coached baseball," he said, pointing to the photos of himself with his young teams. They are some of the few pictures he has in his spartan office . Arcese's office
Ninety countries competed: Israel won.
base; it's like having three short skis instead of two long ones. Arcese snow skis a lot, but said he hasn't been water skiing in a while.
"OK, here's something I haven 't done," he said, pointing to a hang glider built for people in wheelchairs. "Whew, no way."
Keeping in touch with his sports history, Arcese loves his work with Metro's athletic department.
Metro's sports are highly respected, _Arcese said. Eight out of 10 teams were in the top 25 in the nation. The national attention has brought in thousands of inquiries
from students wanting information about Metro and its athletic department, according to Arcese.
"We get requests from all over the world," he said.
The success of the department
got to Tel Aviv. t;.j ..... -.~...;.......-~_..~~~ The Israeli prime minister and
all his cabinet came to the game. The war was over, but bombings
continued. Israel was still suffering.
Jacks any litter of papers, or excess magazines or piles of messages. He, too, wears an ironed shirt, with a hint of starch, sleek black slacks and mirrorshiny shoes. His chair is silver and black, as sleek and angular as Arcese.
can be attributed to increased tuition "When we
landed, the airport had just been bombed, and our terminal was still smoking," Arcese recalled. "We had to exit the plane outside, and we were assigned to a group of armed female soldiers who stayed with us the whol~ time."
The trip shocked Arcese, who said he
"It was very emotional," he said. Israel's winning the gold was such an
emotional boost for the spectators, Arcese said. The joy of the country outweighed coming in second for Arcese.
Eight years later Arcese's team won
He pulls out a magazine, explaining how he can ski and golf and bike.
To golf he has a golf cart, w~ich looks like a regular golf cart, with a seat that swivels to the right or left so he can swing.
To ski he has a chair with a small ski on the bottom, and poles with skis at the
scholarships, top notch coaches, and great facili
ties, he said. "In four years, we've gone from being
a good program to being a great program - a nationally recognized program," he said.
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24 The Metropolitan September 25, 1998
Helman started out as a walk-on· coach HELMAN from 21
later, the Roadrunners joined the Colorado Athletic Conference, where they stayed for seven years. Helman again had a hand in the progress of the Roadrunners, . to the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference in 1996.
Before becoming the baseball coach or athletics director, Helman was the director of campus Recreation for Metro (1977-1981).
"I would work here for the summers," Helman said. "I was in charge of
outdoor recreation and the drop-in programs."
Two years into his campus-recreati~n directorship, he met with the baseball coach and that would start an odyssey.
"I met with the coach at the time and told him that I wanted to be a volunteer coach and he said that it would be OK," Helman said. "He started not to show up as much in the fall and by the time fall had ended, he had resigned."
In his 14 seasons of coaching, Helman's overall record was 338-293-2.
Helman 's best season was in 1988, when his team went 34-15, the best season mark in Roadrunner baseball history.
Helman recalled one of his favorite games that year, 1988, against a Division I school.
"We played Long Beach State, who I think the year before won the national title, two games while we were out in California," Helman said. "In the first game the night before, they beat us badly, but the next day, one of our pitchers, who had a good curve ball, Casey Ryan, went
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out there and shut them down. "In the ninth inning, we were up 3-2,
one of my relief pitchers, Mike Scarpella, who was known to be a little wild, kept saying 'Put me in coach, put me in.' I finally put him in and he got the three outs and we won."
Coaching baseball was something Helman enjoyed more than anything.
"There are times that I would walk on the baseball field and say to myself 'I would come out here and do this (coaching) for free if they would let me."'
News hreoks l'\WV daf on ttw Al..rorio CCJn'¥U, onct tomebocfv'tgol to lei the story. It cov6d be yOu. I you're o good storytel« who respects !he tNlh. contocl
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Photo courlesy of William Helman
RALLY CAPS: Metro Athletics Director William Helman, center, shown in a more serious mood when he coached Metro's baseball team, has little trouble remembering most of his fonner players, whom he has remained close with after nearly 20 years.
My hodgepodge .. of streaks, freaks
Brian Crookham
COACH'S CORNER
What an emotional ·week in the world of sports. History was made everywhere.
The death of FloJo; McGwire and Sosa rewriting the record books at a time when baseball needs a boost; Cal Ripken Jr. ending a
consecutive game streak that will never be broken; and·big news at Metro where the volleyball team beat second-ranked Regis and athletics director Bill Helman announced his retirement
And who could forget the bands from Southern University and Prairie View A&M being suspended for a half-time fight. Here is my hodgepodge of thoughts for the week:
• The most impressive streak in history came to an end when Ripken pulled himself out of the liileup this week. It was a classy move by a classy man. He worked every day for 16 years, even when he was sore or didn' t feel well or just didn't feel like playing - he played.
We live in a society where many people, not just athletes, back out when things that are tough or don't go well. Not Ripken. Part of big salaries come from fans who pay money to see the stars, and for 2,632 consecuitive games they have seen a star shining brightly.
He is a true team player. He deserves the rest.
• Half-time shows should always be as exciting as the one Prairie View and
Southern University. A 20-minute brawl between the two
bands will always keep the fans coming back for more. I guess it gives a new meaning to the term fight song. The rumor is the tuba players didn't take too many body blows.
• How about the atmosphere at Regis for the Metro volleyball game.
It was great to see Metro bring a loud group of fans across town. The men's basketball team organized the noise making, and the volleyball team took care of business on the court.
It was a great weekend for all of our teams, but that was the best win I have seen in a Jong time.
• Back to streaks. One will end at our school on Nov. 1. That is the day athletics director William Helman retires.
He will close the door on a career that has spanned 21 years as a coach and an administrator.
We will be losing a man who has been in charge of the Metro athletic department as it developed from a program with, at best, moderate resources, into a nationally recognized force in Division II athletics.
He has been a well-liked fixture on this campus for the majority of the time there has been an Auraria campus. Now all he has to look forward to is a beachfront condo and a lot of golf.
Wish him luck when you see him on campus over the next month.
Brian Crookham is head coach of the Metro men's soccer team. His column will appear weekly during the fall soccer season
September 25, 1998 The Metropolilon 25 .--~~~~~~~~......;~~~~~~--.
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26 The Metropolitan · September 25, 1998.
GENERAL
12 Step Meetings on Campus - AA Meetings will be held on Tuesdays, 12:30-1 :30 pm in the Auraria Library, Rm 205. The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop drinking. For more information, contact Billi at' the, ~tudent Health Center, (303)556-2525.
MSCD Sfudent-Government Meetjng -Get involved . with student gover~ment every Thursday, 3:30-5:39 p.m. i~ the Senate Chambers, Tivoli #329. For. more information, call (303)556-3312.
Truth Bible Study - Join the Truth Bible Study every Wednesday and Th.ursday from 3:00-5:00p.m. in Tivoli #542. Come and go as needed. For more information, call the Menorah Ministries at (303)355-2009.
ONGOING
Objects of Personal Significance - This art exhibition includes the work of fortyfour contemporary women artist who expand the definition of still life through paintings, photographs, assemblage and installations. The show is being held at the Center for Visual Arts on 1734 Wazee Street. It will run from September 4th -October 14th. The hours are Tues.-Fri., I Oam-5pm and Sat. 11 am-4pm. For more information, call Sally at (303)294-5207.
Active Parenting - This six session video-based parenting program for parents of 6-12 year olds. We will focus on styles of parenting, effective methods of discipline, and family enrichment activities. There will also be problem-solving with the group about your own children. Tuesdays September 29 - November 3. For more information and to sign up call, (303)556-3132.
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UPCOMING
Coming Out Week on · the Auraria Campus - October 12-16. Open call for GLBT and Ally performance artists, musicians, visual art, poetry, dance, etc. For more information and/or submissions, contact Karen Bensen at (303)556-6333.
Life & Death & . . . A One Act Play Series is being presented by the MSCD Department of Speech Communication Theatre Program. It is an exploration of the comic '"agony and irony" of life and death and all the moments in between. Performances start September 29-30, October 1-3 at 7:30 p.m., and October 4 at 2:30 p.m. It is being held in the Theatre Arts building, room 271. Adults: $8, MSCD Students w/ ID: Free, other students: $4. For reservations call (303)556-3033.
Dreams: How They Solve Problems & Guide Our Personal Growth & Development - Take part in this free seminar conducted by Juli Redson-Smith. Join her October 8th in the Tivoli #440 from
12:30 p.m. - 2:00p.m. Presented by the -MSCD Baha'i club. For more information, call (303)423-2484 or (303 )322-8997.
FRI. SEPTEMBER 25
Ice Breaker Join the Student Accounting Organization at St. Francis Interfaith Center - Auraria Campus at 6:00pm as they BREAK THE ICE! Visit with representatives from various accounting businesses and firms. Networking offers opportunity and most important it's fun. Great people! Great involvement! See you there! For more information, call Celena at (303)534-0251 or Andy Young (303)768-1145.
MON. SEPTEMBER 2 8 Corporate Welfare or Stadium Tax? You Choose - The Towering Issues of Today. Join Ray Hutchins, Citizens Opposing the Stadium Tax, Inc. , and David Treadwell, CFANS and former Denver Bronco player in the Tivoli #640 at I :OOp.m. For more information, call (303)556-2595.
WED. SEPTEMBER 30 HMTA- A student chapter that wants students to be involved in the Hospitality industry. Meet industry professionals, job opportunities, resume assistance, and
party all in one! Please join us for a- party and learn. RSVP at (303)556-3152 or stop by the HMTA department. For more information, call Mary Zavislan at (303)791-3192.
Self-Analysis: Your Tools to Leadership Join Kris Binard, CCD Leadership Coordinator in this interactive session that will analyze your own leadership style through assessment and discussion. Once your leadership style is identified, we will examine the relationship between y0trr style and other members ·-0f the group .. Three leadership skills will be analyzed including communication, creating change and collaboration. Meet in the Tivoli #320BC, September 30, 2-3:30p.m. For m01•e-information, call Kari at (303)556-4087.
THURS. OCTOBER 1
World Friendship Festival - On Thursday October 1, 1998, the Auraria Campus will be celebrating world cultures (international crafts, food, performances, etc.). The festival committee invites you to volunteer to lead a session focused on learning about and appreciating diverse cultures. For more information, call Beth Frederick at 556-3004 or Skip Crownhart at (303)556-4207.
"A look Back: The President•s Initiative on Race" - Join Dr. Glen Morris, UCD and Rev. Gil Ford in this· weeks Rap Session. Meets in the Tivoli Multicultural Lounge at 2:00p.m.
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september 25, 1998 The Metropof ilon rT
CLASS If ID SPRING BREAK 991
ClASSIFIED INFO
Classified ads are 5¢ per ward for students currently enrolled at The Metropolitan State College of Denver. for all others • 15¢ per word. Maximum length for all classified ads is 30 words: Classified ads must be prepaid. We now accept Mastercard and Visa. The deadline for classified ads is Monday at 5:00 p.m. Call 556-8361 for mare information.
HELP WANTED
~ A~ - GEr ON-1.JNE AT LOW A..AT Rates; September Special: FREE $20. (303)745-9588 or www.diac.com. 9/25
FOREIGN LANGUAGE TUTOR Tutoring elementary I intermediate Spanish and French, all levels Gennan. I 0 years of experience, 2 B .A.'s . On Auraria Campus Mon.· Thurs. by appointment. Reasonable rates. Leonore Dvorkin (303)985-2327. 12/4
SPRINGBREAK - CANCUN, FLORIDA, Jamaica, South Padre, Bahamas, Etc.. Best Hotels. Parties, Prices. Book Early and Save!! Earn Money + Trips! Campus Reps I Organizations Wanted. Call Inter-Campus Programs (800)327-6013. www.icpt.com 10/30
RODIZIO GRILL • THE STEAK SPRING BREAK PLAN NOW! Revolution. Staffing for season. Now hiring for all positions. Front of house/Back of house. Apply in person 2-5pm. 180 I Wynkoop. Denver . 12/4
PART TIME HELP WANTED: DRIVERS Warehouse, Order Fillers, Filing - 20-30 hours per week. Crescent Electric 1780 W 6th Ave. (6th Avenue and Raritan St.) . Call (303)629-1188 or FAX resume (303)629-5826.
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Cancun, Mazatlan, & S. Padre. Early bird savings until Oct. 31st. America's best prices & packages. Campus sales reps wanted. Earn free trips+ cash. 1-800 SURFS-UP, www.student-express.com. I 1/16
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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The mission of the Assessment and Testing Center is to offer a broad range of quality testing services to aid in the educational endeavors of Auraria students and the community at large.
Assessment and Testing Services Assessment Tests for new students at THE MET
Make-up testing services - available to all f acuity professors
Internet Course testing services - available to all f acuity professors .
Courtesy Test Proctoring services - available to the campus and the educational community at large. ·
Testing for students with disabilities
Information on the foil owing national and institutional tests:
• ACT (American College Test) and the ACT Preparation Course
• · ACT Residual for students at THE MET and UCD
Z,.
• •
CLEP (College Level Examination Program), both National and ·Institutional
GMAT (Graduate Management Admissions Test)
• GRE (Graduate Record Exam)
• Home School Assessment Exams
• LSAT/LDAS (Law School Admission Test)
• MAT (Miller Analogies Test)
• MCAT (Medical College Admission Test)
• ORAL (Oral Competency Program)
• PLACE (Program for Licensing Assessments for Colorado Educators)
Call 556-3677 for more information or check us out on the web at: http://www.mscd.edu/-assesmnt or http://clem.mscd.edu/-assesmnt
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Assessment and Testing Tivoli 347
556-3677-THE METROPOLITAN STATE COLLEGE of DENVER
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