volume 5, issue 22 - march 2, 1983

16
s: Colleges nationwide must either comply with new regula- tions or face loss of aid. ----- Fea re· MSC's nearby lab school Is good news for al f In- volved. MetroStyle: Bill Viola works · reflect the latest In video technology. - -- --- - - .., Page 3 Page ·8 Page 11 - -- - - -- ------- - - - A$UCD elects offlctra New council has prodigious plans [ by Kevin Vaughan , -.. Last week 468 UCD students went to the polls to elect new Aswciated Students of University of Colorado at Denver Executive Council officers and vote on a t constitutional revision and a fee referendum. Ken Cole, a graduate student in the college of design and plann- ing and president of the UCD Stu- dent Senate, was elected ' chairperson of the Executive Council. Other election victors were Francis Sgarlatti, Director of In- ternal Affairs . (112 votes); John -t Porter, Director of Business Af- fairs (184); Roger Padilla, Direc- tor of Academic Affairs ( 173); Barbara Blake, Director of Stu- dent Affairs (110); and David Churchill, Director of Student .1.. Representation ( 41). The constitutional revision, which would. have removed the office of Director of Student Pro- grams from the executive council, "'was defeated for lack of a two- thirds majority vote. The vote was 136 in favor, 114 opposed. The fee referendum, in which students decided where to allocate funds, finished with events first, followed by student services, recreation , student organizations, newletter and stu- dent government respectively. Last year the order was ser- vices, programs, organizations, recreation, student government and newletter. Cole, who ran unopposed after Elizabeth Sharpe withdrew as a candidate, takes office April 1. "I've got a lot I want to ac- oomplish," Cole said. "I'm happy with the other people that were elected." Cole will spend the next month in transition with outgoing chairperson Tom Hanna. High on the list of issues the new executive council will ad- dress is the library's lack of funds, which has caused a shortness of hours and a lack of staff and equipment. "A lo't of people miss Sunday library hours," Cole said. The executive council also plans to address the issue of Selec- tive Service registration being necessary to receive financial aid. Cole and Hanna feel that the Defense Department is making regulations for the Department of Education. The executive council is also working to revise the UCD con- stitution and make it more workable. "We·re trying to make it more efficient, to accomodate · the growth of the school," Cole said. The East Classroom lobby is going to be remodeled to ac- comodate studying students. Now, the lobby is noisy and does not provide a good place. for students to study. The executive council plans to spend $6,000 to $9,000 on the project, Cole said. Cole would also like to see the council lobby the legislature and try to reverse the trend that has been taken by government in re- cent years in which education is ·not as important as it used to be. Cole feels that investments in education are paid back down the road. Other issues Cole plans to ad- dress include: -Maintaining efficiency in the parking facility and operation of the Student Center; -The gymnasium, that the gym is used mainly to train physical education teachers, and not much time is devoted to recreational time; -Making sure UCD fees are not relocated to cover the budget deficit of the CU Boulder athletic program. Last year, $11,200 was ·taken from a UCD account and used to cover losses in the athletic program, Cole said; -Establishing a · good working relationship with the Ctl Board of Regents; -Building a more vocal representation of UCD on the Auraria Campus; and -Getting more students involv- ed in the governmental process. "I strongly would encourage student participation( Cole said. The UCD student government is composed of three branches, Continued Oil pap ..

Upload: met-media

Post on 08-Apr-2016

227 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

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

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

A~!)C!)~

a~~alD~~

s: Colleges nationwide must either comply with new regula­tions or face loss of aid. -----

Fea re· MSC's nearby lab school Is good news for al f In­volved.

MetroStyle: Bill Viola works · reflect the latest In video technology.

---------~- - - ..,

Page 3

Page ·8 •

Page 11 - -- - - - - ------- - -

-A$UCD elects offlctra

New council has prodigious plans [ by Kevin Vaughan

,

-.. Last week 468 UCD students went to the polls to elect new Aswciated Students of University of Colorado at Denver Executive Council officers and vote on a

t constitutional revision and a fee referendum.

Ken Cole, a graduate student in the college of design and plann­ing and president of the UCD Stu­dent Senate, was elected

' chairperson of the Executive Council.

Other election victors were Francis Sgarlatti, Director of In­ternal Affairs .(112 votes); John

-t Porter, Director of Business Af­fairs (184); Roger Padilla, Direc­tor of Academic Affairs ( 173); Barbara Blake, Director of Stu­dent Affairs (110); and David Churchill, Director of Student

.1.. Representation ( 41). The constitutional revision,

which would. have removed the office of Director of Student Pro­grams from the executive council,

"'was defeated for lack of a two­thirds majority vote. The vote

was 136 in favor, 114 opposed. The fee referendum, in which

students decided where to allocate funds, finished with events first, followed by student services, recreation, student organizations, newletter and stu­dent government respectively.

Last year the order was ser­vices, programs, organizations, recreation, student government and newletter.

Cole, who ran unopposed after Elizabeth Sharpe withdrew as a candidate, takes office April 1.

"I've got a lot I want to ac­oomplish," Cole said. "I'm happy with the other people that were elected."

Cole will spend the next month in transition with outgoing chairperson Tom Hanna.

High on the list of issues the new executive council will ad­dress is the library's lack of funds, which has caused a shortness of hours and a lack of staff and equipment.

"A lo't of people miss Sunday library hours," Cole said.

The executive council also

plans to address the issue of Selec­tive Service registration being necessary to receive financial aid. Cole and Hanna feel that the Defense Department is making regulations for the Department of Education.

The executive council is also working to revise the UCD con­stitution and make it more workable.

"We·re trying to make it more efficient, to accomodate ·the growth of the school," Cole said.

The East Classroom lobby is going to be remodeled to ac­comodate studying students. Now, the lobby is noisy and does not provide a good place. for students to study.

The executive council plans to spend $6,000 to $9,000 on the project, Cole said.

Cole would also like to see the council lobby the legislature and try to reverse the trend that has been taken by government in re­cent years in which education is

·not as important as it used to be. Cole feels that investments in education are paid back down the

road. Other issues Cole plans to ad­

dress include: -Maintaining efficiency in the

parking facility and operation of the Student Center;

-The gymnasium, that the gym is used mainly to train physical education teachers, and not much time is devoted to recreational time;

-Making sure UCD fees are not relocated to cover the budget deficit of the CU Boulder athletic program. Last year, $11,200 was ·taken from a UCD account and used to cover losses in the athletic program, Cole said;

-Establishing a · good working relationship with the Ctl Board of Regents;

-Building a more vocal representation of UCD on the Auraria Campus; and

-Getting more students involv­ed in the governmental process.

"I strongly would encourage student participation( Cole said.

The UCD student government is composed of three branches,

Continued Oil pap ..

Page 2: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

T1te Melropolitan Marcia 2 1983 . ,

-

met. ro. p0l~i. tan. / me-tra- 1pal~~t ..;n/ n .1 : · th'.e pfim.ate of an ecclesiastical

· · provJnce ~: \- one -who\ lives in a . metfopoliS or" ~viftces metropolitan ·

manners 0r customs 3: . tlie' name . I . ' •

-- of a newspaper that sevves tlie ~ntire Aataria community. ··

. . . . ..

, .

Page 3: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

Tlte Metropolitan Marcia 2, 1983 3 .

"ews -

SChools face choice in. 8id issue I

by Canon Reed

(CPS)--Schools that help out students who refuse to register for the draft may get in as much trouble as the students, if a bill recently introduced in Congress becomes law.

A congressional proponent of military registration, alarmed by college ad­ministrators' promises to repl$Ce finan­cial aid lost by nonregistrants, is trying to extend the link between colleges and the draft to private forms of financial aid. .

Effective July 1, college men will have to show proof they've registered for the draft in order to get federal financial aid.

But Earlham College in Indiana and Haverford College in Pennsylvania have pledged to get private aid for nonregistrants who are denied fedetal aid. Yale may also accomodate students in need because of their anti-military feelinp.

The University of Minnesota Regents, stopping short of promising aid, have filed a friend-of~the-court brief in a lawsuit to brealc the link between aid and registration.

Those schools and the widespread grumbling from financial aid officers around the country convinced Rep. Gerald Solomon (R-NY} to propose punishing schools that lend money to

draft resisters by withdrawing all "We regard it as a matter of federal fundS and grants from the principle," said Haverford College schools. President Robert Stevens. "If you ask,

"Colleges would have to agree not to 'Have we been intimidated?', the is.rue any kind of financial aid without answer is no." first confirming a student's draft status," , said Gary Holmes, a Solomon spokesman.

"The funds that would be cut off in­clude any government grants -fellowships, research, defense. We hope the bill would stop any university (from) trying to circumvent the draft. enforcement regulations," he explained:

Some Washington observers, in­cluding Dennis Martin of the National As,,oclation of Student Financial Aid Administrators, feel the bill has only a slim chance of p1mage.

Holmes even adds, "The chances are good that it will die in committee."

If that happens, Solomon plans to at­tach it to other, more pressing, legisla­tion that a majority favors. It was the same way the congressman engineered the original draft-enforcement bill.

"We stuck the first one on as an amendment to a defense bill, and it slid right through," Holmes said. "If this new bill is shot down, we plan to try it again."

Reaction from colleges that have pledged to help non-registrants generally falls into the stiff-upper-lip category.

But Stevens added, "We couldn't sur­vive without any form of federal aid; I doubt that any schqol could."

"If a student is denied feqeral aid, for whatever reason, and he still has an unmet need, then we feel we have a comolitment to fill that need," said Kathy Malutich, aid director at Earlham.

"These students wouldn't be denied an education because they resisted the draft per se," she explained. "It's a question of whether or not they have the money." ·

Yale similarly said it would provide aid to students who need money, whatever the reason, but was misinter­preted as a helper of resisters, said spokesman Walter D. Littell.

Littell said Yale "for the past 20 years" has aided students who , could demonstrate financial need. But if the gove~ent forbids schools to aid students who needed monetary help because they didn't register for the draft, Littell added, "we can't speculate

on what we would do." And the University of Minnesota,

which joined a lawsuit aimed to break the clraft:aid link, says it couldn't replace funds lost to nonregistrants even if it wanted to. ·

''We just don't have the money," said aid Director Robert Misenko. Misenko also wonders how Solomon's bill would affect students who already get private aid.

"If a student who is already getting private funds turns out to be a non­regbtrant, I would say to that person you might as well forget about pursuing a higher education," Misenlco said. Vir­tually no one gets through school these days without some form of aid. What the government is denying these JMIOple isn't money. It's the right to an educa­tion.

Rep. Martin Sabo (D-Mhm) would cut off funding for Selective Service. Sabo has introduced the same bill every year since military regbtration began.

But another bill in Con~ is aiming to end military registration altogether.

"The draft has a low priority in Con­gnm," Sabo aide Kevin Bonderud poJnted out, .. but we're hopeful we can push it through anyway." 0

H...._ blleftt·souaht for MSC Variety Show The MSC Student Activities Office

and the Associated Students of MSC are co-sponsoring an exciting new event this year. On March 11, MSC will

1 hold the First Annual Ted Mack Memorial Amatuer Hour Variety Show which will feature the many hidden talents of MSC administrators, facul­ty and students. Some ideas for acts are: poetry readin~, comedy routines, bands Oazz. rock, oldies, c~w. etc.), In-

,-

strumental solos, singing, dance (ballet, jazz, tap, etc.), ~nd mime.

This will be a fun opportunity for students and faculty and administrators to get together and enjoy our talents. Don't be bashful! Prizes will be award­ed to outstanding acts.

Call the Student Activities Office -at x2595 or the Student Gov't Offfce at 13253 to submit your name and act. Auditions will be March 4.

DadllM extended for Larl•r 5qU1re contest Lari.mer Square has extended the

deadline of its First Annual Poster Com­petition.· All entries will be accepted through Friday, March 18. Guidelines

;. and entry for~ will be available at the Larimer Square Associates office at 1463 Larimer Street from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. The winner will be announced to the public Tuesday, March 22.

One poster will be chosen that best captures the image, spirit and ambience'

,. of Denver's most historic block. This· poster will be sold throughout the Square and the design may be used on T-shirts and other promotional materials. The theme of the poster may

be decided by the artist. The use of col­or is suggested, but it should be noted that the poster must reproduce well when printed.

Posters will be judged by a panel com­prised of Larimer Square As.9ociates staff, local artists and members of the media. Judging will not be open to the public or the artists. Prizes include $150, potential media coverage and public display of the poster.

All posters must be framed when sub­mitted, so they may be exhibited in The Market, 1445 Larimer Street.

For more information call: 534-2367.

~ UNC internship program now taking applications College graduates with certification are being interviewed for positions with schools and other professional education agencies in Colorado for the coming school year.

Interns work in teaching, counseling, ..r, evaluation and program development

and administrative positions. They .earn

approximately $7 ,400 for the year plus 15 hours of graduate credit.

For information or to apply, contact Ed Fielder, program coordinator, 402 McKee Hall, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO, 80639, or ph<?ne 351-2965.

THINK ABOUT IT! 30,000 students in the heart of Ainerica's youngest city. A newspaper that ties a thriving academic

· community together. A clean graphic vehicle that will present your m~age in its best possible light. A newspaper that will reach Denver's only· major college market. Think about it and put THE METROPOLITAN on your next media buy!

; j

Page 4: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

r'

4 TM Mdn>poUlan Mt:relt 2, 1983

Nv_ws Denver's West Side· recalled in Blea's Oral History Project ·,

by Jean ~deer

The insatiable hands of St . : Elizabeth's timepiece seem to be insen­sate spectators of Aurarla, and even of a period before the campus was built. The people who lived here where we get our education called it the West Side, which was once alive with the pungent odors of a potato chip factory and a small upholstery shop. This community was predominantly Chicano, but it also had an Italian flavor, and a few in­habitants that were of German descent.

Dr. Irene Blea of the MSC Chicano Studies Department, along with several students, bas spent the past year resear­ching The West Side for her Oral History Project, which she presented Thursday in the form of a video tape which showed a collection of old photographs of the neighborhood and its people, plus a collection of newspaper articles concerning the movement of the ·West Side's inhabitants and the con­struction of the new campus. Dr. Blea was assisted in her endeavor by MSC As.tociate Professor of Art Barbara Houghton, who helped video-tape the project.

"The building of the campus was the most controversial project of the decade," Blea said. "The whole com­munity was up in arms."

An upheaval in the West Side com­munity began when homes were being sold and yet remained vacant, with no one new moving into the community, Blea explained. In 1973 when this oc­curred, the government invoked its right of eminent domain, which allowed it to purchase this land for the benefit of public 'interest, namely the building of the Aurarla Campus.

Residents gathered in the basement of St. Elizabeth's Church to meet with city councilmen, which brought them to the realization that they had no viable choice but to accept the buy-out by the government and, with the aid of the Denver Urban Renewal Authority, relocate, Blea said.

A resistance movement was started by Father Pete Garcia to thwart efforts of the government to implement its plans. Many inhabitants who were of the fifth or sixth generation of West Side families stuck together to resist, even though some households were poor and had 10 to 12 people living in them.

What, Swan Lake on Sale?

Blea said the West Side was a politically active community and these people were not afraid of getting involv­ed in the resistance movement to save their homes.

Families on the West Side felt that they weren't really getting ripped off in an economic sense, but they felt a loss in the emotional investment they had cultivated in each other over the years of living here.

Blea says a blatant hostility still smolders between home owners from the West Side and Aurarla's most recent inhabitants.

Galen McFayden of the Denver Ur­ban Renewal Authority said that renters from the West side were given approx­imately $4,000 to relocate, which was applicable on a low interest (30-year) loan toward the mortgage on another home. Approximately 24 absentee home owners received $25,000 as a buyout from the government.

"This was really quite a nice oppor­tunity for tenants- to become homeowners," contended McFayden. It was DURA's responsibility in 1973 to assist families in their relocation effort.

ASUCD electlen results Continued from pap l

Th~ include the Student Senate, which monitors and recognizes the approx­imately 35 UCO clubs and organiza­tions; The Executive Council, which oversees legislative duties; and the Judicial Board, which is a check against the other two branches.

The 468 ballots cast this year almost doubled the num'ber of the last election.

ASUCD Election Results

Chairperson: Ken Cole 150

Director of Internal Affain: Frances Sgarlatti 112 Kevin Ferguson 78 Tad Millard

Dr. Irene Blea before presenting her oral history project.

,,, Although some families moved out of the state, most chose to remain in Denver.

Former residents of the West Side still have feelings of animosity, but Ninth Street, which was renovated by the ,.. Denver Historical Society, will always be a landmark.

"A national historical landmark does not belong to any ethnic community," said Larry Ambrose, AHEC coordinator of community relations. "After all, the , Indians were the first of many to settle here and inhabit this land." 0

Director of Business Affain: John Porter Manocher Marandinejad

Director of Academic Affain: Roger Padilla Mostafa Gowbari

Director of Student Programs: Barbara Blake Gil Morales Tim Gaffigan

Director of Student Repl'elentation: David Churchill Write-ins: Tad Millard Mike Matthews

Constitutional Revision: Yes No

184~ 72

173 85

110 72~

54

41

1 l '.!,

136 114

STUDENT GOVERNMENT CALENDAR

RECORD SALE

Choose from classical, rock, pop & jazz. Cassettes, too.

-$2.98 and UP·· ·

AURARIA BOOK CENTER 955 Lawrence St. • M-Th 8-7:30, Fri s.,.5, Sat 10-2 • 629-3230

Wednesday, March 2

MSC Student Affairs Commltt" meets at 3:30 p .m. In the cafeteria. • •

The look Center Advisory Commlttff Wiii meet to discuss store (>ollcy dt 3:30 p .m. In Rm. 230 of the Student Center.

CCD Student Activities encourages anyone planning to buy tickets for "Come Dine with the King and I" to do so this week. The p lay, "The King and I" will be held at the Country Dinner Playhouse. 6875 S. Cfln· ton. on March 19. Tickets will be S6 for CCD students. $8 for others. For more Infor­mation calf 629-2597.

The MSC Student Councll encourages any MSC student to visit thelr offices In the Stu· dent Center, Rm. 340, from now to the end of the month, to help contribute Ideas on reforming the MSC Juslclol branch of stu· dent government.

/

Thursday, March 3 Members of the MSC Executive COUncll will be going to Washington D.C .• as part of the United States Students Association to participate In Natlonal Student Action week Morch 1to7. and Lobby Day. March 7. The members of the councff will be tak­ing part In conferences a imed at the needs of students In economic and hard times.

Monday, March 7 Th• Student Factlm• Polley Council will meet at 3:30 p.m .• In Rm. 230 of the Stu· dent Center.

Tuesday, March 8 The MSC Executive Student COUncll will take part In "American Economy In Transl· tlon," a panel discussion to be held at the Air Force Academy In Colorado Springs. The meeting will run until March 12. and will focus on the American economy and Its future. '\... ,

Page 5: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

TIN Metropolitan M.-ele 2, 1983 5

· ·Graduate. students intern in government by Bob Autobee

City government is seen by a lot of us as a breeding ground for a mayor's cronies and ward-heelers, but graduate students at UCD are taking pait in a government-funded program which is bringing some new ideas to local politics.

The National Hispanic Field Service Program involves Hispanic graduate students in public administration and community development. The services involve 14 universities, with UCD as the lead institution.

Director of the UCD unit, and assis­tant director of the national program, is James Espinoza, whose job is to help Hispanic graduate students obtain intern­ships with local city governments. Hispanics represent about 4 percent of the UCD student population.

"I can't emphasize how important this internship is to someone trying ·to get a foot in the door for a career in public ad­ministration," Espinoza said.

Right now, six graduate students are involved in administrative jobs throughout the front range. For an area to qualify for these programs, Espinoza said, "they must have a sizable Hispanic community which has limited resources to solve problems."

Some areas students have worked in are Englewood, Greeley and Longmont. The city of Denver hasn't take~ part yet, but the services program is hoping for the city to get involved soon. The basic duties of students in the program are to improve the quality of services to the minority community and encourage community-sponsored activities, either political or social.

The student receives the training he or she needs as a starting point for a career, and the Hispanic community is taking part in something which will hopefully make their neighborhood a better place to live.

As an example of the work that is be­ing done, last semester a student who worked in Greeley had the opportunity to update and compile information for the community affirmative action records.

Federal funding for this program runs out in September, and the NHFSP and Espinoza are looking for help from the

. private sector.

NHFSP received a $2.5 million grant from the then Department of Housing and Urban Development. It has since changed its title to Health and Human Services, but all the terms on grants and contracts still run through their allotted

MSC Lana-1e Institute off en 7th Mexico trip -

!

The Language and Culture Institute at MSC is planning its Seventh Annual trip to Mexico, June 22 through July 22.

David Conde, director of the in­stitute, said the program is a unique op­portunity for students to explore the history and heritage of Mexico.

The trip will take students to cities such as Zocalo, Castillo De Chapultepec, Oaxac, Teotihuacan and Tula. The travelers will visit Garbaldi Square, the Basilica of Guadalupe, the Ballet Folklorico de Mexico, ar­cheological sites, pyramids and ocean­side resorts.

Aside from this, Conde said, the pro­gram will be going for the first time to "Puerto Escondido," an undeveloped coastline. In the history of the Institute, about 200 students have participated in the trips. Through the program, students can earn a minimum of eight

hours of academic credit in Spanish and Chicano Studies. The public is invited to participate.

Cost for the 21-day tour is $910, which includes round trip airfare, 21 nights lodging, all travel within Mexico and health and accident insurance. Ad­ditional estimated expenses are $316 for tuition, $30 for books and required sup­plies and $168 for meals.

A $75 advance deposit is required by April 8 (the registration deadline) to assure reservations. The remaining $835 is due by June 1. Tuition is due by May 13. ,.Financial aid, including several tui­tion scholarships, is available. Any stu­dent applying for the Institute who sub­mits the $75 refundable deposit by April will be considered for a tuition award.

A two-week orientation begins June 6. to June 21. For more information, call 629-3077.

Students' work displayed In CSU symposium MSC fared well at the 1983 CSU

Creative ' Arts Symposium, with six students having art work chosen for display.

Jeri Lawson won second place in ceramics; Anthony J. Stanzione won

, first place in sculpture; Laurie Erickson had a drawing chosen for display; Mark Sink had a photograph chose9 and Bron­

~ wyn Moore and Susan Whitmore had ceramics works displayed. Moore had two works chosen.

· '

The symposium was coordinated and presented by CSU Productions and is funded by student fees awarded through the ~iated Students of Colorado

' State University. The show runs through March 28.

There were categorieS for poetry, short stories, ceramics, drawing, fibers, graphics, painting, photography, print making, sculpture and best-of-show.

The symposium gives students a chance to see how their work fairs against others.

"We get a chance to see what other people are doing," Moore said. "You get exposure with others."

The show is open only to college students and all art work had to be sub­mitted by Feb. 8.

All art is judged by a jury panel com­prised of an assistant professor of design, an associate professor, a university con­sultant, a poet and a faculty member of cu.

times, which in this case is three years starting from September 1980. The students that are accepted receive $375-a-month for a period of 21 to 25 months, plus full tuition and fees.

When the funding runs out this September, Espinoza said, he would like to see "someone in the private sector keep the funding at the same level and

maintain current standards of the pro­gram."

Plans are now underway to interest local concerned citizens to )ceep this pro­ject from dying.

Anyone interested in helping the Na­tional Hispanic Field Service Program to get more people into the program in the future should call 629-3405, or stop by St.' Cajetan's Rectory. D

CCD-A to sponsor Sprln1 Slnlles Symposium The art of successful singlehood will

be explored at the Spring Singles Sym­posium, Saturday, March 12, at the Auraria Higher Education Center. Sponsoring the day event is the Auraria Campus of the Community College of Denver. The $30 registration fee covers bi:eakfast, lunch, wine-and-cheese reception and choice of three workshops.

Featured speaker for this symposium is Robert A. Gregg, whose topic· will be "Developing Successful Relationships as a Single Adult .. " He is currently a con­sultant to a large private mental health agency and a large single adult organization, both in Denver.

Among the topics for the Singles Sym­posium are money management, finan­cial planning, video dating, fifties and

western dance styles, as well as several workshops on the psychology of rela­tionships in the eighties.

Emmy Lou Atkins, singles columnist for the Rocky Mountain News and author of The Singles Guide, will pre­sent a workshop entitled, "Where Do All the Singles Go?" Ms. Atkin spoke on this topic at the October Singles Symposium and was very well received. Also back for a return engagement are Jim Raughton and Dave Dolfiner of the CCD-Auraria staff. Dolfiner will speak

on "X-Rated Reality or Game Playing Myth of the Single World." Raughton will speak on "Taking Risks, Setting Goals, and Winning."

For more information, call 629-2442 or 629-3380.

WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET INTO ' SHAPE THIS SUMMER.

If you have at least !WO years of coUege left, you can spend six weeks at our Anny RITTC Basic Camp ch.is summer and earn approxnnarely $600.

And if you q_u_alify, you can enter the ROTC 2-Year Program this fall and receive up to $1,()(X) a year.

But the big payoff happens on graduation day. Thats when you receive an officer's comm1SSion

So ~t your body in shape (not to mention your bank account).

Enroll in Anny ROTC. For more informaoon, contact your Professor of Military Science.

MMYROl'C. •ALLlOUCANa

~ Army ROTC in Denver - Auraria campus

serving all colleges and universities in Denver (303) 629-3490 or 629-2946

1059 9th Street Park Denver, Colorado 80204

r J

Page 6: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

...

--- ·------------------------~~--·- - -- -

6 Tlte Metropolitan Marcia 2, 1983

-- O.p/Ecd Notes From the Underground

Pina coladas greet prodigal sons Up to now, rve always associated full-moon parties

with the bitter cold of the mountains above Leadville. I used to get regular invitations to these fetes, thrown by a rather wild group of squatters. The fare included poached venison, burned on the outside and raw on the inside, and ke~ of beer, which had to be taken in­side or wrapped in blankets to keep from freezing . . Mustaches flecked with foam, the hearty souls of Frisco and Montezuma would position themselves on rocky points and hogbacks and join in a blood­curdling chorus of coyote . howls that terrified the down-wind locals.

Last weekend I was treated to something altogether different. An old high-school chum, suffering from a severe case of spring fever, re-named his house moon tan beach and invited everyone he had ever known to dust off the juarachis and Hawaiian prints for a night of Jimmy Buffet and Grateful Dead music. Leis and Pina Coladas were presented at the door, and the cen­tral heating was cranked up to a bone-warming 95 degrees. The atmosphere was soft and indolent, bring­ing out all of the inherent shiftl~ess in our pampered, middle-class natures.

The party was a rare opportunity for me, since it was populated with faces I usually only see in my high school yearbook. Most of the evening was spent catch · ing .up on what everyone is doing now, and how much we've all changed. There was a time when I suspected my graduating class would be made up of social rejects, suicides, and space-cases, but everyone at the party was doing just grand. Most all of them

IDITOlll IUdMNlefllul

BUSINISS MflNflCllR K•lle Latrey

-PltODGCTION MflNflCllR

J•ck flfflecll

CRIDIT MflNflCllR L •Jorlli.IMI

llllPORTUS C. lllfttl. L. Dell'fllllON

ILL 1tt1111pllrey1, M. Ocrenl J. Telllor, It YH1hen T. WllU.ma, T. r.llH

PltODGCTION R. ltko ~

I. St. John

STiflP C. Sch•ldl L. Softdl s. •••ton

TYPISITTllll N. Restivo

fl palMkatlH for tit• ,..,.;.. """., ldawtlon Center MpportH lly •clnrlllln1 e11cl ataftnt ms ho• Metro,..lten StGte Collete.

ldltorttll Hd 1H11lne11 offka ere loceted In Roo111 156 of tlte flarerlG Stafe11t Center, IOttl en Lawrenw, Denver.CO. .

hltorlGI DepertlHnt: 6H·J507 9aslna1 Depertlllent: Ht·IJ61

· M"ILINCI "DDlllSS: THMetropollten P.O. 9aa461S-17 .,....,, co 10Jo_4

TIM .......... -11 ........ _.,-.....,.., "'"'P••• ae.t. c...,. . .,,........,_.. ...... _ ...... ., .................. _....., Nlllct 1111 ........ at TIM ... ,llS:UlllC4 It 1 _...,,er """ ....... -- ( ..... . ~, ..... ,,..,....... .... .....,. .... ...,_ ........ . ........... .....,,_..... ......................... _ .... "'"' ...... """ ........... hN ""' ....... .

had harbored the same gloomy suspicions, so the bright, cheery gossip was a pleasant surprise.

Given the environment and the potent Pina Col­adas, there was an understandable tendancy to gloat a little over having captured at leilst a modest chunk of the American Dream. For some of us, the signal flag was money. for others it was more elusive. Education, true love and new families were · all part of the success stories, and it was hard to resist trying to measure the apples of one man's happiness to the oranges of someone else's.

For most everyone the dreams had taken them by surprise. "Problem" children had become model parents, "hippies" had become real-estate agents, "socialists" had become entrepreneurs, and one athiest friend of mine had become a minister. C'est la vie.

Out of the group, only three of us could be said to be doing what we had dreamed of doing as teenagers. One is an artist, one is a musician, and one is me: The Writer.

Now, as wondedul as that title sounds in my ear, I . always try to temper undue pridefulness with a reminder that, so far at least, it hardly lceeps the woH away from the door. All three of us, in fact, formed the very bottom of the party's socio-economic scale. Starving artists, you might say. Fine with me, really, since I had the foresight to learn bartending and con­struction work before embarking on a career as a writer.

Unfortunately, money is a touchy thermometer of success in this country, and the painter among us felt a little insecure in a room full of (credit) card-carrying capitalists. In defense of his lifestyle, he said some regrettable thin~ about ~veryone else.

The three of us, he maintained, were the only ones with careers that he could respect. We three were pro­fessionals, imbued with the cosmic aura of "creative genius." He attacked those who enjoyed typing for Merrill-Lynch as conformists, and then went on to

suggest that the subjects of my ,column, people who did what they enjoyed secretly or in their spare time, , were rank amateurs or even gutless hypocrites. Well, horse----. - I'm not immune to a little.ivory-tower elitism on oc­casion, especially when I see donkeys' rear-ends at the reigns of power in government and industry. But my artist friend was attempting to separate dreams by some platonic c:ode of values that somehow makes • common-sense a sin and earning a living disgraceful.

There was a time when ar&ts had patrom, and people who did honest work were likely to be uninformed,

illiterate,and just plain ignorant. That time, it seems to me, is gone.

With or without the benefit of college, the people that I know are generally articulate and enlightened, -albeit a little confused.

My wife, for example, is brilliant - an honors stu­dent pushing a 4.0 - but she still isn't sure which career to pursue or what political and religious roads to follow. As children of the middle-class, everyone at that party had suffered from the plethora of choices and the vacuum of values that comes with the subur- .. ban tud. Until this country sets. values for its progeny, there will be no room for self-righteousness among the dreamers.

Io those early years after high school, many of my friends were so frightened by the madness of values in the city that they fled to places like Leadville, where some kind of primitive communalism developed, and where saruty could be found in howling at a ripe moon.

Gingerly, many of them have descended from the mountaintops to re-enter society. I think it's ap­propriate to greet them with leis and Pina Coladas. Some of us will be successful, some of us will not. All 4' of us will dream our secret dreams.

Canon Reed

AHEC parking: definitely big business

Student Government

Report On Valentine's Day, I had a meeting with parking

administrators. They were very hospitable and gave me a rundown of their revenues and expenditures .

In summary: -parking is a separate entity from all three schools

and A.H.E.C. -they are self supportive and generate all their;. own funds. However, they are subject to state laws and restrictions, many of which set the guidelines for their administrative structure, specific staff positions, and pay structures;

-they are required by the state to exist, but receive no funding from the state;

-approximately $12 million is their revenue for the year

-$400,000 of that goes to pay for the school's bonds -$400,000 of that is used for administrative costs -$400,000 is placed into maintenance and reserve

accounts used for future projects -30,000 students attend daily -5,000 parking spaces are available -three of the lots now in use are going to be transfer-

red for other uses -Alternatives being looked into or implemented: 1. split-level parking garages 2. R.T.D. transportation from Mile High Stadium 3. Raise prices, to make parking more in line with

other alternatives of transportation and to deter students from driving to school.

Basically, from the meeting, I found that on paper parking is justified and required by state law. I also found that parking is big business.

If you would need or would like to have some input, please see Pattie Goodman, Student Parking Represen­tative, or myself, in Room 340C, Student Government ~ office, in the Student Center, or call 629-3253. ·

Sincerely, Maurice Nissim

Administrative Advisor

The Student Affairs Committee has been evaluating the legal services offered to the students of MSC. Due to the confidentiality of the legal files, we cannot get information regarding the effectiveness of this pro­gram. In order to determine a future budget for the program, we need to find out if the services provided are fulfilling the student body's demands and re­quirements.

Please contact the Student Support Office (Student Center, Room 255E, 629-3331) if you have used this service. We would like to receive any type of feedback you may hav~.

The weekly meetin~ are continually held in the Stu­dent Cafeteria on Wednesdays at 3:30. We are con­sidering a monthly evening meeting for night students. If you would be interested, please let us know.

REMINDER: Budget hearin~ are coming up! The SAC plays a vital role in the allocation of these funds (Your Student Fees). If you have any concerns, ques­tions, or comments, please come to our meetin~I

P.S. to th~ Black Alliance Group - Great letter last week! ·

Supportingly yours, SAC

Page 7: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

\

.. _,

•\

-----------------~-- ------- --~ ____.....- ·- - -----

The Metropolitan March 2, 1983 7

Letters Racism exists in various· forms Editor, .

What does racism in South Africa have to do with Auraria? .

· Consider: While laying off thousands of production workers in Denver over the past 10 years, Gates Rub­ber Co. ~as been opening new plants in places where a long history of racist violence has helped keep wages low and profits high - places like Alabama, North Carolina and other states where so-called "right-to­work" laws make union organizing more difficult, and places like the Phillipines and Brazil, where low wages are enforced at the point of a gun by military dictator­ships. propped up by the taxes paid by American workers.

Through a licensing agreement with the British Dunlop Tire Co., workers' wages are below the of- · ficial poverty line, where unions are illegal, where no black may hold a job higher than a white and where education is systematically denied to the vast majo~ity

of the population, meetin~ of groups of 10 or more are illegal without permission of the police, and families are forcibily separated by racial laws.

Consider: The McGraw-Hill Co. is the largest publisher of books and magazines in the United States. .Many of the company's textbooks are used in classes on this campus and the company also owns KMGH-TV, Channel 7 in Denver.

McGraw-Hill also owns a subsidiary in South Africa w_hich publishes such titles as Motivating the Black Worker - a tract . which advises white corporate managers how better to exploit black employees under apartheid.

Consider: The Adolph Coors Co., which has a long record of discrimination against women and minorities, wants to sell beer at Auraria. The Coors family, through its influence in the Republican Party, the Reagan Administration and the Heritage Founda­tion, is a major supporter of the South African regime,

which ope:qly espouses Nazi-style racist ideology. Consider: Apartheid's days are numbered. It is only

a matter of time until the white n:iinority racist regime faces massive rebellions and asks the United States to provide more guns; tanks, planes, rockets and perhaps troops. Will a future invasion force of unemployed workers and students from the United States be led by graduates of the ROTC program at Auraria? ·

Find out more about racism in South Africa and how to fight racism here at home. The International Committee Against Racism will meet Thursday, March 3, 7 p.m., in Room 254 of the Student Center to discuss our campaign against apartheid and its. sup­porters in the U.S. We'll also discuss the March for. Jobs planned for March IS and our multiracial pro-gram for the schools. ~

Doug Vaughan

Nuclear freeze the fi'rst step to disarmament ·Editor,

, Nuclear disarmament has been an implicit and stated objecti'1:e of our national policy since the 40s, yet, in all these·years, bilateral negotiations have not halted or slowed the pace of our nuclear buildup. The reasons for this may be arguable, but none of them alter the fact that we are failing. .

Sadly, many have come to view this condition as a permanent fact of life. Others, however, know that the arms race will end ... end because it must.

The nuclear freeze proposal may not be the best solution - it is only the first step to reversing the nuclear buildup and reducing the threat of nuclear war. But it's a critical step. ·

We needn't question our motives for desiring a nuclear freeze. The desire to Uve is all that's required. But we do need to question the motives of those who resist arms control. Our leaders must come to under­stand that their resistance does not promote national security. They must be made to realize that their resistance endangers national security.

"Our government," General MacArthur said, "has kept us in a perpetual state of fear - kept us .in a con­tinuous stampede of patriotic fever - with the cry of a

- , grave national emergency.

"Always there has been some terrible evil at home or some monstrous foreign power that was going to gob­ble us up if we did not blindly rally behind it by fur­nishing the exorbitant funds demanded. Yet, in retrospect, these disasters seem never to have happen-ed, seem never to have been quite real." .

MacArthur wasn't alone in his cynical view of militarism, and neither are we. Another great war­rior, and president, General Eisenhower, warned the American people that "We must guard against the ac­quisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power," he said, "exists, and will persist."

Twenty-two years later, former president Jimmy Carter, another military man, charged that the Pen­tagon. exaggerates Soviet military strength and por­trays America as weak in an attempt to get higher budgets.

"One of the things that aggravated me when I was president among my own leaders," Carter said, "was their false claims that we were weak and the Soviets were strong."

There are indeed many criticisms that can be made about the arms race and the men behind it. The leaders of the Soviet Union and the United States, while claiming their efforts are necessary to ensure a continued "balance of power," encourage, without end, the excessive production of stratetic armaments.

The cold war, from which the arms race spirals, teaches us that the world is black and white. This war of nerves teaches us that our relationship with the Soviet Union is forever fixed ... hardened like an ICBM missile silo. But in reality, our_struggle is complex.

The nuclear freeze proposal may not be the best solution to our problem - it is only the first step. If enacted, however, the freeze will break the vicious momentum of the arms race.

By signing the nuclear freeze petition, we will be sending our leaders an important message:

We, the common people, . reject your incompetent efforts at negotiating arms control. We reject the political, strategic and -economic considerations of the

_issue. We view it as a question ·pj life or death for us all. If you can't do the job, then we, the people, will.

Keith Levise

Experiencing the inexplicable? Blame it on Tommy-Knockers Editor,

Many campuses have their own particular mysticisms and specters. West Point has the ghost of Benedict Arnold, which is reported to pace the old ramparts. Loretto Heights is said to harbour the ghost of May Bonfils in its theatre and the South Pueblo School of Window Dressing has the ghost of Edith Head rolling around through its taffeta and designer burlap. '

MSC, not to be outdone by the "uptown" schools, has its very own ghost types in the forms of the Tommy-Knockers. These gremlins of the gold mines have retired to the old city of Auraria (which is where the campus is now located) and continue to indulge in their misc~ievous pranks, such as hiring more an4 more administration.

Most of the people you see in the "pay 'n gripe" win­dows on the first floor of the Central Classroom Building are really Tommy-Knockers. Be polite to them or they will take their impish, invisible forms and blot your blotter. Because you never know when they will strike, you will be prone to put the occur­rences down to bad luck. Not sol You will know a Tommy-Knocker is short-sheeting your shorts of you experience such things as these:

If you leave anything unattended, worth over fifty­nine cents, anywhere on the campus, it will disappear. At the beginning of each semester, new books are a prime target of Tommy~Knockers;

Your car tape deck will mysteriously disappear and later materialize ·in the El Sleezo pawn shop downtown. Mag wheels, however, never seem to sur-face again; .

The moment you decide to J-walk, that is the mo­ment something mysteriously awakens the Denver Patrolman who was "resting" in his cruiser across the street with his female partner;

Your social seeurity number is different by only one zero from that of Mike O'Hammerhants, and the com­puter keeps dropping ~ros. Mike is on his third academic probation and registered two weeks late using a bad check from the same bank as yours. Who's going to believe you're not Mike? ·

The odds are one-hundred-thousand-to-one that you would be bitten by the rabid skunk that lives behind the dumpster at the Student Center. Buy, you beat the .odds. Congratulations I;

The_seat you take in "Music Appreciation" is the only one in the room that collapses when your head sud­denly falls forward in deep sleep". This will only occur during the second movement of the concerto which your professor has composed "for your enjoymenfl:;

You discover that you hav~ three classes in a row for your major field in the same classroom. It is one of th~ rooms in the interior of the building with no win­dows and no ventilation. There are 30 people in each class and the room has seats for 15. The person sitting in front of you won't have a shower until she· gets

engaged, and the. door must be kept shut because across the hall is a class in beginning "Mantra Chan­ting";

The class... you have wai~ed three years for, "The In­timate Poetry of the Bolshevics'," has been moved to a room seating all 79 of you. It is being taught by a retired Pentagon consultant who lost his hair and his real teeth during a mishap at Los Alamos. He never looks up and refuses to wear 1his hearing aid. Your grade is based on class participation;

Your professor on the "Ornithology of the Pago Pago Bird Range" believes that his is the most important class you will ever attend and holds y.ou over five minutes each time. Your next class, "Business Punc­tuality," is exactly the furthest point from where you are and that professor really hates late-comers. It is also the only time of the midday that you pass the hot dog stand and there are always three ahead of you . The guy at the front of the line can't come up with enough money for his kraut and chili dog because the extra cheese took him over his allowance;

After standing in the check-out line for fifteen minutes at the cafeteria watching your chop suey­fettucine casserole go cold, you get to the cash register just in time.to see the cashier go out to inventory the straws and plastic forks.

Bad luck? The Tommy-Knockers got your number, Boopsie.

Cecil L. Jerome

Page 8: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

I I· .

8 The Metropolitan March Z, 1983

Eeaturcz MSC, DPS learning from lab scl

by Kathleen L. Humphreys

. Is the Metropolitan State College­

Denver Public Schools project living up to the high expectations some hold Jor. it?

MSC and DPS have coordinated resources to establish a lab school at Greenlee Elementary, which has classes in early childhood education and grades kindergarten through sixth.

The project is eliciting praise from teachers, administrators, and students,

Jason Powell thinks he's got the answer. as well as parents.

Dr. Charles Branch, MSC education dean, and DPS Superintendent Joseph Brzeinski initiated the venture, which formally opened Feb. 3. They said the lab school idea has been brewing for several years but came to fruition when the DPS School Board approved the pro­ject last March.

After its approval, the Lab School Ad­visory Council, led by MSC's Dr. Oralie McAfee, associate professor of teacher education, was formed and guidelines were established. The

4

council serves as a liaison between MSC and Greenlee, and between the faculty and parents.

"This lab school is different from most lab schools," Greenlee teacher Julie Weaver said. "A lab school connected with a university is usually owned by them and they have the sole say; this one is a Denver public school first and there is a mutual agreement ..and cooperation."

Another unique-aspect, according to Dr. Martha Fair, is on-site faculty suoervision.

Dr. Fair, coordinator of pre-student teaching field experience, works for the MSC School of Education. Her presence at the lab school enables her to aid teaching students in answering ques­tions, building self-confidence and pro­curing materials.

"Greenlee has an MSC faculty person here for on-site coordination, and this is essential," Fair said. "Student programs will be monitored more closely as in­dividual needs are considered."

"We have offered inservices to help our faculty; we visited the facilities," he said. "It's going to be a lab school like no other, and we're not just talking about the school, but the community as a whole - the school will lend itself to research, demonstration and participa­tion.

"Because of the geographical commit-. ment, we will remove the 10-foot invisi­ble wall that runs down Colfax," . Mazanares said. "If parents see their children 'crossing Colfax' they will follow suit."

Fair hopes parents will be able to serve as teachers and volunteers in various parts of the program, and sees Greenlee faculty benefitting from the rich experiences MSC students bring.

"Some of our teachers have been teaching 10 to 15 years, and students bring new and fresh ideas," Fair said.

An English class for parents right in

"Some of our teaehen ha.ve been teaching 10 to 15 years, and students bring new and fresh ideas."

Greenlee principal Fred Mazanares said the MSC students will benefit as well as the elementary child.

"Instead of waiting until the l~. semester, the students will be involved all the way through and will be able to make up their minds sooner," he said.

Fair contends that lab schools are a natural outgrowth of teacher education. She said it is possible to do three years in a teacher education program and have as little as one semester of contact in direct teaching.

"Actual early teaching years are spent learning what students have learned in their training," Fair said.

As more people are motivated, Mazanares would like to see MSC students have class at Greenlee for in­structional blocks of time. On-site in­struction could include computer in­struction and shops and he said;

"We have the room, why not?" The transition will take time, talk and

commitment, but Mazanares stresses that the school will use every talent available within DPS and MSC.

- Dr. Martha Fair

the lab school is an attempt to benefit parents. Fair also hopes parents will be able to serve as teachers and volunteers in various program components.

The children will benefit from unique program innovations which include an aerospace program, a pilot program for first graders to study reading, math and science by computer and a special language development program. Greenlee pupils will also be able to take danre and swimming classes on the Auraria campus.

"One of the goals is the addition of in­dustrial arts for elementary children and the use of ;the swimming pool," Fair said. . Mazanares said the children at Greenlee will be recipients of "the best ti thing that could happen to our school." ~

"We hope that we will be contagious< - a new trend in education," he said. ~ "Because of the parameter here, I would ~ like to see Greenlee, Balcer Middle .o School and West High School as part of .S this cluster; I would like to see all of i~ these levels involved."

MSC students value this experience; it enhances their educational program'. Roxann Nagel believes there is· great benefit working with the kids.

"You really are wanted; you walk in and you can help the kids," she said. "You're not just sitting there watching someone else."

Tom Nickerson, an MSC student, has more confidence in his own teaching ability and is learning to discipline children better. He points out advan­tages the children receive.

"I think the Kids are getting more in­dividualized attention," Nickerson said. "There are three or four reading groups going on at one time - kids can l~arn different things from exposure to dif­ferent people ....

Julie Weaver teaches first grade at Greenlee Elementary.

He would like to see more creative use of ideas, for instance, the use of varied methods for reading other than the basiil

readers, and exposure to different grade levels within one classroom.

He has enjoyed the experience and, hasn't felt uptight or nervous and he said:

"It's been a real positive experience so far." -

Nagel believes the benefits include the close proximity to Auraria. She ap­preciates the supervising teacher clearly .. spelling out what is expected, as well as the opportunity to experiment with new approaches.

"I also think it tends to help some teachers have a refreshing look at educa­tion and the people with new ideas and current trends," she said. "So far my ex­perience has gone well."

Julie Weaver teaches first grade and her attitude is that the children are be­ing enhanced by activities and projects of MSC students.

"It energizes me, it challenges me . because I have more than one student in the classroom at a time," Weaver said. "It's not the same old stuff anymore and it's a change.

"The children have been very recep­tive,'' she continued. "They love having these students come in and give them in­dividual attention."

When questioned on organizational snags, Weaver pointed out that there are always rough spots in .any new program and communication breakdowns occur.

Renae Adams and Joseph Rodriquez we

"One of the specific problems I have run into is not lcnowing what the MSC curriculum expects, what background and grade level the student is coming from," Weaver explained. "Some pro­fessors came and explained objectives, experiences and activities they would like to see the student accomplish; it was helpful."

Alvina Lujan, a second grade teacher, thinks the lab school concept is ex­cellent. . "You're using good manpower: well­

qualified students who have an interest in a particular field,'' Lujan said. "It . will benefit the child, and through him, the community.

"The fact that both facilities will be jointly shared ensures the best mileage from both." ~de M~Crespin saidJUS-difficult­

coordinating students' schedules because

Page 9: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

The Metropolitan March 2, 1983 9

rool experience everybody has different hours.

"The students should be given a little more time, a block of time," she said.

,.. " Sometimes _ they get involved in something and have to leave."

Crespin believes the lab school benefits the community as well as Greenlee and MSC students.

·"At the same time they are getting the ,. help, they are helping the children,"

Crespin said. Parents Caroline Mackey and , Ellie

Kostiuk have nothing but good things to say about the lab school.

Mackey thinks the lab school increases the adult-student ratio and gives her son

~ exposure to more people's creativity through projects and ideas.

"My son feels like MSC is his school too; it has expanded his world," Mackey said. "There are advantages also to students from MSC and Greenlee - it's one of those win-win-win situations."

-.t "The concept of the lab school is ter--rific," Mackey said. "I think_it's impor-

-tant for college teachers to observe. Having a lab school instead of being here, there and everywhere allows the college to do better evaluation."

Kostiuk sees that there is more in­{ dividual work done with the child.

"If a child is having a hard time, there is extra help," Kostiuk said. "There's a

· lot of · personal contact that gives the child.more self-esteem.

"My little boy is in a gifted and ~ talented class and he likes the extra

rk together at Greenlee. .>

work," she said. "He likes the con­fidence in himself, and the lab school teachers have built it in him.

"I think that everything that's hap­pening with the lab school has given him

~so much incentive to want to do more; he's really enjoyin·g it. Projects~ languages, drama - there's almost no limit.

"I can't tell you the impact it's had on him."

"I think if there were any changes it J would be to ·make the lab school - available · for everyone, more lab

schools," Kostiuk said. "When you build pride and self-esteem, it will help them achieve self-improvement.

Mackey sees the opportunity for extra exposure as a positive thing, but she

. -. would like to see more emphasis on core curriculum kinds of activities.

"The school and college system - just

I

the idea of two institutions cooperating - is innovative," Mackey' said. "If it can start out of a small-project like th_is, there's more hope for expansion so that more people can benefit in the .future.

"The lab school . broadens their horizons; it puts a little glisten in their eye. It makes them want to learn to bet­ter themselves, to learn that, 'Hey, I'm special, and there isn' t anything I can't do.' " · - D

r. art a air sees Greenlee faculty benefitting from the rich ex­periences MSC students bring.

Before We PUt You In C~e Of The World's &lost Sophisticated Nudear Equipment,

We Put You Through The World's Most Sophisticated Nuclear Training.

It takes more than 16 that most of the men months of intensive who operate the training to become a reactors in private fully qualified officer in industry started in the the Nuclear Navy. You Nuclear Navy.) begin with four months It takes more time of leadership training. and more effort to Then as a Navy officer become an officer in the you get a full year of Nuclear Navy. But the ·graduate-level training rewards are greater, too. unavailable anywhere else at any price. The ·rewards can begin as early as

Navy training is based on more than your junior year in college. Qualify, and 1900 reactor-years of experience. Right the Navy will pay you approximately now the Navy operates over half the $1000/month while you finish school. nuclear reactors in America. And the. After four years, with regular Navy'.s nuclear equipment is the most "-"' promotions and salary increases, you can sophisticated in the world. That's why be earning as much as $40,500. That's on your Navy training is and must be the top of a benefits p~ckage that includes most sophisticated in the world. medical and dental care, and 30 days'

As an officer in the Nuclear Navy, . vacation earned every year. More you have decision-making authority responsibility, more money, more future. immediately. You get important manage- So, if you're majoring in math, ment responsibility r ....:. - - ':_ - - - - - ~ - , engineering or th~ fast. Because in the NAVY OPPORTUNITY w 214 physical sciences, and N k l I INFORMATION CENTER I kn avy, as your now · P.O. Box sooo. Clifton, NJ 0101s you want to ow more edge gr~ws, so does I 0 Please send me more information about I about a future in your responsibility. I becoming .anofficer in t heNuclearNavy. (0NI I nuclear power, fill in

Your training and I Na me First !Please Print) Last I the coupon. experience place you I Address A pt. 11 I Tuday's Nuclear among the country's City s tat Zip__ Navy is an opportunity most qualified profes- I Age tconege;university I like no other in the

I :j:Year in College +GPA

sionals. (No surprise I world. &Major/Minor __________ _

I Phone Nu mber I (Area COdel BHt Time to C811

I Th1s is for general recruitment information. You do not have Lo I furnish any of t he information requested. Of course, the more we

L know, the more we can help to determine the kind s o( N•vy posi· J t1ons for which you qualify. -----------

~ Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast.

-

-

Page 10: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

10

-

, ·---!

-

TM Metropolitan Marelt 2. 1983

Typesetting Layout & Design Stats & Halftones

Photography

The Metropolitan 1006 11th St.

Rm. 155 & 156 Deriver, CO 80204

629-8361 or 629-2507

What is an

MSC Student

Assistant? Come to the

Student Center March 7

and find out.

10 a.m. to 2 p.m. · Main Corridor

--

Your mother wants you to Your father wants you to

SO GET A JOBI Applications for

part-time employment are taken by appointment Call Colleen at 295-1864

THE OLD SPAGHE'l"I) FACTORY

1215 18th Street

•• ••

·.. Presents . .•; : •· A llpeclal Collefe Pre-rei-~

• , ..... " . ~:.- •

~

\

JOINUS ON THE BOARDS.

WHO ARI Wl?w< .. aurward Bound-an opponuniry '°' you 10 oxpcricntt pmona1 growth. tluough advmrutt. w.·u fu"' you th< unique ~nity to pwh y<lt1l

::,:::~cc~~:r~~~ tM wmcmimc.

Soon<r lhan you think, th< mountairu will b<corn< your tec0nd horn<. You ·u gain a new pasp«ll~ on y<lt1l cnvuonmmt and )'OW'S<if. AJ your joumcy unfolds. th< 5t.'ang<B in your g1oup will become friends. Toge1h<t'. and by )'OW'S<if, you 'll learn new ways to sol .. prob­lems and skills applnbk to~r ~ryday life . ~courses arc- tough. Thry'tt me-ant to

be-but not beyond 1hc r<ach of anyone ... ho uin. They're fun . And as safe as human in­gtnu1ty and crpcritnc~ can make them.

WHIRi? Th<r< is pcrhap no finer n­pcricnc< than gliding on skis throufc 1h<

~~~=~~~~i!'J:. %.:"~". vigonting cold. and 1cren< vistas mak< th< Colo<ado Rcxkia in wint<r th< ultirnat< Ou1-W2td Bound coue1<. w.·u trach you how th< mounwn1 tan be bcauriful rather thaJI hostile. On a rm-day Nordic courx or a 21-<lar,: mouniaill<'Cfingnpcrirnce. you'll =~k=. ~: win1<rcampcraft and

WHIN? Our wintn program NN from 0.C<mb<r duouah April, spanning th< vati<ry of conditions and rnvuonmm1> from mid­WU11n j>CIWd<t IO warm spring skiing. If th< wantn count doesn't suir your sdxduk. con· lidn OU1 other apcticnc<S: ba5lt in the. rugg<d uanquility of th< Rocki<s on a mountam«nng cOW><. rhrill 10th< fast-moving~ of a whi1nra1cr raft mp, or oplorc 1hc mystery of th< Canyonlands Of sou1hcastrm Utah.

WHY JOU? W• all n«d a chang< of pace, an oppcnunity to li~ up 10 our own poccnual . You can scaym your bomr fOfn'U. Comfonabk. Sccut<. Unt<>tcd in th< rich ..,...,, ah<ad. Or you can chooo< to nplote th< unknown. ·

Wri1c for a frtt C2talog today. Non­~1tncc n«nsaty. Outward Bound is a non­profo C"duca.uonal Ol'gan1zauon.

1.---------1 JOIN US.

I Send a free catalog on the year-round I courses offered to:

I Namt:

i I Addrm

I Ci1y/S1a1~/Zip I Age

I Mail coupon to: . CoJoado Ounr.ud Bound School I 94~ Pennsylvania St. , Dept. W

I Denver, C0-80203 (303) 837-0880 :t\D

I II I § "t. 1· 0 c;, I 1>~ ~'J, I ~o .,_ • .-. ..,,,..

I COLORADO

L--~~uhc~.:_ __ _J

TOM SELLECK and BESS ARMSfRONG Fun and adventure at every turn.

HIGH ROAD 1b CHINA g GOUlEN HARi/EST /.JAOIN!>lj fLM Prosent A FRED WEMRAUB Proclucbon fo. CITY FILMS A BRIAN G. HUTTON Film

TOM SELI.ECK BESS ,t.RMSTRONG ""HIGH ROAD TO CHINA" ~, Allo---=Slatf-"""i-, -J~AC=K~w=EST=ON'""J w1u-am BRIMLEY ROllERT MORLEY BRIAN BLESSED CASSANDRA GAVA

MUlic by JOHN BARRY hoculive PrOOuc:Of RAYMOND CHOW - on Ille bOo1< by JON CLEARY SctwMploy by SANORA WEINTRAUB ROLANO and S. LEE POGOSTIN Produced by FRED WEINTRAUB ~by BRIAN G HUTTON

fiiio-.a--•1 lf'llll!..,.w.nw,,_...I Tllthnlcolor~TIChnC>YllC>n• "·- ·•· .. -• • ..,....·~''°""~· F...__--..... -..... ··-:-----

March 9 at 4:15, 7:15 p.m. Student Center Rm. 330

Free Admission

' .

Page 11: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

The Me'""°"""' Marcia 2, 1983 11

Viola's video focus of 'Sightline' .. I by Heather Shannon

The video experience - a proverbial child born to the 1940s, one we have all had a hand in rearing. Its formative years promised a lot, as we monitored the growth with the detached pride of

· technoid parents. The first decade showed us ourselves

,."coast-to-coast." Mom. was like Harriet Nelson, and Father always did know best. These were the quiescent days of youth.

Vietnam stole the innocence quite 'f"away as televised war came info our

·households. The next 10 years brought us out of Ricky Ricardo-ville and into the •global village.' Television has reached its terrible teens. Our 5ons were leaving and we watched them die.

There were some who refused to allow ~ for the arrested development of the

child, who knew it had grown too un-· disciplined too quickly.

Bill Viola, last week's featured guest director at the Denver Center Cinema's bi-monthly series, Sightline, is one such person. Viola's attraction to active

· video creation spans twelve years, and focuses on the technical capacities of this fertile medium.

.. The technology is both the path and the obstacle to you doing what you want to do," Viola said. "It's the interaction

;::. between the person and the tool and the technology, that malces whatever it is come true," he said.

Viola presented four of his works; Moonblood ('77-'79), The Reflecting Pool ('77-'80), Vegetable Memory ("78-·so), and Chott el~Djrid ('79). all

i,edited and inspired by new technology in the video medium. · I "The video medium encomp~ a

I total fluidity," Viola said. "What Y'?U ~ave seen on this screen is not an image m the sense that we norqially think of an

{image when we think pf photography and filil'l. It's a single point, and if at a specific moment you froze time and looked at that piece, there would be one point of light," he said.

Viola's interest in technology is not

weighted down by the stiff imagery one. might suppose to be present in the cool cranium of a scientist's mind's-eye. There is flow in Viola's work, a feeling that beyond our glimpse the image re­mains mutable. This is expressed wond~rfully in The Reflecting Pool, where half of. what might be called the frame, or image, is suspended, while the other half continues to move.

One part of video, that which satiates our other sense needed to form an in­tellectual synthesis,' is that which is audible. ln a piece entitled Vegetable Memory, we see rapid flashes of early

.. morning in a Japanese fish market. The sound track is recorded on location and th~ sounds are sped up and slowed doWJ\ along with the video.

Unlike the more electronic soun& in his other pieces, Vegetable Memory, comes off as a living art form, vulnerable to subjective interpretation and potential rejection. Dead fish are not pretty.

"Sounds come out of sounds," Viola said. "On some of those slow motion passes, I heard sounds, but don't know where they came from. I have no idea. .There is some interpretation of the original sound played back at that speed •. .it's really fascinating," he said .

'Low c!efinition' is video jargon for the blurry edges around the images we see on the video screen. Viola is quite con­tent with this difference between video and 'high definition' film. He malces it contribute to his art form.

Chott el-Djrid (A Portrait in Light and Heat), exploits this lack of defini­tion. Shot in the Sahara Desert and the flatlands of a frozen North Americitn lands9ape, Chott el-Djrid, is a three­dimensional study of light on a two­

' dimensional screen. The natural lines of the landscape mesh with man's buildings to form an impressionist's tape of live action. Because of the motion the viewer is drawn to participate in th~ mirage. He joins the camera in search of true form, and when in one scene the image talces form, we need to escape.

"What happens to electrons in the cir­cuit when you subject a video signal to a

Star of 'Zoot .Suit' .. to speak on violence·

Ed Olmos, National Spokesperson on Gang Violence and motion picture !lCtor, will appear at St. Francis Inter­faith Center on March 4 from 2 to 4

,ip.m.

Olmos is touring the ·country speaking to groups about the dignity of men and women, hoping to change their attitudes about violence.

Olmos is also in Denver showing his ''latest film, "The Ballad of Gregorio

Cortez," based on the true story of a

Mexican man imprisoned in Texas and subsequently pardoned. Olmos' other film credits include "Zoot Suit "

' "Seguin," "Blade Runner," "300 miles from Stephanie," and "Alambrista."

The St. Francis reception is being sponsored by MSC and CCD-A M.E.Ch.A, · the UCO Mexican­American Education Program and the MSC Chicano Studies Program.

For more information, call 595-7037.

modulation in another wave," Viola ex­plained, "is the same thing that happens to a light ray when ifs on the desert, coming toward your eye, from an ob­ject. It meets a very hot layer of air near the ground, and the light ray gets bent and comes back up to your eye. Things start floating off the ground, the edges of buildings start weaving .. .it's like the desert is the first video sythesizer." he said.

Moonblood is Viola's piece dedicated to the feminine principle. He flatters her against the urban ·backdrop of an· open window, and she remains untouch­ed as the sounds of the city waft hy.

Video plays tricks. The dissolve here is an intricate and refined process -kind of live-action metamoq>hosis. The opening and closing shots are of a wine glass filled with water - the cleansjng and purging of the female cycle - and th~ womb-shaped glass repre§ents a v~l for all that is clean and vulnerably transparent about her.

Viola has transformed the video con­cept, re-educating it.

Finally, with the child's graduation from art school, we can tell our friends that it's going places now, and may even

\

Video artist Biii Viol~ be,aJl upstanding citizen. one day. And we never thought the cbAd would do anything with its life.

The next Sightline will feature film­maker Marjorie Keller on March 15 at 8 p.m. in the Denver Center Cinema's screening room. Admission is $1.50, and seating is limited to 45 persons. 0

·starts Friday

U-Hills 2800 S. Colo. Blvd. 757-71~1

Page 12: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

12 TM Melropolton March 2, 19(

1

·Festival~ features Shostakovich by Tim Cowhick

Dmitri Shostakovich, the grandson of one of Rusda's fin~t composers, will be featured pianist at the University of Col­orado at Denver's Shostakovich Festival being held February 28 to March 5.

Shostakovich, 21, is a gifted pianist who has played with the Chicago Sym­phony, the Philadelphia Orchestra, The National Symphony and the Pittsburgh Symphony, as well as orchestras in Russia and around the world.

Shostakovich's grandfather, also

Dmitri Shostakovich will perform his grandfather's works during a weeklong festival at UCO.

Pick-a-Pack

This great, new,phOto package gives you your choice of many different s ize photo'5 to , share w1lh relatives and lriends "

You'd pay up to 4 times more lor a package hke this. done by a pllo1ograpl11c studio.

P1ck·a·pack is made from your favorue •picture. and you may choose from any one of lhe eight combmalions below

- .... ----A• •• cw D• a.to 1 0 1 1 ... 1 2 2 2 ,. .. 2 4 4 0

·= 8 4 0 8

-ES

3 0 0 o·

--.... Fl ·G• HW

0 0 0 6 0 0 0 12 0

0 0 24

•• COO'ptn1SOtfilWr«llO ~N~n..os •mocllsl..a:teor'lllc:tiergelrlr Pldo-H*lca,...t'Qrn

-~-

Auraria Book Center 9SS Lawrence Street 629-3230 M-Th 8-7:30, Fri 8-S, Sat 10-2

{

-------------------100 ralT llTH A'llMUr I

the beat little ~K.1•1 - :u ,, I

PARTY PLACE ~s

f.S'-" ,~

In town

the bHt major party around!

SOMETHING HAPPENING 7 NITl!S A WEEKI

COMING ATTRACTIONS PRESENCE FEB 23-27

0 .. 1 OP THI HOTTllT 8ANOI '"OM TllAI •

• APPLE FEB 21 MAR 1 HIT BEATLl!S IMOW YOU' LL ........

YOU'LL IWIA• THI ~IATLll A•I IN DIMYl•t

LEE MALONE MAR 2·& DINYl""I OWH PAVO•ITl IAND .

denver's HOTTEST new 3.2 club II

Opening Night Feb. 23 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : POIHKT AT THI 0000 •OO 11 .DD 0" C0 .. 0 :

~ * • * • the PARTY place * • 100 UaT laTM AYIMUI .•

• • • S 1.00 S 1.00 * • OP' • l~ICIAL IYINTI llCLUDID OPP • , .......................... , I · 1 I STOP~THE P,RESSES I I WED. MAR 2 USO SHOWCASt I I llVl•AL TOP ...... , ..... 0 OUT POft A I I

TOUllt OP THI PA• IAIT CttAWAll, olAIJUI , KO•IAl.

11010 A DlltOWN •tOHT YOU WILL alT ALL THl ,IAflDtl I ....... YOU COULD ........ , ,. 0111 ....... I - I DON'T MISS ITI I ONLY AT THE PARTY PLACE . I

I I. .,

I I I ,.//MiOOliL I : : •-------- ... ---,..

Dmitri, is generally considered the most popular of Russian composers. He first became well-known at the age of 18 w:hen he wrote his first symphony for a graduation exercise at St. Petersburg Conservatory. His music was widely loved in Russia and was discovered by the United States in the early 40s when he wrote his Leningrad, or Seventh Symphony, which was inspired by the militant spirit of the city when it was beseiged by Germans.

Shostakovich died in 1975, having written 15 symphonies and 15 string quartets, and having scored over 30 films.

In April 1981, his son Maxim and grandson Dmitri were given political asylum by the United States while tour­ing in West Germany. Maxim is a fine conductor and has guest-conducted symphonies around the world. When Dmitri doesn't go along as a guest pianist, he stays home and attends classes at the Juillard School of Music.

The week-long festival is the inspira­tion of Zoe Erisman, UCO music faculty member.

"I went to see the Denver Symphony Orchestra when Maxim was guest con-

ducting." Erisman said. "He was am~ ing - he made them sound like the Berlin Symphony Orchestra or something."

Erisman is also very fond of the elder Shostakovich's work, and wanted to pre­sent some of his :i:nusic in this part of the country, where it is seldom heard.

Festival Schedule Wednesday, March 7 - Concert at

Boettcher Hall. Program will be Festival Overture, the 5th Symphony~ and the Beethoven 2nd Piano Concerto with Dmitri Shostakovich as soloist at 8 p.rn.

Friday, March 4 - Concert of chamber music, including Piano Quintet, Op. 57, with Dmitri Shostakovich,-8 p.m. at St. Cajetan·~ Center. UCO students with 1.D. admit­ted free.

Saturday, March 5 - Festival con­cludes with the Concertina for Two Pianos, a work written for Maxim Shostakovich, and played by Dmitri Shostakovich and Zoe Erisman, 8 p.m .. UCO students with I.D. admitted free.

DSO to feature Jose FeHclano March 4-5 Internationally acclaimed singer­

guitarist Jose Feliciano will be the featured guest artist with the Denver Symphony Orchestra at Boettcher Con­cert Hall in Denver on Friday and Satt~rday, March 4 and 5 at 8 p.m.

The blind Puerto Rico-born Grammy Award winner is famous for such hits as "Light My Fire," "California Dreamin'," and his theme from "Chico and the Man." Feliciano, who has 35

"Gold" records to his credit, ·has long been recognized as one of the finest con­temporary guitarists in the world. For five years running, he was named Best Pop Guitarist ,by Guit~r Player

Magazine and, he has been voted both Best Jazz Guitarist and Best Rock Guitarist in the Pl11-yboy Magazine reader's poll several times. Feliciano currently has two albums in release on Motow.n Records, "Jose Feliciano" and

; the all-Spanish, "Escenas de Amor." Students with I.D. Will be admitted

for half price.

8EG!NH£AOA AQVANCfO . Cost 1Sab0u1 the same as a seme518f "'a room St.andafOU.eCI leSIS show" OUf students tanguege slulls sup9UOf' us CoffeOe S3, 189 Puce mctudes )81tOUnd 111p to Sev1Ueffom New 10 s1udents compkthng two year progtams in US AOYanced COUtMI YOf'k room. bOafd. and IU1Uon complete Gcwernment grants and Joans also

a"•ttat>&e 10I •hOfble students Huuy, 11 takes a tot or time 10 make all arrangements ' L111ewllh1Spon>shfamol\<, lllilnOCIOSHSfour hoursadly, lourdlysa SPRING SEMESTER -Feb. 1 . June llFAlLSEMESTER -Sel>I 10· weeti.. tour months. Eam 16 hrs ot creon (equtvalen1 SO 4 semes1ers- Dec. 22 each year

1augl'll tn US c<*eges OY9f a rwo ~·' time span) YOOf Spentsn fUll Y ACCREOITEO A prog1am ot lr.nity Cht'lSHan ~ studies wtl be ennanced by Ol)l)Ortunrttes not av811able 111 a U.S class-

SEMESTER IN SPAIN For full information- write to:

2442 E. Collier S.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506 (A Program of Trinity Christian College)

Page 13: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

-sports

by Tony Patino

t The MSC Roadrunners opened their baseball season in grand style at home Saturday by sweeping a double-header from Colorado School of Mines, 12-9 and 3-2.

In the first game, MSC's hitters gave a clinic on how to bat by scoring 12 runs

, in six innings against four different pit­chers.

The slugfest was led by sophomore third-baseman John Quarton, who had two home runs and four runs-batted-in in the first four innings.

MSC's prowess at the plate prompted .:. Coach Bill Helman to oberserve, "Our

' ~ports Notes

MSC has another nationally ranked team, the varsity indoor track team that placed 17th out of 90 schools in the NAIA nationals this weekend.

'fllere were also two runners named All-America, Char-lee Blueback, who placed third in the mile, and John Liese,

r who placed fourth in the two-mile. The squa~ will finish its season March

5 in the Potts Invitational in Boulder. Sharon Ru.el, the only eligible female

competitor on the men's varsity gym­nastics team, is honored to hold such a prestigious position.

"Everyone was right behind me from the start," said Russell, the 24-year-old _ senior who joined the gymnastics team after being told that she had to be a competitive member of the squad to work out with it.

"I wanted to workout with the team," she explained. "I started competing. when I was 13, so a class full of begin­ners would not fulfill what I wanted."

Russell, who has attended the Univer­sity of Texas at El Paso for three years on a gymnastics scholarship, began to put

~ together a floor routine. It was not until later that she realized she could not compete as part of the squad because of rules in the NCAA and the NAIA regar­ding men and women competing on the same team.

"It was at an expedition in Greeley," she said, "when we went into. the gym, the Greeley coach did a little research -

TM Me.....,_ Marcia 2, 1983 13

..

·MSC wins· ~,'.·opener hitters are ready." Helman feels his first . through sixth-place hitters will be especially effective; Helman praised first-baseman Greg Isenhart, claiming "he is really going to hit for us this year." .

Along with its outstanding hitting,. MSC got solid performances from all four of the pitchers it used during the day.

The first game had senior Dan Lee starting for MSC. Lee gave up four runs in his four innings of play, and showed a lot of composure in the third inning by working himself out of a bases-loaded, one-out predicament . .

Junior Jeff Opitz came on in the fifth inning and twned i.n a strong perfor­mance, despite giving up five runs.

Helman was pleased overall with his pitchers' performances, but pointed out "the control in the first game was_n't as sharp as these guys can be." He at­tributed their lack of control to "first­game adrenaline."

In the second game, Mines' pitching kept MSC' s bats silent until the fourth inning, when a · balk produced the Roadrunners' first run. A tw<hout single later in the inning by Jack Hanna tied· the game at two. · .

The game's decisive run ~as scored in the fifth inning when Isenhart hit a 1-2 pitch deep to left field for a sacrifice fly.

MSC was the beneficiary of a Mines coaching blunder in th~ seventh inning. Mines' lead-off batter singled to left field, and when the ball took a bounce

they're an NCAA school - and said a female could not compete with • the men." ·

Russell was allowed to do her routine. "I got a score," she said, "like

everyone else, but when they tldded up the team score, I was left out."

Russell '"was saddened because even though she scored almost as high as Joe Flores, one of the team's leading scorers, her score was not added in with the rest of the team's.

"I've earned my spot," she said, "they don't think I'm different from them."

flt.,:

past MSC's Nick Fisher, it looked like Mines would have a runner on third with nobody out. The Mines third-base

_coach, however, waved the runner around to score, but a good relay from shortstop Dave Byer to catcher Brad Acre caught the runner at the plate with plenty to spare. ·

Strong pitching from sophomore Bob Weber, who had seven strikeoµts, and senior Pat Smaldone, who had four strikeouts, kept MSC in the game, prompting,_ Helman to term their pitching "super."

1lle MSC women's soccer team held its first soccer clinic this weelcend, and is looking forward to hosting its next clinic next month.

The MSC varsity women's softball team will host its first game of this ~ason March 6 against the Air Force Academy squad at noon and 2 p.m. at MSC. MSC women's varsity tennis team will start the season off with a home game against St. Lo~ University at 2 p.m. March 10. The MSC men's varsity gymnastics team will host the NAIA nationals champion­ships March 10, 11 and 12. 0

by Tammy Williams

MSC swim coach Tom Waldmann shows his form after a recent meet.

-

Helman said Saturday's games were "a good effort, with opening game mistakes, primarily in baserunning." The team's goal this year, Helman said, is "getting back to the District VII playoffs."

The Roadrunners will be back in ac­tion March 2 at home in a double­header against the University of Col­orado at noon. 0

Today's Express Fares*

from Denver

to Boston ................... $198 Chicago ................. $198 Phoenix .................. $180 Frankfurt ............... $599 Las Vegas· ............... $100 Los Angeles ............. $119 Miami ................... $198 New York ............... $198 Puerto Vallarta ........ $230 San Francisco .......... $198 Seattle ................... $179 Hawaii .................. $473 Tokyo .................... $949 All fares based on Round Trip

•Restrictions apply to some fares for details and other destinations,

Call 295-1666

International ~~:.. Express Travel ~

All Fares based on Round Trip "Fare$ subject to change without notice"

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Located in Sakura Square

19th and Lawrence

-

,.

Page 14: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

...

-~~--__.,...----~-----~------..,.------ - -- -----·. • f

14 Tl.. Mdropoliton Marcia 2, l 983

calendar CONTINUING EVENTS

Sewall Rehabllltotlon center ls looking for artists with dlsabllltles to participate In a fine arts show and sale to be held at the Intra-West Plaza Bank' Building, 17th and California. March 14-25. For more Informa­tion cail 861-6471.

MSC Summer Arts lnatltut• 13 will be held June 13 to July 15. The program Is offered to talented young people currently enroll­ed In grades five through seven. Appllca­tlons will be accepted through April 1. Space Is limited. For more Information call 629-3244.

Jule stephenlon'• PalnHnga are on display at Zach's Restaurant. 1480 Hum­boldt, through March 5.

Job SHklna Sldll Worklhop for people with dlsobilffles wlll be held on Saturday. March 19 from 8 a .m. to 5 p.m. In the Science Building, Room 109. For i:nore In-formation coll 629-3300. ·

Wednesday, Marc.h 2 MSC, CCD Fiim 5erlel presents "life of Brian" In the student Center, Room 330.- · Show times ate 12:15, 2:15, 4:15 and 7:15.

Dmitri Sholtak.O'llch will appear at 9oett· cher Concert Hall today at 8 p.m. l;lcl<efs may be purchased at the door.

MSC Drug AlcohdoStop Smoking Clnlc will be hekttoday from 5 to 6:30 p.m. In the Student Cen1er. Room 151. For more lnfor. motion oall 629·3185.

Thursday, March 3 Skeptlcol lellglon will be a seminar held today at St. Francis Interfaith Center from

ACROSS 2 Hindu cym. 1 Halt bals 5 Record, In a 3 Lubricate

way · 4 Objeci 9 Cry 5 Experience

12 Couple 6 A Smith 13 In addition 7 Greek letter 14 Exist 8 Vast ages 15 Apportions 9 African 17 Office holder desert 18 Nlck

0

name for 10 Spoken · Henry 11 Ringside

19 Carry appurte-21 Bog down nance 23 Adds sugar 16 Stagger 27 Conjune11on 20,Goal 28 Smallest 22 Preposition

number 23 Strike 29 Specie 24 Have on 31 High moun· 25 Digraph

taln 26 Drunkard 34 Cooled lava 30 Rang 35 Beverage 32 Wash 37 Measure of 33 Dock

, weight 36 Goal • -39 Three-toed 38 Nor's com-

slOth <40 Litt with lever 42 Free of 44 Depart 46 Printer's

measur• 48 Hatmaker 50 Gray matter 53 Encounter 54 Paddle 55 Faroe

whirlwind 57·Stlck to 61 Beill 62 Dry 64 Verve 65 Crafty 66 Turbans 67 Tears

DOWN 65

1 Resort

noon to 1 p.m. (Brown bag lunches welcome).

Friday, March 4 Simple lreaktaat today at Interfaith Center from 9 to 11 a.m. For more Information call 623-2340.

New Blood Magazln. will hold a benem dance concert ··tonight at the Mercury Cafe. 1308 Pearl Sf. at 9:30 p .m. Tickets: $3.

UCD Plannlng preaenta Shoatakovlch felttval today at Sf. Cajeton's Center at 8 p.m. UCO Students Free with Student ID. . AudlHON for the Fll'lt Annual Ted Mack Memorial Talent Show (March 11) wlll be held today In the Mission. Call Student Ac· tlvltles for an appointment at 629-2595.

MSC Parenting Education Reaource Center wtll h91d a workshop today from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. In the Student Center. Room 257. For more Information call 629-3185.

Saturday, March 5 Dmitri Shaatakovtch and Zoe Erllmari will appear at Sf. Cajeton's today at 8 p.m.

Sunday, March 6 · Denver Symphony Orcheltra wlll present a free Cliy Concert today at 2:30 p .m. at Boettcher Concert Hall. Doors open at 1:30 p.m. Seating on a flrst-<:0me. first· serve basis.

TM Colorado Chorale, Daniel G1ace Jr., Director presents "Sing Praise to God" at a

panlon 52 Ark builder 41 Annually 56 Time period . 43 Ob&cure 58 Actor Wal· 45 Article lach 47 Note of Sc:ale 59 Knock 49- Conducts 60 Abstract 50 Neckpieces being 51 Shore bird 63 Pronoun

11

concert tonight at 8 p.m. at Boettcher Con­cert Hall. Tickets: $7.50. For more Informa­tion call 233-1858.

The Legal Center for Handicapped Clttzena wlll hold a Ski-A-Thon today at Sliver Creek Ski area. Free lift tickets for any skier who has more than $50 pledges. Registration begins at 8:30 a .m. For more Information call 573-0542.

Monday, March 7 "Impact• of Future Megatrend1 In Energy" Is the topic of Issues Forum today at Sf. Francis Interfaith Center from noon to 1 p .m. The program Is free and open to . the public. For more Information call 623·2340.

Tuesday, March 8 ''Tea on Tueldays" at Sf. Francis Interfaith Center will meet today from 2 to 3 p.m. for a short presentation and discussion. Irene Blea and Barbara Houghton will discuss t~ Ninth Street Oral History.

MSC _Drug Alcohol-Stop Smoking Cllnlc wlll be held today from 5 to 6:30 p.m. In the Student Center. Room 151. For more Infor­mation call 629-3185.

Wednesday, March 9 Altoclotton °' Minority lullnell Studentl will hOld a meeting today from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Sf. Cajeton's. For more Information call 629-3290.

The Pioneer

You /(NOW, FINDING 01L.... JN TH rs

bRl~D UP W'f:LL HA~ RJ:/11NDED ~ Of 'A L<Jr Of SUCCE.SS srnR1i;s

' J ' , J'VJ:. REAJ). (· ( ·)

Club Calendar UCO CHEMISTRY Cl.UI wlll meet Thursday, March 3, at 8:30 p.m. In the East Classroom. 116. Derrick Davenport of Pur­due University will lecture on Linus Pauling. For more Information call 361-8872.

INTER·VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP wlll hold weekly Blble Studies. For more lnfor·

·motion on tlr:nes call 629-3330 .

LESllANIQAY RESOUICE cana will hold a Lesbian Support Group every Tuesday at 1 p.m. In the Student Center. Room 351.

ACCESS-AUIARIA CowvrER CLUl .. .AN ENTERPllSINQ STUDENT soam Wiii hold ,;, meetings on Tuesday, March 8 at 11:30 a.m. In SO 113 and Wednesday, March 9 at 5:30 p .m. In SO 142. For more Informa-tion call 329-8255. '

SHOTO KAN KARATE CLUI wtll meet every Tuesday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. In the PE Building, Room 215.

METRO STATE RUQIY CWI wtll host the Denver Harlequins Scturday, March 5. at noon on the football field. For more Infor­mation call 629-3253.

by P .I. Lazar

HOW THE. HEL.L YOU GE.I our

OF 1Hl6 7HJNG!!

1.J.JjqAf\ '3 ·Z·~'3

Page 15: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

r---- -

~ Clusifi1d SERVI CFS

...> WOBD~G - Papen and reports, graphics - pie, bar, line, 3D charts, training -for Wordltar and CP/M. Call Mighty Byte, 758-7231, M-F, 8 to 5. 3-2

JAiLER-DANCE, "More than just an exercise claa" sponsored by Metropolitan State College

.i# Dance Studio, P.E. Bldg., Aurarla Campus. Even-. Ing and daytime claaes - coed, low monthly rates

open to students and non-students. Call 758-8689 or 757-2528 (Iv. m-.ge). 3-2

PBDCRIPTION EYEG~ MAI>Es Present a valid student ID for 30 percent off on complete prescription eyeware. ROTC cadets receive 40

~ percent off with proof of cadet status. Call Visual Effects at 744-3335. 3-2

SEASONAL POSmONS AVAILABLE with Hyland Hills Water World and Hyland Hills Park and Recreation District. Lifeguards, cashiers, con­cessions attendants, athletic leaders, and playground leaders. Apply at 7125 Marlposa Street, Denver, Colorado, 80221. 2-23

GRADUA11NG 11US YEAR? Sunbelt and ~ jobsl Weekly updates. Call now. 1-716-885-3242, ext. 612. 3-2

~ OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields. t500 to •1200 monthly. Sighbeeing. Free Info. Write IJC Box 52-CO 2 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.

ALASKAN_ SUMMER JOm: Free Information. Canneries to oilfield. Send SASE to A.J .S., Box 40235, TUICOn, Arizona 85717. Immediate replyl 4-27

PROFDSIONAL WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY. Quality work, reasonable prices. 360-0149.

IMPROVE YOUR GRAD~! Research catalog -306 pages - 10,278 topics - Rush $1 to Box .25097C, Los Angeles, CA 90025. (213) 477-8226. 5-4

~ PROFDSIONAL WEDDING. PHOTOGRAPHY. • Quality work, reasonable prices. Call Master

Photography Studios at 360-0149. 2-23

FINANCIAL TROUB~ need not stop you from obtaining a college education. There are thousands of little known grants and scholarships available. Write: College Grant Services, 1025 Milwaukee, Denver, CO !IO?D6.

I 2-16

PROFDSIONAL INCOME TAX PREPARATION by accountant with over five years experience with CPA firms. Fast, accurtte and thorough. Reuonable rates. Call 756-3097.

. 2-16 , -ALASICA1 SUMMER JOBS. EARN GREAT MONEY in this opportunity rich state. 1983 employer listing and Summer employliieot guide covering all Industries: fishing, petroleum, tourism, etc. Send $5 to RETCO P.O. Box 43670 Tucson, AZ 85733 3-2

' Off Course

STIJDIO/WORJC/OmCE SPACD. From 1200 square feet for t500 to 175 for $110. Perfect for ar­tists. May share. :m>-0457. 3-2'

NEED ADVJCEP But afraid to ask Mom. Try Rent--a-Moml Totally confidential (no names) motherly advice regarding your problems. Reasonable and relatively painless. Call 321-8732 for appointment. 3-23

TYPING - $1.50 to $2.00 Per double-spaced page. Twenty-five years esperienoe. Capitol Hill loca· tion. If you've been up all rilght and it's due today call 377-3888. 5-4 EXPERT TYPING done at re.son.hie prices. All material carefully proof read for accuracy and grammar. Call Judy days at 373-7555, or evenlnp at 850-7698. 3-24

FOR SALE 1lllNIC SPRING, 1970 MGB Convertible, New Top, New Valves, New Brake system, Tonneau, Orglnial WireS, only $1700. CLASSIC INVEST­MENT, 67'-6304.

GREAT BOOKS of the Western World. (Brlt­tanica Publications) 40 vol. set plus 10 bonus books, ' mast never unwrapped. $300 (*800 new) 234-0472 -keep trying. 3-2

BLACK AND BLUE FROM REAGANONOMl~P Express it with your own black on blue Reaganomlcs T-shirt, s, m, 1, qr xi 50/50 cotton blend. Only $9, •8 If you're unemployed. Send check or m .o. to DryWry contract station 16 box 71, 1525 Sherman, Denver, CO. 80203. 3-9

BEAUllFUL, ACRYLIC DESK clock \,Vlth Full Five Functions. 4"x3"x2Y1. Retails at $19.99, yo!U'S for only $9.99 + .50 (postage). Please send check or money order to: D.C. &: Company, 867 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite C-683, Denver, CO. 80222. 3-9

ALCORT SAILFISH w/new dacron sail. $550, 744-9539. 3-2

1WO.BEDROOM MOBILE HOME .6,000. $3,000 under dealer's list price. Owner will carry at $175/month for 4 years.' t600 down. Couch, air conditioner, storm windows + + +. Buy less than rentll 477-2078. · 3-2

GARAGE SALE, Saturday, Feb. 19th from 10 to 2 at the MSC gymnasium, 10th and Lawrence. Sportswear, sport equipment and lots of mi5oellaneow.

HELP WANTED COMPUI'ER TF.cHNOLOGY SYSTEMS ls Inter­viewing for a campus rep to market ProMatch, a computerU.ed resume data ba.e. Call 623-4401 for an appointment. 3-9

FEMALE MODEL for motorcycle ad. Call Bob 986-5123.

'rlMM - THEY CON 'T 'i EVEN SEE!v\ FR\C:rHTENED OF os!

TM Mefropolltan M.-cla 2, 1983 . 15

PA11ENTS WANTED for lnvestiptlonal gas permeable (breathing) contact lemes designed to reduce light semltivity, burning, stinging and spec­tacle blur. Modest fee conforming to CFR 21 812. 7B. Call 825-2!500. 3-30

HOUSING FOR RENT: Roomy unfurn.lshed basement apart· ment at 1+40 Franklin. Freshly painted, some remodeling, new flooring, built In shelves. ICU. + bath + 3 rooms. $250 + deposit. Call Pat, ~8 (eves., weekends) or 830-3656 (days). 3-2 I

HOUSEMATE WANTED - Capitol Hill area. Non-smoker, liberal-minded m/f, age '.20 to 26 to share three-bedroom howe. Must like cats and be dependable. $190/month plw $USO deposit. Con­tact Rhonda or Ken at 831-4212. Best time Is bet­ween 9 and 4. Keep trying. 3-2

FOR RENT: Large one-bedroom baleinent apart­ment. Full kitchen, freshly painted, well lit, very neat and clean In a quiet residential neighborhood. Close to campus on bus line. $250 + deposit In­cludes utilities. 320· 7638

CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Sunny one-bedroom apart­ment with balcony. Suitable for two. Security building, laundry. 26th and Stout. t250. 32(}.0457. 3-2

PERSONALS

WINNING 11IE JOB RACE - Cassette with lastest job landing techniques for career positions after college. Send $7.95. Barclays, 6801 S. Yosemlte-C07. Englewood, CO. 80112. 3-16

MY, YOU'RE UKE A WISP OF SMOKE. I saw you once and then you're gone. You probably don't

even realize it's you rm tallcing abOul Don't be sur­prised if you find out who I am. U1e your imagina­tion. Reverend. 3-2

HOMOSEXUAU - Do you want to change? Call Family Ufe Center at :J88...4.411, ext. 193. 3-30

. SPRINC.BREAJC NEED TRANSPORTATION? Wu.on Drlveaway Inc. has many vehicles to major dties throughout the U.S., many with gas allowance. Call 233-"°26 3-16

STEAMBOAT SPRINGS: Champagne powder, over (K).inch hue. Stay at the Harbor Hotel now and for every day you stay, return free for a day un­til July l, 1983. For reservations, please call Elalne at 879-1522. 3-2

·RU'lll, I still think you're a sweetheart. Let's try it again sometime. E. 3-2

•25 NITE FOR 1WO. ~ log cabins/kitchens, flshlng, game room/firep1aee, ice skating. Also, midweek discouQt. Downhill Winter Park/Silver Creek, cross country Grand Lake. Only SS miles from'Denver. MOUNTAIN LAKES LODGE. In­formation, Denver, 777-7757; Grand Lake l-M:T-8448. 3-30

BOB - The valentine from "Guess WhoM wa from just a friend. I know It doesn't really matter to you, hut I want to save you any embarraaments. Your friend always, "Guess Who." 3-2

JOANNE W. we ran Into each other during registration; where have you been hiding? Please call 321-4326, Bob, after 10 p.m.

~·········-·-··--··-········~ ~ . Cl.flSSIFllD ORDIR FORM \ I I : NflME: PHONE NUMBER: I I

1.D. NOMBER:. ______________ =-=-====:----==-===-::-:---SEND TO 1006 11Tlt STREIT. BOX S7.DINYIR. CO IOJ04 I

I OR DELIVER TO THE STODENT Cltn'ER RM. 156 I I SC/WORD FOR MSC naDINTS. 1 I~ flLL OTHERS I I flDS DOE. PREPAID. BY I P.M. FRIDflY BEFORE POBLICflTION I I I I I I I

i I -~ - ' . # ~----------················~

by Troy D. Bunch

Page 16: Volume 5, Issue 22 - March 2, 1983

. The Boston Hal,f Shell Presents

· A Taste of New England • ID

Downtown Denver at Oceanside Prices

Fresh Oysters on the Half Shell .............. ." ................... $2.49 Y2 dozen Fresh Cherry Stone ·c1ams on the Half Shell .-............. $2.49 V2 dozen Gulf Shrimp Steamed in Beer. : ......................................... $2.49 1A lb.

· Fresh Steamed Mussels ......•............................................ $2.49 Bowl Fresh Steamed Clams .- .................. ~ .................................. $2. 49 Bowl

p\uS_ , Frosty Mugs of Lowenbrau Draft Beer 99¢ each

Monday through Friday 2 pm till 5 pm & 9 pm till Closing

~ Come as You Are! Bring Your Student l.D. For the Above Specials .

Join All Our Friends for Our Daily · Happy Hour 4·6 pm M·F

Featuring Free Fried Shrimp & Fried Veggies

',

~ I

..