volume 7, issue 10 - oct. 24, 1984

20
Volume 7 Issue 10 Two Resign Student _ by Nonna Restivo Reporter, The Metropolitan Memb_ers of ASMSC found ineligible to hold their student government posi- tions by the Office of Student Affairs can appeal the decision to the judicial board on Wednesday, October 24. Two levels.of student government are currently under scrutiny by the board, .., which is the judicial branch of ASMSC. The Senate reviewed its own members (about 22) and found several are not attending meetings regularly. The board must decide if the charges are valid. Other members of student .,,. government not included in the Senate are under review for current GPA stan- ding, insufficient course load, total semester hours completed, and degree status. The board must be certain that members of student government are fulfilling their constitutional • requirements. Jane Wrenshall, student -body treasurer, was cited for being non- degree seeking. She later declared a , major and the charges were dropped. "It creates a great deal of animosity," she said. "We work hard and take a lot of time. Rarely do other students see the effort we put into student govern- ment." Two senate have resigned to date. One couldn't attend meetings regularly due to a conflicting class schedule. The other member had to 'It creates a great deal of animosity. We work hard and take a lo_t of time. Rarely· do other students see the effort we ·put in"to Student Government' Wrenshall work during that time slot. Two -<- remaining members cited for in- eligibility will appeal their charges to the board Wednesday. According to Dave Sytherland, vice president of ASMSC, impeachment proceedings are not a cut and dried affair. . . . ! "Proceedings may go on for quite a while. People may have good reasons for meetings and then the judicial qoard can throw out the charges." · The board operates just like a court in that it hears and then deliberates a • particula> case. The board's procedures for legal proceedings are supposed to be reviewed by the state attorney generals office. But, according to Sutherland, the attorney's advice is not always rele- vant. "You can accept or reject his legal advice. Whatever the board's original cont. on 18 ... . .... "'' Senator 'Bill Visits Senator Bill Armstrong in Denver last Friday and met w.ith students at the Auraria campus. J\rmstrong was on a statewide campaign swing during which time he met with college students from all around Colorado. Armstrong, a Republican, is in the midst of a heated race with Lt. Governor Nancy Dick. -Photo by J.M. Bailey '._1N T. 8IDE . ·:-=' ... · .-- · ·. · ·· ·_: ·;:.. ·:. - ·•· .. . . - . I . ·, • . , -,::.;. . . . . .... - .. "' - • • .... ·:· J. __..;;. No Nukes Symphony Page 10 -Page 12 · October 2"f, 1 !J84 Charges Resurf JlS! ·Professor's Credentials Challenged ©The Metropolitan 1984 by Rose Jackson and Kevin Vaughan Reporter, Editor, The Metropolitan A long-simmering internal conflict in the MSC economics department over alleged discrepancies in the academic "credentials of a· faculty member has burst into the open. At the center of the controversy is Peter Hofer, assistant professor of economics at MSC. Hofer's problems began in February, 1981, when he was the target of a report calling for his immediaJe dismissal and challenging his com- petency as an e9ucator. When contacted by phone Monday ' night by The Metropolitan, Hofer termed the 146-page report an_d its allegations a "witch hunt," and "a mat- , ter for litigation and lawyers." The Metropolitan first learned of the discontent in the department after several students confirmed that an MSC economics professor, Dr. Ralph Burns, had .advised his class on September 25 not to take any courses taught by Hofer. . The Metropolitan then .learned tha1 on February 27, 1981, Dr. Gerald Stone, head of the MSC econom1cs department, compiled the report call- ing for Hofer's immediate dismissal and submitted it to Dr. Richard Pasternak, deau of the school of business; Dr. Stanley S-underwirth, then-acting president for academic affairs; and then MSC President Donald Mcintyre. According to a copy of the Stone report made av.ailable to The Metropolitan, Stone requested Hofer's dismissal based on Colorado Revised Statutes, Title 23-10-210, on the grounds of " ... incompetency, or other good and just cause ... " According to a copy of the Stone report, the alleged discrepancies occur- red in three areas- academic creden- tials,· employment gained through alleged misrepresentation, and alleged unethical academic behavior. Hofer has taught in the MSC economics department since 1968 and has been a tenured faculty member since 1971. He was recommended for hire by then chairman of the economics department Morton Ohlson, a friend with whom he had studied at the University of Colorado in the late 1950s, sources told The Metropolitan. When Ohlson stepped down as chair- man of the department preceeding the 1972-1973 school term, Hofer taught under Chair Edythe Miller, wife of Hofer's present attorney, Martin Miller. According to the 1969-1970 and cont. on page 3 )

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

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

Volume 7 Issue 10

Two Resign

Student_ R~ps.·

~Scrutinized by Nonna Restivo Reporter, The Metropolitan

~ Memb_ers of ASMSC found ineligible to hold their student government posi­tions by the Office of Student Affairs can appeal the decision to the judicial board on Wednesday, October 24. •

Two levels.of student government are ~ currently under scrutiny by the board,

.., which is the judicial branch of ASMSC. The Senate h~ reviewed its own members (about 22) and found several are not attending meetings regularly. The board must decide if the charges are valid. Other members of student

.,,. government not included in the Senate are under review for current GPA stan­ding, insufficient course load, total semester hours completed, and degree status. The board must be certain that members of student government are fulfilling their constitutional

• requirements.

~

Jane Wrenshall, student -body treasurer, was cited for being non­degree seeking. She later declared a , major and the charges were dropped.

"It creates a great deal of animosity," she said. "We work hard and take a lot of time. Rarely do other students see the effort we put into student govern­ment."

Two senate membe~s have resigned to date. One couldn't attend meetings regularly due to a conflicting class

• schedule. The other member had to

'It creates a great deal of animosity. We work hard and take a lo_t of time. Rarely · do other students see the

• effort we ·put in"to Student Government'

·-Ja~e Wrenshall

work during that time slot. Two -<- remaining members cited for in­

eligibility will appeal their charges to the board Wednesday.

According to Dave Sytherland, vice president of ASMSC, impeachment proceedings are not a cut and dried affair. . . .

! "Proceedings may go on for quite a while. People may have good reasons for missing~ meetings and then the judicial qoard can throw out the charges." ·

The board operates just like a court in that it hears and then deliberates a

• particula> case. The board's procedures for legal proceedings are supposed to be reviewed by the state attorney generals office. But, according to Sutherland, the attorney's advice is not always rele­vant.

"You can accept or reject his legal advice. Whatever the board's original

cont. on pag~ 18

........ "''

Senator 'Bill Visits

Senator Bill Armstrong ~opped in Denver last Friday and met w.ith students at the Auraria campus. J\rmstrong was on a statewide campaign swing during which time he met with college students from all around Colorado. Armstrong, a Republican, is in the midst of a heated race with Lt. Governor Nancy Dick.

-Photo by J.M. Bailey

'._1NT.8IDE. ·:-=' ... · .-- · ·. · ·· ·_: ·;:.. ·:. - ·•· .. . . - . I . ·, • . , -,::.;. . . . . .... ~-

~ - ~ .. "' - • • • • • • .... ·:· J. • __..;;. •

No Nukes Symphony Page 10 -Page 12 ·

@P~litan

October 2"f, 1 !J84

Charges Resurf JlS!

·Professor's Credentials Challenged

©The Metropolitan 1984

by Rose Jackson and Kevin Vaughan Reporter, Editor, The Metropolitan

A long-simmering internal conflict in the MSC economics department over alleged discrepancies in the academic "credentials of a· faculty member has burst into the open.

At the center of the controversy is Peter Hofer, assistant professor of economics at MSC.

Hofer's problems began in February, 1981, when he was the target of a report calling for his immediaJe dismissal and challenging his com­petency as an e9ucator.

When contacted by phone Monday ' night by The Metropolitan, Hofer termed the 146-page report an_d its allegations a "witch hunt," and "a mat-

, ter for litigation and lawyers." The Metropolitan first learned of the

discontent in the department after several students confirmed that an MSC economics professor, Dr. Ralph Burns, had .advised his class on September 25 not to take any courses taught by Hofer. .

The Metropolitan then . learned tha1 on February 27, 1981, Dr. Gerald Stone, head of the MSC econom1cs department, compiled the report call­ing for Hofer' s immediate dismissal and submitted it to Dr. Richard Pasternak, deau of the school of business; Dr. Stanley S-underwirth, then-acting president for academic affairs; and then MSC President Donald Mcintyre.

According to a copy of the Stone report made av.ailable to The Metropolitan, Stone requested Hofer's dismissal based on Colorado Revised Statutes, Title 23-10-210, on the grounds of " ... incompetency, or other good and just cause ... "

According to a copy of the Stone report, the alleged discrepancies occur­red in three areas-academic creden­tials, · employment gained through alleged misrepresentation, and alleged unethical academic behavior.

Hofer has taught in the MSC economics department since 1968 and has been a tenured faculty member since 1971.

He was recommended for hire by then chairman of the economics department Morton Ohlson, a friend with whom he had studied at the University of Colorado in the late 1950s, sources told The Metropolitan.

When Ohlson stepped down as chair­man of the department preceeding the 1972-1973 school term, Hofer taught under Chair Edythe Miller, wife of Hofer's present attorney, Martin Miller.

According to the 1969-1970 and cont. on page 3

)

Page 2: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

- ----- ------

s . '

Fontera Book Collection Dedicdted

~

by Michael Ocrant News Edtror, The Metropolitan

Non-violent struggles against oppres­sion should be studied as closely as military strategy or scientific research methods before being dismissed in favor of violent revolt, according to a leading proponent of non-violence.

The non-violent movements per­sonified by Mahatma Ganhdi in India and Dr. Martin Luther King in the United States, should be used as pro-

totypes tor developing passive resistence into a viable revolutionary alternative, said Dr. Gene Shari:>, an author and the director of a prcigram on non-violent conflicts at ~~rva!d University.

Sharp was the keynote speaker at a ceremony October 9 marking the dona­tion to the Auraria Library of a book collection belonging to former MSC President Richard M. Fontera, who died earlier this year.

Before his death, Fontera directed

his family to donate more that 350 volumes of works concerning the p~ilosophical, religious and political thought of India and Southeast Asia.

Fontera had a lasting interest in non­vjolent political movements and work­ed for the Peace Corps for two years in India.

The books donhted to the library, Sharp said, make up one of the best col­lections on the subject of non-violence in the country.

The collection will provide a founda-

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tion to . build on and be of great interest to scholars, Sharp said.

Today, he said, the passive resistence movement led by Ganhdi in India is taken for granted. .,_

But Ganhdi's non-violent struggle shook the foundations of the British empire and contributed to its collapse; Sharp said. ·

Other non-violent movements came before and after Ganhdi, such as the. ~ Solidarity movement in Poland, Sharp said. Such movements should be thoroughly studied and refined .

• By understanding the problems, mistakes and victories in non-violent struggles it may-be possible to develop a system of fighting through non­violence in much the .same way that military strategy develoPed, "Changed and became a science, Sharp said.

The Fontera collection will provide a good way to closely investigate non­violent movements, he said.

And, according to AHEC Library 4" Director Patricia Brei.vik, schools throughout the state will know about the collection tlirough a computerized bibliography.

The collection includes The Col­lected Works of Mahatma Ganhdi and the speeches of Jawaharlal Nehru, a former Indian Prime Minister and a follower of Ganhdi. D

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Page 3: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

Oct!fiet24, 1984

t

Credentials :'Witch Hunf Ass@* coar' lron pgc I could find.no listing for the Blickstone the nation's educational system, and a

1984-1985 MSC bulletins, Hofer holds School of' Law -or even for anv sham, and is unfair not onlv toa B'A. from the College or Colegio organization named Blackstone. legitimate holders of genuine academicAleman, _Madrid, Spain; and M.A. According to advertisements obtain- d"gr"o and students- seriously under-froqr _th.e University-of Cqlorado; and ed by Thi Metropolitan, the,school taking to obtain them, but also to reci-1lr !L.B.' J'D. and LL.D, hom the offeredlawboolafbrg2O0tog600, but pients- of such so-called degrees in

- Bladkstone School of Law-in-Chicago. again-there is no mention of the gran- [hat...they are . wholly iithout- -Transcript copies-from the University ting ol degrees academic value and are nol recognized

of Colora4o, the Univercity- of Utah - Department Chair Stone did contact by any reputable dducational iistitu-and the Blackstone School of Law are the Blackstone School of Law bv tion."-contained in the Stone report, but there phone, according to pages 6 and 7 of hir t" his book "Degrees for Sale," Leeis- no transcript from the College of ieport on Hofer, and i-he conversation Porter states that ihen Secretary ofAleman' resulted in the following exchange: Health Education and Welfare Arihur

r According to^the transcript-copy colt- ....,'a< rtn? S. Fleming declared a war on degreetained in the stone d;Tt*;n"|8fi, ^--9:Sbn:

what will I need to t

Hofer was born in Berlin. Germanv. on ^n"*rr".'.NJ. gr""i a"a trt"t yo" rrliu SLlt^11115?:

an-d-ordered the office of

July 7, f929. The tranJ-I^::,7:t^ to do; just ,"id th" 16 volume s*- Education to prepare a list oI them'

.states that Hor", g"ifllttrtt*X p:6iiqi' what does it cost? Ans#"' Blaclatone appeared on tbe list in 1961

..Deutsche s"hut", c.i"3;t"it"fr:il ifB.-[u"stio.,: Are there "nv "r"-""i

and again in 1970'

Madrid, Equivalent to f,.it., 1945.': :-TI91 Yes. There "ru

u*"-, .'ll Further'' the Illinois Annotated

J This would make Hofer 16-vears-old at rests, Dut ir,"v "i" "ot ruu*itiJ tol*- statutes of l98l stated that d"9""-

the time he earned his spanish ,n"y "."loiyou igi"as" yo* oin g::,lj:ic^^institutions other than

equivelant of an American bachelor of 91191=. g"*ir.t'-il-iE;;Agt;i residence. had to meet five

arts degree. Answer: N*o, the state dois "ot $t--fi requirements' two of which were:

No high school or preparatory school li: q:HOO tt -..opo"J"n"e.'g,'..- "Maintains phvsical facilities suitable

is listed on the transoripf copy.' T:1.111 therL be an icademic re&ti'l and sufficient to the giving of a pro-

- However, -r,* *,ii'*li#'by. r!,e ll1::;X.;ik;Tf::.h'*'""i'pii-ri !jtl*;;;ji;T..ff:ilX',:t",*,n::'Vi"::::^ffi"$:'fi"1i""1T,1,:1: J:: ;";ti'*i*#H;lf#"# *l$qf"$,T;,tYJsitffl$'er' at 16.

"Those are just false allegations made took place in early l98l' ttHS:HiHc ,"po.t on Blackstone

bytheheadof thedepartment. Nobody Documents obtained by The tofinfftfrif,it "...opirated from an of-ever said I got a degree at 16," Hofer Metropolitan show that a" . early as fice composed of fo-ur rooms and a stock

, to)d Th9 Metropolitan Monday by 1948, the FIC ordered Blackstone to room, with four employees tvho handl-- phone. "Nobody in this world can have cease and desist from ".,,issuing ed the clerical *ork; its only facultya transcript tlrat says- I have a degree at diplom-as -or degrees unless _the reci- consisted of two practlcing ittorneys16..,You better watch out what you are pients had in fact completed satisfac- who devoted only a portiin of

'theirrvriting because there will be some im- lorily a regularly prescribed course of time to the school,...neither its saidplications." study under competent supervision." president - treasurer, nor its vice

tajned in StonCs report, Hofer attended that: degree in Agust of lg6l and a f.D. in, CU from the springof 1955 tothe spr- "...thegrantingo{such.degrees, with December oI tgOg.ing of 1959, dirring which time he took no serious effort to establish or main- However, in an employee informa.

_ four graduate and_ Iive t1{ergr$u4e tain genuine scholastic standards or tion sheet contained in the Stone reportr courses-e?rning A's and B's in all. On requirements. .,upon the basis of money and dated April 95, 1g68, there G nothe basis of his 30 credit hours 4 CU, payment, consfitutes an imposition -mention of any degrees earned from thefns DasN or IlLs r)U creulf nours 1r \/u, Paymenr, consfirures an rmposluon -mentron ot any oegTees ealned trom th€including his-master's thesis, Hofer was lnd fraud upon the public and upon Blackstone Sclooiof Law.awarded an M'A'

' ll rotal crodlts Earn€d 122 plur port'However, according to documents ' I .' - -r-- -^-r- .- .:-r

Neither Hofer's contract copy nor An introduction to another FTC president-secretary was a lawyer. "resumecdpy contained in the report list order of April 7, 1948, and made According to a iopy of the Biaclatonea date fo_r the B.A. degree,. available to The Maropolitan by facul- tranrcript obtained by Thi

Accurding to the transqipt copy con- ty in the economics department, states Maropolitan, Hofer earned an LL. Btained in StonCs report, Hofer attended that: degree in ASust of lg6l and a I.D. in

"d;ff by r;;;'"rt';r";'t;;,-i;;;; I - ll rrrrtuatc wotlr iuvolrlng.lntorrelvc rork to lial;;uJ "i thu'sr,"*Jnu Scii,ooL or r [ ^ ll q*tral*r"u dptpJttflr..t:o-ot,ll:1.:-l"i:l]t i;;;A"s*izo,ltiialiir'l"ir"*li | - ll *t*.orr or uraoas: J.D. dcgtcr ire rnrdstill-workingonhis-master's"I-9-9:f: 1 | s.ll A - lrcerrentcording to the Blaclstone transcript z | ; ll : - &rduer'

"opy Jbt"in"d by The Metopolito;, ; t ; ll I - verv 8oo'l

Hofer carried i0 credit "Dr^^r-J^-^.-.L.'^ ^t ^'^ ^^-^lliT.^3t 2 | c ll 11 E-{-Blackstone while at the same time tak- , I : ll D - Falri-a 1,i. MA raarriraman+c .+ arT t ^,,\

t I C Il t! ti---" ing his MA requirements at CU frofi ; I Y ll E - Passlng

th;fal-of1958-tothe-spring'of1959.- ] | !.ll " - Faiture(Docreaut)Law-origionally called the I I C-llBlackstone College of Law but cbanged L i C - ll An average grado of C or botter 1bby the Federal Trade Commission on t I C - ll roquired f or the IJ,.B. deEree arard.by the Federal Trade Commission on t I C - ll required for th6 I!.B. degree arard. IAusust 8. I952-was incomorated in r | . . li It tgl"Z. ; | : t il One credlt hour equals an avorage\ | /

In articles of incorporation filed on ; | : * ll of thlrty bours of actual study. \l/October 23, 1947, Blaikstone proposed ; | : t ll Vto sell law books and offer instruction I I lt + ii - .in law; there is no mention;G;;ilil I I r . il rhls transcrlpt lssueddegrees. 'l'.

. Blackstone was not a residence in- t I B -stitution, but operated through the I

mail. It advertised in magazines such as t I D -"P_opular Mechanics," and appeared in t I B -advertisements as late as January of I

19?5. But when contactd by--The 2 | ll <T -SeE;ei6rvMelropolitan' earlier thisrnontlr*:: ' Biackstone school of Law transcript copy shows altered date *rnd' tory assistanc€ personner in chicago _ir-Jigua grade.

Blackstone s;ho;l of t I B+ Cr - Credit for prevlous lar ptucly

Further discrqrancies appear on a' copy of the rough draft. of that

employee sheet-which was written inlonghand. The handwritten version,also dated April 25, 1968, states Hofet'sage as 37, with the seven having beenwritten over another number, But thety'ped and allegedly final version of thefact sheet lists Hofels age as 38.

Another discrepancy is revealed in acopy of a December 10, 1980 grievancefiled by Hofer--contained in the Stbnereport-which states that Hofer earnedan LL. B and J.D. in 196l and an LL.D in 1968. At the time the LL. D awardwas given by Blackstone, Hofer was

. employed at the lnter-AmericirnUniversity in San German, PuertoRico.

A further discrepancy cited in theStone report is the Blackstonetranscript itself. A close examination ofthe copy of the transcript-which con-tains no official seal from the schoolhnd is dated fannary (sic) 2,1969- reveals that the "69" was ty@by a different typ€writer than the onewhich scnred the rest of the date, The"69" is much darker and bigger thanthe "]annary (sic) 2, 19."

Adalitidnally,'the Stone report cspystates that there are more discrepanciesin the Blackstone transcript, including:

"...alignment of the typing suggeststhat all grades except one and mostother information lvbre typed in at the

. same time, . . The transcript is signed by. a'G.W. Harms,l or'Secraary,' not by'a registrar,..the period noted on the

'transcript' of Hofer's attendance atBlackstone overlapped his graduate

' duties at CU and a period of full-timeemployment at Friends University inKansas..,typed above the graduationdate for the LL..B is a statement awar-ding the j.D. degree; with a separatenote that additional work was done.The language reads: '122 plus po*-graduate work, involving intensivework in field of contracts and prepara-tion of thesis, for which ].D. degreewas awarded. . . This closely resembles

- Hofer's style of writing...there is nomention of an LL.D. deqree. "degree.) i

The Stbne repofr goes on to chargethat Hofer gained his employment atMSC through misrepresentation.

According to the Hofer resume con-tained in the 1981 report, under"Education" Hofer states: "Furtherstudies in economics towards a Ph.D atthe University of Utah. I am presentlyworking towards a doctorate in lawand a doctorate in economics.. I expectto obtain them as soon as ferisible to theextent of non- interference with myteaching work, "-Hofer

also states on his employee factsheet of April'25, 1968j'Ph.D Univer-sity of Utah Economics (Expected1969)."

But Hofer's tranrcript from theUniversity df Utah shows that. heattended three class€s at the university,all 200- level und. ergraduate courses,and withdrew from the school onJanuary 18, 1966. .:.

The Stone report further statesr "Mr.Hofer applied to Metropolitan $tateCo{lege on the basis of his master's rg

GI

Page 4: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

.....

Credentials: No .Disciplinary Action Taken. cont. from page 3 ' degree and the fact that he was pursu­ing a Ph.D .in economics at the Univer­sity of Utah and a doctorate in law. When he applied for the positfon at

of Barry Siegal's "Aggregate Economics

, MSC, it had been more than two years since he had withdrawn from the University of Utah. As the informatton about Blackstone shows, he clearly was not studying for a doctorate in law, since that was hardly required."

. and Public Policy" in his manuscript "On Macro-Economics." The report obtained by The Metropolitan from sources in the department shows several incidences in which Hofer allegedly used sentences, equations and paragraphs in "On Macro-Economics" identical to those is Siegal's book.

According to the report "This behavior is inconsistent with establish­ed scholarly ethics and poses the danger of bringing disrepute to Metropolitan

....

Finally, the report prepared by Stone alleges that Hofer plagiarized portions

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State C~llege . " However, Stone would not comment

ori the report or itS findings. Hofer's contract was renewed in the

fall of 1981. But in December of 1983, the late

MSC President Richard Fontera issued a letter of non-renewal of contract to Hofer, sources in the economics depart­ment told The Metropolitan. And last spring an ad hoc committee was set up as part of the due process of appeal afforded a tenured professor. However, Fontera was admitted to the hospital the same week, for treatment of cancer, and he died several weeks later.

According to an economics professor, the five member panel set up to review the Hofer case voted three to two in favor of retention. ,

Two members of the panel, Dr. Charles M. Ddbbs, associate professor of history, and Dr. Alain D. Ranwez, associate professor of ·French, refused to comment on Monday on the commit­tee's findings.

Hofer's attorney, Martin Miller, did not return phone calls from The Metropolitan on Tuesday, but said last week that he had been told that Hofer had been cleared of any wrongdoing by the school.

"The school dropped all charges, all charges have been dropped, the school president wrote me a letter and told me so," Miller said. " ... It (the charges) is inaccurate because they've checked his

credentials and they are good. You _ s~ould do some checking because the college has written a letter and he has been rehired for another year and he

· will continue to be rehired. Each time these accusations come up they are wrong, there's nothing to it and that is all I can say."

Hofer told The Metropolitan by phone Monday evening that "these are false allegations which someone has brought out. This puts it in a complete­ly different ballpark ... Yo"u should be very careful what you write-this is all libelous material .. . it's all internal. •

"The department head and·I don't see eye to eye on some things." He also called Stone "blindly vindictive" and · said he (Hofer) was in the process of renewing the matter because the "col­lege has gone back on some things we .., ~greed on."

Hofer further stated that he. wasn't "about to roll over and play mum ... Once it gets out, you would be responsible ... I really shouldn't be talk­ing about this internal witch hunt . . . You better watch out what you ~ are writing because there will be some implications ... You know all these things already, all these things are not supposed to . be outside. I can't say anymore."

Acting MSC President Brage Golding refused to comment on Tuesday • because he said it was a personnel mat­ter. 0

Pat Schroeder is not only fOncemed about us, she's con­cerned about our children and our grandchildren. That's why she co-sponsored the Pay-As-You-Go Proposal, and Joint Resolution 382, to develop a comprehensive plan for reducing our national deficit. Pat Schroeder doesn't think President Reagan has the right to spend our money without rega,rd for the future. Her record stands.

..

PAT SCRB.OBDEB.SHE WINS. WE WIN.

Page 5: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

Octobn 24, 1984

-"Rockne" on an unidentified beach with mug. keg. frlsbee and other fun-In-the-sun playthings.

~Rockne's Defensive Line · Has Apparent Holes

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SOUTH BEND, IN (CPS)-For > someone who died in 1931, former

Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne still gets around pretty well.

Or at least his bronze bust does. Over the last year the 100 pound,

two-foot tall Knute Rockne bust has attended .at least one student gradua­tion party, visited the shores of Lake Michigan, and journeyed to Indianapolis recently for the Notre Dame-Purdue football game.

The bust, affectionately known around campus as "Rockne," first vanished from Notre Dame's Rockne

"" Memorial last May 3rd. Two weeks later, editors at the stu~

dent paper, The Observer, were sur­prised to receive a ransom note and photograph of the campus football legend sunning at an unnamed beach.

• Among other things, the note warned that Rockne would not return "until the students get their beer," apparently referring to a new student drinking policy that restricts on-campus beer consumption, explains Observer editor Bob Vonderheide.

• The color picture showed the sunglass-clad Rockne reposing in the sand, surrounded by a boom-box radio, a keg of beer, and a frisbee.

In the meantime, the empty pedestal in Rockne Memorial became too much to bear for many students and

7 administrators. Hoping to re-capture at least some of the aura of the missing Rockne, officials replaced it with a smaller replica dubbed "Rockne Junior."

Over the summer campus police, .. befuddled by the mystery of the missing

bust, began working on leads that Rockne was hiding out somewhere in Los Angeles, recalls Notre Dame Security Chief Glenn Terry.

On September 11, a few days after a Notre Dame-Purdue football game,

.,. Observer editors received a second anonymous note and several photographs showing Rockne in a Pur­due sweatshirt, standing in front of a welc0me sign to Purdue University in Lafayette, Ind.

"I went on a long road trip to see this " game," the note began, "and I'm really

disappointed. The football team has

never scored this poorly." The one-page, typewritten message

was signed "Knute Rockne." "We still have no idea why the notes

and photos were sent to us," says Vonderheide.

Rockne, it seems, isn't the first Notre Dame sculpture to take flight in the night.

"There was a similar disappearance ' in the 1950s involving the statue of Father Theodore Sorin-founder of the university-which was kept on display in one of the residence halls," recalls Dick Conklin, public information director and long-time Notre Dame staffer.

Eventually, Father Sorin was found buried in a golf course sand trap~ "none the worse for wear."

Both the Observer and The Notre Dame Monthly, the campus magazine, did stories last spring recounting the Sorin statue caper, Vonderheide says.

Rockne's oust vanished only days . after the articles a~peared. It finally was returned at a Sept ." 23rd pep rally.

"It just showed up during the rally," Vonderheide ·recalls, and slated authorities quickly whisked Rockne off to secure quarters.

But while everyone was celebrating Rockne's return, the worst happened.

Rockne Junior vanished. -.... In its place the culprits left a jack-o­lantern and two handwritten notes, one of which read "Here's a buck for your troubles."

Chief Terry still won't disclose the contents of the second note. ·

He suspects the theft was "an inside job," because the bust was anchored and locked to the pedestal in the lobby.

"They must have had the key," he surmises, "because the lock was not broken."

No one has heard from Rockne Junior since.

Big Rockne, meanwhile, is back on display in the lobby of the Rockne Memorial, this time anchored to the pedestal by steel rods and concrete.

Terry "thinks" the bust is safe from future pranksters, but he also concedes there's really no way to stop Rockne from running off with another group of determined pranksters, short of remov­ing the bust from public display. D

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Page 6: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

October 24, 1984

(i-UEST COL Debate Fonllat Blurs Political lsrues

b,· Garv H. Holbrok . . Special to The .\frtwploitan

Sunday night we witnessed the final presidential debate and from this experience we. the viewers and voters, are being asked to make a decision as to whom we think can best lead this country for the next four years. Incredible pressure has been put on the presidential and vie~ presidential candidates to res­pond glibly and quickly to the questions tossed at them by the reporters. As one \\itnesses these media events, one has to decide whether or not we. are w~ching \\'ho Can Name That Foreign Policy in Five Seconds or Less and win three more points in the Gallup Polls, or risk the chance of looking and sounding like a mere mortal . James Reston writing in The Neu; York Times .• perhaps puts it best when he said: ·

We have silly. reporters as well as silly politicians in this country. The reporters could have asked wholly dif­ferent or even frivolous questions, and the candidates would have been obliged to answer. Thus the reporters, good, bad or indifferent, and not the candidates dominate the subjects for debate, which gives them mort: power than they want or deserve.

If we do not like the joint press conference setu1 that we have seen this election · year, then we should ask the League of Warne Voters, the networks and the politicians to work -towards a format that will help to elucidate rather than obfuscate the important isues of the day. /

There should be four presidential debates and two vice presidential debates. The debate format could provide/two ten minute constrqptive speec~es;lw0~e major candidates intersperxed with three minutes of cross examination of the can­didate who has just spoken as to their philosophy and position based upon what thev .have said. Each candidate would have a five minute summation to draw up~n what was discovered about his 'opponent's position during the cross examina­tion .period and to further extend his positjon on the debate issue. Then open up

-the proceedings to a p~el of acknowledged authorities who could ask questions based on the candidates' positions.

· : 1:h.is pr0cess may begin to provide ·~ore of a eommon grouitd of understanding

'

To Mister Langston Hughes Someu,-here in this room there is a poem, Like a young girl, handsome, ho_pin' to get caught.

See there, see her fine face, soft, dark, dark and strong. A face that looks to where I can't find. It's near that face, I know it is-that poem. Near that pretty Black girl there, Swinging her legs back and forth, back and forth Under that chair. ·

The poem. I saw it! On that shoe. Under that chair. It just climbed inside, inside her shoe. It's dancing. I can hear it Dancing, dancin' inside that shoe.

Ahhh, let me pull off that shoe And hold that poem, That poem a swingin' inside that shoe; Let me pinch it And press it onto this page. So you Can listen. So you can tell me the color of its care. The sound it paints. You tell me The matter that it sings, The feeling that you find a swingin' inside that shoe. Swinging inside that shoe 'there's a feeling to find­And now it's Dancin'.

David I. Colson

as to the differences between the candidates. There has to be a more viable format than the one we have witnessed this Fall, but until we move to something where

· the candidates have an opportunity to penetrate the rhetorical shield of their opponents, let's call these media events, which they really are-joint candidate press conferences and nothing more.

Gary Holbrok is Professor of Speech Communication at Metropolitan State Col­lege - Editor.

· ·~ .... · -...

The

EDITOR Kevin Vaughan

~USINESS MANAGER Katie Lutrey

PRODUCTION MANAGERS David Colson, Lise Geurkink

ASSIST ANT EDITOR Keith _Levise

.,_ NEWS EDITOR Michael Ocrant

ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR D.J. Owens

SPORTS EDITOR Curt Sandoval

REPORTERS . Bob Davis, Chris Deutsch, Diane Koogle, Norma Restivo,

Heather Shannon, Jessica Snyder, Ann Trudeau PHOTOGRAPHERS

Jim Bailey. V.C. Beap,le PRODUCTION STAFF

Doup, &~com. Barbara Cline. To111 Deppe. Nikki Jackson. Jami Jer1.~e11. Smit Richey. Robert Sdma11

TY PF.SE1TF..RS I'e1111y fa11st. Marvin Ratzlaff

RECEYfIONISTS Peggy Moore, T<.!_m Smith, Marilyn Zellmer

A publication for the students of the Auraria Campus supported by advertising and stu­dent fees from the students of Metropolitan State College. The Metropolitan is published every Wednesday during the school year, except holidays. The opinions expressed within are those of the writers, end do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Metropolitan or its advertisers. Editorial and business office are located in Room 156 of the Aureria Student Center, 9th &: Lawrence. Mailing address: P.O. Box 4615-57 Denver CO 8()204 Editorial: 629.2507 AdvertUing: 629·8361 Advertising deadline is Friday at 3:00 p.m. Deadline for calendar items, press releases, and letters to the editor is Friday at 3:00 p.m. Submissions should be typed and double spaced. Letters under three hundred words will be considered first. The Metropolitan reserves the right to edit copy to conform to limitations of space.

~ .. ~ .. ~ ~

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...

Page 7: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

October 24, 1984

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_OP/ED Voters Face Broad, Complex Issues. Editor:

With the people of the United States about to elect either incumbent President Ronald. Reagan or· former Vice President Walter Mondale to the office of the presidency, several issues confront the pair as they ponder their campaign plat­forms. ·

One of the candidate's concern,s is that many voters will ~ake their decision on a single issue, running the spectrum from MX missile basing to higher education and everything in-between.

Already the debates between President Reagan and Walter Mondale, plus the George Bush-Geraldine Ferraro-Philadelphia vice presidential debate have brought out topics from religion to defense spending. These are issues the public has had to ponder during the 200 plus year history of this nation.

While watching the debates I be~an to wonder just what impact domestic, foreign, regional, and other special interests would have in this November 6 general election. I discovered at least 108 of these which involve enigmas like the ones mentioned and even the Olympics just held in Los Angeles has become an issue due to the 1980 Moscow boycott ordered by then ·President Jimmy Carter.

The National issues are easy to identify as newspapers, television, and magazines bring them out in headline stories, broadcast actualities, and feature stories. These issues-covered in depth by these media-include abortion,.school prayer, taxes, and the condition of our highways.

Foreign policy planks are also easily identifiable as they daily crop up in the media and are splashed against similar reported themes. Former State Depart­ment figures like Henry Kissinger, Dean Rusk, Cyrus Va nee, and Alexander Haig have dealt with a potpourri of problems concerning apartheid, arms control, the Camp David accords, and the United Nations dealing with foi:tlign governments.

However, local issues-which at times become national in nature-have not been covered as heavily, as many are sometimes buried deep in the coverage by the media.

One of these is the question of redress for World War II relocatees-primarily the Japanese-American descent citizens-from the West Coast states of Washington, Oregon, California, Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii. Their's is a long fight which dates back to the end of the war.

Another is the new topic of acid r~in and the effect this has on the New England States of New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maine, Coimec­ticut, and Rhode Island. This also involves our relations with our northern neighbor Canada. •

A second big issue-especially prominent in the Western states-is water and the allocation of supplies from Colorado and the Rocky Mountain stat~. When the Congr~ss returns in January this will certainly be highly debated.

Single issue voters sometimes target other issues most people don't c~re about. But, the candiates will also speak to th6se groups too because if they don't take the time to discuss their problems, the they may lose valuable support needed to put them "over the top" in those key states and thus target their votes.

In addition to the acid rain dilemna, the New England states have a second key question of fishing rights off their cciasts. Recently, a judge stated that Canadian fisherman would gain some of the George's Bank fishing territory. The candidates will definitely have to deal with that group.

Another group the candidates must address are those in the field of primary, secondary, and higher education. The questions asked will be how t:be schools will benefit from the federal government in terms of federal support dollars. Just how far wm they go will depend on-how they wish to support this huge and active field. · ·

When the topic of active fields come up the future of this nation is involved by the discussions of high technology and its ramifications in the next century. This will be a concern of all the candidates in this election and the elections yet to come in this century. The high technology field will effect a large segment of 1our population as many states-particularly those in the Sun Belt-are entering thi~ market. · ·

An observance of the media shows that they can slant the way single voters vote. Despite what they say, they do contribute to their thinking.

Looking at those 108 boxes, many of them can be split-up into smaller boxes as the groups-both pro and con-involved can be separated into smaller groups. These voters who are involved in these splits make their decisions based on how they feel about these separate miniature concerns.

Probably the biggest and best example is in the box titled Equal Right Amend­ment (ERA). Two definite sides are prevalent in lhis as one side would like an ERA and the other side wouldn't like an ERA. This is quite hotl · .

Another example is in the box titled Labor. The different like the Unit~ AutoWcfrkers, Teamsters, United Farm Workers, and many others too numerous to list ~ill decide on how the candidates feel about their areas of mutual concern to their membership.

So, the political field is quite immense and is quite complex as the candidates and I hope you have found. I certainly discovered this to be so.

These squares are also affecting and effecting all elected offices in and around the nation especially those running for the 435 seats in the House of Represen­tatives and the one-third trying for reelect.ion to Senate seats.

Finally, I hope that this explana!ion of these boxes will help you to decide on either Reagan or Mondale and also help you to understand many of the issues of the day.

~Tom T. Urano Jr.

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Page 8: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

QO

A.SUCD Events Board presents

The Festival of the Arts! -November_ 9, 1984

P pop music, painting, poetry, pottery, positive motivation, poster contest

A audio art-jazz, classical and modern, art of business., art shows and sales, attitude adjustment

R readings of literature, recording information, (w)ritings, raisers of funds for clubs

T tantalizing, titilating, tasty -TOT ~LL YI

Y you have to be there-the Festival of the Arts-November 91

Call 629-2510 for more information or to become a part of the Arts

Tne AURARIA BOOK CENTER

Tues-Weds, Oct 23-24 in the Art-Design Supply i>ept,

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You can count on us for the basic items in all major catagories of supplies · . . needed by artists, designers and draftsmen. Our pohcy is to offer year-round good prices, and we will meet any ve.rifiahle regular price in the Metro area on any of our art, design and drafting supplies and equipment. We're convenien~y close, and are open evenings and Saturday. Your suggestions are .appreci~ted~ •

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SPOTLIGHT. -

Auraria: Haven<

by Patricia Milavec Special to The Metropol<>itan

Raymond Kurzweil, Raymond is a reading machine. It converts printed material into a synthesized voice that resembles Lawrence Welk~.

While other scbools, bound in sand- Another aid-Visualtek-is a stone tradition and stairs, try to aC"COm- machine that helps people with limited modate the occasional handicapped vision read printed material magnified student, Auraria . cultivates a fertile to about one inch on a screen. new patch of ground tn the middle of · Disabled students also have access to the city where disabled students encyclopedias available on cassette or flourish and grow. in Braille, raised-line drawing kits with

which blind students can draw, books The Colorado School of Mines in on cassette, a Braille typewriter ·and

Golden has two handicapped students. dictionary, and a Braille-to-Braille Auraria has 432. · copy machine. · -

"The main reason for this high figure The center plans to get a talking is the extreme accessibility of 'the cam- computer. One of its uses would be an pus," says Patricia Yeager, Manager of audio card catalogue. ._ tlie Office of Disabled Student Services "We try t1> help," says Stretsky, for Metropolitan Stat~ College and the "whether it's reading short_ assignments University of Colorado at Denver. for the· blind or learning disabled, or

"Traditional campuses, especially reaching books on a top shelf for a those built" prior to 1977, have too wheelchair student." many barriers to overcome," slie says. One such wheelchair student is Pam

She says schools really started to feel Wilson; 29, of Northglenn. Pam, a pressure after the 1973 Rehabilitation UCD biology major in the pre-med Act Section 504 of the legislation man- program. dated all programs and services receiv- She is also a member of the Section ing federal funds had to be acce$ible'to 504 Committee. _The oommittee, com- · • the disabled. prised of handicapped students from

Auraria responded. The buildings on each school at Auraria, discusses pro-campus are close together. There are blems disabled students encounter on wide push-button doors, bathrooms campus, such as snow removal. built to accommodate ' wheelchairs, "Have you ever tried to get a beeping elevators for the blind, and wheelc]lair down a na.rrow path wheelchair ramps. There are phones cleared by a snow shovel?" she asks. equipped for the hearing impaired and Pam says the Disabled Student Ser-room numbers are posted in Braille. 'vices Office is wonderful. "They're here f ,

The Auraria library ma~es its if you need them, although .they try to resources more accessible to people promote independence for eac~ with handicaps in the Resource Center individual." for Disabled Persons. The office, which includes six inter-

Lola Stretesky, library assistant in pretors and 40 notetakers, is desi~ed charge of daily operations, supervises to make adjustment to the real world • four handicapped UCD students who less traumatic. staff the center. "Students have to take the respon-

Stretesky says among the equipment sibility to get theirown notetakers," and services available, th~ word pro- Yeager explains. "It's a management CE!$Or is the most popular because it e:q>erience for them. They must assess if makes correcting errors and revising they're getting good notes, and if not, el\.SY for those with mobility they'll have to get someone else.'' impairments. The service has no budget for profes-

The resource center is also the home sional notetakers, but Yeager says it's . of Raymond. Named for !ts i_n_v_ep~?~·-. _not_ much of a problem . because

Page 9: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

' . ' '.>

for· Handicapped students who volunte~r are usually con­scientious.

Additionally, some courses and testing methods are modified to accom­modate fhe student's disability. The tests are the same but some students may write more slowly, for examplt!, so they are given longer test-time.

The center seems invaluable to students such as Rick Carrasco, 36, of Denver. A Metro student, Rick is cur­rently working on his teaching certification.

He has a hidden handicap-

always a few who don't want to alter their way of doing things. Some even get upset because ~he students are watching an interpreter instead of• him."

Rick says the faculty on campus have experienced a liberation of the mind because they've been exposed more often to the handicapped student.

Another student who says the faculty is supportive is Tim Zuroski, 26, of Lakewood. A deaf student majoring in art at MSC, Tim says.that some instruc­tors act sorry for him or act like he can't

"Students here are very helpful, accommodating and open to disabled students. I haven't seen any discrimination ·on this ,, campus.

dxslexia. That is, he can process ideas but can neither read nor write. • He is Metro's first dyslexic student, and he says Metro is the only school in Colorado that offers any type of pro­gram for his handicap.

Rick arranges for someone in the center to read tests to him. He then dic­tates his answers and a typist or scribe writes them for him.

He says he attended college for two

Pa~ricia Yeager

do it. In those cases, he us.ually drops the class.

Yeager adds that many disabled students encounter pity and overhelpfulness, such as helping a blind persori across the street after he just crossed it the other direction.

People can help the disabl~. she says, by simply asking if they need help. I

"They'll appreciate it if someone

r ' "Have you ever tried to get a wheelchair down a narrow

.l·

path cleared by a snow shovel?

years without help with his handicap and didn't do too well. After entering Metro's program, his grade point average rose· significantly.

"Because of Metro's open door policy," he says, "people like me have an opportunity to show what we can do. And because 99% of the faculty here are very supportive, and the peo­ple in 'the center are of such high quality, we will do it." ·

Yeager says handicapped stude~ts

Pam Wilson

' reaches out to them rather than them always reaching out. And they get a chance to say no thanks if they don't need help." . Tim continues to talk silently. He speaks through his interpretor, Nancy Aeschlimann, 35, of Denver.

She's been interpreting for eight years and says her dance background helped her learn signing. "The rhythm of dance is similar to the rhythm of signing," she says.

. ''When you 're handicapped, people automatically assume you don't know what you're doing. Education and attitude are keys to overcoming this program. "

have !O make their own arrangements for testing as well as accommodations with faculty.

"The student needs to try these things, and if they fall flat on their face, they need to experience that and learn from it."

"I don't get involved until after a stu­dent has tried and failed. If the pro fes sor says 'No, get out' of my class,' then I try to help," she says.

Instructor's attitudes are extremely helpful. "Most faculty," Yeager says, "are very accepting, although there are

Patricia Yeager

Nancy attends all classes with Tim but never takes the same classes for

, credit although she is currently a human services major. "Interpreting is like a telephone," she explains. "You just transmit the informatiQn -you

· don't process it." . Tim's expressions -reveal his words.

Nancy's fingers fly in a dance that has never been choreographed but is subtly guided like free-style jazz. Their bodies move and sway and words dance across the room.

Tim says he thinks things are better

_now for the handicapped- people can comrw.micate with sign language and there are more opportunities.

"And I want to prove I can do it,'' he says, "especially in my major."

No one can do it alone though, and help is appreciated.

Pam says the biology department has been very supportive. "They built me a shorter chemistry bench and lowered the microscope so I could use it easily' from my chair. And students carry dangerous chemicals for me."

She also says the faculty are realistic and the Auraria population accepts the disabled student easily.

"Once they. get to know you," she says, "they don't see you in a chair. They see past the disability at what you can do. Then they see the person, not the disability."

Yeager agrees. "Students here are very helpful, accommodating and open to disabled students. I haven't seen discrimination on this campus." · Rick says that people attending col­

lege are usually seeking enlightenment · and when they find it, they also drop stereotypes about handicapped people. ·

·Disaoled students terld toJinish their degrees more often than able-bodied students, says YeaJl;er.

"When you:re handicap~, people automatically assume you don't know what your're doing. Education and attitude are keys to overcoming this problem," she says.

Rick, who has a degree in geology and anthropology, hopes to continue with graduate school at UCD.

"I don't want to go to another cam­pus and re-establish myself," he ·says. "It's a lot of hard work."

Pam says she's looking forward to the upcoming battle$ in medical school, and Tim says he wants to survive agd keep going.

One obstacle to carrying on is money. Tim says he chose Metro because it was inexpensive and it had good interpretors. ·

Although there are no additional fees for library or student services, deaf students have to consider thibgs like

paying for an interpreter at a lecture or a first aid class at $8.00 an hour.

Handicapped parking spots aren't freebies - they cost $75 per semester. And dyslexics have to hire scribes or typists.

Money is a tough issue for the administration too, · says Yeager. "There are ten deaf students who need interpretors at Metro. The cost is $27,000 per year per student. It's a bind to chose between interpreters for . ten students and a lab that would serve hundreds."

Another issue Yeager says she feels strongly about is mainstreaming. That is, placing -the disabled student in the least restricted learning environment possible. For example-, a mentally retarded student may need some special classes, but he can take regular physical education classes.

"My philosophy," she says, "is that they're in the programs with everybody else. I don't really believe in special programs for the disabled."

She also says it's better emotional preparation to graduate frOJ:?1 a public or private .school rather than a special . school for the disabled. "All the abnor­mal behaviors are thrown together in a special school."

Rick remembers_ going to a ~i~ school which he says was a mistake. "I adopted the behavior of classmates \\Qth very low !Q's, and I could drool with the best of them," he says. ·

Yeager recalls her favorite example of mainstreaming. A man in a wheelchair was going down to sidewalk on Ninth Street Park hblding hands with an able-bodied woman.

"When I saw that," she says., "I knew we'd reached it. We've bridged the gap romantically."

Romance may be just one gap to bridge for the handicapped. There are still many obstacles to overcome just as the metal and concrete city creates

_obstacles for the sun downtown. But with proper growing instructions, nourishment and care, the flowers will still ~ blooming in December on the ~ fertile patch of ground called Auraria. ~

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Page 10: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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WHICH IS THE L~AST

EXPENSIVE WAY TO· . I

GET TO AURARIA?

A. 0 FLYING A PRIVATE PLANE. . . B. D BEING TRANSPORTED IN A HOT AIR. BALLOON C. D CATCHING THE RIDE

'

IF YOU CHECKED 11C", YOU'D BE RIGHT! ESPECIALLY NOW THAT RTD OFFERS

MONTHLY .COLLEGE STUDENT. DISCOUNTED BUS PASSES!!

YES, NOW YOU CAN CATCH THE RIDE FOR 33°/o LESS!

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?

LOCAL PASS

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IF IT USED

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PICK UP YOUR STUDENT PASS AT THE AUURUI CONVENIENCE STORE (LOCATED IN THE STUDENT CENTER). WHO KNOWS, MAYBE YOU'LL SAVE "DIOUCll llONEY TO BUY I

YOUR OWN PLANE OR HOT AIR BALLOON SOMEDAY! - .

I '

THE COLLEGE STUDENT DISCOUNTED MONTHLY PASS PAO. GRAM BEGINS NOVEMBER, 1984. PASSES ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT THE CONVENIENCE STORE UPON PRESENTA· TION OF A VALIDATED STUDENT IDENTIFICATION CARD.

NEED MORE INFORMATION? CALL THE TRANSPORTATION COORDINATOR AT 829·8493

I

.l

A

Sagan Cool ·on ·

by Keith Levise A#istant Editor, The Metropolitan

Carl Sagan, scientist, author, and spokesman for the advancement of the Nuclear Winter Theory, came to Denver last Friday to explain the theory and it's implications for planet Earth. Sagan spoke of the theoretical, though probable consequences of a limited nuclear war, in which dust, smoke, and debris from the explosions rises high into the atmosphere, blocking out sunlight, and choking off life while the Earth's temperature drops.

The thedry, says Sagan, evolved from a number of studies beginning with the explorations of Mars and a look at Mar­tian dust storms. Scientists also looked into the effects of volcanic explosions, and the collision of a comet or asteroid with Earth five million years ago, which may have produced effects ·similar to the nuclear winter, and could have caused the extinction of the dinosaurs.

No one is sure at what point the nuclear winter will be triggered, or how long it will last, but Sagan calculates that the bombing of as few as a hundred cities could bring it ab<)ut.

"Nuclear Winter," he says, "seems to imply ~hat if nation (A) · makes a devastating first strike on nation {B), the attacking nation J..A) is destroyed no matter what the leaders of (B) decide to do. Even if they don.'t lift a finger to retaliate, the cloud of soot and smoke and dust circulates around the planet and nuclear winter comes to the aggremve nation. It's an elaborate way of committing natio~ suicide."

Sagan's role as an anti-nuclear war activist comes into sharp focus when he. speaks about our present nuclear , policies. "There are too many nuclear weapons in the world," he says, "there are fifty thousand of them, almost all of them more p&werlul than the bombs that destroyed Nagasaki and Hiroshima. The major iaue is what are

all those weapo~ imfzing the suicide?"

"There are m&J nuclear winter, :'b11 main one is we Jlell

verifiable, and ~ strategic nucle• emphasize and pu _overkill capacit~)l arsenals, Sagan. nuclear equipped can destroy 160 S knowledge of th destruction of 160 adequate deterre Union; what is 811

"They don'ts ti There are only 23( planet. Why do weapons?" Sagan Wars "Scenario," w concept of an o system capable of missiles, and he American public The projected costj trillion (American) are other problel!ll

Sagan says if ~ permeable", if is missile, and tf simultaneously E "it would be tan disarmament States and the struction fo the ~ the United Stlltt Sagan says it "destablizing" eie. of power which ~ first strike.

AnOther proble11 that in order to­number of bilaM] the Outer Space 'E denounced. All .I~ "it iS 1ikely to mtlMl a nuclear war."

Sagan has harsij Reagan, bis i~ says the Preside

Page 11: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

October 24. 198.f

uclear Arms

for except max­bility of global

implications of t '-to my mind, the r to have bilateral,

divestitures of the arenals." To perspective the

of our nuclear ~ out that one

erican submarine viet cities. "If the sure and certain

oviet cities isn't an

! for the Soviet equate deterrent?" « 10,000 cities.

~ cities all over the !Ve need all these ~n't buy the "Star lich is based on the ter space defense

oying incoming­~n't believe the ould buy it either. f the system is one

oollars-and there as well. system was "im;

~knock out every it was put up the Soviet Union, ount to strategic

n the United Union." If con-

m was begun by '•lone, however, · ould become· a

t in the balance d lead to a Soviet

th the concept, is ld the system, a

c&aties, including baty, would have to 811, Sagan believes

the possibility of

ords f lr President poJcies. · Sagan

to think "the

Photos by Beagle

way ~o reduce nuclear weapons is to procure them."

"It's extremely worrisome ... even somebody- who understands the facts has a great deal of hard work to do to find a force that can prevent a nuclear war. Someone-who doesn't understand, who doesn't make it his business to know what the facts of life and death are in the nuclear age, is simply incompetent to be president," he says . .

The build-down concept, supported by the Administation is, according to Sagan, "simply a device for moderniz­ing our strategic forces, and (effective­ly) not disarmament at all."

1'No, rm talking about serious disar­mament," he says. 'Tm saying stop and go back t~ some low, but perfectly ade- · quate level of deterrance." Sagan has what he calls "a wish list" for disarma­ment. "I think we should commit. ourselves not to do star wars. I think we should ratify the Comprehensive Test ~an Treaty. I think we should agree on a nuclear freeze. But I think all of that

· is a mere preliminary to the actual major cutback in strategic weapons, and other nuclear systems. And accor­ding to repeated testimony by former

•directors of the Central Intelligence Agency and' the National Security Agency, this can be done with adequate · verifiability, with ·existing" national technical means of verification."

Sagan uses a special an~ogy to ~~ribe our.)luclear problems. "What do you do if there's a chance that your house will be washed away by a flood?" he asks. ''You might say, well, i(s only a theory that my house may be washed away by a flood, and my house has been h"'re for 2Q . years and it hasn't been washed away by ll flood. But peo­ple do things if the. honks of the ryver are rising-they tend to build levees. They don't say, well, ifs only a theory. They tend to take out flood insurance on their .houses, even if the chance of a flood is small. If there. i.! even a small chance of a great disaster, you go ta work to pr~ent it." 0

-

II , .

in the book center! Judging ~~ 2 pm; PRIZES: ABC Gift Certificate

First: $ 20 cert.

Sec9nd: $10. cert. ·

2 entries per person limit

AURARIA· BCXJK CENTER 955 Ltwrenc:e Sttttt· 629-3230 M-~8-7:30, Fri 8:5• Sn 10-J

·-

Page 12: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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. -Beethoven's Sixth .S oils MSC Concert by D.J. Owens Entertainment Editor, The Metropolitan

Doctor William Morse made one big mistake when he planned the MSC Symphony Orchestra's pro~am for the season opener last Sunday night Apparently for the purpose of variety, Morse included Beethoven's Sixth Sym­phony to finis)i off the evening in style.

. The uncharacteristically meager crowd didn't notice. They were asleep.

Throughout the first two pieces and the intermission, all went well and everyone seemed happy. After the break, however, the crowd thinned even further-perhaps they knew what was to follow. • .

The difference between the first and second halves was stark. In part, it was the excellence of Prokofiev's Lieutenant Kije Suite that paled Beethoven in com­parison.

facial expressions alone. Even the hiss­ing of St. Cajetan's radiators couldn't distract him.

The second piece of the evening was a concerto for saxophone, featuring vir­tuoso Vince Cnojek. His alto sax.flowecla like nectar from above;· his 40's-style, jazz-flavored cadenza was brilliant. Like the sign o{ a quality orchestra, in reverse, a quality soloist sounds like many instruments. Cnojek was a romantic, emotional character. Backed by only eleven musicians, he filled th~ four corners of the old church with his full sound.

The entire orchestra returned after a ten-minute break and it was as . if someone had spiked the water fountain with Quaaludes. Not to demean Dr . . Morse or the highly professional musi-..... cians, it was Beethoven who was to blame. The five agonizing movements droned on. One after another, heads began to nod. Even a member of the

~ group was seen near the end, leaning ~on her bass, trying to catch a "z" or two,. ~between measures. · ..o Overall, it was a bittersweet ~experience-somewhat of a letdown

Kije was originally intended as a movie score. The entire piece, in five movements, tells the story of an imaginary officer in the Russian army, invented to hide a mistake by the czar. When the czar wants to meet Kije, his death must also be invented.

.From the fife and 'drum parade that ushered in his birth, to the drum roll and taps that marked his funeral, the orchestra was impeccable and the piece was a delight.

MSC's Brass Blurting Boring Beethoven... after last summer's crescendo-filled concert. The second program of the season is scheduled for Sunday, December 2nd, and it will feature sym- • phonies by Tchaikovsky as Stravinsky. Let's hope they can keep-it all lively next time. 0 The sign of a quality orchestra is

when they sound like a single instru­ment. The strings were the most power­ful. They gave the impression of one massive violin. Indeed all were in perfect sync on Sunday.

"Twinkle Twinkle Llttle Star. .. " Let Us See How Good YOU Are

MSC STUDENT ACTIVITIES~ PROUDLY PRESENTS

'

THE THIRD ANNUAL \ 7 TED MACK f/.'\7

Memor1·a1 Amateur Hour ~ / . November 28

Auraria Student Center Room 330 [;f GRAND PRIZE .. , 1 vV'-

1 Semester In-State Tuition at MSC

Preliminary Competition

Oct. 24 Nov.14

6-9pm 2-6pm

Aurarla Student Center Mission

I • \

·we Need: Comedians, Dancers, Musicians, Jugglers, Singers, Mimes, Other?

For Info please call 629-2595

'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:--~~~~~~~---'

Prokofiev is celebrated for painting a picture in sound. The orchestra reproduced that picture thanks to Morse throwing directive darts left and right. This man could direct with his

~ "A TOTAL DELIGHT •.. COMPLETELY CAPTIVATING, -~--~ REFRESHINGLY DIFFERENT. The most delightful thing about ~ ,. . • 'The Gods Must Be Crazy' is the way it intercuts the goofy :- ~-· people with the real animals, natives and nature. • • •

/ The absurdity of modem life is brilliantly contrasted

: ~· .·~J ' with the simplicity of the natives." C :;;~r' Re• Reed "IEW YORK POST

"SO YOU'RE SICK OF HOLLYWOOD MOVIES... J£. . · take your friends. your kids. lt:s that good. that funny. -~--k . that sexy. that crazy and yes. touching." • 9··-~' , •• •

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Kathleen Carroll. NEW YORK DAILY NEWS : • r

" ... MEET AN ABSOLUTELY BEGUILING CHARACTER ... " "Spending a very little time with him is enough to make you believe that the sweet soul of Buster Keaton has found another lodging place." Sheila Benson LOS ANGELES TIMES '

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STARTS FRIDAY

Exclusive Engagement

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Page 13: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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--- - -- --I

Steve Martin explains his latest project: "A writer named Roy Blount wrote a piece on why he hates celebrities, so I wrote a piece in defense of celebrities. It's a comic piece .. .I can't think of any of the jokes right now, but believe me, it's funny!"

October 24, 1984

MSC Theatre professor Jon Walter clowns with Johnny Carson on "The Tonight Show" earlier t~ year. Walter will be clowning and -lecturing in Student Center 330 on Ha,lloween at noon.

IMPORTED BY LABATT IM!'ORTERS, li':C., AMHERST, NEW YORK

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

Page 14: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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October 24, 1984

,. -Campus Treated To MiraCk Musical·

....

Scenes From "Anyone Can Whistle." The sing­ing and dancing Cookies pay homage to the miracle of the rock.

I

by Norma Restivo Reporter, The Metropolitan

follow, arid people will fall for them too. ·

But, where do miracles begin and , who conjur~ them up? They begin in

"a not too distant towii," a sterile, threadbare, black and white set con­sisting of such places as City Hall, Hotel Superbe, and (snicker) Cookie Jar, an abode for the mentally insane.

The musical "Anyone Can Whistle," presented by the MSC Players was a fair effort with a timely message- miracles can be manufac­tured and, when they are discovered as mere inventions, more miracles will Enter the mayor(es.s) of this fine

Ifs not what you see ... its how you s~e it.

,..... I \Pf'\om· h.h h1 ... 'n1 lw1 o\\ll \\.I\ nl lool11l).! , 11 1h 1 rn.~' 'll\\

l\t)(tlf... , .... \.!l\IUg \tlll . l l h.mu.' Id ... hp\\ \Pt~r \l .. IOll.Ol litP ,It • '' h.,,,,J th1nt1>:h !ht• I,,,.,,. I r.unl'· pnigr.1r11 I h1· lht'llk' '' ~'. · t ,1111plh I rlt' I Ill\\ do 111lr l'lllt•r' lu' t -uhrrnt pl1l 11t1' lrk1•

1 lht''\' Tollo\\111~ lhl' 111 .. 1n1t IHU1' 11'.•lo\\ In \\t't•f..., Int nnu.• l"llllllr<'' \\rll I~· tl1,1.,.•n .uxl puhlr.J1"I 111 1J11, 'f\llt'. l.1tl1

~- "ht10J, · tr"''•' I 1.1 lit' "rll tht'll h1• t•nt.-rl~l 111tn .1 11.1tron,1l '' Hllf ll ·l1lin11. II\' HU 'l ll4 M ii" 111 ... \our pllt llol!,1.1ph '' ill I•· ...._ , .11

, 111 f..1xl,1k' llrl',lk rll.i\!,11111\' dhtrrliut"l ,11 < nllt'l~t·, .111 .ll r11" ~ lht.• u lll lll" t

'~ \ \,l~t.· 'lil t. '\ t 1t u i•11 111t~ 1l lt ' nil 1'Pd.1J.. 11f1'11 ~ci(l.1k h .. 1' llll' :. rrl.!ht 11!1111111 .111 \t>ti'r p1t1l10t'-t.1J..n-:11.~~1, '4> ~t·I out 1lwrc \\tlh \Plll l\.t•l.1k lilrn .1rnl ~1\t• "'\our

h: ... t .. hul~

J>hotogr.1ph' I )lit• :

,,

1 '

'>uhnHt l'hoto' to: The Metropolitan

Puhli< .i lu>n I ),itP: November 28, 1984

Stu. Ctr. Rm. 156

Campus life.

town, the emminent Cora Hoover Hooper, played to the teeth by Jayne, Eubanks. She's a slim vamp of a character with a penchant for notorie­ty. She sashays. about the stage like she owns it and the audience knows it. Her town is destitute and Cora is iust itch~ng to liven the place up. The ques­tion is how?

Never fear! Enter Comptroller Schub, the snivellng nerd of the hour. He's~ man with the plan (for Cora and the town's finances) and his boorish boob of a character was especially effective in the hands of actor John Denny.

Between Schub, the town treasurer

MSC LECTURE SERIES

"Let him • ?

entertain· yoa: : . ~·

Wood flrt Scalptar~s. •• Jon Walter­

Artist, Humorist, Entertainer

October J 1. 1914 Wednesday 12-130 p.m.

Aurarla Student Center Room 330 $1.00

Lectures may be rescheduled or cancelled without notice.

Doug Bascom

(played by John Fortin) and the Chief of Police (actor Guy Williams) a ' miracle is born. It's a huge rock that, seemingly, spouts water fiom nowhere.

The town peasants (as Cora affec­tionately calls them) fall hard for this fake miracle. (Not one of them discover . the pump hidden behind the rock.) • Tourists and pilgrams come from near and far to witnes.s the sight, breaking into song at the first glimpse of the celestial rock. Fortunately, most of the musiCal numbers were well rehearsed, though the projection levels seemed to falter occasionally.

Obviously, this rotten egg of a miracle has to be cracked. Enter J. Bowden Hapgood, man of the hour, played by El Armstt:_ong. Hapgood is assistant to Dr. Detmold, overseer of the Cookie Jar. . ....

Armstrong's performance was nicely paired with that of Rosanna Rains, alias Nurse Apple, the official babysit­ter for the loonies in the bin, called, what else, Cookies.

Rains' character was snappy-a bard as nails nurse with a butter soft interior. In the -midst of .this rath'r naive tale she comes across halfway sincere, and her singing voice is clear and true.

Armstrong's per_formence was fre­quentJY monotone, but his love scenes with Nurse Apple were sufficient to I · keep the momentum going. Together they take OQ the cynical world, Hapgood imploring us to "do it, don't say don't" and "maybe you'll fall but it's better than not trying at all." His voice was strong and on key but, occa­siqnally, seemed to be muffled by either acou~ticS or ineptitude.

The Cookies livened the evening with their mindless bobbing about and vacant stares. Two or three even prov­ed themselves to be graceful dancers. Their costumes were also eye-catching, _,. as were the great mayoress' . Her bitchy character came to life in the elegant outfits she displayed. •

Dave Sckolnik punctuated the even­ing with a hilarious portrayal of Dr. Detmold. His manic laughter sparked more of the same in the rather sparse · audience.

"Anyone Can Whistle," though not as highly polished at it could have been, was entertaining and humorous. If you're into light-hearted fun, the musical continues in Room 271, Arts Building, this Thursday, Saturday and

• Sunday. 0

-- ---- ---- ----- --- -------------------- ----.. .__-~,. ...... .,.. ..... .,. .# .. ,.,.

Page 15: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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Page 16: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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SPORIS •

Snow Holds Men Indoors for District Tourney

(I:> -

Old Man Winter has prevailed again. While this early snow brought some

grief to many auraria students, it has also cancelled two soccer games for the men's varsity squad.

However, the team has been practic­ing indoors in preparartion for next weeks NAIA Division VII Soccer Tour­nament at the Colorado Kickers soccer club-in Golden.

Senior Qan Coffey said he is really excited about the meet because the team has the potential to win the tour­nament. He added that his goal as a senior was to qualify for the national

Good friends keep you going when all you want to do is stop.

Your feet hurt. Your legs hurt. Even your teeth hurt.

But your friends thought you looked terrific. And with them urging you on, your first 10 kilometer race didn't finish you. You finished it.

Now that ~ou have some­thing to celebrate, make sure your support team has the beer it deserves. Tonight, let it be Lowenbrau.

tournament in November. _._ Coffey said the team also realizes

that they can't get too confident because then they could "get blown­out out of the tournament."

This past week the men had to cancel two games. The first was last Saturdays. match witli Bartlesville Wesleyan Col­lege and the other was against Regis which has been rescheduled for this Monday at 3 p.m. at the Rangers field.'

If the season was to end today, the men would face the Colorado School of Mines in the first round of the district . tournament. Mines is the second place team in the league while the Roadrunners are currently in third.

Regis, the number one team, would face Denver University, the fourth place team. The winner of the district tournament will qualify for the NAIA Regionals on November 9.

The men will also be facing cross town rival DU this Saturday at home at 2p.m. 0

UNC.Stops Metro Leads

· They led during all three, but couldn't win Jl game.

That was the story last Wednesday night as the MSC women's volleyball team was dropped in three straight games against an explosive University of Northern Colorado team:

In the first game, the lady Roadrun­ners jumped out to an early 6-2 lead ~ when the Bears called a time out.

UNC's coach must have said something to motivate her team during that time out, as they then quickly exploded for 13 points, winning 15-6

The second game was unbelievable. Metro got an early lift when Terri Mohr, last weeks NAIA District VII player of the week, dove and bumpeci up a UNC spike that was literally inches from the court.

Everyone was playing well for Metro. Sue Hays was playing a smart game .a,s she would tap the ball to the opponents side for points when they thought she was going to set the ball to a MSC player. ·

Everything was going well for Metro as Donna Baros had come in from off the bench with an ankle injury and she . was playing well above expectancy. The ladies had opened up a strong 13-3 lead.

But it wasn't over yet. Here came that quick-scoring, explosive UNC offense. At one time MSC held a 14-8 lead, but they couldn't put .t:Jie game ~ away.

The Bears fought back to a shocking come from behind win 16-14. .

Then in the third game, MSC had early leads of 3-0 and 6-4 respectively. But the closest the ladies came to UNC was an 8-8 tie before the Bears·explod­ed late in the game, again, to . win 15-11.

The remainder of the week was bet­ter for Metro as they beat Adams State College and Ft. Lewis Colfege in three straight games each before dropping to . . W estem State College 3-1. The women • now hold a 20-13 record. 0

Page 17: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

October 24, 1984

-

CAMPUS .-RECREATION . . ,.......Coed Racquetball Tournament-Mix­

er tournament (loose your partner) Fri­day October 26 at 6 p.m. Winner will be determined by . points. Deadline is October 25. ·

Annual Turkey Trot-Thursday1

..!November 1 at 3 p.m. Sign up for the 2.35 mile course throught Confluence Park. Men, Women, Faculty and Staff . divisions. Entry fee is $1.00 -_

3 on 3 Basketball;_M1\.Ildatory meetir!g for team captains and players without

"'teams is Monday, November 5· at 5 p.in. in PER 211. Two divisions-6-foot and over and 6-foot and under. Play begins Thursday, November 8 at 6 p.m. and continues Tuesday and Thursday evenings through December 6, There is a $5.00 team entry fee. , -

MSC Ladies ·_Battle Sno\V

The weather snowed the women's soccer team this·past week, forcing the postponement of two of its three scheduled games, and hampering the game it lost to the University of Nor­thern Colorado 2-0 last Wednesday.

,__ Although Greeley only received three inches of snow the day before, the con­ditions were not ideal. The field was damp and muddy, especially in ftont of the goals, and the air was bitter cold on the bare legs of the players.

p. The Roadrunners never really charg­ed up their offense and UNC .dominated throughout · the game. Metro goalkeeper Dani Denight, covered with mud ..from head-to-toe, had numerous saves as UNC continual­ly drilled the ball towards the goal. ~ Occasionally MSC managed to get the ball onto the other half of the field, only to lose it -to the .opposing defenders. Very few shots were taken on UNC's goal.

Saturday's game a~anst Colorado State University and Monday's make­

>up game with .UNC, which was cancelled two ' weeks ago, will be rescheduled before Nov. 10.

The team will travel to sunny California on a three-game , roadtrip this weekend. · tJ

Flag Football Standings Gold Division Pall Bearers 3-0 R.O.T.C. 3-1 Raiders 1-2 T.N.T.C.H 1-2 Extras 0-3

Silver Division Delta Sigma Phi The Conniptions

al Leftovers ~ Crabs · ] Misfits ~This week:

3-0. . 1-1

1-1 0-1 0-2

~ Thursday, O~tober 25 · =-....,...~~;;;;;·=..;;;;.;;::11 U 3 p.m. Crabs v.s. Leftovers

Students were able to take advantage of the Third Annual Campus 4 p.m. Misfits v.s. Conniptions

Recreation Swim Meet in the Auraria pool last Wednesday. Ribbons Tuesday, October 30 were awarded to the top three finishers in each event. 3 p.m. Raiders v.s. Pall Bearers

4 p.m. Extras v.s. T.N.T.C.H. THIS WEEK

Wednesday, October 2'4 Volleyball v.s. Air Force a~ home 7 p.m. Men's Soccer at Air Force

Friday, October 26 Volleyball at Simon Fraser Universi-ty Tournament in Canada I Women's Soccer at Chico State

Saturday, October 27 Volleyball at Simon Fraser Universi­ty Tournament in Canada

· Cross Countr at CSU Invitational in

/~vision Centers\

IN ·SPO~TS Fort Collins Men's Soccer v.s. Denver Universjty at home 2 p.m. Women's Soccer v.s. Westmont Col­lege

Sunday; October 28 Women's Soccer v.s. Long Beach College

Wednesday, October 31 Volleyball at Regis 7 p.m. Men's Soccer NAIA District VII Tournament

Dr. Patrick M. Fowler OPTOMETRIST

11050 W. Colfax across from

Auraria Campus 825-6999

Montbello Vision Center Montbello State Bank Building

45th and Peoria. Suite 507 373-5990

Idaho Sprin~ · Vi~on Center 217 16th Street

1-576-4244

$20 Discount to . Students, Faculty & Staff with Purchase of

Prescription Eyewear or Contact Lens Package Plus

Extended Wear Contact Lenses $80 per pair

[Does not include Docto_r's fee. Excludes $20 Discount.] . -tr Free Se~vices '-tr Adjustment of Frames -tr Minor Frame Repairs-tr

Expires 12131184

Floor Hockey Standings Blackhawks 2-0-1 Weasles on Ice 1-1-1 Gonads 1-1-0 Checkers 1-1-0

· Team U.S.A. 'o-2-0 Scrogs 0-2-0

This week:

Thursday, October 25 . Team U.S.A. v.s. Weasles on Ice Scrogs v .s. Gonads B!ackhawks v.s. Checkers

CJY NCS ~tr_· COUNSELING~ ({/.""~ SERVICES 1740 Williams Street, Denver, CO 80218 (303) 333-9852

TIRED OF FOOD· CONTROLLING YOUR

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THERE ARE TWO ·SIDES TO , BECOMING-A NURSE IN THE ARMY.

• Anorexia Nervosa • Bulimia • Bulimarexia • , Compulsive Overeating

' And they're both repre, sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means ~rou 're part of a health care svstem in which educational and career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar

on t~e right: means you command respect_ as an Army officer. If you're eammg a BSN. wnte: Army Nurse Opportunities: P.O. Box 7713,

We offer a unique outpatient clinic for clients who wish to continue functioning ip their employment and school situa­tions.

Our clients consistently find , recovery from these pro­gressive and dangerous diseases. '

Cri>clit Carri· & I n"tral>t'l' Paynwnt' Clifton, NJ 07015. · ·

ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU cAN BE. An·t•ptl'd '"d

II> \

Individual Financial Plans ~

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:::;

Page 18: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

I -

This calendar is printed as a courtesy to the students of Auraria and may be edited for spaCf· Please submit calendar items early.

Wednesday 24

~ Fllgnt Team meeting. Student Center 230 CID at 1 p .m, Call 629-3316 for more information.

AHEC Community R8tottons Conference Service tuncheons. Staff of MSC. UCO and DACC welcome. Seating limited. 11 :30 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. Call 629-8533 for more ,Lnformation.

Alpha Eta Rho/ Professional Aviation Frater­nity meeting. Student Center 230 ·C/O at noon. Cail 629-3316 for more information.

MSC llack Students Alliance and Associated Block Students meeting. Stu­dent Center 351 G,noon to 1 p.m. Call 629-3322 for more Information.

Aurorla Jewish Student Alliance meeting. Student Center 251 at noon. Call 629-333 for mo~e Information.

MSC Department of Music presents Plano Concert with Jon Kllbonoff In St. Cajetan's at 8 p .m. Call 629-3180 for more

·information.

Peter Gaulke opens tonight at the "Com­edy Works" located on Larimer Square. 1226 15th St. Call 592-1178 for more lnformanon.

"Nicaragua, Report from the Front," a new film. will be shown at noon, 1 p.m .. and 7 p .rl). followed j:ly a discussion In Student Center Room 330. Sponsored by UCO Con-trol America Support Committee. '

Denver Center Cinema presents "Mid-Day Break-Two delllghtfully scary movies" for only .50 cents at' 12:15. "Seeing the Movies" film/lecture at 6:45 p .m .. "Hiroshima. Mon Amour" at 7:30 p.m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa Sf. Call 893-4000 for more Information

Health Coreen Sclenc.e Program wlll have Frank Jimenez of the California School of Podlatrlc Medicine who will talk to students at 1 :30 p .m. In the West Classroom room 264.

Thursday 25

Aurarta .Jewish Student Alliance presents a political debate between Aaron Harber and Eric Field at 7 p .m . at 1959 S. Colum­bine Ave. Call 629-3333 for more Informa­tion.

"C.P.R. Class-Red Cross Certification" by MS9 Student Health Clinic. 9 to 11:30 a .m.. Student Center. 254/6. Coil 629-2525 for more Information.

MSC Players and Music Activities Commit­tee present "Anyone Can W,hlstle" In MSC Theatre: Arts Building 271 at 8 p .m. Call 629-3033 for more Information.

' MSC Black student Alliance and UCO Associated Block Students meeting. Stu­dent Center 351 G. 5 to 6 p .m. Call 629-3322 for more Information. ·

Eat and Talk In St. Francis Lounge. 5 to 7 p.m. Call 623-2340 for more information.

-"Laurel and Hardy Laugh Marathon" 3Y2 hours at the Denver Center Cinema located at 1245 Champa St. Coil 893-4000

' for more information.

Friday 26 , iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

MSC Department of Music- . preS'ents-Classicol Guitar Concert by Michael Chapdelaine at 8 p .m. St. Cajetan's Coll 629-2714 for more Informa­tion.

MSC Block Student Alliance and UC.D . Associated Black Students meeting. Stu­

dent Center 35-1 G, 10 to 11 a .m. Cail 629-3322 for more information.

MSC United Moslem Students meeting. Stu­dent Center 330 A. 4 to 6 p.m. Cail 629-3185 (or more Information . .

MSC Student Activities Band In the Mission. noon to 4 p.m. Coll 629-2595 ·for more information. · ·

MSC Pdl'ent Resource Center in St. Francis rooms 1 and 2. 8 a.m. to 5 p .m. Call 629-8533 for more Information.

DACC Developmental Studies "Learning Disabilities for Adult Learners Workshops." Student Center 230, 8:30 a .m. to 5 p.m. Cail

. 629-8455 for more information.

Randy Bell will perform at the Rainbow Music Hail 2175 S. Cherry at 7:30 p .m. Coil 691-6000 for more Information.· .

Leon Russell will perform at the Turn of the Century 8930 E. Hampden Ave. at 7:30 p .m. Cail 779-1012 for more information.

Denver Center Cinema presents- "Tight Little Island" at 7:15 p .m. and "A night at the Opera" staring the Marx Brothers at 9 p .m. DCC Is locoted at 1245 Champa St. Coll 893-4000 for more Information.

_Saturday 27

MSC Flight Team practice at Tri County Air­port at 8:30 a .m. Cali 629-3316 for more Information. -

NOW INTERVIEWING F~r exceptional_ College grads

CURRENT OPPORTUNITIES:

*Aviation

* Nuclear Engineering * Business Management * Shipboaid Operations

*law * Intelligence

*Medicine * Civil Engineering

'·Your Navy representative can be reached at 303/844-4892.

An F.qual Opportunity Employer

Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast.

MSC Players and Music Activities Commit­tee presents-"Anyone Can Whistle" In MSC Theatre: Arts Building 271 at 8 p.m. Call 629-3033 for more Information:

"C.P.R. Class-Red Cross Certification" by MSC Student Health Clinic. 9 a.m. to 2 p .m. In Student Center 151. · Cail 629-2525 for more information . .

MSC · Deportment of Conferences and Seminars present "Assessment of the COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) Patient." Student Center 330, 9 a .m. to 1 p.m. Cali 629-3115 for more information.

Underwater lody Composition Tesftng PERH pool 8:30 a.m. to.1 p.fn. Call 629-3145 for more Information.

Working Pare~t Conference In St. Cojetan's. 9 a.m. to noon. Call 629-8362 for more Information.

"DeGarmo and Key land' will perform at the Rainbow Music Hali 2175 S. Cherry at 7 and 9:30 p .m. Cali 691-6000 for more Infor­mation.

Arvada Center presents- "The Art of George Balanchine" performed by Edward Villella and Dancers at 8 p .m. 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. Call 431-3083 for more . Information.

Denver center Cinema presents- "Feet Flrsf' at 1 :30 p .m .• "Mod~rn Tlmes" staring Charlie Chaplin at 315 p.m .. "Pygmallon" at 7: eQc.~ffl. and " Exterm,nating A~gel" at 9 p .m'.ttt: Is located at 1245 Chompo St. Call 893-4000 for more Information.

I '

Sunday 28 I ,

MSC Players and Music kctlvltles Commit­tee presents - "Anyone Can Whistle" In MSC Theatre: Arts Building 271 at 8 p.m. Cali 629-3033 for more Information.

st. Elizabeth's Servtces qt 9 and 1 a.m.

"Mercytul Fate and Exc"er'' will perform at the Rainbow Music Hail t2175 S. Cherry at 7:30 p.m. Call 691-6000 for more Information.

Denver Center J Cinema presents-"Genevleve'1 at 3:30 p .m .. "Modern Times" at 5:4~ p.m. and "E,xter­mlnatlng Angel" at 7:30 p .m. DCC is located at 1245 Champa St. Coll 893-4000 for mo~e Information.

. Monday 29

Aurarla Interfaith Ministry presents "Cen­tral America," personal reflections by Lucia Guzman and Eric Wright. St. Francis Center at noon. Call 623 -2340 for more Information.

Monday Night - Fodtboll in Hie Mis­sion - Seattle at San I Diego· on the big screen. 7 to 10 p .m. Call 629-3185 for more Information.

Radio Station Commlttee meeting. Student Center 255 A at 11 a .m. Call 629-2797 for more Information.

Pumpkin Carving Contest-Student Center Book Center. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Call 629-3230 for more information.

Tuesday 30

College Young Democrats meeting. Stu­dent Center 230 CID at 4 p.m.

Baptist Student Union meeting St. Francis Center room 1 at noon. Cali 623-2340 for more Information.

Alcohollcs Anonymous meeting. Student Center 257, 2 to 3 p.m. Cali 629-2511 for more Information.

UCD Institute for Urban and Public Polley Research- Management Certification Pro­gram. Student Center 330. Cail 629-5277 for more Information.

Denver center Cinema presents-"The Holocaust'1 fllm/lecture at 6:45 p.m. and "The Diary of Anne Frank" at 7:30 p.m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa st. Cail 893-4000 for more Information.

Ogden Theatre presents- "Modern Times" storing Charlle Chaplin at 7:30 p .m. Plus Chaplln shorts at 5:35 and 9: 15 p.m. Ogden Theatre Is ,located at 935 E. Colfax. Call 832-4500 for more information.

Wednesday 31

-MSC Music Department presents a Student 'Recital In St. Cojetan's at 2 p.m. Coll 629-27141or more Information.

MSC Flight Team meeting. Student Center 230 CID at 1 p .m. Call 629-3316 for more Information.

MSC Block Student Alliance and UCO Associated Black -Students meeting. stu­dent Center 351 G, -noon to 1 p .m. Call 629-3322 for more Information.

AHEC Community Relations Conference Service Luncheons. staff of MSC, UCO and DACC welcome. Seating Limited. 11 :30 to 1 :30 p .m. Call 629-8533- for more Information.

MSC Earth Sclencd Club Workshop and Fiim Serles. Student Center 254/6. noon to 1 p.m. Call 629-3042 for'm'ore. information .

MSC Publlc _Forum and !.ecture Serles-"Sculpting." by Jon Waiter. MSC Faculty. StudenrCenter 330 noon to 1:30 p.m. Call 629-2595 for more Information.

UCD student Activities Film - "Monster on the Campus" showing In the Mission, noon to 4 p .m. Call 629:3399 for more information.

Transcendental Meditation techni­que-Free Introductory Lecture. Student Center 254, 3 to 7:30 p.m.

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii___./

Reps' Elig~biJity ·Examined cont. from page I I procedures were woWd still stand."

The current judicial board, con­sisting of four me91bers, took office about a month ago. They are the first board to scrutinize !ASMS~ so closely. Dave Sutherland J encourages the scrutiny. · I ·

"The main reason for going to school is to get an educatibn.""lf people have too low of an average (grade point)

they should spend time on studies rather then student government."

The Wednesday meeting, held in SC 340D, is.open to the public. It will close ' when _the· board deliberates the appeals. Some appeals may be extended to the following week. ·

"If we start getting serious inside our org~ization," Sutherland said, "some students are bound to say we're serious ,~ about what we're doing." D

Page 19: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

_ _.........,..~ • .....-~~ ,. .. ,. •• •,,.'? ..... ··"""#--·~·~ ... ' ····'•"····• ....... • .. .-,,,,.•.•.,."ff.--..•.•.".•.• •-...W...• ... 1 ... • .. • .. •.•v•-,. .• .. ~'\;~ .. '· \V,..~~':i.'~"~ .. "''f ''·

October 24, 1984

For Sale

RVI FAIUl.OUS fUllllY Form Fresh Felines for FREE. Fun· for folks flom 1111• to nnv. Fetch 0 few Fellne1 on lhe fourlh Friday (10/26). 7400 W. 26th Ave .• 6'l9·251J7.

SID IOOY1 Har*'! CllallOn loft (le4. l'ltl IOdlet Ille I M or "*1'111M 6 or 7 N. A deal at HO. CCII UM, days 629·2ll07 lleaM .-gel 10/· •

.a; 10Ya COW'l1l110N SKI IOOY1 2 polr $45 eoc:tl. Coll 832·56<16. 1211

CONTACT IJNIU os !Ow 01 106.00 lncludJng exom. Weor lhemflomeson'ledaymostprescrlp~ons. 825-2500 1211

ElC1INDID WIM CONTACT I.EMii $15/J oomplele Includes exom. 82~2500 1211

. (. . HEY-2 1914 CHEVY'S Musi sell. price breaking 700.00-600.00for 2·54's; 985-3342 10/2A

• SEU YOUR COMl'Ullll Al o Used Compu1er Bozaor. Scrtur· 1 day, November 24. For lnformotlon: 771-0211 11121

IASllNET WITH ACCQSOlllfS, Dressing toble. Dlshwosher. Ping Pong lobleloccessortes. Couch. loveseot. choir set. ~ size bed set. choir. No Junk. coll Denbe/.Jelf ot 373.5549 10/2A • meoMOOEL1s200.979·2946otter6 1012A

~ ~

! POSTERS FOR SALE : • « • « • Michael Jackson « ~ « • T e0?)y Bea Rs « ! Bob MaRley & OtbeRs : • « • • 595 -7783 • • ..

Services

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MOllNCa IN ACCOUNTINla PllNCftD and lntermedlale. Joyce 9&8·67 47. p .m. or 233-8786 rnellOQll/days. 1216

COMPUTH toFTWAft AHO TH£ORY MORINQ, 17 year prof· fesstonal In the Industry. All aspects ol lndustrytaught ot reasonable rates. Cell Scott. 261·2348 8' leov9' message anytime. 1117

lliUAltcH: Colalog of 16.000 topics. Send S1. Research. 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago L 60605. (312) 922-0300. 121)

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QINElllC WIOOINe PltOTOGRAPNY. I shoot. you keep negs. Don't gel burned by 500% makups. Dependable. toP' quality. reasonable not rote. Colt Jim 629·251J7 or 777-968!;

1216

MONTAQUE TYPING atVICI. Toto! Word Processing. Accvtocy o Priority. Editing Available. 2512 So. University Blvd number 602. 80210. by Appl. Ccll 698-0213. 10/U

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lllNT-A-TV ,,.. Color $34 a month. Student Rate. owned and operated by afudenls. 388-5995 1216

WORD PROCESSING - reports, term papers, letters, malling lists, resumes. Fast, accurate service, editing available,, reasonable rates. Don't settle for'just any typing service when you can . have professionally prepared work. ACCENT ON

Earthquake? WHAT earthquake?

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Help Wanted

.. PART-TM PltON: WOK. S. BroadWOy orea. Good starting pay-Selling notion's Leading Publlcollons. Late aflemoons and weekends OllOllable. easy work. Excellent worlclng coo­di~. Diane 871-0671 10/2A . AQGIUSIVE INOIVIOUALS For retail soles In a new. exclusive sunglasses 8outlque. No experience necessary. Flexible hours. good wages. Cell Greg ot 629-5588 otter 6 p .m. 11/7

SECURITY QUAID/DOORMAN Study while you work· Presllglous Office Bulldlng Downtown needs Security Guard· Start Immediately-Good Shlft·Personable-Neot·Honest· Responsible-Please oall 893·2305 10/2A

Housing

RllNllHlD IUFffTS, .Hedi. Water. Gas. Paid. Sec. Bulldlng S175 month a Deposit 534-2276 otter 12:00. 1229 Bannoelc

10/24

• UNIQUE AHO PalONAUZEO SIRVICI for setectlng the room-mate you want to live with. Ccll 534· 7220 10/2A

ClasS'Ads. ... For Buying, Selling,

B.enting, Swapping: try the Classified Ads.

'/

-Photo by J.M. Bailey

Fil& HOUSING SERVICli Full lnformollon on rentals ond room­. motes Is ovollable at the Off Ccmpus Housing Office. Stu­

dent Assistance Center. CN 108. Call 629-3474. 10/31 - HI .TECH

·LORENT

3 mo minimum rental • SPLIT SCREEN WITH LINE

LOC.K • 14X10 RESOLUTION • 22 PROGRAMMABLE

FUNCTION KEYS • UP TO 4 PGS. OF MEMORY

Ore1~c1eo l~.iEI Other l!Cdels d•a1 table. ~olflcepr~ts ,

CALL 7 59-5440

J

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Page 20: Volume 7, Issue 10 - Oct. 24, 1984

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