volume 7, issue 9 - oct. 17, 1984

20
7 Issue 9 .. MSUCD? Merger· Plan ,. Start By Robert Davis Reporter, The Metropolitan Metropolitan S. tate College slipped ' - · one step closer to extinction last Tues- day as the legislative committee · reviewing Colorado's education system was presented a proposal to merge the school with CU. The Higher Education Committee , , received a plan to reorganize the statewide governing structure, including elimination of the Auraria board and combining MSC with UCD. The proposal calls for colleges with similar roles and missions to be govern- ed by a board-with the excep- t. tion of MSG. The recommendation. to merge the schools on Auraria, with the largest campus population in the state, would put MSC under the CU Regents, a board that deals primarily with graduate programs. According to Edgar Benton, of the Colorado Commission on Higher Education, the merger would help both schools. "Graduate teachers need to teach undergraduate classes," Benton said. "These students should have the benefit >-. of teachers that are involved in research." · Fred Hopkins of the MSC Alumni Association disagreed, and said that · Denver's needs are already being met. , .. We have 16,000 graduates," Hopkins said. "But, we have had 150,000 community members who ·attended MSC for professional enrichment. 90 percent of our graduates stay in the metro area- they give back to the community what they received," \ Hopkins said. The only MSC student was a written analysis from Brendan Kelly, representative to the Auraria board. His report said a board is needed to solve on-campw academic disputes and that a merger will not benefit the students or faculty at Auraria. Lisa Espiritu, President of the Associated Students of MSC, was scheduled to testify but she left early in the afternoon. Espiritu said she would C try to get on the November agenda also. The committee meets again at the Capitol on November 9. Although some. observers didn't endure the day-long debate, the con- ".ersation was maintained by the com- mittee members. They questioned & almost everyone that testified. Rexe.r Berndt, President of Ft. Lewis College, was asked for his view on Auraria after he pitched for his school. "If you put it (MSC) under CU (Regents) you are creating; an extremely powerful political force," Berndt said. "The· most powerful force in the state; cont. on pace 3 - ,- - - ,/ The Snow Declared © October 17, 1984 , Blizzard Criwks by Kevin Vaughan Editor, The Metropolitan Once again Denver and the Auraria campus were caught off guard by an unusually severe snowstorm and classes at all three colleges were cancelled until 5 p.m. Tuesday. · Denver Mayor · Federico Pena declared a snow emergency around 5 a.m. Tuesday, and soon thereafter the · campw closed until noon. The closure was later extended to 5 p.m. This was the second severe snowstorm to affect Auraria in less than a year, but this time students were kept abreast of the situation. Last November, the that claaes had been cancelled due to Flight Team page 8 inclement weather came after many students had already left for school. Those who made it to Auraria in that 1983 blizzard arrived only to find park- ing lots and sidewalks covered with knee-deep snow. According to Larry Ambrose, Direc- tor of Community Relations for AHEC, the decision to close the campus was made after the city had a snow emergency. "We were waitipg what the city.decided," Ambrose said. "We had a handle on the situation and made the decision (to cancel about 5:30 a.m." . Ambrose said creW$ began working to clear parking lots and walkways Monday night and that by early Tues- day morning three lots were finished Culture page 10 and the rest were done by noon. The decision to extend the closure of the 30,000 plus student campus to 5 p.m. came after AHEC officials realized many side streets were still impassable. · "We thought we could be open by noon," Ambroee said. 0 "We extended the closure when it became apparent that many side streets in the city were still not cleared." Ambrose said AHEC has two choices when faced with an emergency like this. Clames c.an either be cancelled 01 the campus can be closed altogether. When climes are cancelled, Ambrose said, personnel are still required to report for work. However, when thE campus is closed- as it wu Tuesday-everyone gets the day off. 0 ' , - . page 15

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Page 1: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

Volum~ 7 Issue 9

..

MSUCD? Merger· Plan

,. He~rings Start By Robert Davis Reporter, The Metropolitan

Metropolitan S.tate College slipped ' - · one step closer to extinction last Tues­

day as the legislative committee · reviewing Colorado's education system was presented a proposal to merge the school with CU.

The Higher Education Committee , , received a plan to reorganize the

statewide governing structure, including elimination of the Auraria board and combining MSC with UCD.

The proposal calls for colleges with similar roles and missions to be govern­ed by a ~ngle board-with the excep-

t. tion of MSG. The recommendation. to merge the

schools on Auraria, with the largest campus population in the state, would put MSC under the CU Regents, a board that deals primarily with graduate programs.

~ According to Edgar Benton, of the Colorado Commission on Higher Education, the merger would help both schools.

"Graduate teachers need to teach undergraduate classes," Benton said. "These students should have the benefit

>-. of teachers that are involved in research." ·

Fred Hopkins of the MSC Alumni Association disagreed, and said that· Denver's needs are already being met.

, .. We have 16,000 graduates," ~ Hopkins said. "But, we have had

150,000 community members who ·attended MSC for professional enrichment.

90 percent of our graduates stay in the metro area- they give back to the community what they received,"

\ Hopkins said. The only MSC student repr~tation

was a written analysis from Brendan Kelly, stutlen~ representative to the Auraria board.

His report said a board is needed to solve on-campw academic disputes

• and that a merger will not benefit the students or faculty at Auraria.

Lisa Espiritu, President of the Associated Students of MSC, was scheduled to testify but she left early in the afternoon. Espiritu said she would

C try to get on the November agenda also. The committee meets again at the

Capitol on November 9. Although some. observers didn't

endure the day-long debate, the con­".ersation was maintained by the com­mittee members. They questioned

& almost everyone that testified. Rexe.r Berndt, President of Ft. Lewis

College, was asked for his view on Auraria after he pitched for his school.

"If you put it (MSC) under CU (Regents) you are creating; an extremely powerful political force," Berndt said.

-~ "The· most powerful force in the state; cont. on pace 3

-

, - - -,/

The

Snow Emer~Y. Declared

© Pt~km October 17, 1984

, Blizzard Criwks Au~aria

by Kevin Vaughan Editor, The Metropolitan

Once again Denver and the Auraria campus were caught off guard by an unusually severe snowstorm and classes at all three colleges were cancelled until 5 p.m. Tuesday. · Denver Mayor · Federico Pena declared a snow emergency around 5 a.m. Tuesday, and soon thereafter the

· campw closed until noon. The closure was later extended to 5 p.m.

This was the second severe snowstorm to affect Auraria in less than a year, but this time students were kept abreast of the situation.

Last November, the announcemen~ that claaes had been cancelled due to

Flight Team

page 8

inclement weather came after many students had already left for school.

Those who made it to Auraria in that 1983 blizzard arrived only to find park­ing lots and sidewalks covered with knee-deep snow.

According to Larry Ambrose, Direc­tor of Community Relations for AHEC, the decision to close the campus was made after the city had dec~ared a snow emergency.

"We were waitipg to~ what the city.decided," Ambrose said. "We had a handle on the situation and made the decision (to cancel cl~) about 5:30 a.m." .

Ambrose said creW$ began working to clear parking lots and walkways Monday night and that by early Tues­day morning three lots were finished

Culture

page 10

and the rest were done by noon. The decision to extend the closure of

the 30,000 plus student campus to 5 p.m. came after AHEC officials realized many side streets were still impassable. ·

"We thought we could be open by noon," Ambroee said.

0

"We extended the closure when it became apparent that many side streets in the city were still not cleared."

Ambrose said AHEC has two choices when faced with an emergency like this. Clames c.an either be cancelled 01

the campus can be closed altogether. When climes are cancelled, Ambrose

said, personnel are still required to report for work. However, when thE campus is closed- as it wu Tuesday-everyone gets the day off. 0 '

, - . page 15

Page 2: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

October 17, 1984

s •

. • .

UCD .Course· Requirements Change . • I

by' Nonnan Restivo Reporter, The Metropolitan

each term in UCD courses. But, if cir­cumstances warrant, the university is willing to waive this requirement.

insuring that our students were taking the bulk of their coursework from UCD.''

Though MSC students may chopse to take as many courses as they desire from the Metro-UCD pooled course list, UCD students must adhere to a 50 percent minimum enrollment rule.

Beginning with the Fall 1984 semester all UCD students are expected to take at least half their semester hours

According to George L. Burnham, Director of the Office of Admissions and Records at UCD, an institution of higher education must be sure that when it awards a student a degree, the essential instruction has ~me from the institution granting that degree.

"This was not done in a retributive fashion . It was a matter of simply

Burnham said the faculty of each program at UCD, be it chemistry or philosophy, has concentrated on a core curriculum that emphasizes a par­ticular focus for that major. UCD students must take these core courses at UCD. But elective courses can be pick­ed from the pooled list as long as the

' student adheres to the 50 percent rule.

IN 1960, THE PILLGAVE WOMEN A NEW FREEDOM. IN 1984, THE SIDNGE GIVES WOMEN A NEW CHOICE.

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With The Sponge, you don't have to worry about hormonal side effects. And no other non,prescription vaginal contraceptive has been proven more effective'.' It's been through seven :years of extensive testing, and over 17 million Sponges have hcen sold.

Of course. you don't need a prescription for The Sponge. It can be found ;it your local drug store and at selected supermarkets. ln the 3,pack or convenient 12,pack. .

And the Today Sponge is the only contraceptive that comes with someone to talk to: our 24,hour Tcxlay 'falkline. If you have any questions, or you~re just wondering if The Sponh~ is right for you, visit your student health center or give us a call at 800,22 3,2 329. (In California. 800,222,2329.)

Finally, you have the sponthneity you want and the protection you need. But, hest of al.I. you have another choice you never had before ... ;~~:.

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"We're trying to preserve academic integrity: If we .co-mingle, everything that we are academically, then we destroy tlie unique focus a faculty might have in a certain degree pro- ' gram.''

Across the nation, according to Burnham, students are required to complete the equivalent of your senior year at the institution you graduate from. This is a approxiamately 30 __ credit hours.

Burnham said that before the rule was applied one transfer student obtained a chemistry degree without taking a single chemistry course at UCD. Many students weren't even aware which courses were taught at ~ what school.

"One student thought MSC stood for miscellaneous," Burnham said.

The 50 percent rule ·also applies' to special students-A student with no grade transcripts who is either not seek­ing a degree or has arrived too late in .if the semester to request his transcripts. Others don't submit transcripts because of poor grades.

Burnham stresses that the advising staff at UCD are attentive to any extenuating circumstances a student may have regarding the 50 percent tit rule. If, for some reason, a student must take a course at MSC the request will be evaluated.

"It's not a real restrictive situation." In the Fall of 1983, 2,397 UCD

students were enrolled in MSC courses, • 695 with more that half their course work at MSC. At the end of the Fall enrollment period for 1984, these numbers dropped to 1,934 UCD students enrolled at MSC with 305 tak­ing more than half their coursework at MSC. The total number of UCD ~ students is 10, 790.

"Students at UCD should be looking at Metro as an institution to enhance their program," Burnham said, "not take core course requirements."•

Short Story Contest ... The Metropolitan is proud to

announce a short story contest spon­sored by Tattered Cover Book Store, 2930 East Second Avenue. ' ~

Entries should be no longer than 3000 words. Only clean, well-edited manuscripts will be accepted.

All AHEC students are eligible to enter and the final entry date will be Wednesday, November 14. No late entries will be accepted for any reason. J Winners will be announced Wednes­day, November 28.

Prizes will be as follows: First Prize $40 gift certificate; Second Prize $25 gift certificate; and the Third Prize will be a $15 gift certificate from the Tat-tered Cover. ..

The top winner will have his or her story published in The Metropolitan.

Entries should include name, address, telephone number and the school where the student is enrolled, and be submitted to Kevin Vaughan or ... Katie Lutrey in room 156 of the Stu­dent Center.

Page 3: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

October 17, 1984

Hearing .Examines Merger Aspec~ cont. from page 1

more powerful than cattlemen." Faculty Senate Frieda Holley had a

different view of the potential power changes.

0 MSC will be lost, and in a sense it will become another extension of Boulder," Holley said. "It will becom!l a tning of can we eclipse Boulder."

Consortium Trustee Gladys Foster said the merger is a matter of extra

,_ money for CU. "If they have the added FTE (the

figure used to determine the number of enrolled students by credit hours) they get a higher appropriation from the legislature," Foster said. She said that university-enrolled students bring in more n;ioney for the school than those attending college.

"When MSC was small and using rented space everything was 0. K., " Foster said. "Now there are 17,000 to 18,000 students it's a real problem."

'- "The merger will cause the taxpayer to pay more because the state will pay more," Foster said. And, she said, one of the purposes of the committee was to find ways to save money.

Lesslie Woodard, a member of the Commission on Higher Education, was

• also concerned about the cost. He said he worried about the needs of a new research program.

"If you create a metro university you will have another institution of size and quality and demand of full scale

-- RTD Offers Fare Deals

I

, The Regional Transportation District .... is offering discounted monthly passes to

students at the Auraria campus, Loret­to Heights College, and the University of Colorado in Boulder.

-Starting Friday, October 19, both part-time and full-time students may

~ purchase a discounted pass by showing a current student identification card. Passes are available, with an actual savings discount of one-third, for all levels of service: Local, $16 (reg. $24); Boulder City, $11 (reg. $17); Cir­culator, $8 (reg. $12); Express, $24

~ (reg . . $36); and Regional, $40 (reg. $60). -

Passes are available at the Auraria Book Center Convenience Store at the Student Center; Loretto Heights Busines.1 Office in the main administra-

-c tion building; and the UMC Ticket Ser­vice Office on the CU Boulder campus.

Discounted passes will be designed with an "A" for Academic, instead of the usual "Y" for Youth.

Also, starting December 15, passes for accredited schools, public and

...... private, kindergarten through grade 12, will be available at all outlets. RTD

-plans to have 150-plus outlets, with other schools eligible around December 15, or shortly thereafter.

For route and schedule information, call the RTD Telephone Information

__,.. Center at 778-6000. - Julie Zuffoletto

research capability," W oodaoo said. "The state hasn't committed to educa­tion the resource'S needed for such a sizeable addition."

Putting the politics aside, Hopkins testified on the roots of the topic-education.

"'The caliber and orientation of MSC had a lot to do with ~me finishing school," Hopkins said. -

"I was a hippie from the word go and MSC · allowed me to turn my life around."

Frances Sgarlatti, a UCD student running for a regent spot, agreed with Hopkins.

"I worked at King Soopers stocking shelves at ni~t and went to MSC,;; Sgarlatti said. "MSC encouraged me to do what I'm doing today." -

Committee Chairman Michael Moore said that much of the Auraria concept is working.

Moore said most · of what is heard from Aurar.ia are the common arguments that occur on a college campus. ,

Committee member Donald Bain echoed those remarks.

"''I pon't think there is anything wrong!at Auraria," Bain said. "It works well, efficiently and at low cost. "The difference between Auraria and other institutions is that the warts are visible (at Auraria)."

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The legislature is now conducting hearings on the proposed MSC­UCD Merger.

Woodard said the studies have cause a strain on Auraria and he hoped this would be the last debate over the subject.

The committee is to give a proposal to the legislature by January.

Berndt said he bad sympathy for all of the problems at AHEC.

"If I were president on that campus l'd put a contract out on the other two," Berndt laughed. "That would solve the problem."

"From 400 miles away we think of it , (Auraria) as a triple-headed monster and Jerry Wartgow (AHEC's Executive Director) running around after it." 0

ACADEMIC PRESS, INC. @ and the

Auraria Book Center .

Present an ACADEMIC BOOK FAIR OCTOIER 13-20

Featuring high­level titles with emphasis on

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ALL BOOKS WILL BE 15% OFF OF THE NORMAL PRICE. Most aren't available elsewhere In Denver-don't miss this opportunity to . upgrade your academic library!

,.

Page 4: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

• w

• ~

Octo~ 17, 1984

s .,.

SFPC Approves Cable Hookups b~· Debbie Morgan Rr,.llrtcr. Thr .\letropolitan

Station Vote Delayed of too much damage losses would pro­bably be ch«rged to the club.

The SFPC also voted to install six phones, also to be bolted to the wall, in the student vending lounges across campus so students could malce on­campus phone calls.

The Student Facilities Policy Council , ·oted Friday to allocate $1,500 to install cable drops to student lounges across campus, but indefinitely postponed voting on a student-run cable television channel.

The $1,500 would set up cable drops in student lounges similar to those used in cla.sm>oms, where a monitor is plug­ged into a cable outlet on the wall and programming is picked up from the Library Media Center cable system.

The Studerlt Center television lounge and the Mission are already wired for such a cable system.

In other business, the SFPC voted on a new phone system for the clubs and organizations in .the Activities wing of the Student Center.

The new phone system will provide each club with: * One activated phone f aclc * One phone, bolted to the wall to prevent thefts

* There will be no direct long distance dialing. If a club needs to make a long distance call they will have to go through the Student government office or the Activities office of their school. Charges for the call would be paid for by tlie club. . * No deposit would be required on the phone * Any loss due to the phones would be paid for by the Student Center bond reserve. But if a problem arose because

The new phone system does not include the offices of Student Govem­men t, The Metropolitan, Pro­gram/Events, Board/Councils, or the office of Student Activities. Currently these offices use six-button sets, pro ·· vided ·through the institutions they are associated with. • •

The SFPC delayed voting on the cable television channel to be run by

· Auraria students because of what Chairman Ken Cole called, too many loose ends.

AHEC Staffer Recognized Nationally ,· The cable drops in the student

lounges would be used if an event, such as a speaker or a debate, drew so many people that seating was insufficient.

Monitors could then be set up in stu­dent lounges and the event could be transmitted to accommodate the extra people.

Monitors would have to be rent~ from the Media Center. But since the Media Center requires that only cer­tified personnel be allowed to check out equipment, approval to set up a

· monitor would need to come from a Student Center official.

Patricia Yeager, 31-year-old Manager of the Office of Disabled Stu­dent Services for the Auraria Student Services Center, has been honored by the Seventh National Conference of the Association on Handicapped Student Service Programs in .Post-Secondary Education, in Kansas City.

PresenteQ with the Professional Recognition Award, Yeager was lauded for outstanding and innovative con­tributions which benefit campus pro­grams for the handicapped. . A member of the Auraria community

for four years, Yeager is integral to the process which, in the aftermath of the

WELCOME BACK!!!

Finally, the paperwork is completed and Metro students can, once again, take advantage of the FREE, student -fee funded, LEGAL SERVICES offered by our staff of lawyers and paralegals. For more infonnation, contact our office, Student Center room 255F, extension 3333. Appointments available on a first cotne, first serve basis. Our office is open Mondays and Tuesdays from 9:30 a.m. until 6:00 p.m.; Wednesdays from 9:30 a.m. until 7 :00 p.m.; and Thursdays from 9:30 a ."m. until 5:00 p.m. We look forward to assisting you with your legal problems and answering you legal ques-tions. ·

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Rehabilitation Act of 1973, has produc­ed 95 percent campus accessability for Auraria's 300-400 disabled students. The areas which remain inaccessable to the handicapped are portions of the East Classroom Building and 9th Street Park.

Presently, Yeager's primary concern is the passage of House Bill 127 which will allocate state monies or equiment to private and public institutions for higher education, providing auxiliary learning aids to the handicapped students. If passed, $125,000 will sup­plement handicap services state-wide.

• The AHEC fiscal budget for ~abled

Student Services is $64,000. "The greatest expense," Yeager said,

"is for the interpreters for the hearing 1impaired which totals $27,000 an · acaaemic year."

"Additional funding," Yeager con­tinued," will aid our,mission to reach ~' out to these people and enable disabled students to attend school anywhere in Colorado," she concludes.

Those interested. in the support of H.B. 127 may write to State Represen­tative Jim Moore at 1298 S. Brentwood ,. Way, Lakewood, Colorado 80226.

- Heather Shannon

ON foirms Gow CollLGE RINGS. ,. "~.:

And .... $20 Off White Lustrium Rings.

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. Place: STUDENT CENTER LOWER MALL _ , - ·

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Page 5: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

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

October 17. 1984

Research for Hire: Sealed., Delivered Students from as far away as D.U.

are aware of it. Private enterprise has turned to it for help. The only ones who haven't heard of Auraria Library's Information Retrieval Service, may be Aurarians themselves.

The service, appropriately dubbed l.R.S., was created in June 1984 by the library's department of Academic and Professional Services. It's a delightful plan that goes like this: For $6 an hour, Aurarians can have their research needs tended to-by someone else. Working from a user-supplied bibliography, library staff will locate and check out books owned by Auraria. They will copy articles from journals, submit inter-library loan requests, and, if desired, deliver the information to your office or home. Naturally, there are ad­ditional , reasonable charges for photocopying and special delivery, as well as a higher base rate for the general public.

Staffer Imelda Mulholland put the service into a sensible perspective, com­menting "Today's Aurarian needs to consider work, ·study time, classtime, and leisure. Adding another burden like research when someone else can do

it for you, doesn't seem logical." Doesn't seem logical indeed. For the

teacher in a hurry, and the student on the go, or, for those who are simply into l'ei~ure, Aura~i11's ·1.R.S. could be mi aaoduJu ''T I .

·Add Sch~dule Changed .

\..

by Michael Ocrant News Editor, The Metropolitan

MSC students will be limited to six days in which to add courses to their schedules under a proposal approved by the Faculty Senate on Sept. 19.

Previously MSC students could add courses through the fourteenth week of the semester.

The policy change was among • several changes proposed by MSC

President Brage Golding, when he addressed the Faculty Senate on Aug. 30.

According to Faculty Senate Presi­dent Frieda Holley, the option to add

( classes so late in the semester gives students the impression they can catch up easily with other students no matter how much class work is missed.

Under the proposed change students could add courses after the sixth day only with the approval of the instruc­

.: tor, department head and Dean. Before the change becomes policy,

Holley said, it must be approved by the Deans and by the Board of Trustees.

The Deans, she said, are suggesting students be allowed to add classes

through the tenth or twelfth day of the semester.

According to the official ininutes of the Aug. 30 meeting, Golding also pro­posed changing or amending the following policies:

- The NC policy, he said, is vague and confusing because students can ob­tain an NC as late as the fourteenth week of classes.

- Students should be able to repeat courses and retain the higher grade on­ly if they received a grade of D or F the first time the course was taken.

-Permanently adopting a sixteen­week semester.

-Allowing administrative personnel to participate in the Faculty Senate.

Holley said she is pleased with many of the changes proposed by Golding.

However, she said, some of his sug­gestions, such as opening the Senate to other than faculty, is being met with caution by her and other faculty.

Under a previous president, Holley sai'd, the Senate included ad­ministrators and it became ineffective.

"The school's president became presi­dent of the Senate and he controlled the agenda. The faculty felt it had no voice," Holley said.•

Essay Contest Announced An ~ay contest on the topic "What

is Metro?" is being co-sponsored by the MSC En~ish Dept., the North Central

- Accreditation Steering Committee, and The Metropolitan. The contest is open to all MSC students.

Length and specifications for entries are as follows: Three pages, typewrit­ten, double-spaced, suhmitted with a separate page containing author's

-c name, student number, class/ year in school, mailing address, and telephone number.

First prize is $50.00 and publication in The Metropolitan, and in the MSC Self Study Report for Accreditation. Second prize is $30.00 and publication in The Metropolitan, and third ·prize is $20.00 and publication in The Mf!fropolitan.

The deadline for submissions is December 3, 1984. Please deliver all entries to Kevin Vaughan at The Metropolitan.

-Touch, and Go! Introducing

THE TOUCHSCREEN PERSONAL COMPUTER. The Hewlett-Packard 150.

Touch the screen, instead of memorizing complicated commands. That's how easy it is to use the new Touchscreen Personal Computer from Hewlett-Packard. Come in for a demonstration today during our Com­puter Department Open House, which continues through Thursday, Oct. 18. F,6pll HEWLETT

~~PACKARD

heaven-sent, C.O.D., and darn well worth it.

AURARIA B··O·O·K CFNTER

For more information on this and other library services, dial 629-2741.

- Keith Levise

Lawrence & 9th St. 629-3230

I I I

M-Th 8-7:30, Fri 8-5, Sat 10-3

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Page 6: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

Ocnhq 17. 1981

by Susan SkorupaSpechl to The Metrogrlltarr

NORMAL, IL. (CPS)-In one of themost violent episodes yet this fall ofnationwide student resistance to strictnew drinking policies, as many as 1000Illinois State University students took tothe streets in a seven-hour riot lastweek.

the young people, mostly ISUstudcnts, flocked from campus to cityhal,l on October ath, pelting iotice witirrocls and breaking storJ and officewindows, officials report.

- Other protestors staged a sit-in at adowntown theater and threw rocks atpolice attempting to remove them._ Traffic on a nearby highway also wasdisrupted by nartfrnS piteston equip-1ry| *i!h a keg of beer, observers say.

Local and state pohc€ broke up thesgven-hour disturbance with tear qasabout 9:30 a.m. followins three arr*tsand a plea to students fr6m ISU Presi-dent Lloyd Wallance to 'stopdemonstrating. Officials reported noserious iniuries.

Politics'84

by Keith LeviseAstlsrant Editor. The Ma ropolitar,

When Coloradans step into thevoting booth Nov. 6th, they'll be votingto effect the politics of Auraria, as wellas the nation.

The nine member CU Board ofRegents, which governs CU-Boulder,UCD-Auraria, and other campuses,has a vacant seat. and UCD studentFranccs Ssarlatti would like to fill it,Sgarlatti, i democrat, will be po edagainst Peter Dietze, a republican.

Sgarlatti, who is a political sciencemajor, poigts to her student status, and

'Shtdents uere uallsing up tome dailg saying, if theg roise iturqmore I'm twt - gotttta go toUCD'"

-Frances Sgarlatti

tbefactthatshe'sawoman,andispro-'by.wha..shecallssome..heavy

**f*:*i*S,"U:X":ffi"r'I: :$E;of oulwhite;rud""r:*-mffi:*itii'#ffJl;"mpaign f;qq'i$:Sf-ffiS,?'1:flfr;":i;

if;:*f;n't,'":T:ffi,*t'i [ . fiffiffi[l1i"H4'i:"*i#",ffid; "i::#ff"S1"1iff*i I €w**q* ryffitrry::3$ ;iliiffiffi;-il"ale,*"";'""'u.;student government, is anxio's to a-d- *";+.;.;*:|.*:TTE ;iii:ii.;'9Fn"g".t'li*1"rJlLt'

e";-T;;.aswen,. ; E ""T#3,L1y,':1olfftT;*&r?..WhentheyraisedthetuitiononJulyview.-Shebelievesherelectiontothe

28th," she explains, "the student Er_^_^^_ o_^_'^irj :- L^_:_- t-^ r:,, rL^ ^r r^__urE e PtsrtD'government went in there and said Frances,,Sgarla$ ishoping to fill the at-large Boar{ of Rgser$ will. strengthen the --

? ("t"ti ;;;n'i "rora

ir mv a" ya" seat on CU Board of Regents. board, 1nd ultimat€ly benefit thestudents they serve. I

o._r-

-:.--iiijitij.- -j - - - ' - .r- !+;;i:n i:Jii irliilt+dtj- ^-.5t.--: a.l -i.--arr'r*. }rr.*-.:i.Lns3h.@

New Drinking Policies SolicitViolenceOfficials note new city laws govern-

ing the use of alcohol and makingstudents get permits for parties arebeing enforced for the first time thisfall.

"There have been reports of anumber of spontaneous parties with2000 or 3000 people who take overwhole neighborhoods," explains SteveMahrt, the city lawyer. '!{nd there arethousands of students out at night,roaming neighborhoods, drinking beer.Occasionally, a few get drunk and van-dalize property.'l

Similar crackdowns are occurring onother campuses this fall as civilauthorities move to curb off-campuspartying, and enforce new drinkingregulations and laws.

At the University of Texas at El Paso,disorderly conduct charges were filedagainst Phi Kappa Tau fraternity Presi-dent Dan Sosa when the frat'sneighbors complained about a noisyparty.

The fraternity, which is appealing aprior disorderly conduct conviction as

well as the current charge, plans to

students weie w.alking up to me dailysaying, if they raise it anymore, I'm notgonna go to UCD."

Tuition has risen 57 percent forundergraduates, and 9l percent forgraduate students in the past five years.

CU's Colorado student enrollmentcap, is a pressing concern of Sgarlatti's.

relocate,More frequent Southwest Missouri

State University police patrols areenforcing drinking regulations with anew law allowing them to arreststudents on suspicion of a misde-meanot,. Th.anks to recent hikes in the

minimum drinking age and newregulations designed to minimize cam-puses's legal liability for studentbehavior, milder protests have eruptedat Wiscvnsin, North Carolina State,Indiana, St. Bonaventure and F'lorida,among dozens of schools, in recentweela.

The ISU crackdown netted over 300violators in August and September, saysNormal City Hall spokesman Mahrt.There were only l7 in May and June.

But all the violations stemrned fromthe city's public possession of alcohol .

ordinance, not the new mass gatheringlaw which requires permits for publicgatherings of 300 or more, Mahrtreports.

"We haven't had li single party.disturbance this fall," agrees Richard

"The public is complaining about it,"she says. "If you're paying 80 percent(through taxes) of what it costs foranybody to go to school up in Boulder;wouldnt you want to be able to getyour kid in?" She suggests that the in-state quota system be changed to allowmore residents acc€ss to the school.

Godfrey, ISU director of institutionaladvancement and Normal mavor."And the frats have had no p.obl"rnwith the ordinance: It's verv easv tocomply with."

Some students questioned theordinance's summer passage, claimingfew students were on campus then, butGodfrey recalls ISU student leadersjoined discusions on the measure lastspring.

And the demonstration, advertisedthrough leaflets .and the campuSnewspap€r, was not endorsed by thestudent governmbnt, he adds.

Most protestors had no idea why theywere there, he maintains.

"I went into the crowd to tdk to theprotestors," he says. "An extremelysmall pelcentage of people were thereto be destructive. Lots were aroundbecause it was something to do on awarm October night."

Officials are prepared for moredemonstrations. but "we don'taniicipate any," Godfrey says, "Somestudents have even suggested taking upa collection to pay for damages. " l

"We'd have to tighten our belt a little _

at first," she says, "but it would work -

out."Sgarlafti is opposed to the Board of

Regents' attempts to absorb Metro iritothe system. 'I believe-it would be badall around," she says. "How can auniversity board know the needs of -Metro?" Sgarl4tti suggests thatmanagement of Auraria be handled by"making up a whole new board ofrepresentatives from each of the threeschools. Keep the schools separate," shesays, "we don't need to merge them."

The perennial problem of college t

dropouts is high on her list of concerns.An alarming af trition tute is confirmed

-Hou can a uni.oersitg board}rlr,ruo tlw nceds of Metrc?"

-Frances Sgarlatti

Page 7: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

..

' ·

.t

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

October I 7, I 98'4

_OP/ED MSC Government Report ,

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

Now that it's time for the Judicial Board to give its student government report again, I had fully intended upon getting a few skeletons but of our closet and t~H you about the resignations, impeachments and general hubub that has gone on m student government in the last three weeks. Until these issues are set.tled, I ~ill go on to more important items at hand. But, alas, as our esteemed V1ce-Pres1dent, Dave Sutherland, would put it, the forces of the Price of Darkness are at work again and the Angels of Goodness must go towork to" save all MSC students from the miserable fate he would behold to us. I'm sure by noe youhave all guessed I am referring to the merger issue which has reared its ugly little head on our cam­pus once more. Here wer go again. The same old story; C. U .- had ~he absolu_te ar­rogance to try and put us under their system. HA HA HA. Well, Im n~t g01~g to roll over and play dead. I am going to complain and mo~n, and complain a_ga1~ to whoever will listen and whoever won't. Now I could give all you free-th11;1king,

The

l\llJ11R0ll()fXfi\N EDITOR

.Kei;in Vaughan BUSINESS MA.~AGER

Katie Lrlfrey PRODUCTIOK MAK AGERS Dai.;id ,Colson. Lise Geurkink

ASSIST A:\'T EDITOR Keith Leri~c

::\"EWS EDITOR .\lic11al'l Ocra11t

E::\"TERT AI:\'~fE::\"T EDITOR D.]. 01ce11s

SPORTS EDITOR Curt Sa11doral

REPORTERS Bob DOds. Chris Deutsch. Diane Koogle. Xonna Restit:o.

Heather Sha1111011. Jessica Snyder. A1111 Trudeau PHOTOGRAPHERS

Jim Bailey. ' ·. C. Beagle PRODl'CTIO::\" STAFF

Da11g Bascom. Barbara Cli11c. Tom Deppe . .\'ikki ]ackso11 . Jami ]c11sc11. Scoff Riclre11. Robert Sc·l111a11

TYPESETrERS . l'e1111y Fau.~t .. \larri11 Rat::.la.f.f

RECEPTIOXISTS Peggy .\Ioore. Tom Smith .. \Iarilyn Zellmn

A publication for the stude11ts of the Auraria Campus supported by advertisin~and stu­dent f~ 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. and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Metropolitan or its ad,·ertisers. Editorial and business offices are located in Room 156 of the Auraria Student Center. 9th &: Lawrence. Mailing address: P.O. Box 4615-Si Denver CO 80204 Editorial: 629-2507 Advertising: 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 .\lctropolitan reserves the right to edit copy to conform to limitations of space.

intelligent college students the same old apathy song and dance. But I know very well that it neither appeals to you nor works very well. So instead I will give you the facts, plain and simple.

If MSC were to be made a part of the University of Colorado, the C. U. ·Board of Regents would control MSC. This means they would control our money. You know, that wonderful green stuff (or plastic as the case may be) that we all hate to depart with at the beginning of each semester to pay for tuition, student fees, books, etc., etc. This may not be distressing at first glance, but kn~ng how the C . U. Board of Regents regard MSC, it wouldn't take long to discover how our stu­dent fees would be allocated back to us. In addition, our tuition would soon rise because as an alligned entity, the MSC undergraduate program would ~ave to support the CU graduate program. Our faculty would soon be required to publish material thus their class loads would have to lighten up. Whereas they ar~ now re­quired to teach twelve (12) hours a semester and have three office hours a week, they would soon be likened to C.U. Professors, who are only required to teach six (6) hours a semester and publish material. Hence, classes would be-larger because teachers are teaching fewer classes and the faculty would be increased and once again, your tuition would be raised to support the added professors. Instead of having trained teachers with-masters degrees, we would have graduate students teaching our undergraduate classes. These are merely a few of the disadvantages to you, the MSC students. There are rriany others but for the sake of brevity I will refrain from stating anymore.

Is this what you want to happen to your school? I hope as fellow MSC students, you do not. I can onfy pray you will do as I and write to your state senator and keep abreast of any planned demonstrations. Don't allow the Prince of Darkness reign at MSC. Be an Angel of Goodness and help light the way.

1 Laura Ridgell

After the Fall out out

ASMSC Judicial Board

··(Carl's Call-Winter Wasteland)

Children will cry When they fail .to forget -those blue, growing, ..good olde days, those cherry and snowy days, those green and sunny days when human eyes were deep

When the ocean roared water white,

and bright;

when the cloud painted sky sailed on and on, when singing filled the forest~

" ... bees' was beautiful dancing leaping deer running water wonderful and wee goes the wind ... "

But we, be damned, Damn Urizon Adolten damned!

A cruel shade binds the shine, parched and freezing sick our children mumble as they shuffle down sticky tar crater streets-

..... ring around the rosy a pocket full of posy fallout fallout we all fall down ... "

Unburning soot dyes the Moon Bitter before red stinging eyes, bitter before dry streaming eyes, biting eyes, my childrens' eyes, · anxious to blink

Into cool forests of sky-water-blue.

David I. Colson

Page 8: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

"' i

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ON ·OCTOBER 26Tll . .

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October 17, 1984

SPOTLIGHT .MSC Flight ·Team

.•

by Joe O'Leary Special to The Metropolitan

Pointing the nose of a small, noisy, wood and fabric airplane towards a long but narrow strip of cracked asphalt at 70 mil~, anJl.our, the gw,_~np. rushes up to meet Hans Ge~Ef'Ait' M"ff feet a second.

Gerthe, a Metropolitan State College junior, is trying out for a flying position on the school's flight team. Half a mile from the end of the run­way, Gerthe and his cream and red 1946 Taylorcraft are too high. He kicks the rudder pedals and dips one wing. The plane slips- almost ~lying sideways, and dropping out of the sky.

"This is how we do it without flaps," 9erthe says, "Either that or hold the doors open with your feet."

Seconds later, the nose is pointed at the white line 300 feet beyond the·run­way threshold.

Outside and ahead of the steel-tube criss-crossed windshield braces, a four­inch wire sticking out of the gas cap bobs up and down as the unseen cork in 'the tank rolls with the sloshing fuel.

The crac~ed, dark gray runway grows in the windshield as the plane approaches the landing point. A few feet off the ground, Gerthe pulls back the control wheel, and the runway drops away beneath the nose. The nose continues rising, slowly, as Gerthe hold<; the plane off the runway.

The tailwheel strikes the pavement with a solid thud, short of the touchdown line. A half second later, the main wheels touchdown.

The upright hay . bales and flight team members standing next to the touchdown line rush past the wing. like hitchhikers beside an interstate. Gerthe pushes the engine throttle forward, and the engine roars to full power.

"So much for smootll landin~, ·· says Gerthe. Halfwav down the runwav. having gaincll · takeoff speed, the plane·s tale lifts off the pavement, the the earth disappears beneath tfie nose as it becomes airborn. Five minutes later, he will try again to land on the line.

Gerthe is one of the 11 pilots trying out to compett.~ at the National lnter­l'<>lll1tiak Flying A<;sociation's Regional Saft•ty Convention. known as Saft'<'on.

I

The regional event will be held Th-urs­day and Friday iii Rangley, Colorado.

Every Saturday morning for six weeks, Gerthe and other MSC pilots practiced.precision landings at the Tri­County Airport, a few miles north of Broomfield. Tri-County is a fly-in neihborhood, where residents literally have planes in their garages. The MSC flight team shares the crowded airstrip with local pilots during practice.

Gerthe uses his own aircraft to prac­tice, but the other pilots share three rented Cessna 152's from a local flying club. The 152 is a high wing, two-seat training aircraft. Each pilot flies six landings, then turns the machine over to another pilot.

As Gerthe's Taylorcraft vaults off the runway back into the air, the pilots who f.lew earlier mill about in the mud and weeds, between . the cracked and patched runway and the asphalt and gravel taxiway. As the sound of the engine drones into the distance, the pilots talk aQout the last landing and wait for the next .

The pilots try to land their airplane on a touchdown line inside "The Box" - a painted stretch of runway 100 feet before and 200 feet bevond the line-300 feet beyond the. runway threshold.

Pilots start with a perfect score of zero, and penalty points are added for unsafe flying and distance away from the touchdown line. The plane's wheels have silver crosses painted on their sides, so ground observers can see the exact moment the wheel meets the ground. For every foot away from the touchdown line, a point is added. The pilot with the lowext score ranks first in the event. ·

Two types of landings are used: short field. or power-on landings. where the pilot is allowed to use engine power to control the apprach: and power-off. which requires the pilot to glide to a precision landing with no power.

During competition and·practice, the pilot is allowed one practice landing in each event. then the next two are averaged.

Landing right on the line is rare. but Chetyl Gillespie. taking down landing scores in a spiral notebook beside the runwa\'. touched the wheels on the line earlier. that mornin~.

''But they got worse after that." she

Page 9: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

' I

October 17, 1984

Practices for Meet

says humbly. The grounded pilots turn their heads

_and focus on a dark outline in the clear October morning sky, half a mile away

... and 500 feet up. Conversations taper off to quiet com- 1

ments as the pilots watch the plane proach. The plane banks, and slowly turns toward the ground crew, lining up with the runway. As it flies closer, the engine becomes audible, and the

-· outline becomes sharper. The plane's landing light is a morn­

i.ng star against the dark silhouette. The flaps look like white rectangles hanging from the wings.

A woman pilot notices the plane's i:udder moving back and forth.

,... "Is that the Rudderman?" she asks. Team captain Scott McMillan says

yes . The incoming pilot is his co-captain, Jeff McElhaney, known for his nervous habit ..of using the rudder too much.

The Rudderma~ and his plane glide in over the·runway end and levels it off· a foot abdve the pavement. In a second, the nose pitches up a few inches, caus­ing the plane to climb another foot. Reacting, the nose pitches down, and the plane sinks. The Cessna floats past..

• the hay bales apd grounded pilots. More than 200 feet downwind, the wheels bark and pai'nted crosses Spin.

"Lob," says Cina Peters, - Long Out - of Box. "You can only lob in tennis and

precision landings," she says, laughing. "Then 'there's S.O.B."

The Rudderman brings the engine back up to full power while rolling down the runway, then climbs back into the air for another try.

Not everyone on the flight team flies. Short field and power off landings are

"- only two of the events the team com­petes in.

In the Aircraft Identification event, participants are shown slides of aiicraft for three seconds, they have 15 seconds to tdentify the model, manufacturer and aircraft n~e.

In Computer Accuracy, teams com­pete using a round slide-rule type of computer in solving in-flight naviga­tion problems such as fuel burn, wind­drift and ground speed calculations.

In Preflight Inspectjon, the par­ticipants have 10 minutes to find

' delibe~ately caused problems on parked

aircraft. Problems include missing light bulbs, screws, radios left on, and reversed propellers. Points' are awarded on thoroughness of inspection and the number of problems found.

Pilots also compete in flight simulators, scored on accuracy of navigation. -~«10.E~ who ~l\tfcl tq support the t~/~tW:r didn't do \ veil enough in these events, can be part of the Safety Crew, which moves the aircraft by hand from parking to start-up ramp, and carry fire- extinguishers for emergencies. .

And then there's the message drop. The message drop is similar to the

Coast• Guard practice of dropping messages to life-rafts. A six-il)ch long balsa block with a hole bored along its length to hold paper messages, is drop­ped from the aircraft over a target.

The target is a 55-gallon drum. The object is to drop it inside, while

flying 200 feet over it' at 100 miles an hour. Something akin to Luke Skywalker dropping torpedoes down the Death Star's exhaust stack.

"It doesn't take a lot of skill," says McMillan, who says-POOple have done this succesnully. "It's -basically a luck event."

Flight Team Members Include: SHORT-FIE-LO EVENT (POWER­

ON): Gina Peters, Craig Brennan, Greg Saltzman, Jeff McElhaney, Scott Tatge. .

POWER-OFF: Scott Tatge, Jeff McElhaney, Craig Brennan, Don Mor­ris, Cheryl Gillespie.

PREFLIGHT INSPECTION:· Scott McMillan, Craig Brennan_, Jeff McElhaney, Scott Tatge. ·

SIMULATOR: Grant Hachen, Sott Brown, Jeff McElhaney, Steve Gunther, Alan Floyd.

MESSAGE DROP: Scott Johnson, Kelly Turk, Scott Tatge, Craig · Brennan, Steve Gunther.

COMPUTER ACCURACY: Kent Drotar, Mike Sands, Scott Brown, Scott Johnston, Grant Hacben, Rob White.

AIRCRAFT RECOGNITION: Scott McMillAO, Jeff McElhaney, Greg Saltzman, Alan F1oyd, ~tt Tatge, Don Morris.

SAFETY CREW: Alan Holder, Kelly Turk, Debbie Espinosa, Cameron Man, Mark Hammer. •

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2. Let AlphaGraphics copy, collate, bind and distribute specific ezerpts from various sources for your climes' special needs. 3. While waiting for final publication of your manwcripts, let AlphaGraphlcs prepare them for your immediate use. • 4. If a book or article you need is unavailable from the library Qr is out of print, let AlphaGraphics print, copy and distribute it for you. 5. At your request, AlphaGraphics will establish a permanent file for your classes' Instructional material "originals.'' Each sem~ we can update your file according to your_ Instructions.

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Page 10: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

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Denver Has .It

i by Sharon Stanley

and Beth Smith

Culture: (Kul' cher) n. 1. A par­ticular form of civilization, especially the beliefs, customs, arts, and institutions of a society at a given time ...

Editor's note: Last spring Greg Peanon'• Contemporary Issues class studied the. influx of Southeast Asians into the Denver area. This iR one of many artides produced by the class which we will nzn ~ semester.

Page 11: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

r Ousn Version oJ China,tou;nLocated on the west side of Denver,

just a stone s throw from Lakewood,approaching the intersection of FloridaiJenue an-d Federal Boulevard, is

Denver's scaled- down version of SanFracisco's Chinatown.

It is fast becoming krro*n as the'Lit-tle Saigon Market' to Denver residents,a cluster of thriving -Southeast Asiangrocsry and clothing stores, travel andreal estate agencies, doctors' offices,acupuncture clinics, restaurants andother businesses.

The Asian stores are easily recogniz-ed by the foreign writing on thti signs.Some have no English trarulations atdl. Other telltde signs are the Kung Fuand Orierltal punk rock posters on thefront of a video shop, the brightlypainted storefronts, twangy orientelmusic and the smell of incense escapingthrough windows and doors.

The best time to see Little Saigon ison Sattrrday afternoon. A pedestr'ianparadise, on its sidewalks, Thais, Viet-namese, Cambodians, Hmongs andLaotians mingle with Anglos and Mex-lcans

While carrying out weekend .chores,the Southeast Asians find time to relaxon sidewalks and in dmrways, catchingup on gossip over a crld can of coffee(fuia's answer to the heat problem) or aYeo's Soya Bean Drink.

The area in which Little Saigon islocated was at one time predominantlyMexican. But because of the nearbygovernment housing projects, thc Asianrefugees inhabited when they firstarrived in Denver, South Federal

Boulevard was a natural place for theirmarket to develop.

One of the first businessmen in thearea explained that he opened his storebecause of the increasing refugeedemand for unavailable SoutheastAsian foods.

"I'm thinking how to get food to5,000 of my people living here inDenver in 1975 so I opened my store,"said Thong Luong, owner of the ThaiBinh Market. 1955 S. FederalBoulevard.

Luong was in the import-exPortbusiness while living in Vietnam, hisnative country, so it was natural forhim to be the supplier of imPortedfoods for his people in Denver.

Currently, Luong is working on a

Oetahet I 7. 1984

centract to supply King Soopers withthe Oriental foods needed by SoutheastAsian refugees and restaurant ownersthroughout the region.

Although there are still a fewHispanic and white-owned businessesin the area, it seems all are existing har-moniously in the market.

Ernie's Auto Body, Pablo's Hideaway,and the Thai Binh Market, all nestledtogether in the same shopping center,reflect the neighborhood's atmosphere.

So does seeing an Hispanic kid andAnglo kid and a Southeast Asian kidwalking by, all wearing jeans andt- shirts.

Just'like the oriental store signs, thefuian boy's shirt bears angular slashesand dots symbolizing words or phrasein his nstive tongue.

Laughing and cutting uP as theYwent by, the three boys had a

mischievous look about them. ButTames Tavlor. former owner and fatherof the cuirent owner of Taylor's Phar-macv. 1077 S. Federal Blvd., said, "Wedoni have to watch the Vietnamesekids in ourstore at all. They are veryhonest. They can come in and browseor read magazines and they don't stealanything...But with some of our otherclientele, we practically have to jumpover the €ounter io stoP them fromstealing from us."

Taylor also said he feels the Asianshave upgraded the neighborhood; TwoSoutheast fuian doctors in the shoppingcenter have brought him a lot of newcustomers.

The (Indochinese) are the best thingto happen to this shopping center," he

said. "I rent to some of them and theyare very nice, honest tenants, too."

He added that the only problem hehad seen with preju&ce against theAsians had not been with the businessowners in the area but with establishedcustomers who frequent the drtig store.

"They see the Vietnamese people, getangry and peel- out or something. Theydon't know anything about thee peo'ple and I don't waste my tinie arguingwith them " or trying to tell themanything."

Taylor said he does not want to angerand lose his old customers.

Several Indochinese shop owners inthe area say they have been well receiv-ed and are not encountering any pre-judice either.

"At the moment, I am not havingproblems with prejudic',e," said ThaiBinh owner, Luong, giving the impres-sion he thought the question washumorous.

Because of their imported specialtyproducts, Luong . says the marketattracts customers from all over the ci-ty, not just the neighborhood crowd.

A few doors down from the ThaiMarket; l00l S. Federal Blvd,. attrictsa large American clientele. Steppingthrough its doon .is like taking a briefiournev to the other side of the world.' Arrivers are greeted by a swirlingaroma similar to a combination of

ammonia and fish but the unsettlingaroma is not clearly defineable.

Among the 50 pound-burlap bags ofsweet and long grain rice and the halfunnacked boxes of steamers, woks and

"o6ki.rg untensils, were shelves lined

with festive red-, yellow-, and orange-wrapped fuian delicacies.

Homing in on one rather strong,distinct smell, a row of cellophanepackages containing a substance look-ing like moldy, black marijuana seem-ed to be culprit, These small packages,

- labled "Dried Vegetable," smelled as

though they were emmitting rnost ofthe store's odor.

Although the description was not- specific as to what kind of vegetable the

packages held, at least it clearly defin-ed the food group the contents were in.

How easity an American wouldassume that 'vegetables' meant lettuce,carrots, corn or something green theyare familiar with.

According to the Thai Market'sowner, Vichol Chinsomboom, thereason for the big difference in Asianand American foods is climate. Chin-somboom says his people's diet is based

. on many foods requiring high humidi-ty. They eat a lot of tropical and oceanproducts such as rice, bamboo, fungiand fish.

Besides the variation caused byclimate conditions, preparing andmarketing techiniques of the Asianfoods further alienates them toAmericans.

Steamed mackeral in a brown Bam-boo plate on the.shelf next to assorteddried anchory fish and mud fish wereall clearly visible through theirpackages. American groceries wouldhave had colorful pictures of the con-tents within in order to stimulate sales. .

"Another difference in the market"of

my country and here in America is the.amount of fresh products," said Chin-somboom. "Much of the food in thisstore is dried or canned. In Thailand. itis dways fresh. " But the food itself isnot the only thing which differs.

Mai Luong, the Vietnamese wifu ofLuong, pointed out differences inAlnerican and Asian eating habits.

"In Vietnam, we crok and eat thefood different," she said. "!(e eatchicken and egg noodle soup forbreakfast at home. Here it is served toyou for your lunch and supper."

Mai sald the contents of their_ lunchand supper meals are interchangeable.

Customarily, both are large rneals butat suppertime, the meal waits until theentire family is present, whereas lunchmay be eaten away from home.

A typicd Vietnamese lunch or supper, says Mai, consists of rice as.a maincourse. It is prepared with pork,chicken or beef (respectively, in orderof accessability) . Side dishes of Chinesecabbage, bean sprouts and bambooshoots are popular.

Spices most frequently used in thepreparetion of these dishes includegarlic, salt, hot peppers, soy sauce andIish sauce. Mai said that because of thdhigh water content of their dishesfuians do not enjoy a large variety ofdrinks with their meals. Hot tea isusually served after the meal and milkis reserved for the children and the sickbecause it is hard to get, she said. A fewexpensive canned drinla such as coldcoffee and sweetened soya juice may bepurchaseil in the stores and restaurants.

Americans may get a taste of theAsian cuisine in one of the manyrestaurants of Little Saigon. Themarket is teaming with them.

On Saturday nights, the marketrestaurants are usually packed withAmericans. Waiting lines are a com-mon occurrence. The smell of steamingvqetables, spicey meats and friedeggrolls wafting through the airintrigues the tastebuds and sparls the' ima$nation.

And as the Americans are out for anight on the town, the Indcchinese canbe seen in the kitchens clanging potsand pans or behind cash registers ring-ing up sales.

As easily as the Americans haveaccepted the fuian foods into their life,the Asians have found their hiche inand ac.cepted the American capitalistic

\

Ioe

society.

Page 12: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

N -

October 17. 1984

Bedside Book By Buscaglia A Beauty

IDVING EACH OTHER

Author of l.IVING, l.OVING & Ll'ARNING

by Nonna Restivo Reporter, The Metropolitan

In his latest book, Loving Each Other, Leo Buscaglia has written an information packet on relationships. · He breaks them down -into their finer parts, analyzes and pinpoints the weaket mechanisms, and rebuilds them with practical advice.

Buscaglia emphasizes that our deper­sonalized culture is not conducive to lasting love relationships, whether sex-

ual, familial or merely platonic. We stumble into_ relationships like unprepared explorers into "iinch~rted territory.

Many of us crave the security and strength that relationships afford, but we lack the necessary skills to make them viable. One of the biggest stumbl­ing blocks within relationships is com­munication. Buscaglia emphasizes that communication can make or break a relationship. Most of the time we mere­ly speak and listen to just ourselves. Incessant daily, monologue corrodes relationships and isolates us further from one another. Buscaglia urges us to choose our words carefully when we do communicate. This lessens the chan~ of being misunderstood or misinter-preted. .

To illustrate many of his concepts, Buscaglia is careful to pick and choose reliable sources. He cites examples from famous authors, poets, newspapers and philosophers. These references strengthen and solidify his major premises. For example, he reveals that in a Louis Harris poll conducted in 1969,_,six out of ten individuals in the U~teo 11States feit-·' that lying was juiitied at times. Information such· as this becomes a teaser for the meatier idea to come. The reader is snared and Buscaglia is free to interject his own thoughts and opinions. He identifies

ANYONE~ 'CAN WHISTLE Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim

Dook by Arthur Laurents Musical and Stage Direction by Claudia Irwin

October 18, 19, 20, 25, and 27 at 8:00 p.m. and October 28 at 2:00 p.m.

l.

On the Aurorla Campus In the Arts Dulldlng Room 271 (MSC Theater)

TICKETS: S4.50 Gen•ral Publlc; S2.50 Stud•nfl; Fr•• to MSC Stud.~ts For r6ervatfons and lnformatton call 629~~

This o joint project of rhe MSC Players and rhe Music Acrtvlrles Commirtee and is funded by rhe Srudent Affairs Boord of Merropoliton Sfote College

. A fMtropoltton Stat .. Coll99•

'------------------=--------------------------------

and labels the differ~nt forms of lying, when they are useful and when they are corrosive. He is straightforward and simple, avoiding the long-winded technical paragraphs that can bore and alienate a reader.

Because a book on lovin_g could easily become trite and syrupy, 13uscaglia is quick to involve his readers in the experiences of people like themselves. He doesn't stand on a ·pedestal spewing golden gems of wisdom, drawing only on personal trials and tribulations. Much of the book was built around a questionnaire he mailed at random to 1,000 men and women who had writ­ten him expressing an' interest in the dynamics of love relationships. Six hun- , dred people responded.

One section of the questionnaire specifically asked the respondents for advice, based on their own experience, that they could impart to those about to embark on a new relationship. An entire chapter is dovoted to the specific advice they recommend. It is eye­opening and relevant.

Other topics specifically dealt with are honesty, forgiveness and jealousy. Buscaglia merely reiterates many universal solutions to the above emo­tions, but livens the piaterial with specific examples. His chapter on forgiveness begins on a familiar. note-a biblical quote from the book of

Matthew. When Jesus is asked how many times a man should forgive his sinful brother the reply is, "I tell you not seven times but seventy times seven." The reader may be squirming at this point, anticipating the sermon to -come. But Buscaglia saves the moment with a reference to a story carried in The New York Times. A grief-stricken couple embrace and forgive a young man who has ~n found guilty of rap­ing and murdering their daughter. The reader is instantly back in the modern -world, not bobbing aimlessly in preachy metaphors.

Buscaglia's final emphasis is that we know and like ourselves, that we become . responsible for our own actions. Many of us have heard these same admonitions before. Yet -Buscaglia is gentle. He is not scolding, but guiding us, offering not pat answers but friendly direction.

Relationships, for many, are wrought with anxiety and disappoint­ment. We are unprepared for their complexities, yet we want them to work. Buscaglia offers practical sugges­tions, stressing that above all we must know ourselves. "You must live as if you are alone and others are the gifts offered to help you enrich your own life."

Loving Each Other is available at the Auraria Book Center for $13.95 O

The RenaisSance Cometh.

.. .The Renaissance In Liberal Arts Education. Renaissance: A period of vigorous

scientific, artistic and intellectual activity. Renaissance Man/Woman: A person who has wide interests and is expert in several areas. Liberal Arts: The Renaissance education at Loretto Heights College, equipping tamorrow's women and men with the insights and skills to suc­ceed in our modern world.

For more than half a century, Loretto Heights College in Denver has excelled in the tradition of values-centered liberal arts education and selected professional programs. Today, Loretto Heights is at the cutting edge of a Renaissance in superior teaching that gives stu-

. dents an advantage at succeeding in their personal and professional lives.

The Loretto Heights College graduate is comfortable, certainly, in a traditional career path, and never uncomfortable or hesitant about exploring new avenues to a meaningful lite.

At its campus overlooking the Rocky Mountains, you will choose your Loretto · Heights degree curriculum from six

baccalaureate program areas: Business, Education, Humanities and Social and Natural Sciences, Nursing, Performing and f ine Arts, or our innovative University Without Walls, which is oriented to the special needs of the adult student.

'lbu will begin a · learning experience leading to a profitable career as well as a more valuable quality of life.

Libe~Arts. The Renaissance Education. Small classes and personal attention are

traditional hallmarks at Lt>retto Heights. We are an independent, four-year college, dedicated to quality in undetgraduate education thcough the integration of liberal arts with professional career preparation. And, this dedication will insure that you achieve a durable education for a lifetime.

Exceptional Teaching Is The First Priority.

For morejnformation, please contact the Offtee of Admi55ions, 3001 South Federal Boulevard, Denver, Colorado 80236, (303) 936·8441, fxtension 216.

..

1-

Page 13: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

\

October 17, l 984

· Amadeus Depicts Mozart , Sidesteps His Music ,

by Mary S. Baker Special to The i\fetropolita11

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was a stuffy, disciplined composer, always dressed in a white lace shirt with puffy sleeves, forever sitting at his piano, that had one

s andle burning on it, in a room with white walls. Right? Wrong. Or so the film version of the play Amc¢e11s, written by Peter Shaffer and direct.eel by Milos For-

~ man, would have us believe. . . '

On the contrary, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Tom Hulce) comes across more as a fill-in for a punk rock group like the Kamakazi Klones. Hulce does a good job of portraying Mozart as a total idiot, except when it comes to his genius with music,

.. which seems fo bubble from him like a bottomless bottle of champagne. ·

His laugh, a mixture of a cackle and a giggle, will not soon be forgotten. Often out of context, it is used to enhance the image of Mozart as child prodigy, lunatic, or both. The laugh is also used as a device in the development of the plot, for it's the laugh that Antonio Salieri, played by F. Murray Abraham, hears before he meets Mozart. Salieri is the court composer. of Emperor Joseph II. After Salieri

.witnesses Mozart acting particularly ineloquent \\ith a lady, he recognizes that the geni~ is a veritable slop pot that contains music from God, while he is the perfect vessel with no talent.

' . This knowledge understandabh- infuriates Salieri and he sets out to destroy

Mozart by becoming his confidant. Salieri does a superb job o.f acting this part as he constantJy has to compliment Mozart while hating his guts. ~This .is great soap opera material. .

Mozart's wife, Constanze, played by Elizabeth Berridge, plays a weak role throughout the mo,·ie. Only once-when she stands up to Mozart's father-does shf' show talPnt.

Mozart's father is a real sour 'puss and is the controller of Mozart's life. We do not see how much he reacts to his father until the father dies and .Mozart composes " Don Giovanni." Upon \'iewing this self-reYealing opera. Salieri grasps that the key to Mozart's destruction lies in the figu·re of his father. exerting power over his son e\'e!l from beyond the grave.

Spectacle-wise. the film is very ornate and reminis~ent of the block-buster films of the past. as it should be, since it is two hours and forty minutes long. The ad­mirable qualih· is that it instills. a desire to find out the real ston- of Mozart's life. "' . . .

The most consist ant character was. Emperor Joseph II . Through him we get a sense of some of the reality of 18th cehtury Vienria. As the Emperor. he has to ask everyone in his court their opinion on any gi,·en issue. \Vhen he must comment on one of Mozart's operas. he asks an aide what he should say. The aide answers. "Too mam· notes. Yes. that's it. Too man\' notes." Thelin~ is appropo. though we definite'ly do not get enough of Mozart's music.

1\Ve also end up with too many questions that we may or may not want the answers to. ··was Mozart really the demonical Boy George of the 18th century · musicians?" or "Where did Frau Mozart keep getting the cash for all those threads?"

The film. though couched in reality. tried too hard to put ~fozart on the cover ,of People Magazine and succeeded too little in portra~ing Mozart as a composer of the ,\·orld's finest music. The appeal will lie in the message: ~lozart was a genius who hitd his problems too. . 0

... ~, ...

-THE NUCLEAR WINTER Friday, October 19th, 1984, S:OOpm

BoettcHer Concert Hall

Tickets $8, $10, $12 •1 Available CJhpll 9JJ1/ltlx outlets, including

The Denver anct Garf Bl'others stores. To charge tickets call 98U712

EDDIE "CLEANHEAD"

VINSON iN

CONCERT FaidAy

• SATURdAy OcTobER 19 & 20

8:JO pM-1 :JO AM

Advance tickets on Sale Oct. 10 Admission $7.00

· (no reserved seating)

c:;oME EAal.y-$TAY LATE

~ ~ . . . . •' •" .. " . . . . . . . . . . .

' _-.., :

·' ...

With Gasper's Cuisl'ne ·Mexican & American

Food

TliE 2200 Champa (off Broadway) W'f101E: Pfl\SOR

295-7997

/

. . --

Page 14: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

October 17, 1984

Students React To Emmanuel Exhibit b~· D.J. Owens f·::,~.:i-1 .. 1c~1t f.i1tc>r . . The· .\f,·tr1;1'<•lst1m

:\unuin· s own bastion of cultural t>:<prt>S..·•fon . the Emmanuel Gallen-. is onet> again sporting its usual artistic fart>. In..~tead of attempting to describe the indescribable. here are a few stu­dt>nt reactions to the show. The follow­ing are e.xct>rpts from an English IOI da.~s assignment: compliments of Charlie :\ngermeyer - their beloved in.~tructor:

A THIN-LINE SEPARATES LOVE FROM HATE, SUCCESS FROM .FAILURE, LIFE FROM DEATH. ALINE AS

Grant \Viemers found that the ex­hibit had .. both connotations of good and e\·il sources of nature ...

Susie White, like most of the other students. saw the symbolism of Holly Summer·s paintings: "She uses the sym­bolism of colors ... to conjure (up) thoughts (of despair):·

Greg Shepherd hit upon some distur- · bing truths: " ... the ground is evil. Birds were hit b~· cars, bunted in the snow, or trapped in cages - all on the ground where man lives ...

DIFFICULT I

1DWALK ASA RA.ZOltS EDGE.

11-IE ltt-\ZC)l~S J:J)(~J: ..

THE STORY OF ONE MAN'S SEARCH FOR HIMSELF.

COIJ ·.\1BIA l'ICTl "RES l'Rl :~E:"T~ . . \ .\IARCI ·cct -COllE:\ -BE:\:\ l'ROl>l"<.TIO:'\ AJOllN BYRI 'M 1'11.:\1

BILL MURRAY

Rab Herring sensed the contrast appreciating another's unfaked gift of love. " between paintings that "seemed to

radiate a message of love and peace" and others with "the pain and ugliness of death." .

And my reaction? All the paintings were too much alike. The bright reds and blinding yellows caught the eye, but how many different ways can you paint birds? The telephone pole in­stallation was really in­teresting- especially the way it seemed to fade into the distance.

Finally Lucia Salinas got the impres­sion of "a bird flying through the four seasons."

Ah yes, budding school newspaper reporters one and all. But art is not for the critics, ifs for the people. And the Emmanuel Gallery is not for ditching your favorite Engli!Jt class, but for

'

"Messengers," an exhibit by David Griggs and Holly Sumner, is showing ~ through October 18. •

Heavy Metal

Review by Richard Price Special to The Metropolitan

Greetings from Heavy Metal Headquarters. If you don't like heavy metal music, if just the sound of those words makes you curl back your lips in disgust (make a fist and you'll look just likeBilly Idol), then turn the page. Go on. Read theexciting news about the school · planning to raise tuition for next sernsester. Better yet, read the comics. Go on. Get out of here. Who needs you? I don't. Bop on home and dress-up like Boy George. Go on, get out. Take off. We're not going to start until you leave. Okay, they're gone. Back to Boulder where they belong. J

Now, down to business. Iron Maiden's got a new album out tailed Powerslave. This band is one of my favorites because they rock hard and loud. Powerslave is no exceptjon. Complementing the original guitar strummings and drum poundings are some interesting and intelligent lyrics that reach past the usual metal offerin~. The band uses quotes from Samuel Taylor , .. Coleridge, the English poet, in a song. I'm impressed.

To be honest, the first time I listened to the album I wasn't too impressed, but the more I listen to-it, the more I like it. War songs such as "Aces High;; and ' "Back in the Village" come to mind as the L.P.'s finer points.

Best song on the album: "Rime of the Ancient • Mariner." This is a fourteen-minute epic tale of a sailor who feels a need to share his past and, are you ready for this, ·~To teach God's word that we must love all things." Do you believe it? Iron Maiden has the guts to try and break the commercial devil w-0rship lyrics brought about by all the little punks out there who think songs about Satan and Hell are cool. '

Judgement: Buy it! •

B_eatles For Baby Boomers For those born during the baby boom era, unable to

witn~ the sensation of tl}e Beatles from Liverpool, ~ England, Monday night's show was second best to the real thing .

"Tl IE R:\ZOH'C.., ED< ,i: ·· BASEi) O.'\ TllE CJASSIC NOVEL BY W SOMERSET MAl lGllAM

On Monday night, Oct. 8, four men greatly resembling the disbanded Fab Four presented their act to a well-sized crowd at the Turn of the Century. From any conceiveable cloned expression, right down to the wearing of monkey suits, the band "Liverpool" ' played their tribute to the Beatles .

TllUU·:c..,A HI c..,c.,u.L <.ATllERl.'\T 111(.KC., .DE:\1101.."1 E!JJOTL\~ I "NCtE ELLIOT! ,\:>;DJAMES, KEACI I ., ; JN.K .'\ITZ~~-~11'. .. ,. ··: :) .< ~11:'\BYHl"\1 & B!LL ~.\.'!~.!{AY :~:~~:·:~ l{(?B COllEN Q

. . • · R< >Bl:H I I . . \1AH<.l.U .I A.'I> ll~Rl{Y nl:NN .,JOllN BYRl M ax::..,.-~J·

. PG·13. :_":,::.;_~_.:.:~~ . k l \I> 1111 11 "·' ''-lion~ ~ -"~-· ... . :..;;;,~~~~-.·.= :-........ ~ .. ..... ~ .... "°'.

OPENS OCTOBER 19

They strummed and drummed through such classics as "I Wanna Hold Your Hand", "If I Fell", "Something", "Come Together", "Help!", "Ohl Darl-ing", "Twist and Shout", and many more ·

After playing for a ~uple of hours, and receiving -three encores, they ended their act; which brought all who attended back into many yesterdays.

- Julie Zuffoletto

Page 15: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

·SPORIS . . .

MSC Takes 3rd by Curt Sandoval Sports Editor. The Metropolitan

Fact: Last weekend Metro hosted the Fifth Annual MSC Volleyball

" ·Tournament. Fact: MSC posted and impressive

third place fjnish. Unbelievable Fact: The women went

into the championship matches with only seven players.

No, it's not a misprint. 1he women's volleyball team captured third pla~ with only seven women at the MSC tournament last weekend.

While most teams in the tournament had a bench of four to eight players, MSC had a bench of one.

If that's not enough, Metro went mto the third place match against Southern Utah with little rest between their previous matches, but what a finish it was.

~ . If anyone videotaped the match they should send it to Alcoa Fantastic Finishes. -

Southern Utah took the first game 15-8 while Metro fought back to take the seconc! one 15-8, putting all the pressure on the third and final game.

MSC fell behind early 4-0 before they W!'re even able to serve the ball. But the women fought back to a 4-5 deficit when Southern· Utah- called-an early time out.

The points were long and the score • remained close when Southern Utah

called its second and- ffnaf time-out with the score only at 8-6 in favor of the opposition.

As,the game conti1:med. to stay close, head coach Pat J uhnson called two time

• outs late in the match with the Roadrunners trailing 10-12 and 11-13. Then MSC suddenly found themselves with their backs against the wall trail­ing 14-11, with Southern Utah serving.

But the defense pulled through to r give MSC the serve. Then MSC

exploded and fought back to a heart stopping 16-14 win.

..

Johnson said one incentive for the team was there's no trophy for fourth place

The women did play exceptionally well throughout the entire tournament. The matches held on Friday and early Saturday were pool play dividing the · 13 schools inJ:o two pools. The top four teams in each pool qualified for the cbampionship bracket .

MSC finished ~nd in its pool with a 5-1 record dropping only to Regis who went to 6-0. Against Regis, junior Donna Baro~ went out with an ankle injury and was unable to play for the

• remainder of the tournament, thus · leaving only seven ~omen able to play.

Metro met -Chadron State College (Nebraska) in· the opening round of the championships. Junior Sue Hays- was nothing short of excellent as she was diving all over the court for every shot

.... as well as passing good. Hays was later ,named to the second team all­tournament team.

Junior Cathrine Guiles was awarded first team aH-tournament honors as she was the key to the Roadrunners power at the net.

Metro dug themselves into a hole in - the second -game as they fell behind

11-2. The women fought back but came up empty handed losing that game 15-13.

...

· In game three junior Terri Mohr was serving well and spiking hard from thf"

cont. on" page 17

··cut .. ··· .-. . . :. ~

. .

If you love to ski, now there's one more reason to take the Loveland cutoff this year.

The Loveland Pass saves you big bucks on a great season-of skiing

Your first lift ticket is absolutely f!ee. So you 'll save money pronto. Then. you'll get discounts on every ticket you buy. And special savings on equipment rentals, lessons, even nursery care.

At $20, your Loveland Pass is just too good to pass up. And so is Loveland. With its easy-to· reach location, wide variety of well-groomed trails. greai snow and long season.

Get the Loveland Pass. And join the other skiing Rangers of the Rockies-in a resounding cheer of. "High priced skiing ... away ' "

i 1984 Clear Creek Skiing Corp.

r-----------------~ I

I want to cut ski costs off at the Pass. - 1

1 Please send me __ Loveland Pass(es) I at $20 each. My check for I I is enclosed. I I Name I I Address I I City State __ Zip I I Bring or mail coupon and check to; I I Loveland. Box 899. Georgetown. CO 80444 I I For more information ca ll 303·569·2288 or I L~.:_:~80_20ll ·free ~~~:'.:_~-----~~~ ~

H you love to ski, ski Loveland. ,~~

Page 16: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

I

October 17, 1984

SPORIB Woffien's Soccer Team Fight Two Overtimes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

by Diane Koogle Sports Writer, The Metropolitan

The MSC women's soccer team com­peted in three aggressive games this weekend in a tournament at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, tying , twice and winning once.

Saturday morning the team faced

Macalester College and battled to a 0-0 overtime score. However, Metro press­ed Macalester's defense almost 80 per­cent of the game.

Throughout the game the Roadrun­ners applied .constant pressure with effectivP. nffensive attackS, exhausting Macaiester's players. MSC took numerous shots on goal, but most of

them were aimed directly at the goalkeeper.

Near the end of the overtime period the only real Macalester threat struck when a hand ball was called on an MSC player in the goal box. Macalester had a direct shot on the goal. Goalkeeper Dani Denight's diving block deflected the ball out of bounds.

Good friends Won't leave you flat.

The moon was up, the stars were out and-pfftt!-your rear tire was down. Good thing there was a phone nearby. And a few good friends who were willing to drive a dozen miles, ·on a Saturday night, to give you a lift. When you get back, you want to do more than just say "thanks'.' So tonight, let it be LOwenbrau.

Lowenbrau. Here's to good friends.

Later Saturday afternoon the women shut out Trinity University 5-0.

Forward Betsy Taylor, headed the ball into the goal to score Metro's first goal of the massacre. Later in the first half Amy Shute scored from a short one-on-one standoff with the Trinity. · goalie, making the score 2-0 at halftime.

Every MSC player wanted a chance at scoring in the second half. Two players who normally play defense, Debora Berdahl and Clair Howe, went .. to offense and assisted in scoring the

· next goal, which bounced off a Trinity defender and into· the goal.

Howe nailed the next goal after it rebounded off the opposing goalkeeper. She then came back and assisted on the · final goal, which was chipped in by Shute.

In a wet and cold confrontation, Metro and the University of Northern Colorado ended up tied 0-0 when the weather forced officials to call the ' game ten minutes before regulation time expired Sunday.

Last Tuesday the Roadrunners lost to the University of Colorado 2-1 in Boulder. •

1- CAMPUS RECREATION

Flag Football Standings Gold Division Pall Bearers R.O.T.C. T .N.T.C.H. Extras Raiders

Silver Division Delta Sigma Phi The Conniptions Leftovers Crabs Misfits

This week:

,

3 p.m. Crabs v.s. Leftovers

3-0 3-1

1-2 1-2. 0-3

3-0 1-1 1-1 0-1 ~ 0-2

4 p.m. Misfits v.s. The Conniptions

Swim Meet- Campus Recreation's third annual Swim Meet will be held Oc­tober 17 at 6 p.m. Register at Campus Recreation Chechout (PER 108) or in the pool area just prior to the meet. $1 entry fee for age group, men and women's divisions.

Coed Racquetball Tour-nament- Mixer tournament (loose your partner) Friday, October 16 at 6 p.m. The winner will be determined by points awarded . ., Deadline for entry is Thursday, October 25.

Annual Trurkey Trot - Thursday, November 1 at 3 p.m. Sign up for the 2.35 mile course through Confluence Park. Men, Women, Faculty and Staff .­divisions. Entry fee is $1.

Page 17: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

Octpber 17, 1984

>- It's Back! Men's basketball officially began practice Monday bringing back the program when it was dropped after the 77 -78 season. The men's first game will be against Kansas Wesleyan College on Nov. 25 at the Auditorium Arena. ·

Ve>ll~)7b~ll ******************************

Sue Hays (5) who leads Dist. VII in assist with a 7.69 average, sets the ball to Catherine Guiles

, (10) COtlL from pap 15 come~ while Darlene Katzer, freshman, was playing with the inten sity of a veteran. MSC went on to take that one, in a close game, 15-12 to put them in the semi-finals against Regis

"'for a berth in the finals. Metro didn't have more than 15

minutes of rest before they had to play the Rangers. In game one Regis was able to substitute eight times while MSC cUdn't go to ifs one pers6n bench a single time. Regis took the game 15-8.

• Metro played tough in the second game but came up short losing 15-12 that sent them into the third place game against Southern Utah. Regis went on into the finals but dropped to a tough UNC team 18-16, 16-4.

.... During the tournament MSC won seven matches and lost only two to bring its overall record to .~8-11. •

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Lawrence & 9th St. 629-3230 M.:fh 8-7:30, Fri 8-5, SatI0-3

CC Men Look to Improve team, that scored 117 points. Last week the men's cross countty

team headed to the University of New Mexico Highlands Invitational meet and ran on the same course they will be running on for the national qualifying meet.

Hopefully, when the men take to theo rocky and hilly course next month they will run better than they did last weekend as they finished fu fourth place out of five schools.

"We've definitely got to improve, we didn't run well,.;, -said head coach Micheal Peterson. He said one of his runners must be able to place in the top five.

• At the m~ last weekend George Frushour was the Roadrunners top finisher placing 10th with a 28:34 time followed by Charlie Blueback in 14th at 29:01 for five miles.

Peterson said he liked the course as far as a cross country -course but with ten teams on tbe course next month he feels it will be a bit difficult. He added that if it rains or snows it will be a hor­rible course.

University of New Mexico Highlands won the meet with 36 points while Western State College placed third. Both of these teams are clubs MSC will have to contend with at the nationa! qualifyin~ meet.

Metro did beat Ft. Lewis, a league

MSC's other scorers were: John Montgomery in 28th at 28:34, Paco Sanchez in 32nd at 31:51 and Tom Hedlund 33rd at 32:15.

The men's next meet will be October 27 · at the Colorado State University Invitational meet in Fort Collins.

- Curtis Sandoval

HIS WEEK PORTS

Wednesday, October 17

IN

Volleyball v.s. UNC at home 7 p.m. Women's Soccer v.s. UNC away

Friday, October 19 Volleyball v.s. Adams State away Saturday, October 20

Women's soccer v.s. CSU at horn noon · Men's Soccer v .s. Bartlesvill Wesleyan College at home 2 p .m.

Volleyball v.s. Ft. Lewis and Wester State away

onday, October 22 Volleyball v.s. Southern Colorad

away Men's v.s. Regis away ednesday, October 24 Volleyball v.s. Air Force home 7 p.m

e 's Soccer v.s. Air Force awa

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Page 18: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

GO -

r I Wednesday 17

MSC Block 91udent Alllance and UCO Associated Black students meeting In StlJ­dent Center 351 G noon to 1 ,p .m. Cdl 629-3322 for more Information. MSC Earth science Club Workshop and Film Serles. Student Center 254/6, noon to 1 ' p.m. Call 629-3042 for more Information. MSC Wind Enaemble Dr. Glen Yarberry. Conductor. St. CaJetan's at noon. Call 629-2714 for more Information.

campus Recreation 3rd annual SWlm meet. PERH pool at 6 p .m. Call 629-3145 for more Information.

starting tonight at the. Comedy Works. Biii Engval. Showtlme 8:30. 1226 15th St. Larimer Square. Call 592-1178 for more Information.

Denver Center Cinema presents-"Mid­Day Break" at 12:45 p .m . an early French comedy and BBC-TV Documentary, "See­ing the Movies" film/lecture program at 6:45 p .m .. "Black Narcissus" at 7:30 p.m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa St. Call 892-4000 for more Information. ·

Tranacendental MedltaHon Technique Free Introductory · Lectures In Student Center room 254,3 p .m. and 7:30 p.m.

Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, Studeni Center 257, 2 to 3 p.m.

MECHA Open HouM and free movie. stu­dent Center 230 B/C Call 629-3324 for more Information.

Thursday 1·a

PSI CHI Meeting and lecture. StucJE.1-it Center 254 at 3:30 p .m. Call 629, 3329 for more Information.

MSC Playen and Music Activities Commit­tee presents "Anyone Can Whistle.'' MSC Theatre: Arts Building 271 at 8 p.m. Call 629-3033 for more Information. , MSC Black Student Alliance and UCD Assoclatted Black students meeting. stu­dent Center 351 G. Call 629-3322 for more Information KIDl-TV 12 presents a national teleconference on the Nuclear Arms Race. 4 to 6:30 p.m. .

"Renalllance" will perform at the Rainbow Music Hall 2175 South Cherry at 7:30 p.m: Call 691-6000 for more Information.

UCO ~ Club presems a lecture by Dr. Martin Lockley on "Dinosaur Foot Prints of the 'the Colorado Plateau." East Cla.uroom 122 at noon.

..................................................

United .· Parcel Seivice

Now Hiring ...................................... -...... .

ACCESS-Aurarla Community College Computer Club meeting. South Building 114 2:30 p.m. Call 278-3519 for more Infor­mation.

Denver Center Cinema presents "Scarlet Days" plus shorts at 8 p .m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa St. Call 893-4000 for more Information.

Union of Conc""8d SClentlsts "A Day of Education" on the nuclear arms race. Stu­dent Center 330 A/B 11 a .m. to 3 p .m. Call 629-8327 for more Information, -

Friday 19

"Current laaues In Interior Design" a free lecture .by Arnold Friedmann. Denver Center Cinema 14th and Curtis at 5;15 p.m. . MSC Players and Music Activities Commit­tee present "Anyone Can Whistle." MSC Theatre: Art Build ing 271 at 8 p.m. Call 629-3033 for more Information.

MSC Black Student Alllance and UCD Associated Black students meeting. Stu­dent Center 351 G 10 to 11 a .m . Call 629-3322 for more Information.

Denver Center Cinema presents "The Lavender Hiii Mob" at 7:15 p.m. and "And Now For Something Completly Dlfferenf' (Monty Python cast) at 9 p.m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa St. Call 893-4000 for more Information.

"Grim Reaper" will perform at the Rainbow Music Hall 2175 South Cherry at 7:30 p.m. Call 691-6000 for more Information.

Dr. Carl Sagan will speak on "Nuclear Winter" at Boetcher Co!)Cert Hall 8 p.m. Call 629-2610 for more Information.

MSC Department of Mualc presents Plano Master Class with Jon Kllbonoff In St. Cajetan's 2 to 4 p.m. Call 629-3180 for more Information.

"MllttarlzaHon of Space: Star Wars &. High Frontier" a pannel discussion sponsored by the Graduate School of lnternotlonal stuqles. UCO. 3-5 p .m. In the lounge of the Ben- Cherrington Hall. Call 629-2610 for more Information.

Please meet the calendar deadlne. 1 p.m. today.

Saturday 20

oenver·cent• Cinema presents "Cartoon Program" two hours of cartoons at 1 :30 p .m .. "Monsieur Verdoux" with Charlie Chaplln'at 3:15 p.m., "The Old-Fashioned Way" staring W. C . Fields at 6 p .m., "Nanook of the North" and "The Wedding

Part Time Positions Day & Night Shifts Available Excellent Pay Contact Job Placement Office In Central Classroom

Equal Oppoftunlty EmplOyer M/F

of Paolo' at 8 p .m. DCC Is located at 1245-Champa St. Call 893-4000 for more Infor­mation.

MSC Players and Music Activities Commit­tee presents "An'{one Can Whistle." MSC Theatre: Arts Building 271 at 8 p .m. Call 629-3033 f(!r more Information.

MSC · Prelaw Club Fall lananaza-all students welcome 562i0 East Mexico Avh. At 6 p .m. Call 756-9191 for more Informa­tion.

Baptist Student Union and Friendship Inter­national present third annual student Night at 7 p.m. Bear Valley Baptist Church. Coll 238-0135 for more Information.

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

"Jeff Lorber Fusion" will perform at the Rainbow Music Hall 2175 South Cherry at 7:30 p .m. 691-6000 for more lnformdtlon.

SundQy 21

Services at St. Ellzlbeth at 9 and 11 a .m.

Denver Center Cinema presents "Movie Crazy" at 3:30 p .m .. " Monsieur Verdoux" at 5 p .m .. "The Phantom of Liberty" at 7:30 p .m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa St. Call 893-4000 for more Information.

Last chance to see Bill Engvol at the "Com­edy Works." Located at 1226 15th St. on Larimer Square. Call 592-~178 for more Information. "Pat Metheny" will perform at Macky Auditorium, Boulder at 8 p.m. Call 691 -6000 for more Information.

Ogden Theatre presents "The Gold Rush" staring Charlie Chaplin at 12:50. 4:10. 7:30 p .m. Plus 3 Chaplin shorts, at 2:30. 5:50, 9:10 p .m . Ogden Theatre Is locoted at 935 East Colfax. Call 832-4500 for more Information.

Monday 22

Aurarla lnterlatth Ministry presents "In­fluencing the Influencers-The Role of Media In the PoUtlcol Process." Noon to 1 p.m. In St. Francis Center. Coll 623-2340 for more lnformatloi:i.

Radio StaHon Committee meeting. Student Center 255 A 11 a.m. Coll 629-2797 for more Information.

UCO Faculty Exhibit begins at the Em­manuel Gallery. On display until Nov. 8. "Jetrersc>n Starship" will perform at the Rainbow Music Hall 2175 South Cherry at 7 and 10 p.m. Call 691-6000 for more Infor­mation.

l~Vision Centers'

• October 17, 1984

Aurarla Ugrary Gallery presents Painting by Marie Baker. Showing until Nov. 8.

Tuesday 23

College Young Democrats meeting. Stu­dent Center 230 CID at 4 p.m. Baptist Student Union meeting. St. Francis room 1 at noon. Call 623-2340 for more In­formation. Alcohollcs Anonymous meeting. Student Center 257 2 to 3 p .m. Denver CentM Cinema presents .. The Holocausf' film/lecture at 6:45 p .m .... The • Boat Is Full" at 7:30 p.m. DCC Is located at 1245 Champa St. Call 893-4000 for more Information. "lonnle Rant" Wiii perform at the Rainbow Muclc Hall 2175 South Cherry at 7:30 p .m . Call 691-6000 for more Information. MIA AlsoclaHon presents guest speaker Wiiiiam K. Roudebush. Aurarla student · Center. Rm 230 A & B at 8:30 p .m.

Wednesday 24

' MSC Fflgnt Team ~ting. Student Center 230 CID at, 1 p .m. Call 629-3316 for more Information. AHEC community RelaHons Conference Service Luncheons. Staff of MSC. UCD and DACC welcome. Seating limited. 11 :30 a.m. to 1 :30 p .m. Call 629-8533 for more Information. Alpha Eta Rho{ Professlonal Aviation Frater­nity meeting. student Center 230 CID at noon. Call 629-3316 for more Information. MSC Black Students Alllance and Associated Black Students meeting. Stu­dent Center 351 G noon to 1 p .m. Call 629-3322 for more Information. Aurarla Jewllh Student Alliance meeting. student Center 251 at noon. Call 629-333 for more Information .. MSC Department of Music presents Plano Concert with Jon Kllbonoff In St. Cajetan's at 8 p.m. Coll 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 Information. Denver center Cinema presents "Mid-Day Break - Two delUghtflllly 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 St. Call 893-4000 for more Information

"Nicaragua, Report from the Front,'; o . new fllm. wlll be shown at noon. 1 p .m., and 7 p .rr:i. followed bV a discussion In student Center Room 330. Sponsored by UCD Con­trol America Support Committee.

Dr. Patriclc M. Fowler OYfOMETRIST

1050 W. Colfax across from

Auraria Campus 825-6999

Montbello Vision Center Montbello State Banlc Building

45th and Peoria, Suite 5ffl :l7:l-.'i000

Idaho Sprin~ Vision Center

217 16th Street l-57R-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 Doctor's fee. Excludes $20 Discourit.) • *Free Services *Adjustment of Frames * Minor Frame Repai1'$tl

Expires 12131184

..

Page 19: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

October 17, 1984

..

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Page 20: Volume 7, Issue 9 - Oct. 17, 1984

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