Volume 6, Issue 15 - Dec. 7, 1983

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Volume 6 hrue 15

"Growing with a growing community."

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December 7, 1983

Anybody's Race:

Merry Christnias &-Happy路 Nevv Year

Awards Committee Breaks With Tradition

Froni the Staff of The Metropolitan For those of you that survived against the odds to the end of this semester, the motley crew of The Metropolitan would like to wish you a Merry Christmas and a happy New Year. The Metropolitan will -be back on the stands January 25, and we expect the spring to be even more of a challenge than the semester behind us. In the meantime, if you will promise to try and forget about us, we will try and forget about you.

by Carson Reed Editor, The Metropolitan

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The MSC. Awards Committee has announced that MSC students with outstanding records of academic and community achievement may now nominate themselves for a variety of awards. Student petitions for any of the categories of national and local recognition are being accepted as part of an overall campaign to increase the number and quality of applicants. The awards range fror;n national listing in Who's Who,to an Outstanding Student Leadership award being presented for the first time by MSC student government. All in all, eleven different kinds of awards are open to competition, many with multiple recipients. "In the past, students have been dependent on their department to recognize them and take the time and trouble to norllinate them," said student representative Mike Egan. "But on a commuter campus, not everyone with an outstanding record hangs around the department long enough to have a mentor take them under their wing." "In the past, it has been up to each department to nominate students. Some _departments took it very seriously, others have virtually ignored it," Egan said. Application forms are being sent to each department, Egan said, and are also available from the Student Affairs Office, CN 316, or from MSC Student Government~ in Room 340C of the Student Center. Egan stressed that students will still benefit from nomination by their departmental dean or a faculty member. "We'll be considering every aspect of a student's record," Egan said, "and a letter of -recommendation from the dean is certainly going to help a student's chances." The main reas-o n for selfnominations, Egan said, is to give some avenue of recognition for an outstanding student who is not being pushed by his or her own department. "Our expectations are that students who deserve the award will - be hustling to give us the best presentation possible. We'll be looking for applications that are not only substantial, but sharp and showy as well. Given that, any recommendations that accompany an application will have some weight. Deadline for applications is February 24. 路

Noxious Gases Engulf Auraria by Jack Affleck Reporter, The Metropolitan

Hail! Hail! The Gang's All Here! photo by Tripod

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Class Struggle Ends

Snowbound

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Page 12

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Last Thursday, December 1, the Department of Health declared a pollution alert for the downtown area. That alert marked the begining of a long winter of working and studying in a pressure-cooker of poisonous gasses for downtown commuters, including the students at Auraria. In response to that hazard, a pollution awareness talk was given on the following day by air pollution specialist Rick Halvey, who outlined ' the content of Denver's air pollution and jts causes and effects. He explained that the main reason for the alert was a temperature inversion, no. upward air moyement. Breathing the air on campus, Halvey said, can result in nausea, headaches, 路 dizzyness, and drowsiness, among other symptoms. The reasons for the symptoms are simple, Halvey said. Carbon monoxide attaches to hemoglobin in the bloodstream replacing needed oxygen. Although carbon monoxide is Denver's worst pollutant, other significant pollutants include nitrogen dioxide and ozone. As commuters, Auraria's 35,000 students, faculty, and staff are contributors to the problem, as well as . the victims of it, Halvey said. Because the problem of pollution is so significant 'to students at Auraria, Halvey was surprised that only twenty people attended his presentation in the Student Center. "I thought as bad as the air was yesterday, it would'_ve been a packed house," Halvey said. Halvey emphasized that helping to eliminate Denver's brown cloud requires the help of all Denver commuters, including those at Auraria. 0


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