Volume 9, Issue 4 - Sept. 12, 1986

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Volume 9

Issue 4

September 12, 1986

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"A Portrait of Eritea," the collection of Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Anthony Suau is on exhibit in the Auraria Library through September 25. See related story p.6

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New building replacing history Prof ~uff led over broken ground

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Peter Boyles hits the classroom

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Celebrate our 21st Birthday with us! Saturday, Sept.ember 27, at the Student Cent.er, 9th and Lawrence St. 'lbe festivities begin at 6 p.m. A gala of dancing, refreshments, music and birthday cake. Admis&on: $10.00 (proceem for the Student Emergency w~ Fund). To order tickets, writ.e MSC 21st Birthday, 1380 Lawrence Suire 1200, Denver, CO 80204. Make checks payable to the MSC Foundation or call 556-4833 for information. . .. .. . .

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The Metropolitan

September 12, 1986

Republicans rally at airport balloons, bands and cold ti/et by Bob Haas It was a pleasure to stand when Ronald Reagan walked into the room. All cynical observation aside, there is something quite right about the President of the United States. All of the republican party loyalists who gathered Monday morning in a Continental Airlines' hanger to lunch with the President would likely agree. The Ken Kramer/ Ron Reagan /Republican party feel good gathering made up in good cheer what it lacked in real style. No real style? - It's difficult to maintain an adequate cocktail small talk demeanor on ¡the concrete floors and in the echo vaulted corrigated ceiling of a barracks-like airplane hanger. - There is something uncomfortably wrong with the American political machine - the balloons and band music, the delegate convention mentality, a relinquishing of so much individuality for the sake of such single minded conformity. It is that single minded conformity which would like to elect Ken Kramer to the United States Senate. And candidate Kramer may not have understood that Monday morning he was only a prop. The gathering, the balloons and the excitement were not' for him, not for the success of his election. Rather, the gathering was a celebration of the republican party, and of the election of a republican to the senate chambers. Apparently, any republican would do.

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"We must elect senators who will vote for America's future," Reagan said. "Vote for Ken Kramer so we can have a republican senate that I can work with for these next two and a half years." Not to suggest that Ronald Reagan

does not think Ken Kramer a good aud able man, and not to say that Ken Kramer is neither. But Monday morning Ken Kramer was a symbol, the symbol of one of us. One of us Monday morning was a republican gathered at a republican

gala decorated with republican balloons and crepe stringers, listening to republican children's singing groups singing republican songs. The little flags sticking out of so many pressed and polished three-piece republican suits were republjcan flags, and the two well stocked bars served republican scotch. And ¡ no one suggested that the gathering was anything but a party pep rally. Nor is it suggested that the republican's primary opposition carries on with any greater decorum. (Recall the Fritz and Gerry show of 1984.) If there is something uncomforting about all this hoopla, there is also something quite right about it. There is something of innocent naivete in the bubbling embracement of the party's leader, a leader full of real charm and enjoyable wit. And if there is something of innocent naivete about plunking ~ down $500.00 for cold filet and a nut . cookie, there is .something of genuine faith in a common cause there, too. D


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The Metropolitan September 12, 1986

Sean-Michael Gilmore

On October 31, 1880, the same great citizens of Denver who brought us the Sand Creek massacre burned Hop Alley - a once thriving Chinese community - to the ground. In doing so, they deprived future citizens of Denver the rich cultural experience an ethnic nieghborhood can bring.

20th for remnants of Denver's Chinatown. Finding few, it was left to our imagination to consider what it would be like had the nieghborhood been left alone to grow into a cultural center like the great Chinatowns of New York and San Fransisco. An ethnic community contributes to a city in many rich and varied ways, just as the constant influx of immigrants has contributed to the greatness of this country. That may be contrary to popular conservative isolationism but it's my opinion. So when Steve called me the other day to say he was taking me to lunch at the New Saigon restaurant on south Federal so I could check out the growing Vietnamese community

I was turned on to Hop Alley a few years ago by my friend and Zen master, Steve Eriksson. Steve has appointed himself my personal director of sociology (he's got a masters from UCD and the guy thinks he knows everthing) . We spent an afternoon searching the alley between Blake and Wazee Steets from 16th to

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The Metropolitan

rolled up sleeping mat I hac;l no use for, but not willing to let go of, kept for many years. I would find out years later that among those Vietnamese was a women - Van-Nguyen - who would later bring her family to Denver and open a restaurant she would call New Saigon. The New Saigon looks like any small cafe. Booths and tables with plastic covers. Corkbbard and mirror tiles on the walls. On the back wall is a carved wooden clock in the shape of Vietnam. Pop Vietnamese music on the sound system. Steve and I ordered French 33, a great Gallic beer and we both tried the Mi Xao Don-Mi Xao Mem, a mixture of sauteed vegetables, chicken, beef and shrimp over rice noodles. It was excellant (New Saigon won Westword's best of Denver award in 1985). For dessert we had Ca Phe Sua, a Veitnamese espresso with a sweet milk syrup. I talked with Hang-Vu the daughter of the owner. She told me her family had left Vietnam after the fall of Saigon and had spent time in a refugee camp in the Phillipines before being moved to Guam. After several months they were shipped to Camp Pendleton in southern California for processing. They found a sponsor in Denver and the family opened the New Saigon seven years ago. She said with the many new Vietnamese restaurants opening, the New Saigon had "fewer Vietnamese customers but more Americans". Hang-Vu said she liked living in Denver, but the winters were awfully cold - something I agreed with. During lunch the restaurant had been filled with Vietnamese people and suprisingly I had been filled with an oddly comfortable feeling. Not the sweet nostalgic feeling of coming home but more the feeling of putting on a fovorite shirt you haven'.t worn in a long time. An easy feeling. Of coarse there was no possibility of morter rounds dropping in for lunch or SAMs to snatch me out of the sky. No V.C. satchel charges. through the plate glass window. Just people eating lunch. Afterwards Steve and I went a few blocks south on Federal to check out the oriental buisness community that covers both sides of the street for about a quarter of a mile. While Steve looked around I talked to N ghia Luong, the owner of the Thai Binh Supermarket. Mr. Luong told me the community had grown from four stores in 1980 to 22 new buisnesses including several Vietnamese and Thai supermarkets and two video stores that feature movies in Vietnamese and other Asian languages. "Most of the stores are Vietnamese," said Mr. Luong "but because the foods are so similar many Cambodians, Thais and Laotians shop here." Mr. Luong estimates a community of thirteen thousand South East Asians use the buisness center. Buisness is so good, he said, that most of the stores will soon be moving to a new center under construction at Alameda and Federal. Mr. Luong said the area merchants look out for each other. In fact, he

September 12, 1986

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says, there's no more vandalism or trouble in this community than anywhere else. That pleased me. . There would be no Alamo Bays in Denver. There will be no burning of Hop Alley. I had hated the politics of Vietnam. But once upon a time I had fought for these people. I would, by God, do so again. o

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The Metropolitan September 12, 1986

Eritrean Atrocity by Bob Haas The newspaper is full of horror these days. Well documented stories of mass killings gain our sympathy for the victims; child molesters are always despised. These localized and specific horrors are easy targets for our revulsion. We would never kill postal employees, we would never molest a child. Paging through the newspaper, we consider the importance of remembering the genocide of the Holocaust, lest it might happen again. How could any civilized society have allowed such an horror to take place? How could so many people have done nothing to prevent such an atrocity? While we remember historical Germany, we cannot quite remember our reaction to Pol Pot's genocide in Cambodia. Certainly we must have had a reaction, but it has slipped somewhere between pouring a fresh cup of morning coffee and turning the page. We abhor the memory of the genocide committed against the Native Americans, and we turn the newspaper page and see a bewildered boy with a bandaged stump for an arm. Genocide has been successfully waged against

• From "A Portrait of Eritrea" in the Auraria Library Gallery this Afghani child. The Soviet army has schemed against him, has scattered toys for him to find. They are cleverly booby-trapped toys, toys made to blow off the hands and arms of small children. But Afghanistan is so far away, and the politics involved so complicated, and besides we haven't read the funnies yet. We turn the page. But turning the page on atrocities doesn't make them go away.

Curiously, present horrors seem more distant than past ones. Present horrors are, afterall, halfway around the world. Past horrors are part of our history, a history that insulates us, gives us the freedom to feel sure that we would have done something had we been there. Photographer Anthony Suau journeyed to Eritrea in December 1984 to document the suffering in that war and. continued on page 7

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The MetropoUtan September 12, 1986

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famine ravaged country. His photographs tum a present atrocity into a close and immediate reality. What he found was a courageous and highly organized people fighting for independence from the Ethiopian government, a government which uses starvation as a weapon of war. The Ethiopians encourage the outside world to believe that the disturbance in its northern province is merely civil unrest perpetrated by a few zealous rebels. Visiting Eritrean Relief Committee executive director Tesfa A. Seyoum tells a different story. "It is painfully obvious that the Ethiopian government plans to starve the Eritreans into submission," Seyoum said recently at the photography exhibit's opening at the Auraria Library. "The only way to get the aid to Eritrea is through Sudan," he said, " and that must be done at night because of the bombings." The bombings are carried out with Soviet supplied military hardware. In fact, both the Et}liopian army and the Eritreans are armed by the Soviets. "Ninety-percent of the armaments used by the Eritreans are captured weapons," Seyoum said. "And actually, the bombings are not the worst. When the Migs (jet fighters} fly over, they make a terrible sound. The sound will break your eardrums. The jets fly

over hospitals and orphanages. The sound they make terrorizes the children. Our children have no home to grow up in. "Seyoum pauses. "This is sad," he says. Sad indeed. As in Afghanistan, the survival of the children in Eritrea will one day be the history of their country. The drought in Eritrea is a natural catastrophe. The outpouring of aid from so many countries is the required membership dues in the community of civilized societies. The famine in Eritrea is a human atrocity, created in large part by the political game playing of a repressive regime. This atrocity spits in the face of civilized societies. We are easily outraged at the obscene indecency of Adolf Hitler. We willingly believe that had we been there, we would have done something. Do something. Do what? The Rocky Mountain News said this in a recent editorial: ...Americans shouUI prepare themselves for more pictures of skeletal, dying Africans. This time they should recognize that neither nature nor Westem colonialism is to blame. And that no matter how much they want to help, that option may not be available. Perhaps not. But see the photos, and move mind and spirit close to the story, before the atrocity b ecomes o history.

From "A Portrait of Eritrea" in the Auraria Library Gallery

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The Metropolitan

Construction destroys buried history by Anne Bentzlin-Smith As Auraria professors strive to stimulate the minds of the students that fill their classrooms, the very buildings in which they teach have indefinitely sealed part of Denver's early history underground. MSC cultural anthropologist Ken Keller thinks the area is rich in artifacts that could provide valuable information regarding Colorado's early history and pre-history (before written history). But as Keller puts it, "Here we go, once again." The construction of the UCD Replacement Building is in full swing and any areas worthy of archaeological study have since been destroyed. Long before many of the campus buildings were built, Keller recalls, "pot hunters" could be seen from Speer Boulevard, digging for lead-

glass bottles and pottery to sell. They dug up and sold anything they could find and left the area looking like a war zone, he said. "I guess I get a little frustrated. We are in a place where it's culturally, prehistorically and historically fairly rich, not in the same way as Mesa Verde, but with material that is there for interpretation and understanding," Keller said. "People need to be made aware that once it's (an artifact) dug up, it's gone." The land adjacent to Cherry Creek and. the Platte River was used by various tribes of Indians before the city of Auraria was founded. The city of Auraria was founded before Denver but the two towns later merged. In the early 1800' s, the area was inhabited by minorities and was a working class neighborhood, Keller said. "Those are the people nothing was continued on page 14

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Replacement Building: Replaces historical arti

general Con.tracter M.A. ~n Cofr1118f1J

No Strain, no gain by Robert Ritter and Eric Mees The gray-haired guy sitting on the bench next to Bob Hull this year won't be a blue-chip recruit from Brooklyn or a junior-college transfer from Texas. Instead, it will be Joe Strain, the coach of last year's Colorado high school basketball champions and a man with 23 years of coaching experience. Strain, 55, will be the new assistant basketball coach and an athletics department administrative assistant. Strain coached 15 years at George Washington High School, leading the Patriots to an overall record of 165-30, including six conference and two state titles. One of the reasons he Jeft CW for Metro is the success of MSC's basketball program. "There is an optimistic, positive atti-

tude here at Metro. What coach Hull did last year was great." Strain said. "I think after going 13-13 last year, we could-iu:iprove our record by five or six games." HuH said he feels extremely fortunate to have a coach with Strain's credentials and especially at a bargain price. "I wanted to get a coach with experience and normally to do that you have to pay a lot," Hull said. "Joe seemed excited and since he was retiring he'll get his pension (from Denver Public Schools), so the salary he required was not as much as others." Hull said Strain's 15 years experience counseling high school students also impressed him. "Joe will help counsel the players on academics and help free me for more fundraising," Hull said. Strain will also scout the teams on Metro's schedule and do a lot of the

recruiting of local students. He hopes that Metro will be able to get the best from the Denver area. "Mostly, though, it's a lot of paperwork," Strain said. Strain will not be the only former Patriot on the Roadrunner squad. Freshman forward Shun Tillman was recruited out of CW by Hull after leading the Patriots to the state championship. 'Tm glad he followed me to Metro," Tillman said with a laugh, "he's a good coach." Strain, a Denver native, played basketball "at South High School and later at Phillips University in Enid, OK. He now resides in southeast Denver with his wife, Jeanette. They have three children and three grandchildren, all of whom, he says, Jove sports. His son, Joe, played pro baseball with the San Francisco Giants in the D late 70s.

Athletic Dept.

Coach Strain talks to the media after a George Washington game.


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September 12, 1986

Boyles bags biggies for Illedia class speakers by Frederick G. Ripley

Aside from being a popular radio personality at KNUS and host of a prime-time cable television show, Peter Boyles will be appearing live in front of a journalism class every Tuesday and Thursday, from 2:00 to 3:15 p.m . West Classroom 254 has never seen the likes of the guest-speaker list Boyles has compiled for the course he created, How Media Shapes Culture. Music promoter Barry Fey, of Feyline Enterprises, was the first to speak to the rather awestruck class September 4.

Fey, who has filled Mile High Stadium for rock concerts and is responsible for such major events as Red Rocks Summer of Stars, talked to the

With a degree in history, Boyles came into journalism and later broadcasting by answering an American Automobile Association ad for writers. "The only stipulation was that I cut my hair," he said. "I needed a job and snipping off some hair sure beat starving to death." Boyles is considered by some to be a controversial figure because of his support of the military and involvement in things like The Committee For a Free Afghanistan, "an issue he feels strongly about," Greg Pearson, director of the journalism department, said of his former student. "Sure, there's been some disgrun· tlement expressed over the hiring of Peter, but nothing that would preclude

Ther versatile Peter Boyles gazes at the Panama Canal last summer as a media representative on a fact-finding tour of the Colorado National Guard's involvement in Central America.

Auraria Community Relations

{ Nobody.Hungry? by Carol Buck A ticket-selling contest for Metro's 21st birthday party is underway - or is supposed to be. The Student Activities office designed the ticket-selling contest to promote student involvement in the . Sept. 27 birthday celebration. But the contest still has no student " contestants. "Some interest has been expressed, but so farnobody's picked up tickets," Yolanda Ortega, director of Student Activities, said. Mike Majeres, coordinator for Clubs , and Campus-wide Programming, said he notified MSC clubs and organizations of the contest by memo August ;<.

11.

Any campus organization is eligible to enter this intense competition. The group which sells the most tickets over • 50 will win certificates for 21 large Domino's pizzas. Second prize is 12 Celestial Seasonings tea shirts. The MSC Alumni Association has already sold approximately 50 tickets, Ann Dickerson of Public Relations said. . ~ Ortega said she hoped that discussion of the contest at last Wednesday's

All Club's Day would encourage the students' competitive spirits and generate ticket-selling contestants. Ticket sales will not only benefit competing clubs and organizations, theyj will benefit students as well. All proceeds from the event will go to a new emergency student loan fund, the criteria for which has not yet been established, Dr. Gwen Thomas, assistant vice president of institutional adv~ncement, said. The fund will be administered by the MSC Foundation, which Thomas called the "fund-raising arm of the college." This means that the purchase of one $5 ticket ($10 for non-students) will buy much more than an evening of unlimited food , drink and dance. That ticket will also provide student benefits. Until campus organizations join the contest, tickets can be purchased thr~ugh Student Activities, Public Relations, Institutional Advancement, all ~atatix outlets and the Ticket Bu~. A ticket booth has b een opened in the Student Center, cafeteria level, Dickerson said. For more information, contact Public ,elations at 556-4262. D

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small group as though they were a circle of his closest friends. He fielded questions on the music industry and how media has played a part in shaping the industry, concluding that "the media is no one's friend but their own." Because of his high visibility, Boyles has access to many public figures and media personalities like himself. For instance, Channel 4's Bob Palmer and Ron Zappolo, are scheduled speakers, as well as Denver Post columnist Woody Paige. Joe 'Louis' Barrow, son of the late heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis, will speak about the media's impact on his father. The book, CHAMPION Joe Louis-Black Hero in White America, by Chris Mead, is required reading for Boyles' course. "It promises to be an interesting semester with some real surprises in store," Boyles, a 1973 MSC graduate, said. "People may not agree with my views or those of the guest speakers, but faced with a challenge, the normal reaction is to think and ask questions."

me from doing.so," Pearson said. Omnibus courses like this one are taught periodically when the teacher has expertise in a certairi area, Pearson said. Metro alumni that have preceded Boyles in teaching such classes are Joe Fuentas, then with the Rocky Mountain News and presently working in public relations for Coors; Rick Barber, KOA radio personality; and Laurie Spenser, Denver Post copy desk chief. "Peter is articulate and has a very quick mind," Pearson said. "Hopefully this course will have a positive affect on the students." Boyles welcomes anyone to attend one of his classes or listen to a particular guest speaker. He asks, however, that people who do so be considerate of the speaker and the students registered for the course. "This means not monopolizing all of the speaker's time," Boyles said. "Although the idea for the course was predominantly mine, Greg has · offered me the chance of a lifetime," he said. "I just hope I can learn as much from this experience as the students." D


PagetO

September 12, 1986

Women,s volleyball

Coach: Inexperience could hinder tCam' s talents by Robert Ritter For anyone who has ever seen the women's volleyball championship banners hanging in the Auraria gym, they don't bring to mind the crowded rafters of Boston Garden. But women's volleyball coach Pat Johnson would love to add another banner to the three that already hang there. She even goes so far as to say she will sew one herself if her women win the conference championship. The Roadrunners open the 1986 season this Friday at Western State and if one word sums up the team it would be: inexperienced. Johnson said her team has as much talent as any sh~'s ever had, but the

inexperience of the team could hamper its ability to perform as well as last year's squad. "This squad and the whole general level of talent is better than we've had in the past. We have some excellent potential but we need some time to develop," Johnson said. "We're really going to have to have some patience in putting things together, players as well as coaches. We've got 14 new faces out of 19 members on the squad," she said. Johnson lost five starters from last year's team, which finished 30-16 overall and second in the Continental Divide Conference with an 11-3 record.

Photo by David Mcintyre

Sophomore Corrine Donnelly will be the lone returning starter, but Johnson said she feels the newcomers will nicely fill the vacated gaps. gaps. "Corrine is playing better now than she did last year," Johnson said, "and we·ve got some strength this year to replace the starters we lost. In fact, some of the freshmen are real threats to be in the starting lineup. Right now, though, I'm just experimenting." Donnelly agrees with her coach on the women's prospects for the '86 season. "This team is not as developed as last year's. Time is what it takes to develop. The base of the team is better but we need a little more experience in our passing game," Donnelly said. "We'll be strong in blocking and hitting with Lee Ann Dawson, Heidi Keyes and Diane Johnson. "I was worried about losing my job this season because the freshmen are so good," she said. Donnelly isn't sure if the women will improve on last year's success, but said she feels good about the strength of the bench and the team overall. Johnson, starting her 18th season as head coach, went one big step toward bringing experience to her squad when she hired Jerrie McGahan as an assistant coach over the summer. McGahan played on the Olympic volleyball team from 1970-1975 and has played professionally, inCluding a stint with the old Denver Comets. Last year she played professionally in Italy. "I feel fortunate to be able to work with her. She's been an excellent addition in that she's brought us so much experience," Johnson said. Johnson said she thinks Regis, which returns with most of the same squad, will be the team to beat in the CDC, but said Metro should not be counted out. "We'll be playing an underdog role again this year, but we could surprise some people," she said. This is the first yeaF Johnson has ever had to make cuts from the team, and while it was difficult to cut people, she said it shows there is more interest in the team. As Johnson prepares the Roadrunners for their first weekend trip, she compares her team to a common form of punctuation. "The team is a question mark at this point in the season. There is a high level of talent but a lack of cohesiveness, the ability to work together," Johnson said. "I think we can do well. It will depend on how the kids develop. That's more of a question mark than ever b efore." If Johnson's team develops like she expects and gains the experience she deems necessary, she just may find herself sewing a banner in late November to hang on the north wall of the Auraria gym. D

The Snake Former Oakland Raiders quarterback Ken Stabler will be autographing copies of his new autobiography, Snake, in the Auraria Book Center next Monday from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. According to the Denver Area Book Promoters Association, the book tells of Stabler's years with the Raiders and how he, "created a reputation for chasing women, drinking hard and generally raising hell." D

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Draftiness by Kirk Gill Registering for the draft is like a onenight stand. That, at least, is the prevailing attitude among young men questioned on the Metro campus about draft registration. "It's like a one-night stand, because it's so easy to sign that piece 6f paper without, in your mind, really making a commitment," Alan Hoover, 18, said. "Sure, I registered, but I ain't gong to go kill anybody." All the men questioned bed registered for the draft, but most also have serious reservations about fighting in a war overseas. "I hope we learned from Vietnam," Bob Wright, 19, said. When asked about penalties for nonregistration, such as not receiving student loans or financial aid, not being eligible for Federal jobs or job benefits and a $250,000 fine or five years imprisonment, all said that penalties played a part in deciding to register. "It's (non-registration) just more hassle than it's worth," Wright said. Some of those questioned, however, said they registered out of patriotic duty, and one said he registered because his parents made him do it. Whatever the reason, virtually all young men are registering when they are supposed to. Shelia Moore of Denver's Selective Service Office said that no Coloradans have been prosecuted for failing to register since mandatory registration was re-enacted in 1980. Also, according to Cheryl Judson, director of Metro's Financial Aid Office, less than 3i of registration-age men nationally lied on financial aid statements or weren't registered. Judson said the government has sophisticated means of catching those who fail to register. "They take the names and run them through the big computer in the sky," Judson said. Nam es are cross-referenced through Justice Department, Department of Motor Vehicles, Internal Revenue, Social Security, and school computers. Judson added that, like the young men questioned on campus, all those applying for financial aid since she's been here have been registered for the D draft.

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The Metropolitan September 12, 1986

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Page 12

____

The Metropolitan

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MSC Language & Culture Institute is planning Winter in

Cost Only 8879.00 .--...a r1:. •r .r1. T :"1z -:•.:rl T :•a. •r r•::.91• :1•1 . . . r.·1..1. 1. . . . 1.·.1."l. 1 ••••1 .

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$100 off by October 1•1 $50 off by November 1•1

David CondJ, Director Box 4, 1006 11 1h St. MSC Language & Culture Institute Denver, CO 80204 Call 556-3078 or come by CN 313

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limited tim~ 10% d~~ount ~(;i-a11 z\u~a.ria ret~~ed . · nne~"~ilh a C~\Ilpus ID~~n addWional ,r;~;Qisco'ifot for payment':~~ full " . e tini~of You,~··visit tilakC$ this ail: even tiiore valuable o~r! ·'.~· :, :· ···., · Auraria Dental Ce"'t~e\s ··•·· ors an<,'.t.slaff~rovid~. ~qmpr(!hynsiv~~lale ,:5.,._,~ of tne art ~taFc~. lit ion t&;'.~u toil.tine cte~'Uil ca~Bz~heir ~fvices{:•· ~ ioclude professional cos.metic bonding t.O get you ready for those · upcqming ne.w:Job (~~~foVi · · .. ··£~;~/ " ' . ·;. ,~;~· '~;~~:> Our oomfbrtabt¢''hffic . lose''and. c ' ien campus. ~Lei~9 •.. heaaphones, nilro~oxide-Jlaughitt.~gas). aquariu~sand altopica~_-1?.la~t <•.. envtr,pnmenl,.wake f~ma verx;;*elax~•.~nd. r~t·~~r e~~~l}.ble.~~tltal v~~1t!.. rxx;t&rs Keily White·aod s&Stt Joo~$ welcome yott;:t-O call or stop.by for this .special ~fore,~vem~r 17. ~9%'· W~.f~~r e~~ning ~~rs as ~II as &t~fday appqintm~f!ls lo ~aomOij~te our;.;p:ahent~t~usr~~hedult1-e.. Le~ us help you &righlerryour smile. Ca.l!:,573-5~ togay! ~--.._.--·-----·

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Exhibitions express freedom cry for Prisoners of Conscience by J. Johnson

- Early Bird Discounts -

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.Jli1aa_

MEXICO~ January 7-19, 1987

Septemqer 12, 1986

Increruble exhibitions of pain, despair and injustice, superbly reproduced by 24 prominent Denver-area artists, represent the marrow of "Prisoners of Conscience" - torture victims or persons who disappeared at the hands of their government. In recognition of the 25th anniversary of Amnesty International, the Arvada Center for Arts and Humanities offers a five-week display of paintings, sculptures, silk screens, videos, photographs and zen flower arrangements. Each artist's work is a biographical sketch on behalf of individuals throughout world whose human rights have been violated. Karen Breunig's "Birdman" portrays Dr Vojislav Sesely, an emaciated lecturer, physically imprisoned with wires_ while birds soar freely outside. The walls of captivity are visibly unable to contain the man's soul. Dr. Sesely, a Yugoslavian arrested for bis non-violent freedom of expression, remained steadfast in bis beliefs throughout a grueling 27 hour inquisition. Preceding his trial, Sesely went on a hunger strike that left him frail and wasted. But, his condition did not deter him from delivering a three hour speech in his own defense. In that speech Sesely said, "The written and spoken word could not overthrow the government."

Breunig's "Birdman" captures the ,_ total essence of Sesely's torment, as well as bis convictions. A different ordeal depicted through a sculpture by Barbara Houghton, chairperson for Metropolitan State College Arts department was equally compelling. A jagged-edged wooden platform houses a video , relating the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of Alejandro Rodriguez Urza, a Chilean architect. His family received unoffici ·.assurances that he was alive and in prison from an ex-inmate who reported be had seen Alejandro in the prison that Alejandro had assisted him during an · illness. Despite these assurances, the Chilean government officials still deny knowledge of Alejandro's detention or whereabouts. Houghton titled her piece "When Someone Disappears It's Like They Go Into A Black Hole". The color accurately depicts the void that arises out of mysterious disappearances, and the jagged edge depicts the struggles with uncertainty. In preparation for the exhibition each artist received the history of a prisoner of his or her choosing and was instructed to create a work about that prisoner. ~-

"Prisoners of Conscience" are men, women, and children who have been imprisoned because of their beliefs, continued on page 13

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The Metropolitan

September 12. 1986

Pegel3

Wednesday, September 17 • 9 a.m., University of Colorado, Room EC36. "Before and After Censorship," a lecture on William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, by Elihu Pearlman, professor of English, University of Colorado at Denver. • 11 a.m., Wyer Auditorium, Central Library. A panel discussion, "Witches Are/ Are Not for Burning," will focus on Arthur Miller:s The Crucible.

Sunday, September 14 • 7:30 p.m., WYER Auditorium, Central Library, 1357 Broadway. Sally Diamond, Germinal Stage, will give a dramatic reading of "Molly's Monologue" from James Joyce's Ulysses. Her presentation will be followed by a panel discussion. Two programs exploring censorship have been scheduled for September by the Denver Public Library in connection with the faculty of University of Colorado at Denver. The exhibition "Censorship and Libraries", focusing on key censorship battles of the past two decades, will be at the Denver Public Library from Sept. 8 - Oct. 19. A lecture and panel discussion proram titled "Focus on Censored Books" will run concurrent with the exhibition through September.Admission is free and open to the public.

continued from page 12

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-_

color, religion, language or ethnic origin, and who have never used or advocated violence. The intricate works of these artisans link the souls of their victims with the rest of the world. The exhibition 1 part of a multidisciplinary project, will take place from September 6 through October 5, and will involve many facets of art by writers, visual artists, musicians, dancers, choreographers, actors and scholars. "When the First Two Hundred Letter_s Came", 'an experimental performance play, will be presented b y wr!_ter-director Marie Cartier starting on September 9. Using the "Prisoners of Conscience" exhibition as an integral backdrop, the play weaves together words and phrases from Amnesty International members' letters to prisoners, and their responses. The title is derived from the letter of a released prisoner who told how the organization's letters ultimately led to his release. On September 11 and 12, as part of the Center's dance series, a special collaboration by David Taylor Dance Theatre and the Premiat Trio will be performed. This hauntingly poignant piece was conceived and written in 1944 and dedicated to a friend of Dmitri Shostakovich, who died in a Nazi concentration camp . The Arvada Center's Theatre Company will open its season with a production of the play "Every Good Boy Deserves Favor" on September 17. Written by Tom Stoppard, with music by Andre Previn, the play takes place in a mental hospital in the Soviet Union where a political prisoner shares a cell with a mental patient who believes he conducts his own orchestra. Special tours of the exhibition for the deaf will be offered on September 26 and 27 before the performance by the National-Theatre of the Deaf. On the final day of the project, October 5, the Center will present an afternoon symposium, "Human Rights in the Future: A Message of Hope?" The "Prisoners of Conscience" project, in its focus on individuals, illustrates that human-rights abuse is widespread throughout the world and not endemic to a particular system. These demonstrations of compassion

Monday, September 15 • 11 a.m., University of Colorado at Denver, 1100 14th St., Room EC22. "Are These Racist Books?" lecture by Gwen Thomas, assistant vice president for institutional advancement. Her program will focus on Alice Walker's The Color Purple and Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

Thursday, September 18 • 7:30 p.m., Wyer Auditorium, Central Library. Debate program titled "What Is Obscenity Under the Law?" Friday, September 19 • 2 p.m., University of Colorado at Denver, Room EC116. "Censored Coloradoans (Big Bill Haywood and Judge Ben Lindsey); is the lecture presented by Tom Noel, associate profesfor of history, U niversity of Colorado at Denver.

Tuesday, September 16 • 12:30 p.m., University of Colorado at Denver, Room EC120. "Censored Parts of Huck," a lecture which focuses on Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, by Stuart James, professor emeritus, University of Denver. • 7 p.m., Wyer· Auditorium, Central Library. Ralph Daniels, vice president of standards for NBC Television, will show film clips of programs the national network chose not to broadcast, and he will explain why. Daniels will welcome questions from the audience. A wine and cheese reception will follow the presentation. sketch roadmaps connecting the lives of the free to those in unjustified captivity The exhibition alone poignantly illustrates the agonies these people suffer. And this wrenching portrait of human

Saturday, September 20 • 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Community College of Denver Learning Center, 1111 W. Colfax Ave., South Classroom. The keynot address, "Catch Her in the Rye," will be given on J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye by Arnold Langberg, principal, Jefferson County Open Open High School. Two panel discussions will be held at IO a.m. and offered a second time at 11:30 a.m.

torment suggests to each person we are our brother's keeper. The Arvada C enter for the Arts and Humanities is located at 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. For i~formation, call 4228050. D

ll"tl~SJ.u!.dt~

Htflttfffi-rORTE 21st year

Denver

Vol.CLXXVI

50¢

TEXTBOOK TIPS: Full refunds are • given on course books whe,n 1

You present your receipt. A receipt must accompany returned books.

I

Books are brought back in brand new condition.

I

Returns are made by Sept. 20, 1986.

September 15th STUDENT ACTIVITIES has

50% off on DCTC tickets! Available to all MSC, UCO & CCD Students, staff & faculty. Purchase tickets in the MSC Student Activities Office, Room 153 in the Student Center. Phone: 556-2595

WATCH FOR FURTHER REPORTS!

AURARIA B·O·O·K

C·ENTER Lawrence & 9th St.

Returns and exchanges for all Book Center merchandise except electronics and computer.supplies are made in the Convenience Store -- Student Center lower mall. M-Th 8am-6:30pm F 8am-5pm Sat 10am-3pm

, . "· .

556-3230

.... .


The Metropolitan

Page14

Archaeology

walk. "The stratigraphy (arrangement of layers of rock or material each representing a geological time) had historical evidence, but I never had a chance to get in and look around. I saw the building going up and thought, 'Here we go again."' Keller, together with Jon Kent, a newly hired historical archaeologist, and Dr. Leslie Wildesen, Colorado state archaeologist, intends to change all that. According to campus architect Robert Kronewitter, no federal funding is involved in the UCD Replace-

continued from page 8

really written about," Keller -said. "Authors wrote about Molly Brown, the wealthy, politics and things that were interesting to them. The lowerincome and minority groups no one wrote about, so what we do know about them is only what somebody alludes to or what we can dig up from the ground." Keller said there is much to learn about the day-to-day lives of those who once lived in this area, which used to be Auraria. Archaeologists and an-

"I guess I get a little frustrated. We are in a place where it's culturally, prehistorically and historically fairly rich . . . with material that is there for interpretation and understanding." · - Ken Keller ment Building construction. Testing the ground under the building was left to AHEC's discretion. Presently, when a new building is constructed using federal funding, a "request for proposal" is supposed to be filed with the state archaeologist. The request is a proposal to do a preliminary study of the land involved to determine if the area contains cultural resources (artifacts). The state archaeologist runs a file

thropologists can study material recovered in a dig and piece the information together enough even to learn what people ate. Keller said he can't swear that there is material worth digging for, but all those pot hunters wouldn't have been out there if there wasn't. He said he saw evidence of areas worthy of study in the soil at the construction site of the new classroom building as he walked by on the side-

NOW OPEN!

September 12.1986 .

check to see if there are existing records on the property and reviews the proposal. Once approved the land is tested. If nothing is found, the construction~ommence. If cultural resources are found, then a more extensive dig may be performed. The procedures are less than effective, according to Keller. Wildesen is the only state archaeologist responsible for checking and enforcing the procedures. While federal laws require and state statutes encourage that land be tested before construction begins, it is the responsibility of the builder to know of the requirements. Wildesen said the government offers training sessions and that companies should designate someone to be responsible for following the procedures. Existing policy is informal; however, ~ildesen is working on more formal procedures. "Just about everyone loves history," Wildesen said. "They want to save old buildings or study a site. They want to do it but don't have the money. Developers buy land, but if it won't make money, they won't do a study." In the meantime, Keller and Kent are working on a strategy to prevent further destruction of possible cultural resources on the Auraria campus. Kent has only been at MSC for three weeks, but already their strategy is taking form. "AHEC has a plan drawn up for the next 20 and 50 years," Keller said. "They know where they're scheduled to build next. Jon and I will see where they're planning to build next and talk turkey about what's going on and work together (with AHEC)." Kent said that before going to AHEC,

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The MSC Institute for Intercultural Stu?ies and Services is sponsoring a Umted States and Mexico Relations conference next Monday from 8:15 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the St. Francis Center on campus. Featured speakers include State Representative Philip Hernandez and Richard Castro, executive director of the agency for human rights for the City of Denver. The conference is open to all educators, students and members of the community free of charge. For more information, call 556-4004. o

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he and Keller will have to identify the kinds of things that might be found on campus by doing historical research with Wildesen. Once they have identified potential archaeological resources, they will go to AHEC and ask permission to conduct a study. Keller says that the anthropology department didn't have the personnel to take steps to do something prior to Kent joining the staff. Now, with Kent's background in urban historical archaeology, Keller plans to take charge. 'Tm not going to wait around any longer," he said.

I

I

September 17th, 12:00 noon Auraria Student Center room 330 DR. E. JULIUS DASCH Professor of Geology, Oregon State University "Age Dating of the Inner Planets" October 20th, 12:00 noon

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..


Page15

The Metropolitan September 12, 1986

C -l assified Advertise in Classified ads are a service provfded by The Metropolitan to the Auraria Campus. The charge for this service is 15¢ per word (MSC students pay 5¢ per word). Ads must be 25 ~ - words or less and must be pre· paid. The deadline for classified ads is 5 p.m. Friday prior to publication.

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