Volume 10, Issue 5 - Sept. 18, 1987

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·Bain says merger ·apossible solution Robert Ritter Associate Editor

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Denver needs a "world class" institution of higher education and some form of a merger between Auraria's three schools would be an ideal solution, said Don Bain, chairman of the Auraria Board of Directors, in a speech at the student center Tuesday. Bain started his speech by saying that any statements he made would not necessarily be representative of the Auraria board or the Auraria Higher Education Center (AHEC). He then outlined several ingredients he believes important to economic development in Denver and a higher quality of life for Denverites. Among these issues he included greater airport access, a viable workforce, a quality telecommunications system and quality government. But much of the speech focused on what Bain said he feels is Denver's most pressing need: a research institution that will eventually attract more business. "The kind of industries and small entrepreneurs that create jobs in this day

and age are tied to schools such as the University of Texas or MIT," Bain said. "Denver does not have anything resembling a world class higher education system." And, he said, Auraria may be the ideal place for such a system. "Denver needs to be the location of a major institution of higher education and one can make a case that Auraria is the place where that should happen." He said that a merger between MSC and UCO in a coordinated way would be a good start toward filling Denver's need of a major institution. Bain, a member of the board since its inception in 1977, said the board proposed such a plan in 1978. "The Auraria board recommended the institutions merge in 1978. I think the suggestions made in that report are still viable," he ~aid. MSC president William Fulkerson said after the speech that Bain's remarks will probably create a difficult relationship between the Metro and Auraria staffs. "I was surprised. I think it puts Auraria's staff and the institution's staff in an uncomfortable position because we are

Don Bain speaks for student center lecture series.

Photo by Dave Beech

Denver firefighters leave the Science Building after responding to an alarm Wednesday (Sept. 16 ). Smoke caused by a wiring problem in a ceiling light fixture in biology room 209 triggered the alarm, Auraria Public Safety Officer Ray Wells said. There were no injuries, but classes were evacuated for a short time.

asked by the legislature to be a cooperative effort and then the chairman feels different," he said. "The thing that bothers me," Fulkerson

The Trustees of State Colleges governs MSC and the CU Board of Regents governs UCD.

added," is we're put in a postition where a teaching institution is not valued. We are turning out fine teachers and small business people and just an excellent number of people in business support." Bain said although his loyalties and Fulkerson's differ, he still feels the role of Metro as an accessible campus with open admissions can coexist with a solid research fou~dation of higher education." But Bain said it's going to take strong local and state leadership and a decision as to which board would govern the institution before it happens. "One of the serious impediments of the merger is who will be the governing board. You could make a case for creating a new board. The Auraria board is not looking for the job," Bain said.

At the conclusion of the speech, Bain was asked if he could predict Auraria's future if a merger never happened. "Your crystal ball is as good as mine," he answered. "We'll probably drift along as we have. We are the most efficient campus in the state. Things are going all right. (But} we'll see the continued stress of the campuses not being their own masters." Bain· added that he believes there are "clouds on the horizon" as MSC and UCO, through offering classes off campus, show an inclination toward less involvement with the downtown area and Auraria. A dying Auraria "does not bode well for the city of Denver," he said. "Denver will be the worse for it. Downtown Denver could wake up to find it's the back door to Castle Rock." D


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The Metropolitan

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September 18, 1987

3

-------NEWS------Parking and tenure policy also discussed

~Student Shlrley Roberts Reporter

The Auraria Student Center is more interested in making profits than providing. students with facilities for legitimate campus activities, at least one member of the MSC student senate said at their biweekly meeting Sept. 9. Senator Rick Link suggested a petition --6 be circulated among students requesting the student center give student activities and interests a priority. The petition was referred to the Justice Board for review for constitutionality and will be presented before the senate at its next meeting. • Link urged the student government to take over all program planning from the student center and give it to the student

senate suggests· petition activities coordinators of MSC, CCD and UCD. Link said such a move will avoid duplication in programs, such as the lecture series announced by the stud ent center last week. He said he fears that the student center will take over many activities that rightly belong to the students and potentially make a profit from them. "The student center is making money off us (students)," Link said. He questioned if the center may also be spending students fees that belong to ASMSC. Senator Lois Kaness said a member of the SFPC told her the committee derives its funds from "excess income" provided by the cafeteria, vending machines and copy machines in the student center.

attorney general's office the second week of spring semester 1988. The final draft will be voted upon by the student body during the general election held each spring. Kaness further expressed concern about a proposed parking structure. She said an architect plans to submit drawings to AHEC Director Morgan Smith's office in a few weeks. If construction on the facility begins this semester, Kaness said, there could be parking problems next semester. She said she feels a student representative should be involved in any planning procedures. The senate voted to put a representative on the Planning Advisory Board to keep the senate updated on the parking structure.

In other action, the senate; with little discussion, unanimously passed the proposed draft of the AIDS policy in its current form. ASMSC President Martin Norton said he talked with representatives of the Cay and Lesbian Alliance and they also favor the proposed policy. Kaness voiced concern over the new tenure policy that allows instructors to be released with "just cause" but without the right of due process. She said she plans to further research the due process issue and propose a statement to be delivered to the state legislature expressing student discontent with the policy. The senate also voted by a two-thirds majority to have the new school constitution ready for review by the Colorado

D

·Barraza envisions "One Stop" for future Linda Cuyler ~

·

Reporter

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Tobin Barrozo, MSC's provost and vice president of academic affairs, apologized Friday for any inconvenience stud ents may have experienced with financial aid in the past few months. :J "On behalf of the institution, this is my first opportunity to publicly apologize to all students who were frustrated and met with any inconvenience, or felt they weren't treated in the manner they can appropriately expect," said Barrozo. His comments came in the wake of a <'- heated controversy surrounding the financial aid office that began in mid-August, when about 4,700 students began receiving th~ir financial aid award letters only weeks before the beginning of fall semester, instead of about June 1, as expected. As provost, Barrozo is Metro's chief aca1' demic officer, responsible for the internal operations of the institution and for prioritizing those operations.

When asked why more emphasis had not been placed on having the computer system in financial aid running smoothly b y May 1, Barrozo replied, "I would say a greater priority should have been set to implement that system to ensure it worked. It was the responsibility of this institution to get the computer installed in a timely fashion - we just weren't quick enough to realize it wouldn't be up May l." "But we've heard enough excuses - I'm sorry. We11 do our best to make sure it doesn't happen again." he said. Barrozo also said he envisions the idea of "One Stop," with admissions and records, financial aid, advising and the business office integrating their computer systems, so students will be able to deal with many questions at one central location. "We want to provide a more serviceoriented operation, and right now we're not providing the service that students, as our clients, need," said Barrozo, adding Q

that construction for this new flow-through system has aJ.!eady begun at Central Classroom 108.

"But I think students will see a radical change by spring registration," he said. D

Bike thief cuffed Hoelfler and Jim Ferguson of Public Safety checked the serial number on the bike, which was the same as Bratland's. The officers placed their own lock on the bike, along with a card informing the rider ~o contact the Public Safety Office. At4:24 p.m. Sept. 9, Public Safety workstudy student Thomas Malone, who was on stake-out, observed a suspect looking at the bike, Ferguson said. She said the suspect picked up the card, read it and then replaced the card. Ferguson said the two officers were summoned, and after questioning Midgett, took him into custody. D

Laurence C. Washington

Reporter

Auraria Public Safety officials arrested Angelo Midgett Sept. 9 in connection with bicycle theft. According to Lolly Ferguson of the Auraria Public Safety office, the problem began July ri:l when Community College of Denver student Daniel Bratland reported his 15-speed mountain bike stolen. She said Bratland, who now works for Public Safety, spotted his bike at the Auraria library bike rack while he was on patrol. He informed officials, and Officers Steve

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September 18, 1987

The Metropolitan

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Part-time profs union bound Patrick Cleary Reporter A fledgling union of about 30 part-time teachers at MSC seeking a stronger bargaining voice as faculty members directly contradicts a faculty handbook it says grants them no rights whatsoever. By associating with the Colorado Federation of Teachers (CFT} , the proposed union hopes that lobby can use its influence with MSC, the Consortium of State Colleges and the State Legislah~re, in its efforts to obtain recognition in the trustee handbook. MSC Interim President William Fulkerson said although he knows little of the intentions of the proposed union , "Colorado law ·prohibits faculty from bargaining."

CFT president Bruce Goldberg said the teachers are not barred from organizing. But bet:ause there is no collective bargaining in the state, as in others, "whatever h'appens depends on the individual governing board," he said. The college may or may not listen to the concerns of the members of the union, who became members at-large in the CFT in August, he said. Pam Wagner, director of external affairs for the Consortium of State Colleges, MSC's governing board, said President Houston Elam is aware of an interest among parttime instructors in forming a union but did not know it was "imminent." She said she was not sure of the legality of it either, but would look into it.

the Independent Faculty Council seeks a definition of faculty in the trustees handbook which includes part-time instructors and "works at the department level for the establishment of reappointment criteria and due process procedures which will ensure that qualified part-time instructors are re\varded for their professional perforn1ance." McAllister said there are many more part-time instructors than full-time, yet they have no rights established in the handbook. And, this fall the MSC president's interp retation of the handbook caused many instructors to lose at least two credit hours of instruction, he said . Fulkerson said the trustee's handbook

to two courses or eight semester hours except in special circumstances. Most courses at MSC, except in the sciences, are usually only three credit hours. In the past, many instructors, especially in the English department's writing center, had been teaching eight and up to ten 111111 ·credit hours, according to McAllister. Part-time instructors are paid $475 per credit hour, a wage \1cAllister said was set in 1979. Full-time salaries begin at $19,000, he said. Losing credit hours hits deep in the pocket of those teaching part-time who -4 live "substantially below the poverty level," he said . MSC's Office of Contract Personnel statistics show 394 part-time and 324 full-time intructors on s taff this fall. Director Sandi J ones said because many full-time • instructors took advantage of the early retirement with full benefits program offered late this summer the college was left short-handed, so extra part-time instructo rs were hired to fill those slots. Overall, she said the distribution of teachers has • been pretty even through the years. The majority of part-time instructors have other jobs, she said. Fulkerson said in order for a urban school such as MSC to best serve its students, people practicing their crafts in the "' surrounding community are drawn on to share some of their time with students. continued o n 1:>age 7

~CLASSICAL MUSIC SERIES , . . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J Monday, September 14, ff}87

Wayne Mc Kev illy on Keyboards October 5, 1987

Gassimer Trio (Harp, Flute, Viola)

to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market Banned Books Week-

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The Metropolitan

5

September 18, 1987

.Metro students dig Auraria's history Steve Leach Reporter

I.

Although a group of MSC students didn't find exactly what they were looking for during this summer's archaelogical dig on campus, the dig's supervisor, Dr. Jonathan Kent, said things went "superbly." Kent, an assistant professor of anthropology at Metro, said the Historical Archaeology of Denver Project was originally designed to find out more than historical records say about the way the early ethno-minorities of Denver lived. "Archaeology provides what historical documents do not," Kent said. "We get a clearer view of common people and minorities, as opposed to the wealthy. "We did not come up with the kinds of things we wanted to in terms of looking at ethnic minorities," Kent said, "because there had been some really deep excavations associated with construction of later warehouses and the like, that removed just about all traces of domestic activity associated with early folks." What the group did find in their excavation just along the south side of Wazee Street, Kent said, "was some fairly well stratified trash deposits that will be able to tell us something about the nature of material culture in this area over time, and the changes in materi~ culture over time." According to Kent, trash deposits such as bits and pieces of food or belongings can reveal a great deal of information about peoples' diet and their social-economic status. Such deposits may also help in determin-

ing early Aurarians' access to materials from different regions, giving hints to their trade and economic connections, as well as a look at their technology and how it was changing. The crew also found remains of an old Hungarian flour mill that existed on the comer of Eighth and Wazee at the time the Auraria campus was first being built. Kent said the class of 14 students that conducted the dig, "received training in site survey , excavation techniques , archaeological recording techniques and learned how to recognize different materials from the past." Kent said the department would continue working in the Auraria area next summer, but he was not certain whether the dig would be on or off campus. One possible site would be the area behveen the Physical Education Building and the Emmanuel Gallery. In addition to offering summer classes involving digs in the Auraria area, Kent is also exploring the possibility of offering credit hours for a trip to Peru next summer. Students participating in next summer's trip to Peru will be part of a team for the California Institute for Peruvian Studies (CIPS), a non-profit organization established to carry out archaeological research in southern Peru. Studies will continue where last summer's CIPS group left off, along the southern coast of Peru in the Acari and Chara regions, amongst river valleys which flow out of the Andes across the Peruvian coastal desert to the Pacific Ocean. Kent said that alon~ with the re¢on's

MSC students Roberta Blanc (right) and Tom Reifer participate in campus archaeological dig. extremely arid climate comes conditions so dry that the preservation of materials is almost perfect. Last summer's trip was extremely successful, Kent said. The group excavated 39 tombs from a 1,300- to 1,400-year-old cemetary that was uncovered by a farmer while grading his fields.

Kent said the cemetary, previously unknown to the archaeology community, was a "fairly significant find ." Many of the tombs contained grave offerings, mummy bundles, necklaces of shell and beautiful pottery, all of which will tell more about the people who lived at that D time.

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September 18, 1987

6

Th;e Metropolitan

------OP-ED-----Prof criticizes editor's .effort Dear Editor: Ms. Pamela Rivers' item (Sept. 11) on Financial Aid offers a charming entry for my forthcoming anthology, Editorializing the Easy Way: What could be easier than to collect a few of the regrettable but nearly inevitable financial-aid horror stories, dismiss as irrelevant any factors which might in fact account for their occurrence, and then pontificate about the mismanagement of an agency whose name one doesn't even have straight yet. On the other hand, if Ms. Rivers were interested in rising above the level of the quick-draw contest. she might consider investing the effort necessary for some grasp of the complex Federal regulations under which the Office of Student Financial Aid operates as well as the requirements of the external agencies to which the Office must conform. Then she might explore the trade-offs inherent in mounting a computerized system in the hope that she could then make an informed judgment about whether the benefits outweigh the inescapable miscarriages along the way. Finally, if investigative journalism is really her bag, she might undertake what no one seems to have succeeded at yet: finding out what are truly the root causes of the personnel problems which appear to have hampered the efficacy of the Office in recent months. Of course, in six months it might no longer be news.

John Spradley MSC Department of English

Letters Banned Book Week returns Editor: Well , everybody, it is back again. Just like last year, the year before and as far back as I can remember. No, it is not time for celebration; it is time for mourning. Yes, Banned Boo k Week is back. The purpose of this important week is to educate the public about this crime that is occurring in front of our eyes. Book banning, first of all , is the removal of books, magazines and other periodicals from libraries and even bookstores due to some person's personal objections. Some advice for those who do not enjoy a certain book or magazine: Don't read it. The books that are being banned vary from the Bible to Mother Goose. Some favorites of the censorship community include: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger. My favorite is the American Heritage Dictionary. This makes one question the reasoning behind the movement. So my advice to everybody is to READ. Read anything. Read classics, gothics, newspapers and most important, read while you still have the freedom to. James Michael Carr MSC Student

Metro student criticizes behavior of Eng Iish department chair

Lecture series raises brows To the Editor: An event has surfaced on this campus that I feel should be brought out into the open. A flyer has been posted stating, The Auraria Student Center Proudly Presents "By Word of Mouth" a monthly lecture series. The student population should consider the following questions about this series: 1. Does there exist, within the three institutions, Student Activities Directors and coordinators presently assigned the task of offering this type of service via student activities fees? 2.Who has given the Student Center the authority to present such a program? 3. Who will be paying for the program? 4. Will the students be paying twice for the service? 5. If the Student Center has a surplus of money, why not reti re the bond early nr lower the prices of rental space, food prices, vending machines? . With the prices of education ever on the rise, any reduction in cost students must pay will be great relief.

Dennis Bryan Metro Student

Editor Jim ~tanut"!

Associate Editor Hohert Hittl'r

Assistant Editors

Copy Editor Joan Da\ ih

Photo Editor Dalt.• Crum

R e porters Ht·1wt• Allt•n. Jr-.m -\mll'r\<111, 'ilwll\ RJrr. P·.11 lii'<:kman. ~hirlr\ Romwr. Kari Hn.11111. Juhn Carl..nn. C Patrit~k Clt•Jn.. Lintla Cm k-r. lb~ Frr)ol;IL"-Hl. Sh'n· l..1.~.u h. Hu~ 111·11 \lar\h. Chad \ lurrh. Krlly Pa..1a. l ..a11n·nu· C \\a,.f1111l(trn1, Shirlr,· Hnht•rt ... l>t•hr-a ~<.-hhitt·r

Jam1.•• Tabor. \11~ am \\ 1lt·~ Juli(• .\nn Z11fh1l1.·tt11

Photographe rs

Dear Editor: Two years ago, the MSC English department attempted the election of a new department chair; but for various reasons, no one really wanted the job. Well, almost no one. Jan Delasara did finally get elected. Unfortunately, MSC students continue to suffer as a consequence of that election. In the Sept. 4 Metropolitan cover story, ousted English instructor Larry DiPaolo quoted Delasara as saying outside writing efforts could only detract from a professor's class preparation. Does the woman realize that such a narrowminded attitude could also keep Nobel laureate Saul Bellow and many other fine author/teachers out of the classroom? And what of our own lesser-known but equally fine author/pro.fessors here at MSC? Is this a signal? Stop writing or get fired? Welcome to the Dark Ages! When Di Paolo commented that his students didn't feel his classes suffered from his extra writing, Delasara supposedly said, "That's only the students." From personal experience I can say that such a comment is not out of character for Delasara. Last year, the editor of MSC's Metrosphere magazi"ne and myself (managing editor) had an appointment with Delasara to discuss her concerns about the magazine's format and content. Arriving on time, the editor and I were kept waiting outside Delasara's office for over 30 minutes while she discussed her concerns with another professor. During the course of their conversation, she was asked her opinion - regarding the competency of the magazine's editor ial staff. I was appalled and angered to overhear her say, "Well. they are just students." Though we had a scheduled apppintment, we never met with Delasara that day. She appeared later

with an impatient apology, suggesting the professor could relay her concerns. It was suddenly apparent that she had never intended to speak with us. i felt sorry for the obviously embarrassed professor who knew we had just been cold-shouldered out of a scheduled meeting. Our staff was able to publish that issue of Metro sphere without incorporating any of the radical content and format changes suggested by Delasara. The publication went on to win third place in the prestigious category of Overall Excellence, as well as three other awards at the year's Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Press Competition . Add itionally, Writer's Digest, the largest writer's magazine in the country, had already hailed Metrosphere as one of the nation's top literary magazines for poetry. Metrosphere was, and I hope, continues building a national literary reputation for MSC, despite Delasara's attitude that it is edited by "just students." I believe it is time someone in authority reminded Jan Delasara that students come to a college or university to learn, not to be summarily insulted or degraded. Her bureaucratic, if not dictatorial , attitude ignores a very basic tenet that an English degree at MSC is not the only game in town . As her general attitude toward students becomes more widely known, fewer people will sign up for the abuse; who can blame them for going elsewhere? J. Clifford Stevens MSC Senior Mr. Stevens is a newly invited member of the Golden Key National Honor Society, recipient of the MSC 1986-87 outstanding Student Award for the English Department.

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MSC lets down Metro G-rad uate Dear Editor: When I returned to school at MSC in 1977 I was required , like all students, to endu~e English 101 . Fortunately for me, I was placed in a class with Larry DiPaolo, whose enthusiasm for the English language bears a direct relationship to pursuit of writing as a career. Di Paolo, himself a product of MSC, is one of the finest instructors this school has ever had, and his mistreatment is a scandal and a tragedy for future students to come. I love th is college. but now I love it a little less than before. Carson Reed Metro grad


The Metropolitan

7

' 5eptember'I8, 1987

Fourth World Wilderness Congress

Views swapped on Earth's future Mlryam Wiley Reporter

Things have changed. At the Fourth World Wilderness Congress, held for the first time in the United States, environmentalists are talking business and developers are showing their con• cern for preservation. 'The survival of this planet as a decent home for all who share it depends on us making profound changes in the way we do business," former EPA administrator William Ruckelshaus told an audience of about 1500 gathered Sunday morning at Currigan Hall. "There's an urgent need for a majority consensus when it comes to matters affecting survival," said retired banker David Rockefeller in a following speech. In past gatherings of conservationists, business people have not taken part. This time there seems to be an urgent need for an understanding of the complimentary roles of economic development and conservation. "In the past, economical growth and environmental protection have been seen as basically antithetical," said Rockefeller. "Happily, however, there now seems to be increasingly some meeting of the minds, some ynderstanding that man and nature can, and indeed, must work together creatively." As one of the 21 environmental specialists from the United Nations World Commission who traveled to numerous parts of the world to verify locally the reality of peoples and their lands, Ruckelshaus warned: "The World Commission has made a clear finding that for most of the developing world, mindless continuation of current practices will lead to a descending spiral of environmental degradation, increased poverty, desperate remedies inflicting further destruction of irreplaceable assets, political disorder and social chaos. "The statistics of what conventional 'development' has wrought in terms of desertification, soil erosion, impoverishment of rural people, and the loss of tropical forests are by now depressingly familiar," he added. Based on these findings and the urgent need to preserve what is left, the World Commission proposed a new model for economic growth "substaina~le development" which means the use of natural resources without the destruction of the environment, Ruckelshaus explained.

CORRECTIONS The Sept. 11 issue of The Metropolitan incorrectly reported the following: Robin Heid never sky-dived at the Gulch and never ran for the U.S. Senate. Gary Hart never read Sport Death. The title of the book was inspired by M.l.T. students' use of the word in their computer lab. Dale Mall.e ek is 70 years old, not 72. J

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The Sept. 4 issue of The Metropolitan incorrectly reported the following: Sal Ruibal recruited Frank Mullen, Susan Skorupa, Lou Chapman and Steve Rabbe, all former Metropolitan staff members.

This idea, which may sound obvious to some, still hurts radicals such as environmentalist Roderick Nash, from the University of California at Santa Barbara. He insists that it is not possible to have an utilitarian conservation policy. "On a limited earth, there has to be limits. Only cancer has no limits," he said. "If we want wilderness, we are going to have to say no to growth." But on the other side stands the hungry developing nations who are eager to get help to organize their growth and conquer their poverty. Yolanda Kakabadse, the director of Fundacio'n Natura in Ecuador, shared with the audience her concern about what might have made a community of 50 people or less, in her home country, to kill a priest and a nun who arrived in their territory. She said that indigenous people have slowly but aggressively been pushed out from their homelands. "As long as the exploitation of natural resources within wild areas means business, there will be little that we can do to stop the process,'' Kakabadse said. She was the first one in the Wilderness Congress to bring up the relation between the foreign debt of developing nations and the destruction of the environment, when she spoke during the first of the three-day Congress in Denver. (The Congress continues in Estes Park). "It's important to stress that there's a definite relationship between a country's financial obligations, foreign debt in this case, and its capacity to preserve its natural resources in the wild lands," she said. "Decision makers from the public and the private sectors fall into the vicious cycle of intensifying exploitation of natural resources to increase the national income." The same seems to be true in Brazil. "We will have to pay a foreign debt of $120 billion, $10 billion a year only in interest," said Brazilian environmentalist Jose' Pedro Costa." "If we have to pay the debt in the stipulated term, it means that we will have to produce a lot more in order to export the capital, which comes from wood, soy beans, industrial goods, all of which strains the natural resources," he added. In his speech during the second day of the congress, Costa urged Americans to become aware of their role in conservation throughout the world. "We need the American public opinion," he said. "I come here to get support." After his speech he explained the political side of environmental issues and the need to pressure decision makers. "The World Bank today will only finance a project in Brazil if there is a commitment to preserve the environment and the bank even has a special line of credit which is specifically for the protection of the environment. It was not always like that," Costa said. Costa, who has a master's in environmental planning from the University of California at Berkeley, is responsible for a project which proposes to make the Atlantic Forest in the eastern part of Brazil a historic landmark to be preserved and recognized as a "reserve of the biosphere" by UNESCO.

Photo by Dave Beech

The women's soccer and basketball teams have distributed 1,800 NCAA Welcome Packs since the start of the semester. The packs, designed by the NCAA and Gillette, contain information about drug abuse as well as free samples of Gillette products. A $500 scholarship will be drawn in November for people who filled out the consumer questionnaire. This is ooly one of the many projects that have to be taken from an international point of view, Costa explained. There are many others already going on with the support of the World Wildlife Fund, a nongovernmental non-profit environmental support group, which has been active in Brazil for the last five years and currently devotes more than a million dollars of its budget to conservation projects in Brazil. International cooperation like this will have to become more common in order to balance growth and development throughout the Third World, experts agree. "The developing world cannot by itself overcome economic stagnation and the resulting ecological miopia," Rockefeller said.

"The developed nations have a major role to play providing markets as well as technical and financial assistance." Rockefeller also said that private enterprise should be promoted in those countries, as well as ownership of land. 'The farmer who is passing his land to his children will think carefully before he destroys it." But most of alJ, Rockefeller stressed the need for a global understanding of what preserving wilderness really means. "Discussion of complex ecosystems may seem esoteric to many people, but a way must be found to make it clear to the citizens of Denver or Dallas that they have a stake in the rainforests of Brazil." o

Teachers form union continued from pa~e 4

The main goal of the union is a stronger voice in contracts, and rehire status and pay raises because of "MSC's dependence on temporary and less than full-time appointments has increased," and parttime instructors are excluded from the rank of faculty on the basis of their temporary assignments," according to its statement of purpose. Contract personnel director Jones said "there is no question they (part-time) provide valuable experience. Our students are lucky to get the different perspective of education they provide. "But we are governed by the trustees," she said. Basically, according to the trustees handbook, part-time instructors have no rights because they are hired on an as needed basis and sign an agreement each semester stating that, she said. "Our first priority is to ensure the fulJtime instructors have enough classes to teach. I understand their (part-time) concerns," Jones added.

McAllister said the union knows MSC's hands are tied by the trustees. Their request is to get the college to look at the human factors. "The paradox to me is that in a society that is always screaming about illiteracy, people who are teaching basic composition courses are below the poverty level," he said. Also, by spending half the time traveling to different schools to teach, the part-time instructor is never on campus on a regular basis to provide students with personal instruction and guidance, he said. For McAllister and the union, "It's a matter of going from non-existence to existence. An act of creation." CFT president Goldberg said his organization plans to offer legal as well as organization advice to the union. "There is no public employee labor law," he said. The human factor in terms of money is that "we are worse off than someone starting out at McDonalds but we are on the o grill our whole life," McAllister said.


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The Metropolitan

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Dynamo dreams Ottratiquiffty · Debra Schluter Reporter "It is not so difficult for people to arrange their lives sensibly if they behave sensibly, but to arrange their lives happily, that is a far, far different thing." Thomas Tryon

Patty Rebne must be one of the happiest people on campus. And while it is not exactly fair to imply that she has arranged her life less than sensibly, Rebne's campus involvement stretches beyond what many would consider to be so. But Rebne has long since learned Thomas Tryon's little lesson - and besides, what appears awkward or cumbersome to one, may be the freedom flight of another. For instance, going to school can be tough enough, and teaching probably isn't exactly easy, but students and teachers on the Auraria campus rarely seem to notice, for in spite of the workload, for a variety of reasons, many hold down other jobs. For most, that's plenty. For Patty Rebne, it's just a start. Rebne, 30, is a slender, strawberryblonde bundle of energy, who, as a student at the University of Colorado-Denver, an employee at the Community College of Denver, and a teacher at Metropolitan State College, has a finger in every slice of the collective Auraria pie. A graduate student at UCD, Rebne began working last fall in an accelerated program toward her master's degree in business administration. At the same time, she took on a full-time job as the director of student activities at CCD, and this fall began teaching journalism at MSC. To hear her tell it, things just kind of worked out that way. "Energy - I have a lot of it," she says. "If I don't stay busy I start driving people crazy. And there is just so much to get out of school - so much to know and do. I don't want to miss it - I don't want to miss anything." But to be perfectly honest, she adds, there is an element of insecurity behind her drive too. "The challenge of proving myself, constantly, even though I know I don't have to, keeps me moving," she says, peering out from behind oversized glasses, her eyes bright, intense, and smiling. But Rebne knows her limits. Effective Oct. 1, she is stepping down from her post at CCD. The decision was not an easy one, she said. "I love this job, and I love working for my boss," she says. "I enjoy all the people contact - working with students." Martin Van de Visse, vice-president of student services at CCD, said her resignation was not one be wanted to take. "She has done a good job - the best job of organizing and promoting student activities that I have seen in the 13 years I've been here," he said. Rebne coordinated the formation of four new student clubs, Van de Visse said, including a chapter of Phi Theta Kappa

(the Community/Junior College National Scholastic Honor Society), the Art Club, Amnesty International, and the Radiological Club. She also had a major impact in getting the school newspaper, The Prospector, started again. "She developed student interest and pushed to get the paper up to professional standards," Van de Visse said. Rebne says she was only doing her job. \ Vhat she is most proud of leaving behind at CCD, she says, is a student government whose credibility has been restored and a re-organized and more visible activities office.

Patty Rebne wears many hats. Not one to have time on her hands or to be caught resting on her laurels, Rebne will step almost immediately from her job at CCD into a graduate assistantship with Jeff Heyl, an assistant professor of operations management in the UCD graduate school of business. Rebne will help Heyl research product and quality control in health care. The assistantship, she says, "is a real honor." A former high school English, speech and journalism teacher who earned her undergraduate degree in communications and journalism at the University of Northern Colorado, Rebne has come full-circle, back to the classroom environment that she loves - no matter which side of it she is on. Heyl, Rebne says, was the one who encouraged her to return to teaching, and when the opportunity to teach journalism at MSC came up, she applied. She now teaches two courses, Introduction to Journalism and Fundamentals of Public Relations. 'Tm really happy to be back," she says. Rebne left teaching five years ago when job-related stress began to affect her health.

"I would've never left, I would've stayed in it the rest of my life, but the stress was doing something to me," she says, shaking her head slowly, as though she were remembering, still a bit concerned, still puzzled. After she left teaching, Rebne worked in public relations for the Colorado Tax Amnesty program and did public relations consulting for AT&T. While working at AT&T, Rebne got a side job involving her nearly lifelong hobby of collecting quotes. She answered an ad to write fortunes for the Boulder-based Fortune 44 Cookie Company. Her job was to select quotes from famous people and interpret them as fortunes in the company's "Wish Biscuits" gourmet fortune cookies. Reaching an empty cookie box from a shelf in her office, Rebne sets it down on her desk. "Here, you can have this - I'll just have to take it with me when I leave." Then pulling her desk drawer out, she reaches in, her hand disappearing way in the back, digging for the tiny elusive slips of paper - fortunes she had written. "Here, you can have these too," she says, depositing five yellowed and grease-stained bits of wisdom next to the b ox. "One can always be kind to people about whom one cares nothing." - Wilde. "Beware of mistaking kindness for love," Rebne wrote, "Guard your affections." And, "The world will never be better than the men who inhabit it." - Joseph F. Newton. "Do your best to make your comer the best part of the world," is another of Rebne's witticisms. "The job was fun ," Rebne recalls, laughing, "and I had half my research done - I have been collecting quotes since I was a young child." Her collection is now filling a large, once-blank book, transferred there from the notebooks and file cards of years past. The quotes she keeps in her head tumble out on her tongue in the course of conversation just as naturally as her own - except she attributes them . "My favorite," Rebne says, stretching her arms out and framing the imaginary words in her hands, "is the one I always keep right out here in front of me: Micah 6:8: "He has showed you, 0 man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God?' " Rebne also collects old hymn books, and is a deacon at the First Presbyterian Church in Boulder. As busy as she likes to be, Rebne says her dream is to live with her husband, Glenn, on Whidbey Island in Puget Sound, near her grandmother, have a couple of kids and work in her own consulting business. For now, her more immediate goal is to finish her MBA. "\\'hen I finish school, I'm going to sit down and do needlepoint for one solid year," she says. "Read some murder mysteries and Gone with the Wind for the 19th time." 0 Now, that sounds sensible.

Suzanne Dirksen and Matt Cohen in last ye. Boo" written b y Christopher Durang.

Theatre sea· Royden Marsh Reporter The MSC Players; the school's theatre club, w ill emphasize student participation in four productions this year. Club members have chosen shows which they feel will be entertaining for the public as well as a learning experience for themselves. "The problem with last year was that the first show was not an MSC show. It was Dracula, which was a Hunger Artist show. There was one MSC student in the show. It alienated any influx of new students. There was nothing for them to do; another theatre was doing everything," said D iane McDaniel, the new MSC Players president. The first Players production this year will be \he Chalk Garden by Enid Bagnold. Set in England during the '50s, this show revolves around a family tom by secrets. • "It has a kind of Hitchcock feel to it, a psychological kind of mystery," McDaniel said. Ann A. Randolph, who directed Central City Opera's The Face on the Barroom Floor, will direct The Chalk Garden, which is now in rehearsal stage. The play will run Oct. 15 - 215. "The second show last year was R.U.R. which was heavily male-dominated,'' McDaniel explained. "It was also open auditions and, therefore, MSC students


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r's production "The Marriage of Bette and

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son nears were relegated, once again, to small posidions because they didn't have tlie training or experience." Because of this, auditions for The Chalk Garden have been limited to MSC students. The Piayers' second show wiJJ be Michael Cristofer's The Shadow Box. This powerlul 1977 Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winhing play illustrates the five stages of death. The play focuses on three families, the realities of dying and how each deals wjth the resenting anger, denial, bargaining, depression an~ finally acceptance. Richard Kenyon, an MSC graduate and founding member of the MSC Players, will direct The Shadow Box. The play has nine characters, four male, four female and an interviewer that can be male or female. The MSC Players hold auditions the week of Oct. 19. The Shadow Box runs Dec. 3 -13 for a total of eight performances. - The third and fourth plays will .be produced during the spring semester. The third will be a student-directed one-act play. Auditions will be held at the beginning of the'semester and the play will run for a week in the beginning of March. ••The fourth show will likely be a family show. Auditions for it will be during the 1 week of March 14 and the play will run " from April 28 to May 4. • For more information contact the MSC Players at 556-3403 or stop by their office at room 271 in the Arts Building. O

Most bands hope for the day when they are popular enough to get away from the bar gigs. And with the release of their third album, The Pursuit of Happiness (MCA/Curb) , the Beat Farmers are big enough to get away from the spilled beer, cigarette smoke and the sometimes seedy patrons. But who says they want to. Last Thursday (Sept. 10) San Diego's Beat Farmers played the first show of a three-month national tour at Denver's Paramount Theatre. "It's kinda pretentious havin' a show in a place like this (the Paramount), but at least they serve beer. I noticed that," said Joey Harris, guitarist, singer and songwriter for the band, to the crowd. But it probably didn't matter to the band that Coors was being served in the lobby; they brought their own Coronas. I heard it mentioned before the show that there would only be two cases for the show. "Why only two?" asked Country Dick Montana, the drummer, sometimes singer/guitarist and overall wild man. But to say that all these guys did was get up on stage, drink a lot and get crazy wouldn't be totally accurate. To start with, they put on a hell of a show. I'm talking about screaming, slashing, searing guitars. Crunching, pounding, slamming drums. 1 hundering, rumbling bass. What can I say about vocals? They were great, too. I'm talking about guys who play everything. Don't be surprised if you hear stuff from George Jones to the Kinks to the Velvet Underground to Kenny Rogers to Tom Waits to Neil Young. Maybe even a little a cappella Led Zeppelin. Their own material is just as potent as the stuff they cover. The single "Dark Light" from Pursuit is somewhere in the top 100. (It was originally supposed to be on The Lost Boys movie soundtrack. "They decided not to use it--we decided not to see

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Country Dick Montana and crazy beer antics. Photo by Dan Walters

it," Joey said.) . Rolle Dexter (a.k.a. Rolle Love), the bass player, describes the band's musical beginnings as honky-tonk with a country feel. "We started in the Spring Valley Inn (near San Diego) playing to construction workers who drank beer and shit. We eventually evolved into more of a rock feel. It's so hard to explain. We just got toughersounding." Jerry Raney, the other guitarist, singer and songwriter, said they play a soulful rock 'n' roll, with different accents of blues and country and general "get up and rock" music. And with their Pursuit album, Raney said he feels that new producer Dave Jerden (who's worked with the Rolling Stones and Talking Heads, among others) has really improved their sound. "I have to say something good about him. He fits with us real well," Raney explained. "He caught the live feeling the natural sound of the Beat Farmers." Van Go, their second studio album, seems to have been a bit of a letdown for the band. Original band member Buddy Blue was about to leave the band because of musical differences, and then-producer Craig Leon wasn't really familiar with a band like the Beat Farmers, according to the band members. After Blue left and started his own band, The Jacks, Harris took his place. "It was kinda hard at the time to resolve our differences (with Blue)," Dexter said. "He can be difficult to work with and he knows it." But it's not like these guys hate Blue. Dexter said he's still a good friend. During the show, Harris even put in a plug for The Jacks. And these guys aren't like most of the pompous rock stars who only play in enormo-domes and can't even see their audience. They play for the audience. Vvhen the theatre crew was setting up portable seats near the stage before the show, Montana was worried that people wouldn't have enough room to dance. And when he found out that the opening act (The Insiders from Chicago) was only scheduled to play for 30 minutes, he got mad. "These guys have an album out. They should play at least 45 (minutes)," Montana protested. They played 45. (Great sound from this new band. Look for them.) And the Beat Farmers played for two hours. Two solid hours of rock and roll. They played a bunch of songs from their new album, including "Dark Light," "Big Big Man," "Texas," "Rosie" and some others. Raney and Harris traded vocals and guitar licks on different songs and were so tight, you'd think they'd been playing together forever. One of my favorites (actually, they all were) was Raney's rendition of Ray Davies' (the Kinks) "20th Century Man." Then, of course, was the lunatic Country Dick Montana. The only way I can describe his rendition of "Lucille" would be to imagine Sam Kineson and Kenny Rogers getting together, drinking a lot of beer and going for bareback buffalo rides.

Joey Harris sin.gs and plays guitar. Photo by Dan Walters And the lunacy doesn't end there. Beer flies everywhere (the stage monitors are covered with towels before they let him "sing"). He'll demand a piggy-back ride. He'll toss you condoms. He'll throw himself on the stage. And Harris'll even refill your beer cup with a fresh Corona. The best thing about being on tour for these guys? "I don't have to see the same people two days in a row. I don't have to keep my room clean. I can get as drunk as I want to, and there are no apologies because we're already gone," said Montana. The worst part? "It's a little rough to get used to because after a week and a half, we start to smell really bad," he said. Catch Country Dick after a show sometime (he'll probably be in the nearest bar) and ask him to tell you about the time he was living in his record shop on $35 a week. (The record store, he said, was a lot cooler than Denver's Wax Trax. "All the customers got free beer, for one thing." He even checked out the legal end with his insurance man.) Or maybe he'll tell you about his first sexual encounter. An old friend from San Diego, Bob Ulrich (who lives in Littleton), just suggested that Montana and this girl, well, you know .... (Ulrich,now a responsible citizen, suggested I quote Dick at least twice.) So where is a band like the Beat Farmers headed in the future? Raney thinks it would be good to eventually get a gold album and a platinum album after that. But they're going to take their time. "A slow build to us is a lot better. We haven't let the record companies interfere with us," Raney said. "Don't need advice from no company man/Who complicates life with a legalized plan" (from "Big Big Man" by Jerry Raney D and Steve Marshall).

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September is, 1987

10

Thb Metropolitan well slaying, and Denver District Attorney Norm Early promises to seek the death penalty in the case. They came from al1 over Colorado to the basilica on East Colfax Avenue, guns still on their hips, to say goodbye to brotherin-arms. Light streamed through stained glass windows, incense permeated the air and the altar boy performed his duties with special reverence. And the basilica blazed with blue. From the navy of the sheriff's department uniforms to the faded jean jacket of a man in his late 20s, whose stringy, blond hair and bushy mustache set him apart from the rest of the sea of azure. A man who wore a black bandana tied around his left arm in memory of a friend. And, like the man with his bandana, the deluge of officers obscured the faces of. their shields with black tape to protest a senseless murder. "Death has no more power over him, and that is the will of the Lord," said Monsignor Richard C. Heister. And they wept. These officers from Englewood and Denver and Aurora .

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Officers bid adieu to brother-in-arms Linda Cuyler Reporter

On Thursday they buried their own. They came 400 strong to pay final tribute to a man of peace who died violently by his own gun at the hands of a career criminal. The 400 law enforcement officers joined about 1,400 others at the Basilica of the

Timothy Vialpando. Vialpando had been transferred from the county jail to DGH for the treatment of stab wounds to the chest, back and hand, which are now believed to have been selfinflicted for the purpose of staging an escape attempt from the hospital. Vialpando has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the Still-

Immaculate Conception to mourn Deputy Daniel Stillwell, a 4-year veteran of the Denver sheriff's department and the third Denver-area police officer to be killed in the line of duty in the last nine months. Stillwell, 27, was killed Sunday morning at Denver General Hospital when he was shot twice with his own service revolver in the chest by 30-year-old convicted rapist

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A young policewoman sagged against the shoulder of a fellow officer; an Hispanic veteran in his 50s crouched on one knee, his face buried in his hands; and one tough-looking, red-faced cop in his late 40s stood erect at the side of the church, head held high and hands grasped firmly behind his back, tears streaming down his face and onto his starched blue collar. But mostly these officers took it well they bucked up. "Dan died a hero," Deputy William Musselman said in a tribute about a man he loved. "He was protecting all of us." It is part of the job, they said . We knew that when we hired on, they said. They came for his widow - and his little girl. Stillwell and his wife, Irene, 36, would have been married four years on Sept. 9, the day before she buried him. Their 3-year-old daughter, Ann, is just like her dad, Musselman told the mourners. "Dan never gave you a kiss and a hug but his little girl did, and she's just like her dad. Every time you went to his house, even if you'd never been there before, his little daughter had to give you a kiss and a hug. And you felt like you'd been kissed and hugged," Mussehnan choked between sobs. Another friend of Stillwell's, Leonard Guzman, eulogized: In the blink of an eye,

The beat of a heart, The deed was done.

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And we will remember. And we will miss him, And we wi.ll miss him. And then they filed out of the basilica. While the church bells tolled two discordant notes - the same grating tones, over and over again - they kept coming. One officer with his arm in a cast, another in a wheelchair, yet another struggling for his every step, and thanking God with each breath for the life to try. These 400 officers who vowed to serve and protect faced the basilica and saluted. They stood at attention as the American flag-covered casket was carried down the steps and lifted into the waiting black hearse. And it was done. D From the blue into the black.

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The MetropolJtan

September 1s. 1987

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Metro art teachers featured at show Pam Rivers Assistant Editor

..The key is going in with an open mind and responding to the pieces on whatever level you are most comfortable." Barbara Houghton, chairman of the MSC Art Department, provides a remedy for understanding art. The works of Houghton and 10 other art faculty currently are on display at the 1987 Denver Regional Art Exposition, located on floors 53, 54 and in the Republic Plaza lobby, 16th Street Mall at Tremont Place. "A common problem some people have in viewing art,'' Houghton continues, "is that they try to figure out all of what the piece means. "People should not feel intimidated if they lack an extensive knowledge of art history. They should try to relate to the colors or whatever strikes them about the work of art." The exhibition is the largest collection of art housed under one roof in the mountain region. The variety of art work comes from galleries in Colorado and from local and national artists. The expo, which includes 2,000 pieces by 500 artists, comprises traditional Western masterpieces,. neon constructions, video works, contemporary canvases, jewelry, photography, sculpture and crafts. Most of the art is for sale.

Drill," by Charles W. Hayes; "Learning The Sport/The Managers," by Barbara Houghton; "Variation On A Sacred," by Rodger Lang; "Wooden Bowl," by Dennis Lucero; and "The Arts Of... ," by Jean Schiff. The exposition opened Sept. 11 and continues Sept. 17-20. Expo hours are 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. General admission tickets are $4 or $2 for students and seniors. D

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[.;., c: Art enthusiast examines sculpture exhibited at Denver Regional Art Exposition.

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Barbara Houghton stands in front of a self-portrait. "l base much of my work on my reactions to experiences in life." MSC art faculty are presenting a mixedmedia display, each work from a different medium, including a computer coloredpencil drawing and a color-Xerox repro duction. Houghton said participating in the show is good public relations for the department. She said the department also participates in an annual faculty show. Some art faculty exhibit their work nationally, Houghton said, and all members in the department maintain studio space at home or at a private studio. The works of the faculty artists on exhibit include: "Live On Stage," by E.C. Cunningham; "Audubon's Brush," by David Mesple'; "Sears Tower, Chicago," by Jay Dilorenzo; "Blue Violet Head," by Craig Smith; "Fragmented Wafer," by Eugene Eidy; "Wolverine,'' by Gary Emrich; "Core J j '

STARTS EVERYWHERE FRIDAY, SEPT. 18


The Metropolitan

September 18, 1987

12

------SPORTS------

Lady Roadrunners return home victorious , Volleyball Jean Anderson Reporter

The MSC women's volleyball team returned to the scene of last year's dismal 0-2 opening on Grand Junction and did a turn around. Last season the Roadrunners lost to Eastern :\ew Mexico State and \1esa College. This year they were the victors. The Roadrunners defeated ENMS in straight games, 15-7, 15-7, 15-9 in the first match. They followed the opener by rallying over Mesa College in a 5-game marathon, 12-5, 15-2, 15-5, 6-14, 15-8.

Soccer "I think the kids were determined," head coach Pat Johnson said. "We really set a goal to improve on what we did last year." A strong passing game gave MSC the edge against E:\'MS, Johnson said. In the second match, the Roadrunners faced long-time rival Mesa. "They kept coming back at us," Johnson said about Mesa. 'They're never going to rollover." The rivalry was fueled by junior setter Verna Julaton's return to her old school. Julaton played for Mesa for two years before transferring to MSC. Strong serving helped lift the Roadrunners

over Mesa. Julaton had a 9-point serving streak in the the third game and sophomore Nina Fanelli came off the bench in the fifth game to serve seven straight points, Johnson said. "Our overall quality is improving," she said. "Our defense is stronger than our offense right now. We need a higher kill (spike) percentage when we get the opportunities." \1SC travels to the Minnesota Tournament Sept. 18-19. The team's first match is against Nebraska-Omaha, ranked third in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II.

IN PERSON!

TOM JACKSON WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23

Meet one of Denver's favorite Broncos when "TJ" comes to ABC to sign copies of his new autobiography, BLITZ. This is the book he's waited 14 years to write, and in it he discloses startling views of his teammates, . opponents and coaches, his diary of the final Super Bowl season, plus insights into life after footbal I. Join us for a lunchtime of fun , hoopla and adoration, then savor your personalized copy of BLITZ at home durin~ upcoming game halftimes.

GO BRONCOS! ,

AURARIA

B·O·O·K CENTER Lawrence & 9th St.

M-Th 8-6,

556-3230 F 8-5, Sat 10-3

CAN'T MAKE IT? Call and charge a book and we 'll have it signed for you.

12-1:30PM

Renee Allen Reporter

The MSC women's soccer team narrowly defeated Texas Christian University 2-1 Friday at the Air Force Academy. Senior Amy Shute scored six minutes into the first half, assisted by freshman Monica Wenston. TCU came back to tie the score seven minutes into the second half. But three minutes later sophomore Tonja Ridgeway scored the ""'inning goal, assisted by freshman Jodi Lucero. Coach Ed Montojo said this was the strongest game the team has p layed thus far. "I think we are going to have a good season, now it is just a question of playing more together," he said. Montojo said the key to winning Friday's game was a strong midfield, consisting of senior Holly Hoskins, Ridgeway, and sophomores Leslie Zimmerman and Leslie Markley Junior Cindy Fronapfel was strong on defense and sophomore Jan Holland was effective in the goal, he said. The Roadrunners will participate in a tournament in Milwaukee, Wisc . on Saturday and Sunday. "If we can win this tournament, we can start to establish and identity. I think we have a good chance of winning. It's going to come down to who wants to win the most," Montojo said. o

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Copy of military discharge required if veteran. Copy of police check from local police department required. Apply between 9 am -2 pm at: II

Exclusive Accounts Denver Job Service 1330 Fox Street Denver EOE

Male/Female

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The Metropolitan

September 18, 1987

13

Soccer team undefeated "We knew it would be tough," Chambers said. "You're talking about a team that was in nationals last year. They lost maybe one or two starters. "The rivals used to be Metro and DU , now it's Regis." Regis Coach Marcelo "Chelo" Curi agrees to a certain extent. "Metro, DU, Mines, Regis, they're all big rivals,'' Curi said. "It will just depend on who wants it more." Apparently, Metro did, he said.

Karl Braun Reporter

The ~1SC men's soccer team remained undefeated for the season after beating its newest archrival, Regis College, 3-1Sept.9 and then shutting out the College of the Southwest 5-0 Sept. 14. Against Regis, Metro started fast as junior Mike Wachter scored five minutes into the first half on a short pass from D.J. Ruder, a former Regis player. Regis tied the game when Brian Velasquez scored 3" minutes later on a short pass from Mike Napoli. The Roadrunners took a 2-1 lead with 13 minutes left in the first half when midfielder Jeff Fletcher headed the ball past Regis goalie Kurt Holzkamp on an assist from junior ~itch Corsevski. Fletcher received a black eye after catching an elbow from Velasquez on the play. Early in the second half, a Regis player slid tackled Wachter inside the penalty box and Corsevski scored on a straight-on penalty kick, giving the Roadrunners a 3-1 lead. MSC fullback David Biondi, who left the game after being hit in the face, praised the team's effort. "It was an excellent effort by the whole team," Biondi said. "I was psyched for it. These guys thought they were hot ... We showed them." Coach Bill Chambers said he wasn't surprised with intensity of the game.

"Metro d eserved it," Curi said. "They came in and capitalized on our mistakes. They came in and wanted it more." With 19 varsity and seven junior varsity players, depth should not pose a problem for the Roadrunners this season, Chambers said. "I look at the bench. I used five or six different subs," Chambers said. "We have a lot of skill down the bench. They were a bunch of new guys and they came together. They were pulling for one cause. "It was nice to win." On Monday, Ruder scored three goals in the first half as the Roadrunners recorded their first shutout of the year. Twenty minutes into the first half, Ruder scored on an unassisted shot past Mustangs goalie Tom Dunford. Ruder scored again 15 minutes later when his shot rattled off the cross bar and side post before going into the net. Ruder's final goal came with 2:30 left in the first half on a full field run when he eluded the diving Dunford.

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D.]. Ruder led the team in scoring with three goals in Monday's win. Despite the ease of the win, Chambers was critical of his team's effort. 'Tm not real happy with the way we played," Chambers said. "If it hadn't been for D.J .... he took three balls right to the goal. "Since it was a non-league game and we had come off a real tough game with Regis, I didn't think they would be too up for it. We played a little bit flat."

Defender Mis' Mrak scored the Roadrunners' fourth goal on a penalty kick 15 minutes into the second half. Fletcher scored the final goal off a rebound by penalty kick by freshman David Hood. The 3-0 Roadrunners play the University of Denver at 2 p . m. , September 19, D Auraria fields.

' " ('

VALIDATED FREE PARKING-LOTS A & B

PG-13 PG-13 PG-13

MATINEES DAILY Call 571-1000 for movie times ~\e a t'(\O \ e.o\o'I c\asses. ne\~eet\

Try Our New American Glace' Frozen De11ertl Bring in this ad and receive a free sample. Offer expires September 24. 1987. (Limited Quantities Availablel

~TIVOLI

12

路----------------------------------Try the BEST EGG ROLL in town at the : Mr. 'Egg :Roll .2 Egg Rolls for $1.00

,

with this coupon

EXPIRES

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1. Pork Fried Rice 2. Vegetable Tempura 3. Vegetable Stir Fried

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The most exciting few hours you'll spend all week. Run. Climb. Rappel. Navigate. Lead. And develop the confidence and skills you won't get from a textbook. Enroll in Army ROTC as one of your electives. Get the facts today.

Department of Military Science Auraria Campus Rectory Office Building Denver. Colorado 80204-0010

.. .

556-3490

1050 W. Colfax

(next to Burger King)

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ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAIN!Nl..~ Cl)RPS


14

September 18, 1987

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SEPTEMBER 18 FRIDAY Aurerla Library Bualneu Seminar 1: Overview Is scheduled for Sept. 18 from 8:30-10:30 a.m. The seminar Is designed to show you how to effectlvely use the library for buslneu or organlzatlonal needs.

22 TUESDAY Metro Finance Club meeting wlll be held Sept. 22 at 5:00 p.m., Student Center room 254/256.

23 WEDNESDAY A "Student Leaders Forum" wlll be held Sept. 23 In the St. Francis Center. Registration begins at 11 a.m. In the lounge. For more Information, call 556-2701 or 556-8441 . 23 , WEDNESDAY Wednesday Aftemoon Club at the Mission presents Dotsero Sept. 23 from 3:00-6:00 p.m.

24 THURSDAY Ski Club hes an Introductory meeting Sept. 24 at 2 p.m. In Student Center room 330-C. Current and prospective members should attend.

THURSDAY 24 Metro Finance Club meeting wlll be held Sept. 24 at 12:30 p.m., Student Center room 254/256.

26 SATURDAY " Informed Choices on Career'' Is a class for wome.n facing career choices to be held Sept. 26 from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Call the Office of Extended Campus Programs at 556-3376 for Information.

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ANNOUNCEMENTS The Outdoor Adventure Program of Campus Recreation is bukl For information about trips, call 556-8363/ 3210.

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22 TUESDAY National Society of Black Engineers meets Sept. 22 at 4 p.m. In Student Center room 230-A. Anyone Interested In joining the club la Invited to attend the meeting or sign up In room 213, South Classroom.

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The Metropolitan

The Auraria Jewish Student Alliance is biick this semester. Office hours are Mon./ Wed.8-9 il.m., Tues./ Thurs. 8-9:15 a.m., 9:30-10:45 a.m., 11 a.m.-1p.m., 6-8 p.m., ilnd Fri. 9:30-10:45 a.m. in room 2550 in the Student Center. Call 556-3330 for information. Metro rugby wilnts you! Prutice is Tue./Thur. from

4-6 p.m. on the field behind the Tivoli. Ciill Russ Rey-

nolds at 694-3957 for informiltion.

University of Colorildo at Denver arts alumni showcase their work through Oct. 1 in the Emmilnuel Callery. Many items will be for sale.

University of Denver's Center for MaritaJ ilnd Filmily Studies is looking for volunteer couples for rese..rch on how physical health affects marital satisfaction. For detilils, call Joyce Emde at 871-3829.

The Arnda Center Theatre Company has auditions for "Codspell" Sept. 19 and 20. For audition appointment and other information, call 431-3080.

Calendu items are free. Please send all calendar notices to The Metropolitan, Attn: Editor, or bring in to our office, Student Center Rm. 156. All notices will be edited for content and space consideration. On campus events will tilke priority . Deadline for calendar items is Mondily at noon.

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T I .V 0 L I Food! Glorious food! Tivoli Denver celebrates the joys of all things delicious with a week of festivities, September 21-27. It's the grand reopening of our food court-newly named "Taste of Tivoli." Enjoy daily entertainment, food specials, then try your hand at our Taste of Tivoli trivia game to win great prizes! Sample the variety of foods offered by Tivoli's food merchants at:

Mandarin cottage

...

-e

J

THE STEAKMAN

..,,, .- jf"'

~iao

;:: 1Jeo/iio~

P a sta a nd Pizza Bar

Bon appetit!

;-

9th & Larimer 629-8712


The Metropolitan

september 18, 1987

15

Classified SERVICES

HELP WANTED

HOUSING

MATH PROBLEMS? SOLVE THEM NOWI Algebra and Beyond Professional Tutors in Larimer Square. Call 892-MATH. 9/lB

GRAPHIC ASSISTANT: Newsletter company needs part-time paste-up help. Experience required . Located near Metro. Flexible 5-10· hours per week. Call Jennifer 825-6707. 9/lB

AFFORDABLE HOUSING -Cozy, newly decorated buffet apts. New furniture and appliances. Rent $235.00 to $265.00, 21 W. First Avenue. Quiet and clean. Heat & Water paid. By appt. 333-1542. Mon-Fri. 8-5. 9/18

LOVE IS IN THE AIRI Don't be left out. Great dates! Personalized introduction service. 329-6243. 9/lB NEW SUPPORT GROUP: For women over 30 who are degree-seeking undergraduate students. Will meet on campus once a week during the evening. If interested, please call Nancy at 556-2939 before September 25. 9/lB NATIONWIDE MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS company is seeking college representatives to promote and sell voice mail to students; (a unique computerized system that receives and delivers messages). So messages will never be missed again. Make your own hours, good commission program. Please call 649-8388 for more information. 9/lB CONVENIENT. FUN. INEXPENSIVE! Your own astrology chart, plus 11 page interpretation, only $10! Send birth date, time, place: Zodiac-L, 400 Woods, Teacneck, NJ 07666 9125 SWALLOW HILL MUSIC SCHOOL - Denver's Home of Folk Music. Learn guitar, banjo, singing, fiddle, dulcimer and more. Sunday jam sessions and great concerts. Call m1003 after 1:00 p.m. 1012 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES at affordable rates. 680-1680. 10/9 WORDPRO-WORD PROCESSING. Tired of hunt 'n peck? Call WORDPRO. Complete word processing services. Quick turnaround, proofing, spelling and punctuation checked. TERM PAPERS, THESES, REPORTS, RESUMES. Professional services at affordable rates. 680-1680. 10/9

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MIJIT WORD PROCESSING. $1.50 per dbl. spaced page. 24-hour service. 575-8725. 12/4 TYPING SERVICES/LETTER QUALITY WORD PROCESSING for business, student or personal needs. Reasonable rates, central location. Call Kathy at 322-4188. 12/4 TYPING - EXPERIENCED. Accurate, Reasonable. Call Sandi 234-1095. 5/6

•New Interactive Dialing Method • All Phone Numbers • New Ads Daily • Call Anytime Private Numbers Furnished

SMALL BUSINESS NEEDS Part time office help. Light typing , filing, running errands, etc. Flexible 10-15 hours per week.Located near Metro. Call Jennifer 825-6707. 9/lB

ACTIVISTS · Full and part-time jobs available for students supporting family violence prevention program focus_ing on work with adolescents. Work 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. 3-5 . days per week. Earn $ while making a difference. Call 320-1142 9:00 a.m. to noon Monday through Friday for appt. Will train. 9/18 THE OLD SPAGHETTI FACTORY is now taking applications for part-time kitchen staff, bussers and hostesses. Ideal for students. Flexible hours, no experience necessary; great working conditions. Apply in person, Monday through Sunday 2:00-4:00 p.m. 1215 18th St., 295-1864. 9/25

ROOMMATE: 2 bedroom Apt., near Villa Italia $225. Deposit $200. 238-2475. 9125 STUDENT HOUSING AT THE GOTHAM, 12th & Grant. Free local phone calling. Efficiency, Buffet, and One Bedroom Apartments for short or long term leasing at low student rates. Within walking distance to Auraria, or catch RTD at 12th ·& Grant. Furnished or unfurnished. Call, or come by for a tour. 861-1176 10/2 OGDEN FANTASTIC 1 & 2 bedrooms in established building. Good area near Washington Park and downtown, Security Bldg., Exercise room, pool, laundry facilities, parking Adults only, from $280.00, 6 or 9 month lease. Call 722-8950 or 573-1916. 10/2

FOR SALE

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Intro Flight $27.00 per person with ad

stephen Smith CR 979-1045 affiliated with Colorado's largest flight school.

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lCALL DOES IT ALL Leave, or listen to UNCENSORED MESSAGES... Instantly Updated for immediate response

ROCKY ROCOCO PIZZA Tivoli Mall. Flexible hours, part-time days or njghts. Counter, prep, bus. 10/9

GOVERNMENT HOMES. Delinquent tax property. Repossessions. For information 805687-6000 ext. L-n16. 10/9

EARN $100 DAY and more - hand delivery of flyers door to door. Permanent part/full - no experience required .. Call 24 hours 1-800-255-5110 ext. 600. 10/16

CAN YOU BUY Jeeps, Cars, 4x4's seized in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for facts today. 602-837-3401. Ext. 1073. 10/9

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EARN $5-$10 PER HOUR delivering for Blackjack Pizza - we pay better than the competition! Part-time/flexible hours. Must be at least 18, with insured car. Apply at 1818 E. Colfax. 10/30 HOME HEAL TH AIDE. female, wanted partti me evenings for quadriplegic. Nonsmoker, dog-lover, with reliable transportation. References desired. Experienced or will train. Near OTC n1-0579. 12/4

YOU'VE EARNED ITI $25 A NIGHT FOR 2. Ten cozy log cabins/kitchens. Gameroom, pool table, fireplace~ HBO, fishing , volleyball, horseshoes, picnic areas, playgrounds. Nestled in pines, aspens. Wild flowers & chipmunks. Make 20¢ call tonight! MOUNTAIN LAKES LODGE 1-627-8448Grand Lake. 5/6

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., Woman over 18 earn $50 completing a FDA registered vaginitis study. Free: ·Exam • Lab test •Value $175 AMI Health Care Center Thornton Gynecologists.

426-0570 •

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Auraria Campus

CAREER EXPLORATION DAY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1987 10:00 AM 3:30 PM STUDENT CENTER All Auraria students and alumni are welcome to attend. Over 50 employer representatives will be present to discuss career paths and future employment opportunities. A variety of career oriented workshops will also be held throughout the day.

Sponsored by Office of Career Services; Auraria Student Assistance Center

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Community College of Denver, Metropolitan State College, University of Colorado at Denver Workshops 10:00 to 10:50 a.m. "DISCOVER - Computer Based Career Guidance System" ........................... . ............................. "Successfully Beating the Job Search Blues". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Planning to Buy a Franchised Business". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI): Personality and Career Choice" ....... .. .. ... .. .. .. ..... ...... . ... . .......... "Resumes That \\'ork" ............................. ..... .... .... . . . ..... .. .. . .. ....... ...... .......... ........ .. "The Employment Outlook: Projections for Metro Denver". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Student Center 2.54 Student Center 256 Student Center 257 Student Center 258 Student Center 230 Student Center 230

11:00 to 11:50 a.m. "The Interviewing Process from the Employer's Perspective" .... . ......................................................... St. Cajetan's "Personal and Professional Growth Through the Peace Corps" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Student Center 254 "Is the La\v for You?" ...................... . ............ . ................................. .. ................... Student Center 256 "Job Skills for the 21st Century" . . . . . . ......................... . . .......................................... . . . .. Student Center 257 "Policy Development & Fund Raising for Non-Profits" ............. .......... ............................... .. . : . . . Student Center '258 "So You Want to \Vork with People" . ..... ...... . ............ ... ................................................. Student Center 230 "You & TV: How to Break in and How to Last" .................... . ..... .. ........ .. ......... .. .. ...... .... .. .... Student Center 230

1:00 to 1:50 p.m. "There is Life After Liberal Arts" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Career Planning: Putting Yourself in the Driver's Seat" ............................. . ........... ... ........... . .... "Alternative Careers for Teachers" ................................................ .... .............. .. .. ......... "Job Possibilities Overseas" ....... .. .... . ..... . ... ... . .... . ... ...... ................... . ..... . ... . ........... .. . "Visual Impact: Careers in Creativity" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ''The Hows and \l\lhys of Informational Interviewing" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Student Center 254 Student Center 256 Student Center 257 Student Center 258 Student Center 230 Student Center 230

2:00 to 2:50 p.m. "The Interviewing Process from the Employer's Perspective" ..... .. ........... . . ... . ............. . ............... . . ....... St. Cajetan's "Working for the Federal Government" ............................ ... ....... . ... . . ..... ....... . ..... . ........... Student Center '254 "Games Mother Never Taught You - Political Strategies fo r Career Women" ............... .... .... .. ...... .... ..... Student Center 256 "Job Search Strategies - Have I got the Right Stuff" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Student Center 257 "Disabled People in the Work Force" ................ ... ........... ... ..... ... . ... . ..... ............. .. ........ .. Student Center 230 "Preparation for Working in a CPA Firm" .. ........... . .. .. ... ..... ...... .. ............ .............. .. .......... Student Center 230

Employers 0

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AMI Presbyterian/St. Luke's Medical Center Aetna Life & Casuality Allstate Insurance American Society of Women Accountants Auraria Higher Education Center Becker CPA Review Brookstone Co./Univ. Town Center Bureau of Land Management City & County of Denver City of Aurora City of Longmont Colorado Air l\ational Guard Colorado National Bank of Denver Colorado Society of CPA's Continental Airlines Coors

0

-· FBI Federal Correctional Institution Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City First Investors IBM Internal Revenue Service Los Angeles College of Chiropractics Lowry Air Force Base Martin Marietta Mountain Bell Mercy Medical Center National Assoc. of Accountants National Center for Atmospheric Research Northwestern University Principal Financial Public Service

Radisson Hotel, Denver Rockwell International Rose ~edical Center Southland Corporation Suicide Prevention Allied Regional Effort State Farm Insurance TOPS Personnel Touche Ross CPA's TRW United Airlines U.S. Air Force U.S. General Acct. Office u .S. Geological Survey United Parcel Service University of Colorado HSC - Child Health Associate Program U.S. Marine Corps U.S. Navy U.S. Peace Corps

These employers responded before September 10, 1987; this list does not include those who responded after that time.


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