Volume 17, Issue 2 - Aug. 26, 1994

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Volwne 17 Issue 2 August 26, 1994

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Questions arise over Tivoli parking validation policy

6 1: 1·: \ 'l ' l IC l ·:S Sigil Billiards and Arcade now open

20

To and from the new Tivoli Student Union: Campus traffic patterns change as students flock to their new digs for books, .. entertainment, eats and conversation.

Photo by ,., Andy Cross

Women l soccer news

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24

Minority retention low Donna Hickey The Metropolitan

"Two Budd lites, please."

...·-

Pullouf

By the year 2020, the number of minorities in the United States will become the majority, said MSCD President Sheila Kaplan at MSCD's diversity conference last week. The third annual diversity conference, "Leadership Through Diversity," included workshops, speakers and group dialogue sessions on Aug. 17 and 18. The issues ranged from how personal bias interferes in conflict management and how diverse communities can achieve higher productivity.

Kaplan did not personally attend the conference, but she did address administrators, faculty and students via video. "I have made diversity one of the highest priorities in my administration," Kaplan said. "The economic success and social harmony for this and every future generation in America will depend directly on our educational system." MSCD has not been successful retaining students of color, Kaplan said. "To meet our obligation to our students, to our community and to the state of Colorado, we must do better," Kaplan said, adding that hiring more administration and instructors of color could set a model for retaining minority students.

Kaplan said she will be more "aggressive" about retaining students of color. The administration will continue to provide academic advising, peer counseling, tutoring and cultural activities. Kaplan "Metro has become more

see DIVERSITY page 3


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The Metropolitan

DIVERSITY from page 1 responsive to the needs of an ethnically diverse student population," Kaplan said. According to Kaplan, nearly 25 percent of the student population identified themselves as minorities, but only 15 percent of MSCD's minority students gradua~e within a six year period.

·1 h.a ve made diversity on(! o,t@the fffbhesl prior/ties Id · my qdmln,/stratlon'

The Metropolitan/Jane Raley

When the Multicultural Lounge and Resource Center opens in October, the Student Government Assembly will have a new Vice President of Diversity in place. The SGA opened the position when Julie Imada, who was elected to the position last spring, repeatedly failed to attend summer meetings. The Vice President of Diversity will work with administration, faculty, staff and student groups, focusing on recruitment and retention, equal opportunity and educational issues relating to minority students. Six student under consideration for the position are: Reyniko Abram, a freshman political science major; Julie Blair, a junior speech communications contract major; l.esJi Ann Garrett, a junior political science major; Robert Hale, a senior human resource management major; Traci Love, a freshman sociology major; and Angelita Rodriguez, a freshman Spanish major. During the spring 1994 semester, vandalism in the St. Francis Center, antiSemitic posters on bulletin boards and a racial slur scrawled across a student's picture prompted MSCD President Sheila Kaplan to respond several times. The Multicultural Lounge and Resource Center will be split into two areas. One will showcase art exhibits and speakers, the other will be a resource center, providing educational and social services.

-Claudia Hibbert

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Kaplan: MSCD to respond to diverse student population

enrollment inches higher, minority recruitment makes gains

From where we've come to where we 're going

August 26. 1994

Enrollment up College moves closer to meeting CCHE mandate Christopher Anderson Staff Writer Enrollment for Fall 1994 is up by a mere 94 students, and minority enrollment is up .8 percent compared to Fall 1993, according to a preliminary report by MSCD Institutional Research. "It's encouraging that enrollment is up because they were on a downward trend when you compared last year's enrollment to the year before," said Paul Wilken, MSCD director of Institutional Research. Total enrollment for Fall 1994 is 16,800 compared to 16,706 for Fall 1993. This figure is still down from a recent high of 17,835 in Fall of 1991. · Wilken was also pleased by the increase in minority enrollment. "Each term it seems to increase," Wilken said. Fall 1993 minority enrollment was 19.7 percent; Spring 1994 minority enrollment was 19.9 percent; and Fall 1994 minority enrollment, so far, is at 20.5 percent. Vernon Haley, vice president of Student Services, said current minority enrollment was about what it should be. The real concern should be retention of

these students, he said. "It's all very well and good to up your enrollment - but at the same time we want to make sure that they stay here," Haley said. "The Colorado Commission on Higher Education has mandated that we move up to 21.2 percent in terms of (our) minority retention rate, and we are at 14. something.... So, we have some work to do." James Dixon, associate dean of Letters, Arts and Sciences and club advisor to the Black Student Alliance, agreed. It is important for all students to be enrolled - not just minorities, he said. "We have to watch how you come in," Dixon said. ~'We have to watch'you while you are here. We have to watch you as you leave and see what you are doing on the other side." Speaking on improving the enrollment statistics, Dixon said it is really important to encourage students before college, particularly in grades K-5. "It's very important to demand they come up to a competent level and not excuse them because they may be economically deprived," he said. "We can not dumb down our expectations."

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"This is a statistic none of us can be proud of," she said. "The involvement of the entire campus community - faculty, staff and administrators - is essential if we are to be successful."

Individuals key to greater diversity Representatives of MSCD's Student Government Assembly, the faculty senate and staff members were part of a panel, discussing ways to educate the college population about what they learned in the conference. Jerry Boswell, president of the Faculty Senate, said administrators must take responsibility for creating a more comfortable environment at MSCD. "We can not manage diversity until we can manage well," Boswell said. "It has to start with us as individuals." Betty Vette, director of the Board on Academic Standard Exceptions, agreed. "We need to define goals and objectives," she said. "If we are all students, we all have to be teachable." Panelists Mark Shannon, SGA vice president of Student Fees, and Anderson Moore, representative of the Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board, said Student Government will be more visible through classrooms and forums. "It is our duty as leaders to pass on (this) information," Moore said. "We have a new constitution that makes us more visible on campus."

-Associate News Editor Claudia Hibbert contributed to this report


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The Metropolitan

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August26,1994

Golden Parachute may !iCHDLAR!iHIP jeopardize job security

l\IEW!i Rocky ·M ountain l\lews Offers l\lew !icholarships

Available Immediatelv• ! -WHO: Ethnic Minority Journalism or Related Field Students Enrolled at Metro State for 1994 Fall Semester

WHAT: Rocky Mountain News Full-time, Four-Year Scholarship

WHERE: Applications available in the Journalism Department, WC 266

WHEl\I: Application Deadline is Friday, September 16, 1994, at 4 p.m. Restrictions apply. Scholarship includes internship program at the News.

'letropolitan~State Colle~l} of Denyer

-

Administrators subject to immediate termination under new law Meredith Myers The Metropolitan Some administrators at MSCD no longer have job security. They can now be fired at will. After July 1 the "Golden Parachute" law went into effect. The law eliminated employment contracts. The annual contracts served as legal agreements between state-financed institutions and their employees. Administrators constitute the bulk of nonclassified employees at MSCD. Before the "Golden Parachute," if an employee's performance was not acceptable, hearings took place. Under the existing law, that safeguard does not apply. "The litigation itself could take four months," said MSCD President Sheila Kaplan. "Since the employment contract was only for a year, we would just wait it out. "The existence of the law has caused a certain amount of anxiety among nonclassified employees, because people have lost their sense of security. There

have been several non-renewed contracts." Because of the law, there are no fixed-term contracts and there does not have to be a cause for termination of an employee. Either party can now terminate employment. The law does not authorize unlawful terminations for reasons contrary to

'All admlnlstratofs serve at tpe pleasure at some-

body - even Dr# Kaplan. ~r These Jobs are,,J;>,at lifetime , ·

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applicable federal, state or local law. In addition, the statewide Jaw will not affect faculty or classified employees such as secretaries and administrative assistants. H8 PARACHUTE p...- 8

..


Question and Answer -· With: Megan Reyes, the new president of Student Government Assembly Louis A. Landa News Editor

·.._ __

LANDA: Please give an overview of Student Government and your role in it. REYES: It's a brand new Student Government from every perspective. We are newly elected officials, and it's a new structure of government. The past Student Government members got together over winter break and created a new constitution. We felt the existing constitution ... was ineffective. We found it was hierarchical. It's modeled on our federal constitution. It has a judicial branch, legislative branch and executive branch. The new constitution made the government smaller. The old government had 25 senators.... This one bas 12 members all together: one board of trustee, two SACAB (Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board) members, a president, a chief justice and seven vice presidents. Those are the paid Student Government members. We decided to pay all the elected members. We decreased the president's stipend from $500 to $200, and pay the others $200 each. The powers of Student Government are spread out. So when you want to know about my role - my job - I don't look at it that way . ... It's all our job to make this work. Nothing is going to land on anybody's shoulders. It's a very inclusive and cooperative Student Government. It's not the president (that) speaks for all. LANDA: Then what is your role in Student Government? REYES: My role is to delegate. My role is to meet with the top administrators at the college and inform them on the progress of Student Government. I guess I can best be described as a liaison between the administration, faculty and the students. The brunt of the work - and this is

very new to Student Government - is on the shoulder of the vice presidents. In the past, senators didn't have a job description. Now we have clearly defined the role of Student Government. LANDA: But I think most students see the title "president" and say, "This is the person leading things." REYES: I would have liked to have gotten away from those titles, because that's what we do - we associate certain things with those titles. LANDA: If the focus of this interview should be that things have changed, let's make sure we emphasis that. REYES: I would like to. I think students must be made aware of the changes, because it does affect them. They will see this year true representation. The design of this body is one through which all 17,000 students are represented, not particular groups. We are not funding programs any more. Clubs and organizations can get money from club funding. Last year, clubs could get money from Student Government and club funding. We have totally eliminated that, because we felt that didn't allow us to provide equal representation for ... all students. LANDA: You said there would be true representation. That brings me to my next question about voting in the last elections. Do you have figures on that? It is my understanding that fewer than 100 students voted. Is that correct? REYES: I think it was 92. LANDA: Do you feel confident that there is true representation with only 92 students voting? REYES: Confident? I don't know if it is a confidence issue. Am I disappointed? Absolutely! Under the circumstance I don't see that anything different would happen. The Office of Student Affairs, which is now Student Services, had committed to funding a mailing, but they

see REYES page 9

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The Metropolitan

Aupat26,1994

$10 for parking!!??

Students shocked and confused over Tivoli parking validation policy at the New York Deli

Louis A. Landa News Editor Don't ask to have your Tivoli Student Union parking ticket validated at the New York Deli unless you're ready to dish out $10. Some students were shocked at this high minimum-purchase price. One student was told her parking ticket was too old and her validation was void. Management at the new Tivoli eating establishment said AHEC personnel set the price. They said they were notified of this policy on the morning of the first day of classes. Barb Weiske, director of the Tivoli Student Union, said the policy is part of the contract with the deli. She said confusion over validation requirements is understandable. "I think we need (signs) at the merchants

The Metropolitan/Jane Raley

to help customers know of this policy," she said. "But I hope validation is not the main reason they are going in there." She said the parking validation policies are designed to encourage high turnover in the parking lots. The other merchants have contracts and validation agreements held over from the previous Tivoli owner. The parking validation policy differs for each business. The Boiler Room has a $3 minimum purchase policy, and AMC Tivoli 12 Theaters requirement is any purchase. As motorists enter the parking lot, which is located at the northwest comer of the Tivoli, they pass a sign that reads, "Validations, AMC, Morton's, Boiler Room, New York Deli; Some validations may be limited; Ask merchants for details." The sign neglects to say anything about validation prices or that prices vary from $3 to $10. Weiske said future food court tenants will not be part of any parking validation

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The Metropolitan

AUBWt26,1994

1

I

I Books? What Books?

Many students will Jo t have books for the first days of classJ. Various problems ca~sed delays in textbook shipments to the !Auraria Book Center. Most of the delayed books are for specific classes with $mited enrollI ment. The hardest hit are students enrolled in the 51 ~ections of Fundamentals of Speech. I. ABC Director Gretchen Minney said the textbook for this class is on order and should be available by Aug. 26. She said the ABC noti~es faculty as soon as books are available. Check with your teacher.

CoPRIG announces fall • campaigns pt

MSCD's chapter CoPIRG (Colorado Public Interest Research Group) needs your help ~ith projects this semester: The Clean Air Campatgn will work to reduce mileage on in<?.vidual vehicles, pressing for increa~? use of public transportation and improve bike lanes. The Voter Regis ration and Education project will ta~get potential voters in an attempt to raiSf the percentage Auraria of students voting in local and national elections. The Hunger/Homeles~ness project will enlist students to help the homeless and understand the real prq lem. The Campus Book Swap will let students barter and trade textbooks without the middleperson. CoPIRG's . . to save stu dent moncI y. aunts

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8

Tlie Metropolitan

Aupat26,1994

Law removes security ,

PARACHUTE from page 4

•~L .,

Auraria Higher Education Center announces the

Diversity Internship Program for the 1994-95 Academic Year

Elisiiility

KMust be a full-ttme student at COIMlunity College ot Denver, Metropolttan State College of Denver or University of Colorado at Denver

K2.70 GPA or better

KStudents must have completed one full year at one ex mcxe ot the institutions on the Auraria campus

~AlA~

K$6.50 per hour/20 hours per week

l>cA"littc iseptember 2, 1994 ~~ttfAef

Far applications and information, contact: LeRoy M. Romero Manager ot DiversHy Programs Auraria Higher Educatton Center 1380 Lawrence Street, Suite 610 Denver, CO 80202

(303) 556-6212 Please note: Incomplete applications will not be accepted.

Tuesda~.

"The basic difference is that at-will (non-classified) employees had job security for a year because of the contract, and now they don't," said Sandi Jones, director of Personnel and Payroll Services. "No one is going to frivolously walk around firing people. The only reasons that someone will lose a job is because of poor performance or reorganization." Jones added that the president of the school is the only one with the authority to fire people. Before the "Golden Parachute," if a person was laid off, the remainder of the contracted salary would have to be paid even if they were no longer working for the school, according to Jones. "The payment of compensation to government-supported officials or employees after such have ended their employment creates unnecessary costs, which ultimately are borne by the taxpayers of this state," one section of the law reads. Kaplan also said problems with hiring administrators have occurred since the law was passed. "A candidate for the Vice President of Academic Affairs withdrew because there would be no contract involved because of the Golden Parachute law. He didn't want to move his family from out of state and not have the job security he was used to. But it's the law - and we have to work with it." Other MSCD employees see a greater

downside to the new law. "The more secure we feel, the more time we have to do our jobs well," said Andrea Doyle, secretary of the Council of Administrators. Administrators are the only unprotected group of people on campus, she said. "Classified employees and faculty all have contracts that protect their jobs." Doyle added that members of the council are attempting to get administrators from other state institutions to come together in a "grass-roots effort" to change the law. However, they don't have official support from the Council of Administrators or MSCD. "No one believed the bill ... would pass, so no one fought it," Doyle said. "If the council doesn't decide to address it, we will move on. We don't want to spend a lot of time being negative." Dr. Norman Provizer, chairman of the Political Science department, said the idea isn't a new one. "The fact is, in business this is what · happens every day," he said. "When people are made into administrators at the university level, they trade job security for money. All administrators serve at the pleasure of ~omebody - even Dr. Kaplan. These jobs are not lifetime appointments. 11 However, Provizer said that if the wrong person were to be made president, it could tum into a "reign of terror."

Sept. 6th

Wednesdau. Sept. 7th

1:30 to 3:30 pm in the MSCO Student Government Office. Tivoli Student Union. Rm. 307

Interested in an1.1 of the following issues_- ? • Graduation Agreements

• Published Facultq Evaluations • Diversitli •Childcare • Student Fees Kstt S&I 111ld t1'•e to sl1n Uese and oner co1ter1s •hk KSCI Studear's. Lets 11r1· te1e

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Augwt26.1994

The Metropolitan

w

New SGA president views her role as liaison REYES from page 5 backed out of that. Student Government and the elections commission was counting on that. I don't think Student Government has to take responsibility for that. It was a funding question. Yes, we should have had a better tum out. LANDA: It was a question, not an indictment. I was just curious how you felt with so few students voting. It's my understanding some of the offices went uncontested. REYES: Mine was, but what I hope most students would do is look at the new constitution and see that it's less hierarchical. This eliminates the in-fighting that's a waste of time. We need to be out there talking to the students ... talking to administrators.... We need to look at the serious issues like deferred tuition. We are going to try and make that available to more students. It was a ... pilot program and it's fairly successful. Graduation agreements are extremely ineffective on the campus. They cause more problems and paperwork that anything else.... Many institutions of higher education don't have graduation agreements as we understand them on this cam-

pus. Why. is that? They are still graduating students. LANDA: Did you attend the diversity workshops? If so, what did you think? REYES: Yes, I attended the second day. I thought the breakout groups were great. I've always found breakout groups to be more effective, because if they offer (several) then you can usually select the one of your particular interest. It seemed like their target market was faculty, and I got that loud and clear. I didn't feel as though it was geared toward students. The student prospective that were offered at the end of the day ... there wasn't enough time for it. I think ... they need to hear from students as well. However if the seminar was geared for faculty and we were just lucky to get in, I can see why they geared it that way. If they are going to invite students they need to make it interesting and valuable to students. I don't feel it was valuable as a student. LANDA: How do you view clubs and sports on campus, and how will Student Government work in those areas? REYES: Student clubs are the life blood on any campus - especially Metro ... being a commuter campus and non-traditional campus. Clubs keep students on

campus. LANDA: So, for an urban campus like Metro you are saying that clubs provide the unity, where on a campus like CU-Boulder sports provides that unity. REYES: Well I can't speak for CU. All I can tell you is my experience at Metro and what I see ... and 1 see there are a lot of very politically and socially active clubs on this campus. Some of the groups that represent people of color and sexual orientation that's real life stuff they are dealing wtth, it's not just because they are political idealists and they feel they want to do something for a good cause. A passion lends itself to joining a group that represents your interest. LANDA: The reason I brought up CU is because you see a great deal of pride and community in their sporting activities, and you don't see that much on this campus. REYES: The interesting thing about Metro is there are very few schools like-it in the nation. I'm not an expert on sports, and all I can speak to is what I have seen on campus and talking with other students. This is a commuter campus. Take me, for example: I'm a single parent; I have

three kids; I work part-time; and I go to school full time. You tell me when I can fit athletics into my schedule. Most people at Metro are coming to class and leaving. ... They have other obligations. It works on the CU campus. It works on the CSU campus. It doesn't work here. There is not enough interest. Athletics at Metro has never been able to support itself, there is the indicator. ... It would appear to me that any venture that can't support itself dies - doesn't it? I find it odd that a venture that depends on over half of its budget to be supplemented by student fees is a program in trouble. Maybe if students knew ... they were paying close to $100,000 in scholarship money to pay for athletes to come to school here - maybe they would look at it differently. There are students who can barely scrape up enough money to pay for tuition and books.... I am very much opposed to athletics on this campus because I don't think we are the type that go to a basketball game on Friday night.

We've just developed awey to make Power Macintosh even more powerful. (Buy one now, and we'll throw in all this software to help you power through college)

\, Power Macintosh 7100/66 81250, Macintrub c.olor Di.splay, !{JpleDesign· kjo/Joard and mouse. Only $2,3 75. 00. Or about $39 a month. t

J'tllli!""!!r '""" _.,,,~Siii tw:lwi«ldln "°" """ Not only is the worlds fastest Macintosh computer available at special low student prices, but now it includes a student software set available only from Apple. For a limited time, buy a select Power ~lacintoslf and you get software that helps you through every aspect of writing papers. a personal orgm1izer/calendar created foryour student lifestyle and the Internet Companion to help you tap intoon-line research resources. Plus you'll get ClarisWorks, an integrated

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package with a word processor, database, spreadsheet and more. Buy a select Power ~lac· with CD-ROM, and you'll also get a multimedia library of essential reference tools. It all comes with Power Macintosh - the computer that grows with you from college to the professional ,_ world. And now, with an Apple Computer Loan, it's easier than ever to own one. Its the power every student needs. The power to be your best. ..

Apple•

4f.

Campus Computers • Tivoli Student Union M-Th: 7:30am-6:00pm, Fri: 7:30am-5:00pm, Sat: 10:00am-3:00pm • 556-3726 Watch for our Grand Opening Sept. 19-24 Prices do not include sates tax. Cffer opirer Odobtr 17, 1994; atwlalk only wbilt supplies last. Cl 1994A/l(!k (,ompu/er, Inc. All rigbl.r restnltd. }#lit, lbe A/l(!k logo, Macin/osh and "7btpowtr to be;~ur best" are regislmd tradtmar~ <!}#lie CompuJw, Inc. A/l(!kDfSig11, flom' Mac and f'rJlt'tr Macink>sh are trademar~ <!A/l(!k Compultr, Inc. ClanSll!ris is a regis/ertdtrademar* o/ClarisCorporalion. 'An tslima/e bastdon anA/l(!kCompulw /Jxm of12,513.23/or lbe Poll'tr Macin/osh 7100/66, and SZ.777.78/orlbe l'oll.'tr Macintosh 7100/66 u;ilb CD-RO.If !)~em shoim ahcl<. Pricesa1ui loan amounts aresubfed ID change uilboul tuJtia. life )'OUT A/l(!k OJ111pus Rotifer or rtpmm/alilJ<fer currenl sys/ml prices. A5.5% loan ori/ifnalion fee ll!ilJ be addtd lo /be requesltd lean amou11t. 1bt in- rail is <'aria/*. bastdon t.be commtrdal paper rate plus 5.3.S'- For lbe mo11/b <!August 1994, lbe mlms/ rate teas 10. J(!'f,, U"ilb 1111 APR<!I I J6%. 8-;mr loan term rib no prt/Jtl)mm/ ptna/ty. 7!tt mcnJb/y fJllYmtnl sbou'11 asswntS no defermtn! <I[JrinQ/la/ or inJm:st. S/udmts may deftr princifJal payments up ID 4 )"'"' or unlil graduolion. Defemte11t u711 cbange ;our monlbl;· payments 7!tt }#lit <:ompuler I.Dan is subfed lo aet61 11{11roVa/.

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Effective August 22, 1994, the Denver Police Department

will ticket cars that back up on the Auraria Parkway to wait for a space in Lot R, and cars that back up onto 7th Street to wait for a space in Lot H. If you norf'Tlally park in these areas at times that are likely to have heavy traffic, please develop an alternate plan for parking.

Auraria Campus

Lot E DALY.ft£

D

LotA 01111.Y.f'EE

*Daily Fee Parking Available in some permit lots after 5:00 p.m. (See Parking Guide for more information)

E)

Tips to a TICKETLESS EDUCATION The Auraria parking system receives no student tuition fees or tax dollars. We try to provide the most efficient service with the lowest parking rates. You can help:

1.

Park only in designated parking spaces.

2.

Parking rates are in effect Monday through Saturday 24 hours a day.

3.

Reserve Disabled Accessible Parking for the disabled at all times. THERE IS A $50 FINE FOR ILLEGALLY PARKING IN A DISABLED ACCESSIBLE PARKING SPACE.

4.

Time limits are strictly enforced due to the high demand for parking.

5.

Immediately report any machine malfunctions or any other problems to the Parking Division at 556-2000.

Voluntary compliance with parking rules benefits everyone. We thank you for your assistance!

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August 26. 1994

The Metropolitan

Volume 17

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Issue 2

Anti-Elvis walks among us ""MITROPOLITAN 0

by The Rev. Mort Farndu don't know about you, but I had a revelation recently. It was a revelation filled with amazement and horror. A revelation of such immense proportions I knew it had come from Elvis, He whose proportions can scarcely be measured, whose tumid dimensions dwarfs mere mortal men. The revelation from Elvis was as weighty as the King Himself, yet as ethereal as His dialogue in Viva Las Vegas. 0 Mighty E, You whose greatness encompasses all things, even their opposites! Which is precisely what the revelation was all about. Opposites. An Anti-Elvis walks among us. And you know his name. This Anti-Elvis has been strutting and fretting upon the stage for decades. He is, in fact, almost as well known to the .Public as The King Himself. In fact, this Evil One was identified years ago by members of the

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r-

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Presleyterian Church. Not as the Anti-Elvis, but as one of the many False Gods who lead people to ruin and damnation. He is more than just another False God like Madonna or Mick Jagger, however. He is more than just another perfidious pop icon with a following of idol-worshipping fools. For the Anti-Elvis is the very essence of unElvisness. He is the pure embodiment of all that the King loathes: skinniness, sneakiness and unmanliness. A creature so abhorrent - even to himself - that he has surgically altered his face so as to become almost unrecognizable as a member of the human race. You know him by his blasphemous trademark: a single white glove. That's right, brothers and sisters - Michael Jackson is the Anti-Elvis! And he has his Evil Gloved Hand on the King's Only Begotten Daughter. The horror of this Unholy Union between

First Presle~erian Church of Elvis the Divine '

Michael and the Divine Lisa Marie is too much for any Presleyterian to bear. That the Evil Gloved One (two syllables: GLOV-ed) has bewitched and beguiled Our Princess is clear. The image it conjures for all Presleyterians is intolerable. The Divine Lisa, she whose very veins run with the King's Blood and is filled beyond measure with His Holy Spirit, now lies night after night in the unspeakable embrace of the Anti-Elvis. We should not be surprised, though - the Gloved One is a cunning and powerful foe. In casting his diabolical spell over Our Princess, he has increased his wealth and fame manyfold, allying himself with the King's Name, not to mention the King's Estate. As if this was not appalling enough, it gets worse. For Michael is using Our Princess in the most cynical and manipulative public relations ploy since Nixon's Checkers speech.

With this Monstrous Marriage to the King's Daughter, he seeks to redeem himself as a man in the eyes of the public. He hopes we will forget the recent allegations of child molestation against him and the huge out-ofcourt settlement that followed. The horror of the Divine Lisa being molested herself by such a creature turns the stomach and boggles the mind. But fear not, Presleyterians! You who follow the E must know that in revealing the true identity of the Anti-Elvis, the King has also given us the means to oppose him. Guided by E and filled with His Spirit, Preselyterians everywhere shall work and pray without ceasing until the Divine Lisa breaks Michael's fiendish spell. Deliver Our Princess from the clutches of the Evil Gloved One, 0 E, and cast this Unholy Union asunder!

EDITOR Jeff Stratton COPY EDITOR Jeanie Straub NEWS EDITOR Louis A. Landa FEATURES EDITOR Robyn Schwartz SPORTS EDITOR Michael BeDan PHOTO EDITOR Andy Cross ASSOCIATE COPY EDITOR Scottie Menin ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITORS Claudia Hibbert Jesse Stephenson STAFF WRITER Christopher Anderson REPORTERS Joelle Conway Donna Hickey Dave Flomberg Mike Larkin Isaac Mion Andrew Mosier Meredith Myers STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Jane Raley CARTOONISTS Rob Kruse Takuya Minagawa Matthew Pike

Is that an Uzi in your pocket? Robyn Schwartz Features Editor Is that an Uzi in your pocket or are you just happy to see me? Oh, my mistake, it's a crime-bill opposer. Colorado Reps. Dan Schaefer and Scott Mcinnis, along with a frightening number of National Rifle Association power fanatics, are fighting to keep an Uzi in every pot, an M-16 in every garage. I know I never leave home without a semiautomatic weapon.

It's a God-given right. The Bill of Rights· guarantees it. Of course, when the Second Amendment was adopted, the country was more rural than it is now and people needed weapons to ward off wolves, bears and outlaws. There was also that little benefit of gun ownership, hunting - some people lived a hundred miles from the nearest King Soopers. I personally oppose most cases of gun ownership in modern America, but I cannot think of one

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'Truth does not have to ask anyones

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permission. ' Schopenhauer

situation in which an average citizen would need a semiautomatic weapon. Even NRA member U.S. Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell is considering dropping his membership because of threats he received because of his support of the crime bill. Why are some people so opposed to banning these weapons? Is it because such a bill might hurt the NRA, one of the most powerful lobby groups in the country? Is it a financial threat to big

politics? I don't know. I'm not the paranoid type, but it makes me question the morals of people like Schaefer and Mcinnis, like Sens. Orrin Hatch, A-Utah, and Bob Dole, A-Kan., who vehemently oppose the crime bill. Why are they so protective of guns used mostly by drug dealers, gunrunners and gang members? I welcome a response. I really want to hear an explanation.

CORRI~PONDINCI The Metropolitan welcomes letters to the editor and guest edttorials from Auraria students and faculty. Submit letters (typed only) on a Macintosh·compatible disk, if possible. Letters must be under 250 words or will be edited for space. We won't print libelous material. Letters must include name, student IDnumber or title, school and phone number. All letters submitted become property of The Metropolitan. For more informotion regarding letters or editorials, call 556-2507.

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GRAPHIC ARTISTS Elvira Flores Kyle Loving DISTRIBUTION Kelly Raymond \.

OFFICE MANAGER Corina Landeros ADVISER Jane Hoback DIRECTOR OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Kate Lutrey

TELEPHONE NUMBERS Editorial: 556-2507 556-8361 Advertising: 556-3421 Fax: 1pe Metropousan 11 produced Dy arnJJor Ille 11uaenu oJ M3LU seniuig Ille Auraria Campw and the local community. The Metropolitan ii 1upported by advertising revenun and student feu, and ii pubfuhed every Friday daring the academic year and ii di&trihuted to all campw building1. NoperlOll may take more than one copy of each weekly issue of The Metropolitan without prwr written permiuwn. Direct any questw111, complaints, compliments or commenll lo the MSCD Board ofPablications clo TM Metropolitan. Opinion.1 expreued within do not necessarily refect those of The Metropolitan, Metropolitan Stale College of Denver or iu advertisers. Deadline for calendar itenu ii 5 p.m. Friday. Deadline for pre11 rele<Uesii 10 a.m. Monday. Display advertising deadline ii 3 p.m. Friday. Cla11ifted a9vertiiing deadline ii Noan Monday. The Metropolitans offices are located in the Auraria Student Union room 313. Mailing addreu ii P.O.Box 173362, Campw Box 57, Denver, CO 80217-3362. AU righu reserved. The Metropolitan ii printed on recycled paper.

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The Metropolitan

.August26,1994

TIVOLI the @lb and the Haw

The grain hopper In the lower stairwell is a remnant of the Tivoli's brewing history.

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he Tivoli Student Union is one of lower downtown Denver's finest and richest historical landmarks. The Tivoli has served for more than 120 years as a brewery, opera house, cultural gathering spot, shopping mall, and finally, as a Student Union for the Auraria Campus. German immigrants made many substantial contributions to Denver's development in the mid- to late-1800s by founding banks, stores and, in the German tradition, breweries. The Tivoli' s colorful past began with German-born Moritz Sigi, who in 1866 opened Sigi's Brewery, where the Tivoli sits today. Sigi came to Denver in hope of striking it rich as a gold prospector, but after six years in Denver he entered the brewing business. Sigi's brewhouse was a humble building with only a few windows and thick brick walls to keep temperatures cool. Sigi sank Denver's first artesian well in the early 1870s, which for many years provided water for brewing. In 1870, Sigi constructed the first of the Tivoli's buildings, called Sigi's Hall. A brick building with arched second-story windows, Sigi's Hall set the tone for the Tivoli buildings built years later. Sigi's contribution to the Tivoli has not been forgotten. In the newly renovated Tivoli Student Union, Sigi's Billiards, Arcade and Cabaret offers Auraria students and the public a glimpse of the past. With thick brick walls, which were built as cooling chambers in the 1890s for the brewery, a classic wooden bar and carefully preserved style, the old Tivoli buildings have been traditionally restored.

Dennis Bryan, who runs Sigi's, i about the new student game room antii formation of the Tivoli into the Tivol Union. "It will give Auraria a chance to the students to the public," Bryan said. Bryan also added that Sigi's func serve the students and to offer th~ ~ enjoy themselves, which he said they de Another German immigrant wl formed Sigi's modest brewery into wh bled a Bavarian Castle, Max Melshei1 four of the Tivoli 's buildings. I Melsheimer crossed the plains to D~r Milwaukee. He took over Sigi's Br 1879, four years after Sigi's death. Melsheimer built a corner store, Halle, its adjoining building and the m building, while operating his growing respected brewery. Melsheimer ope brewery in the same building wete brewed Colorado Beer and Sigi's Hall a social center. In 1882, the Tum Halle Opera He up, which would host musicals, plays and other cultural events well up to ti the century. The floors and stage of were solid 4-inch-thick rock maple, anc ings soared to a breathtaking 75 feet. Halle became host to the Denver T German organization which was the 011 tinually active ethnic group in Color Turners were associated with the bre\11 1869, when they held meetings, gymna es and debates in Sigi's Hall. The strived to keep German traditions a: gatherings alive in Denver, and the T was built by Melsheimer, also a meml

Story by Joelle Conway Photos by Jane Raley

Students swamp the atrium of the Tivoli Student Union on the first day of the fall semester. It Is the future home of the food court and provides tables for studying and socializing.

Theresa Lopez and An Nguyen escape from the Tivoli stored bottles of beer for the Tlvoll's founding brewer


The Metropolitans entertainment section, featuring off-campus events, film, music, theatre reviews and whatever else we feel like Structures and Artifacts. They are bookended by a Prelude and Postlude and interspersed with two short Interludes. Budd's career-long it would throw XTC fans for a loop. Jeff Stratton penchant for evocative song titles is in Though Partridge's name is first Editor full effect with names like "Ceramic on the credits, his contribution to Hill Andy Partridge/ Harold Budd Avenue," "Tenochtitlan's Numberless is less discernible than Budd's. He Bridges" and "Missing Pieces to the Through the Hiii adds a slow, floating guitar to "The Place of Odd Glances," and some of Game of Salt a.nd Onyx." Gyroscope/All Saints/Caroline First pressings of Hill are exquisthe pieces he pilots are reminiscent of itely packaged, with fold-out inserts Meditative music has been given his "Homo Safari Series" from 1983 full of illustrations. What concept Hill a new lease on life apart from new and his solo LP from 1980 - robotic, embodies is not explained, but the age vapidity, thanks to the pioneers of jerky marches punctuated by chimes record seems a kind of solemn travelambiance. In the last two years, mod- and bells. Several of his passages are ogue through landscape and architecalmost childlike repetimarked by an ern synthesists like The Orb and The ture. · tiveness, but his guitar and Budd's Aphex Twin have married ambient Working together on the record music with an electro-dance sensibili- piano trade lyrical melodic phrases through a series of visits and fax ty, producing a futuristic hybrid that that are emotive and poignant. But it's transmissions, the two gradually has become better known than the - - - - - - - - - - - - - . mapped out the territory they "original" ambient music, a form wanted to explore. invented by Brian Eno and marked Budd's work has always by his milestone 1970s works, been improvisational; Partridge's Music for Airports and Discree~ is usually carefully planned and Music. often detailed before recording Through the Hill hearkens actually begins. back to the older, more organic Budd characterized the ambient. Californian Harold Budd recording as "two architects is best known for his middesigning a bridge between Seventies work with Eno; softthem and deciding how it was pedal piano etudes complemented going to look before they built it. by Eno's pioneering electronics We hadn't the faintest idea of work. These gentle, abstract what the musical part would look records, including The Plateau of like, but that was the fun bit, Mirror and The Pearl, paved the because that's when we started way for Budd's solo work of the decorating the bridge and decid'80s. In 1986, he received a hiping what the gargoyles would ness transplant when he collabolook like." rated on the gorgeous Moon and Through the Hilf s minimal The Melodies with British dreamornamentalism takes a back rockers the Cocteau Twins. Now seat to the overall usefulness of he's hooked up with Andy the bridge of sighs itself. It's a Partridge, the reclusive, oddball utilitarian record. It'll work for leader of XTC. The result is a cinyou too, after a hard day at ematic, placid soundtrack to a dream, very similar to Budd's The thinner the hair: strange bedfellows Harold Budd and Andy Partridge. Their col- school. wandering minimalism; no doubt, laboration Is a chill pill for the highly strung or tightly wound.

The pavilion of dreams

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soft-spoken ivories which take center stage. The spare music often exhibits Asian tonalities replete with nearly silent passages . The two- use the space between notes to great effect. Hill is an album of pauses, as much as the thoughtfully placed notes that break them up. The overall mood is spacious and drifting, yet not sleepinducing. It's certainly relaxing, providing a luscious space to think. This is cardiac-friendly music, with a tonic effect on pulse rate and blood pressure. Hill is ostensibly a concept album. The record is divided into several sections, including Geography,

Coping with insanity: Julian Cope continues his musical psychotherapy with new Autogeddon Jeff Stratton

lz

Julian Cope Autogeddon American Julian Cope hates me because I

drive. He probably hates my car, too. Copey's simplistic and rough Autogeddon roughly completes the trio of environmentally-sensitive mysticism he worked through on Peggy Suicide and JehovahKill. His latest is packed with profanity and humor; there's several good yucks in the first few songs, culminating in the supremely cynical "Don't Call Me Mark Chapman." Although the album is laced with acoustic instrumentation and an almost madrigal feel, the closing "s•t•a•r•c•a•r" is chock-full of spacey bleeps and blips and soaring, Floydian guitar. "Ain't But the One Way" is a surprisingly lucid straightforward rocker. Like Robyn Hitchcock or Syd Barrett have been unfocused versions of, Cope is the archetypal angry, drunk poet with an out-of-tune guitar on his knee. This is a difficult record. but a fascinatingly funny and

frightening one.

Catherine sleepyep. TVT records Produced by SmashPump's Billy

Corgan, and sounding like a cross between his band and My Bloody Valentine, Chicago's Catherine says "better living through noise," but their always-melody-conscious brand of noise is too pretty to cause anything but surface irritation. "It's No Lie" sounds almost exactly like My Bloody Valentine, and the concoction of sharp, pulverized guitar cascades and whispered vocals gives the tune a momentum that's hard to escape. "Sleep" offers a thoughtfully sweet respite until the 12-minute title song descends into a mire of truly devastating feedback. Although somewhat derivative, this record is loud, well-polis h ed and hard as a gemstone.A promising debut - hopefully the fulllength disc to follow continues the momentum. see BUDD page 14


14

The Metro olitan

Another Budd lite BUDD from page 13

Future Sound of London Lifeforms paths 1-lep. AstralwerksNirgin/Caroline Like the holographic epic that spawned it (reviewed here last week) , this shard of the original nonetheless embodies the mind-blowing feel of its parent. Only one of the seven remixes corresponds much with the original , and they each develop individual personalities with bird and insect sounds sprinkled liberally throughout, intoxicating percussion and exotic flutes. These versions add Cocteau Twin Liz Fraser, her voice often manipulated beyond recognition, morphing the mix into a 3-D sunset. A mini-excursion which complements the fantastic voyage given on the double CD.

A

t 26 1994

Stop, you're kill 1ng me Oliver "Mr. Controversy" Stone tries another film Dave Flomberg The Metropolitan Like a tale told by an idiot, "Natural Born Killers" is the latest sure-to-be-abox-office-smash directed by Mr. So- Called Controversy, Oliver Stone. A two-hour sensual assault - full of sound and fury that signifies nothing is laid out as a smorgasbord of intense montage work intertwined with a loose plot . Th is movie, although sure to be big, will hopefully offend any freeth inking individuals who choose to see it. V io lence is in . Continuing a trend developed in movies such as "Reservoir Dogs" and "True Romance ," Quentin Tarantino uses the same shocking violence to make yet another statement on the subversive evil nature of the American media machine. Quite Frankly, Mr. Stone, I'm sick of it. The American media is being consistently attacked by enough activist groups that the last thing it needs is to be attacked by one of it s biggest leaders. It strikes me as hypocritical that Stone would make such a film. But I digress. As far as characteriza-

Reingold. Some of Stone's choices for clips in his montage work are grating. The use of actual World War II footage is unwarranted. In

aggravating. Add this to Stone's usage of the Menendez trial, the Lorena Bobbitt monstrosity, Charles Manson, Jeffrey Dahmer, and you get what

addition, the story presents the yin-yang as a symbol that seems to be an important focal point of Mickey Knox's character. Unfortunately, this idea is presented near the end of the movie, and there is no time left to develop it. Stone uses the Rodney King story not once, but twice, and both times it is

looks like a cornucopia of twisted killers and violent offenders, which Stone uses to make his outdated and overstated point - The American media machine "is man made weather." If you go see this movie, take a bottle of Dramamine with you. And try and think a little for yourself.

Loca·I music showcase loaded Jeff Stratton Editor

Harold Budd/Zeitgeist She is a Phantom New Albion Budd's been quite the busy guy lately, first with his new album with Andy Partridge, and now this concurrence with Zeitgeist, a classical quartet that record for San Francisco's avant-garde label New Albion. No new ground is broken here - Budd doesn't want to stray far from familiar turf. She is a Phantom is Budd's piano and voice (he reads a couple of poems) with an affectionate accompaniment of keyboards, woodwinds and marimbas. The results are very Phillip Glass-y and perkier than the Partridge LP. A must for fans of experimental, 20th century classical music.

l

Instead of Woodstock's maddening mire of mud, Denver basked in 90degree sunshine for the Rocky Mountain Music Association's 10th annual Rockfest Music Showcase. Held Aug. 14 at the DU athletic fields, the show gave Denver's best bands an opportunity to give brief performances before a crowd of fans, supporters, family members and (supposedly) big-wig A&R people from the big record labels. Although the event was publicized heavily, nowhere near the anticipated 5,000 folks made it to the show, even though publicist Ginny Ragsdale remained optimistic late into the afternoon.

and the relative ease with which 30 bands set up, performed and broke down with few hitches. "This is all about the talent we have here in our area, and we know that people do support it," said Morris. "I just wish there were more of them here." Other groups that performed included The Jonez, Jux County, Martha's Wake, and China My Eyes. Denver has historically been pegged as an apathetic town as far as supThe Metropolitan/Dave Flomberg porting its own talent. Two "Watch out for the brown acid" : Mike Ward from Mean of Denver's best bands, Lord of Word and Twice Uncle Mike. Wilted, weren't at the fest, "I think we'll hit that," the stage for a quick three and some (deservedly) unknown acts were, but it's she said. songs. well-organized events like "I'm not counting," said Bassist Cherri Morris, Mean Uncle Mike's drum- one of the event's organiz- this one that'll put Denver mer, Garret Smythe, as he ers, was disappointed with on the map. finished his plate of ribs the turnout, but pleased and his beer before taking with the caliber of music


August 26, 1994

Double-vision at Woodstock '94

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parade. People scurried for tarps, · ot h ers tents and raincoats, while danced in the rain. After the rain, it was no longer Woodstock; it was Mudstock. The mosh pit became the mud pit, and mud slides quickly developed throughout the festival. An 85 o-acre pigpen somehow brought out the best in almost everyone. People began pulling together to help one another from falling down

Isaac Mion

making. Those who thought that the Reporter-a - arge reunion had been turned into a solely SAUGERTIES, N.Y. SAUGERTIES, N.Y. - Some commercial endeavor were either called it Crookstock, others called it indifferent or enraged when they Generation Xers made up the majority of the crowd at the 25th anniverBuckstock, most called it heard that the concert was free to all sary of Woodstock, which drew Greedstock, and everyone called it comers. 350,000 people. Mudstock. These were the names "I can't believe I paid $150 bucks Those representatives of most commonly 'used to refer to to come to a concert and then they Generation X showed the world that Woodstock '94 make it free at the last minute. What - although they had been labeled To some, especially those com- a rip-off!" commented one disgrundisillusioned and unmotivated - they ing from afar, the 25th reunion of one tied festivalgoer who had traveled all could spend the way from Oregon. three days lis''That's cool - they made it tening to music free to everyone, just like the in peace. first one," another said as he Woodstock craftily concealed a bottle of '94 came closer venomous spirits inside his to the original backpack. Alcohol , guns, than most critics knives, and potential shrapnel and cynics could grenades like aerosol cans have ever imagwere not allowed at the concert ined. Despite site. high ticket prices "Dude, I saw these two and meticulous chicks die in the mosh pit at planning of Aerosmith," one muck-covered security, food masher said. "They just got and parking, trampled to death and sucked people flocked to under by the mud." the festival to Despite never ending find virtually no rumors such as this, the two authority, very • deaths turned out to be from loose security natural causes. and three days All in all, the on-site clinic of music and treated 2,000 people over the peace. The Metropolitan/Joelle Conway three-day period. Most cases It was • were ankle injuries received almost impossi- Welcome to Club Mud: It was messy and muddy, but they LIKED It! Woodstock folks hve It up. from frolicking in the merciless ble to know mud. Another blast from the of the greatest gatherings on Earth pa~t was the pr~sence of bad. LSD, what to ~xpect with t~e ne~s media_ and sliding away. The mud people c~lllQ_aJ. rng the festival site to a wlio cou[pn't resist were sliding down was a disappointment because of which ha? ~ed1cs busy trymg. to prison. Drug dogs, metal detectors, mud hills some of them baring it all. outrageous prices, muddy conditions calm palpitating hearts and sending and bag searches were reported. Musi'c didn't turn out to be the and a general lack of organization. some trippers to the local hospital. Those who arrived Friday planBands like Santana and Green But no drug dogs showed, securi- best part of Woodstock '94. ty wa~ virtually Cypress Hill ning to set up tents and enjoy the Day were a treat to see when they first night of music were treated to no played on the smaller south stage. nonexistent and seemed to interest fewer than parking spaces or Woodstock per- They played on Sunday along with the metal detectors were easily half the audience sonnel, eight-hour waits for a bus Bob Dylan, avoi?able by but when rappe~ ride to the Traffic, the walking rather . · B-Real lit a blunt concert site, A I I m a n than catching a " onstage and proand endless Brothers, Bad ceeded to body run-arounds Company and bus. A local radio surf on the crowd from state Peter Gabriel, ,, it worked. ' troopers. who put on a station reported Saturday mornNine Inch "If you dazzling teching that people Nails stole the want my d 1 nical show to were crashing show. The band's advice, I'd • '• finish things the gates, but it wasn't exactly crash- industrial sound and dark lyrics made just turn up. ing - just a few holes in the fenc~ them powerful stage performers. around and . By that that allowed easy access to the fest1Bob Dylan was the Sunday highgo home and time, everyval. • ,, light. The entire crowd seemed to be hope for a ... one was We encountered a peace patrol lighting up joints and chanting, refund," said exhausted. officer by whom we could enter legal- "Everybody must get stoned." one trooper. "We're gettin' our riot Tents as well as people were covly rather than through holes in the It was quite clearly the mud that gear ready. There's a full scale riot ered in mud, the latrines near the fence. We asked if he needed to see made Woodstock •9 4 such an unforgoin' on in there and the organizers main campground overflowed onto " . gettable sensory experience, along are hidin' out in a hotel in Quebec." the grou~d, making for a lovely odor our ~ckets. No problem,. he ~aid. . with the challenge of surviving three Not exactly encouraging words alo~.g with scents ?f mud, muck, to a band of weary road trippers who marijuana, and $11 pizza crust. We walked in with our tickets nights without getting too lost wast' had just traveled 1,500 miles in 36 The price of beer made the pizza intact, never having to dig them out of ed or tired. hours and spent almost $150 apiece seem cheap by comparison. This our backpacks. ' Woodstock 9 4 could never live Saturday morning the f~stival site up to the original Woodstock, but on tickets to Greedstock. report~r paid $30 for a 12-pack of By Saturday morning the buses Budweiser. was wall-to-wall people. Fifty bands would we want it to? That was a difplayed on two stages, . incl~ding Salt ferent generation and time. Things were running to and from parking ~o wrap it up, ~o ?isc )?Ckeys N Pepa and C¥press Hill, Bhnd ~?Ion have changed. This are our generalots, some of which were located 60 flew m to emcee a midnight- tll-d~wn and Metall1ca, and original tion's time to enjoy three days without miles from the site, and the previous rave. This kept ~ few hundr~d t1reWoodstockers Joe Cocker and authority to enjoy music and to show night's mayhem was mostly forgotten less ravers gyrating for a while, but the world that Woodstock could leave in the midst of the fact that, be it before dawn party-pooping "peace Crosby, Stills and Nash. organized chaos or just another cor- patrol" officers broke it up and sent After several more perfo~mances, its mark once again. ugly gray clouds began to ram on the porate scam, this was history in the the kiddies packing.

J II C oe e onway Reporter-at-Large

1

f L


1994~1995

Placing The Face With the Voice, The MSCD Student Government Assembly STUDENT ADVISORY COMMIME TO THE AURARIA BOARD

STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO THE AURARIA BOARD

Statement: · sACAB Represents students and their concerns to the Auraria Board of Directors, participates in creating policy and watchdog's the student fee's controlled by AHEC:

Statement: ·As a member of MSCD SACAB, Student Advisory Committee to the Auraria Board of Directors, my representation extends to all three Constituent lnstiMions, MSCD, UCO, CCD.•

Kersten Keith

Goal: ·As a member of SACAB it is my mission and duty to review, investigate and represent pertinent policies and procedures surrounding students on the Auraria Campus.·

Anderson Calvin Moore

BOARD TO TRUSTEES

PRESIDENT

Statement: ·Higher education has become a competitive industry whereby forcing colleges and universities to be customer oriented. For MSCD to compete in higher education, the institution must increase communication and availability of retention services, maintain the quality of academic programs, control the rising cost of tuition and student/academic fees and continue to emphasize diversity on campus.·

Statement: ·As president of MSCD's Student Government Assembly, I intend to provide guidance, support and inspiration for all SGA members, while building coalitions between students, administration, faculty and staff in order to effectively serve our constituency.·

Megan Reyes

Goal: •My goals as student trustee is to improve customer service at MSCD, curtail rising tuition and student/academic fees, increase financial aid, and improve diversity on the campus:

Alfonso Suazo

VICE PRESIDENT OF ACADEMIC AFFAIRS

VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT ms

Statement: ·Meet with MSCD's Vice President and Provost of Academic Affairs, the deans of the three schools, and the President of the Faculty Senate on a regular basis so as to be well informed on MSCD's academic issues.·

Statement: "Responsible to MSCD students in the guaranteeing of fair and efficient allocation of their student fees. Additionally, the VP will be an advocate to MSCD students on student fee issues and be a sounding board for their concerns.·

Goal: ·continue to investigate the possibility of published faculty evaluations, current Graduation Agreement policies and procedures in order to determine if modifications are necessary, as well as, provide an opportunity for students to ask questions of SGA members and/or Academic Affairs administrators about their concerns.·

Goal: "My mission is to inform the student population, my constituents, on their rights as students. I'll be a source of knowledge to any and all students on questions regarding their fees and to also be their voice to the administration vvtlerl they need to be heard:

Mark Shannon

Clayton Steneroden

-

VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT SERVICES

VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

Statement: ·Primarily increase the awareness on the campus about services available to MSCD students, also to provide representation during MSCD committee/board meetings, and participate in the decision-making process when applicable, concerning student services.·

Statement: ·1 envision my position as working closely with the Office of Student Activities to aid clubs in achieving their goels and increasing student involvement in clubs and on campus.•

Goal: ·create a strong and active Student Services committee so as to provide all MSCD students with information regarding the student services (for which they pay) that concern and/or interest them:

Goal: "Help student organizations achieve their goels and increase student involvement by increasing the awareness of student organizations on campus and informing MSCD students how they can benefit from them:

Brooke McMaken

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Eric Higgins

VICE PRESIDENT OF CAMPUS COMMUNICATIONS Statement: ·Responsible for producing a communication and publication structure that will inform both the campus community and the community at large .. :

Goal: ·sGA needs a stronger communication bridge with its constituency on how their student fees are spent, as well as, other vital issues that affect higher education. It is my goal to first create, then build a bridge of communication, then to strengthen it with help from SGA members and our constituents.·

VICE PRESIDENT OF IUDGIT AND ffNANCE Statement: ·1 envision my position as the student advocate for fiscal and technological issues,· by ·becoming a student voice on campus regarding budgetary matters.· Goal:

·continue working with the Budget Office on the Deferred Tuition Program, Direct Deposit Program for students, investigate the mandatory health insurance for MSCD students, as well as, provide an opportunity for students to ask questions of SGA members and/or Budget Office administrators about their fiscal concerns:

AmyHaimerl

/vlaria C. Rodriguez

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•.

Students Re~resenting Students . 556-3311 Tivoli Student Union RM. 307


The Metropolitan

excited Ila.transStudent howcase io n is to plJ)Ce to 1erve. ;, transt resem.er, built I 1878, rer from ~ . wery m he Tum in tower nd wellilted his Hgi had erved as 1se went

lectures : tum of ief-Halle the ceilhe Tum rners, a i::st, condo. The :ry since ic'classfurners d social m Halle ~r of the

Turners, as a place for the organization to hold elaborate events. In 1882, an adjoining building to the Halle was built, which probably replaced Sigi's original brewhouse. In 1890, Melsheimer concocted the Tivoli into the towering landmark it is today. He built the Tower building which was designed after the best breweries in Germany. The building turned out as a four-story building, with a two-story tower set in the front center of the building. Behind the brewhouse was the boiler room, still a part of the Tivoli today. The boiler room held the massive generator, with its distinct smokestack rising from the west comer, which stands out today with "Tivoli" painted in big red letters. John Good, a wealthy Denver German, renamed the brewery the Tivoli in 1901. Good named the brewery after a famous amusement park in Copenhagen and enjoyed pointing out that Tivoli spelled backwards read "I lov it." The brewery was now well-equipped and modernized to brew large quantities of beer, thanks to Melsheimer. By 1913 the TivoliUnion, yet another name which came from the consolidation of the Union Brewery and the Tivoli Brewery, employed 80 men and reported $400,00 in sales. The Tivoli survived even when prohibition swept the country in 1919, due to the genius of John Good's son, also named John. The Brewery began producing "Dash," a near-beer which contained one-fourth of 1 percent of alcohol, which kept the brewery in business while many other breweries across the country went under. The Tivoli operated as a brewery until 1969, when it shut down.

Sid Hollister, who owned the historical landmark after it was closed, envisioned turning the Tivoli into a student center for the Auraria Campus. However, the Colorado Commission on Higher Education refused to allow an operating brewery on the Auraria Campus. In 1973, the Tivoli was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, protecting the buildings and the major brewing equipment. The same year the Denver Urban Renewal Authority bought the Tivoli and transferred the property to the Auraria Higher Education Center. After the Tivoli was sold to a company (or development in the early 1980s, the Tivoli came back to life, but only minimally. Barb Weiske, director of the Student Union, said that between 1985 and 1991 the Tivoli never quite made it as a shopping center, because it was never fully occupied. Through a Student Bond election in 1991, the Auraria Higher Education Center bought the Tivoli lease back from the Hahn Development Co. for the purpose of turning the historical landmark into a student union. Weiske said the renovation of the Tivoli began in December 1993, and the architects were sensitive to preserving the buildings' original style. "I'm very excited about the Tivoli,'' Weiske said. "It's great finally having people and Life in the building," she said. Sid Hollister's dream of turning the old brewery into a student union is a reality at last. On Aug. 22, the Tivoli Student Union welcomed Auraria students to enjoy the splendor of its history.

August 26 1994

11 w

Brian Trullinger, left, and Ed Johnson perform the feat of grace that Is the reconstruction of the Tivoli.

~rowd Into the cavernous boardgame room In Slgl's. This room once • This room Is the coolest room In the bllllards hall.

The Tlvoll maintains the same castle-like appearance as when Max Melsheimer expanded It In 1890.

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BOB MARLEY ST. CA.JETAN'S ( AURARIA CAMPUS)

~~~~

SEPTEMBER 7, 1994 l IAM-IPM LECTURE/VIDEO

'

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STUDENTS- FREE (W/l.D.) FACULlY- $3.00 GENERAL PUBLIC - $3.00

TICKETS AT llfE DOOR FOR MORE INFO: . CALL 556-2595

)

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!~f~i:~I'

"MY MISSION IS TO MAK!E SURE THAT BOB MARLEY'S HERITAGE IS NOT DESTRO 路~

.

ROGER SS TEIFIFIENSS -


The Metropolitan

August26,1994

19

Rally to kick off AIDS Walk 1994 Auraria walk team sets goals higher for seventh annual walk, expects to raise more money this year for Colorado AIDS Project and other agencies that benefit people living with the disease Mike Larkin The Metropolitan

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Jeff Milich has ambitious goals for this year's "From All Walks of Life" AIDS walk. "I want to get $10,000 worth of sponsorships from the Miiich Auraria community," says the co-captain of the Auraria Walk Team. He figures that boils down to at least $1 from 25 percent of the Auraria Campus population. The Auraria Walk Team has participated in AIDS Walk Colorado for the last three years. The team plans an Aug. 26 kickoff rally to publicize the walk and to solicit donations and sponsorships. The rally will be at noon at the flagpole in front of the Plaza Building (former Student Union). Donation jars and registration tables will be set up at the rally for people interested in contributing to or joining the walk. To participate in the walk, a $10

pledge is required, but anyone can make a $1 or more donation without going on the walk, says Billi Mavromatis, Student Health Center health educator and veteran AIDS walker. "We'd love to have people come with us and walk with us and bring their friends," Mavromatis says. But if they can't, they can stop by and donate at the rally or at the Health Center. The rally will have guest speakers whom Milich hopes will help deliver the message that AIDS needs to be addressed and fought now. In addition to Student Government Assembly leaders and a Colorado AIDS Project representative, Milich says Jared Maggard, an 8-year-old boy living with the HIV virus, will speak at the rally. "I'm not afraid to use emotion to get my message across," Milich says. T-shirts with the AIDS Walk 1994 logo will also be available at the rally for $15. Milich and others from numerous Auraria organizations and clubs ranging from the MSCD Golden Key National Honor Society to the Student Health Center and MSCD's Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Services, are among walk team

organizers. They are raising money for Milich is hoping that through events Colorado agencies that assist those living like this, community awareness about the with IDV and AIDS. The Colorado AIDS AIDS virus will grow and more people Project will receive SO percent of the pro- will join the fight. "We have to remember to hope for a ceeds - it is the largest AIDS provider in the state and is the principal sponsor of cure," Milich says. Milich has been a captain for the last the walk. Thirty other agencies throughout the state will receive the remaining. three years, but insists he is not the only revenue from the walk. captain. Advance check in for the walk starts "If anything, there are co-captains at 8 a.m. Sept. 11 at the south end of because many people have worked very Cheesman Park. hard," he says. Milich, 44, will graduate next fall Opening ceremonies begin at 9 a.m. and there will be a 10-minute aerobic with a contract major and will not be warmup at 9:30 a.m. The walk starts at involved with the Auraria Walk Team in 9:40 a.m. Participants will walk past the 1995. But he wants to continue to work in Denver Botanic Gardens, through the the AIDS community. Cheesman Park neighborhood and end up Milich says he finds working with back at the park. It will take an hour at the people with AIDS/HIV rewarding as well most, according to Mavromatis. as overwhelming. Afterward, there will be snacks, music, Although many AIDS victims are rejected by their families, he says, there and closing ceremonies. "It's a very easy walk, and it's a are supportive people waiting to step in to beautiful walk through Capitol Hill," fill those gaps. Milich anticipates the goal of the proMavromatis says. "It's fun. Some people ject will be met and that more people than bring their pets, their babies in strollers." The walk has been held for seven ever will be walking. "I'd like us to do really well this years, drawing 5,000 participants last year and raising more than $500,000. The goal year," he says. "It would be a great swan for this year's walk is to raise $700,000. song, so to speak."

11111111111111111

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Auraria Public Safety Your Campus Police Agency

I magine having direct access to thousands of African American MBAs

in major U.S. firms nationwide. And having the right connections and

the right opportunities to help keep your career on track. If you're an MBA student who's ready to put your career plans in high gear, we're an organization that can help you. The National Black MBA Association (NBMBAA) is a national network of business executives and entrepreneurs who work in a wide range of industries.

The Auraria Public Safety Division is fully certified and authorized to provide police services to the Auraria Campus, and is proud to maintain this campus' reputation as one of the safest in the state.*

For 24 years, the National Black MBA Association has provided unique opportunities for MBA trained professionals. Put these contacts to work for you by becoming part of this growing force of business leaders. By joining the NBMBAA at the student rate of $55, you'll receive full membership benefits, including:

In addition to a police chief and 15-20 full-time officers, the Public Safety Division employs student hourly workers as police officers, guards and dispatchers. Officers patrol the campus 24 hours per day, seven days per week, on foot, bicycles, golf carts and in patrol cars. The Public Safety Division is committed to being an active, integral part of the campus community.

• Scholanhip programs for undergraduates, graduates and Ph.D. candidates • An annual conference and other professional development programs • Mentoring programs that provide access to experienced professionals in your field • A membership directory featuring detailed contact information on all members • A quarterly newsletter • Employment Network Services that help you with job searches and placement

0 Twenty-four Hour Full Police Service

• ' ' '''''''

Attend our Annual Conference SepU!mber 14-18, 1994 at the San Francisco Hilton and activate this network. Our Career Fair, on September 16, 1994, offers over 1,000 contacts from hundreds of corporations. Join the NBMBAA This small investment can reap big rewards for your career. Call or write today for a membership application. Discounted student rates are available for the conference and membership.

-

The Public Safety Division provides these and other services to the campus:

Ill

Ill II Ill

0 0 0 0

Security Patrols, Bicycle Patrols, Foot Patrols Vehicle Unlocks Oocked out? Call us-we'll get you back into your vehicle!) Crime Prevention Programs Emergency Response 0 Environmental Health and Safety

Auraria Public Safety 556-3271 Emergency 556-2222 *P.S. We can't do it without your help! Please report any suspicious activity to Public Safety immediately:


20

The Metropolitan

AUSJUt 26, 1994

COUNSEtING CENTER GrouP,s • Fall Seme§tet\ ,,...

,~

• Effective Study Skills, Managing Time, Test Taking and Test Anxiety· •Introduction to Biofeedback • Compulsive Overeating Treatment and Support Group/Eating and Emotions • Stress: Strategies for Fall • Pathways of Change: A Women's Support Group • Why Do I Get Angry ..• Even Over little Things? • "Sleepless in Denver" or The Search for Better Relationships • Group Counseling •Positive Interpersonal • Communication · • "Cutting Loose!" - Coming to Terms With Your Parents •Enhancing Self-Esteem, Motivation, and Personal Effectiveness •Balancing Single Parenting and Life's Other Demands • Active Parenting •Searching for Solutions • Journey of The Hero •Men's Issues Group • Healthy Relationships •Jewish Identity, lnterm~age and Interfaith Dating • Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Support Group • Personal Assessment : The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and Strong Interest Inventory

The Metropolitan/Jane Raley

Game Room Coordinator Dennis Bryan in Sigl~s Billiards and Arcade on the lower level of the Tivoli Student Union.

A student union with balls cue balls, that is given an upscale home. "I didn't want to raise the prices, but we would rather not raise student fees," The clack of billiards. The scent of says Dennis Bryan, game room coordinachalk dust. The glow of new green felt tor. under the shadows of crack-shot cues. "All revenue generated from this Relish the aura of a a pool-lover's playgoes into one big pot for salaries and total ground. operation of the building." Welcome to Sigi's Billiards and The pot includes revenue from Arcade at the Tivoli Student Union. nonstudents. Sigi's opened Aug. 22 to students Bryan has run the student game room and other contenders who find relaxation and student ID production for a little at the end of a stick or at the push of a more than a year. button. A video arcade has sprouted in "I love this job," says Bryan, who is the catacombs of a brewery - you can wearing a beanie hat with a propeller on almost smell the old bottles. More elecit for opening day. "Not for monetary tronic games are to come. remuneration. It's the opportunity to Sigi's is 9,554 square feet of fun. work with students, to be involved with From 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays, and 11 them, to help in their development." a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdays, Sigi's offers a He says the jobs the billiard room video arcade, a room equipped with provides teach students responsibility. chessboards and other games, ping pong, Sigi's employs 20 student hourly work12 pool tables and an Olympic-sized ers. snooker table. Student IDs are still being processed What's snooker? It's kind of an elitand updated on the Mezzanine level of ist pool game with extra balls and extra the former Student Union, which is now rules on a larger table. Go in and see for the Plaza Building. But that will tjiange yourself. Pool and snooker cost students when a state-of-the-art computerized ID $2 per table per hour and nonstudents system is installed in Sigi's next semes$2.50 per person per hour. ter. Prices have gone up 20 .cents since -But I!- the Tivoli game room ~ritr? the move from the old Stude~t U~o~: and there are two fewer pool tables. But see SIGl'S page 22 the tables have been refurbished and

Robyn Schwartz Features Editor

HOT PCI r:::~i.,,i'"f

Jras IW:il"T.reJ 'o\

3<6fo ~ ~\,.. sc\.-oo\ i

University of Colorado at Denver For more information please call the MSCD/UCD Counseling Center, 556-3132 or Stop by CN 203 to sign up for any of the above groups

Q_,;T \NOIT•rf]-·· ....STarl t:Or'Y'lpJ"T

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Mini-Tower Case 212 mb Hard Drive 14" SVGA Color Monitor 101-key Enhanced Keyboard 3-~" 1.44mb HD Floppy Disk Drive Windows for Workgroups 3.11 3-Button Mouse MS-DOS 6 .21 Com lete System, 1-year warranty I

On/IJ

$899.," HVOIMI. t:Ollllft:T/011 9110 CITY VIEW Oil/VE MOU/SON, t:fJ 10465 (301) '91-SZIZ


Augrut26,1994

The Metropolitan

21

.Marley Revival Claudia Hibbert

The extravaganza, which will include unreleased footage of Marley's life, will Associate News Editor be an "intimate and private" look at the Roger late great. Steffans' mis"A lot of what I'm going to be showsion is to make ing is not very professional," Steffans sure Bob said. "But if you went to Bob's mother's Marley ' s her- house in Miami and asked her to show itage is not you a bunch of her favorite home movies destroyed, and of Bob, this is the kind of stuff she ' d he promises show you. This is the Bob we never see in his " Bob the official releases." Marley The bulk of the footage comes from Extravaganza" home movies, interviews and rehearsals. Steffens can be seen Steffans acquired much of his collection nowhere else, from trading with other collectors. unless you get invited over to the "I really despise bootlegs and bootMarley's place for some jerk chicken and leggers," Steffans emphasized. "I have no rice an' peas. use for them. They're making a profit off Steffans will present the lecture something they have no right to make a about the life and times of Bob Marley profit off." Sept. 7 at St. Cajetan's Center. He will Steffans said his interest in reggae is appear Sept. 2 at the Isis Theatre in Aspen sincere. He has three rooms filled from for the World Music Festival, then he will floor to ceiling with 11,000 cassettes, go on to Reggae on the Rocks Sept. 4 as a some of which he hasn't had a chance to guest master of ceremqnies. listen to. But some have questioned his Steffans, 52, has known the Marley interest because of his race. family for 20 years. Marley's mother, "Whether people like it or not, Bob Sedella Booker, has come to Steffans' Marley himself was 50 percent white ... show three times. although he certainly became a figure of "That's a pretty unnerving feeling black pride and black consciousness. If standing on stage telling her son's story in people have a problem with my being front of her," Steffans said. "But she white, then they are not listening to the always says, 'Every time I hear you I words of Bob Marley." learn something new about my boy.'"

This photograph.by Marscha

E;f~~~;;::r~~:~·· ~...Pr . . Monday at the Emmanuel Gallery.

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The Student Health Center is still Ta.king Care of the Student Body

>-

~ ~ StateililegefiDenver Thomas Muenzberg • Director

New Location: Tivoli Student Union 3rd Floor Student Activities Room TV 305-C 556-4435

SHORT-TERM STUDENT LOAN PROGRAM FALL SEMESTER 1994 OFFICE HOURS MONDAY 10 am -1 pm, TUESDAY 11 am - 5 p m WEDNESDAY 11 am - 1 pm, THURSDAY 11 a m - 5 pm FRIDAY 10 am - 1 pm Other hours by appointment only.

in the Plaza Build ing (old Student Union) First level Suite 140. Any Student with a valid l.D. c ard can use the Health Center. You DO NOT have to b e enrolled in the Student Health insurance to be eligible.

Who is on sta.ft? Physicians, Nurse Prac titioners, Physician Assistants, R. N.'s, Medical A_ssistants. Health Educ ators and Allied Health Professionals.

What About Cost? Your routine offic e visits are tree when you are ill. Charges as assessed at the time ot service to r extend ed workups, supplies, medication, lab w ork a nd procedures.

What Services Are Available? Evaluation & Treatment ot illnesses, health problems and muscular skeletal injuries. Lab testing (including HIV testing and counseling).

IMPORTANT NOTE:

To receive a check on Wednesday afternoon, the loan must be completed no later than 1:00 p.m. Monday. To receive a check o n Friday afternoon, the loon must be completed no later than 1:00 p.m. Wednesday. Students toking less than nine c redit hours during fall semester or first semester freshmen who do not have financial aid are not eligible.

7~ "" - «tt/IMJ«4 I YOU MUST BRINGI! 1.

2.

·:t

A current student 1.0. Proof of Collateral: (one of the following) Flnanclal Aid: New computer access! No paper work needed. A letter from your supervisor stating the number of Work Study: hours per week you work, the rate of pay, and the supervisor's name and telephone number. You will be required to stan a oqvroll deduction form wben you cornotete the loan pqoers. A letter of understanding from the MSCD VA: Veteran's Affairs Office. Off-Campus A letter on company letterhead stationery stating Employment: the number of hours you work per week, the rate of pay, how long you have been employed, and the supervisor's name and telephone number.

Medications-a dispensing area is located in the Health Center. Annual Gynecologic exams and Pap Smears: Birth control information and supplies. Pregnancy testing. Soter Sex Instruction.

Sexually transmitted disease screening a nd treatment. Minor Surgery. Smoking Cessation. Eating Disorders, Nutrition/Cholesterol counseling, weight loss. Physical Exams, Immunizations. T.B. Testing. First Aid and minor injury care

Stop by or caJI for more information and the current semester laours.

556-2525

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22

'1Yu! Jlelropolilan

Cabaret coming soon SIGl'S from page 20 It is, according to the students playing on

all but one of the tables before 10 a.m. opening day. MSCD freshman Danielle Williams, 18, a math major, says the pool tables are great. "I like it a lot," says Don Koogle, 18, an MSCD chemistry major. "It's a lot better." MSCD freshman Garrett Osborne, 18, who uses a wheelchair, wanted access into Sigi's, but had to wait because the lift into the pool hall has not yet been installed. Osborne said he could wait and noted that overall, the Tivoli Student

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John Douglas, superintendent for Gerald Phipps Construction, the company responsible for the renovation of the Tivoli, said the lift will be ready in about three weeks. Bryan said if anyone in a wheelchair wants access sooner, they should ask at the entrance for assistance into the hall. Also coming this October to Sigi's is a reincarnation of the old Mission, intact with everyone's favorite bartender, Field Majors. Reborn as Sigi's Cabaret, the bar will still offer only 3.2 beer, but should still improve as it transmogrifies, offering more space and a more historical atmosphere for open-mike poets, musicians and other arty expressionists. >

l~NAPSDOTS MSCD Student GovernJDent AsseJDbly is getting involved "7"Ith•••

IT'S CHILI OUT HERE! MSCD Student Activities sponsors Campus Involvement Week with a chili-off to start the week. All this and more on the Lawrence Street Mall. Be there or be hungry. MONDAY, MSCD departments will vie for the head jalapeno award. Ruminate to the rhythms of The Rudy Grant Band. TUESDAY is MSCD Student Services Day.

• Student Fees . • Published Faculty Evaluations •Tuition • Graduation Agreements • . Child' ~are • Di_y~rsity • and· A'.~'7'ising · · .

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WEDNESDAY, clubs will offer all the information requirements necessary for a healthy college experience. Go ahead, bite off a bigger piece of involvement and make a difference at Auraria. THURSDAY sees the return of the ever-popular Ice Cream Social Responsibility/Community Resource Day. Try Ben and Jerry on a stick with their Peace Pops promotion. Ask not what your community can do for you, but what chew can do for your community. Get fat for freedom. EMMANUEL GALLERY presents "Parallel Lines" and "Last Chance to Cope," a dual exhibit of sculpture, photographs and mixed media installations. The show opens Monday. The gallery will hold a reception at 5:30 p.m. Sept. 2. BITE ME! Intercollegiate Athletics is serving hot dog deals from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the Auraria Events Center patio through Sept. 16. Get a dog, a drink and some chips for only $2. Proceeds will offset educational materials and athletics conference fees. - Robyn Schwartz Check out theee other ereat buye on Laptope: IBM COLOR 486-25 $1,995 Noteetar mono 486DX-33 $1.495 Hyundai COLOR 486-33 $1995 All Laptope come with more ereat goodiee! Wintlowe 3.11, MS-DOS 6.21 + tax caee anti MORE! 1-year Warranty Call 697-5212 for a fanta6tic buy on a great Laptop PCI Pereonal Connection 9880 S. City View Drive Morrieon, CO 80465-2382

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-Multi-sport M

The Metropolitan

Wise tries hand at soccer

Women spikers on a mission

.t

Michael BeDan

Andrew Mosier

Sports Editor

The Metropolitan

In 1993-94, MSCD sported what Women' s Volleyball Coach Rhonda Williams called the best team she ever coached. "I think this year's team could change my mind on that," Williams said. That will be tough to do. Last year's team won its second straight Colorado Athletic Conference title and gained its third consecutive NCAA Division II Regional berth. Her 1994-95 squad opens the season Sept. 1 at South Dakota State. This year's team returns eight players and adds nine new faces to the roster. This mix should make the team stronger, according to Williams, who said the team lacked mental toughness in clutch situations last year. Four out of the five losses suffered by the 32-5 Roadrunners were delivered in the fifth and deciding_game of the matches they lost. The most costly fifth game loss was to Regis in the regional final, a 14-16 fifth game collapse to a team they had beaten twice earlier in the season. "I think they went in thinking they didn't have to play that great to win ," Williams said of the loss that cost the Roadrunners a trip to the Elite Eight. "I think this team will be better mentally," Williams said. To ensure this, Williams brought in Sean McCann, a sports psychologist from the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs to work with the players. His first visit on Aug. 20 proved to be successful, so he will return at midseason and just before the

It was a simple _decision, but one that had to be made for MSCD sophomore Shannon Wise. Wise made the decision not to return to MSCD's nationally ranked volleyball team, opting to play soccer for coach Ed Montojo's Roadrunners. "I like soccer better, that is why I decided to play," Wise said. "I have been playing since I was three. I love the sport." Wise said she was not sure she could give the dedication to volleyball that she wanted to, which also swayed her decision. "I was not enjoying volleyball, and that made it hard to be dedicated to it," Wise said. Montojo said despite Wise's year long lay-off, she has acclimated herself back into the sport with little difficulty. "Shannon is a great athlete and has good size, " Montojo said. "I have not yet picked the starting 11, but she is bound to fit in there somewhere." Montojo is not sure what position Wise is going to hold on the field. "She has the size to play defense, but she has never played there before," Montojo said. "In high school she played in the midfield and up front, but right now she lacks the creativity needed to run the midfield, she still looks at everything straight up-and-down." Despite Wise's year-long sabbatical from the game, flashes of her allsta te briJliance while playing for Gateway High School have begun to surface. "She scored a nice goal in the inter-squad game last week," Montojo said. "All she has to do is understand the movement off the ball that she did not see in high school, and make adjustments to the system we play here." Wise will continue to play basketball for MSCD, competing in her first season after red-sltirting last year. '

4

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A!l,f(U!t26,1994

playoffs. " He was amazed at the attitudes of my players and said the team was incredible," Williams said. With the mental side being taken care of, Williams said the hard work that goes into making a champion was never a problem. "This is a team that works hard," she said. "They have been practicing six hours a day since Aug.9." This team possesses some incredible talent as well. MSCD returns senior All-American Crissy Canada, who possesses phenomenal athletic ability (31 inch vertical leap), and is known for her quickness and . f f e n s i v e The Metropolitan Andy Crou 0 prowess. Canada Senior All-American Crissy Canada cheers on teamates at practice will also provide on Aug. 24. Canada Is a middle-blocker for the fifth ranked MSCD valuable leader- Women's Volleyball team. ship as a middle include sophomore Stacey blocker for this club in its Hoyt and Laurie Anderson. VolleyW . . . . .'s quest to repeat as CAC Both players should have an 1994 prt-HCIS09 ... 10 champs and reach the Elite impact. 1. Cal State Bakenfield Eight. This season presents a 2. Northern Colorado Senior and three-sport schedule similar to last year's performer (tennis, basketball 3. Portland State - it is among the toughest and volleyball) Katie Horvat, 4. Cal State Los Angeles Division II schedules in the whom Williams calls "a defenS. Mttro State country. MSCD could end up sive goddess," brings her skills 6. Northtm Michigan facing at least nine schools and leadership back for the who were ranked in the top 25 7.Regls '94-95 campaign as well. in the final poll of 1993. 8. Tampa The new season also "Our goal has been the 9. Cal Poly Pomona brings some young talent to Elite Eight, and we've fallen 10. Nor1h Dakota Slate the court. Williams said playjust short," Williams said. ers to watch this season

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25

The Metropolitan

August26,1994

The Calendar is a free service of The Metropolitan for students, faculty and staff of the Auraria Campus. Calendar items for MSCD receive priority due to space limitations. Forms for calendar items are available at The Metropolitan office, Suite 313 of the Tivoli Student Union. Tiu Metropolitan reserves the right to edit calendar items for space considerations or to refuse any items we deem unsuitable for publication.

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27

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Volunteers are needed by Colorado Save Outdoor Sculpture! to survey all publicly accessible outdoor sculptures in the state of Colorado. Info: CU-Denver Fine Arts Department, 556-6259.

MSCD 's Student Activities hosts Campus Involvement Week. Today is Clubs Day with free fruit from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., by the flagpole on the Lawrence St. Mall. Info: 5562595.

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MSCD's Student Activities hosts Campus Involvement Week. Today is Kick Off Day with live music from The Rudy Grant Band and a free Chili Cook Off from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., by the flagpole on the Lawrence St. Mall. Info: 556-2595.

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Menorah Ministries host a Truth Bible Study every Monday, Wednesday and Thursday from 3 to 6 p.m. in Suite 355 of the Tivoli Student Union. Come and go as needed for fellowship and Truth Bible Study. Info: 7220944.

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MSCD ' s Bahai Club presents " Dr. Albert Einstein: His Scientific Achievements apd Views on Religion and World Peace" at 7:30 p.m., 225 E. Bayaud Ave. Free, all welcome. Info: 322-8997.

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Menorah Ministries hosts a Jewish Messiah and Biblical Historical Jewish Roots of Christianity information table every Monday, Wednesday and Thursday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., at the main entrance lobby of the North classroom building. Info: 722-0944.

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MSCD's Student Activities hosts Campus Involvement Week. Today is Student Services Day with free candy from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., by the flagpole on the Lawrence St. Mall. Info: 556-2595. MSCD's Career Services presents an Employment Services Orientation Workshop from 3 to 4:30 p.m. in the Arts Building, Suite 177. Free. Info: 556-3664.

Sc_•1•ll•••••I••·•- I MSCD's Student Activities hosts Campus Involvement Week. Today is Ice Cream Social Responsibility and Community Resources Day with free Ben and Jerry's Peace Pops from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., by the flagpole on the Lawrence St. Mall. Info: 556-2595. MSCD's Career Services presents an Interviewing Skills Workshop from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Arts Building, Suite 177. Free. Info: 556-3664.

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MSCD's Career Services presents an Employment Services Orientation Workshop from 3 to 4:30 p.m. in the Arts Building, Suite 177. Free. Info: 556-3664.

MSCD's Career Services presents a workshop on Resumes That Work from 9 to 11 a.m. in the Arts Building, Suite 177. Free.

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MSCD's Bahai Club presents "The Challenge of Russia ' s Future: Conversations with Russian Scientists and Environmentalists" at 7:30 p.m., 225 E. Bayaud Ave . Free, all welcome. Info: 322-8997.

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MSCD ' s Career Services presents an Employment Services Orientation Workshop from 10 to 11 :30 a.m. in the Arts Building, Suite 177. Free. Info: 556-3664.

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A free Scholarship Workshop will be held from 1 to 2 p.m. in the Tivoli Student Union, Suite 642. Info: 556-8441. Those who want to start a club at MSCD must attend a mandatory meeting today at 5:30 p.m., or tomorrow at 4 p.m. Meetings will be held in the Tivoli Student Union, Suite 640.

The Auraria Public Safety Division Presents

Looking for your Class? August 22 through September 2, · class location printouts are updated dally at the following location:

--

A Bicycle Security Clinic Thursday, September 8 9:00 am • noon

Arts Bulldlng

-----

Protect your investment Protect your bike

Room 177

Book Center-Tivoli Student Union lnlormatton Desk, lower level

Central Ckmroom

In the open area between the Student Union and the PE Events Center.

Acodernlc A<Mllng. nm noor-moln hol

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Featuring:

Nolth Clallroom 1. Admllllonl. Room 1001 2. Information table 3. First .,..,.. Sludenll !Clbl&-Q:Jllerlo

• Bicv.cle theft protection registration • Information on bicycle safety • Information on bicycle security • Bicycle lock demonstration • Meet Public Safety bike patrol officers

Public safely Recepttonlsl. 1200 Seventh street

HPER Bulldlng Campus Recreotlon Detk, Room 106

South Classroom Room 134

Tlvoll Union Information Desk

Visitor Information Center

<

CU-Denve< Building. Roam 130

Call 556•327 l for more information

West Classroom LOunge. Room 150

or cal AHEC's Office of Foclltleo Pklnnlng and Use at 556-8376 ot Ille following times:

August 22 through September 2 Monday-Thursday 7:30 am - 6:00 pm Friday 1:30 am - 5:00 pm

Special thanks to: • Kryptonite Corp. • Bike Broker, inc.

September 6 through semester's end Monday - Friday 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

~ Auraria Higher Education Center

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26

The Metropolitan

Augwt26,1994

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The Metropolitan

SALES REPS REQUIRED by fastest growing NASDAQ ••«••.JS•NG Exchange telecommunications company to market sure sale HELP WANTED Part-time services. Please call 436-1052. FOR RENT • ONE ROOM IN beautiful victorian mansion Liquor store clerk. 623-2556 8/26 Capitol Hill. $350 includes 10/21 everything 329-3392. 8/26 RED ROCKS! ROLLING PART-TIME POSITIONS imme- STONES! CONCERTS! diately available for sales and SPORTS EVENTS! production . College Bonus Contemporary Services is ProQram available. 15-20 hour accepting applications for partflexible schedule. $5.50 per time/temporary employees to hour to start. Call Honeybaked work in crowd management. Ham Co. 238-8888.9/2 Must be reliable and outgoing. ~ The nation's leader ii college marketing ls Call CSC at 850-0500. 9/2 ~ seeking an energetic, entrepreneur1al : studenllortheposkionofcampusrep. No OFFICE SUPPORT/RECEPi sales Involved. Place advertising on · bulletin boards for companies such as TIONIST Organized, intelligent, : American Expressand Mlcrosdt. courteous and loves to work ' Great part-time job earnings. Choose · your own hours; 4-8 hours per week with people. Is this you? Must . required.Can: be able to work Monday, Campus Rep Progam ' Amelican Passage Me<la Corp. Wednesday and Friday GORGEOUS MALE STRIP· 215W.Harrison,Seattle,WA98119 (800) 487-2434 Ext. 4444 between 1:00 a.m . and 2:00 PERS Absolutely the lowest p.m. (more hours possible) priced male strippers in $5.00 per hour. Word Perfect Colorado for any occasion. 5.1 a plus. Ninth Street Park! Leave detailed message at Fort Collins voice mail 1-303-495Contact Cheryl 556-3291 .9/2 4769. 8/26

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TRUTH BIBLE STUDY M-WThurs. 3-6p.m., Tivoli Student Union Room #355, Come & Go as needed. Fellowship & Bible Truth Study. How to know and walk with God is #1 . Menorah Ministries 722-0944 9/9

oraphic

Artist

.. . WANTED Experience Preferred Must have working knowledge of Macintosh computers and QuarkXpress. Must be an MSCD student. ~

5 5 6 - 8 3 6 1

ASK•FOR•K ATE

ALTERNATIVES

PAR.T TIME SALES REPS ,,.... LOOKING FOR FIVE STUDENTS-, required to sell state-of-the-art TO WORK 3 HOURS IN THE EVENING. enviro.nmental. systems in MAKING $10 TO $15 AN HOUR. dynam~c growth industry. tiuge TRANSPORTATION REQUIRED potential. 30% comm1ss1ons. MANAGEMENT POSITIONS Call 296-5000.8/26 ASLo AVAILABLE CALL LES KRIEGER 378-4947 ~

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PREGNANCY CE.NTE.R

FREE PREG~A~cr T..EST ' . Support Se~fces , A counselin8 ~ <*ring-honest discussion cl options and SCIVices. Make an informed choice. No pre5511tt. no .t>ortion referrals. AU ~es free and conlidential.

295-2288

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SENIORS AND ALUMNI !!!

Take advantage of MSCD Career Services: • Learn or Improve • Work with Pr

Job Vacancy Listings, Resume Referral SeNice, On-Campus Interviewing, Campus Career Library, Career Counseling, and More !

(In a Professional,

Sign-up for an Employment Services Orientation in Career Services, Arts Building, Suite #1n, 556-3664.

•Great Ben •Career 0

, COMPANY

PART OF AP

'fues., August 30 ..................3:oo-4:30 pm ;;"~rl., September 2 .................3:0G-4:30 pm Tues., September 6 ...........u10:00-11:30 am ed.l September 14 ...........*'.5:Q0-6:30 . . pm at., Se,ptember 17 .............~10:30-12:00 pm ;mThurs., September 22 ..........3:Q0.4:30 pm .e,d., s,ptem,ber 28 ............5;00-6:30 pm on.~ October 3 ...................10:00-11:30 am Fri., October 7 ......................3:00-5:00 pm •rfues., October 11 ..................11:00-12:30 pm .;.:.~

APPLY IN PERSON MONDAY -

AY 8:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. ATION D 8TH FLOOR 0014

755-3800

EOE

755-3800

Career Services, Metropolitan State College of Denver

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11路:00 -1:00 MONDAY: GET COOl<IN WITH KICK OFF DAY TUESDAY: SPICE UP YOUR LIFE WITH 路 STUDENT SERVICES DAY

AUGUST 29 - SEPT 1 LAWRENCE ST. MALL RAIN LOCATION: TIVOLI STUDENT UNION

D Y: BALANCE YOUR DIET WITH CLUBS DAY THURSDAY: ICE CREAM SOCIAL RESPONSIBftlTY COMMUNITY RESOURCE DAY .

J LIVE MUSIC . THE RUDY GRANT BAND

1

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