Volume 21, Issue 13 - Nov. 13, 1998

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November 13, 1998

Issue 13

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Brainiacs Catherine Edstrom, left, and Samantha Fiorini examine a sheep brain before dissecting it in Anatomy and Physiology class Nov. 11. The Metro students compared the brains with human brains, brought in by part-time instructor Pat Stranahan

John Swift/The Metropolitan

Man 路arrested in shooting By Tara Trujillo The Metropolitan A 20-year-old man has been arrested in connection with the shooting of a Robert Adams, a 19-year-old Metro student. Westminster police questioned Timothy Nitz in connection with the incident Nov. 5. He was arrested later that day, said Westminister police investigator Dan Meyer. Adams was listed in critical condition on Nov. 11 at Centura Health-St. Anthony Central Hospital. Adams was shot in the head outside a house party in 'westminister on Oct. 24. Nitz is in Adams County jail on suspicion of criminal

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attempted first-degree murder and first-degree assault, police said. More than 40 people from the party were questioned, and police still didn't have a lead until they got a call from Thornton police who had received an anonymous tip, Meyer said. "It was a lucky chain of events that led to him," Meyer said. He said police are still working hard to find other possible suspects, though Nitz is the only arrest that has been made. Adams was the first of three shootings in the last month involving teenagers or young adults at parties. The second shooting involved 17-year-old Joua Her, who was gunned down after a Halloween party at the

Thornton Recreation Center. Thornton police say Her was an innocent bystander caught in a rivalry between two gangs. Two 14-year-old boys were arrested in Ber's death. The last altercation resulted in a shooting, stabbing and a beating of three males at a party in Terrace Garden Apartments. The victims, whose names weren't released, did not want to press charges so Westminister police are having problems with the investigation, said Meyer. None of the shootings are related but some of the circumstances are similar, Meyer said. "It's this teen-type party, where someone shows up at a party not invited. They are asked to leave and they start shooting. It's party crashers that are causing it," Meyer said.

PEACE A HAND:

Metro grad faces fierce Fijian Rat in her quest as a Peace Corps volunteer

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The women's soccer team is a first-timer at the NCAA regional tournament

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The Metropolitan

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November 13, 1998

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Celebrating the life and philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Call for Nominations The Peace Award will be given in the following categories: M~CD

Student• MSCD Employee (Fac~lty/Staff/Administrator) •Member of the Community

Please list Demonstrations of Advocacy, Compassion, &Commitment to Peace &Justice Nomination Forms are available at: MSCD Office of Student Life• MSCD Department cit African American Studies MSCD Office of Student Publications• MSCD Institute for Women's S~dies & Services Return Nominations to: MSCD Offi'ce of Student Life P.O. Box 173362 Campus Box 74 • Denver, CO 80217-3362 •ATTN: Pauline Reece

Nominations must be received by Monday, November 30, 1998 ..

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Peace Breakfast Friday, January 15,1999

8:30a.m. -10:30a.m. Tivoli Turnhalle

Tickets on sale November 20, 1998 Students $3.00 •All Others $7.00 • MSCD Educational Equity CenterfTerrace Center 800 • MSCD Office of Student Publications/Tivoli Student Union Suite 313 · • MSCD Department of African American Studies/Rectory 109 • MSCD Institute for Women's Studies & Services/1033 9th Street Park MSCD

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Offices or Departments interested in buying blocks of tickets should call 303-556-8361.

For More Information call 3 0 3 - 5 5 6 - 8 3 6 1 :.,

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November 13, 1998

All quiet

The Metropolitan

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Great digs

on parking plan front By Alicia Beard The Metropolitan

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Students were scarce at a meeting set up by Auraria administrators to discuss parking alternatives for the campus. The parking problem at Auraria was studied by Trans Systems Corp., which published a report of possible parking and transportation solutions for the campus. "Do you hear people complain?" asked a consultant from Trans Systems Corp. "And yet where are they?" The Nov. 11 town meeting on parking was the third meeting Auraria administratgrs have held gain feedback on possible solutions before they make their Dean Wolf final recommendations to the Auraria Board of Directors. ''We are going through a process of presenting this to as many members of the campus community as we could get to listen," said Dean Wolf, executive vice president for Administration. Wolf said in the last three meetings, 18 students have showed up to give input on parking issues. Wolf said he is about two weeks away from closing a deal with the Pepsi Center. The pact would allow students from all three schools to use 800 additional parking spaces. For spring semester Mark Gallagher, director of parking, said the building at Fifth Street and Walnut Street is being demolished to make room for additional parking in lot A. One problem impacting the parking availability on campus now is the Center see PARKING on 5

Jaime Jarrett/The Metropo/ifan

Mike Burk, superintendent for Hensel Phelps Construction company, watches while pieces of cement are moved from the work area. Aurclria officials are adding new sewer lines and stonn drains the Perfonning Arts building that will be built between the Plaza Building and the parking garage.

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Cop clashes with car, driver By Kerney Williams The Metropolitan An Auraria police officer suffered minor injuries Nov. 4 in an accident near the Tivoli. Around 4: 15 p.m. Kelley Hood allegedly parked her car in a parking area reserved for food caterers behind the Tivoli, according to an Auraria police report. Officer Felix Lucero approached Hood and asked her to move her car. _Hood argued with Lucero and then pulled out suddenly, running over Lucero's right foot and hitting Lucero's right arm with her car's mirror, the report said. Police chased her onto Interstate 25 and lost her in the pursuit, but not before they got her license plate number.

"We called the owner of the car," said Detective Randy Hinricher. "The owners then contacted (Hood), who turned herself in to Denver Police." Denver court records show that Kelley Hood is charged with hit and run injury, failure to give notice, failure to report an accident, and driving without proof of insurance. These charges are all misdemeanors. "She was very sorry," said Dale Windish of the Denver Police Department, who took Hood's statement. "She was mad and pulled out fast. I don't think she realized what she had done." Lucero was treated at St. Joseph's Hospital and released, Hinricher said. Neither Hood nor Lucero was available for comment.

College to survey students' comfort By Sean Weaver The Metropolitan

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Metro administrators will conduct three short-term projects to determine ways to decrease the number of students who drop out of the college. Nearly two-thirds of Metro students will not graduate after six years, according to the Colorado Commission on Higher Education. The college has the worst graduation rate in ~olorado.

"We're a school of opportunity," said Metro spokeswoman Debbie Thomas. She said other colleges in Colorado only accept students who, because of their SAT scores and grade point averages, are likely to graduate. She said Metro's charter is designed to give everybody a chance al a college degree. Thomas said despite the nature of the school's charter, "We agree that we need to do better than what we are doing." The first short-term project will be a

survey to determine how comfortable students are at Metro. "One' of the major areas to consider in retention is how comfortable students feel in and out of the classroom," said David Conde, Metro's interim associate vice president of Academic Affairs. "We want to see how closely related (student's plans for their future) are to what we have to offer." The survey, which will be conducted by Noel-Livitz, a national consulting firm,

will be distributed to about 4,300 students in 180 classes on campus during the week of Nov. 16. The standardized survey will determine students' opinions on topics such as parking and financial aid, said Michael Barnett, Metro's associate vice president of Student Enrollment Management. He said professors will distribute the questionnaires for students to fill out at home. "We're hoping to find out where see RETENTION on 5

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The Metropolitan

November 13, 1998

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You know our quality. The University of Denver will • enrich you intellectually • advance you professionally • provide you life-long learning

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Look at your choices. More than 100 master's degrees, 20 doctoral degrees and 40 graduate-level certificates in the • Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences • Natural Sciences, Mathematics and Engineering • Graduate School of International Studies •. Graduate School of Professional Psychology • Graduate School of Social Work • Daniels College of Business • College of Education • College of Law • University College

Want more choices? Consider our many joint programs or propose a combination of two graduate degree programs that flexibly meet your needs. Graduate Adnussion, University of Denver Voice 303.871.3119 Fax 303.871.4942 Web www.du.edu/ grad/ gradaca.html E-mail grad-adm@du ..edu

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November 13, 1998

The Metropolitan

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Metro veterans get preparatory perks By Alicia Beard The Metropolitan Military veterans who decide to go to college not only get their tuition paid for, they can also take free preparatory classes to get them up to speed with other students. Metro's Veteran's Services helps veterans get their Montgomery GI Bill benefits started, and Veteran's Upward Bound provides prep classes for GED and college, as well as referrals for housing and employment Veterans were honored nationally Nov. 11 for Veterans Day, a holiday that recognizes the truce signed Nov. 11, 1918, ending World War 1. Shane Mora, a Chicano Studies and Computer

City passes hate crime resolution

Information Systems major at Metro, said he invested $100 a month for a year while in the Navy that allotted him $12,500 through the Montgomery GI Bill. Soldiers have the option of signing up for the Montgomery GI Bill, which passed in 1987 as a system of pay reduction for educational benefits. "When I first started coming here, this office made it very easy for me," Mora said of Veteran Services. 'They basically hand-walked all my paperwork." Janet Maestas, who heads Veteran Services, said there are 400-600 veterans in its program who are going to school at Metro. Jake Lindsay, assistant director of Veteran's Upward Bound, said the program was established in 1972 to help

Vietnam veterans who had been out of school for two to four years. "The first thing we do is help them to be students and to start setting their goals for graduation from college," Lindsay said. Upward Bound provides pre-assessment testing and a 12-week course on basic skills covering math, English, computers and science, Lindsay said. During this time, veterans who have already completed the program become peer advisors for those involved. After the 12week course, veterans are given a post-assessment to see if they're ready to take college courses, he said. Lindsay said 95 percent of the veterans that complete the program go on to college.

New arts building curbs -¡ parking

Canvasing campus

By Tim Fields The Metropolitan

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Members of the Denver City Council said there are monsters in Denver. These monsters are people. People committing hate crimes. The council unanimously adopted a resolution Nov. 2 designating Nov. 1-7 as "Denver Hate Crimes Awareness Week." "(Hate crimes) are not going away unless we all make an effort," said council member Joyce Foster. Community awareness of the hatecrime issue is an effective way of dealing with the problem, said several council members. Council member Edward Thomas said he did not understand why people brutalize each other, and it is sad these resolutions are needed. The Matthew Shepard killing in Wyoming and violent hate crimes in Denver were the reasons for the resolution's creation, said council member Allegra Haynes. Shepard, a 21-year-old student at the University of Wyoming who was openly gay, died Oct. 12 following an attack where he was beaten and tied to a fence post. "The only thing that can come out of hate crimes is a doubling of our efforts towards goodwill," Haynes said. Denver has a history of stopping hate crimes, said council member Dennis Gallagher. The fall of Colorado's Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s demonstrates Denver will not tolerate violence, he said.

PARKING from 3

for Academic and Performing Arts. "On this campus we have one place to build and that's usually on parking lots," Wolf said. "So that takes 275 parking spaces out of service." Wolf said construction for the new administration building has started and the space needed for the building will also be taken from parking. By Jan. 1, lot G will disappear. "Any new academic buildings, we will have a component to replace any parking that's displaced," Wolf said. However, building a parking structure that will house 2,000 spaces, is a possibility, Wolf said. It would be built in the current_Lot E, adjacent to what will be the new administration buildin~.

CORRECTIONS Jaime Jarmt!The Metropolitan

A photo on page 4 of the Oct. 30 edition misidentified its subject, Kimberly Street-Daniels.

Metro student Kevin Singleton, an art maior with a painting emphasis, begins a new painting during her art class Nov. 11.

Metro spends $8,000for 1 comfort' survey RETENTION from 3

we're at and to develop long range goals," he said. Thomas said the college will spend $8,000 to conduct the survey and have the results analyzed. "When we get our results back we can

not only compare ourselves to our college but to other colleges as well," Thomas said. "It will give us an ability to pinpoint what is and isn't working for students." Administrators will also examine how scholarship money affects the dropout rate. "The college has committed a sub-

stantial amount of funds to help students succeed," Conde said. "Our goal is to make sure the dollars are effective." "We want to see if there is a way we can use the scholarship dollars we have available for those students who would qualify to help them stay in school," Thomas said.

Barnett said student services designed to help students stay in school will also be examined. "We need to take a hard look to see how the student services are structured to keep students on track," he said. Barnett said the school will look at intervention services to help students.


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The Metropolitan

November 13, 1998

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In protest of protests Some Metro students seem addicted to . EDITORIAL melodrama. Show them injustice, point out NEws: hatred and sin, and a small mob will conMetro students are . prone to protest. verge on campus to stand up for the rights of good people everyVmws: where. Most of them don't Too bad protests at know what they' re Metro are more style yelling about than substance. Most students don't take the time to learn about the issues they're protesting. Emotional grandstanding is lots of fun and can generate press coverage, but it almost never results in concrete change. Take the protest Sept. 16 when students marched to Colorado Department of Education headquarters to decry the exclusion of ethnic minority history from public school curricula. They tromped across campus, Speer Boulevard and on Colfax Avenue, waving signs and banners, shouting.slogans. They passed right by Department of Education headquarters. It's impossible to say how far they would have continued up Colfax Avenue. When Luis Torres, the march's organizer and a Metro professor, realized what was happening he ran to the front to tell the flock they had already passed their destination. The marchers had shouted, "I want to learn," and carried signs that read "Educate the mind," but

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they had not even taken the time to find out to where they were marching. There have been at least l 0 protests on or near Auraria Campus since March that involved Metro students. They protested drilling in Alaska, the Clinton impeachment process, crimes against gays and Columbus Day. Now the marchers are back in their homes. Their screaming has not changed anything and there are no clear signs that the marches have even served to educate their participants. One of the most frequent marchers, Angell Perez, even acknowledged as much at an Oct. 22 march with Amnesty International against police brutality. "It didn't really do anything," she said. "We marched, gave them our demands and that was it." Perez and Torres, it should be noted, are exceptions. Perez is helping to organize another protest against the potential use of the death penalty on a person she says is a political prisoner. Torres has worked for years with the Department of. Education to improve history classes in Colorado public schools. But for every Perez and Torres there are hundreds of fists clenched in ignorance. Protests can be a good way to call attention to injustice, but they have virtually no effect unless they are coupled with long-term, concrete action. Of course we defend the students' right to free speech and assembly. But in the shadow of Veteran's Day, when we honor men and women who made real sacrifices for those rights, it is an insult for so many to shout so loudly for something they know so little about.

Forget graduation, the interim rate sucks "No administrator in the state of Coloradc has any entitlement to their position." - William Fulkerson I am submitting a request to the editor of this paper that my formal title and job description be changed to interim columnist for The Metropolitan. Kyle Ringo Sure, I want to be known for Committing COMMITTING Journalism, but after having done a little of JOURNALISM that I think I might fit in better at this school if I am known for committing journalism on an interim basis. Not following me? Let's take a quick tour of our college. We'll start right here in the cozy offices of this newspaper where Chris Mancuso is interim director of Student Publications. Mancuso came down with the interim bug when Kate Lutrey left the position to become interim executive assistant to the interim vice president for Student Services. That person is Yolanda Ortega-Ericksen. And let's not forget Kelly Espinoza the interim assistant vice president of Student Services. Moving on now, we find Cheryl Norton the interim provost, though the word on Norton is she has deteriorated to full-blown Provost. My condolences. If the preceding news upset you, maybe Gail Bruce-Sanford can help. She is the interim director of the Counseling Center. I've heard you can prevent becoming one of the interims by abstaining from employment in the administrative field, especially as it relates to higher education, and by learning early to avoid administration. Maybe Vincent Orlando interim chair of the Early Childhood and Elementary Education department would know if that is true. I want to know why there are so many damn interim administrators at this school. Maybe Jane Broida, interim assistant dean of the School of Professional Studies can give us her insight. Why can't people just say no to an interim position? Apparently, it has become such a problem that Metro placed restrictions on how long one can be an interim employee, according to Sandi Jones, director of Personnel. It's down to two years - max. Well, unless the president says differently. Maybe there should be some kind of public service campaign discouraging administrators from accepting interim positions. David Conde and Frieda Holley both interim associate vice presidents of Academic Affairs could do the talking and when they are done that pretty little star can fly by and all will be right again. I'm sure Marlene Roys-Flenniken, interim coordinator of the Academic Success program could help everyone get their ducks in a row. Carolyn Schafer, interim director of communications, could organize the campaign and John Landry, interim associate dean of the School of Business, could keep the books straight. Maybe Joan McDermott, interim Athletics director could convince one of Metro's athletic teams to dedicate its season to the plight of the interims. In the interim, we could have Jennifer Jackson, interim director of the Student Development Center; Karen Raforth, interim associate vice president and dean of Student Life and Colby Hatfield, interim associate director of the Center for Individualized Learning study reasons why so many students have decided to make this school an interim stop on their journey through life. Now there is an idea: Interims studying interims. And when aU the studying is completed we can tum to Janet Spradley, interim assistant director of Assessment and Testing.

Kyle Ringo is a Metro student and an interim columnist for The Metropolitan. His e-mail address is ringok@mscd.edu.


November 13, 1998

STAFF EDITOR Perry Swanson NEWS EDITOR Sean Weaver ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR Alicia Beard FEATURES EDITOR Tim Fields SPORTS EDITOR Tom Viskocil PHOTO EDITOR John Swift ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR Jaime Jarrett COPY EDITORS Dave Flomberg Rico Baca WEBMASTER Brian Wilson PRODUCTION MANAGER Alyssa King GRAPIDC ARTISTS Tim Dohrman Christian Keller Anita John Rene Gillivan REPORTERS Michael Byrd Sharon Cating David Proviano Rebecca Rivas Tara Trujillo Kerney Williams PHOTOGRAPHERS Kelli McWhirter Laurine Moore ADVERTISING STAFF Jennifer Lopez Ralph Rodriguez

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OFFICE STAFF Bernadette Baca Kim Fronapfel Simon Joshi BUSINESS MANAGER Donnita Wong ADVISER Jane Hoback

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DIRECTOR OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Chris Mancuso TELEPHONE NUMBERS Editorial: 303-556-2507 Advertising: 303-556-8361 Fax: 303-556-3421 E-mail: swansonp@mscd.edu The Ml'lrOJMllitan is produced by and for 1he studenlS of Melropolitan Sia~ College of Denver sert~ng 1he Auraria Campus. The Mrtrupulillln is supported by adi-ertising revtnues and student fees, and is published et>ery Friday du~ the academic year and monrlily during tlie summer semester. Thr Mrtropolitan is distributed lo all campus buildings. No person rnay lake more than one copy of each edition of The Mmupolitan 1citliout prior written per111ission. Direct any questions, complaints, compliments or commenls to 1he MSCD Board of Publications clo The Metropolitan. Opinions expressed within do not necessarily rejlecl 1/1ose of Tht Metropolitan, Metropolitan State College of Denver or iu advertisers. Deadline for calendar items is 5 p.m. Friday. Deadline for press relea5es is 10 a.m. Monday. Display advertising deadline is 3 p.m. Friday. C/assifwl advertising deadline is 5 p.m. Monday. The Metropolitan offices are located in the Tivoli S1udent Union, room 313. The mailing address is P.O. Box 173362, Campus Box 57, Denver, CO 80217.J362. 0 All rights reserved. The Metropolitan is printed on recycled paper.

The Metropolitan

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On the corner of 8th and Speer I always drive past, averting my eyes and pretending not to notice, as do most of the other drivers on the road. How often do you see them, especially along Speer, holding their signs, trying to get a few bucks for food, booze, or whatever else someone in their position might be seeking? It's easy to forget they're there, after Dave Flomberg a while. But this time I stop. JIVE Maybe it's because it's Veteran's Day, or maybe because my column idea for this week isn't ready. I don't know exactly why I do it. I just do. His sign isn't particularly original. "Vet needs help. God bless you." He sits slumped over in a wheelchair, a tom and dirty brown plaid blanket across his shoulders and a meshbacked John Deere cap on his head. He has on a pair of glasses, one of the lenses missing, the other cracked. I pull over to the side of the intersection and walk across the street. "I ain't botherin' nobody," he mutters, avoiding eye contact. "You really a vet?" I ask, nodding to his sign. "Who the hell are you?" now he catches my eye. And I can tell by looking into his he was, in fact, a man who had seen more in his life than I would care to in mine. I offer up a couple bucks and repeat my question. "Yep. In the army during 'Nam. Lost my leg on tour through a shithole in Saigon. Fuckin' 0 in front of me tripped a mine, blew his ass off. Would've laughed mine off, If'n he hadn't taken my leg with him. Served him right, the dumb bastard." I ask him what company he was with, or platoon. He won't tell me. "Got no right disgracin' my brothers with what I am now," he says. I tell him my name and ask his. He points at my car, a 1974 Fleetwood. "I'm Cadillac Jack," he says, laughing to himself.

I ask him how he ended up on the comer of 8th and Speer at 8 p.m. on a cold Wednesday night. "Does it really matter?" he asks me. I say it's Veteran's day, and it might make a good story. "Vet's day already?" he snorts. "Fuck you. While yer mama was wipin' yer ass, I was gettin spit on by people I thought I was fightin' fer. Now it's a good story? Where the hell were you 30 years ago? Bet you weren't even born yet. "You think anyone gives a damn? Ain't nobody gonna read a story 'bout me 'cause ain't nobody wanna remember that shit. That's why I been sittin' here since 7 this morning and got me four bucks and a quarter. All dem fat cats pretends not to notice me on account of all the babies I killed and all the women I raped and all the weed I smoked. I got news fer dem: I ain't killed anybody wasn't shootin' at me and I ain't fucked nothin over there without payin' fer it!" His voice raises and he shout~ this at traffic as it flows. A yuppie in a new Jeep Cherokee passes by and honks, flipping us off. "Fuck you!" the guy in the wheelchair screams. He turns back to me. "See? Think he's gonna read somethin' 'bout me? Fat fuckin' chance." I ask him what he's going to do with the money he makes on this comer. "Invest in I.B.M., you jackass, what the hell do you think I'm gonna do with it? I'm gonna buy me a bottle of Boone's Farm, find the warmest place I can, then drink until I wakes up. Then, I'll do it again." I thank him and start towards my car. "Hey," he calls after me, "Happy fuckin' Vet's Day!" Happy Veteran's Day, Cadillac Jack.

• Dave Flomberg is a Metro student and a copy editor/columnist for The Metropolitan. His e-mail address is flomberg@mscd.edu.

{ETTERS

Solution to male ignorance: an invasion Editor: How many mothers have you read about this year who have killed their newborn babies? Yes, I can think of two or three off hand that have made the news. Maybe these young women still won't talk to their parents, and maybe we will end up with a bunch of dead babies anyway. I think I know which scenario is worse. My point, you ask? I agree with the principle of both Amendments 11 and 12, but I have very serious problems with the government telling me that I have no choice anymore. It is a direct violation of our creed as Americans. A violation of the foundation of this country. A violation of our liberty, which is an "inalienable" human right. Now, most of us came here by choice, some of us did not. Bygones. Today is the issue. We are American citizens now. The country where every election cycle we voluntarily vote out that personal responsibility in favor of government directive. Think about that. Should doctors perform partial birth

abortions? Of course not. By the time a fetus reaches that stage in development it's viable; at 22 weeks the fetus has a very high chance of survival outside the womb with fewer problems previously inherent to premature birth. If a woman takes that much time lo decide, I think she should deal with the consequences. On principle, I agree. On the other hand, it's a matter of responsibility. My body is mine, and I make the decisions regarding my body. I decide whether or not I get to die if I become irreversibly brain damaged. I decide whether or not I eat meat. I decide whether or not I give birth. It is no man's business, ever to decide for a woman whether or not she will reproduce. If we are going to press the issue then let's press it with engendering taking responsibility for our actions as individuals as sexually active women. Let's not take by force the opportunity to be responsible, to be free and to choose. I guess it's a little late for that. Thank the Republican voters of Colorado for setting back the liberation of men. Most

people think women need to be liberated. No, we think freely, we understand what it means to fight for rights, freedoms and privileges. So , do so-called minority groups, especially those with an African heritage. They know what it means to win freedom, to be liberated. But men in this generation have never had that opportunity to fight for their freedom. They've fought for the freedom of the Southern Vietnamese, for the freedom of Europeans, two times there, but not since the 1700s have men in this country had to fight for their own freedom. Maybe an invasion would make them understand what it feels like to have to constantly struggle for basic rights. The right to choose, which is guaranteed in our inalienable right to liberty. They need to be liberated from archaic thinking. Then we can begin to focus on where our responsibilities lie instead of what rights we have to win back.

Melissa McGuire Metro student


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November 13, 1998

The Metropolitan

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ROACTIVE

t h e world, Heidi said. "We just weren't quite ready yet to settle down into our careers." The Adlers are an oddity in the Peace Corps only 7 percent of volunteers are married. After about a year wait, the Adlers were sent to small island in Fiji, a 13hour boat ride from the main island. For 24 months they lived without hot or running water. They had to wash .aJJ their laundry by hand and they slept with a mosquito neLDver their bed each night to keep the cockroaches and other insects out. Heidi said all the windows in their house were broken and rats would often come in at night. She told of one night, after she and Todd had been on the island for one month, when a rat got into bed with them. ''My parents actually thought the experience was good for me because I had always been so squeamish of bugs and rodents." Heidi taught chemistry and math to children grades 7-12 and Todd By Arlene Wilson taught accountin~ and math. Because magine after working your way through they were the only teachers at the four or five grueling years of college, you end up local school with bachelor's degrees, living in below-poverty conditions. No run- they were put in high regard by the - - • • • • ning water. No washing machines. Rats school administration and Heidi climbing through your broken win- immediately became head of the scidows at night. ences department. Imagine volunteering to live in those conditions, as But more important than teachsome Metro graduates have. ing the basics to students was the Many former Metro students have enrolled in the opportunity to educate them about Peace Corps after graduation, and some say it was the American civilization, Heidi said. best experience of their li,ves. "Many people in Fiji think that The Peace Corps is a program where American vol- everyone in America is rich," Heidi unteers go abroad to provide people with training and said. "They have the idea that we all education in the hopes of reducing their poverty. The live a Hollywood lifestyle in the Corps also tries to promote a better understanding of United States." Americans, according to recently published Peace Corps Heidi said the experience made literature. Todd and her appreciate what Many of the countries served are under-industrial- Americans have, especially their vast ized or impovrished. Thirty-eight percent of Peace Corps opportunities and freedoms back volunteers help with education in English, math and other home. Americans live in a rushed general subjects. Eighteen percent of volunteers assist society, she said, and Fijian life is with environmental training, 18 percent with training in taken one day and meal at a time. She the health field, 13 percent in business training, 9 percent learned to appreciate the small things in agricultural training and 4 percent with training in in life. other areas. After receiving her degree as a physician's assistant Heidi Adler and her husband, Todd, joined the Peace from the University of St. Louis, Heidi, 33, now lives in Corps together in 1992 after graduating from Metro with Eureka, Nev. Now, there are 20 Metro graduates who are serving degrees in chemistry and accounting, respectively. They learned of the Peace Corps through a job fair at Metro and in the Peace Corps overseas. One such graduate, Jennifer said they felt it would be an exciting opportunity to see Mattison, is serving in Cameroon, Africa, teaching

Metro

alumni join

Peace Corps and call it the experience of a lifetime

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English to high school students. When Mattison first arrived in Africa, her mother, Barbara, said she was stationed in a remote, povertystricken area in north Cameroon. The local people were hostile toward Mattison because she was a professional woman in a Muslim society where women are still considered "lower-class" citizens. Her classes consisted of up to 70 students, and Jennifer had to teach with no textbooks, no chalkboard and no writing materials. The community was situated in the middle of a desert area and temperatures often were well above I 00 degrees. Mattison was transferred to Galim, Cameroon, in the western part of the country. The climate is milder, and the land is lush and suitable for farming. Barbara said women's rights movements are taking a strqng hold in that part of the country and her daughter is respected rather than shunned by the community. She is good friends with a community tribal chief and his 15 wives and 60 children. Barbara said her daughter spends a good deal of her free time with the locals exchanging cultural ideas and customs. Another portion of her free time is spent putting together an environmental education manual, Mattison's mother said. Mattison and some other Peace Corps volunteers wanted to educate the locals on environmental issues such as water conservation and recycling, which few locals are familiar with. Once the manual is complete, they will submit it to Peace Corps headquarters in Africa for approval for publication. Mattison told her mother her experience with the Peace Corps taught her many things. Wherever you go, people are people, sharing many of the same ideas, dreams, and experiencing the same day-today frustrations and problems. She said she feels a great openness and caring toward other people which she didn't feel before. Mattison, 26, has a technical communications degree and an international diplomacy degree from Metro and hopes to work in an American embassy abroad when she returns from the Peace Corps in June 1999, Barbara said. Both Heidi and Mattison 's mother said that along with being so far from home and family, one of the biggest drawbacks to being in the Peace Corps is that many volunteers, despite precautions, often succumb to disease. Mattison - Heidi Adler, herself has had malaria three times Metro alumna since being stationed in Africa. Heidi said most Americans are encouraged not to seek treatment for minor illnesses so they have a chance to build up their immune systems. The Peace Corps was established ;n I 961, and over 400 Auraria graduates have served since then.

'My parents actually thought the • experience was good for me because I had always been so squeamish of bugs and rodents'


10 The Metropolitan November 13, 1998

The characters in Party have

oodles of fun. It's playing at Theatre on

Broadway, 13 5. Broadway, through Jan.

"

2. Call (303) 860-9360.

Nice package! Get friendly with the boys as play explores friendship

By Rico Baca

Party_ has a fonnula that is so universal, how couldn't it work? Seven friends get together and drink and bond and ... party. Most of them take shots, drink beers and they all end up naked. But there's more to this play than seven naked gay men running around the stage. It's all about the brotherhood and camaraderie people have among their inner circle. This play shows a night in the life of these men, but it's the same when a few teen girls get together, just as it's the same when four close heterosexual males come together for a Sunday afternoon full of football and beers. The evening starts out at Kevin's (Don Bill) house. He is the party host, and still feeling the repercussions of his last relationship's abrupt ending. Friends trickle in to the point of a full living room, and things get under way. Playwright David Dillon is apt at showing and not telling his audience the characters' backgrounds. With smooth direction by Nick Sugar, the audience effortlessly learns of character pasts, baggage and involvements. Party guests include Brian (Brian Upton), the actor who's afraid of nothing; Peter (Brian Houtz), Kevin's

new roommate; and Andy (Chad Hoeppner), a recently out-of-thecloset student. They play a game similar to Truth or Dare, and either end up divulging secrets about their lives or living out another's fantasy (such as pulling one's underwear off with his teeth). Throughout the course of the night, relationships develop and friendships strengthen. The group eventually grows into an entity of one. The acting in this show is commendable. One hard thing about acting out a party is making it look fresh day

after day. They succeed in this. Each character differs from the next and has his own quirky attributes. Thankfully, the gay man stereotypes aren't milked for this production. The script gets away with it (with the token queen who knows everything about musical theCourtesy of Theatre on Broadway ater, the horny dancer, etc.), but the acting and the direction steer away from overused methods on acting these characters. Complete with a beautiful realist set, a workable lighting grid and a great script, Party keeps true with its title and is a hoot.

Metro's 'Nunsense' doesn't overcome script By Rico Baca Hooray! Metro theater is performirig the screwball musical Nunsense. It's hard not to be sarcastic. This musical always fails because the two-hour show is boring and only has enough good material to fill an hour. The script isn ' t funny, the songs aren't memorable, and the characters don't have enough depth. And if you didn't grow up in or near a Catholic family, many jokes will just pass you right up. General audiences will catch its drift. And it has some funny moments and one or two songs that might stick in your head. Just not enough! Things kick off with five nuns running the show (Right there you know you're in trou-

ble). There has just been an accident where the chef killed 52 nuns. The convent buried 48 of them, but the remaining 4 dead nuns reside in the freezer because it can't afford to bury them (after the nuns prematurely bought a VCR). Now these five nuns are holding a talent night to raise money - thus enters you, the audience. They dance, they !ling and they quiz the audience on the beginnings of their order of the Little Sisters of Hoboken. (Pay close attention, because if you answer the questions right, you might get a Saint Christopher trading card, or something similar in worth.) Mother Superior (Terry L. Gallant) leads the troupe with her consistent faith. She organizes the troops and acts as the main narrator throughout most of the

Their noticeable flaws come show. The four nuns under Mother when they went solo. In most cases, solo dance Superior are stereotyped as thus: the dancer, Sister Mary Leo numbers and vocal solos pale in (Mary Dawson); the forgetful, comparison to the moments when Sister Mary Amnesia (Chelsea Marrs); the responsible, -Sister Mary Hubert (Kathryn Jans Coons); and the rugged, Sister Robert Anne (Missy Guisinger). Metro's production is as good as it could be - granted the aforemendon~t tioned lackluster script. You can see its attempt at humor, only it never reaches it. When a director chooses the show, it's a given that women will domi- numerous nuns litter the stage. nate the stage. These five women The actresses don't carry the work well together. They glow numbers, lacking projection and when they sing harmonies and act ability. However, Guisinger and off of each other wonderfully.

The script is not funny, the songs aren't memorable, and the characters have enough depth.

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Marrs manage the stage beautifully in their lonesome moments. Guisinger's "Playing Second Fiddle" is bouncy and comprehensible. Marrs' character is curiously lovable throughout, and her ballad "I Could've Gone to Nashville" has th~ perfect mix of joy and regret. The environment is simple and makes for a good time at intermission. The audience is invited to play games and walk the cake walk. The production team has fun with this musical, but it's not completely translated to the audience. Nun/penguin jokes almost sounds more appealing. Nunsense plays through Nov. 15. Call (303) 556-3033.

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November 13, 1998 The Metropolitan

11

By Nick Garner Photograph by John Swift

W

alking under a lad-. der, a black cat crossing your path, breaking a mirror, and getting seven years of bad luck are not the only common superstitions. For athletes, superstitions are a part of the game. Some athletes wear the same shorts under their basketball shorts. Some baseball players wear the same shirt underneath their unifonns. Metro athletes, from volleyball to men's soccer, have their own type of superstitions. They range from the way they dress, to eating a certain kind of food, to even sitting in the same place before each game. Even the guys in the public relations office in Metro's Athletics Department have a superstition going on with one of the volleyball coaches. "Every game we bring a different kind of candy to the scores table," said Adam Dunivan, Metro freshman . "For a couple of games, we would have Starbursts at the table for Liz (Armbrustmacher). When the team lost, we had to change candy. Now the candy of choice is Skittles."

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Head coach Mike Power: "I carry this cross in my pocket every game. There have been times that if I have forgotten the cross, I will drive home and get it. In the games that I have not had the cross on me, my teams have gone something like 1-5."

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Assistant coach Amy Bourcy: "I will never eat until I get lo the gym because I'm so nervous . When I get to the gym, I eat all kinds of junk food like M&M's, Snickers, and I drink a lot of Coke too." Assistant coach Farrah Magee: "I would wear the same socks, eat the same thing, take my vitamins before coach (Darryl) Smith would speak. I would stand in the same place during the national anthem, took the same cough drops whenever I was sick, and I would take off my wann-up suit at the same time." Assistant coach Kristi Baxter: "During the national anthem, I would look at the same star (on the flag) every time, the fourth from the left hand corner." Junior guard Stephanie Allen: "I always sit in the same place, pray at the same time, wear the same socks, and visualize what I'm going to do in the game. I always seem to be goofing off in the locker room, like telling jokes and

stuff like that to get the team loose before the start of the game." Senior center Shilo Tiritas: "I sit in the locker room and I have my thumb away from my face and my eyes follow my thumb as it is making figure eights. My mom told me that if you do that, you work both sides of your brain and it helps you to think better on the court."

VOLLEYBALL Head coach Joan McDermott: " I have the coaches sit in the same place, eat at the same time, always wann-up as a team. I will always wear one of the players ' lucky rings and another one's warm-up jacket. This season the girls light a candle before every game. We were not doing well at the start of the season, so when we went to Chadron State, we tried to do something different and we lit a candle and we won that night and we have been winning ever since."

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Senior outside hitter Amy Buchanan: "I have to put on my right sock first, then my left sock, then my right shoe, then my left shoe. I wear the same tie for every game. If our game is a home match, I always have a Turkey and Provolone sandwich from The Mere." Senior outside hitter Audra Littou: "I have not been really superstitious in a long time. When I was at Glendale (Community College) I would wann up the same way, put my shoes and knee pads on the left side then the right. I would park in the same place on gairiedays. It was strange that nobody, while I was at Glendale, would park in that place." Junior middle blocker Chris Brink: "I always wann-up the same, do the same stretches, starting with my right side, then the left. Like if I was starting off stretching my anns, I would stretch the right ann first then the left ann. I wear the same hairdo for every game."

Jessica Lee, a Metro freshman, carries the good-luck candle that the womens vollyball team lights before every game. the game and the second half, I have to have a half-cup of water, since I know that I won 't be drinking much water during the game. "The girls have their own superstition. We would wear our white jerseys at home, then we lost to Mesa State, and we changed to the red. After the loss to Colorado Christian, we went back to the white ones."

WOMEN'S SOCCER Head coach Ed Montojo: "I always put my right sock and shoe on first, then the left sock and shoe. I also always wear the same coach's shirt and jacket. If we have a Friday night game then a Sunday game, I will wash the shirt and jacket after the game on Sunday. Before the start of

Senior defender Marisa Burks: "I always have to have my legs shaved, wear the same sports bra, and when we wannup before the game, I have to be on the right side of the field and Kari (Pierce) has to be on the left side." Freshman defender/midfielder

...

Jennifer Kitano: "I have to have my ankles taped exactly an hour before the game, and it has to be the right ankle first and then the left one." Junior defender/midfielder Jodie Roberts: "I have to wear special socks and shirt before the game, I don't like to wear my game jersey while I wann-up. I also have to wear my polo socks, I don't like any other kind of socks." Junior midfielder/defender Jenelle Andrews: "I have to wear my socks with the logos on the outside of the my legs. Like if the socks have a Nike logo, the check has to be on the outside of my legs."

see SUPERSTITION on

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November 13, 1998

Finals, shopping, parties, finances ... Holiday demands have you stressed? Take a break ... let

Credit Union of Denver help lighten your load. Metro students who open an account with Credit Union of Denver before December 11, 1998 can enter a drawing for a chance to WIN a restaurant gift certificate and movie tickets valued at $100.00.

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November 13, 1998

Wachamacallit ensures luck -

13

MSCD Peer Educators Present

right before the game starts, not before I get to the field, but right before the game starts."

SUPERSTITIONS from 11

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The Metropolitan

Junior midfielder Kari Pierce: "I have to eat a 'Whatchamacallit" before every game and when the team goes into the huddle before the start of the game, I never go and join them."

Junior midfielder Vicki Chong: "When ever the national anthem-is playing, I always sing the New Zealand national anthem."

Sophomore defender Sam McLeod:

"I wear Santa Claus socks and chew my

Junior midfielder Ariana O'Neill: "I have to put my sleeves up and tape them so that they will stay up for the entire game."

green gum (Extra spearmint)."

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Senior goalkeeper Kelly Johannes: "I will never wear the yellow jersey again! I wore that when we lost to Colorado Christian so I'm not going to wear it again."

MEN'S SOCCER Head coach Brian Crookham: "I always listen to the same music (Led Zepplin, Jimi Hendrix and Red Rider), dress the same way, and I do the roster at the same time every game."

Freshman goalkeeper Jenny Fink: "Pam (DeLuca) has to be the last person during the pre-game warm-ups that 路 shoots on me."

Junior midfielder Jorge Mena: "Everyone on the team has something different that they do before the game. I never wear my game shirt or shorts when we are warming up before the game. When I get dressed, I start with the left side, then the right. Like I would put on my left sock, then left shoe then right sock, right shoe."

Sophomore midfielder Dawn Mitchell: "I only take three shoots before the game. I don't care if I make them all or miss them all, I just shoot three times." Senior midfielder Julie Ray: "I have to put my cleats on the grass. The rest of the team puts theirs on when they are on the track, but for some reason, I just can't do it." Freshman defender Jessica Westerberg: "I ialce off all of my jewelry

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Resbiction of food intake Depression Restriction of your food choices Weighing yoanelf frequently

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Time: IO:OOa.m. - 5:00p.m.

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Meet with your Jostens repiesentltive for full details. See our complete ring selection on display in your college bookstore. -CP-芦IHI)

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14

The Metropolitan

,.

,. it amo . . lt Tivoli 12 Theatres

November 13, 1998

THE Dl61TRL REUO.LUTION c.~

B/IBBR by PULSAR

STUDENTS

•SHOCK

$4.50

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Show your valid student I.D. SAVE to receive a di$count of $2 off $2 the adult admission of $6.50.

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Call (303) 790-4262 for show times and updated listings

•TEMPERATURE TOLERANT TO

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This is als~a fundraiser for The Aurarla Child Care Center (the non-profit daycare on the Auraria Campus)

Entry to the event Is a donation of one of the following:

Fine Jewelry & G ifts Diamonds & Precious Stones Expert Jewelry Repair

Teacher Education Books, Children's Books, Educational Computer Software, Markers, Children's Games, Or a cash donation

Tabor Center 1201 16th Street, #105 Denver, Colorado 80202 303-454-8475

which the center will put towards their new Teacher Resource Library

Thia event la open to everyone, we hope that you can comer Refreshments and snacks provide by Sigma Tau Delta

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November 3-21 Box locations: the OCPA, English Dept, ,._

Friday, Noyember 2 . 6:00 - s:oo p~m. Tivoli Student Bnion Room 32QA;.B, C CynthUl ~eS,ftl] "'·" •

Keynote Speaker:

LAS Office, Management Dept.,

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Political Science Dept., & Psychology Dept Boxes also available at Fall Induction

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November 20 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Tivoli Student Union 320 A, B, C

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For more i1!formatio11 contact: Dr. Lyn Wickelgren .'\03- 556- 302:-> lh". ,\lain Ranwcz 303- 556- 31!1 I

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For more i11f'or111atio11 co11/act:

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Judy George 3113-237-70.'I ur 30.~-.534-0.51 ~

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November 13, 1998

The Metropolitan

15

Soccer season sensational Women's team going to NCM's for the first time in school history 路 By Nick Gamer

Roadrunners bringing home two honors. Coach Montojo was named the RMAC Coach of the Year after leading Metro to For all of the people who have verbal- the programs best season ever, finishing ly doubted the Metro women's soccer the regular season with a 17-4-1 record. team throughout this season, prepare to eat The 9-4-1 record in the RMAC was good your words. enough for second place. The Roadrunners For the first time in history, are currently ranked 16th in the the Roadrunners were selected to nation. part1c1pate in the NCAA "I was kind of surprised Tournament after placing second that he (Montojo) was named," in the Rocky Mountain Athletic junior forward Pam DeLuca Conference Tournament held said. "Everyone had a good seaNov. 7-8. After 13 years of son but I'm happy that he won." coaching, head coach Ed Ready for dessert? Montojo will guide the Junior forward Kari Pierce Ed Montojo Roadrunners toward an NCAA was named the RMAC Player of title. The Roadrunners will travel the Year for her perfonnance to Grand Junction to face Mesa State in the throughout the season. Pierce, a dominatfirst round of the tournament. It will be the ing factor for the Roadrunners on offense fourth time this year the two teams have all season, scored 15 goals and dished out played each other. Metro has yet to defeat six assists for 36 total points. Mesa State, losing a 2-0 game for the Four Roadrunners were named to the RMAC title. RMAC first and second team rosters. But wait, don' t wipe your face yet, Selected to the first team All-RMAC was there's more. Kari Pierce and senior forward Arianna The RMAC released the end of the O'Neill while Kari's sister, Katie, was on season honors on Nov. 10 with the the second team along with junior defend-

The Metropolitan

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er Kathryn Cziuzas. Roadrunners on the season have out "Yeah I was surprised," Montojo said. scored the opposition 54-20 and out shot "I thought that it would have been one of them 430-198. In the three meetings with the girls from Mesa State, Tiffany Mesa State, Metro could only score two Thompson or Cheryl Bates." goals and were out shot by the Mavericks "Our nominee was Kari and I was 36-32. glad that everything worked out "We need to cash in on our that the coaches selected her," opportunities when we get Montojo said. "She is a complete them," Montojo said. "In the player, she can play offense and last two meetings with Mesa, defense, she can do it all." we had chances to score in the first half and go up early, but Metro defeated Colorado our shots would be wide of the Christian for the first time this season in the first round of the goal. "We need to take care of RMAC Tournament, 4-0. In the finals, the Roadrunners fell our chances, we would make a Kari Pierce mistake and they would capitalbehind early against Mesa State ize on it," Montojo said. "In the and lost to the Mavericks for the third time this season, 2-0. The last game with Mesa, we had the ball on Roadrunners are 0-3 against the Mavericks our side of the field and we made a bad this season, including the 2-0 loss in the pass and they intercepted it and Tiffany (Thompson) chipped the ball over Kelly's RMAC Championship game. In the three meetings between the two (Johannes) head for a goal." teams this season, Mesa State scored the If the Roadrunners get past Mesa first goal in all of the three meetings. The State, they will face the winner of the explosive offense Metro had during the Somona State-California State University, season has been shutout only twice, both Domingez Hills game in the quarterfinal times coming against Mesa State. The game.

Ready to prove a point Metro women don't agree with coach's preseason poll By Kyle Ringo The Metropolitan

Pardon Gabi Sandoval for being hacked off and excuse Stephanie Allen for her smirk. Sandoval and Allen, both guards on Metro's women's basketball team, are trying to figure out how the coaches in the Roc~y Mountain Athletic Conference have reached the conclusion that this year's Metro team is not capable of winning its second consecutive conference championship. "It really pisses me off," Sandoval said. "But I guess we're the underdogs now and we'll just have to prove them wrong." The source of Sandoval's contempt and the butt of Allen's jokes is in black and white and staring them in the face. It's the preseason RMAC coaches poll, which didn't give the Roadrunners a single firstplace vote and has them rated fourth overall and third in the East Division. Coaches were not

allowed to vote for their own teams. "I just laugh at it," Allen said. "I think it's funny. "It makes us want to work harder. Every year I've been here, we've worked our way up there anyway." There seems to be little to justify such a juxtaposition in respect from the end of one season to the beginning of the next. But here is what Allen, Sandoval and other Roadrunners believe RMAC coaches are thinking: Coach Darryl Smith, 1997-98 RMAC Coach of the Year, left Metro after last season to take the head coaching position at Wichita State. Smith never had a losing season at Metro, and the coaches obviously feel he was responsible for the Roadrunners' success, which is half-right in Allen's and Sandoval's eyes. Metro lost five seniors from last season's team, including RMAC Player of the Year Farrah Magee and the stellar-shooting

Kristi Baxter. The other three seniors played sparingly. Coaches don't know what to expect from new coach Mike Power who takes over for Smith after coaching at Briar Cliff College in Iowa the past six years. Sure, if you stop right there, maybe the coaches have a point. But that is really only half the story. Here is what Allen and Sandoval think the coaches are forgetting. Smith said before leaving that if everyone stayed put and his recruits came to Metro despite him leaving, it would be the greatest collection of talent in the women's basketball program's short but storied history. Everyone is back except Nicole Davis who redshirted last season. While losing Magee and Baxter is big, 路Metro has gained two-fold at both positions. Shilo Tiritas is back to play post where Magee was so successful. Tiritas missed last season because she was

see WOMEN on 16

Kell McWhirtu/1he Metropolitan

Returning starter DanieUe Stott practices her shooting during a recent Roadrunner practice. Metro is picked to finish fourth in the RMAC preseason coach's poll.


16

The Metropolitan

November

13, 1998

Women shooting for title ·WOMEN from 15

pregnant with her son, Justice. She also married former Metro men's basketball player Chris Tiritas. Shilo Tiritas was arguably the best player on Metro's team two years ago when her name was Shilo Justice. Smith managed to steal senior Timmi-Jo Miller away from the University of Southern Colorado before departing. Miller was second all-time in scoring at USC and an All-conference selection in her first two years. Smith recruited Sarah Coleman to fill Baxter's role as an outside scoring threat. Coleman came to Metro from Umpqua Community College in California where she averaged 18 points per game, and Sandoval, who is a defensive force and also shoots well, will play

more because Baxter is gone. And last but not least in the argument against the coaches is Smith's replacement. Mike Power, whose system and approach to the game is without doubt mor~ aggressive than Smith's style, which tormented those same RMAC coaches. Power has slipped in without any of the Roadrunners missing a beat. His credential's speak for themselves. He won 68 of his final 73 games at Briar Cliff and his team was in the hunt for the NAIA national championship in his final two years. Case closed. Regardless of what coaches think and the player's rebuttal, Allen, Sandoval and the rest of the defending champion Roadrunners know they will have to prove everything on the court.

'

"We've got a lot of new people, and we just have to get into a rhythm," Sandoval said. Whether his players are amused or disgusted doesn't bother Power. He is enjoying the part he has been cast in. "I kind of relish this role," Power said. "I've been the king of the hill for the last few years." Power-ball is similar to what the Denver Nuggets played when Paul Westhead was the coach. It is run-and-gun basketball with no stopping or walking to catch your breath. It's full-court, trapping defense and taking as many shots as possible. Power's teams at Briar Cliff attempted more than 100 shots in a single game numerous times and opponents averaged 30 turnovers per game in his final season. But in order to implement Power-ball to its maximum potential, coach Power needs more healthy bodies. Only two of 14 athletes are 100 percent healthy heading into this season, which begins at Auraria Events Center on Nov. 13 at 8 p.m., when Metro hosts the University of California-Davis in the first round of the Roadrunner Classic tournament.

"Literally, this is the strangest thing I have seen in my life," Power said. "We have seven girls sitting and watching practice." The list of players and their varying injuries is extensive. Four will miss the entire season. Post player Heidi Lake is not injured but will redshirt this season because she is pregnant. Tonia Carrillo has a dislocated elbow; walk-on Soon Kim and transfer Becky Maclennan also will redshirt because of injuries. Other injuries range from the screw that must be removed from junior forward Kristen Weidler's knee to stress fractures and bulging discs that other players are dealing with. Power just wants to get through the first six games of the season, four of which are against top-25 opponents. "If we get through that stretch .500, I think that would be great," Power said. "If we were unblemished, it would be a minor miracle. . "We are playing with one hand behind our backs right now." As far as Allen and Sandoval are concerned, onehanded or not, the Roadrunners aren't the fourth best team in the RMAC.

'It really pisses me off •.• But I guess we're the underdogs now and we'll just have to prove them wrong.'

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November 13, 1998

The Nietropolitan

17

Metro shares title, RMAC next, By Tom Viskocil The Metropolitan

f

The Metro women's volleyball team put its name on one piece of school history. Now the Roadrunners are looking to fill a page. Metro finished the regular season Nov. 7 with a four-game win over Nebraska-Kearney, securing its first ever Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship. The Roadrunners ended the regular season with a 17-2 record, sharing the title with Regis and Colorado Christian. It marks the first conference championship since 1993 when Metro won the Colorado Athletic Conference championship. 路 "The players understand what they've accomplished but they want more," coach Joan McDermott said. Thatjob will begin Nov. 13 when the

Roadrunners take their No. 3 seed into the RMAC Tournament. Metro will face Western State in a 1 p.m. match. If they win, they'll face the No. 2 seeded Colorado Christian Cougars in a 5:30 p.m. match. Colorado Christian has beaten Metro in the two meetings this year but

McDermott feels if the Roadrunners can change their mind set, a victory is attainable. "We have to go into the match like we do against Regis," she said. "We need to get over this mental hump, stay focused and execute under pressure." Regis is ranked second in the nation

RMAC Volleyball Tournament

Fall 1998

Friday November 13: 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 5:30 p.~. 7:30 p.m.

Metro vs. Western Sl Nebraska vs. Mesa St. 1 p.m. winner vs. Colo. Christian 3 p.m. winner vs. Regis

Saturday November 14: 5:30 p.m.

3rd place final

7:30 p.m.

1st place final

Modest motivation fuels Metro volleyball team By David Proviano The Metropolitan Not just another transfer student, Chris Brink is a key motivator for Metro's wt>men's volleyball team. Although Brink denies it, last December she posted a motivational sign for the team that teammates say has worked, said volleyball coach Joan McDermott. "It was put up early in the Spring," McDermott said. "I left the sign up for awhile. It inspired and motivated us to get better and it carried over until this year." "She posted a sign and gave it to all the players," said Kenni Swan, an outside hitter for the team. "It, had a saying about success and the national tournament." Brink knows a little about national tournaments. As a freshman at the University of.Nebraska-Omaha, she scored the final point of the championship game to help her team win the national title. "Under pressure she's a person that can be a leader ... she's new to the team and already she has been voted one of the captains," McDermott said. "Chris has made a big difference on the team. She can put the ball down with authority. She's very intense and plays with a lot of passion ." /J. middle blocker for the team, Brink is a junior majoring in Public Relations. Two years ago, she was a personal pick of McDermott when she coached for Morningside College. McDermott tried to recruit her out of Tracy-Milroy high school in Minnesota where she was an all-state selection in both volleyball and basketball. Brink rejected the offer to Morningside and went to the University of Nebraska at Omaha instead. However, even with a national title under her belt, a dislike for the college and the fact that McDermott was now coaching at Metro led to her to transfer here. Her coach in Nebraska refused to release her to a college in the same conference. She did however allow her to transfer to Metro.

John Swift/The Metropolitan

Chris Brink brings a powerful swing and a championship ring with her to the Metro volleyball team. McDermott said Brink contacted her, visited the college two days later then was in Denver a week after that. "Maybe it's fate that we're together again," Brink said. "She's the most dedicated player," said Kenni Swan, outside hitter for the team. "She'll go until she can't go further. Since the first day, she was very vocal, always yelling and encouraging the team."

but Metro has beaten them both tiirtes in the regular season. Metro is ranked 14th nationally and third in the Southwest Region. Four teams from that region will receive bids to the NCAA Regional Championships Nov. 2021. Metro was seeded third in the RMAC Tournament because its overall record was worse than Regis and Colorado Christian. But when it comes to receiving bids to the Regional Tournament, a tough schedule will help teams. Metro has had one of the toughest schedules in the nation, playing. 10 matches against teams that were nationally ranked at some time in the season. This is why Metro could conceivably place third in the RMAC Tournament and still get a bid to regionals. Metro is currently riding a six-match winning streak and has won 20 of its last 23 matches.

Wait until next year It comes full circle... All too quickly it comes to a close. Two weeks of preseason. Three months of daily training. Twenty games. Countless hours of pla~ning and preparation. What a season. It started last November l, 1997, the day of our last game of the season. 1997 was a bitter disappointment. A Brian Crook.ham young team with a lot of potential had COACH'S CORNER fallen victim to a lack of maturity, lack of field, and most of all a lack pf confidence. It was not time to make excuses, but to figure out how to get it done. A change of style of play,_a change in some personnel, but most of all it was about making a commitment to doing whatever it takes to be successfull both on and off the field. Seven new players were on our roster in the fall. Preseason was intense and there was truly competition for most of the spots on the field. We were more talented than we had been in the three-plus years I have been here. We needed to be. Our schedule was the toughest we have ever seen. Nine of our 19 regular season games would be' against opponents who would be ranked in the top 25. Playing for the regular season conference championship, this is what we set out to do nine months ago. A great shot in overtime won the championship for Ft. Lewis and gave us the number three seed in the post season tournament. It was a disappointing loss that would pair us with CUColorado Springs who we had beaten a week earlier. Back to Durango we went. After the coaches meeting on Friday night we stepped out into a heavy snowstorm. The worse the field conditions, the better off Colorado Springs would be. After plowing 4 inches of snow off the field, UCCS scores early and we were lucky to make it to halftime with the score still 1-0. It was not until they made it 2-0 that we decided to play. We took control at the end and had many opportunities, but it was too little, too late. A 2-1 loss ended the season. The team matured throughout the season, and there were many positives. A 12-8 record. It is the second most wins the program has had since moving to Division II in 1985. We are _ a constant in the top ten in the region. We only lose two starters. Things are moving in the right direction. In the end, though, we are still 8 losses away from where we want to be. It's time to take a deep look, a deep breath, and get started. Next fall's success starts now.


.. 18

The Metropolitan

November 13, 1998.

GENERAL

ONGOING

12 Step Meetings on Campus - AA Meetings will be held on Tuesdays, 12:301:30 pm in the Auraria Library, Rm 205. The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop drinking. For more information, contact Billi at the Student Health Center, (303)556-2525.

Mad About You! - Have you been involved in relationships that have not worked for you? This group is designed to help you identify relationship patterns, and to offer suggestions for changing if there is a need. Please schedule an appointment with one of the facilitators prior to attending this group. Meetings are Tuesdays, Sept. 29 - Nov. 24 from 3:304:50pm in Tivoli #651 . Call (303)5563132 for appointment.

MSCD Student Government Meeting Get involved with student government every Thursday, 3:30-5:30 p.m. in the Senate Chambers, Tivoli #329. For more information, call (303)556-3312. Truth Bible Study - Join the Truth Bible Study every Wednesday and Thursday from 3:00-5:00p.m. in Tivoli #542. Come and go as needed. For more information, call the Menorah Ministries at (303)3552009.

The Four Seasons: Contemporary Japanese Textiles - An exhibition of contemporary fiber art from Japan through the auspices of the Asian Art Coordinating Council and Kokusai Art. This fascinating exhibit is at the MET Center for the Visuals Arts, 1734 Wazee St. October 23 December 15. For more information, call (303)294-5207.

FRI. NOVEMBER

13

Nunsense - A musical comedy by Dan Goggin is being performed in the Arts Building Rm 271 Nov. 13 - 14 at 7:30 p.m. and at 2:30 p.m. on Nov. 15. For reservations, call (303)556-3033.

MON. NOVEMBER

16

What is the Meaning of This?: Everyday Language and Prejudice Have you ever been challenged about your use of certain words or phrases? You may be surprised how many commonly used words and phrases in the U.S. version of the English language are rooted in racism, anti-Semitism, ageism, sexism, etc. Join in this discussion on Monday, Nov. 16 at 12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. in Tivoli #6-51. For more information , call Jose at (303)5563132.

TUES. NOVEMBER

17

Land of "Os" - Part two of the video "A Tale of 'O'". It sensitizes us to the myriad of diversity issues that impact our outlooks, perspectives, decisions, and lifestyles. Discu!ision will center on some of the dynamics that take place when we are surrounded by differences in habits, customs, values, and practices. Join Paul Lam, M.A. & Gail Bruce-Sanford, Ph.D., from 3:00 - 4:30 P.M. in Tivoli #442. For more info., call Jose at (303)556-3132.

WED. NOVEMBER

18

Bias-Free Communication - This miniworkshop will provide opportunity for exploring our biases in communicating with others. We will examine issues of bias in gender, age, ability, and others. Don Sugar, Psy.D. & Gail Bruce-Sanford, Ph.D. will lead this workshop from 2:00 3:30 P.M. in Tivoli #651.

Apply for an MSCD Student Award Each year, The Metropolitan State College of Denver honors graduating seniors who are shining examples of academic and personal achievement. .. ..-... -pplications is Friday, February 5, 1999.

• Student Leadership Award

• Ou tending Students At-Large

• Special Service Award from Academic Affairs

Presentation, and/or Publications

• Special Service Aw<:Jrd from Student Services

o Academic Achievement wi Ji' College and-Community Service

• American Association ' of University Women AWr;J

0 Academic Achievement under

r

1

• 9utstanding Student from E ·

Challenging Circunfstances

-~ •President' <'Award

Additionally, each year, juniors and seniors are recognired r their outstanding academic and personal achievments through the fo owing:

Who's Who Among Stude ts-.1n-AmeriCQn Universities and Colleges Award The deadline for~ completed application

/ The criteria for the above awards is incly/ed on the application form, available in the office of your major department. See above for due dates. For more information on any of these- awards, please call the MSCD Office of Student Life, (303) 556-3559, or your major department.

We want you to shine!


CLASSIFllD CLASSIFIED INFO Classified ads 'are 5¢ per word for students currently enroll~d at The Metropolitan State College of Denver. For all others· 15¢ per word. Maximum length for all classified ads is 30 words. Classified ads must be prepaid. We now accept Mastercard and Visa. The deadline for classified ads is Friday al 5:00 p.m. Call 556-8361 for more information.

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SERVICES WANT TO GET IN SHAPE? -AWARD Winning instrl.!ctor offers classes combining weight training, calisthenics and stretches. $5/class. All equipment provided. Eves. and Sat. in SW Denver. Leonore Dvorkin, (303)985-2327. 12/4 FOREIGN LANGUAGE- TUTOR Tutoring elementary I intermediate Spanish and French, all levels German. 10 years of experience, 2 B.A. 's. On Auraria Campus Mon.-Thurs. by appointment. Reasonable rates. Leonore Q.vorkin (303)985-2327. 12/4

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