Volume 29, Issue 5 - Sept. 14, 2006

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Metro Statevaluesthe opinionsof our studentsregardingtechnology and technologyservices.Help shapethe future of technologyat the Collegeby participatingin this online survey. Check your MetroConnecte-mail for a messagefrom PresidentStephen Jordan and your link to the Metro State Technology Survey! Survey closes at 5 p.m. on Sept.21,2006.

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PilZElSI Everyonewho submits a completed survey including their Metro State e-mail address by the deadline will receive a chance to win one of a variety of prizes. . Video iPod . one-gigabyte USB pocket drives . Auraria Bookstoregift certificates

Take the Metro State Technology Survey-

your opinion counts!

This hessage brought to you by lhe Metropolitan State College of Oenver Technofogy Initiatives Committee. A report of survey results will be made available at a later date. Check Metroconnect for more information.

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is with jihadists who use terrorist methodsto fight wars. Arnerica is faced with a new kind of war and new strategiesare neededbecause traditiona.l,conventionalwarfareurill not be suc' cessflrl. "The most effectiveproceduresare clandestine fufiltration of cells, anticipation of operaBy David Pollan tionsandthe terminationof plottersandplots," dpollan@nscd.erlu Hart said. Hart called upon the use of SWAI teams FormerColoradoSen.GaryHart denounced U.S.foreigl poliry ard t}tecoultry'sresponse to and specialoperationsforcesto fight jihadists. the attacks of Sept. 11 as he adrlresseda group The fighters needto be a mix of police officers of peopleon tle event'sfive-yearanniversary ir and reguiar soldiers, said Hart, notirg that when fighling homegrownterrorists - u'hether the King CenterRecitalHall. on chalges right-wing militia, radical animai-rightsgroups Hart alsoprovidedsuggestions in foreign poliry *'ays to defeatjihadists wrth- or clinicbombers- policeand larv-enforcement areused. out using traditional warfare and discussedthe agencies "Suppressionand eliminationof jihadist nation'ssafetyfive yearslater. Hart begaat}re lectureby tackiing the issue cells much more resembles1aw en-forcement of official accountabilityfor the Sept.11attacks. than traditronalwarfare,"he said. r odiub0ld@m(d.edu Photo 0ilJboldo byAdrion The9/11Conmissiononlytentativelyaddressed ond(ommunity Developmenl ondTimWirth(hoirfor[nvironmenlol Newly oppoinled Scholor-ln-Residence the questionof how the attacks could have oc- The ongoing wars public "9,/l 0n"Sepl. fothe entitled l: FiveYeors Sen. Horlgoveospeech otGSPA ondlormer Gory The currentadmhistration hasusedthe war Policy curred,Hart said. ondfie disreslion Accordingto Hart, the failure was a lack of on teror to carq/ out otheragendasthat existeil ll infte King[enlerRecilol oboilfte currenl odminiskolion, Holl.Hespoke moinly responseto warnings of an inmi:rent attack. A longbeforethe attacksof Sept.11,Hart said. if hosexcercised sinte 2001. The UnitedStateswagedwar in Afgbadstan committeethat Hart co-chaired,the U.S. Com' mission on National Security for the 21"1Cen' directly {ollowhg the Sept.ll attacks. The pur- is not the numberkilled, but rather t}te number coupleof motives,Hart said.Onewastfie useof America:rworld powerto create,as Hart called with vrhohavebeenwoundedald killed in combat. tury predicted a major terrorist attack in the poseof the war was to terminate a1-Qaida 'This conflict miscalculationis one of the it, a unitary presidenry.In otherwords, creatilg UnitedStatesandissuerla warnilg to the White plannedattacks,destroyingtheir bases,training groundsald leailership. worstil U.S.history' he said."It turneda quick a presidencyof exfaordinary ald supra-constiHouseeight monthsprior to Sept.11. "This vacuumof accountabilityfor Sept. 11 According to Hart, Americals and fellow military action into an occupation nightrnare tutional authority.The otler motivewasto make Iraq a permanentpolitical and military basefor end.' remafusa dark shadowof an even darker dav." membersof the giobal communityagreedwittr with no foreseeable Hart pointedout that supportersof the war the United States. The president has advisers the i:rvasio:rof Afghanistanas a legitirnateald he said. and membersof his cabinetwho were part of a argue that t}te overthrow of governmentstlnt rationalizedretaliation. However,the war i:r Afghanistal wasquickly harbor tenorists is critica-lto w-inningthe war committeeto overthrowHusseinin the past,and Fightingthe jihaatists The attacks of Sept. 11, accordingto Hart, forgottenwhen the UnitedStatesbegal waging on terror. If that were true, he said, the United now tlrat ttrey were in power,they made their were not a:r act of war, but a crime conmitted war ir Iraq to overtlrow t}te regimeof Sadda:n Stateswould then have to invadea host of na- dreaminto a reality. Hart also disagreedwith a continuedAmeriagailst the Americanpeople.His reasonilg was Husseh. The Bush admi:ristrationusedthe at- tions wherejihadists are located,someof which that by definition a war is betweentwo or more tacks of 9/11 to gai:: supportfor the war in Iraq, are Americanallies.Accordingto Hart, al'Qaida canoccupationof Iraq, slairning tlat it only fuels nations with uniformed soldiers. The Geneva Hart said. 0ffrcials claimed Iraq had weapons leadershipis principallylocatedil Saudifuabia, terrorists and puts the United Statesat geater Conventionwas set up to civilize war, and the of massilestructionaad that tlere was a direct Pakista:ra:rd Erypt, not lraq. He also said Eu- risk to an atlack. Lr regardsto AmericanoccuIink betweenHusseinand the attacks on Ameri- rope is now the strongholdfor jihadists, not the pation, Hart said the nearly $500 rnillion spent barbaricattacks violatedthe convention. 'Jihadistshavea religiousard not a political can soil. It has sincebeenileterminedthere was Middle East. on military andreconstructioncoststo build gar'They "Il simpleterms, doctriles ald instruments risons tlroughout Iraq and a 120-acreforhess agenrla,'he said. representno state,wear no comectionbetweenHusseinald Sept.11. Meanwhile,Hart said, "the real war agahst of traclitionalwarfarewill not defeatthe jihadist in downtownBaghdad,couidbe better spenton no uniforms, attack civilian targets indiscdmi threat to the United States,' Hart said. "In fact, the Americal peoplefor things such as health nateh seekto kill as maly non'combatalts as the jihad in Afghadstar is far from over." possibleand make no demalils for territory or The war in Iraq has quickly becomea con- our voluntary war and continuedoccupationof careand education. -The Iraqi insurgencywill continueas Iong possessions." flict with ildigenous ilsurgents who hold anti- Iraq fuelsterrorism." The Iraq ilvasion was a strategic moveby as Anerican military forcesare there,' he said. Accordingto Hart, tley should not be con- America:rsentiments.He said it has escalated sideredwarriors, but ratler faratical religious to a prolongedald bloody occupation,one in t}te Americangovernmentto form a stronghold zealotswho engagein crininal sabotage.Hart which there havebeen20,000Americancasual- in the Middle East,he said. A pre-emptivestrike of Iraq wasbackedby a Sec llf,ffI Page I said it must be kept in mind that tle conflict ties, and noted that his definition of casualties

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Melro'sfinesl honors Breokfo$ Professors, staffand administratorsreceive awardsfor dedication Byfoellguye4 ryryeioc@nrcd.cdu Fron adnrinishatorsto stuclents,members fron all segrnentsof Metro's communitygatleredin the King Centerfor tle Presitlent'sWel-. comeBack BrealCaston Weclnesday, Sept.6. - The reception consisted of brealCast and ad<lressesfrom President StephenJordan and Provost RodolfoRocha followed by an awards ceremony. Facnlty memben Mohanned Akacam,Zra Meranto, Dorothy Snozek,staff rrember Mary All Bacaand adninistrator JefferyW. Johnson were recipients of tle Distinguished Service aq'ards.The award winnerswere nominatedby ttreir peers. " (Ihe award) gles tlat exha eners/ to keep going,'Akacen said. 'It valiilates vrftat you are doing." Other award wimers incluiled Anit Rao, Kamran Salami and Jean Ethredge, who receivedthe Faculty SenateExcellencein Teaching awards. Diame f,a:rison Miller, Cynthia Vamucci, fulene Sgoutasand Sham Worthy receivedtle GoldenIGy lnternational Honour Societyawards. Moretlan 200 fnll-time employdesreceived serviceawards)Amongtle recipientswere English professorsSandra Doe and Ed lpw who havebeenteaciringat Metro for 40 years. "Longevityand dedicationis very important to the college,'Jordansaid. In addition to tieir recognition,the awarrl qdnnersreceiveda tarable monetaryaward. Tt is the conmitorent aad passionof both new andrehuriug faculty,which will help shape the new vision of the college,'Rochasaid. Jordansaid in bis addresstiat last year the Board of tustees gave him the job of leading Metro to becometle preeminent public urbal baccalaureatecollegein the nation. "Ib help achievettris vision," he sai4 'I laid

out a tfuee-phaseplan of stabilization,growth and investment,and assessnent. Now, in the secondyear of stabilization,I am pleaseilwitl tfie successwe havealreadyattainedin stabilizing the collegeacademicallyaad financially." He said tlat $3.3 million was spent on improving classroomequipmentald faculty computers and that a racially diverse group.of 62 firll-time tenuredand tenure-trackfaculty,were adderlat the start of tlris semester. "This spring we developeila major facultysalary initiative tlat demonsbatesthe value of faculty promotionmore so tlan any other institution in tle statb, ;ncluding CU-Boulder,"Jordan said. He said he is working for Metro to achieve status as a Ilispanic Serving Institution. This federal designatiotrbrings resources,but requires an instifution to haveat ieast 25 percent of its full-time studentsbe Hispanic,a requirenent that six otler Coloradocollegeshavem.et. Cunently Metro hashdf tlat. iDoes tlris meirn \i'e clont serve other students?Of coursenot," he said."But it doesmean that we intend to be the four-yearinsbfution of choicefor the fastest-growingpopulationin the m.etroarea." seven-count5r He said that despitethe school'snumberof academicand cultural assets,Metrolspublicinageis lacking. "(Metro) is perceivedas a second-chance, last-hopeinstihrtion," he said. "It's clear that if we don't tale ch4rgeand build on Metro State'sknown assets,we'll bave to adhereto a one-size-fits-allapproachdeveiopedat the federallevel." Among ttre changeswere an editorial a:rd graphics guide to create'campus-wideconsistency a modifierllogo to te revealedlater this semester, a:rd a new slogan: "Metro State: WhereSuccessBeginsWitl You." "In or<lerfor our students to achievesuccess,it doesbeginwitl you," he said. 'Whether you are fuculty, staff, student, administratoror alumni,we all mntnbute." "It's time for a culture shift ... we must assumepricle And tlemonstrateleadershipand change,"he said.

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hisremorks totfiesorldd fte hesidenl Jock }|l|iegives filetrc Presidenl Stephen Jordon looks onmSGA Recitul Holl. Welcome Bock Breokfosl Sept. 6intheffngCenler Presidenils

impocl 0nsfudent woste, includes minimizing Prinlod solufion Eylodc Xtcndcr jHcnaic@nscd.du The hint SolutionsCommitteeat Meto is working toward finiting paper waste in Meto ' computerl,absand hopesto reach i resolution by the end of the spring 2007 senester,according to GeorgeMidcllenist chief information offcer aadvice presidentof InformationTbc,hnologies at Metro. the committeeis collectingdatato aid tlea decision@ using a progran tlat monitors the number of printouts nade $ each student, as well as an IT open surueyonline at MehoConnect to all studentsand faculty. Middlenist said that ttre goal is to not impact sh.rdentsnegatively,but to determinea reasonablelimit on tle number of pagesthe average studentneetlsto print. "If tley have an academicneed to print pages,they shouldbe ableto print thosepages,' he said.

SGA conmittee nembers subnitted a recommendationletter to tle chair of tle Print Solutions Committeeon Aug. 1, 2006, which said that ttreywould like to seetlte smallestpossible a:nount of students to be allected by tle new printing solution. . A:nrcngtle concernsabout printing Midcllenist said that one is ttre "green effect," or amountof wastethat is tossedin recyciingbins ald trashcansin the labs. Accordingto aJune 22,2006 article in The Mehopolita:r, 76 percent of students using Metro labs printed betweenone and 99 pages per semester,and 10 percentof studentsprinted more than 400 pages. BetweenJan. 1, 2006, and April 26,2N6,350 studentsprinted more tlan 1000pages,40 studentsprintetl moretlan 2,000 pages,and one studentprinted a total of 2L,962pages. The Print Solutions Conmittee began dis' cussinghowto minimizetle wasteand erploitation of printing in the labs in June 2006. Since

then, the Iab Advisory Committeea::dttre Technologr Initiatives Conmittee, botl rnadeup of students,fafirity and staff, have been worting with the Meto StudentGovemmentAssembly's IT Connittee to reach a solutiontiat doesnot imposeon students. The SGA committee recommendedtlat a limit of 750 pagesper student per semesterbe set,with no penaltyimposedduringtlte first semester of the implenent, after which a charge would be appliedfor everypageovertlat linit. F,quitrac,softwarethat monitors lai printing, hes lssa active since January2006, Middlenist said. When a student prints an excess of 750 pages,they will be givena fom to filI out stating tleir major and why they need to print more pages. Currently, tlere is no charge for prhting any amountof black andwhite pages.

by working witl faculty as well bs studentsto lower print waste," Lopezsaid. The letter to tle Print SolutionsConmittee also suggeststtrat anyprofit nade fron tle overagechargesbe donatedto a causetlat he$s ttre environment'so sfurlentsilon't feel like tley are havinganotherfee imposedon ttren in order to punishthem, or nake tle collegeand the IT departnent a profit." SGASenatorAnrbewBaternansaidttre committeewas discussingusingmoneycollectedfor . thesechargesbe usedto buy vendingnachines that sell disks and drivesin the conputer labs. 'They were talking about using this money to buy moreways to make more money,"Bateman said. 'I am not okaywith tlat." Midrllenrist agreed. "lhat's not somettring I would support," he said. "I dont tlhk we

AnottrerSGAcommittee nenbet Carlos will nakea lot ofnoneyoffofit.' Hesaidtlat Lopez,saiilthe com:nittee is askingIT to work tlough it wasanideabroughtupin tle prelifiit is not sonetling with facultyas well as sfuilentsto lowerprint narystagesof ttre process, waste.'Wearetryingto ask IT to beproactive anyoneis activelypu$uitrg.


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TeomAuroriowolksfor AIDS Eypdc Kcmaic ihlemaie@mrcd.cdu Motivationand remembrance wereamong tle key goalsof tle 19u amul AIDS Walk Colorado. Approximately 40rrolunteers fronr$e Auraria walk tean participated in ttreSept.10event Parkin Denver. at Cheesnan Mebo sophomore aad Aurariawalk team' memberHeatherHa*el-Kincaidsaidshewas gladto haveanAurariatearrto participate with and raiserl$135for tle cause.Shealso said tlere shouldbemortAIDSawareness. "I dont rhinkttrere'stoo muchsup'portfor it because a lot of peoplearefocusedonbreast cancer,'shesaid.iPeopleshonlddistributesupthn [ytlolylrcd. knil@rrdrdr portthrouglod all diseases." ' however, to getfanily, Shesaidit wasea.sy, (olorodo infirslilrc qd Mkhler, weoring numhr231,coms forthebeginning offie mce. Greg Runners AIDS runselfieirwokhes ondbroce olfie inogurol 'ndvidtok to supportttrefund-raisftienilsdndcocrorkers (olorc& fiom 250 leuns 0f lgthAnnrnl AIDS nolk rilh lherunmsfollordbyth ueoring numhr231,come inserond. ftip Hozeuki, Mdponh ing. orgonizoliors. theArruilo wlrorui*dmoney for$aleHIV/AIDS ondoqonimliom, induding mlktsorn buinesses lbam nenber JordanBair,a Meto sfudent lromColorodo Tou canseehorr the diseasebas changed,' gwernmentrepresentative, White CAREAcI. said she wants AIDS Menorial Quilt were also on ilisplay. Nancy Aesc,hlinann,a'Metro alunna and shetlai( noting tlat the crowil is nce Qlamic the quilt includedpanelstbat werr created to "leadfo example"andrais€$1000for next year'swall hopitrgto encourage othersto do by Auraria students,faculty and staff in 1990 cas€menrger for the CCDCenterfor Personal sincethe beginningof the eveut and avranoess in memoryof loved ones who were victims of Disabilities, has attentletl the went everyyeaf of tle diseasehas spreadto a wider vadety of tle sa.me. Mone5r raisedfton tle event,projectedto HMAIDS. Some patrons held back tears as sincetle event started in Deiwer.She said.ttre ppople. the diseasehas fallen backfron the p$lic bein thehundreds of ttrousads,will gotoward thry ningled through tle panelsof ttre quilt on event's attendancejnmFetl into the tlousantls eye in recent'years,lost to attention oa other ttre year White died ttre Colorado AIDSPrcjectand 30 otherHIV/ tle lawn. 'It iloes Billi Mavronatis-Jacobson, a healttr educa- diseaseslike breast-ihcer, she saftl One of tle panelswas in menory of $a:r AIDSorganizations acrossthe state,according 'White, a boy infecteil witl HMAIDS in f984 tor at Metro's Student Healt} Center,said she not get the federal ftrnding that it used to. Do to tle AIDSWalkColoratlo website.Tbamsstill haveutil the endof Septenber to keepraising tlrorg! a blood transfusionto treat his hemo- has attendedall but one of the 19 AIDS trIalk you go down Colfax and see big ads on AIDS philia. He bmught a new face to tle disease, Coloradoeventsand said that attenda:rceis not anymore?" mon€v. Eowever,Aescblimannsaid tlat participaAurariahastrienttretopfund- which much of tle American pubtc vas ipo- what it userlto be. In pastyears, In ttre early yeirs of the event,Mawomatis- tion has steadily increas€dover tle last few raisingcampus to participate. rant of at the time, when he fought for the right Alongwith the five-kilometer fund-raising to attend schoolafter he found out he was in- Jacobs0nsaid tlat pafticipants filled ttre entire years."Anil it needsto keepgrowing,"she sailL .walk-a-thon. Park, unbelievablecompared "More woman die ftom HIV thh breast canand tle inauguralfive-kiloneter fected.White diedat ttre ageof 13 in April 1990, iawn of Cheeseman groups, andtle nationalattentionsparkedhumanitaria:r witl tlis year'sattendance,whichwas relatively cer." run,tle eventoffered250participating sparseon walkers, nr.nnersandvolunteers. freemassagps Portionsofthe efforts and a federal program called the $a:r .mdrefreshments.

progroffi, benefits feltforced intoleorning hutsees Student tlat he was put in tlat late, but most of the studentshew in June." I,jax said he leamed tllat he had been sethe new Reece Leaming Comnunity has lected to be a part of tle com:nunitywhen he been problematiciir somerespectsaad helpfi:l registeredfor classes.He said he was told by in others,accordingto at least onestrdent. a student oounselortlat he had to speakwi& Aaron Ajax, 19, said he did not feel he had Skip Crownhart,anottrerclirectorof tle Reece a choicerihen he agreedto participate in the Leaning Cohnuiity. Ajax thoughthe bad no choicebut to be part leanring condunity's pilot progran. He is one of 100 new studentswho were recruitedto be a of tle lea:rringcommunityif hewishedto attenil part of the programcreatedto help stuclentsat classesat Metro, he said. While he was never risk of failing out of school. specificallytold tlat the programwas his only Ajax said that he ditlnt know the prognm option, he claims tlat he was also .nevertold was optionalwhen he becameinvolved. tlat he couldchoseto not participate Lindsey said tlat Ajax could have refused "That'snot true," saidJanellLinilsey,director of academicsuccessand one of tle directors andbeenplacedon academicprobationinstead. 'We rlid tell studentstllat it was optional,' of.ttreleamingconnunity.'Students.weregiven tle option to be or not be inclutled in the pro- she said. 'We sat with the stuilents and tolil gam." tlem what tle programwasand what would be The leaming comnunity was designedto expectedof tlem and sorie studentssaid, 'No, ' help sfudents through their fint semesterat I can't do tlat.' So he must have said'0K' at Meho arid continueto providesupportfor them sone point." 'It sounds like tlis is an anomaly," said ttrroughout tleir ,acaderric careers, Lindsey said. Catly Lucas, spokespersonfor'tle college.LuAjar was less tlan pleasedwitl the pr+ cas said ttrat it seemedlike Ajax hailnt untlergrun reten he startedstoodhow the programworkedwhenhe became "In tle begimhg I was angry about it be invobedcause I was tlrown into ttre pnogrun witlout Ajax believeshe was selectedfor ttre learn- . weu knowing,' he explained.Ajax saidhe didn't ing comnunity becauseof poor gradesin high know he bad been chosento participatein the school prognm until two daysbeforecl,assstarted. "I applied at Meho State and th€V put ne 'Stullents were beingput in all tbrougfuthe in rtrat's called the student successprogram," surnner," said Lindsey."It couldhave'happened Ajax said."Itls like acadenicprobation.' Dy lllisol [aile1 abailet9@uscd.edu

Accordingto Lindsey,the leardng community is not a:r academicprobationaryprogran or a programfor remedi,l students.HoweverLindseysaid, studentswit! an academicinilex of 85 and abovewere not eligible to ta.kepart in the learning comnunity. An acadenricindexis ta.kenfrom a student's high schoolGPAandtleir SAI score.Accordirg to Daniel Parks at the Metro State adnissions office, tle averageindex at Metro in 2004 and 2005was 93. Studentswho havean index of 76 to 85 car be provisionallyadmittedto Metro,but their casemust be reviewedby a committeeanh if tley are adnitted tley are usually placedon academicprobation. The Reecekarning Conmunity puts studentsin snaller classesthat are pairedtogether. The cl,assesbave a shared syllabusso that studentsapply to one classthe skills that they learnedin tle otler class. The program is divided into fve groups of 20 studentstlat take classestogettrerwith ttre intention of makingtlem part of a con:gunity. All students involved in the program mrst sip a contact that details tle expectations they must meet.If tley do not me6ttlese .ex?ecto tations,tley couldfacesuspension,accorrding a pressreleaseaboutthe leaming connunity. Anotler aspect of the leanring corutunity is the Rou'fu Break, a time in ttre nidille of tle day when tle students have a break and once a week listen to a guest speaker Linds€y said. tley woutd host speakerson topics of heall!,

time m4n,gement,study skills, moneymrnagement, scholarshipsaad fuancial ai( and a motivational speakerwill appearamundmid-terms a:rdfinals. "I'm not quite sure what I'm supposedto do with those,"Ajarlaid of tle RowdyBreaks. "They'vehad ttrem, but studentshave not been ableto find them." Conmunication was an issue in tle prc gram's first weeks. Linilsey said tlat students were havinga banl time finalingthe locatim in the PE Building and ttrat tle programw"asstill new and not all tle problemsbad been ironed out yet. "I wish I was able to pick my owl classes and do Oe normal college tling,' Aja! said. 'Over ttre next four years,if I'n not ableto take . ttre classesI want to ta.ke,I'm not going to be happywith it." Linds€Vsaid tlat while tle shrderts were not able to pick their on'n classesduring their frst semesterin the program, they would be ableto sign up for wtatever classestley c,hose for tle rest of their academiccareersat Meho. ' Despite the problemshe ins with il {iar said tlat he would reconmendtle programbe causeofthe snaller dasses. 'Ihe teacherlnorrs pur nameand they're ally do offer a lot of tlings to you to hdp Wu succeedat Meto State." he said. 'I do think it will hclp me ia sone urayor anotber.I'm not go-1 ing to complail just becarseof the fact tlat ttE' are helpingne be in college.'


. . T}|tMITR0POL|TAN 9.14.06

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Turnitin honesty hrings owureness, DyRuthanefohnson riohalS0@mscd.cdu I^astyear Meto tested a website that uses a network of search enginesand clatabasesto checkshrdentpapersfor plagiarism. In a successfirltwo-senesterpilot progra:n, students submittedtleir papers onlfue to Tttnitin.com. According to Metro faculty member ?ara T!ll, who spearheadedthe program, although plagiarisn is not widespreadamongMetro students,the problemshouldbe addressedin order to advancetlte school'sstandardsand to keep tle studentshonestand learning. l l said many students are unaware of what achrallyconstitutesplagiarism. To nore clearly defiie the parameters,Tlrnitin.comoffersbrowserinformationonthe subject, stating that the crime evenincludes'copying so maaywords or ideas from a sourcethat it makesup the najority of your work, whetler you give cre(fit or not.' For Mebo studentscaughtcomnitting intellechul propertytleft, penaltiesca:rincludefailing grades,suspensionand expulsion, depending on ttre frequencyald severit5rof the crine. According to Tbmitin's research website, professionalplagiaristscanincur fines,lawsuits anil evencriminal prosecution. After tlte 2005 pilot progran at Meto, ltrll conducteda suweyaskhg 325 studentsfron 23 ciassesabouttleir exoeriencewith I\rrniti:r.

0f the 325 suweyed,37 percentwrote posi tive com'nents,35 percentcommenteilnegatively a:rd27 percentremainedneutral. I-r addition,107 of the 325 felt tlut I'urnitin would 'enhancethe academicintegrity of a degreefrom Metro." Somestudents,however,wrote tlnt using tle plagiarism-preventionwebslte was botl time-consumingald a "hassle." Other concernsincluded a feeling of being 'guilty until proveninnocent,' as well as privacy and copyrightissues,sinceI\rnitin retains tlre right to keep all submittedpapen in tleir databasefor future comparisons. JohnBanie, CEOof Tbrnitil's privately heid parent companyiParadigns, said in responseto privacy and copynght concernstlat since tle inception of iParadig:nsand Tlrnitin ir 1998, his companyhas neVerbeensuedor tlfeatened v'dtha lawsuit. 'We employthe thirteenth:largest1awfirm in tlre country, and they confrm there are absolutely no copgight or privacy issueswitl our program,"he said. Barrie said Tlrrnitin advertisesthat it uses student papers solely for cross-referencingto check for plagiarism,ald their databaseis not searchableor accessiblefor anythingotler than cross-referencing and originality reports. MargaretBurke pointsout in her article 'Deterring Plagiarism:A New Role for Librarians" tlat t}te program"can act as a deterrentagainst collusion and can actually protect student pa-

pers from being plagiarizedby other students sincetJreirwork will show up as a matchin the llrnitin databaseat the time of submission." Statisticsfrom Metro'sInformationTechnologr departmentshowtiat lbrnitin is utilizeil by 168 of more than 1,200 fuli-time and part-tine instructors. Shce spring,6,137studentshavesubmitted 14,902papers. 0f tlose papers, 14,571 originality reports were generatedfor comparison. ' Oncestudentslog on to Tlrnitin and submit a paper,.rn originality report matchesphrases, sentencesand paragra.phsald is tlen sent to the professor. Roughly 4 percent of all papers subnitted were foundto be 75 to100 percentunoriginal. Brian Zastrocky,director of Metro's IT Services, saitl that numberhas fuIlen as more professorssign on to the Tlrnitin program. Although Thrnitin is merely a tool and not foolproof,Ttrll saidthe programhas beenuseful for Metro's staff anil goodfor ttre school'soverall profile. According to Barrie, Ttrrnitin currentiy sewes 5,500 institutions in 90 comtries, with a databasethat includesover22 million student papers,hundredsof thousandsofjournals, periodicalsand newspublications,and digital libraries of morethan 2 milliea[66ft5. Barrie cameupwith tle conceptfor the webbasedplagiarisn preventiontool wtile completing his doctoratein biophysicsat the University

of Caiiforni:a,Berkley While studentteachingin the neurologr department in 194, Ba:rie becamefamiliar with plagiarisn after he developedtecbnolog tltat allowed sfudents to peer-revieweach otler's papers. "I thought the peer reviewwonftl help them advancetheir writing skills, but instead some took advantageand began printing off other's work and turning it in as their own," he said. The experiencehighlighted tle extent of plagiarisn for Barrie, who felt that lf that much cheating occurred in his own departnent, the probability in other departnents, colleges,educationalinstitutions andprblicationsarorindthe world was exponential. "I realized t}ese students were not only robbing tlemselves of an education but also advancingunlairly over honest, hard-working students,"he added. A suwey conductedby ProfessorDon McCabeof RutgersUniversityin 2004foundthat of "30,000undergraduatesat 34 colleges,17 per- . cent admittedto cut-and-pasteplagiarismusing tle Internet.' Not only do students commit intellectual property crimes, but professionalwriters, journalisf5 4nd qtis6-do so as well. Becauseof the sheer enormity of Internet Iiterature and the temptationsit brings, Ttrnitin clients have begunto include high schools, corporations,law finns and nonprofit orgaaizations.

VOICES UNIOUE lnsight is looking for nerl' & distinct writers. lf .r'ou break the mold and can rvnte clearlv and effective lv. we rvalt l'ou!

(lonserv'ativos, rvorrrcn, and pcoplc of all color and lifr:stvk:s who want to share their stories are asked lo conmcr. l\'Iatthew Quane, Insight editor at nq uane@nLscd.elu.or 1303)556-2507

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Lctters to the edit<rr are ahval s welconre. Dt:adlirre: Nlondavs at 3pm. Email Nlatthelv at m.quane@mscd.eduor leave thcm a[ the O1nce of Student NIedia.l'ivoli .313,


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o 9.14.06 lllElltlR0frlUlAll

collsforoctivism Soulioh

Progrom brings lifetoHisponic

By foe l{quyen nSrycios@mscd.cdu

relenlion $udenl

Lisa Mlliamson, better known as Sister Souljah, discussedthe power of activism and the responsibilityblack collegestudentshavein today'ssocietySept.7 in the Tlvoli 1lrnlalle. The outspokenactivist shared her experiences as a student from Rutgers Universit5t from workilg in campusorgadzationsto trave} ing ttre globe. She urged tlose in attenda:rce to take chargeand participatein clubs becausecollege is the perfecttime to do so. 'College is an opportunity for you to do somethingdifferent," she said. 'Ald when I say somethingdifferent, I meal sometlfng meaningful. To not just becomejust like everybody

eise.Tb not just follow whateverthe policyis, to becomea policy-maker." Shesaid she understa:rdsthe difficulty college studentsfacein orderto help their comnu' nity. 'To not be selfish is an incrediblebattle for you to haveon a collegiatelevel," she said. "Becauseyou're born i:r Arnericawhere individualism is what tley teachyou." Shecontilueil by sayingcollegeis an opporhrnity and thosewho earn it havea responsibillty. She criticized black college students who call oneanotherderogatoryterms. "Nowyou got the black collegeguys calling the girls 'bitches,'the black collegegirls calling 'nigtlemselves 'bitches' and calling the guys gers,'" shesai& "Sonow you havea ca.rnpus full

'bitches' who are supposedto of 'niggers' aad be tlre problemsolvers,tle crdne ile l,acrbne, tle intellectuals, the top 10 percent of A.frican peoplewho are supposedto be representingthe wofl(l.

Shedisapprovedof black femalecollegestudentswho lack sexualmorality 'A dog is an rnimal tlat enters a room, smellssomethingit likes, seessomethingtlnt it An organizationdevotedto promotinghighlikes, runs overand humpsit," shesaid."That's er education and Hispanic leadershipteamed what you did, thus earningyour title: bitch." up with RegisUniversity in early Septemberto Shesaid Harriet T\rbmanis ttre definition of kick off Colorado'sfirst Iatin Initiative to Foster womanhoodbecauseshe went back to rescue Enpowerment. tlose who were still enslaved,wen after she LIFE is a progfturl sponsoredby the Nareachedher own freedom. tional Societyof HispanicMBAs whoseprimary Williamson went on to condemnscaatily goal is to ilcrease tJreundergraduategraduaclad bLackwomenfeaturedin the media. tion rate arnongIlispanic studentsthrough net"Somebig bootygirl witl a tlong on andher working. tlighs wrappedarounda pole is your hem," she Volunteer membersof NSHMBA ard Hissaid. "Your leader is somehigh schooldropout panic leadersgatlered on the Regiscampusas with pasties on her titties who acts hard berole modelsto encourageI{ispanic undergraducauseshewent to jail." ate students in pursuing academicand profes'Your initial understandingof womanhood sional successil an attempt to create a comwas shapedby someonewho was retarded in munity of connection. tleir womanhood. "Studies show Hispanic undergraduates Williamson questionsthe public perception tlrop out before Tharksgiving because tley of black womenin today'ssociety. havent connected,"NSHMBAPresidentSteph"How did we becomethe nothers of civilianie Herrerasaid. 'sluts' 'LIFE is here to give and create a comiort zation ... 166s66mingtle 'bitches'and 'hos' 'skeezes' and all the namestlat and and zone for Hispanic undergraduates,'said Ester we are called routi.nelyin our cultural fabric Baca-McKeeve!vice presidentof educationfor tlrough musicand films and our social interacNSHMBA. tion with eachotler?" sheasked. Boaril membersfron NSHMBA. UPS. the Shefinishedby encouragingthe femalestuIatin Americal Educational Foundation a.nd tlents to aspire to be different fron the status tle Denverlatina Chamberof Commercespoke quo and to shive for excellence. abouttle importanceof leadenhip,professional "I'm hereto inspireyou to be different," she networkingand accessto moneyfor college. said. 'Different tlan tle norm, different tlan Every Hispanic undergraduatein Colorado what tley teach you, different becauseno prowas welcomedto the LIFE event, though the o Ptroto bv loson Smoll ismoll4@nrd.edr fessoris goingto pull you asideanil tell you tlat only schoolsrepresentedwere RegisUniversity you're not firlflling the stantlardof your wonanand WestwoodCollege. group of students on Sept.7 in fie before speoking fo o o buffet lunch in her honor Sister Soulich ottended hoorl." In tle future, LIFE would like to develop lhevenue before herspeech. leove Tivoli Turnholle. Soulioh mked fiotollphologrophen more representationfrom universities ald co} iegesin Colorado,Baca-McKeever saitl. were not presentfor Metro undergra.duates .tle LIIE kickoff. However,Baca-McKeeversaid she hopes tle program will becomean intra-collegepro' Gontinued from3 gran. "It is essentialto our security that we re deploymentin andtlroughout tle United States F,amondel Castillo,a Metro associateproto repelatLacksor to respondto tlem whenthey iluce our dq>endenceon Persian GulI oil,' he fessorof Chicano/astudies,saidstateg shonld Anerican safety: five years Lrter said. "No single policy would more reducettre Therehavebeenno majorattacks on Arneri- occur,"he said. be attachedto ttre new programfor it to be supBut, Hart said, this is impossiblebecause terodst tlreat." ported. can soil in the past five years. Somesay it is ' As long as Ameriians are dependanton PerHerrera said the Univemity of Coloradoat becauseAnerica:rs are fighting tle terrorists in much of the Griardis in kaq and not taining prevent sian GuIfoil, the needto fight for oil will present or respondto attacks in the Unitetl Iraq andAfghanistanso thqi will not attack t]te to Denverwould soonbe a LIIE participant. 'Erlucators need to work togetler for stu- United Statesat hone. itselJ, Hart said, and wittr the needto fight for States. premust be ileployedto ttre region. purpose oil, soldiers The of homelandsecurityis to However,Hart argued,tJIeinsurgentsbeing dents to succeedby mea:rsof providing tutorjihadist A miJitarypresencein the region will only attacks, and ttre best security,in foughtin lraq are 90 percentindigenousIraqi in- vent ing, counselingand nentoring," Castillosaid. Accordingto tle LIFE website,in 2005the surgentsand not al-Qaida.Theseinsurgentsare Hart's opinion,is to find out tlrough intelligence cause national insurgencies,and .as long as Alcoa Founrlationprovidedgrants to NSHIIBA not interestedin attacking Americansat hone. what is beingplamed andto stopit beforeit can Americais an occupierin ttre regionit will suffer chaptersin Sa:rAntonio, Chicago,Atlanta, Los They are interestedin getting America:esout of be carriedout. Hart saidAmericals are nowhere escal,atingcasualties,Hart empbasized. 'I[e will go to war for oil a:rdall we will get Angelesand Denverwitl ttre intention ttrat the their county. Fewertlan 10 percent of the in- closeto achievingtlis task. "There will alwaysbe risks, but we are not is rvar,and not oil,' Hart said."Jihadistswill degraduationrate for Hispanic surgentsin Iraq are foreignjihadists, he said. low undergracluate 'Regarclless of the lengtl of tine we stay in nearly as preparedas we ought to be and can feat us only if we l,ayour freedouron the altar studentsc/ouldbe addressed. 'We can have tle LIFE program at every kaq, we will be attacked again at home,' Hart be,"he said. of political expediencyaad sacriflceour convicpoltions ald our courage." Hart calledfor a changein U.S.foreip said. "And we are not prepared.' campusbecausea natioral grant will payfor it,' Hart is cunently ttre Scholiar-In-Residence rebuilding alliances shattered Accorilingto Hart, the Deparbnentof Home- icy, starting wittr Herrerasaid. Tim Wirth Chair for Environnental and and Each LIFE chapter in the nation will host land Securityis uot what tle Americanpeople by tle war in haq. Conrnunity DevelopmentPolicy at tle UniverThe United States needsto demonshateit LIFI events in tle fall and spring semesters, had in mind, evidencedby its responseto Hurat Denverand Health Sciences good partner fight sity of Colorado and an equalally in the targeting enteringor second-yearstudents,ac- rica:re Katrina The departnent is too cumber- is a jihadists. managed, Graduate Schoolof PublicAffairs. The U.S. nust also rec- Center he said. against the someand is poorly cordingto Baca-Mckeever. jihadist a Colorado senator ftom 1975 to He was terorism as an intemational Anottrer reasonAmerica is uapreparedfor ognize Every year NHSIIBA offers $1 million in presidential candidate.IIe 1987 and a two-time anotherattack is tlat too nany National Guard threat, he said. scholarshipsto graduatestudents. But most importanfly,Hart said, the United has sewedin tle U.S.Departmentof Justiceanil In Denveralone,Hispanicgraduatestudents menbershavebeendeployedto Iraq, he said. ' "The backboneof homeLandsecurity is a Statesneedsto lower its military presenceand . at ttre U.S. Departmentof the Interior. Ee has receiveda total of $25,000in scholarships. also authored16 books. well-trainedNationalGuardreadyfor immecliate visibility in the Midtlle East.

Dy Barbaralernandcz bhuna$@mscd.edu

oFuture notreody defense Americot soillikely, 0nU.S. HART oilocks


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Stillsofer ofier yeurs ullftese The 6.fth amiversary of the most pivotal event of tlis century has come andgone,andtheUniredStatesremans as exposedas everto a terroristattack. Ratherthan preparilg for actionon the homefront, a large chulk of our Natronal Guardis attempting to que1lthe constantuprisingsin the newly founded ripmnnrrfin

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But therewasa time whenSept. I I MNTTUEW represented morethanfearald terror. OUf,NE Oneact was able to pu1lour nation nquane @mscd.edu apart,sunderthe lisceral fromthe intellectual. Tt I tt I Emotionn.rledtlat day,led h large part by the spaun of fear ald terror: hate. Hate for thosewho plotted,hate for tiose who acted,hatefor thoseseen cheeringfromthe Mideaston CNN. But as the hate passedald {mostlyl coolerheadsprevailed,the attacks gave us insight. They gave us a glimpse of ourselvesthat we ilon't usua-llyget. They allowedus to see oruselves in a light that rarely illumilates the dark, htinate gallol,,,s of our souls. This glimpse into ourselves revealed, comparisons of "Islamo-facists" to Hitprofoundlya-ndpersonalll',ou.rmost es- Ier ald Lenil, in a time when 40 percent cenlirl rnmnnnpnfc of high school graduatesbelieve that But ]il{e mostof hIe'simponar:tles- the UnitedStatesfoughtwith Germany sons,our glimpsewas easilyforgotten. agahst Russiain WorldWar IL The hate that remahs has fueled tu,'o But the real problemdoesnot Iie il warsald corrldcausea third. the htellect of the Americanpublic.If Sir isaacNewlonalmosthadit right I have learneda:rythingfrom Stephen uith his thud law o[ motion:in this con- Colben,ir is *rat ourproblems Ie in our flict, to eachaction,thereseernsto be a collectivegut. morepowerfulreaction. The problernis the intestinal churnAs Gary Hart said on MondaY,"We ing that erupts when u.e are force'fed will go to war for oil ard all we will get scenesof piales crashinginto buildings is war,andnot oil." over and over.The problemis the glitzy 'We have hterjected ourselvesinto "shockard awe" bombingof Baghdad what our leadersconsiderar "lmcon- from which the public could not avert ventiolal war," as if our militar1rexpect' lts gaze. ed somethingother thal urbal guerilla The problemis that our violent sowarfare in lraq. Ald our executivelead- lution has been inherently e4pty and ers have porhayed themselvesas tle unftlfilling. last lne of defenseagainstterrorism. Wewere facedtlat day with the exPresidentBush and Donalil Rums- traordinaryand we respondedwith anyfeld crack tleir propagandist whips thing but. Becauseof tJris,Sept. 11 r'.'i11 acrossAmerica'sbackside,interjecting alwaysremaina sad,sadday.

problem lhereol notlie does intheintellect offteAmericon public. lfI hove leorned onything from Stephen Colbert, itisthotourproblems gut. lieinour collecfive

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Bibliophiles anonymous book in two meetingsinsteadof one. The protagonistof The CountoJMonte Ozslo is EdmondDant6s,a youngCorsicansailor vrhoselife becomes Everynonth a smallbut deilicatedgroupgatlerson entenched in jealousyandpolitics. Dant6s is unjustly sent to prison for allegetlly concampusto discussa wide rangeof subjects,from vengeance to dehunanization to road rage. No, it's not a so- sorting with pro-Napoleonicfactions and is locked up in group.It's Auraria's owl book club. the d.rnk rlungeonsof tle Chateaud'If, an isolatedisland cial-aurareness main goal is to ... b,ringaboutmoreof a conmu- prison.After yearsof imprisonment,he escapesas a hard, "Qs nity atmosphereon campus,"said Betty Ingels, the book bitter ma::bent on revenge.Whenhe discoversa legenrlclub fucilitator. "Bâ‚Źcausewe have so mary tiousan<lsof ary fortune, Daat6sadoptstle title of the Countof Monte stuclents... it allows tlem to connecton a morepersonal Cristoand sets out to avengehis uljust punishment. Moretlan 150yearsafter its original publication,?lle level and gives tlem a chanceto do sone recreational CountoJMonte(Yrilo remainsa pertinent archetypaltale reading." The group'meets in tle Auraria CampusBookstore aboutthetruepriceof revenge. At the frst meeting,tle club discussedttre merits of the last lbesilay of everymontl to discussand exchange revengeald debatedwhether it is ever an honora.blepurideasabouttlrc current bmk selection. The year-oldclub allows studeotsto read books fron suit. The rlebatecoveredreligiousperspectivesonrevenge, tle classics oanonand Aon contemporaryautlors who and tle dehumanizationof imprisonmentand its inpact on a person'spsyche,The group also cliscussedmoilern dont get nuch exposr.tein mainstreammedia group Iast serrestertle read.Inthe TIne of Butterflia referenceslike roarl rage a.ndthe movieVfur Veruletta. In addition to montlly meetings,tle book .clubproby Julia Alvarez, a writer from ttre DominicanRepublic. The group enjoyedthe book so nuch they decidedto read viiles a chanceto meetauttrorswho arevisiting campusto discussttreir works. Last year,author Kent Hanrf cameto anottrerof Alvarezt novels,Ingels said. 'It's givenus a chanceto explorea lot of diverseet}- ' campusto talk abouthis novelP/ol'nsong. "My greatesthopeis tlat peoplewill gainavery genunic traclitionsand get infornation we wouldnt have had ine love of reading.What'snot alreadyestablishedwill be ottrerwise,"trgels said. This year tley're starting outwith TheCountoJMonte learned,anil what's alreadyttrere will grow," Ingels said. Clisfo,AlexandreDumas' 1844 story of betrayaland ven- "I can tlink of nothing better to do witl a free monent geance.Due to its length, the club decidedto cover tle tlan reada book."

Ey Oartc lcadcr crcarlc3@nscd.cdu

0udlofiles: ondthe Jerry Jihod York New [vildoers, ThePretenders Dolls, l6 PAGE Reviews


|2 r MEII0SPI0|YE

olllt MElt0PllLlIAll 9.14.06

forfreedom Struggle morks Tibet Tibet: A Buddhist Trilogy lfot f,ated 134minutes 0pensSept.lS Ey lficholasDmart derart@mscd.edu

(ourtesy oflhreod [ross fikm China'soccupationa:rd domiration of Tibet, beginningin 1949, violently tra:rsformedan intact civilization,pushingmanyfrom tleir homes ...ardcausingtle deatls ofhuntlrerlsoftlousands of Tibetans. But near$ 20 yearsbeforeBrad Pitt starred in SeiEn Yearsin T\bet- popularizing Tibet's plight in Americanpop culture idion - Graham Colema:rwas trailblazing the tenitory witl his documentaryTlbet:A Budilhist lliloW, vthtch has recentlybeenre-editedand re-released. 0n March 10, 1959, the people of Lhasa lashed out ag:inst f,lia65s occupation.Thousanils of Tibetans were killed and the Dalai Lanra fled to India In his documentary,Colemen capturesan eloquentDahi r?ma glving a speechon tle 186 amiversary of the event In his speec[ the Dalai Iama advocated compassion,askedhis peopleto iook to ttre Chinesefor guiclanceanrl commendedhis enemies' societalprogress.He stressedtlat his people's individual actions should be aind toward the goodof their society.

'As an exile commudty,our task is to persist witl our struggle for freedom,"the Dalai I^amasaid. "What is important though, is to be honest,sincere,trutlful and kind. lte principal premiseof our struggle for freedomis to saJeguardour uniqueidentit5r" Although tle Chineseoccupationravaged Tlbet and destroyed over 6,000 monasteries, Colema:rfocuseson how Tibetan culture transcendedtle violenceto safeguardits rich and peacefuitraditions. Onesuchtradition the nlm showedwas the rite known as "A Beautiful Ornament,"a nearly 2,000-yearold tradition that seeks to sweep away the forces of harm il society.During religious reheats Budclhistmonks meditate and constuct a "cmnogram," a synbolic depiction of tle universemadeof wood an<lcolored thread. Colemal filmed tlis section in t}e ancient village of Boudha,Nepal,whereTarik Rinpoche, abbot of Phulwary Sakya Monastery preparetl the rituals.

0riginalla 7l6el comprisedthee fflms that clockedin at morethan four hours.Over20years later, Colemal has taken a morepragm.aticapproachto presentinghis film.Ihe editedversion is just overtwo hours in length and dividedinto tiree conciseparts: 'The Dalai Lana, the Monasteriesand the People,'"Radiatingthe Fruit of Tfutl" and "The Fields of Senses." Even though the filn's third part is set in ladakh with scenicmountainviews,thii is not a tSpical PBS documentaryViewerswon't find themselves passing a beginning philosophy course a.fterwatching ttris; it is not a general overviewof Budtlhisn. Rather,it is an in-dept! look at specfficaspectsof Tibetanculture. g scenesof monks Altlough tlte Ioud openin. in fuIl rlebate- who ominouslyslap tIeA hands while making their point - may not match tlre distilled vision of Buddhismpreviouslypresented in American pop cultue, Coleman'sdocumenta4r does its job eloquently,caphuing on fi lrn a civilization crying for freedom.

In-depth flahrielle: mokes chorocter sludy upforlockofoction For a movietlat only rarely strays Gabrielle from its stifling and oppressivesetUnrated ting, Gabiellehas a lot goingon. 90 minutes the film may trot lxrvea 1otof acOpensSept.15 tion, but it has enoughtension and psychologicaln"anceto keepa viewer watching a lovelessmarriageon tle By Glarle Reader brhk of collapse.Its settingis a shrf$r, creader3@mscd.ed turu-of-the-centuryParisianhone, an ambiencethat servesto u:rderlinethe strain and tensionof a failing union. Based on The Retum by Joseph Conrad,tle moviefollowsJeaaHewey tPascal Greggory)and his wife Gabrielle (Isabelle Huppert), a wOalttry

Frenchcouplewho havesettleddown to a comfortableand sterile narriage. Their predictableroutine changes whenJeancomeshometo fnd a note from Gabrielle, saying she's leavhg him for alother man.He is completely shocked, ald his surprise is compomded when she retums, telling him shecouklnt go tbmugh witl it. And tlis is in the first 20 minutes. The rest of the fflm depicts the pair adjusting to their narriage and what Gabrielle'sleaving signifies for ttrem as individuals ald as a couole.

What this meansis tlat they both talk - a lot. They talk to each otler, tley talk to the servantsanil they talk to themselves. For the most part ttre filn's curematography,along with its sets and costumes, lends the drama a constricted, confinedfeelin.gtlnt echoes Gabrielle'ssenseof suffocation. Nhat Gabiellelacks in action, it makes up in characterization.Huppert and Greggorypaint a captivating porbait that givesGabielletle credibiJityit desewes. (udesyofIFC tilms


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remem ere By OcofYollcmal 0n a rlaywhen nost of tle counhy reminiscedaboutthe tagic eventsof Sept 11, 2001,a premiereat StarzFilmCenter celebrrated the inspiring life of one of tle day's rrost belove.dvictims. The Sointof9/11is tle story of Fattrer MychalJudge,a gay Catlolic priest and the frst registeredvictim of Sept.11. Nanator Ian McKellen tells tle story tlrough Judge'sowu words. Interqiewswith fanily friends and coworkersround out the story of a life prolific in its charitablework tle saoifices of the New Yorkers, "If alyone sSanbolized the firefrghters, the police officers, tle EMTS,paramedics, it uras Mychal,' former New Yort Mayor Rudolph Giuliani statesin one of.the movie'sopenbg scenes. Fr,on inages of thd moming of Sept. 11, ttre movie'snarrative jumps beck in time to Judge'sdecisionto enter the Catholicseminaryat tle age of 15. He was of0ciallyordained a priest ia 1961 at tle ageof27, and he devotedhi+self to humanitarianeffofis in sone of his era's nost pressingtragedies:the mnflict in Northem lreland,the AIDS crisis and the crashof TWA Flight 800. "Mlrchal}dge has be6r a hero of nine for a little wtile, particularly becausehe was a gay man and a priest,' said Denver priest Fla* Quintarh Quintana said tle movie "gives a positive witness, particularly lor gry Catholics,becausehere is a rn,rnwho didnt want to abandonhis nen ... in a time viten tley neededhim nost' Onthe norning of Sept 11,ludge couldhavesougft safe tywitb otlers, but he choseto help instead-A friend renarts,

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"This is how Mychalwould haveprayedto havehad ttre last tlay in his life transpire'- doingwhat he loved." lte movienade imagesof tlat nrorningbrilliantly fteshAn alnost palpablesilencereignedin the theater as inages of the Worlil ltade CenterSoutl Towerslowly and gracefirlly collapshginto the largestpile of rubbleanddust Americahas everseenflickeredon tle screen. Nevertleless, this is not a novie of horrifring inages sbung together.There are no cronrdsof peoplebeing swallowed by billowing clouds of dust, no helpiessvictins leaping fron windows.Thereis just beaut5i:beautyin conmunity, beauty in people'ssouls and beauty in tle acts of a humble nan. Eventle footageof tle squalorand commotionof tlat norning takes on a traascenilentquality,tfuit of the shining, selflesscitizenswho risked their lives for others. A goodportion of the movieis madeup of aaecdotes.One storyaboutJudgereceivingan oficial car from the fue depirtnent conplefe wit! 'bells and wiistles, lights and gadgets," producedan au.dible ripple of laughterion tle audience. The ffln lent a unique on a tragic eventthat basbeencoveredfrom atl angles. 'I'n really curiousto seea differentpoint of view or a tlifferrentangleon the events,' said IJna, a fln societyqenber, beforr thc novie. 'We've heard so muchjn the news and I'm hopingf* simething different.' Differentis oneway to describe?)L Sdirt oJ9/11.Itrai$t also be <lescribedas a grard cinenatic kibute to a private citizencfro gevehis life to saveotlers.

'For a manwho will nwer get sainttrood,havinga tribute in the fonn of a movieis an amazingthing to give somebody to raemorializetleir life," audiencemâ‚ŹmberVince Kessube said. This nwie presentsa stiking alternativeto the hype.It movesalongwithout ttre force of an astiondriven script and it avoidsthe lneejerk enotions so prevalentin moviesabout hagedy. Spokenin McKellen'sgrave timbre, Judge'swords ring somber,simple,beautifulandtrue. ThzSaintof9/11 is abouta manwalking to the beatof his ovn &um, notjust in his seruality,or his unorthodoxpriestly practices;but in the way he approachedlife - with an uninhibited opennessand optinrism.The filrn is notjust a.tibute to MychafJudgeor tle victims of Sept. 11, it is a tribute to tle city of NewYorkandits commrmities.It is a tnbute to the peopleufio conmit everydayacts of kindnessthat go unna ticed. It is a tribute to hunadty "I want everybofuto seethis novie,' said David Cladr, a film 56rsie$pssbes, "I cant imagrnesomethingmorecoustructive to aloon the fifth amiverrsaryof 9/11.' The fuint of 9/11, Clark said,was like "sometling rising out ofthe ashes." At its sinplest, the movieis abouta nan vfuowould give his coat to a homelesspe6on. It's abouta menqfro hew alcoholismffrsthan4 who vrasacutel5rawareof his oriu faults. Judgeneversawhinself as a sainqbut raller as a simernrto was tloing tle best hâ‚Ź coukt

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The Pretenders ThePretenders ( S i r el,9 B O ) ByShannon Yoshida syoshida@mscd.edu "PLIY THIS ALBIIM LOUD,"read t}te directionson the sleeveof The Pretenders'1980 self-titled debut.After 26 years,this advicestill rings true. This album desen'esto be played loud. The raw talent of ChrissieHynde'svoice is surprisirg.With the first track, "Precious,"she setsthe bar for everyfuturefemalsrocker.Her rugged yet gracefirl voice is deceivingall the

way to t}te song'send,when shebelts out, 'But not mebaby/I'm too preciouVI hadto fuck off." Therereally is no better way to start an album. The tracks may seemto havea tone of sexual idatuation with l1'ricslike 'I rubbedmy face itr the sweattJratran dowl his chest,"from the song"Up the Neck,"but Hyndestill showsclass tlroughout the album.The first sideis reckless, promiscuousand deliversal edgethat trot many vocalists can accomplishwhile playirg the guitar at tJtesametime. The b-sideshowsThe Pretendersin a softer light, with tracks like the irviting single "Brass In Pocket."Everynumberputs out attitude and romance,creatingan elixir of abrasivesensualrty. Hynde isn't t}re only essenceof this foursomethough.PeteFarndon,tlre bassist,combined with Martin Chamberson dnrms, ma-kes sule t}lat everytrack hasenoughenergrto keep up with her, but JamesHoneymal Scott shies away from outla::dishguitar solosto showcase moreof Hlmde'samazng tone. It could be said that The Pretendersare gearedmoretoward a punk style, but their ability goes far beyondbeing locked into one cat-

egory The fact that so many female artists are spindng renditions of Hynde shows her influence.Currentfemaleartists, suchas Pink, Gwen StefarLia:rdThe Domas, idolizear:dimitate her seductivewaysa:rdbitchy attifude. Thehetendarsmayhavebeenjust wbat tle '80s neededto unl.eashwomeninto an equi!'briumwhere they can finally rock just as hard as men.

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TbRemember Euen?irs, has much of t}te same bluesy, rowdy, breakhrough sou:rd as their earlier efforts, which were reminiscentof early Rolling Stones.But ulike those albums, One Dog is nisshg tlre Dolls' distinctively whimsi cal style. It is a lot to ask the two original 50somethingband members (lead singer David Johansenand rhytlul guitarist Sylvail Sylvain) to still pull off high heelsard patentleather,but it is evenmoreto ask themto recreatea sould New York Dolls so reliant on the fr:zzy lawnmowerlicks of de' Cne Doy lt Will PleoseUs To ceasedlead gritar manJohmy Thunders. Remember EvenThts vocals,whichwereneverstrong Johansen's 20061 iRoodrunner. to begin with, now show signs of a healy life of haril drugs and chain smoking. In the past Ey|cremyfohnson Johansen'ssquawkuas conspicuouslycovered up by raw a:rd pou:rdingsound, but Ore Day ijohdllS@mscd.edu relies too much on a voice tJrat onlv reached "Ald now you're walkin' just like you're ten Billboard fame as Johansen's'80s pseudonym, feet tall,' sangthe NewYorkDolls on thetr 7974 Buster Poildexter. And we all knovrthat shtick album ?ooMuch, TooSoon.At the time, when got old quick. the ba:rdwas inventinga new blues/puk sornd Not only does legenrlaryJohn Lennon proand taking Marc Bolan and David Bou'ie'sbi ducerJackDouglashighlight the quirky,clich6d curiouslook to new levels,t}te cross-dressing lyrics of Johansentoo much, but, by previous prrnksruerzwalking like they were ten feet tall. standards,vastly over-producesthe entire alBut 32 years ald nearly half a dozenband bun. It's like Douglasand the new Dolls are memberslater, the high-heeledgo-gobootshave tryhg to take the trash out of the '70s' trashistartedto fa1la bit flat. est bald. Their new release.OneDauIt Wl PleaseUs Still, there is enoughgarbagerock to make

OneDay a necessaryacquisition for aly true fan. Onetrack, "Fishlets and Cigarettes,"em bracesthe band'searly decadenceand desireas 'You're gettu' a Iittle Johalsen strarnsto silg, impatient,smokjl' like a mental patient/Happinessis fishnetsa:rdcigarettes." OneDay al:sooffers a pair of burned-out ballads that addressthe rock ar:d roll excess that led to t}Ie demiseof memberspast: "I Ail't Got Nothil'' a:rd 'MaimedHapphess."In the former,Johansenexistentially croons,"It don't make no senseand it seemsso odd/ Ald it ma.kesmewonderif there'sa God." One Dag also adds some backup vocal

boostsfrom punk icon Igry Popon "GimmeLuv and Ttm on the Light,' as well from anclrogoprodigr Michael Stipe on "Danchg on the Lip of a Volcalo." Upbeatnumberslike 'Runnin' Arould" ald "Rainbow Store" a-rereminders of the band's legacy as well, waililg out enough down-inthe'dumps keltoard hooks and charactenstic Joha:rsencatcalls to leave one whoopilg it up for more. In OneDag's openhg track, 'We're AII in Inve,"Johalsenremindslistenersthat he's"got a bad reputation that just wont quit." While that maybetme, tlte fact remainsthat the Dolls arejust not nearly as bad as they oncevere.

listen up.This isyour toshow meon toyou. 0nessoy 0nr,vhy chonce how much theDolls Write ofupto600words : Glomheods, i York Dolls Dolls' Doy lt WillPlewe oresuch oninfluentiol bond for0chon(e towinocopy 0ffteNew York One Usloi i theNew your Even lfirs i Remember ond oDolls Tshirt. Emoil essoys tomcorneol@mscd.edu by04.l. :

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Poris Hilton Poris (Worner Bros.,2006) By ticholas lhart Derarl@nsed.cdu

Jihod Jerry & Tlre Evildoerc Mine is Not a Holv Wor (Cordless, 2006l' ttGa$t f,ood hoorilc@nscd"crilu

Branding phrases,firl-color advertisinginserts, a watch line and magazine*overappearances,all doneto saturatepop cnlturewith your nameand feedyour business'bottom line. This is not Donald 1)unpb business-plan nakeover.It is ParisHilton'sventureinto music wittr her debutalbumPcnis. Everything ftom Hilton's first intelligible words- her signaturebrandingphraseof'That's hot" - to the CDinsert advertisingher hadbags and watchesmakesthis album seemmorelike a marketing firm's new approachto promotion than an 1l-song, major-labeldebuL Hilton helpedpenfive of tle songsonPczs, including Jealousy," which boasts the bridge lyrics, 'Everything I did, I did becauseI cared. Sohow did all the goodbetweenus get so bad?

Maybesomeilay we'll get back vihat we had-' Hilton was able to put a little of her SftpIe Zrf into ttris Scott Storch-prodwedtrack anil bernoanher es&a::gedfrienclshipwitl ex co-star NicoleRichie. In tle elecho-popnumber."I[n You On," Hilton sings,"SorryI tuaed you on. Tble a cold shower nrhen you get home,' wittily alluding tlat she's "hot." It's that bnnding rhing again; she'snot rich for notling. 0n ttre album,Hilton's musicalpalate does ventureinto a feurgenresincluf,ingpop,reggae, daace,rock and even hip hop, the latter with the tune "Fightin' Over Me." This track is ttre higlilight ofPanbbecauseit feahuesFatJoeand Jadakissand doesa goodjob of taking the attention off of Hilton's over-indulgentmoansand

mos, vihich are generouslysprinkled tbroughout the altnln. She's Aboveall, Hilton is a businesswoman. smart enoughto bring in big-nameproducers, from Storch" who worked with 50 Cent anal Beyonc6,to Lukasz Tr Luke" Gott$al{ wilo worked with Kelly Clarksoa,to collaborateon ttris album and clinch alotler shareof bottornline success. Intinately, pani is tle nusical equivalent of Shake'N Bake. Aayonegiven tle proper ingredientsof high profile producers,A-list songwriters, najor lalel distnibutionand pruiotion can cook'up sometling tasty and cousumable f61 ffts rnessss,but it's nothing to rely on for nourishment

Sone faclst}at die shouldstay dead.Stimrp pants, for instalce, shouldneverbecomepopular again.the sameappliesto bandstlat have long sincedeclinedinto the where-are-they-now file, suchas Devo. In 1991 Devo took a bovgand disbalded. Though they were a monumenbl influence in ' tle NevrWavesceneof tle '70s and '80s, theA time had comeand gone. Sincethen, the band hasplayednumerous"rwival' showsbut never nade a firll attempt to recnter ttre nusic world until bassist Genld Casaleannouncedhis plan to start a solo project in 2005. The nonfter he took was JihadJerry,and his bandwas The Evildoers.His unfstunate retum to musicstore shelvesis to be mournedJihad Jerry wibts peopleto know that his war is not a holy war but a war on shrpidity. It works, if stupidity is fouglt with sUpidity.

Mine is Not a Holg Waroffersnottringmoretla:r doitish lyrics tlat attempt to be political. The music is wrought wit}t Devo-likeelechonic effects, and the backup vocals could have been pei{ormedbetter by a monkey. Jerry'sfirst single, "Army Girls GoneWild," comments on tle abuse that took place at Abu Ghraib prison in Inq. It starts out with a siren set to bad '70s pom music. Ierry sings, "Private Susie fron Nevr 0rleaas wants you .to know who's your daddy/ She's.gonnanake you take one for the red, white and blue." Sudilenly a fox-huntinghonr soundsand Jerry goes on to compalettre Abu Ghraibincidentwittr the boob-flashinggirls MTV feahres during spring break. Ilis lyrics are obsceneas he sings, "Man down, arls up, toss somesalad,reacharound, hard time, spit shine,snapto attention,now ilo

ttre dog."Themostannoyingpart of the song, besidesttre lyrics,is the high.pitched screaning,whichsouds.likea bunchd teenagegirls It is a witlessattemptto be ona rollercoaster. ironic. As if tlere isn't enoughmin<lless dribhle on the album,Jerryincludedtwo Devosongs, "I BeenRefused" and"I Neeila Chick,"asif to renind peoplejust vrhyDe-vo isn't toppingthe Bitlboad chartsanym.ore. Whilethesesougs are renarkablybetter+hantre rest, they still fail to captivateeventhesimplestof nintls. His is not a holywa4 it is a shrpidwar.JihadJerry'sattenptto bepoliticalandneaningful doesnotling but causepeopleto crirge.He shontdcrawlbackinto the hole_hecamefrom andtaketlis festeringexcu* for andburtrwit! hin.

possiblereleaseon ttre label. TheA ovm talent, along with that of tleir remixers, has led to an enjqpble tecbno collectionfor DJsand entlusiasts alike. Variedin soundand feeling,all ttre site's music he$s to dispel ttre long-held belief that techno music all soun<lsthe.same.But makeno mistake:tlis is def:rite$ pumping,,lance-floortechno. One epic, sprawling hack on the site is tle WolJ + Wolf + lnmb lllusic I^amboriginal "MAS." Clockingin atjust u1ils1$ rninutes, tiis tra:rcey nurnber slowly builG and changesurhile Ey foshne Sndfh naintaining a high energr without relying excessively on a heavy,tlunping kick drum. The gadually nodulatintâ‚ŹSuscd.ctu ing qnth line tlat doninates tle tack ilistinguishesit from otbers available.$lth an older, ilark-warehouseinNow is &e tine to start paying attenlion to Wolf + thecity vibe, "MAS" shcm'stlat innovationin soundis a Iamb Music, as they are fast on ttreir way to becoming continually changingprocessand tlat all music reflects pioueen of tle next generationof tec,hnoproducers. its time. the duo starttd out tlrowing snall prarligsin a loft in Another standoutjarn on tle site is Ioren Steele's NewYork, and has expa::ded!o tlrowing eventsfor more remir of Wolf + Iamb's 'Holding IIer and Loving You," than 2,000 peoplein large warehousesas the interest in which is deepand groovingwhere tle original is stonpy minimalfsshn3has growl in recentyears. and aggressive.Eachhas its place,and tlis rernir wonld .But throwing partieshasnt beenthe only avenuettrat be best suited for late-night da:rceflqprs or quiet jaunts tlese youngentrepreneurshaveexplored.Theyhavealso tlrough tle city. launchedWolf + Ianob Music. ttreir home on the web. Wolf + Larrb Music offe$ anotler b.ke on what lnRatler than offering releaseswittr artwort and several ternet tlistibution of music can nean. 6y rnakingit contracks by a singleartist, they offer singlehacks that they venient and easy for the audienceto participate in tle and others have produced.Interestingly, ttre site also listening process,they bave shom a new way to invest sbaresthe sourcematerial for eachtrack, anil listeners energl into nusic. arc enconragedto renix songstandsubmitttre results for

(onections LastweekonpageL5of TheMetropolitan,TessMcCartlry(hnccart@mscd.edu), wasnot properly SorqrTess,we loveyou. creditedfor her illustrationof a masonjar for the My MomingJacketFreeplay.


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Tolo, we're notinHqitionymore EmmanuelConstart is a man wittr a rnultifacetedexistence.Having resided in New York since1994,his inposing framehasbeenspotted socializingin a variety of hip locales.He could probablydtect youto the bestcoffeehousesand nightclubs.As a real estate agent, he can help you buy or sell your next home,if you're fortunate enoughto live in Queens.And if you canget on his gooalside,he might wen tell you how to found a paramilitary squadresponsiblefor ttre murder,rape and torture of ttrousa:rds,ald get . off scot-free. For ttrose unfaniliar with Constant,who affectionatelygoesby Tbto, his infamy datesto the early '90s. When former Haitian president Jean-Bertand Aristide was temporarily overtlrown in 1991. Constart formed the Front for tlte Adva:rcementof Progressof Haiti TFRAPH) . Until the United Stateshelped restore Aristide to power, FRAPH sought to quell the ousted president'ssupporterstlrough criminal acts of violence.In 1994, when Aristide regainedthe presidency,Consta:rtfled to the United States on a tourist visa.

HfiU millz ehallez@nscd.edl For roughly a year, Constantwas detained by the Immigration and NafuralizationService. But in 1996, shortly after he tlreatened to exposeinformationabouthis ties to tlte CLAduring an interview on 60 Mrnufes,he was released. Until recently,he has beenliving relatively carefree in Queens.Despite outcry fron the nearby Haitian connunity, which manifests conmonly as organizedprotests outside Consta:rt'shome,he hasyet to be broughtto justice. Humanrights groupshave fought for his extradition to Haiti. wherein 2000. he was convicted

a:rd sentencedto life il prison for his role in a massacre. Early in July, Constant was arrested on chargesincluiiing grand larceny.He is suspected to have usedmortgagefraud to take over $1 million from Sunlust Bark. His bail is set at $50,000. My question:Why did it take allegationsof fraud to get a manrvhohasbeenconvictedof far moreheinouscrimesarrested? By refusbg to extradite Constant,tlte UnitedStatesgovernmentis showingits indifference to humanrights violations and hypocrisyin its stance on terrorism. How different wonld his situation be, had his victims residedin the land of ttre free? It is curiouswe shorlldsustain such extensivefatalities and frscaldepletionfrying to bring tJre likes of Saildern Hussein ald Osamabin Ladento justice, when all the wbile we've had a textbook-defilitionterrorist living conlortably in our backyard.Furthermore,tJreFBI now considers "eco-terrorist' orgadzationssuch as the Animal Liberation Front and Earth Liberation

Front, two groupswhosestigna is not violence but properly damage,as the top domesticterror tlreats. What constitutes terrorism, according to tlre actionsof our govemmera,t? Websterb defiles "tle use of violence terrorism as and tJreats to intirnidateor coerce,esp.for political purposes." With respectto this definition,t}te UnitedStates seemsto be confused.If we examinethe victims t}rat baveled us either to action or indifference, it appean as tlough American lives and properly are worth their weight in gold, haqi lives are worth their weight in oil, and Haitian lives are worth their weight in sand. While we are certainlyjustified in pursuing tlose who truly tlreaten our safety,it bardly seemssuch hunts are hunanitarian in nature. Unlessthe United Statesbeginsto show it values internationalhumanriglits, it's hard for me to believethe War on Terror is anytling but political. The next time you heara U.S.offlcial toss around tleir favorite buzzword,try to picture Toto Constalt resting comfortablyin his large white housein NewYork.

pleose your cover eors Curious George, $lrc1979 EDITORIN CHIEF Cory Corcidto . cosciolo@mscd.edu MANAGING EDITOR Mqtl Gunn . gunnmo@mrcd.edu , NEWS EDITOR Dovid Pollqn . dpollon@mscd,edu ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR Josie Klemcier . iklemoie@mscd.edu OPINIONSEDITOR ilqffhew Quqne . mquqne@mscd.edu ASSISTANT OPINIONSEDITOR Gaof Wollermqn . gwollerm@mrcd,edu FEATURES EDITOR Adom Goldriain . goldstcc@mscd.edu ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR Joe Nguyen . nguyâ‚ŹiosOnscd,sdu MUSICEDITOR Itegon Comecl . mcqrncol@mscd.edu ASSISTANT MUSICEDITOR Cossie Hood . hoodc@mscd.adu

SPORTS EDITOR Jersmy Johnson . iiohn3oS@mscd.edu ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR Eric Lonsing . lonsing@mscd.eilu PI-IOTO EDITOR Jenn le8l<rnc . ikerrigo@mscd.edu DESIGNER Jennifer Lutos . ilucos5@mscd,edu COPYEDITORS Ioy'or Sullivon r tsulli2l@mscd.edu Joel Togert . togBrl@rnscd.edu ASSISTANT DIRECIOR OFSTUDENT MEDIA Donnito Wong ADVISER Jqne Hobqck The Metropolitanis producedby and for the students of Metropolitan State Collegeof Denverand serves ttre Auraria Campus.The Metropolitan is supported by advertising revenue and student fees, and is publishedevery Thursday during the acailemicy'ear and bi-weekly during the Summer semester The Metropolitan is distnluted to all campusbuildings. . No personnay hke moretlan onecopyof eachedition of The Metropolitanwittrout prior written permission. Please direct aay questions,comments,complaints or complimentsto Meho Board of Publicationsc/o The Mebopolitan Opinionsexpressedc'ithin do not necessarilyreflect ttroseof Metopolitan StateCollege of Denver or its advertisers. Deadlinefor calendar itemsis 5 p.n. ThursdayDeadlinefor pressreleasesis 10 a-n. MondayDisplayadvertisingdeadlineis 3 p.n. thursday Classifiedadveftsing is 5 p.m.Thmalay. Our of6ces arâ‚Ź located in the Tivoli Sturlent Union, Roon 313. Mailing address is PO. Box 173362, CampusBox 57, Deffer, CO80277-3362.

PresidentGeorgeBushsteppedup to the podium on Sept.5 to give a national adilresslooking just as much like a beady-eyeddeer in the heacllightsas ever. As usual,his speechwas ladenwith clich6s. This time, it was 'taking the words of the eremy seriously." Mainstream media was smattered witl quotes labelhg tliis speecha call to tlte United Statesto listen to the voicesof evil. I have an idea for GeorgiePorgie: stop listenhg to tlte voices of evil. Really, half of his speechesend up sounding like Darth Vader quotes. 'You are either with us or wittr the tenorists" may not have tlte samechilling power of "I find your lack of faith disturbing,"but it is a start for a halfwit busilessman impersonating JamesEarl Jones.

"takeRichardIII, for example:"Conscience is but a word that corrardsuse, devisedat first to keep the strong i:r awe: ow stong arms be our conscience, our swordsour law!' Perhapsa stern, old-fashionidEuropeandemeanorcould help Bush nanage Jar,rertof Zes Miserables:"It's a pity the larv rloesn'tallow me to be mercifirl.' Unfortunately, our presiilent is about as articulate as t}re Queenof Hearts n Alice in Wonderland screaming,"Sentencefirstl Verdict williamz@nscd.edu afterwards!" This nation will do what it wants. It has 0f course,if Bush had somewit, he might ttre power, it has the jurisdiction and it has a muster a few chills reading a Shakespearian mumblingbobblehead namedGeorge\Ui Bush proclamationto the hurral rights opganizations to sputterout impetialistic slogans. ttrat condemntorture in his military siegesof Can'twe at least get a better rascot? Iraq and Afghanistan.

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fromftegrove relurns Nucleur energy finalysis 0n Aug. 29 a groundbreakingcerenonywas held in Eunice,N.M.,to beginconstructionon the NationalEnrichmentFacilig where,startilg in 2008, uraniumwill be enrichedfor eventual marked usein nuclearreactors.The celebration t}te beginningof the site's constmctionand also a firndamentalchangein America'srelationship with nuclearenergr. Thouehsouredin tle last half of rhe 20d century,our love affair with nuclear enerry began rosily.In 1953 Dwight D. Eisenhorver addressedthe U.N. with his "Atoms for Peace" the shari:rgof nuclear speech,whichadvocated energr technologywith poor and underdeveiopednations. The speechheraldedan age that somebelievedwould seepower "too cheapto meter." Foundeilin 1959,the InternationalAtomic Energy Agenq' began facilitating the rnternational exchangeof nucleartechlologr a:rdhsuring its safeand non niiitary use. Wit}l the advent of the IAEA, nuclear reactors bega:rpoppingup around the globeand the dangersof t}re proliferationof nucleartechnologr becameapparent.The nuclear solution movedslowly but surely from ideal to taboo. At cenhry's end public skepticism toward any'1iingnuclear- which peakedafter the neltdom at Chemobylin 1986- virhulty killsd thg nuclearenergymarket. For tlre United States,the dreamof an endless, clea:renerSysourceseemedto be coming tue urtil the 1979accidentat ThreeMile Islard in Pen:rsylvania.Sincethen, no new U.S.nuclear plants have been approvedfor construction. (It is inportant to notetlat the low cost of fossil fuel energr also had a hand il de-emphasizing the nuclearoption.)There are currently 104 reactors licensedto operatei:l tle United States, in the last after dozenswere decommissioned two decades(ilcludhg Colorado'sFort St. Vrain in 1989). But as tle world confronts the realities of relatively scarce oil and coa.l re.

fi{DRIW rL0HR-SPINCI spencald @mscd.edu serves- ald the apparentdamagedoneby fossil fuels - we hare also startedhunting for a1ternative sourcesof enerry.The nuclearoption once againlooks appealing. A perfectenergrwouldproducelittle carbon dioxide(or arryotherpoisongas);be accessible ald in near-endless supplyor, evenbetter,renewable;and, preferably,not causea total envi ronmentalcollapse.Fossilfuels,wbile currently supplyingthe lion's share of our power,fail to passjustabouteveryoneof ti.esecriteria. Solar power couid be perfect, but crment photovoltaiccollectorsuse lessthan 10 percent of snnlight- a nice ttLingfor calcLrlatorsald domesticpower sources,but not mucheise. Bio-refineries are facilities tlnt produce fuel, energl and chemicalsfrom orgarricmaterial. Like solar power,however,they havea great future andlow output.Windpowerholdsa small shareof the market and is currently expanding. PresidentGeorgeW. Bushrecenflytalked about how whd coulil someday produceas much as 20 percentof the nation'spower.But wind as a:r energr facestwo problems:it is not ubiquitous, ald the gialt wind-driventurbines kill birds as well as induce a not-in-my-backyardreaction ftom neighbors. There are a m:mber of altemative energr sources,but at the momentthey canbarely supply a smallpercentage of our powerneeds,even iI we get crazywith conservation. So we come back to our powerfi:l friend, the atom. Unfortunately,the one glaring prob-

. ofmwertZ@nscd.edu lllusfiction byAndrew Horverlon 1emwith nuclearpoweris storage.We sti1ldon't have a legitimate, long-termsolution for radio' active waste lrom the controlled flssion of enricheduranium.Thoughwe onceuseil the practice, reryclhg nuclearmaterial is now barreil by nuclear non-proMerationagreements.Il fact, it is questionablewhether our civilization ca:r reasonablyexpectto ever createtruly saJestorage facilities, giventhe millenniallonghalf-lives of somenuclear materials. For over fift5ryears the by-productsof nuclearpowerhavesat in 'interim storage' sites all aroundthe country.For betteror worse,tlte fate of a proposed long-term storagesite, YuccaMountain,still sits il court. Nonetheless,the gromdbreakirg ir New Mexico representsthe arriva-lof a new America::energrpolicy.Unveiledin January,President Bush's AdvancedEnergr Initiative - though it continuesfirndingfor fossil fue1s- fundsa number of energr alternatives, includhg nuclear.

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Similarly,the 2005 EnergyBilI gaveloan ircentives, productiontax credits,ald federalrisk insuralce to buildersof new nuclearsites.[r 2005 two compaliesfiled for licensesto build new fuhavebegunthe cilities. This year 16 compa.nies federalapplicationprocess,proposinga total of 25 future nuclearpla::ts. Havingnot yet founda perfectenerry source, we areforcedto strike a balance,to diversifyour porfolio, with t}te resourceswe have. Current 'thinking tendsto lea:rtoward getting the nuclear power showback on the road. Otler sources might surface,or ratler tieir technologiesmight be improved,but right nori' the optionsare slim. Regardingthe storageof radioactivematerials, proponentsof nuclear power night say interim storageis betier than no storageat all. But tell that to the state's citizenswho store it. The debatewill rage on. ln tle mealtime - we needpower.


Weekend splitd6iovufor'Runner Fridaynight cold spell spills into Saturday night feverfor Metro By PabtoGru and Eric Lansing pcruzl @mscd.edu,lansing@mscd.edu

"I clearlysawthat ball out . .. soI ovem ed tlnt one." the otficial said after the match. "It wasa very crucialpoint ... a toughcall." With a bruised morale, the Roadmnners went on to tle nexl set, wherethey were able to keep ttre margin small, but were ultimately unableto pull aheadfor the win. Feelingbetter about their makeshiftlireup, t]te 'Ru:rers movedon to thet next challeng' ers,Fort kwis. Wiruringtheir first gameof the match 30-18 with plenty of room to spare, and then barely loshg their seconilgarne29-31 the 'Runners provedthat the matchwoulil be a long one,witlt fiercecompetitionthrough all five sets. ThoughMetro stuck with the Slqrhawksin match,they ultimatelyfell an edge-of-the-seat 11-15in the final set, kiliing their spirits on the first day of matches. "It's just otlr mentality,"Allison explahed that night after tlte two heartbreakinglosses. "Weneedto comeout and havethe confidence to win, to knowwe'regoingto win." Saturday'sgamesshowedgreater 'Rumers potentialas Metroswepttwo RMACopponents in MesaState (3-0)ard ColoradoState'Pueblo (3 -1 ). 'We just had a lot of communication,' Wittenburg said on how the team improvedfrom Fritlay'sgames.'We talked on the back lfue and front line so it was easierto block. We had to changeour mentality becausewe were playing to not lose,tLenplayilg to win." Metro swept Mesa State 30-26, 30-26nd 30-21to defeatthe Mavericksin straightsets. After Mesa State tied the first set at 22, the 'Runnersrailedoff sevenof the next 11 pohts, includhg a silgle-servegame poi:rt, for the w1n. Outside hitters Allison ard Green led the team with 15 ard 16 kills respectively,while Ostlerpostedanottrer17 digs. "It was a.llup to us," Allison said. "Weknorv we are a really goodtearn,it is just how we want to comeout anil play.Are we goingto play timiil or arewejust goingto put it out onthe Lhe?" Saturday'ssecondgameagainstCSU-Fueb1o had the ma-khgsof an early seasonMetro gamewith a display of freshmanmistal<esald late-gameleadsthat were not beingclosedout.

Playingtheir first set of "real' RockyMountail Atl etic Conferencematchesthis season on Sept. 8 and 9 at the Auraria Event Center, t}te Roadrunnersvolleyball team repeatedthe pattern of t}te previousweekend'sprelimi:rary tournament by boulcing back a-fter an initial two lossesto win two of their flrst foru regional matches. Starting off their first match against Westem NewMexicoUniversity,Metro lost il a quick tlree-set frenzy.Thoughtlle scoreswere close in eachgame - 30.23,37 35 and 30.27- the 'Runners were not able to pnll ttrough il a singleone.St.artingthe first gamein a fulk, the womenstayeilsix ald 10 pointsbehild tbroughout, leavinglittle roon for victory. 'We were missing SheenaBohannon,our starting midrlle lutter, so we had to have our right sideplaying middle,' StefanieAllison said. 'So we werejust trying to get useil to our lineup ald just trying to makeit work." Outsidehitter Julie Greenand middleblocker MeganWittenburg added21 ald 12 kills re' spectively,while defensivespecialistBri 0stler tried to keep the ball in play witl a match-high 26 digs. 'I think you can tell the amourt of enerry you're going to bring to the match by how you warmedup, and tlat's exactly how we warmed up," head coach DebbieHenrlricks said of tlte team'sslow start. "Oneof tle things t}tat we've beenidentifuilg is that how we warm up generally carries overinto how we start a match.' Feelinga bit warmer,the teamwent irto t}Ie secondset hoping to slow thilgs down against ttre Musta-ngs.Metro kept the gameneck-aldneck right to the end,until that hopefadedinto anotherloss. At ole point toward t}te game's end, the 'Runnerspulled aheadof tle Mustangs,nearly scoring the game-winningpoint. But after a closecall was ovemied by tbe offtcia1,the game SeeY0LLEYBILL Page 24 endedin anotherwin for the Musta:rgs.

Pholo bvSimono Krouoovo. skrcroov@mscd.edu

(center) (left)ondDonico (righllotlempl oJulie spike triTorkington loblock Green Jennifer Snowborger 'Runners the Mustongs in lhree sels, Melro lhe were beolen by doy, 8 ot Aurorio [vent [enler. though 5epl. il home. hodocoreer-high 33 ondMeso Slole Green bounced bock fie nextnighl bysweeping GU-Pueblo gome rlosing ogoinsl lheIhundenolves. kilkinSoturdoyl


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. 9.14.06 Illt flElt0P(MAll

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'Runners collsontherood dodge close Metro manhandles ColoradoChristian; na:rowly beatsMesa, Fort Lewis on the road Bylercny lohnson iiobnfl[@mscd.cdu The Metro women'ssoccertearn continued its Division-Il dominancelast week in Rocky Mountain Atlletic Conferenceaction. Though tle road- which was full of nasty elenents last week fcir Metro - hasn'tbeenas smoottrfor the . Roadrunnerssofar tlis season,tle results have beenexactlytle same.Theywin. Metro uade fools out of ColoradoChristidn on Wednesdaywith an 8-0 drubbbg, but squeezedfu Fritlay's and Suntlay'sgameswitl the help of forward Kylee Hanaval's late-game heroism. 'It's tough to go on the road becauseboth of tlose teamsare nuch improvedfrom the last couple of years," head coach Damy Sanchez' said. "Did we play great all the time? No, but we diil enougbto win and at the end of the ilay that's all tlnt really matters.' Ha:ravanwas abseDtfrom ttre Roadrunners match-upagainstColoradoChristianon Sept. 6 due to a previousred card, but ttre senior was baiielymissedas the nevibieMetro stars, freshman $6666 Mays and hansfer JessicaBrown, scoredtwo goalseach. '1Fhegarc cras-soorâ‚Źlessthrough the first 31 minutes,until Mays nailed a headerto give tlte 'Runnerstle 1-0 lead. Then ttre floodgates opend with Mefuooutshootingtle Cougars263 i.ntle game,including a 14-1 contrast in the first hatf. ForwardKira Sharpailderla secondgoal for tle 'Runnerswittr a headerin tlte 33d ninute, and Brom addedanotherscoreon a Iooseball to give Meto a 3-0 Ieadheadinginto ttre breal. Defensivebar,k JennaOney,forward Katie Kilbey and goalkeeperSarah Leonard rounded out tle scoringattack,witl Onâ‚Źyaddingtwo assists to the afternoon. Wlth the victory the Roatlrunen bavewon 54 straigbt hone gamesdatingback to 2002._ . Meto went on ttre road for a pair of away RMAC gamesstarting Sept 8. The 'Runners' frrst stop was in GrandJunction,vrhere Mebo

took on MesaState. The Mavericks gave t}te 'Ruuers a rough riile, shutting Metro rlownin tlte first hall Hanavan scoredon a cross pattr from Mays in the $tft minute to give the Roadrurners the lead, but the Maverick'sLauren Sell drove one past tle goalkeeperRachelZollnerto tie tie gamein ttre83dminute. Oneyttren had her ttrird assist of tle week with.a passto Hanavanfor tle goal. The goals were tle sixtl a:rd seventh of tle seasdnfor Hanavan.This seasonOneyand Hanavanhave alreadybeen awardedRMAC defensiveand offensive Player of tle Weekawards,respectively "I feel like at the beginning of the season we were getting better results and lately we've been having a tough time scoring,' Oney said. 'But we're comingtlrough with wins." Ha::avanscoredher eighth goal of ttre season off Sharp'sassist in tle 58u minute Sept. 10. Thoughit was ttre only goa.lof the game,.it proveil to be enoughto carry the Roadnuners overFort Lewis at Dirks Field in Durango. 'We cameout strongbut we didn't finish our chancesat first," Hanavansaid. 'Itrs just Iucky that I hadthe goalsbecauseany oneof us could have scoredthem. After that, we playedsmart defenseandwent out andwon it." Metro manageda 20-11shootingadvantage over the Skyhawksbut were off tlle mark most of the day. Hanavan connectedfor just one of seven shots,but only one goal was neecledas Zolher shut doun the Skyhawksin tle goalbox. Zollner loged'five saveson 11 Fort Levrds shots anrl was namedRMAC DefensivePlayer of tle WeekSepL12 for her efforts last week. 'Fort levais is.a beautifrrlplaceto play,but it was an ugly gameand I think it nade mehavi to focus evenmore," Zollner said, "And tle del"ass is making it easierfor me to nake saves and tlat's why we havent beenscoredon many times.' Aside frorr tle eight goals ttris year, Ha:ravan also leads tJm team witl 18 points. The Roadnrnnerswin was tle 54b unbeaten.game for Meto datingback to 2004. Meto is ra.nkedNo. 2 in the NCMs Division-Il. They continueRMACaction on Sept. 15 against ColoradoState-Pueblobefore haveling to ttre north side of town to take on rival Regis Universityon Sept. 17.

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ilelromidfielder Kellen Johnson, renler, soors obove fwoMosler's defenden foroheoder 9otAuroSept. rioField. IheRoodrunnen hot fteMuslongs 3-0.lhewinmorked thesetond forMelro in0smony doys osftemen bed(olorodo School olMines 2-lforfteweekend sweep.

V0LLEYBAII. records Green coreer-high 33kills Gontinued ftom 2l Instead of letting those mistakestum into State on Sept. 15. Meho then facesRMAC foe loss, Metro overcamettrem and rlefeatedthe Nebraska-Keamey a Sept. 16, also at ttre Auraria Thnndenvolves 30-24,30-32,30-28and 30-20 Event Center. in four sets. 'Sometimesq/e come out and pLayconsistent and we get leads and we pull leads," Henrlricks said. "Sometineswe play to win and we seemto havea confidentmentality.' 'And otler times we seemto lack little a confiiencefor tle situation,so tlatb what we'll continueto work on." Green recorded a career-highof 33 kills, while Allison bad 25 to go along wittr her two blocks anil 16 digs. "For me, it is a 1ot of mental preparation," Allison said about her all-around effort. 'It's aboutbeingdeterminedon everypl,ayandlnowing tlat no matter what happens,I will haveto makea better play out of it." The Roatlruners rehrrn to single-game format with a home match-upagainst Chailron

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After a "disappohtingl 6-0 loss to No. 1rarked Fort kwis last week,men'ssoccerhead coach Ken Parsons wondered how tJte team would reboundald fild tleir wav back to winning ways. The Metro men'ssoccerteam showedtleir coachthat they hail not forgotten what it took to get results by beatingtwo quality opponents over the past weekend.The Roadrunnersoutlasted ColoradoSchoolof Mines 2-1 and then relied on two late goals by midfielder Antonio Porrasto beat The Master'sCollege3-0. "Comingoff that loss,this was a must-win," Parsorissaid. "The schedulinghasn't beenparticulariy frienilly to us, as we had to play a lot of tough games.This is a good win based on the fact tlat it was important to see how.our team rebounds,regroups,and how our team refocuses." The win against the Orediggerscame Fri<lay,Sept. 8 in Golden,where goalkeepergran Vickery saw 19 shotsand made10 savesfor tle Metro win. The 0rediggersattackedVickery at everyalgle, ald the shot total woultl havebeen much higher if not for courfless shots blocked by Mines' own defenders. "This is the kind of garnewhereVickerywill do we11,'Parsonssaid. 'He's a shot stopper.He hatl to comeup with a coupleof them over t}re course of the game that certainly coulil have gonetle Mines' way." Forward ShaunElbaumscoredthe opening goal in the 13n minute off midfielderMark Cromie's corner kick. After 'Diggers forward Craig Thompsontied t}e gameat one apiecewith his team-leadingfifth goal of ttre season, Metro fr6shm4a Ken Weigangscored his frst collegiate and game-wiminggoal in the 39b minute. Weigangsaid it felt good to get that first goal. He saw t}re ball cometo him, saw a wiileopen net a:rd took the kick ttrat led to the 2-1 victory.

Saturtlay'sgame versus The Masters College revolvedaround one play that could have swunga victory for eitler team. Metro struck first with Elbaun's fourth goal il his last four gameswith assistsby Porrasand forwaril Johl McClain.Clingingto the l-0 lead, Metro controlledtJreball and kept firing shots towards tlte Mustangs' net. The Roadrunners had frouble with accuracyand spent tle frst half lookhg for a secondgoal to put the game away. Master's finally found a chance with l0 minutes to go when forward Jared Thornton took a shot on goal, forcing Vickery to make a diving save.However,the ball was not grabbed by the Metro goalie,and Thorntonvrasleft with an opennet off tle rebound.Possiblysurprised with the suddenopportunity,Thornton took a quick shot but lofted it high over the net, missing the opportunityto tie a game in which ttre Mustaagswere outplayedand breathlessfrom t}te Denveraltitude. "They got their secondwind a:rd had a lot of pressureupon us,' Vickery explainedof the play. "I madea saveand tley had a wide-open goal and luckily hit (the batt) over. Our guys cameback, steppedit up, and scored anotler goal to heip us win With tle chanceall but gone,the Roadrunnerscameright backand scoreda goallessthan two minuteslater to wrap up the game.Porras scored the goal on McClain'ssecondassist of the day.Porras addedalother goal 39 seconds Iater on a penalty kick. Porras's goals were his seconrla:rd tlird on the year,and he remainsonly one goal back from tying t}re school'scareermark of 39. "I don't klow if we should have put ourselves in ttrat position to begin with," Parson said of that pivotal play. 'And I tbtul we could have certainly given ourselvesa cushionbefore that. Witl Tony (Ponas),he took tlte initiative upon himself to score a couple of goals. Tony was a recipient of McClain'shard work and it was necessa4rfor us to win tlis game."


notall sportis playedonthefieltl Because

to VIDEO FromMattel A look Madden: GANIERSat videofootball UNITE Byleruruyfohuol iiobllS@nscd"edu

pros for goming Madden o chollenge EA Sportsclassic

callsuponthebest in the nation,world Xyferemyfohnson ijohn3llS@nscd.edu The video gameindusty is boomingbigger tlan evertlese days,a:rdthere is no better examFle of this tlun the billion-dollar Electronic Arts John Maddenfootball series. Since 1995, Maddengameshavebecomea staple for clterathletes worldwide, and nowhereis tlut trend better showcasedtla4 at tlte a.nnualMadden Challenge. This year tle MaddenChallengekicked off Sept. I at Denver'som InvescoField at Mile High. Set in the posh indoor club level of the stadium, tlre event includedDJs spinning.emcees spitting football lingo, end-zonedancecontests, 'Beat tle D-T!ain" face-offsand dozensof highquality plasna flat screens,where someof the best competitorsin Coloradoand beyondwere able to square off in tlte fifth annual Madden Challenge,sponsoredby EA Sports. 'The poker industry has becomea billiondollar industqq"said DougScott,vice president of EA Sports Entertainnent. "And if you can make a bunch of fat, oid men sitting around a table playing cardsa billion-dollar industry,you have to make playing Maddena.trindustry as well.' The Maddenserieshas blossomecl,appearing on MTI ESPN and other major television networks.The gameis promotedby playersa:rd faas alike and is often praisedfor the quality of realibn it hasbroughtto video sports gaming. The Madden Challenge,which spans 26 U.S. cities as weII as international locations such'as tle United Kingdom, Germany,China a.ndMexico,is taking cyter-athleticsto a whole new level. "The guys that play ttris gameare students of tle game,"Scott said. "They're not only sfudentsof football- which they haveto bein order to play the game- but tley're sfudents of tlte softwareas well. It is a softwareprogram,after atl." A software program, yes. But a very lucrative one to become familiar witl. Several competitorsreturn year after year for a shot at winning a region and noving on to tlie finals in Hawaii,which take placein Februaryduringthe Pro Bo$'i. Regionalwinnen comeawaywitl a $1,000 paycheck,and the winner in Hawaii pulls down $100,000 for tle "whole deal," aecording to_ MaddenChallengeSeriesproject managerRod Stiga[. 'These guys look at this ttring as their shoq' Stigall said. 'lheir professionis to be a

Videogameshave always beena way of escapingrealityandlivingvicariouslythrough digital inages. Whether you're killing zombies,stealingcars,fiading magicmusbmoms in secret sbwersor fighting Draculahinself, video ganes haveprovidedtlrill-seeking experiencesfor otlerwise mundanehunan beings swinning in nediocrity. But tle sportsvideo gameris a different breed.Thesepeopletlrive on putting virtual greens,masteringhq:king balls and sliders, and ruming deeproutesto perfection. I've personallyenjoyedthen dll, but the latter hasalwaysbeenmy forte. It startedon my fifth Christnas when Santabrought me Mattel's bandheldLED-basedFootball. The gameofferedlittle nore ttran LED blockers andan LED rundng backtlat conldonly rur sidewaysandforward there was no realism, but the entertainnentvalue was undeniable. So much so, in fact, tlat Mattel re-released tle primitive hu* of plastic in 2000. Soonafter cane the ultinate old-school ganing eotertainnent systen, ttre Atari 2600.While I thoroughlyenjoyedsur;hgqmes o civerse Ptrolo by[hucklver:en l@nrcd.edr as Conbat,trlogga, Pi{all andQrBa{lwas (omefromdifferenl portsof the(ounfry gome lo porlicipole intheModden qlick$ drawn to iports games,my favorite of olloges Video enfiusiosb F@futL.I gome thetirtuil beingM NeturorL'sSuf,etChaQenge fuls,omoior video moker, sponsus I olInvesco field.[ledronic ftollenge onFridoy, Sepl. victory remember.a staunch over larticrdady tomojor cities ondisinitsfifthyeor. event whirh trovels oround U.S. my uncleLester,in vfiich he tlrew ilown tle joystidq quit in a huff and stormedout of tle cyber-athlete." houx. Wenever spoke"tnin. Sone sure-shotplayersbecone so adeptat Systemscome and systems So, aqd so the ga:ne they draw sponsorsthat pay airfare did vfuleofmtball games.In 1988, ilbcno, for tournamentsacrossthe country in order to makersof the popularNinjo G'otila4rdeasd ensuretleir qrber-atllete makesit to Hawaii in old-schoolfavorite TianoBoul. *lnaJly,there February was a football gamefull of life, with players "I've beenserioussi:rceMadden'05 and I'm just goodat it, so tlnt's why.I like to play," said figbting tackles and leaping in tle air for spectacularcatches.The gamewas certaidy R.J.,circuit regular a-ndtwo-tine finalist. "Ald void of any football realism,but the 8-neganowpeoplepayfor meto travelto the events." RJ. won in both Philadelphiaand Phoenix Wte <layshad fimlly bitten ttre dust Years liater I found nyself in college on his way to the f:rals in 2005 ald 2006. with only ranen nootllesand a Sega il armed At the Denver evenl R.J. found himself Genesis. That year my roommateIan and I to rival the losers bracketafter a closeloss discoverred tle joys of ElechonicArts Sports Problem. "He stopped me just tlat one tine and Madden 1996. SeIwees,the two of us, John Neil and HalI of FamerDerrick ThomSmith that's what basically beat me,' R.J. said after cotching oposs. asamasseda ridiculous58 total sacksin tle the charnpionshipgame,tlough the defensivelyregularseason.Not qnly did ny love for vicleo incli:red 7-3 score suggestedthat Problemhad football ganing grow,so did my love of solid RJ.'snumberall nightlong. defensesand blitzing formations. R.J. and Problem, like most Madden 'ballers," go only by nicknamesthey earneddurThese skills paid otr years l,ater vfien systems such as Dreamcast or ttre later ing the tour. Ma:ryof tlte nicknamesare carried Maddenseries delverldeeperinto offensive overfrom online coinpetition. 'A11.of the guys developtheir nicknameon and defensivestategies, introducing pump fakes.line shifls andaudiblesinto the virtual it tle tour ard sticks with then,' Stigall said. "It's like a conmunity hub where these guys footballworld. I mayneverhavehadtle sizeto passttre know eachotherjust from playing Mailden.' pigskin or ttre speedto pluck passesfrom The MaddenChallengeis constandylooking ttre sky, but I always loved football. these to further developtheir fan-basea:rd competigamesgavem.etle opportunityto act on tlat tion. Aside from gainingexha sponsorshipfrom love and gain a knowledgeof tle gamemore ESPN,Direct TV andBest Bui4tlte eventis also complex rh,n tossing long bonbs to deep eff6vsflqnlins for rural gamersthat don't have receivers.Video gamestarght me offensive accessto a venue. -There'sa big resourceof guyscominghere and defensiveschemesandtle importanceof outsideblockers. aad playing in official Maddentournamentsall 'Shat My glory dayson the field nay havenw. acrossttre country',"Stigall said. we're 'but with a pigskin coner come to fuuition, really doing is hrming this into a worldwide rhing to determinewho the best Maddenplayer troller in rry halds, I will alwaysbe a player at hearL in tle world is year in andyear out."

Mel's TopFive The Video Fooftoll Gomes

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