volume 7, issue 21 - feb. 27, 1985

16
- Volume 7 Issue 2 J Student Fees May Increase © PreSM>pOliflln February 27, 1985 · SFPC To Sti.Id)r. Fieldhouse Proposal . \ by Kevin Vaughan Editor, The Metropolitan The Student Facilities Policy allocated up to $8,000 from the Student Center Bond Reserve to hire a consul- tant to look at the feasibility of building an athletic fieldhouse campus. The action was taken at last Friday's meeting and will have to be approved by the Auraria Board of Directors before the consultant can be hired. If the allocaticn is approved by AHEC, then the students will have to approve an increase in their fees to pay .. "The question is are students willing to tax themselves an extra $10 or $20 a year . to leave something for the future." for the actual construction and opera- . tion of the fieldhouse. • According to SFPC Chairman Ken Cole, the increase in student fees would not amount to "more than $10 a > semester, and could be even less than that." The action is needed, Cole said, to alleviate . the overcrowding at the physical education building which resulted from a big jump in both Student Facilities Policy Council members debate fieldhouse pro- posal at last Friday's meeting. intramural and varsity sport competi- tion at the three Auraria schools. The students will have to approve the increase in fees through a referendum vote which could come as early as April. "I would like to try it at the end of April," Cole said. "I would hate to leave it until next fall when the enthusiasm and momentum may l).Ot be · what it is now." Cole estimated that at least 3,000 to 5,000 students would have to vote on the referendum for .the Auraria board , and the governing boai:ds of the three schools, to aprove the actual construc- tion of the fieldhouse. "The question is ," Cole said, , "are students willing to tax themselves an extra $10 - or $20 a year to leave W artgow. Endorses 'Super Board' · by David King Reporter. The Metropolitan The executive director of the AHEC board told the House Education Com- mittee last that his board supports a plan to create a "super board" to govern Colorado's higher education system, even if that plan pro- duced a merger oetween MSC and UCD. Dr. Jerome W artgow spoke before the committee at the second of three hearings on House Bill 1187. The bill would create a board of regents to govern all of Colorado's higher educa- tion. Wartgow said the problems facing the Auraria campus can only be solved if a governing body is given the authority to coordinate both the academic and n'on-academic functions of the campus. He described the situation of tlie AHEC board as frustrating. "We (AHEC) are advocating it (HB 1187) because it provides an ultimate decision making board," Wartgow said. Rep. Wayne Knox, a member of the House Education Committee, said AHEC had a lot to do with.the need for HB 1187. "I kind of jumped on him (Wartgow) during the hearing because they (AHEC) seem to be at the bottom of most of the problems," Knox said. Knox said there is little legislative support for HB 1187 as it is now. He Legislature said the legislature is leaning toward strengthening the Colorado Commis- sion on Higher Education, a commis- sion already functioning with limited authority, rather than creating the new "super board.' : . "- "Of course, the way things jump around, that could change tomorrow," Knox added. Knox said the proposal was designed to limit the number of governing boards and the conflict between them. He said HB 1187 not only creates one large board, but leaves each institution with its ' own governing board, defeating the proposal's purpose. Knox also said that, if passed, the ------ · s, uper board's power would be unlimited, and a merger of MSC and UCD would probably occur regardless I of CCHE recommendation. ..I've been fighting a merger at Auraria since most of the students there were junior high," Knox said. - Auraria has been .a popular battle ground for Colorado's higher education administration for years. W artgow said that whatever govern- ing system ends up with Auraria gets the largest student population in Col- orado and that people have to look at any dedsion to be maqe as a business decision, not an academic one. W artgow also said that a coalition of the schools at Auraria would eliminate most of the problems facing AHEC and create a substantial acade.mic and financial resource. In addition , he said, current resources from Auraria are being diverted to schools that are struggling. "If we (Colorado higher education) operated like a business we wouldn't be starving our rising star to keep the dogs alive," Wartgow said. The House Education Committee will meet again the Wednesday to con- t'tnue discussion on HB 1187. D something for the future.''. · Cole cited the overcrowding in the campus recreation department as a prime reason to build the fieldhouse. It would not only house campus recrea- tion, but would also be home for the MSC men's and women's basketball teams-both of which are currently playing their home games at the Auditorium Arena. The new arena would seat as many as 5,000 and would include a stage and screen as well as handball and racquet- ball courts, a weight room, locker rooms, and possibly even an indoor "I would like to try it at the end of April. I would hate to leave it until next fall when the enthusiasm and momentum may not be what it is now." track. In . addition tq the fi!'lldhouse, the increase in fees would include a host of improvements for the Student Center. Cafeteria and lounge space would be increased, and a station for the pro- posed monorail system would be added to end to the building. · ·A year ago a student center enhance- ment bill was drafted, but was not ratified by the students. D Jackson Page 4 Parking Page 8

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The Metropolitan is a weekly, student-run newspaper serving the Auraria Campus in downtown Denver since 1979.

TRANSCRIPT

-

Volume 7 Issue 2 J

Student Fees May Increase

© PreSM>pOliflln

February 27, 1985

· SFPC To Sti.Id)r. Fieldhouse Proposal . \

by Kevin Vaughan Editor, The Metropolitan

The Student Facilities Policy Council~ allocated up to $8,000 from the Student Center Bond Reserve to hire a consul­tant to look at the feasibility of building an athletic fieldhouse ~n campus.

The action was taken at last Friday's meeting and will have to be approved by the Auraria Board of Directors before the consultant can be hired.

If the allocaticn is approved by AHEC, then the students will have to approve an increase in their fees to pay

.. ~ "The question is are students willing to tax themselves an extra $10 or $20 a year . to leave something for the future."

for the actual construction and opera- . tion of the fieldhouse. •

According to SFPC Chairman Ken Cole, the increase in student fees would not amount to "more than $10 a

> semester, and could be even less than that."

The action is needed, Cole said, to alleviate . the overcrowding at the physical education building which resulted from a big jump in both

Student Facilities Policy Council members debate fieldhouse pro­posal at last Friday's meeting.

intramural and varsity sport competi­tion at the three Auraria schools.

The students will have to approve the increase in fees through a referendum vote which could come as early as April.

"I would like to try it at the end of April," Cole said. "I would hate to leave it until next fall when the enthusiasm and momentum may l).Ot be·

what it is now." Cole estimated that at least 3,000 to

5,000 students would have to vote on the referendum for .the Auraria board, and the governing boai:ds of the three schools, to aprove the actual construc­tion of the fieldhouse.

"The question is," Cole said, ,"are students willing to tax themselves an extra $10 -or $20 a year to leave

W artgow. Endorses 'Super Board' ·by David King Reporter. The Metropolitan

The executive director of the AHEC board told the House Education Com­mittee last Wedn~day that his board supports a plan to create a "super board" to govern Colorado's higher education system, even if that plan pro­duced a merger oetween MSC and UCD.

Dr. Jerome W artgow spoke before the committee at the second of three hearings on House Bill 1187. The bill would create a board of regents to govern all of Colorado's higher educa­tion.

Wartgow said the problems facing the Auraria campus can only be solved if a governing body is given the authority to coordinate both the academic and n'on-academic functions of the campus.

He described the situation of tlie AHEC board as frustrating.

"We (AHEC) are advocating it (HB 1187) because it provides an ultimate decision making board," Wartgow said.

Rep. Wayne Knox, a member of the House Education Committee, said

AHEC had a lot to do with.the need for HB 1187.

"I kind of jumped on him (Wartgow) during the hearing because they (AHEC) seem to be at the bottom of most of the problems," Knox said.

Knox said there is little legislative support for HB 1187 as it is now. He

Legislature said the legislature is leaning toward strengthening the Colorado Commis­sion on Higher Education, a commis­sion already functioning with limited authority, rather than creating the new "super board.': . "-

"Of course, the way things jump around, that could change tomorrow," Knox added.

Knox said the proposal was designed to limit the number of governing boards and the conflict between them. He said HB 1187 not only creates one large board, but leaves each institution with its ' own governing board, defeating the proposal's purpose.

Knox also said that, if passed, the

------·

s,uper board's power would be unlimited, and a merger of MSC and UCD would probably occur regardless I of CCHE recommendation.

.. I've been fighting a merger at Auraria since most of the students there were i~ junior high," Knox said. -

Auraria has been . a popular battle ground for Colorado's higher education administration for years.

W artgow said that whatever govern­ing system ends up with Auraria gets the largest student population in Col­orado and that people have to look at any dedsion to be maqe as a business decision, not an academic one.

W artgow also said that a coalition of the schools at Auraria would eliminate most of the problems facing AHEC and create a substantial acade.mic and financial resource.

In addition, he said, current resources from Auraria are being diverted to schools that are struggling.

"If we (Colorado higher education) operated like a business we wouldn't be starving our rising star to keep the dogs alive," Wartgow said.

The House Education Committee will meet again the Wednesday to con­t'tnue discussion on HB 1187. D

something for the future.''. · Cole cited the overcrowding in the

campus recreation department as a prime reason to build the fieldhouse. It would not only house campus recrea­tion, but would also be home for the MSC men's and women's basketball teams-both of which are currently playing their home games at the Auditorium Arena.

The new arena would seat as many as 5,000 and would include a stage and screen as well as handball and racquet­ball courts, a weight room, locker rooms, and possibly even an indoor

"I would like to try it at the end of April. I would hate to leave it until next fall when the enthusiasm and momentum may not be what it is now." track.

In . addition tq the fi!'lldhouse, the increase in fees would include a host of improvements for the Student Center.

Cafeteria and lounge space would be increased, and a station for the pro­posed monorail system would be added to on~ end to the building. ·

·A year ago a student center enhance­ment bill was drafted, but was not ratified by the students. D

Jackson

Page 4

Parking

Page 8

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.... February 27, 1985 s . .

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Faculty.Senate Mulls Policy Changes by Tom Smith Reporter, The Metropolitan

The Faculty Senate is considering a resolution that would lengthen the semester to 16 weeks, make final exams two hours long and drop the NC nota­tion from use.

The resolution, presented at Thurs­day's Senate meeting, was prepared by the Academic Policies Committed, pro-

• posed the fall semester begin on the Monday before Labor Day in order to be finished by Christmas.

"You can't have a 16 week semester and end before Christmas," said Dr. Frieda Holley chairperson of the Facul­ty Senate, in an interview one week prior to the meeting.

Lengthening the semester would also assure that students get what they pay for, according to Holley.

"Some of the absolute chaos in our reluctance to cancel (school) because

~ we realize that maybe We are ~hort­changing the students," Holley said.

Clajming that students will benefit · from a longer semester Holley said she supports the policy change.

"Now the student may benefit by get­ting an extra three hours. But it also allows the flexibility to cancel three in

the middle for snow or this or that," she said.

Another reason for the 16 week semester is for funding purposes.

Funding for the college is appropriated #lCcording to the full time equivalent student ratio.

"One credit hour is supposed to be X number of minutes," Holley said. "To get that X number of minu~es you need to have your class meet three times a week for 15 weeks for 50 minutes."

With the present 15 week semester · the school is right on the edge, it does

not allow for any school days to be cancelled.

But not all faculty are happy with the idea.

"Some faculty are very upset, because they feel we are working more for less pay. We are working an extra two weeks a year and we will get absolutely no increase in pay for this," Holley said.

The extra week could be used for a final exam week.

Currently final exams are one hour long.

"I now give two hour finals, but I have to give them on two different days, because I have only one hour days," she said.

Holley tests the first half of the course

on the first day, and the second half of the course on the second day.

"Many of us believe in comprehen­sive finals and we also feel that you cannot take a comprehensive final in one hour," she said.

Final exams scare many students, some even opt to take an NC right before the final. An NC can be granted up to the 14th week of the semester.

"I personally disagree with that. I feel the student needs to make a com­mitment to the course. We encourage the student not to make that commit­ment by allowing them the chance to get out of the course so late," Holley said.

But not all faculty agree with Holley's attitude, or the proposed changes.

Under the proposed policy change, the NC would be dropped from use and the notations I. \VF, WP and W would be used.

One faculty member said !}te changes would restrict his flexibiltiy in grading, and did not see what he was gaining from the proposed changes.

Chemistry professor Julanne Gilbert, who worked on the proposal, respond­ed by saying that the NC was a catch­all grade.

"We're not trying to restrict freedom

to give grades as we're trying to prepare a more academically viable policy," she said.

Another faculty metnber disagreed. "We are taking a very simple grade

that says no credit_and substituting for that grade a whole host of other kinds of things that none of the other institu­tions can interpret either. Everyone knows what no credit means. It means that you didn't get there," he said.

Others were concerned about the · punitive effect of the p'olicy change.

"The NC allows the student to go 'away and try again, without punitive attachment."

Others were concerned with huw the proposal was going .to deal with people who "audit," or take courses for no credit.

"It has been brought to our attention that the policy doesn't speak directly to people who audit. And that's something we need to discuss. We weren't sure that the NC was an appropriate grade for that category in any case," said EdCooper.

After about a half-an-hour of discus­sion, a straw vote was taken: And the vote was 23 to 16 in favor of the change.

The Faculty Senate will vote official­ly on the proposal in two weeks. 0

-Denver's Better Air ·Cftampaign Couldn't be Worse by Tom Smith Reporter, The Metropolitan

Denver;s · Better Air Campaign resulted in only a three percent reduc­tion in vehicle miles traveled even though nine out of ten people knew about the program.

Tony Massaro, director of the Office of Environmental Affairs, and in charge of the Better Air Campaign said the BAC is trying to clean up- the air in -Denver because of threats of govern­ment sanctions.

. "We probably wouldn't have done

..._ the BAC if it weren't for the threat of the government sanctions," he said.

According to the Clean Air Act, all cities -had until 1982 to meet certain

The campaign of voluntary par- · ticipation was designed to have car owners leave their automobiles "home one day a week. The day was set by the BAC according to the last digit of the license plate.

The EPA wanted to make the pro­gram mandatory. But the Pena Administration sold them on the volun­tary aspect in keeping with the Reagan ideology of voluntarism, Massaro said.

"We call it (the first year of the cam­paign) a moderate success. We did a lot of education of-the issue. We raised awareness about the program itself as well as the problem itself." Massaro said.

Whether the program worked will ultimately be decided by the EPA.

"They're (EPA) not out there holding a hammer .over our head, they want the thing to work, and they helped us to make it work. "

standards set forth by the government. The standards limit the amount of

carbon monoxide to 9 parts per million averaged over an eight hour period.

Denver exceeded that 24 different times in 1983.

In 1982 all but 41 cities had met the standards. Denver was one of those

" cities. The Environmental Protection Agen­

cy, the agency the government uses to enforce this program, gave these 41 cities an extention of five years to meet the standard.

"The projections are that only Los - Angeles and Denver won't meet that,"

Massaro said.

Tony Massaro

"You have to take into account weather. That has an impact not just on air quality but on peoples driving habits," Massaro said. , The EPA's report will be out it late March.

"Their preliminary indications are that it worked enough to let us do il again next year," Massaro said. · "They're (EPA) not out there holding a hammer over our head, they want the thing to work, and they helped us make it work," he said.

Denver is a test area for 'this type of program. Other cities wanted to try it but the EPA officials would not let them until they assess the program in

... !. ... ,. .. '• ' - ~ J .. <. . -- -~--- . ~.:..- - . --- ...

' L

Denver, he said. "Nobody really knows what will hap-The campaign will run again in the pen in -1988 if we have a violation in

1985-1986 bad air season-the winter 1987," he said. months in Denver. ' . "The sanctions call for stopping

"If in the 85-86 air season we see no federal money to fund highway pro-change over this year in terms of par- jects and sewer grant money," he said. ticipation we would have the full range "It 'Yould affect the maintenance of of options to supplement the BAC, the roads. It would certainly affect new including mandatory programs," construction, where most of the money Massaro said. is ear marked," he said.

"The Mayor has said publicly if we Other projects that would be hurt don't meet the objectives under the would be the replacement of bridges voluntary program he would consider a and viaducts, replacement of the mandatory program," he said. Mousetrap and completion of

Massaro said that they would not Colorado-470. wait until the start of the 1986-1987 air "Whether realistically they will get season to decide about the mandatory the full extent or not no one knows. programs because they would be under Everyone has always buckled under pressure of sanctions to meet the stan- just prior to the sanctioning," Massaro dards. said:

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February 27, 1985 ,

Choose Hope Over Dopg_

Jesse Jackson Comes to Colorado by Lori Martin-Schneider Special to . The Metropolitan

Some may have been curious, many simply dedicated supporters.

Yet the crowd of 4,000 clapped and cheered when Rev. Jesse Jackson Sun-

Clay night urged the people of Colorado State University to recruit blacks "other than for football and basketball" for the sake of CSU's development.

"If the school is all white with no appreciation of blacks then it is

of American history without talking of Afro-American history.

Judge Carl Stokes, former mayor of Cleveland and the first black mayor of a major U.S. city, gave a lengthy introduction for the former Democratic presidential contender supporting his long-time friend and colleague.

Jackson was originally scheduled to appear Feb. 17 but cancelled because of . a bout with pneumonia which resulted in a collapsed lung. This was his first public appearance since his

''The students of this university, for purposes of your own education, should not be satisfied until there are students here from .. :all over the world. This generation ... must choose hope over dope. ''

incomplete," Jackson said. His speech in CSU's Moby Gym was given in honor of the annual Black Awareness month.

"The students of this university, for purposes of your own education, should not be satisfied until there are students here from ... all over the world," Jackson said. "This genera­tion ... must choose hope over dope."

Jackson said white Americans have basi~ally been taught to isolate black history, but that it is impossible to talk

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illness. Jackson repeatedly pleaded for peace

in Nicaragua and in South Africa, say­ing the responsibility of the new generation is to choose "negotiation over confrontation."

"The struggle is over direction," Jackson said. "Let the record show that 10 million more people will be in poverty under the Reagan Administra­tion, most of which are white females with children," he said.

MSC STUDENT ACTIVITIES PRESENTS

THE CALENDAR

THE FRIDAY JAM SERIES

MAR 1st. 11:30 am to 5 pm DYNAMO HUM & Break Dance Exhibitions & Belly Dance Exhibitions

MAR 13TH, MSC I UCO Presentation AVIATORS- NOON

MSC THEATRE MOVIE OF THE WEEK

FEB 27TH, "YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY"

"ABSENCE OF MALICE" 12PM & SPM

COMING SOON: WOMEN'S FARE "85" MAR 6, 9 am to 5 pm

Student Center

Jesse Jackson spoke before a packed house at CSU Sunday in his first public appearance since he came down with. pneumonia last mon~

Jackson said the Democrats must not nation, "where everybody is "lose faith in our youth, must not lose somebody." faith in the locked out, and must not lose the commitment to fairness and justice." .

He said the highest expression of patriotism is to make our nat'ion a just

Jackson said his Rainbow Coalition aims to expand the Democratic party, "and make it more responsible and , more sensitive." D

Misconceptions Hurt BAC cont. from paf,f' :~ l

To avoid the sanctions, Massaro has looked at a number of supplemental ideas to the BAC.

These include increased use of gasahol, higher truces on gasoline, sub­sidies to electric vehicles use, increased park-and-ride facilities and lower RTD fares.

Other ideas would get large corpora­tions to consider the four day work week, as well as carpooling.

"A lot of people feel they need their cars for work, period," he said.

"We have about 2,200 employees out of the 11,000 in the city that are operating on four day work weeks," he said.

But, misconceptions have hurt the BAC.

"People say because the bad air is always collected over downtown Denver that means it is generated by ; Denverites. And that is a misconcep­tion," Massaro said. "Air pollution from Boulder and the suburbs drift down. It all goes to the Central Platte Valley. It moves just like the water drains." 0

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February 27, 1985

--

.. Esquibel Scolds Student· Goveriunent by Robert Davis News Editor, The Metropolitan

MSC Vice President of Student Affairs Antonio Esquibel urged the school's student senate to "get over to" an effective administrative group and get away from "petty and nitpicky per­son al confrontations" when he

delayed the student government from preparing a new constitution by the deadline set by interim MSC President Brage Golding. -

The student senate, according to Esquibel, spends too much time "look­ing at a bunch of nit-picky issues that really get in the way."

"So I guess what I'm here to ask is if

C<But before we get into that I'd like to talk a little bit •about the B.S. that's been going on the last semester in Stu-

dent Government . .. '' Antonio Esquibel

attended their meeting last W edoes­day.

Esquibel wa11 invited by the senate to address the needs of a new student government constitution-which is currently being revised-from the col­lege adminstration's point of view.

"But before we get into that I'd like to talk a little bit about the B.S. that's been going on the last semester in the

~ student government at Auraria and the _ senate," Esquibel said, "There are two types of administrators, one type is the one who's nitpicky all the time, gets into personal confrontations with his peers and gets into petty personal con­flicts."

"The other type is the one who sees the larger goal of the college in a broader perspective. I have to say that last semester the student government got into that first type of administra­tion," Esquibel said, refer.ring to. the sticky impeachment proceeding.5 that

we can get over to that second type 01

administration that I talked about," Esquibel said. .

Many of the controversies, Esquib~l said, seemed to be forgotten-an ommision he said he fully sup1>9rts.

"From what I read in the student newspaper it seems all of those involved in who's a senator and who's not a senator are letting that go," Esquibel said. "That's great."

Better communication between stu­-Oent gove~nment and the administra­tion, he said, would eliminate some of the senate's problems.

"I'd like to set up a more structured way to communicate with this body," Esquibel said. He requested meetings every two weeks between college administrators and student government "so that you'll be kept informed ·of what's happening on the college-wide basis and I can be informed of what the students are saying."

New East ClassroornStalled Until Legislature 0 Ks Funds by Nonna Restivo Reporter, The Metropolitan

For several years the East Classroom has been scheduled for replacement under the Auraria Master Plan, the overall blueprint of proposed buildings, street closures and other designs conceived for the Auraria cam­pus.

But until the state legislature okays a proposal by AHEC to borrow funds for constructing a new facility the projeet is on hold, according to J oAnne Soker, AHEC director of special projects.

AHEC was forced to seek funds from the legislature because it cbuldn't sell the East Classroom complex, which ' consists of the Tramway, Tower and Bromley Buildings, all owned by the University of Colorado Board of Regents.

According to Soker, the proposal is "a device to let us (AHEC) sit out the market-to wait for a better price."

"What happened is that we just miss­ed the market," Soker said. "The high rolling speculation in downtown land slowed down. People were realizing tha,t downtown may be over7built­too much office space."

Various developers, including Daniel Crow, Chip Newell and Del Webb, have already looked at the complex.

"When building values started going down, there was a gap between the value of the old building and the cost of a new one," Soker stated. "Developers tried to 9uild tax benefits into it in a way that would close the gap, but the gap was too big."

If the state legislature rejects AHEC's proposal, they will submit another one next year.

"We could try to sell, but the pro­blem is there's not enough value in the old building to build a new one,'.' Soker said. ,

If the proposal .is accepted AHEC will begin construction, though · no specffic starting date has been set.

"The state legislature last year did appropriate money to us for architect and engineer , fees for the new building," Soker said.

The building is scheduled to be built on parking lots P and Q, at the east end of the campus near the Physical Educa­tion Building. It will be approximately 250,000 square feet and will consist of engineering labs, new auditoriums, lec­ture halls, and student-funded lounge space. ·

According to Soker, the new building will brng students closer together, eliminate the safety hazard of crossing Speer Boulevard, and be more cost­efficient in terms of utilities and repair.

D

Esquibel Shares Administrative Strategy With MSC Student Senate

Esquibel also urged the senate to hurry the · constitution preparation­efforts so it could be sent to the state attorney general and all the "kinks" could be worked out before the upc0m­ing student government elections.

The senate spent the remainder of its meeting reworking · the constitu-

tion-written by Chris Dahle, chair­man of the student gov.,ernment judicial board-but they didnt finish revisions before their scheduled 5 p.m. adjourn­ment time.

They closed the session opting to hold several one hour meetings devoted to fine tuning the constitution. 0

The

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RECEPTIONiSTS l'eJ!J!.y Moore. Marilyn Zellmer

DISTRIBUTION Jael1yang Lee· -

A publication for the students of the Auraria Campus supporteu by advertising and student fees from the students of Metropolitan State College. The Metropolitan is published every Wednesday during the school year, except holidays. The opinions expressed within are those of the writers, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Metropolitan or its advertisers. . . Editorial and business offices are located in Room 156 of the Auraria Student Center, 9th & Lawrence. Mailing address: P.O. Box 4615-57 Denver CO 80204 Editorial: 629-2507 Advertising: 629-8361 Advertising deadline is Friday at 3:00 p.m. Deadline for calendar items, press releases, and let­ters to the editor is Friday at l :00 p.m. Suh missions should be typed and double spaced. Letters under three hundred woru' wui he considered first. The Metropolitan reserves the right to edit copy to conform to limitations of space.

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Pa#!,e6

OP/ED February 27, 1985 •

AHEC Cop Story -'Abomination' ·Editor:

I must voice my complaints about an article that appeared in the Jan. 30, 1985 issue of The Metropolitan. The headline,. AHEC Cops Pleased-Thank You-With Peaceful, Often Boring Precinct, though wordy, w0tald have ade­quately expressed the thesis. The article itself was an abomination which served merely to prolong the reader's agony. One wonders whether b<?redom could ever be a newsworthy topic; if it were, would it warrant a page and half of coverage? I think not. The subject matter, however, was the least of the atticle's problems. The piece is a testament to sexism, racism, and the trivialization of sexual assault.

The most starkly offensive statement in the piece is this: " 'There's a lot of humor in police work,' he says. Then he chuckles as he recalls a sexual offender the police tagged 'The Cabinet Maker.'" After giving an account of the offender's technique, the author goes on. " 'That was original!' Hoeffler says in mock admiration.'' If sexual assault is a humorous part of police work, then something is seriously wrong. Sexual assault is not humorous to the victims, who experience very real terror and degradation. That reminds me of an amusing anecdote about a mass murder ...

As if to compensate for this lighthearted treatment of sexual assault, the article then states:

"But inside the technical services manager's office, Lolly Ferguson says sexual offenses make up seven-tenths of one percent of their total calls. 'We have no confirmed cases of first degree rape offenses and only a few third degree (intimate touching) cases,' she says. 'And we're very proud of having one of the lowest crime rates in the nation ... We have a very mature student population.' "

These figures bear no resemblance to statistics for any other college campus; they are unbelievably low. As if that weren't enough, the statistics cited in the article contradict and discredit each other. The statement that seven-tenths of one percent of all calls are related to sexual assault complaints is invalidated by another figure which appears earlier in the piece. The earlier figure states that only one-half (or five tenths) of one percent of all calls are related to disturbances at all. In other words, there are two-fifths of one percent more sexual assault com­plaints than there are total disturbance complaints.

The statement that there have been "no confirmed cases of first-degree rape" sounds as though there have been first-degree rapes reported, but that they don't count because they aren't "confirmed" (whatever that means.) "Only a few" (third-degree cases) is a phrase which is not only ambi~ous, but belittleing. "Only" implies that the third-degree assaults which did occur were not harmful because there were not "many.'' Finally, the implied connection between a mature student population and a "low" sexual crime rate is unrealistic and misleading. Rape is not perpetrated exclusively by young or " immature" men; it is a crime which occurs across all social, racial, and age barriers.

Making light of sexual assault is not the only offense committed by the author and subjects of this article. The author also includes material which is blatantly

Po\Ver Struggle Ousted Prof Editor:

As seen from the inside, what occurred in the Sociology Department was the result of an internal power struggle. Age was merely a face-saving facade. The late President Fontera was a manipulated instrument. Nobody won.

Editor,

Theresita Polzin Prof es.wr of Sociology

Is that light at the end of the tunnel or another train coming? After being on the ASMSC J-Board and attending most of last semester and this semester's Senate meetings, it's nice to see that maybe our Student Government is back on track again.

Not much has been done for the students in the last six months. Funds were not available; the students were not ·represented; and damaging impeachments scares flew. Let's face it-a lot has been flying around.

I feel the "real" encumbrance has not yet been lifted. A new paint job does not make a new car. You can see the muck piling up and deoaying by the side of the tracks.

The lack of student appointees and the many vacant positions show the loss of interest in our Student Government. This in turn has to affect our school overall. I am very pleased with our new President, Dr. Magelli, and his real commitment and pride for our school. Hopefajly, some of this will trickle down.

I am not a cheerleader, but, the guy who has had to sweep up after the 'pep rallies. It's hard to look forward with bloodshot eyes-but we must roll on. I Lust hope that the hangover will be less painful than the indulgence.

Looking both ways before crossing, Justice Steven Buhai

MSC student

racist. The reader is told of a prank one of the officers pulled to liven up the graveyard shift. He had a real-looking mo~key puppet in his patrol car, so he inched th& monkey up to peer out the window in order to startle the driver of the car next to his. So what-it's just a harmless prank and a harmless story, right? Wrong. The article specifically states that the victim of the prank was a black man wearing a feathered hat and driving a chartreuse Cadillac. Since this is the only practical joke recounted, it appears as though black men who fit the "pimp" stereotype deserve to be ridiculed. -

Finally, the article ends on a decidedly sexist note. The officers are swapping stories "like war buddies retelling their adventures ... Hoeffler stands in the door­way, his blue eyes twinkling." One of the tales which has put a twinkle in his eye is this:

"'And don't forget the naked couple in the hatchback.' When the officer asked them to move along, the guy simply said, 'Here's my ID; I'll be done in a minute.' " ·

Notice the terminology: "I'll be done in a minute." This kind of statement is appropriate only when one performs a task alone; when two or more people are involved, one would say, "We'll be. done in a minute." Obviously, the woman with whom this man is having sex is not accorded the status of personhood; she is an object with which he'll soon be finished. Regardless of its sexism, this anecdote has no place in a newspaper which supposedly represents a college. It would be more appropriate for the Playboy roving reporter.

Why did Th~Metropolitan feature a lengthy article about the AHEC cops and the fact that they have nothing to do? Why were blatantly sexist and racist statements featured in the piece? Why was sexual assault trivialized, and why were the "facts" completely contradictory? If The Metropolitan 's writers can't find anything appropriate about which · to write, they shouldn't write anything. Going to such lengths to find a topic and then sensationalizing it is an embarassing tactic which undermines the cr~dibility of the paper, and consequently casts doubt on the integrity of the school.

· Sincerely, Joan Johnson

Metro student Co-Director,

Progressive Action Against Media Abuse

Cop Story Defended Ms. Johnson I ask you, what is the purpose of a newspaper? In my opinion,

newspapers exist to inform, enlighten and entertain their readership. The people, places and things which make up the Auraria community are all part of our every­day lives-and it's our job to bring them to our readers.

I agree with you that some of the statements made by the officer are racist, and even sexist. But you are attacking the wrong people. We didn't say · those things- and we don't condo_ne them. We merely brought to our readers an enlightening article on one aspect of this campus.

That some people view sexual assault and racism in this manner is not our fault, it is a fault of our society. At The Metropolitan we respect our reader's opinions and we welcome their input. But in this case I have to say that I think we were right to print what we did. I think you would get closer to the heart of the pro­blem if you reworded your letter and sent it to the officer in question.

- ,,,.- - )

fWGrlf.R l

Thank You Kevin Vaughan

Editor, The Metropolitan

Na.J, DO 1 GET MY MON£Y C3F7Clf?

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Contributing cartoonist,} on Walter is a speech professor at MSC . ........

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Februa,,Y 27, 1985 OP/ED MSC Government Report

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ASMSC President Lisa Espiritu may not have been wholly accurate in her asser­tion that the'Student Affairs Board was wasting $1000 on a party, but she 9ased that assertion on all the information available at the time.

The non-communication that caused several students, myself included, to believe that the SAB was squandering a sizable portion of our fees is typical of the SAB over the last seyeral months. Indications are that things will not improve. In the past few weeks the SAB has promulgated an entirely new set of rules governing the budgeting of student fee funded programs. I won't dwell on the fact that these

.substantial changes were al~ost totally unexpected, and were made with almqst no input from the people directly affected, i.e. the directors of fee fundeQ pro­grams and the students at large.

It is my understanding that the new procedures eliminate a most important part of the budgeting process, a public hearing at which each program director has the opportunity to present his or her funding request to the SAB in person, and in public view. SAB will now consider a written application· form only, and will, it seems, now make its decisions in a vacuum. Somehow I'm not sure I trust the eleven members of the SAB to make a fair and equitable distribution of over half a

Editor's Note: The following poems were submitted by the president of Black Student Alliance, Tammy Williams, in commemoration of Black History month.

·The Younger Child

Ha, ha Rasheim,

you of dark skin call yourself my brother

You say that we came from the same womb You call our mother Africa

but, Rasheim

my brother

I have nevet seen our mother she, that you say has been raped of her innocence

stripped of her diamonds &

amputated of her gold

but, Rasheim

my brother

You say that she is still strong &

able to bear more fruit

-.

You say that the blood of the Nile still runs through her veins You say that the skin of our mother glistens ebony in the sight of the sun

but, I say

that the milk from her pyramid breasts can no longer find the mouths of her babes

for we have been gone too long Rasheim,

my mahogpny brother and scattered too far from her foreign body

I say that we have a new mother

Rasheim, my older brother

and I call her America

Tammy Williams

million dollars of our money unless you and I are able to watch their every conniv­ing move. I hope I misunderstand the new process ...

In any event Student Fees are now entirely at the discretion of the five faculty and six student members of the SAB. There are about 17 ,000 of us paying student fees. Are we being adequately represented? Only one of the students on the board is a woman, yet over half the studentry is female. Is this right?1t may take a while to change the structure of the SAB. But as students we must insist on access to information regarding the expendittue of our money. At the very least the minutes of each SAB meeting should be readily available. Apparently the SAB's new policy is to inform people on a need to know basis, and apparently not even the president of the student body needs to know. If this is allowed to continue, then $1000 par­ties where wine and beer and bits are paid for with our money will be among the minor abuses. · ·

I had to ~ork last Friday. I hope the rest of you were able to crash SAB's little party.

Christopher Dahle Chief Justice, ASMSC Judicial Board

The Masquerade

is it time to say goodnight is it time for the touching to end (and the masquerade to begin) '

the sun sets as you stroke my breasts

and inhale the essence of my soul

you bring the chores of the day with you things left undone battles left unwon

things that haunt you even now in my arms

I

this dance we make at the ball, does it help you at all or does it add to the nightmares

to the storm brewing (beneath the surface of your)

copper ebony

& emerald

mask

you say it's goodnight time for the touching to end and the masquerade to begin

will you go home and watch the Sands of time

as they mold and.shape your son (the emerald that glimmers

as the sun licks it on her way to bed)

and what about the Terrible, Glorious and Bearable ones , (who stanq in line for a dance)

a chance to touch a chance to share

do their poems reach you do their pleas find sympathy

have they learned your sea-ets have they accepted your gifts

a weekly dance a casual song

how will the dance end (will the partners bow)

and say goodnight (will the touching end)

the sun is setting the purple clouds are turning into black sky

will there be time for one last dance before the masquerade begins

Tammy Williams

I

I'aJ!.PS

Richard Alfultis, Parking Director

by Robert Davis News Editor, The Metropolitan

" The Auraria Higher Education Center board is considering two people mover systems to deal with the parking squeeze that's going to begin next semester.

At its next meeting March 11, the board is expected to review rapid tran­sit proposals from two companies. Both proposals will come from automated guideway transportation companies.

Despite the popularity and efficiency of the Auraria trolley, the board didn't accept a plan from Pat Kitowski, the owner of the trolley, to deal with mov­ing an estimated 1,500 people a day to and from Mile High Stadium.

"We gave them a proposal that said we could handle 'X' amount of people for considerably less than a monorail system," Kitowsld said. "At the point I gave them my so-called proposals it was too late for them to accept more proposals."

According to Richard Alfultis, AHEC's new parking ditector, Auraria's parking problems will mount slowly as a few parking lots are lost at ·a time, starting with lots E and B going Tivoli merchants next semester.

Then lots P and Q will be used as the site for the new UCD replacement

the buck at Mile High." More spaces for no money, according

to Alfultis, because the city isn't charg­ing Auraria for the use of the Mile High lots .

But even free parking spaces don't keep the cost of an ACT in the same league with the cost of the trolley.

"Our proposal wasn't even in the ballpark," Kitowski said, " it was very much less."

Alfultis agreed: "Almost anything will be ·cheaper

than ACT. You're looking at a Ion!! down. But if it takes a ·subsidy we're down. Hut it it takes a subsidiary we' re going to keep the cost of parking at Mile High attractive."

Since the parking garage idea Auraria considered was estimated at $7 million AHEC placed a spending cap of $7 million or so" on any poten­tial ACT.

"The shuttle is actually cheaper," Schoemer said, "but when you run the cost of 20 years of operation of the shut­tle the ACT is cheaper because. there are no drivers (in the ACT)."

JoAnn Saker, director of special pro­jects for AHEC, has been dealing with the two potential ACT companies. She said the locally based Otis company has offered a system that. would pay for itself.

"With the Otis, Auraria wouldn't have to foot a dime," Saker said, "it minimized our risk substantially."

She said the company has offered to operate the system and fund it through fares. Auraria would have to provide a guaranteed sum in the event that rider­ship was down.

"In terms. of risk analysis it really flips the risk over to the operator," Saker said. "We're not in the tramway business so they know much more than we do about it."

But Kitowskf.; trolley proposal had a similar asset. ,

" Our proposal did have a kicker in it in that after a certain period of time the system would pay for itself in advertis­ing," Kitowski said.

Saker said fares would be governed by AHEC to protect the students from being overcharged.

"The fare would be designed to encourage ridership," Soker said. "We've always promised Auraria peo­ple they would have low parking cost so

"With the Otis, Auraria wouldn't have to foot a dime, it 1Jlinimizes our risk substantially. "

JoAnn Saker

building. Alfultis said construction on that building is scheduled to start in the fall.

Deputy Executive Director of AHEC Jim Schoemer said that out of the 5,000 parking lot spaces an estimated 1,200 to 1,500 will be lost.

"We looked at a parking garage that would hold 1,200 cars and found it would cost us seven million dollars," Schoemer said. "We get more spaces for

fares would be different for Auraria people than for non-Auraria people."

Soker said since AHEC hopes that the city will use the ACT for Bronco games they hope to build a transit station near the East Classroom so people could park in the Denver Center for Perform­ing Arts parking garage and take the ACT to the stadium.

Universal Mobility, ~e company that rovided the ACT at the World's

_ , -

l 1

k

I

D ·= ~

Fair, is competing with Otis for the contract. If Universal won they would

· use the same system they had at the fair, Saker said.

She said she expects an updated pro­posal from both companies this week to be reviewed by the AHEC board at its next meeting.

Alfultis agreed and said he expects a construction date to come from the March meeting. He predicted the system would be running in two years.

"Absolute earliest would be to start engineering in the next six months," Alfultis said. "That means you don't build till .next spring and a system like that can't be built in less than 18 months."

Schoemer agreed with that estimate. "The objective is, if we can make it,

to have a system up one year from this fall," Schoemer said. "Within a month or so it may be that we can get a con­tract signed with one of these firms and we can get. going." _

Alfultis said getting a system like an ACT takes a certain amount of pushing.

"The more I think about it the more I

think it may be three years (before th1 system is up)," Alfultis said. "But if yo1 say three years it will be three. So if W•

put the pressure on some of these pea ple it may be two years."

Alfultis's ability to apply pressure i one of the reasons AHEC hired him Just after the ex-White House transpor tation advisor was hired last month AHEC Executive Director Jerry War tgow said Alfultis was selected for th1 job in light of all the up-comini changes.

Alfultis admits the progresstv, posture of AHEC lured him to the cam pus.

"One of the reasons the job appea1e1 tci me was the number of changes tha are apt to take place in the next fiv years," Alfultis said. "That's wha makes this job exciting, not only to dea with interesting people and interestin problems but to get in on the grouni floor." _ ·

Along with the parking lot change the city plans to close the Larimer ani Lawrence Streets viaducts within th next four years.

"That's been one of Jerry's (Wart gow) biggest objectives ever since h

.run ch Legend

/ .

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150 75 0 150 --Building Legend Existing Buildings D New Construction -Non· Campus Property D

"

got here," Schoemer said. With the elimination of th~two

streets AHEC plans to improve the J- pedestrian layout of the campus and

add some new buildings, as well as make additions to the library.

Soker said those changes are flexible and at least ten years away.

For now the issues are the AGT and '> the re-routing of traffic, Soker said.

She predicts the new W azee viaduct, which will replace Lawrence and Larimer, could be open in four years.

Kitowski said the closures could , affect his running trolley service to and from Mile High Stadium.

"I haven't seen the plaI?-s for the new highway but it could cut our route off from Mile High," Kitowski said. "I think Auraria is looking 01,1t for the future. They have their act together. Don't you think a lot of students will look at Auraria as a campus looking to the future?"

Alfultis agreed that the idea has more to offer than efficient transportation.

Proposed

Mile High AHEC

AGT Route '

'

Denver Center for the Performing Arts

Speer Boulevard

Student Center

Larimer Street

Lawrence Street

Colfax Viaduct

Interstate 25

Mile High Stadium

"It could even be, now don't.laugh, a tourist attraction," _he said. "It might even get on Dynasty. It would be big."

...... ,,..,,!'sl''!l!l!I'!

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Paw!1

February 27, 1985

' .I

February 27, 1985 ~

Sci-Fi Epic Won't Tax Your Brain .,,.

the teleportation secret of the Psychlo empire. Psychlos are driven to destroy any alien who threatens to discover this secret, or if that is impossible, to destroy themselves. Because of this cap­sule, Psychlos enjoy receiving and inflicting pain much the same as humans enjoy receiving and giving tenderness.

by Rose Jackson Reporter, The Metropolitan

Ready ... stand by .. . blast off! So begins Battlefield Earth, a mam­

moth testimony to L. Ron Hubbard's ability to type.

This 1,066-page volume has been made into a movie that is scheduled to be released . this spring. The fast­moving dialogue, swashbuckling characters ~nd action-filled sequences,

/ .

which lend themselves to spectacular special effects, will probably make this movie exciting to watch. However, reading this book is like wading through a huge comic book, the characters are flat and the plot con­trived.

Teri, a 1,000 pound Wookie-like creature with the face of a gorilla and the disposition of a chain-gang leader on a bad day, greets the reader in the first chapter by stating, "Man is an

endangered species." Teri is a Psychlo, a race of beings that rule the universe

. and mine colony planets for raw materials (minerals) to use in industry on the planet Psychlo.

We find out that Psychlos are inherently cruel creatures because of small capsules placed at the base of their brain at birth by Catrists, a ruling class of Psychlo "doctors." These cap­sules control any emotion that would induce compassion, thereby protecting

.. . ..

The sure thing comes once in a lifetime ...

but the real thing lasts forever.

:{··--·

EMBA.5SY FILMS ASSOCIATES .,..,.." , MONUMENT PICTURES , ........ ,.., • ROB REINER "w "THE SURE THINGH '""""'; JOHN CUSAC~ •DAPHNE ZUNIGA · VIVECA LINDFORS ~"''""'"'" '"'"'"":: NICOLLETlE SHERIDAN

-Jtit~1i HENRY WINKLER , ... ,.~',~ ANDREW SCHEINMAN "'";!'; TOM scon WI/HI~~ STEVEN L BLOOM ' JONATHAN RQBERTS IPG-t3T;:::;.~"":""...:!:~l """''~:ROGER BIRNBAUM '"'""':.\' ROB REINER t~. ~ST ~-lttnllll,,...fllll ·-.~ j~ t•lfC1I MftA.'-"~llJit.lr..'°"'•WI '

I

Starts March 1st at a Theatre Near You.

Jonnie Good boy Tyler is one of the few remaining humans on Earth. He sets out from his village to discover why many of his people are dying and thosi!' who survive are not bearing children. Jonnie's village is very near the ruin of Cheyenne Mountain (we all know where that is) where nuolear devices had been exploded centuries before.

Jonnie sets out to help his village and ends up saving the .. universe from the· tyranny of the Psychlos. He leaves his village carrying throw clubs, and riding his horse, Windsplitter. He returns flying a super-sonic aircraft and carrying laser weapons. It is just a little too hard to believe-even for a ·· die-hard science fiction fan.

Teri finds Jonnie wandering on the plains just outside an ancient city called "Denver" and makes a project out of him. Teri wants to prove to his superiors that human beings can be used in the mines and thus save millions of credits (Psychlo currency) on labor for the company (the Intergalactic Mining Co.).

Teri throws Jonnie in a pit, feeds him rats and stale water, and teaches him how to mine. Jonnie, however, survives and learns Teri's culture, including the difficult Psychlo language, and deter­mines to beat Teri at ~is own game and win back the world.

Jonnie then manages to involve the whole Earth, including spunky Scotsmen, putrid South American mercenaries and even some intergalac­tic bankers who actually look like sharks, in his emancipation plan.

Hubbard's ambition in this work is definitely epic in scope. However, a good editor with a giant red pen could ~ have relieved the publishers of the responsibilty of printing at least 300 pages.

Hubbard writes three or four paragraphs that say the same thing and often has trouble finishing sentences, even those which are not part of· the characters' speeches.

It is hard to understand why someone who has been in the business of writing since the 1930s retains such a shallow approach to science fiction. Especially someone who claims to rival Arthur C . Clarke's futuristic pragmatism or Heinlein's romantic, spacemen heroes.

This book is good to read if you don't want to think too much-say for instance if you're dozing lazily on a beach_ and baking your body in the sun.

· However, if you're into serious science fiction, forget it.

Hubbard's typing . speed probably doubled the summer he wrote this book. I know my reading speed did the· ' week I read it. Id

Page 11

f ebruary ~7, 1985

Electronic Effects Dominate New Briley Album ,.

Last year Martin Briley came . out with the single "Salt In My Tears" and a slew of other interesting songs off the album One Night With A Stranger quickly becoming my favorite "Next Big Thing in Rock n' Roll."

Now I've heard his ne~ album, Dangerous Moments, and I'm no longer completely convinced. Yes, Briley is a masterful song writer , and I found myself frequently grinning at the humorous lyrics he has come up with, lmt the performance has become

lackluster. The clearest flaw is in the album's

production. All the requisite guitar riffs and drum fills so essential to the success of any good pop album are there, but they are obscured behind far too many mindless synthesizers and flashy elec­tronic effects.

Despite the valiant efforts of Hall & Oates' lead guitarist G.E. Smith, the whole affair lacks that certain snappy feeling that characterizes a hit, tqough

. you can tell that Briley's material has

Emmanuel Exhibit Contradicts Title Fiasco, according to Webster's Dic­

tionary, means a failure. When MSC's student show opened, one might have expected such a failure- but that wasn't necessarily tbe case.

The walls of Emmanuel are plastered with the usual carefully rendered, but typical boring full frame, pencil drawn faces. Only a few more personal works stood out. • Her Choice, by Peter Buena (oil) captures your attention with its full range of vibrant colors. Playful, brisk brushstrokes show us a woman torn betw,ee~ her choice of two men. Buena's piece won the honor of Best of Show.

Lori Davis Windle had a disturbing piece (as one on-looker called it) entitl­ed Apron Strings (prisma color) . Naked

breasts, feet and hands swarm across the canvas, and are captured in mom­mas' apron strings. The effect is quite thought provoking. -

Suzanne M. Kime gives us untitled (clay) which is a hand holding a head in thoughtful repose. Its colors are a la naturels; blacks, greys, peaches and browns · give the figure a sort of mouldy, un-earthly cast.

There's a very smooth, beautifully rendered, princely looking chair sitting in the back of the gallery. This chair is the work of Scott LeCocq, untitled (oil­ed ash). LeCocq's piece won 3rd place for excellence in ·the Visual Arts. ' . Fiasco will run through March 7 at the Emmanuel Gallery on the. Auraria Campus.

-Nikki Jac~on

Unanimous Winner·GRAND PRIZE ,PALME D'OR·Cannes Film Festival

Starts Friday March 1st Exclusive Engagement

the potential. The album's producer is Phil

Ramone, whose recent success with Billy Joel's b111oce 11t Ma11 L.P. wolild have led one to expect more. .

Briley can also take some of the blame, since he's one of the synthesizer players. In addition, his vocals don't live up to the potenti-al of his writing. It would be unfair to describe Briley's style as monotone, though it's awful close to the truth. To make matters worse, the songs seem to lack a variety

of style. Briley bombards you with one potential hit after another, though nothing is quite different enough to make a lasting impression.

Nowhere does the album show us another side fo the man-a different style, a slower number, or one that's more upbeat. After a while it brings to mind the similar effects of being forced to listen to one too many K-Tel Greatest Hits commercials in succes-sion .

- Chris Deutsch

The Auraria Book Center presents

SANDRA DALLAS

BY SANORA llALIAS l't«>fOGIW'MS rt kiNIW. ,.TCHISON

Colorado Ghost Towns and Mining Camps is the first volume in more than twenty­five years to document the mountain communities that quickly grew and died with the state's gold and silver rushes. The book is richly illustrated with photographs taken by Dallas' daughter, Kendal Atchison, sup­plemented by archival photographs and clearly­drawn maps.

autographing

COLORADO GHOST TOWNS

AND -MINING

CAMPS Thurs., March 7

12-1 PM

Ms. Dallas is the Denver Bureau Manager of Business Week and author of other books anp articles on Colorado and the West.

COLORADO GHOST TOWNS AND MINING CAMPS is published by the University of Oklahegia Press. Please join us on March 7 and take advantage of special pricing of the book at 25% off pub I ished p~ice !

AURARIA BOOK CENTER Lawrence & 9th St. 556-3230. M-Th 8-7:30, Fri 8-5, Sat 10-3

_,-·

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SPORTS February 27.1985

Sluggers Split Opener with USC b __ y_C_urt __ S_a_n_d_o_v_a_I ______ splitting a double header in Pueblo second 3-2. said he was pleased with Weber's pit- ;s

with the University of Southern Col- Bob Weber, who was out most of last ching. orado. season due to an injury, pJtched the "He was popping some high 80's

''CiSC won the first game 5-1 before first four innings for the Roadrunners (throwing 80 miles per hour)," Helman

Sports Editor, The Metropolitan

The MSC men's baseball team open­ed up the regular season Sunday by Metro CStme from behind to take the . in game one. Head coach Bill Helinan said.

The invitation just said black tie. Thanks to your,friends, _

you also wore a jacket and pants.

When none other than the Dean inYites vou to a black tie reception. what do ~:ou do? Start b(n-row­ing: a jacket here ( 40 reJ..,rlllar). a pair of pants. there. and before you know il. you 're looking pretty sharp.

And when your formal party is ~~ over, there's another one \'OU should

0

, arrange. Making sure that each contributor to your wardrobe gets what he deserws in the form of a U>wenbriiu.

Afkr all. isn't anv friend worth a cummerbund: worth

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Lowenbrau.Here's to good friends. -

fn the second game, the Roadrunners were in the> top of the seventh inning and had yet to score; 13 innings for the day with just one run. '

Helman said the team then got a lit­tle crazy and a "rally master" emerged. The team decided to turn their hats inside-out and suddenly, as weird as it sounds, the men blasted in three runs -during the seventh inning.

Mark Bryant led off the inning with a walk, followed by Randy Hodges blasting a single to left field to put run­ners at first and second.

Ronn Wells was then signaled to bunt, in order to move the runners to second and third. However, USC didn't ·cover the bunt and Metro had loaded up the bases.

Then things took a turn f~r the worse. Craig Bonato and Todd Vaughn struck out. But when Vaughn struck out, the ball went into the dirt and Bryant was able to score.

Doug Montgomery came to the plate with the run at third and two outs. On the first pitch Montgomery hit a single up the middle to score both Hodges and Wells and put Metro up 3-2.

In the bottom of the seventh, USC got one runner on base before the Roadrunners shut them down. Steve Ciberay got the win in relief of Tim Collins who had pitched the first four innings.

When Collins was on the mound, he struck out four players in just four inn­ings and Helman said he was throwing around 90 mile per hour. :·1t was good we hung in there and got one game," Helman said. "We played good clean ball, but we escaped by stealing."

Helman said he was also pleased with Hodges, for what he thbught was the game winning catch, when the junior from Arvada made a diving grab down the third base line to save a USC triple.

Helman said he is very hopeful about the season with a strong pitching unit and defensive team.

"We've got good combinations," he said. "The team has a remarkable 13 pitchers on the squad. They'll all be fighting for time," Helman said.

The team will be taking on Regis Wednesday before playing four games this weekend with Air Force. But the ,big games ahead lie on spring break when the team will travel to Phoenix, Arizona to play exhibition games with major league squads. 0

The Metropolitari regrets to an­nounce the departure of Sports Editor Curt Sandoval.

Applications for the open job will be accepted through Priday, March 8.

Please send clips and a cover letter 'including student status, experience and availability to The Metropolitan Editorial Staff, P.O. Box 4615-57, Denver CO 80204.

- - - -------~-~

..;February 27, 1985 \

,Hoopsters Drop Two, · t Fall Below .500 Mark

by Curt Sandoval Sports Editor, The Metropolitan

~--------...::...::.....:..:..::__:__ __ ~ · The MSC men's basketball team had a tough time this past week as they dropped two games to bring their overall record to 12-13, the first time the Roadrunners have fallen below . 500.

.... Wednesday night the men dropped a 66-65 overtime decision to the Regis Rangers at the Regis fieldhouse. Metro had whipped Regis earlier in the year at the Auditorium by 25 points.

The loss marked the eighth time this year that the Roadrunners have been beaten by four points or less.

Metro controlled the tempo of the game but couldn't capitalize on free throws in the late stages of the contest. Another problem the Roadrunners couldn't stop was the scoring of Charles Howell who had 20 points for the Rangers.

Regis' Chuck Wahleim came in to hit two free throws with just 58 seconds left in regulation to tie the game up. After Metro went ahead Wahleim again hit two free- throws and the game was destined to overtime.

Once again, the man of the hour for Regis, Wahleim, connected on another

pair of tree throws to give the Rangers the lead they would not relinquish.

While Regis was nothing but hot from the line, the Roadrunners missed six of the last 10 free throws. If the night wasn't bad enough, Metro's leading scorer Herb Darden, who averages 18 pt>ints a game, did not start because he had car trouble prior to the game. Darden was held to just nine points for the evening.

. The team's luck didn't get any better . as the men dropped to Colorado Col­lege Saturday night in Pueblo 90-77 in what coach Bob Ligouri said, "was one of the strangest games I'vll ever seen."

.· During the course of the game, Col­orado College shot an incredible 45 free throws to Metro's nine. Ligouri said eight of his players were either playing with four fouls or had fouled out of the game.

"We were averaging more than a foul every minute," Ligouri said. He added that the team had out~scored Colorado by eight points from the field, but were beaten at the line.

The men will play their last game of the season against Santa Fe Tuesday night in hopes of ending with a .500 season. 0

. CAMPUS RECREATION, THE DENVER NUGGETS AND COORS,

PRESENT THE FOURTH ANNUAL COLLEGIATE MEN'S AND CO·ED 3 ON 3 TOURNAMENT

Entrx fee Is only .$10.00 per team. This fee will cover: Participa-· tlon in the tournament, a ticket for each team member to the March 9th, Denver Nuggets-Indiana Pacers game, concessions coupon and a discount coupon for future Nuggets games.

The championship tournament will be held at iMCNichoJs Sports Arena on March 9th among the first place finishers from the 10 different achoo&e •. Awards will .be preeente.d to the first and second plab,t fJnl"*8 from each School and atl&pwnplonshlp tournament. ·

Entry forms are available at the Campus Recreation Check-Out desk, PER 108. ·

• WE ARE THE REIGNING CHAMPIONSJ!!!

Page 13

; Runners Go Outdoors First year track coach Micheal Peter­

son is now in the home stretch of his debut year as a varsity coach.

Petersorr, who has been coaching cross country and indoor track, is still trying to build a program at MSC.

However,. ghosts of last season when he wasn't at MSC have been haunting him. Brian Janssen, last year's coach, knew he would not be around this year so he didn't recruit anyone .

"We don't have enough bodies," Peterson said. He said he has picked up a high jumper, but overall the team size is very small.

~Tm trying to build a program, but sometimes I have to fi ht the

administrative forces," he said. With the men's opening meet in Phoenix in March, the Roadrunners are hoping to rely on the experience of George Frushour, Dave Garcia and John Mon-tgomery as its strength. ·

"Metro has all the potential in th world," Peterson said. "It is the onl urban college that fields so man sports. The potential is tremendous."

However, while Peterson is ve optimistic about the future of track an athletics at MSC he said some chang

. have to be made . "We need a different attitude towar

athletics and what it can do for th school." 0

PER TV -Sho"W Hits Cable Dr. James E. Bryant, Professor. and

Chair, Physical Education and Recrea­tion Department will become host of the Aurora City Cable, Channel 28 television program tentatively named SPORTSCOPE. The program will begin March 18, 1985 and run initially for a 13 week time period.

SPORTSCOPE will be a· weekly, 30 minute interview program done live in the studio and telecast several times during the week. Topic areas for the program will include physical fitness,

biomechanics, sports sociology, sports psychology, sport art, and sports skills information. Sports Communication Multi-Major student at Metropolitan State College, Curt Sandoval will also be involved with the program working with on "location visual filming and editing . Guests will include Metropolitan State College physical education and recreation faculty, Aurora city recreation staff, and experts in sport both locally and nationally. O

Sample . The Swmnit.

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Ski Free Sample the Summit-Keystone/ North Peak. Arapahoe Basin. Copper Mountain and Breckenridge-and stay for $39.95/ night, Sunday-Thursday at the Silverthorne Lodge. This special rate includes a full-day lift ticket at any of the four nearby ski areas.

Free shuttle to all fqur areas. And after skiing sample our indoor pool.~uzzi. ~urant and lounge.

Sl9.95 per person.t>ased on double occupancy, limlted~dfOOnlJ'ilWilable at thts rate. adv.wiced reseTVations tiequired. one lift ticketper_,..pir night booked. offer ..alid Jhrough 3i3 l/ M . •

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Pagel4

This Calendar is presented as a courtesy to the students of Auraria and may be edited for space, Please submit calendar items early.

Wednesday 27

US Polley-Towards Apartheid SOuth Africa, a talk by Dr. Boffour Agyeman. noon to 1 p.m. in St: Francis meeting room 1. A fee is charged. For further information coll 623-2340.

A Bach's Lunch, Music and lecture. noon to 1 p.m. In St. Francis Lounge. For further infor­mation coll 623-2340.

Rellghtlng the Candle of Excellence, a talk by Morva Collins. at 7 to 8:30 p.m. In St. Cojeton's. A MSC Lecture Series presenta­tion. For further Information coll 556-2595.

Job search Strategies, 9:30 to 11 :30 o.m. and "Interviewing Skills.'' 2 to 4 p .m. Two workshops presented by the Office of Career Planning and Placement Services. To participate you must sign up two days prior to workshop. For further information coll 556-3474.

Downtowner Movie Break, this week features a Harold Lloyd comedy. a Laurel and Hardy routine. a cartoon. and on Our Gong comedy-all FREE beginning at 12:15 p.m. at the Denver Center Cinema. 1245 Champa St. For further information cdll 892-0987.

The Thames a Notional , Geographic Special about the clean-up that restored the Thomes river waters to a new vitality, on KBDl-TV 12.

Baptist Student Union Fellowship Group at 1 p.m. In Stud~nt Center. 254. For further Information call 623-2340.

Thursday 28

MSC Admllllons Luncheon, 11:30 a.m. to 1. p.m. In Student Center. 230 AJB. For further Information call 556-3058.

Tucker Hart Adams-economist and V.P. of United Bonk of Colorado will speak on "Economic Trends for Denver and the U.S." . at 8:30 p.m. In the Student Center. 330. Sponsored by the Master of Business Association Students. For, furtner Informa­tion call 388·2574. Concentric Circles of Concern Study Group at 10 a.m. in Student Center. 247. Sponsored by the Baptist Student Union. For further Information call 623-2340.

The Denver Symphony Orchestra will per­form Sibelius. Chopin and Tchaikovsky at 8 p.m. at the Boettcher Concert Hall. For fur­ther information or to charge tickets call 5,92-7777.

Slides From Nicaragua-slides and discus­sion l?ly Dr. Lorry Mosqueda on the recent elections in Nicaragua. at 6 p.m. in the Stu-· dent Center 230 AJB. Sponsored by the Auroria Central America Support Commit­tee. For further information coll 556-8318.

Friday 1

Richard D. Lamm Governor of Colorado will speak at 6:30 to 7:50 o.m. at the Executive Tower Inn. 1405 Curtis. Progrorn and breakfast is $6. For further Information or reservations coll 320-1004.

Portraits of Chlldren, the second concert by the Colorado Chlldrens Chorale at 8 p.m. in Boettcher Concert Holl. For further Information or to charge tickets coll 988-7444.

The Lewltzky Dance Company which per­formed at the Los Angeles Olympics will per form at 8 p.m. at the' Arvada Center. 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. For further Information coll 422-8050.

Beauty and the Beast at 7 p.m. rn French with English sabtlttes and "El Norte" at 8:45 at the Denver Center Cinema. 1245 Cham­pa St. For further Information coll 892-0987.

Saturday 2

FREE Income tax assistance for low income. elderly, non-English speaking and handicapped taxpayers at 11 o .m. to 3 p.m. in room 201 of the Aurorio Library. Assistance provided by the MSC lox accounting students. Polttely Rude, a country/bluegrass band based In Greeley. will perform at the Alpen Musikfest: spotlighting women muslcans. The performance will be at 9 to 12 p.m. at the Ramada Inn at 1-70 and Kipling. For further Information coll 861-4307. The Lewttzky Dance Company which per­formed at the Los Angeles Olympics will perform at 8 p.m.-at the Arvada Center. 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. For further Informa­tion coll 422-8050.

The Denver Symphony Orchestra will per­Blble Reading Group at 1 p.m. in Student form Sibelius. Chopin and Tchaikovsky at 8 Center. 257. Sponsored by the Baptist Stu- p.m. at the Boettcher Concert Holl. For fur­dent Union. For further information coll ther Information or to charge tickets coll 623-2340. - .. ,592-7777.

( ''\

~0 .{/~ 1.. .-· -- -

NCS COUNSELING SERVICES

1740 Williams St. Denver, CO 80218 (303) 333-9852

Sunday 3

The Denver Symphony Orchestra will per­form Sibelius. Chopin and Tchaikovsky at 2:30 p .m. at the Boettcher Concert Holl. For further information or to charge tickets coll 592-7777

One-Man Exhibit, paintings. Guest Artist. Al Schossou on display at the Aurorlo Library.

The Children's Museum Is open from noon to 5 p_.m. with hands-on participatory exhibits. The Museum con be reached by taking 1-25 to exit 211 (23 Avenue.).

Northern Ughta at 3 p .m.. "Children of Paradise'' at 4:45 p.m. in French with

. English subtitles and "El Norte" at 8 p.m. Ali shows ore at the Denver Center Cinema. 1245 Champa SI. For further information coll 892-0987.

Monday4

Mock Interview a workshop at 2 to 4 p.m. presented by the Office of Career Planning and Placement Services. To participate you must sign up two days prior to workshop. For further information stop by Central Classroom 108. or coll 556-3474.

Different Drummers, a dramatic portrayal of 11 women by Sylvia Falconer. at noon to 1 p .m. In St. Francis Center. upstairs meeting room 1. Part of the weekly Issues Forum. sponsored by the Aurarlo Interfaith Ministry. For further Information call 623-2340.

Bible Study on the Book of James at 7 p.m. at 2333 South University. Sponsored by the Baptist Student Union. For further Informa-tion coll 233-5320. -

Land of the Tiger a Notonol Geographic Special at 7 p .m. An excellent documen­tary showing close-ups-of the most power­ful and elusive predator of the Indian forest. Footage from 2 years of work In India's national porks on KBDl-TV 12.

Barn of Fire this documentary focuses on the modern science of plate tectonics. at 8:30 p.m. on KBDl-TV 12.

This calendar is a FREE service of THE METROPOLITAN. All Items SJ.Jbmitted may not be run. due to space limitations.. Ali Items must be submitted not later than 1 p.m. Friday.

Tuesday 5

Interviewing Skills a workshop at 9 to 11 a .m. presented by the Office of Career Planning and Placement Services. To par­ticipate you must sign up two days prior to workshop. For further Information stop by Central Classroom 108. or coll 556-3474.

Alcoholics Anonymous meetings at 11 :30 to 12:30 p.m. and 4 to 5 p.m. In Student Center. 258. Sponsored by the Student Organization of Human Services. For further Information coll 556-2511.

Scripture Memory Group at 10 a.m. In the Student Center. 257. - Sponsored by the Baptist Student Union. For further Informa­tion call 623-2340.

Woodstock the 1970 Oscar-Winner of "Best Documentary" will show at 7 p.m. on KBDl­TV 12.

Wednesday 6

Resume WrHlng Workshop at 10 to noon. presented by the Office of Career Planning and Placement Services. To participate you must sign up two days prior to workshop. For further Information stop by Central Classroom 108. or call 556-3474.

Womens Fare '85 displays. booths. fundroisers. demonstrations. arts and enter­tainment at 9 a .m. to 5 p .m. In the Student Center. For further Information coll 556-2595.

Baptist Student Union Fellowship Group at 1 p .m. In the Student Center. 254. For further information coll 623-2340.

Downtowner Movie Break at 12:15 p .m. This week features a D.W. Griffith short. a Bugs Bunny cartoon. a Laurel and Hardy routine and a musical short. oil FREE at the Denver Center Cinema. 1245 Champa St. For further Information coll 892-0987.

Aurarta Nuclear Education ProJect will meet In room 351E Student Center at 2:00. All interested people welcome. Coll 556-3320 for more Information.

Advertise in

The

February 27, 1985

...

Help Wanted

AIRLINES HIRING, S 14-S 39 ,000! Stewardesses Reservotlonlsl! Worldwide! Coll Jof Guide, Directory, Newsletter. 1-(916) 944-4444 ~Metro Stale Air 5/1

CRUISESHIPS HIRING, $14-$30,000 Carib­bean. Hawaii, World, Call for Guide, Direc­tory, Newsletter. 1-(916) 944-4444 x Metro State Cruise. 511

OVERSEAS JOBS.. Summer. yr. round. ~urope, S. Amer., Australia. Asia . .lall _fields. S600-S2000 mo. Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJC, PO Box 52-Co-2 Corona Del Mar, CA92625 3/6

,--.. PART ilME SALES The Regiment shops needs part time/full l ime soles people. 20-40 hours per week, hourly rates negotiable. Merchandising and selling quality, tradi­tional clothing. Please call 759-2242 3/6

DRIVERS WANTED for Pizza delivery. Must • hove a car and insurance. Apply in person.

PIZZA ITALIANO, 1544 W. ?0th Ave., Westminster. 2/27

Services

RESEARCH PAPERS! 106-oaae colalog-15,278 topics! Rush $2 .00 l~esearcr •. 11322 Idaho w200Mts LvS Angeles, 90025. (213) 47/ -8226. 518

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TYPING-Accurate and Reasonable, Coll Sandi ot 234-1095 3/27

RESEARCH Send $2 for catalog ot over-16,000 topics to assist your research ef­forts. For info .. call toll­free 1-800-621-57~1-llnois call 312-922 ).

Authors· ~Harch, Rm 600-N . .C07 S. o .. rl>orn, Chicago, IL 80e0~

FRANKLY SPEAKING

RECORD CUTIING SERVICE Records made from your tapes, singles S10-S12.50. albums S25-S37.50. Poul Brekus 433-3249 eves. 2/27

CUSTOM WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY-You design, .package, and price your album. Call 360-0149 for your FREE planning guide and o hAOutif111 brochure on weddinq photography. 5/8

TAX HELP for: Small Business People, Independent Contractors, Direct Salespeo­ple. Entertainers, Non-Residents ... and Everyday People,. Call Jay Klein 8t Assoc ::::t 595-7783 5/8

WORD PROCESSING IBM Equipment used. Foot notes Justification, Subscripts. & many other features. $1 .75 per double spaced page. CAii 286· 7263 5/8

PHOTOGRAPHER FOR HlllE ALL JOBS accepted.' very reasonable rotes, profes­sional quality work. Call Beagle at 778-6621 evens. or leave message· at 556-2507 5/8

SPRING BREAK GETAWAYS South Padre Island. TX, From S119-S145; Daytona Beach, FL. From S119-S139. Campus representative positions available call 1-740-8242. 2/27

KEEP SAKE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY I shoot, you keep negs. Don't get burned by 500 percent mc;irkups. Dependoble,Top quali­ty, Reasonable flat rate. Coll Jim 556-8361 or 777-9685. 5/8

Hqusing

NICE APART. For Rent. 5-10 mins. from school. South Denver. 2nd Floor. Off street parking. 300/monlh. HEAT PAID. Call Michel 722-6602. or 722-5166. 2/27

SUNNY EFFICIENCY 1 & 2 Bedrooms, Hard­wood floors, oak doors & cabinets. secure, cable. storage, on Capitol Hill 440-4275 days only, Poul. 3/13

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Call Clay 629-1193 anytime. 2127

You now hove o friend 1n the Real Estate business. Allow a fellow· stu­dent to help vou Find the home of vour dreams. Available at the Aurana Campus T uesdavs and Thursdavs llam-2pm. Call Donald Anderson at 329-9669 or 757-5024 evenings.

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Up the old companionway ...

\

How To Study For Exams ... And Pass

Read this valuable report In 5 minutes and get passing grades .. . even In yourtoughest subjects. Here's an easy-to-use plan based on established prln­cfples of /earning that eliminates a lot of forgetting and lmpr!'sses the mind with what you need lo know to pass your exams. In short, 11 simplifies learning by using what we know about the learning process to your advantage. Included In the report are special study Ups for math, physics, psychology and other subjects.

.. . II you must memorize ... learn to memorize so that you are confident that you have stored away all pertinent Information. •

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