volume 13, issue 3 - sept. 7, 1990

24
THE ETROPOLITAN The Metropolitan State College of Den v er student newspaper ser vi ng the Aurari a Campus since 1979 Denver, Colorado Volume 13, Issue 3 September 7, 1990 [south African journalist delivers perSpec ive p. 16 I Children frolic in the fountain at Civic Center Park on a 90 degree day at A Taste of Colorado over Labor Day weekend. \ Student .forces policy change Tammy Pacheco The Metropolitan Metropolitan State College of Denver has a new policy on religious discrim- ination because a Jewish student compl• ained to the Affirmative Action Advisory Council. MSCD student Joel Kleg said he missed Diane Hartman's beginning reporting class to attend Passover Seder in April. Due to Hartman's policy of not accepting work past deadline, Kleg was not able to make up the work he missed. He has since accused Hartman of reli- gious discrimination. Hartman said that she had made the rule and that no exceptions were made for any student in the class, and that good attendance was also considered in the final grade. _ "1 gave him (Joel) the zeros for missing the classes but, because he had good at- tendance, I didn't figure those zeros into his final grade," Hartman said. Kleg asked to see his final grades, but 'has not received them. "They'll give me the letter grade, but they won't give me the numerical grade," Kleg said. According to Hartman, the zeros didn't hurt his grade at all. A committee formed at MSCD to hear Kleg's complaint found that Hartman treated all her students in the same man- ner, and Kleg's grade was not hurt by the missing grades. But the committee also found that MSCD' slack of aclear policy on absences due to religious holidays left room for possible charges of discrimination. As a result, Director of Equal Oppor- tunity and Assistant to the President Percy A. Morehouse, Jr. drafted a four-part policy on nonattendance because of reli- gious beliefs. "It's been approved by the [MSCD\ President Thomas Brewer's] Cl}binet," Morehouse said.· The "Class Attendance on Religious Holidays Policy," went into effect Aug. 29. It allows for students, who are unable to attend a class on a particular day due to religious beliefs, to be excused from any examination or work requirement on that day. According to Hartman, Kleg said he, at first, wanted a school policy regarding religious practice and missing class. Kleg now says he wants his changed because he feels he deserves an "A." Kleg is not satisfied with the committee's finding and has asked the Anti-defamation League and the Ameri- can Civil Liberties Union for their help. "I don't understand why he is carrying this out," Hartman said. The religious policy will be available to students as soon as the Board of Trust- ees has a final look at it. :l Joel Kleg (See policy page 17)

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

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

THE ETROPOLITAN The Metropolitan State College of Denver student newspaper ser ving the Auraria Campus since 1979

Denver, Colorado Volume 13, Issue 3 September 7, 1990

[south African journalist delivers perSpec ive p. 16 I

Children frolic in the fountain at Civic Center Park on a 90 degree day at A Taste of Colorado over Labor Day weekend. \

Student complai~t .forces policy change Tammy Pacheco The Metropolitan

Metropolitan State College of Denver has a new policy on religious discrim­ination because a Jewish student compl• ained to the Affirmative Action Advisory Council.

MSCD student Joel Kleg said he missed Diane Hartman's beginning reporting class to attend Passover Seder in April. Due to Hartman's policy of not accepting work past deadline, Kleg was not able to make up the work he missed.

He has since accused Hartman of reli­gious discrimination.

Hartman said that she had made the rule and that no exceptions were made for any student in the class, and that good attendance was also considered in the final grade. _

"1 gave him (Joel) the zeros for missing the classes but, because he had good at-

tendance, I didn't figure those zeros into his final grade," Hartman said.

Kleg asked to see his final grades, but ' has not received them. "They'll give me the letter grade, but they won't give me the numerical grade," Kleg said.

According to Hartman, the zeros didn't hurt his grade at all.

A committee formed at MSCD to hear Kleg's complaint found that Hartman treated all her students in the same man­ner, and Kleg's grade was not hurt by the missing grades.

But the committee also found that MSCD' slack of aclear policy on absences due to religious holidays left room for possible charges of discrimination.

As a result, Director of Equal Oppor­tunity and Assistant to the President Percy A. Morehouse, Jr. drafted a four-part policy on nonattendance because of reli­gious beliefs.

"It's been approved by the [MSCD\

President Thomas Brewer's] Cl}binet," Morehouse said. · The "Class Attendance on Religious Holidays Policy," went into effect Aug. 29.

It allows for students, who are unable to attend a class on a particular day due to religious beliefs, to be excused from any examination or work requirement on that day.

According to Hartman, Kleg said he, at first, wanted a school policy regarding religious practice and missing class. Kleg now says he wants his gr~de changed because he feels he deserves an "A."

Kleg is not satisfied with the committee's finding and has asked the Anti-defamation League and the Ameri­can Civil Liberties Union for their help.

" I don't understand why he is carrying this out," Hartman said.

The religious policy will be available to students as soon as the Board of Trust­ees has a final look at it. :l

Joel Kleg

(See policy page 17)

Page 2: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

eta ~

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October 6 • 6 p.m. -'til the cows come home • Music by Tiny Barge and the Big Chill

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Metropolitan --State College of Denver

..

' _,

Page 3: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

·-·

-~

September 7, 1990

NEWS

RIEFS

Mayor seeks artistic excellence candidates

Denver's Commission on Cultural Affairs is accepting nominations for the annual Mayor's Award for Excellence in the Arts.

Recipients of the awards may be individuals, organiza­tions, businesses or philan­thropic groups judged to have made a significant and lasting contribution to the arts in Denver.

Nominators may make more than one nomination, but should use a separate form for each nomination.

An independent panel of judges, appointed by the com­mission and composed of arts professionals and community leaders will select the awardees.

As many as three awards will be presented. Sub-mission deadline is Sept. 14.

Nomination forms and ad­ditional information are avail­able through Gregory Geissler at 640-2678.

Student counts fish for money

Each year the U.S. govern­

ment hires 30,000 students across the country to work part­time during the school year. These jobs are set aside for those students who are having trouble paying for their tuition.

One student in Seattle earned $8 per hour sitting on a rock counting fish as they swam by in a stream.

Contact Stay In School Pro­gram, Career Entry and Em­ployment Group, U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Washington, D.C., 20415 or call (202) 606-0950.

THE M ETROPOLITAN 3

Former AHEC Parking director named interim vice president

Julie Pezze The Metropolitan

Although Richard Alfultis has dditional responsibilities as the uraria Higher Education Center' s

ew interim executive vice presi­ent for Administration, he finds ·s new job to be "less stressful"

han his former position as director f Parking and Transportation.

Alfultis describes his interim sition as "one of the managers of

JI the non-acad~mic service divi­ions of AHEC.

"You might call it the executive ecretary of the Board of Directors or Auraria," Alfultis said.

He is one of four members of e executive council which over­

ees the budget, supervises divi­ions' activities, and he is "the guy ho gets to answer" if those ser­

ices don't come out properly, he aid.

Alfultis considered his job at arking and Transportation to be ore stressful because the deci­

ions were more immediate and e impact of those decisions was ore "controversial," he said. His new position involves more

ong-range planning tactics. 'Tm aced with more day-to-day con­ontations and more challenges of hether we did the right thing," he

aid. "It's a joke .. . and it may be e, the only people who smile

ess than people in parking are the tudent aid people," he said.

Alfultis was recommended for

icki Engeman Police Reporter

Impropriety puts pair in pokey

After an incident at the Tivoli, both perpetrator and victim were arrested.

At approximately 2 a.m. on Aug. 30, an officer observed sev­eral people jumping up and down on the hood and windshield of a Ford Mustang parked in the 900 block of Walnut Street.

Upon seeing the officer, the group scattered. All of them got away except Daniel . Jerry Gutierrez.

Gutierrez was placed under ar­rest for criminal mischief to an automobile.

Meanwhile, the others ran

New VP for Administration at Auraria Higher Education Center Richard Alfultis

the position by Auraria Board Chair Betty Miller because of his famil­iarity with AHEC operations.

"It was a matter of finding someone who could maintain the relationships and whatever mo­mentum there is on activities and efforts that are now going on," said Alfultis, who assumed the position earlier this month.

Aiful tis is also acquainted with members of the Colorado Com­mission on Higher Education, with which he will be working in efforts to acquire legislative, capital con­struction appropriations to even­tually build an additional AHEC classroom building.

"We work on a new classroom building far in advance. The new initiative is underway and I have to keep it going or it will fall out of

the cycle and we 'lllose it," Alfultis said.

Alfultis is not a candidate for the permanent position. When asked why not, he said, "I'm not sure I want to make a long-term commitment."

The AHEC Board of Directors is expected to announce executive vice president candidate selections during its next meeting scheduled for Sept. 10.

Former Executive Vice Presi­dent for Administration Jim Schoemer has taken the position as vice president of Administration at Regis College.

Schoemer said he chose Regis because of its rapid and the chal­lenge of worpng at a private insti-tution. 0

COP SHOP southbound through the campus and into the housing projects south of W. Colfax A venue.

The owner of the vehicle, Keith Cunningham, 18, was working his security guard job when this oc­curred.

The police contacted Cunningham and it turns out that Cunningham was wanted on an outstanding failure to appear war­rant in Greenwood Village.

Cunningham then was taken into custody by the Denver Police Department and transported to municipal jail.

Urine trouble if you're caught for this one

The brush: Blue and black

markers. The canvas: The men ' s rest

room on the first floor of the Stu­dent Union.

The artist: Unknown. On Aug. 30, gang-related graf­

fiti was discovered in both the stall and urinal areas of the rest room. Damage was estimated at $30.

Anyone privy to information about the artist should contact Auraria Public Safety.

Seger, Bon Jovi found in bush

Two cassettes tapes were found in the southeast comer of Lot Lon Sept. 1.

One was a Bon "Living on a Prayer" Jovi and the other was Bob Seger, you know, the guy who was catapulted to fame after Tom Cruise

onstruction pd ate

Below are listed Auraria Physical Plant status reports for various construction projects on campus.

Parking Garage: Ap­proximately 75 percent of the structural precast concrete has been erected, along with por­tions of the exterior brick pan­els .

PER Building: Construc­tion should commence by mid­

n September. Phased comple­tion and occupancy will be in late fall semester through spring semester.

Fifth Street parking lot: Temporary gravel parking is available. Supplemental park­ing off Walnut and Curtis is also available. Construction

of permanent lots should begin by mid-September.

Larimer Street bus turn­a round: Bus traffic is sched­uled to start Sept. 9, with land­scaping and sidewalks to be completed by the end of Sep­tember.

Central C lassroom Building: First floor remodel­ing will be completed by mid­September.

cavorted in his undies to "Old time Rock and Roll" in "Risky Busi­ness."

To whomever found them: Why didn't you just leave them in the bushes where they belong?

New Key Counter corner

We're only two weeks into the semester, and already faculty members are having difficulty keeping track of those pesky sets of keys they're given to buildings and offices. -

So far, 11 esteemed members academiahavelosttheirkeys; that's almost a set a day.

Taking these facts into consid­eration, Cop Shop will begin a Key Counter comer for the remainder of the semester. O

Page 4: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

f,

4 THE METROPOLITAN September 7, 1990

Iraqi, Kuwaiti students talk about conflict Cheryl Suazo The Metropolitan

Two MSCD students, one from Kuwait and one from Iraq, were asked to tell how they feel about the conflict between their two nations. Although the students' nations are now enemies, they expressed similar opinions on two major points.

Both of the students said they still hope for unity of the Arab nations, and they both said that U.S. and multi-national troops should not be in Saudi Arabia.

Before the Aug. 2 invasion, Kuwaiti se­nior AlxJullah Alshawaf, 31, a mechanical engineering major, telephoned his family in Kuwait every week. Since the invasion he has not heard from them, and he is worried. He said he would rather be back home fighting the Iraqi forces.

Alshawaf said that, before the invasion, Kuwaitis generally liked Iraq 's President Saddam Hussein "until his teeth became so long that he bit the first hand that gave him food." Kuwait supported Iraq during the Iraq-Iran war.

"When the war finished two years ago, Iraq had about one million military troops," Alshawaf said. "(Hussein) was afraid that his troops would revolt against him, so he had to do something to keep them busy." It would not have mattered which country Hussein invaded -Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Kuwait - as long as his troops kept busy with something other than planning a revo-

lution or coup, Alshawaf said. Alshawaf said he hopes the confronta­

tion will end peacefully because he thinks military action would lead to World War III.

" If they fight, (Hussein) will destroy Kuwait completely before he leaves," he said. But the destruction would also include many other Arab countries in the region, he said, because of Iraq 's missile capability.

Alshawaf said his brother escaped from Kuwait just one week ago and gave him an eyewitness account of the situation.

"He said it is completely miserable," Alshawaf said. "They were attacking and bombing the houses with the tanks." He said that in addition to the carnage, the Kuwaitis are suffering more from the United Nations economic sanctions than are the Iraqis.

"Maybe the unity of the Arab nations will come, but not this way," he said. "The way that Saddam did this is completely wrong. He killed a lot of people in Kuwait, and if you want unity between two countries, you don't enter the country and rob everything. Just change the government and say, 'This belongs to Iraq,' and maybe the Kuwaiti people would agree about that. If everything would (remain) the same."

Alshawaf said that most Iraqis are afraid of Hussein "because he is a killer."

"He even killed his nephew and his brother-in-law," he said. "So don't expect any Iraqi to say that Saddam is wrong. Before the invasion of Kuwait, even for the Kuwaitis, the Saudis or anybody in the Gulf area, we were not allowed to say anything

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For'1ore lnformation:Job descriptions and a schedule of on­campus interviews may be obtained from Bill Basile in the student employment office of the Auroria Student Assistance Center. suite 177 in the Arts Building. Phone: 556-34 77, or apply in person at 645 W. 53rd Place.

bad against Saddam. If you said anything they would put you in jail."

Alshawaf said the invasion has not made him dislike the Iraqi people.

" It is the government that is the worst thing," he said. " I have some cousins living in Iraq, and they are Iraqi. So I am worried about the people in Iraq and Kuwait."

Both Alshawaf and the Iraqi student said the conflict is between their countries and others should not get invo lved . Even though the Saudi Arabian government wants the U.S. and multi-national troops to help protect their oil fields, Alshawaf said he does not think foreign troops should be deployed there.

"I think it is better solved in an Arabic way and not bring in any other foreign troops because Iraq has a million troops, and everybody else will send at least one million," Alshawaf said. "And the losers will be Ku­wait, Saudi Arabia and even Iraq. "The problem with the Americans is that they are not there to fight. They want to settle there (with permanent military in­stallations)," he said. "And you will notice, after two or three years, they will stay there without any fight there. They will stay there just to prove they are the powerful Ameri­cans. If they wanted to fight they would have fought (Hussein) before he brought more troops to the area."

The Iraqi student, who requested ano­nymity, was reluctant to talk about Hussein and refused to talk about certain events concerning her country. She said she does

not know why Hussein invaded Kuwait, but she believes he must have had a valid rea­son. . "The main problem is the oil problems," she said. "There are oil fields that are shared by Iraq and Kuwait. That's what we heard from the Middle East. We don't really know the reason, but I'm sure there is a good reason. We don't have to know it. We don't run the country. We can live without knowing it. We can still drive our cars, eat our food, go to the movies without knowing the rea­son. And the Kuwaitis can still do that in Kuwait, but they ran away."

She said she thinks the media have blown the conflict out of proportion.

"This is our country and the Kuwaitis' country," she said. "If it is oil, we did not say, ' We are not going to sell you oil any­more.' And between the people, I don't think that whenever a country invades an­other country it means that we are going to kick them. When America invaded Panama you didn' t kick the people of Panama out. "We didn't do anything (to the Kuwaitis). They just ran away from the country to protect their money. People in Iraq don't do any of the stuff the news is saying or that people who ran away from Kuwait are say­ing," she said.

She said people now feel sorry for the Kuwaitis because they think they have no country or money.

see IRAQ page 9

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Page 5: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

{

-,

September 7, 1990

·Bike patrol on campus

Vicki Engeman The Metropolitan

Lockyourselfoutofyourcar? Need directions or first aid? With a quick response time, a member of the Auraria Public Safety bicycle patrol can assist you in usually less than one minute.

Wearing bright red shirts, these highly visible students ride around parking lots as well as throughout the campus. 1be bicycles are more accessible and can preve11t crimes that motor vehicle patrols cannot.

Sgt. George Casias has been run­ning the program for three years. He re­members a time when things didn't run so smoothly. Up until a couple months ago, the bicycles that the patrol was using were outdated. Monitors 1spent as much time fixing the bikes as they did patrolling. "They were almost always in a state of disrepair," said Casjas. Since then, three new 21-speed mountain bikes were donat.ed to the depart­ment tbroqgh TREK and The Bike Broker. Sean Schnell, a monitor for one year now, said there is DO comparison to the old bi­cycle be rode.

The new bicycles are equipped better as well. All now contain first aid kits and have heavier tires and stronger frames.

An average shift for a monitor would be about a 15-mile ride. Being on the bicycles allows monitors to patrol specific problem areas more often. What used to take 15 to 20 minutes on foot DOW takes about five.

Ha crime should occur, monitors carry no weapons and are unauthorized to involve themselves in the situation. A radio call is made to the dispatcher who then sends a patrol car. Although they do not have the same role as an officer, their presence, Casias feels, is an important one. "Monitors serve as an extra set of eyes and ears for the officer. It helps our job one-thousand fold if we can be more accessible to the public."

It is this accessibility that also en­hances Community Policing, a program started at APS.

By the spring or summer of 1991, Casias hopes to have police officers on bicycles. Since they would be carrying weapons, their outfits would have to be much more than a red T-shirt.

Bicycle policing might not work well outside a college campus, but Casias sees it as a positive measure at Auraria. "This is the perfect place to do it," he said.

THE METROPOLITAN s

New VP, LAS Dean set goals Tammy Pacheco The Metropolitan

The School of Letters, Arts and Sciences welcomed the new Vice President for Aca­demic Affairs David W. Williams at its first meeting of the year and presented goals for the upcoming school year.

'Tm looking forward to great things happening," Williams said. He joins MSCD from the lliinois Board of Regents. Williams stressed the importance of an active faculty and urged them to become involved with

.

students and MSCD. "Teamwork is going to be the key to our

success," Williams said. Dean of Letters, Arts and Sciences Larry

Johnson discussed the goals of LAS in the coming year. Johnson said that LAS is the heart of MSCD since 56 percent of all credit hours are offered through LAS.

Almost every student takes some type of LAS course during their academic career. "It's important that each one of those students gets the best education possible," Johnson said.

The number one goal of the LAS is to ensure the quality of the educational experi-

ence for students, Johnson said. With that goal in mind, Johnson said that the faculty needs to do a better job of advising students on what the future holds for them.

The second major goal Johnson discussed was to ensure the quality of the faculty. Johnson pointed out that students will get a good education only if there is a strong and supportive faculty.

As a third goal, Johnson said that MSCD needs to maintain curriculum which is both current and relevant. He said that he hopes that MSCD can obtain grants to offer dif­ferent types of courses and programs to better the students' education.

I'd nerer hare beliered that one little co111puter could 111ake such an incredible difference in 111y acaden1ic and \rorking life.

Miriam Stoll B.A. History. Dartmouth College M.B.A. Stanford Graduate School of Business

"I became a Macintosh convert in busines.s school. 'i\t our computer lab I'd always find lines of people

waiting to use the Macintosh computers, while other com­puters just sat there. So I had a choice: wait for a Macintosh,

or come back at 6 AM. to grab one before they'd all be taken. ''.After busines.s schooL I took a job at a large bank and

used my Macintosh for producing everything from spreadsheets to a company newsletter.

"Tcxlay I use Macintosh to help me run my own management consulting firm.When I give a pres­

entation, I can see in people's faces that they're really impressed. And that makes

me feel great "Sometimes I take Friday off, put

my Macintosh and skis in the car, and head for the mountains. I ski days and work nights. It's perfect.

"You know, I can't say where I'll be in five, ten, or fifteen years, but I can say that my Macintosh will be there with me'.'

AURARIA BOOK CENTER COMPUl'Ell FAIR

Sept. 111: 12 In the Main Corrldot from lOam- 4pm

•• Why do people love Macintosh*? Ask them.

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Page 6: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

6 THEMETROPOLIT AN September 7, 1990

Religion on dog tags comes into question Joel Alan Kleg Special to The Met

Reports that Jewish soldiers who are part of the U.S. troop deployment in Saudi Arabia are being directed to alter the religious designations on their dog tags have sparked a demand by the Anti-defamation League of B 'nai B 'rith that Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney clarify U.S. policy concerning Jew­ish troops in the Persian Gulf.

In a letter to Cheney, AOL National Director Abraham H. Foxman said, "The order is undoubtedly well-intentioned .. . but it is imperative thatthe issue be presented in a manner that is not perceived as coercive."

The Army has denied the reports. "No Army official has given orders to

any soldier to change the religious designa­tion on their dog tags," Army spokeswoman Capt. Barbara Goodno said. "It has been a matter of Army policy that soldiers make their own decision on religious preference."

Col. Arthur Fine, Jewish chaplain at Fitzsimons Army Medical Center, said that he is not aware of any directives requiring Jewish soldiers to change the religious designation on their dog tags.

"I hope, if it is true, it was done for their safety," Fine said. "Who knows what the Iraqis would do if they caught a soldier with 'Jewish' on his dog tags."

The religious designation on dog tags is

l.C .....

I

not readily visible and should not present any problems, Fine said.

Capt. James Ellison, Seventh-day Adventist chaplain at Fitzsimons, said that he hopes the reports are not true. "We wouldn't know what to do with a body (without dog tags)," Ellison said. "The dog tags are the only way to determine a soldier's burial wish."

Mormon chaplain Maj. Nicholas A. Brown said, "For the safety of the soldier, if captured, it would perhaps be safer to take the religious designation off the dog tags."

If there is any validity to the reports that Jewish soldiers are being asked to conceal their religious affiliations, it would not be the first time that U.S. soldiers have been ordered to do so.

During Operation Bright Star, maneu­vers conducted with Egyptian personnel in 1985, chaplains were ordered to cover up the religious insignia on their uniforms, said Ellison, who participated in the operation.

Additional orders censoring Army movies and altering table manners were enforced during Operation Bright Star to accommo­date Egyptian military personnel partici­pating in the exercises. The orders were not well received by U.S. soldiers., Ellison said.

An Army chaplain raised a chaplaincy flag in defiance of the orders, Fine said.

"It is important for us to be identifiable," Brown said. "But safety reasons may be more important than being hard-nosed about

Dog tags such as these are used to identify U.S. soldiers.

it." Orders requiring U.S. troops to conceal

their religious affiliations stems from the fact that "to Moslems, both Jews and Christians are infidels," Fine said. ""Our religious symbols are offensive to them."

There are "no restrictions on religious services" for U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia, according to a Pentagon official quoted in the Aug. 24 issue of the "lntermountain

Jewish News." Jewish soldiers in Saudi Arabia will be

able to observe the upcoming high-holiday services in private, according to Ellison. "Religion has always been a private matter in the Army."

However, Brown said, "The U.S. is go­ing to have to decide what price it is willing to pay for the Saudis' permission to operate on their soil." 0

The Metropolitan is accepting letters and guest editorials on relevant topics and issues of student concern. Please bring submissions to our office, Rm 156 in the Student Union.

-· .

'

Page 7: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

September 7, 1990

Auraria Club Day offers choices Joel Lamoreaux The Metropolitan

Auraria students trying to decide which campus clubs to join may feel that they ' re trying to buy an ice cream cone at a parlor with 31 anonymous flavors - so many choices and no way to know which is best.

However, on Wednesday, Sept. 12, stu-dents will have a chance to talk with mem­bers and view displays representing clubs from all three Auraria schools at the annual Club Recruitment Day.

"In the past, it's been hard for students to find out what clubs they'd be interested in, because many clubs are located around the department they serve, and if students aren't in that department, it's hard for them to hear about the group's activities," said Ed Quayle, clubs coordinator for Metro.

This year's event, taking place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the Student Union Plaza, should be the largest ever at Auraria, with between 50to60clubs in attendance, Quayle said.

The event will feature the music of"Leslie Drayton and Fun," a Denver-based jazz band featuring trumpeter Leslie Drayton, who spent three years as Marvin Gaye's music director. The band will perform from 10 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m., also on the Student Union Plaza.

Sponsored by the Student Activities de­partments of Metro and the Community College of Denver, the University of Colo­rado at Denver office of Student Life, and Campus Recreation Club Sports, Club Re-

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cruitment day is not only a chance for stu­dents to find out what each club is about. but also for clubs to recruit members, Quayle said.

In addition, a treasure hunt for students and a booth contest for the clubs is being planned, said Metro's Assistant Club Co­ordinator Mike Green.

"A series of clues that the participants will have to solve will lead to prizes located in the area of the student Union," Green said.

This will be associated with an open house for the student activities and student life offices, Green said. The hunt will require participants to enter the office area while solving their clues, getting them acquainted with where many of the groups are located, he said.

An award will also be given to the club with the best display, Quayle said. Each club has been encouraged to create a colorful and visual display featuring what the club is all about, what it has accomplished and what its future activities include.

"We feel that the group that comes up with the best display has made a strong commitment to its school and its members," Quayle said. Giving the award allows that group to be recognized for a job well done, he said.

Quayle said refreshments would be pro­vided throughout the event and will be provided by CU-D. In case of rain, it will be moved to inside the Student Union on the mezzanine, Quayle said.

L~ .....

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8 THEl'VfETROPOLITAN September 7, 1990

A taste of 'The Taste'

Good News For RTD Riders!

RTD's Larimer Transitway opens September 9th. The Transitway extends from Speer Bou­levard to 10th Street with bus stops near the North Classroom and the Student Union.

Two RTD routes will serve the Transitway. Route 0 will provide service from 7 :00 a.m. to 7 :00 p.m. and Route 15 will provide service from 6:00 a.m. to midnight.

RTD student bus passes and 10-ride ticket books are available at the student union.

For RTD route and schedule information, call 778-6000.

~ Auraria Parking Office 556-3257

~ 0 Lot T

;/ *

Scenes from The Festival of Mountain and Plain/A Taste of Colorado, which took place over Labor Day weekend at Civic Center Park. Photos by Cathy Van Schwartz.

~ i\S I

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I Lot G ~ L _·· ··-- 1

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Page 9: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

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September 7, 1990

IRAQ from page 4 "What nobody is considering is that all

the Kuwaiti money is in the United States," she said. "They don't invest in their country. The Kuwait Embassy is paying for people to live in the United States. And now all of the Americans are like, 'You Iraqis go back to Iraq.' We had nothing to do with it. And the people here in the United States, they know nothing about what is going on in Kuwait."

She said most Americans don't know where the Middle East is and only care about paying higher prices for gas.

"They don't care about the peopJe in the Middle East or their feelings," she said.

Hussein had no other choice but to use the non-Arab hostages as human missile shields, she said, to prevent the United States from invading Iraq. But, she said, she be­lieves the hostages are being treated well.

The Iraqi student said she thinks the conflict should not be a yard- stick by which to measure friends.

"[ didn't invade Kuwait myself, so [ don't think it should be considered (in deter­mining friendships)."

Although Americans have not yet ha­rassed her for being an Iraqi, she said that she understands their hostile feelings be­cause their loved ones are being sent to Saudi Arabia.

"I don't blame (Americans) because the (U.S.) government itself is not considering the people or the country," she said. "But, if it comes to harassment and phone calls, and if they beat me down the street, then [will do something about it, and I won't understand it."

Sometimes she avoids telling other stu­dents she is an Iraqi, she said, but it doesn't often come up in conversations.

"In (a) class when we introduced our­selves J said I am a foreign student and nobody asked where I'm from," she said. "They just wanted to know that l am not an American."

THEMETROPOLIT AN

She said she particularly avoids telling students from Kuwait or other Arab coun­tries where she is from "because now the problem is growing not only with Kuwaitis but with all of the countries in that region."

She is afraid of Kuwaiti students, she said.

"I do understand that they consider fe­males as something special, but with all of the stuff in the news, any Iraqi would be their enemy no matter if they are male or female," she said.

If tensions increase or fighting begins in the Middle East, she said, she would leave the United States.

"When it comes to students from Arab

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Page 10: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

10 THEMETROPOLITAN

~1C.1'.::::>vVN~. A ~POU ,-AN MA!7H01,..l56= t7Y'~F!~UN ~y MAYl-\e=;M / MLll2.t7f;.12. ANC7 HOB 12.UL.E. M'{ P'AJZ.,-NE;?.. Mo-So ANO "I:. w~~ "'1Hi5 CIOPFO!''>A~N CiiY~ oNL...Y µop~,, Bur w~vr;: :ru-;;1 ~r~N'I OU~ L,A<;;T a1t1f:­Flt«H,...1NG NiC~L- ON A ~L.E ~ ~N,-UC~Y B0t-<'2-60N .-Al_ ~.,;} l.v~'v~ C.01" oug PRIO~TI £5 5\'~Ai~HT . - MY NAH~'s PUL-"'~.- ... ~LU . ..ilJS" PL-1LAS~L

~'VA"'\~ P~1"~.CfiY£.

There's an IBM PS/2 made for every student body.

Printers

IBM Proprinter'" 111 wkable (Model4201-003) $ 349

IBM Proprinter X24E wkable (Model 4207-002) $ 499

IBM Proprinter XL24E wkable(Modd4208-002) $ 679

IBM LaserPrinter E w/cable (Model 4019-EOI) $1,039

Hewlett-Packard PaintJet• color graphics printer (Model HP 3630-A) $ 799

<Ai 'P<IBM PSfl~, ~::i~:l; Modd 30 286 (

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Preloaded l with IBM DOS 4.0 j

and Microsoft Windows 3.~

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Whether you need a computer to write papers or create graphics, charts and spreadsheets, there's an IBM Personal System/~ that's right for you.

Try one on for size. We're sure you'll find one that fits just right.

The IBM PS/T family of computers has every­thing you asked for ... including preloaded software, a special student price and affordable loan pay­ments.** All model& come with IBM DOS 4.0, Microsoft Windows 3.0, 3.5-inch diskette drive and an I BM Mouse.

And if you buy before December 31, 1990, you'll receive a TWA• Certificate entitling you to a round-trip ticket for $149tt /$249.tt Plus · a free TWA Getaway• Student Discount Card application. You'll also get a great low price on the PRODIGY• service.

Come by the Computer Fair on September 11-12 in the Student Union. Demo an IBM PS/2 and visit with an IBM sales representative.

··This ot ter is available od:>f 10 Quahhed students. faculty. stall and onslitutions that purchase IBM Selected Academoc Solutoons througll parhc1pa1ong campus locations Pnces QUOled do not include sales tax. handling and/CJ< pfOcessong chalges Check w1lh yotJt onshlution regatdong these charges Droers are sutljee1 to avaolabtlJty Puces are sutljee1 lo chanQe and BM~ w11hdraw the oller at ar-ry l ime w1lhoul wr•llen notce 'Mlcrosoll WO<d 10< Windows. Mocrosoll E>1eet and hOC Windows Utl11Jes are the Academic Edltoons t ZSolt Sotitype JS the Academic Version tValld 10< any TWA dest1na1«>n on lhe contonen1a1 US or Puerto Rco 10< lravet September 16. 1990. lhrough Decemoer 19. 19'..11, al the following round·lr.p tares $149 00 round·lrop tor 1ra-..i1 trom September 16. 1'!90 through June 14. t99t. and September 16. 1991. through December 19. 1991 $249 ()() round·lrop tor tra-..il June t5. 1991. ltvouqh Seplember t5. t99t Sea1s are hmlled Fate JS non·retunoab!e. 14 day advance purchase. blacl<oul dates and certain other resuoctoonsapply Complete delaJls w<lt be shown on cerhtoca1e. Applocanls 10< TW..:S Gelaway Student Otscounl Card muSl be lulHome sludenlS between the ages ol 16-26 •.<IBM, Personal System/ 2 and PS/2 ate registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation Mcrosoll •s a registered trademark of Moctosoll C0<pora1oon Paonl.Jel JS a registered tradematk ot Hewlelt·Pacl<ard Company TWA is a regosleted service mark ot Trans World Air Ines. Inc TWA Gel away is a registered trademark al Trans World A•lines. Inc PAOOIGY is a regiSlefed seMCe matk and trademark al Pr<>dlgy SeMces Company. a partnership ot IBM and Sears "IBM Prop<onter is a trademark ol lntemaloonal Business Machines COtl>O'OtlOO Windows. Word tor WW>dows and Excel are lradematks ot Mtcrosoll C0<poration. hOC Windows UIJIJtoes (hOC WW>dows and hOC F •SlAws> are lradematks ol lhe llOC Computer Corporation. ZSott SottType •Sa trademark ot ZSott Corporation

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September 7, 1990

TEXT REFUND. POLICY

REFUNDS ARE GIVEN ON TEXTBOOKS THAT ARE:

- Returned within the first three weeks of class for regular tenns.

· Returned within the first week of class for short-term modules.

. Accompanied by your receipt .

- New books must be relurned unread and unmar1<.ed ( in new condition)

· Priced with our slicker.

NO OTHER TEXTBOOK REFUNDS WILL BE GIVEN! Please use caution when purchasing texts

after the third week of classes • they are not refundable!

MANAGEMENT RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DETERMINE THE

CONDITION OR SALABILITY OF THE RETURN.

LAST DAY TO RETURN TEXTS

September 15

RETURNS AND EXCHANGES ARE MADE IN THE

CONVENIENCE STORE - Student Center Lower Mall •

AURARIA B·O·O·K CENTER

Lawrence & 9th St. 556-3230 M-Th 8-6, F 8-5, Sat 10-3

/

Page 11: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

September 7, 1990 THEMETROPOLIT AN 11

Practice interviews help open job market Cheryl Suazo The Metropolitan

Can participating in mock interviews increase a student' s chances of being hired by the employer of their choice or will common sense do the job?

Some graduates said they were hired as a direct result of taking the time to do mock interviews while they attended classes at Auraria Campus.

According to Ron Lujan, assistant director of the Office of Career Services, mock in­terviews and critiques have been offered free to students for about six years.

On Sept. 12 and 13, Metropolitan State College of Denver's Accounting Honor Society and the University of Colorado at Denver' s Society of Accounting Students will sponsor mock interviews for account­ing majors - seniors only. Students must submit resumes by Sept. 5.

Representatives from about 15 account­ing firms will interview students for 30 minutes and then critique their performances, Lujan said.

In addition to national and local-level finns, several of those planning to interview students are "big six" accounting firms, in­ternational firms that work with Fortune 500 companies, he said.

One of the benefits for students, Lujan . said, is that many of these finns will come back during the on-campus recruiting sea-

son this fall. "That allows the students to initiate con­

tact with possible future employers," he said.

Another benefit is preparing for open­ended questions, which are the most difficult to answer, he said. For example, the questions "What are your strengths and weaknesses?" "Tell me about yourself," and "Why do you want to work for our firm?" are often asked during job interviews.

Many students who participated in past

'You study all the time to get your degree so why not take a few nights to study to get a job?'

mock interviews, praised the programs and said that preparing for such questions was a majorreason they bad successful interviews.

Tammy Durnford, 26, a University of Northern Colorado graduate with a teaching certificate from CU-D, participated in the mock interviews held last spring for teach­ing jobs and was hired only one week later. She now teaches third grade at Cherrelyn Elementary School in Englewood.

''The mock interview helped me tremen­dously," Durnford said. Career Services gave

·MSCO Student .Health Center presents:

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her a list of questions that might be asked, which included "Why do you want to be a teacher?" Durnford said she studied the list just as she would have studied for a test.

"You study all the time to get your degree so why not take a few nights to study to get a job?" she said.

Durnford said that one of the best tips she remembers was that recruiters and inter­viewers expect answers to have a beginning, a middle with two or three points, and a definite end, and if written they would each be about one paragraph in length.

"I sat at my computer and wrote out my answers, and then I would practice with my husband," Durnford said.

During her mock interview, she said, she knew the preparation had paid off when the interviewer blocked other recruiters from talking to her, showed her the benefit packet and explained the pay scale.

Marni Pepper, 23, a Colorado State University graduate with an MSCD teach­ing certificate, also participated in a mock interview forteachingjobs. She now teaches fourth and fifth grades in the Cherry Creek School District.

The feedback, Pepper said, helped her to feel more comfortable in later job interviews. To get the most out of the mock interviews, she said, students should treat them like real job interviews.

Suzanne Sime, 29, an MSCD graduate and employee at the Denver accounting firm Yale & Seffinger, did a mock interview for accounting before she graduated in 1987.

Sime said it gave her the chance to ask the

interviewer questions and to preview the firm, which allowed her to decide whether she liked the firm enough to pursue a job there.

One of the tips Sime thought was helpful was doing "homework" before an interview to express an interest in the firm conducting the interview.

"Students who have prior knowledge of the firm are looked upon more favorably than those who d~n't know anything about the firm," she said.

Sime said the interviews she did after graduating were very similar to the mock interviews held on campus.

"Any little help you can get"prior to going to a real interview is going to be to youc benefit," she said.

Lujan said that Career Services is trying to coordinate mock interviews for engi­neering students to be held this fall.

"We want the students to be able to give the firms concrete examples of their back­ground and how it relates to the job they are applying for," Lujan said.

The practice seems to make a major dif­ference in how well the students are prepared to meet the needs of employers, he said.

"We've actually had comments from firms saying, 'This is the person we're in­terested in, ' so the students make an impact even in the mock interviews," he said.

Students who wish to sign up for the accounting mock interviews should visit the Career Services offices Arts Building Room 177 or call Ron Lujan, at556-3477, for more information. 0

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Page 12: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

12 THEMETROPOLIT AN September 7, 1990

OP/ED Beach blankets: BINGO! Moving experience or trip through hell? Dave Plank

There's a reason you aren't supposed to pull trees up out of the ground and move them to a new place. If you do, they'll usually die.

See, it's be.cause the tree doesn't like packing up all its stuff and putting it in the cars and trucks of its friends, then taking it somewhere else and getting it out of the cars and trucks and unpacking it.

So the tree just dies instead, like I should have instead of moving last weekend. But as it is, there are some tips that I'd like to give you, before my memory fades and I forget what a sheer, unadulterated hell I've just been through.

You can find out a lot about people when you watch them move. Some people turn the act of moving into a vulgar display of wealth and good taste, hiring gigantic trucks full of students to move their stuff for them, taking extra time walking from the truck to the house so all the neighbors can admire the investment of quality oriental vases and Louis XIV armchairs that are joining the neighborhood.

If circumstances permit, this is the way to go. I would have done it, but I couldn't afford movers and I don't think that superhero Big Gulp cups and bean bag chairs would have sent my neighbors the right kind of message.

There are also people who spend weeks prior to the move carefully packing each and every item they own, wrapping everything breakable in newspaper or maybe that plastic stuff with the bubbles in it, and labeling boxes by where in the new house they need to go.

This makes about as much sense as getting a haircut before you go skydiving. Sure, maybe every­thing will turn out okay and the effort won't be wasted, but why take chances? No matter how many times you write "fragile" on a box, somebody is going to try and pogo-stick their way into the house on it, and then all your hard work's gone, you anal-retentive loser. It's better to just pack stuff loosely into boxes and tell yourself that at least if your heirloom china soup tureen breaks, you won't have to move the son of a bitch next time.

Then there's the really smart way to go, especially if you don't really care about anything you own. spread all your blankets out on the floor. Dump everything you have into the middle of them, bundle them up and go. You'll destroy 60 percent of everything you own, tops, and when you arrive at your final destination the neighbors will know you don't have anything worth stealing. The move will go a lot faster this way, not to mention the jiffy-quick snap unpacking what's left will be.

The real wrinkle comes when you move in with someone else. Now not only do you have all your crap to contend with, but all the garbage someone else has

collected over the course of their life. You'll have two of everything, but don't toss any of it-you'll need all your stuff when the relationship goes sour and you leave in the middle of the day, while your former significant other is at work, so they'll be stuck with the remainder of the lease. This is also a good way to go because moving out while the other person's gone gives you the chance to pilfer anything of theirs you may have grown attached to while your relationship slowly dissolved away to an empty, lonely nightmare. Nobody said love was easy.

It should also be obvious that if you haven'tcultivated a close friendship with someone who owns a truck, you need to. Even if you don't plan on moving right now, it can't hurt. And dropping by a truck owner's house with a bottle of scotch every once in a while will come in handy when they throw you out of your apartment building so they can'turn it into a parking lot, or you find out the concrete in the foundation of your house was made using uranium tailings instead of gravel.

In the end, I guess, the most important advice to be given about moving is, of course, to not do it. Just don't. Because most people do it so rarely, they forget how much the whole affair smacks of gross self-abuse. Remember. Think about it. Think about it some more, and then reconsider your feelings about where you are now.

And then, if you still feel you must, start spreading out blankets in the middle of the floor.

Student speaks out Editor:

Islam - in a word ... submissiveness. Submission to Mohammad (God), and a way of life, the way of life of many in the Middle East who are in the midst of a struggle. A struggle for land, oil , and power in an area that used to be the power center of the world. To the millions of Moselms that live in the region near Iraq, Mohammad is still the Savior, the Koran is the Law, and Saddam Hussien is the voice of God. He is a chance for them to return to the once Almighty Arab Kingdom. His call to arms is for what they believe as a righteous cause - to reclaim the lost Arab land, for a near total control of world oil, and the beginning of a return to what once was.

REMEMBE~

But what a minute; life, Saddam, and life, fellow Moselms; isn't quite tha1 easy. We live in a new Age where might doesn't make right. We follow a world set of standards (United Nations), we strive for peace in what we hope to be a new era of worldwide under­standing. Ruthless dictators are no longer allowed to take countries and upset the world in Fi (Hitler) Blitzkrieg fashion. For we, as Americans, will step in for the good of our Arab friends, the good and rights of the Kuwaiti's, and the Global economy. Yes, some things in the world change (the search for World Peace, end of the Cold War) and· others remain the same - Americans will proudly stand up against barbaric warriors and end their reign of terror.

Christopher Kelly MSCD Student

CORRECTIONS LETTERS POLICY In the Aug. 24 issue of The Metropolitan, in the Tivoli In the Aug. 31 issue of The Metropolitan, in The Metropolitan encourages submission of letters to the

3rewery story on page 1, Jim Schoemer was incor- the Book Center story on page 3, the graph editor and guest editorials on relevant and timely topics. ectly called the out-going vice president for Admin- lists the publisher price of "Strategies for Submissions may be brought to The Metropolitan offices in stration at Metro. He is the out-going vice president for Successful Writing" at $18. 75 and percentage Student Union room 156 or mailed to campus box 57. :i.dministration at AHEC. was figured from that. The Book Center pays For additional information call The Metropolitan at 556-2507.

$19.50 for the book, a 33.4 percent mark up.

Page 13: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

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September 7, 1990 THEMETROPOLIT AN

DITO RIAL U.S. overextending self in Mid East crisis

Last night I dreamed that unleaded gasoline was $7.99 a gallon.

When I awoke, I was greeted by the bright and cheery words of Secretary of State James Baker.

In an Associated Press wire article, Baker told Congress that economic effects of the Middle East crisis will go far beyond higher gas prices.

According to the story, Baker spoke of the possibility of a recession "or even the darkness of a depression."

Could it have been this new consciousness of· economic difficulties that prompted President Bush to go public with his request for forgiveness of Egypt's $7 billion IOU to the U.S.?

In standard spoiled-brat fashion, Israeli Finance Minister Yitzhak Modai said that, if Egypt gets debt relief, Israel wants it too. If you give it to one, you have to give it to everyone.

I supposed this $7 billion isn't that big a deal. Baker implied that Washington had given up on seeing the money again anyway.

Bush has also implemented a discount insurance program for American companies who take their ships or planes to the Middle East so they don't have to pay exorbitant "war-risk insurance rates." Now there's a money saver. Hasn't anyone told Bush that there's a reason war-risk rates are higher?

l ~\O ~(. \ mc.rro po l t11.n

13

Meanwhile, "senior U.S. officials" are touring the globe in search of financial assistance from other countries. Up to this point, we can hardly convince other governments that we'll do most of the work if they'll kick in some cash.

themselves with the rest of the world and oppose the Iraqis and Saddam Hussein.

Now, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev is implqr­ing Bush to be diplomatic in the Middle East, saying it's the only way the problems will be solved. At the same time, Soviet military advisers are in Iraq modeling the latest in Soviet military apparel.

So, essentially, what we have is one big global mess. Upon the lap of every American is the biggest part of the mess.

It is almost as if the U.S. had a round-trip ticket to an exotic locale, left on the two-week dream trip and, upon arrival, had no money for food or hotels.

Thus, we embark, stumbling, on World Mess I.

House Democratic Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri just irritated the Japanese while trying to coerce a check out of them. Gephardt said they promised, and then sweetened the deal by telling them the U.S. has let them get away with unfair trade practices for years. Way to go, Dick.

To further complicate matters, there's the Soviet Union speaking out of both sides of its mouth.

Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze ac­tucilly acknowledged that the Saddam tumor in Kuwait was a big problem for the Middle East.

It would have been vastly more appropriate during Gerald Ford's presidency.

Teresa Lenway Editor Initially, there was word that the Soviets would ally

I wonder if he stayed awake nights to come up with that. Perhaps in between phone calls to Hussein.

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'LTHE METROPOLITAN Editor News Editor Features Editor Copy Editor Sports Editor Asst. Features Editor Photo Editor

Teresa Lenway David 0. Williams Kirt Ace Segler Sue Evans Dale Shrull Gwen Estridge Cathy VanSchwartz

Reporters Carolyn Bauer, Vicki Engeman, Dianne Fujiwara, Susan Kientz, Joel Lamoreaux, Tammy Pacheco, Kimberly Palmer, Julie Pezze, Kimberly Palmer, Cheryl Suazo, V.M. Utterback,

W.OB~M.

Photographers Production Coordinators Graphic Artist Cartoonists Advertising Manager Advertising Sales Office Staff Director of

Dennis Smits Susan Christensen, Rhona Lloyd Miki Harkin Brian Larson, Todd Bak Carrie Aldrich Elaine Wiley Gwen Estridge, Dana Julian

Student Publications Editorial: 556-2507

Kate Lutrey Advertising: 556-8361

'

Page 14: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

14

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THEMETROPOLIT AN

''I EARi MORE TH_ _ MDIEY AT UPS,.1

I EARi RESPEOt''

I 9E I

~

'When you do a good job at UPS you get noticed. I even got promoted. Now I'm a supervisor. Not bad for only work· ing part-time and still carrying a full class load. I like being a success.

"I like going to the bank. too When I started at UPS I made almost $10,000 a year working about four hours a day, five days a week. And then along came my promotion - and a nice raise. I've worked before. but no other company ever treated me like this. Most students work in Operations. But they do get openings 1n Accounting. Industrial En­gineering. l.S. and Customer Service. They're all great jobs.

"At UPS the money 1s good. but being appreciated for what you do 1s even bet­ter I like that."

For further Information contact your­Student Employment Office on campus Art• Bldg. Rm 1n.

EOE MIF

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Page 15: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

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September 7, 1990 THE METROPOLITAN 15

Instructor works from foreign experience Joel Lamoreaux The Metropolitan

Have you ever said something that wasn' t what you really wanted to say? Somehow the words in your head didn't quite come out of your mouth the way you wanted them to.

For many students trying to learn a for­eign language, this is more than just a daily occurrence - it ' s more like hourly.

Butforstudentsin AnnWilliamGasr,;on 's French classes, it' s nO' big deal.

"It can be somewhat intimidating, mak­ing funny faces and funny sounds," Gasr,;on said. "Students shouldn't be afraid of seem­ing silly or asking dumb questions."

Gasr,;on, who is in her first semester teaching at Metro, understands what students go through because of her own background.

master's degrees in French from both the University of Cincinnati and the University of Lyon, in France. She obtained her doctor­ate from Northwestern University in llli­nois.

For those who do go over to France, whether as a student or as a tourist, Gasr,;on advises to make sure and see the country side, and do the things they would enjoy doing at home, such as hiking.

"A lot of why people have negative ideas about France is because they assess the whole country as if it were like Paris," Gasr,;on said.

~ Paris is a very big city like New York, she ~ said, and is fun to visit, but there is much

~ 0 Ill :f '< < Ill :i

&' ::r

more to see. "Hit the small towns," Gasr,;on said. It is

there you will find out what the French people and their culture is all about, she said. She still remembers one instance when

she entered a shop in France to purchase 500 grams of cheese. She promptly walked up to the clerk and asked for 500 kilograms of watermelon instead.

! ~~~~~~~~~~~~___.:_~~~~:::.J~

Gasr,;on has many fond memories of her time in Europe, such as meeting and marring her husband, and earning a degree at a French university. Still, she is happy to be home. A place where she can help students at Metro understand the necessity of getting a different perspective on their life through the study of another culture.

G~on admits wanting, for a few min­utes, to pack her bags and head back to the comforts of home in the United States. She persevered, and now draws on such experi­ences while instructing her students.

Ann William Gas~on,a new MSCD French instructor

Teaching students offers her a different opportunity than what she had be doing in Paris before coming back home to teach at Metro. Previously, she had been instructing business executives at the American Uni­versity in Paris. Her students were sent over by their companies and many with no prior education in a foreign language.

These people were used to being in the comfort of their home, and had a hard time adapting, she said. It would have been a great help if they would have had some kind of a background in communicating in a foreign language.

Gasr,;on likes the idea of teaching at the college level where she can influence stu­dents to learn about another culture before having to face the culture shock of being thrown into another society with no prior

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preparation. Gasr,;on spent about six years in France,

first as a student, later as a researcher and employee. These different roles provided her with a variety of experiences to draw upon while teaching. After graduating from Adams State College with bachelor's degrees in English and French, Gasr,;on participated in a Rotary scholarship program designed to promote international understanding.

She continued her studies, obtaining

- ---- - ----

"It's so easy to get caught up in the everyday processes of things, life becomes mundane," she said.

Leaming about other types of people, their concerns and beliefs, gives a student a whole new outlook of the everyday events that make up their existence.

"Nothing is mundane about a foreign language," Gasr,;on said. 0

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Page 16: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

16 THEMETROPOLIT AN

Students caught snoozing on the comfy couches at Auraria Library.

Metropolitan State College of Denver

TO MSCD STUDENTS Please review the NC (No Credit)

and I (Incomplete) policy effective with the Fall, 1990 semester.

The No Credit (NC) notation is not a grade. It may indicate withdrawal from the course or course repetition. The NC notation may also be used in self-paced courses to indicate that the student and/or the faculty have decided to extend the student's exposure to the course in order to increase the student's proficiency. In order to earn credit, the student must reregister for and pay for the course in a subsequent term. The Incomplete (I) notarion may be assigned when a srudent was unable to take the fina l examination and/ or did not complete all of her/his our-of-class assignments due to unusual circumstances such as hospitalization. Incomplete work de­noted by the I notation must be completed within one calendar year or earlier, at the discretion of the faculty member. If the incomplete work is not completed within one calendar year, the I notation will change to an F. A student may not he awarded a degree with an Incomplete (!) on the MSCD academic record. The Incomplete (I) notation may not be awarded in a self-paced course. The following minimal requirements shall be required throughout the college and shall be a part of all school. departmental, or individual faculty policies:

1. The NC notation shall be available to students in all instances through the fourth week of classes for fall and spring terms.

2. Requests by students for an NC notation in a given course shall not be granted after the tenth week of the fall and spring semesters. The Incomplete (I) notation may be used during this period provided the conditions specified above apply.

3. Proportional time frames are applied for modular courses, weekend courses, workshops, and summer terms.

4. A written policy statement describing the use of the NC notation shall be given to each student for each class in which she/ he enrolls.

ALL STUDENTS: If you request a NC grade notation, make sure you keep your copy of the NC Withdrawal form and then request a registration confirmation of your classes indicating the withdrawal. Keep these documents in your educational file. Consult the current class schedule for all withdrawal deadlines.

_,

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September 7, 1990

Journalist reveals South African experiences to MSCD students Carolyn Bauer The Metropolitan

"At work, we have an integrated news­room, but at the end of the day, I go back to my nice home while the blacks I work with return to a struggle area where only coloreds live."

David C. Wightman, a journalist and managing editor for ' 'The Dai ly News"' in Durban, South Africa, explained the reali­ties of daily life to an MSCD advanced reporting class Aug. 30. Wightman, an anglo of English descent, is visiting the United States under the auspices of the U.S. Infor­mation Agency.

Wightman outlined how strides toward integration are being taken in his country under the leadership of F.W. de Klerk, but he was quick to point out just how far off equality between the races really is.

"In the main cities, we have huge squatter societies set up. These places do not have even the basics of paved roads and electric­ity," Wightman said. Ac know !edging a huge lapse in the quality of educational opportu­nities available to blacks, Wightman stated that South African universities "are pretty much integrated now, but a lot of young blacks are very disenchanted."

Because of government repress ion, Wightman said that young students of the last decade took up the slogan of " liberation before education," and they spent more time in demonstration than in studying, hurting their chances for advancement in the order that is taking hold today.

"F.W. de Klerk did something momen­tous by un-banning the African National Congress, by freeing Nelson Mandela and by trying for a more democratic society,'' Wightman said. "He showed very clearly that his predecessors have been racists."

When asked how long it will take for the white community to accept parity among the races, Wightman was blunt:

"South Africa will need a generation for

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people's attitudes to change. And what people must realize is that a lot of the white community is riddled with guilt about how the coloreds in the country have been treated."

Not only is there dissent among the whites on how to restructure South Africa, accord­ing to Wightman, whose newspaper is di­rected mainly at a black readership, but the two large black populations of Xhosa and Zulu have diametric differences as well.

.. Both the Xhosa community, with which Mandela is associated, and the Zulu com­munity want the end o f apar theid," Wightman said. "But the Xhosa, which make up a large portion of the ANC, are looking for a socialistic society. The Zulu, on the other hand, are interested in a more free­market economy."

According to Wightman, there are sev­;ral immense hurdles to pass before a new South African constitution can be written. The Group Areas Act is of major concern, h~ said. This is a main tenant of South African society that requires people to live in segre­gated areas.

Another major stumbling block, Wightman said, are the race classification rules. These require that each child born be put ipto a racial classification of either black, white, Asian or colored - meaning anyone of mixed racial background.

"The writ ing of a new constitution also worries me because rules governing the press could be written in," Wightman said. "Lack of government suppression of the press is now better without P.W. Botha in charge," he stated. "We had to be very cagey about putting the real news between the lines of stories before. I had books literally six inches thick with rules for checking and censoring stories. It was a nightmare- it was madness."

Still, Wightman is glad to be living in South Africa. "It ' s a wonderful time to be there," he said. "There are so many changes. For all its troubles, it ' s an exciting place to be now." 0

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Page 17: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

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September 7, 1990 THE METROPOLITAN 17

New policy Class attendance on religious holidays

1. Students at Metropolitan State College of Denver who, because of their sincerely held religious beliefs, are unable to attend classes, take examinations, participate in graded activities or submit graded assign­ments on particular days shall, without penalty, be excused from such classes and be given a meaningful opportunity to make up such examinations and graded activities or assignments provided that reasonable advance written notice (no later than the

· class period prior to the anticipated absence) that the students will be absent for religious reasons is given to faculty members.

2. Nothing in paragraph 1 of this policy shall require MSCD faculty members to reschedule classes, repeat lectures or other ungraded activities or provide ungraded individualized. instructions solely for the benefit of students who, forreligious reasons, are unable to attend regularly scheduled classes or activities. However, presentations, critiques, conferences and similar activities involving individual students shall be scheduled to avoid conflicts with such stu­dents' religious observances or holidays provided that reasonable advance notice of scheduling conflicts is given to faculty members.

3. Because classroom attendance and participation is an important aspect of learning, MSCD students should not regis­ter for courses if regularly scheduled classes or activities routinely conflict with their religious observances or holidays (e.g., conflicts resulting in weekly absences for an entire semester).

4. Any MSCD student who believes that an MSCD faculty member has violated this policy is entitled to seek relief under section VII of the MSCD Affirmative Action Plan.

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Writer gives new insight • • 1n -using pen V. M. Utterback The Metropolitan

With his slight middle-age spread, th.in-. g blond hair, conservative grey slacks d loafers, it's difficult to picture Mark olf as the former lead singer in a rock 'n'

oil band. · Writing is now Wolf's life. The rock

and is just a memory from college days at he University of Colorado, but it is an xperience he occasionally draws on in his urrent job as columnist for the "Rocky ountain News."

, A recent story opportunity presented it­lfwhen Marvin "Henchi" Graves, former mber of the lively 60s and 70s dance d, "Freddi-Henchi and the Soul Setters,"

ound himself in jail on drug charges. It was article that Wolf particularly wanted to

rite. "I was the obvious choice for the Henchi · cle," he said, "because I was there when

·1 [the band] was all happening." Wolfrelates in the Henchi article: "It was

early impossible to come of age around oulder and the University of Colorado om the later 1960s and through the 1970s ithouthearing"Freddi-Henchi and the Soul tters." As a guest speaker in a feature writing

lass, he used his experience with the Henchi icle as a springboard for giying feature­. ting tips to the class of aspiring journalists. Although he taped the Henchi interview,

e was quick to point out that was not his onnal practice.

"You'll find you use tape recorders less d Jess," Wolf told the students:."What I d when I use a tape recorder is that the

tory is very quote heavy. You feel like if ou got them [quotes], you've got to use em." He suggested that it is better to take notes

nly; and "edit" the material as you go, oting in the margins the important quotes d points you want to focus on. Wolf bad myriad feature writing and

terviewing tips, from using the right pen e's a Cross pen devotee/fanatic), to being

repared before the interview by "having me kind of idea how this thing is going to

nd up." It's not all such serious business however.

'Writing ought to be fun," he said. "You eed to enjoy what you're doing." _

Wolf enjoys feature writing and encour­ges students to try it.

"Feature writing is likely to be the first pportunity you get to stretch a little bit...to

"te texture," he said. "Any kind of campus setting seems to be

rimming with good feature stories," Wolf dded encouragingly.

To the journalism student eager f~r,career ips, Wolf shared the best advice he said he• s verreceived: "Live an interesting life, meet teresting people and keep your eyes and

arsopen. a

Page 18: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

18 THEMETROPOLIT AN September 7, 1990

THEATER Pretending makes strange bedfellows Susan Kientz The Metropolitan

An Englishman asks his wife matter-of­factly, "ls your lover coming today?" She answers, "Mmmhm." The husband agrees not to return before sundown and admits that he is spending his afternoons seeing a whore.

"The Lover" by Harold Pinter, produced by Second Stage Theatre Co., is one of the single act plays opening the season at the University of Colorado at Denver. This opening scene leads any spectatorto wonder what married couple would tolerate such infidelity in a partner.

other lovers she is seeing and when Richard tells his whore that he prefers heavier women.

Scott McKinstry has appeared in Denver in such shows as "As You Like It,"

"The Tempest" and "Richard Ill .. , He has performed at Germinal Stage Denver, The Changing Scene and with Hunger Artists. He will appear in Hunger Artists' next show, "Black Coffee," by Agatha Christie.

Martha Harmon Pardee just completed the premiere run of Colleen Hubbard's "Motherload," as Elan. Before that she ap­peared as Francis/Susie in "The Voice of the Prairie" at the University of Denver. A graduate of Northwestern University, Martha recently moved from Los Angeles where she studied acting at the American Film Institute and Sanford Meisner's Playhouse West.

But once the story continues, the audi­ence learns that the wife (Sarah) and the whore are the same person played by Martha Harmon Pardee. In tum, the husband (Rich­ard) and "the lover" are portrayed by Scott McKinstry.

Richard and Sarah are saving their dull marriage by "pretending" that the other is having an affair. Sarah has become tired of her business-suit husband Richard and is more aroused by her lover, who dresses more rugged with rolled up sleeves, and tells her how attractive she is. Whereas Richard can reach all of his deepest fantasies by visiting his whore, dressed in red high heels and a tight camisole.

Martha Harmon Pardee and Scott McKinstry in a scene from Sam Shepard's the "Cowboy Mouth."

The other opening of the season for the Second Stage Theatre Co. is Sam Shepard's one act play "Cowboy Mouth." Once again, McKinstry and Harmon Pardee star as Slim and Cavale.

asking each other questions about their ex­tramarital partners. They even get jealous when hearing about what the other does with the other partner.

When the two are together as husband and wife, they continue to make-believe by

When Sarah's lover final ly tells her that he has grown tired of her and finds her "too boney ," and that he would much prefer his wife, the game seems to be coming to an end. But, once Richard returns home as Sarah's husband, he then transforms into her lover once again. It was sometimes

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confusing to figure out which character Ri­chard was portraying, because of limited costume changes.

First-time set designer Angie Lee pro­duced a colorful backdrop. Velcro was used to hold props against the walls. The pro­duction design and concept is based on American "pop culture" and "pop art."

Acting in a slightly modified, yet still effective set design, Slim and Cavale are singers with big dreams. Live music is provided by Chris Steele, Tim Beckman and Sam Schiel.

"The Lover" and "Cowboy Mouth" are showing through Sept. 8 at the Art Building Room 278. For information and reserva­tions, call 329-8015. 0

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Page 19: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

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September 7, 1990 THE METROPOLITAN

MSCD women's basketball coach hired Dale Shrull Sports Editor

The search for a new head women 's basketball coach at MSCD has officially come to an end with the announcement that Darryl Smith will take over the controls for the 1990-91 season.

According to MSCD director of ath­letics, William Helman, Smith comes to MSCD from California State at San Bernar­dino where he was an assistant women's basketball coach. With Smith's help, CSB amassed a record of 24-4 and finished third

at the Western Regional NCAA Division III tournament last year.

Smith will be taking over a team that had a record of 1-27 in 1988-89 and 11-16 last season. Smith will replace CindyGuthals who was the head coach last season.

Prior to CSB, Smith gained most of his coaching experience in Montana at the high school level. Smith compiled a 45-27 record while he was the head women's bas­ketball coach at Bozeman High School in Bozeman, Mont., from 1986-89.

"(Smith) has the experience and back­ground to be a good NCAA Division II women's basketball coach," Helman said.

Get Ready ... Get Set ...

Majoring in physical education, Smith received his bachelor' s of science degree in 1981 from the College of Great Falls, lo­cated in Montana.

When Darryl Smith arrives on the MSCD campus Sept. 4, instead of keeping up with the Joneses, he may find himself trying to keep up with the Smith's in the athletic department. With the addition of Darryl, MSCD athletic department now has three Smith's. Greg Smith is the assistant director of athletics for sports information and Joel Smith is the assistant director of athletics for business and eligibility. None of the Smiths are related. 0

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Page 20: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

20 THEMETROPOLIT AN September 7, 1990

SPORTS

BRIEFS Sports info department I hires ex-MSCD slugger

Metropolitan State College of Denver has hired one its former student athletes as the assistant sports informatio~ director, ac­cording to William Helman, MSCD directon of athletics.

Doug Montgomery graduated from MSCD in 1990 with a bachelor of .science degree in criminal justice. Montgomery was also a four-year letterman for the MSCD baseball team. His 32 home runs were a, school record before Rusty Befus broke the record last year.

Montgomery comes to MSCD from the Denver Zephyrs, where he worked as public relations director.

'This is a tremendous opportunity for me and I can't wait to get started," Montgomery said.

One reason for the move was that the Zephyrs cut Montgomery's work schedule from 12 months a year to only nine. Mont­

. gomery said the schedule change forced him to find work the remaining three months of the year.

"I'm looking forward to working for my alma mater and giving something back to the school," Montgomery said.

Men's' soccer debut The MSCD men's soccer team will begin

their season this weekend. On Friday, Sept. 7 they will take the field against University ofColorado-ColoradoSpringsontheAuraria Field at 4 p.m. On Saturday, Sept. 8 the Roadrunners will travel across town to play the University of Denver at 4 p.m.

Coach Dennis Daly also announced that the team selected seniors Tim Yunger, Kent Nelke and David Hood as tri"-captains for the season.

Volleyball co-captains named

Firs~yearheadcoach Rhonda McMullen armounced that senior Chris Hines and juniOll Darcie Inglee wiU be the team's co-captain for the season.

Hines, from Petaluma, Calif., is the team's outside bitter and Inglee, a two-year s~ from Wheat Ridge, plays the middle block position.

A view from the press box End Zone or Twilight Zone?

Dale Shrull Sports Editor

Football fans have just exited a dimen­

sion where sight and sound meet, a dimen­

sion where reality is often difficult to recog­

nize.

. This is a time of year when Denver Bron­cos fans have worked themselves into a

frenzied state of excitement and optimism.

The dimension that just ended was the NFL exhibition season. A time of year that

statistics or wins and losses fail to matter as

they dissolve into the unknown. A time of

year where losses have numerous excuses:

John Elway played only the first half, the need to experiment with new players and

situations, third- and forth-team players.

The excuses are endless and, strangely

enough, accepted.

One thing that must be remembered is

that it's only exhibition season. A time where answers aren't given, only more

questions are asked. Questions like: will Elway and the new

Broncos offense continue to shred opposing

defenses when the regular season starts? Or did the offense look great just because the

defenses weren't playing with 100 percent

of their defensive schemes in place? Or were

the defenses intermingled with second-,

third- and forth-team players? Will the de­

fense continue to get pressure on oppos~ng quarterbacks when the real season begins?

Will Dennis Smith, Steve Atwater and rookie Alton Montgomery s~e fear into the hearts

of receivers just when they thought it was

safe to go into the secondary again? Football fans use the exhibition season to

give themselves an unrealistic view of the

upcoming regular . season. Just because

Elway riddled defenses with pin-point

passes, just because Dan Reeves, bless his

heart, said Elway had his best training camp

of his career, just because Gerald Perry hasn't held anything except his breath while

putting on his pants, do~sn ' t mean a thing.

Exhibition games don't count.

So many questions; however, the an­

swers must wait. The exhibition season is a

very exciting time of year. It's a time of year

when speculation, doubts and high hopes

run rampant.

The fans are missing a great opportunity

to relax. The exhibition season is a time when a "who cares" attitude should be taken.

So what if John Elway throws an intercep­tion, or Melvin Bratton hands a game to the

San Francisco 49ers? Fans should relax and

enjoy the exhibition season. There will be

enough time during the regular season to

push you blood pressure to the boiling point.

Why put the unneeded stress upon yourself?

Save it for the regular season when I'm sure there will be an abundance of stressful situ­

ations.

The so-called experts and fans alike make predictions and forecasts about the upcom­

ing season. Some use the exhibition season

to formulate their opinions. However, all

this time of year does js lead to senseless

debate. No one has the answers. The an­

swers will come on the field, when the games count. Some of the answers won't be

good for Bronco fans.

Now that we 're perched on the eve of the

1990 regular season, every team is a con­tender, every team is tied. Every team and

every fan has expectations as big as Eric

Dickerson's ego.

All the questions will be answered as the season slowly progresses. Each week there

will be new questions asked and they will be

answered during and after the game. After three recent Super Bowl debacles,

the one question about the Broncos that

really matters still lingers: will the Broncos

ever win a world championship?

On Sunday the Broncos begin another

Where can I get a copy-quick-here on campus?

journey toward that elusive prize. They be­gin the 1990 season appropriately enough

agall)st the last AFC team to win a Super Bowl, the hated Los Angeles--or should we

just call them the California-Radiers.

The Denver Broncos are a good team, a

good AFC team. Trips to the Super Bowl in

three of the last four seasons answer that

question. But are they a good enough team

to beat an NFC team in the Super Bowl? We' II see. Can they even reach the big game

again? In a sport where so few teams even

get a chance to play in a Super Bowl, have the Broncos missed their chance?

We'll see.

The Broncos will start with the Raiders

on Sunday, where and when their season

ends will be answered when it ends. Bron­

cos fans might not like the answer. But

maybe they will. So as the 1990 regular season begins, the

Broncos will hope for many trips to the end

zone , and hope to avoid another trip into the

Twilight Zone. O

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Page 21: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

• September 7, 1990

Women's soccer team not kicking themselves over tie Dianne Fujiwara The Metropolitan

"Navy blue and Columbia blue" are listed as the official colors of the MSCD women's soccer team, but black and any color blue would probably be more apprQ­priate for a team that is struggling with injuries.

With four players missing, the Roadrun­ners were, nevertheless, able to hang on in double overtime to tie Western Washington University 1-1 in the Sept. 1 season opener on the Auraria Field.

"Because of the injury factor, we were a little ragged," said Ed Montojo, the 'Run­ners head coach, "but it's to be expected in the first game."

MSCD' s only goal came early in the first half on passes from junior Stephanie Price and · senior forward Monica Wenston to

Bridgette Leisure, who was in a crowd of defenders in front of Western Washington 's goal. Leisure is a returning junior, and one of the team leaders in scoring.

Western Washington scored late in the game off a comer kick, forcing the overtime.

Montojo said he was "extremely happy" with the 'Runners effort - especially with the play of the team's young defenders, which include four freshmen.

One of those defenders, Renee Richie. a five-foot-four-inch freshman from Arvada, was a standout in her first collegiate game, he said.

While he was pleased with the team's overall performance, Montojo said the women need to work on their timing and on their "game fitness - being physically fit."

MSCD's next two games are Sept. 8 and 9 at the Northeast Missouri Tourney in Kirksville. 0

THE M ETROPOLITAN 21

Bridgette Leisure, right, from MSCD defends a Western Washington player. Leisure later scored MSCD's only goal.

, Preview tourney nets high hopes Kimberly Palmer The Metropolitan

last weekend at the University of Denver.

The MSCD women's volleyball team had a chance to sharpen its skills at the Colorado Collegiate Preview tournament

Ranked 14th in the NCAA Division II, the Roadrunners took second in the tourna­ment, battling eight teams from around the state, including the University of Northern Colorado, Regis College, Western State College andUniversity of Denver. Regis won the tournament.

MSCD coach Rhonda McMullen said

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that, while the tournament didn't count on the record, it does count for pride.

"Everyone played really tough," she said. "And we're not the same team that we were in the past- yet. We have the potential and we have the talent. Now we need the experience."

Jennifer Drees, a junior transfer from Montana Tech with All-American honors,

sees the team shaping up well, and although she thinks it will be tough, she said she 's looking forward to the season.

"This weekend was good because it gave us a chance to work as a team," Drees said. "And we're working well together. I think we can only get better."

The team travels to Kansas for the Fort Hays tournament this weekend. 0

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Page 22: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

22 THEMETROPOLIT AN

CALENDAR FRIDAY, Sept. 7 Job Search Strategies, 10 a.m. - noon, Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, for more information, call 556-3477.

Metropolitan State College of Denver announces the opening of The Center for the Visual Arts opening show, "Twenty-five years of Metro Art," featuring original works by 2§ MSCD Art De­partment Alumni artists, 6- 9 p.m., Center for the Visual Arts, 1701 Wazee St., open to the public, call 294-5207 or294-5208 for more information.

CoPIRG, Consumer Survival: Insurance Confer­ence. 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Student Union Room 330A, free to students, call 355-1861 to register.

SATURDAY, Sept. 8 The Future of Socialism, concerning the future of socialism and progressive social change, I - 6 p.m., North Side Community Center, 3555 Pecos St.,for more information, call 388-1065 from 2-6 p.m.

MONDAY, Sept.10 Open AA Meeting, noon - l p.m., Auraria Li­brary Room 206, 556-2525.

Hispanic Leadership Association club meeting, 5 p.m., Student Union Rooms 254 & 256, call Armand Abeyta at 556-3321 or 433-5592 for more information.

TUESDAY, Sept.11 Resumes That Work, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m., Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, 556-3477.

The film, "Planning for the Study Abroad," I p.m., Auraria Student Assistance Center, Arts Building Room 177, sponsored by the Office of International Programs, 556-3660.

WEDNESDAY, Sept.12 Recruitment and Retention Subcommittee will be sponsoring a Campus Service Fair, I 0 a.m. - 3 p.m., Student Union, for more information con­tact Leez at 556-2595, MSCD Student Govern­ment.

Future Educators monthly meeting with Dr. Shive, the new director of Teacher Certification, 4 - 5 p.m., Child Development Center, call 388-3353 for more information.

Open AA Meeting, noon - I p.m., Auraria Li­brary Room 206, 556-2525.

The Annual Club Recruitment Day, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Student Union Plaza, for more information call, 556-2595 (MSCD), 556-2597 (CCD) or 556-3335 (CU-D).

THURSDAY, Sept.13 New Talent Showcase, 12:30 - I :30 p.m., The Mission, call Jeanine at 556-2595 for more infor­mation.

Researching Your Career and Decision Making, IO a.m. - noon, Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, 556-3477.

Auraria Interfaith Ministry's Open House, 11 :30 a.m. - l :30 p.m., St. Francis Center, call 556-8591 for more information.

Floating Campus Al-Anon Meeting, noon-I p.m., Auraria Library Room 206, for more information call 556-2525, Al-Anon Service Center Office 24-hour Al-Anon Phone# 321-8788.

FRIDAY, Sept.14 Mock Interview, 11:30 a.m. - 2 p.m., Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, 556-3477.

Ran own company at 26. We're looking for a few good college students and graduates who can fill the shoes of a Marine Corps officer. That's a pretty tall order.

It means leading other Marines. Being responsible for their well being. But that's something no civilian job offers you at 26.

If you think you're a real company man, see your* Marine Corps Officer Selection Officer for details. (303)832-2429 COLLECT IF NEEDED

MSCD Student Activities sponsors, FAC (Fri­day Afternoon Club), 11 :30 a.m. - I :30 p.m., The Mission, featuring band, " Llucious Pink," for more information, call 556-2595.

MONDAY, Sept.17 Job Search Strategies, I - 3 p.m., Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, 556-3477.

Open AA Meeting, noon - I p.m., Auraria Li­brary Room 206, 556-2525.

TUESDAY, Sept.18 Auraria Lesbian and Gay Alliance (ALAGA) general meeting, 7:30p.m., Student Union Rooms 254 & 256, call Carl at 860-7183 for more infor­mation.

Interviewing Skills, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m., Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, 556-3477.

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 19 MSCD's Student Activities presents, "Gerald Endsley-Brass Quintette," as part of their Classi­cal Music Series, I I :30 a.m. - l :30 p.m., Student Union Mezzanine, call 556-2595 for more in­formation.

Resumes That Work, 10 a.m. - noon, Office of Career Services, Arts Building Room 177, 556-3477.

Open AA Meeting, noon - I p.m., Auraria Li­brary Room 206, 556-2525.

THURSDAY, Sept. 20 Floating Campus Al-Anon Meeting, noon- I p.m., Auraria Library Room 206, for more information call 556-2525, Al-Anon Service Center Office 24-hour Al-Anon Phone# 321-8788.

September 7, 1990

ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Metro Accounting Honor Society and Alumni began sign-up Aug. 29 for mock in­terviews to be held Sept. 12 and 13. Account­ing seniors should sign up in Arts Building Room 177. Deadline to turn in resumes is Sept. 5. For more information, call 556-8580.

The Eighth Annual Career Exploration Day will be held on Wednesday, Sept. 26. More than 60 employers will be will be represented and 25 workshops offered at the Auraria Higher Education Center. The event will be held in the Student Union from 10 a.m. - 3:30 p.m., it is free and open to Auraria students and alumni. Sponsored by the Auraria Office of Career Services, CCD, MSCD, and CU-D. For more information call the Auraria Office of Career Services at 556-3477 or 556-8320.

ATTENTION ALL AURA RIA STUDENTS! The Annual Club Recruitment Day will be held Sept. 12 from 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. on the Student Union Plaut. The event offers the perfect opportunity to catch up with old friends and make some new ones. Live music will be provided by "Leslie Drayton and Fun" and refreshments will also be served. Clubs in­terested in setting up a table should contact their Student Activities Department. This event is sponsored by the MSCD Student Activities and the CU-D Events Board, and the CU-D Office of Student Life. For more information call 556-2595 (MSCD), 556-2597 (CCD) or 556-3335 (CU-D).

The MSCD Student Health Center is spon­soring a 12-step smoking ce8.$8tion group, open to anyone at any stage of quitting, 11 a.m. -noon, every Tuesday, Central Classroom Building Room 203, cost is free, call 556-2525 for more information.

SEE CAPT. WENDEL SEPTEMBER 13th CENTER BETWEEN AND 14th 10 : 00 & 2 : 00

He~Jooking iJl'a i!w good men.

r

Page 23: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

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September 7, 1990

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SOS TYPING SERVICE I have the experience to help you with all your academic typing needs.Call Sandi 234-1 ~5. 1m

WORDPRO - professional word processing -reports, term papers, graphs, resumes. Fast, accurate, depend­able letter quality documents. Solid reputation on cam-pus. Call Ann Shuman 766-0091 . 1 m

TERM PAPERS AND RESUMES you write and we type, specializing in designing resumes. Ann Marie 922-3388. 917 DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES? Be your own boss, set your own hours, make .alQl of money with just a few hours a week. This system is simple and ideal for college students. I'm one myself! My simple system will show you how, if you have the smarts. Send $5.00 (so I'll know your serious) + $1.00 P & H to A.P. Publica­tions, 1460 W. Dakota, Denver, CO 80223 Guaranteed!

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. Part-time wordprocessor/receptionistfor busy, non­smoking office located downtown. Ideal for student. Word processing (WORDSTAR preferred), good adm. skills, exc. telephone manner. Parking allowance. Flex-ible hours. Call Barbara at 892-8893. 917

STUDENT JOBS "How to Work Your Way Through College·, In-depth book tells how. Great gift. $5.00 order now! ! ! Parrella Company, 2669 South Moore Drive Suite 103C, Lakewood, CO 80227.

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Due to an upcoming expansion. First Interstate Bank of Denver has several part tme positions to include day, night and weekend shifts. Call our Job Line at 293-5777 for specific schedule information.

On SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, applications will be accepted and interviews conducted from 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. We are located downtown at 633 17th Street. 8th Floor. North Tower in Human Resources. Or you may apply by mailing your resume to First Interstate Bank of Denver, P.O. Box 5808, Denver. CO 80217. ATIN: AT-99.

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An Equal Opportunity Employer

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THEMETROPOLIT AN 23

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Page 24: Volume 13, Issue 3 - Sept. 7, 1990

ABC

Computer Sept. 11-12 • l Oam-4pm Student Union Main Corridor

Meet representatives of

Apple Macintosh IBM PS/2

NeXT Toshiba Portables

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Compare systems side-by-side and get the latest prices from

our educational discount program for students, faculty

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help you move ahead in college, including

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COMPUTER 8.00K SALE Sept. 10-15

AURARIA BOOK CENTER Lawrence Way & 9th St. 556-3230

M-Th 8-6, F 8-5, Sat 10-3

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