volume 37, issue 17 - jan. 15, 2015
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The Metropolitan is a weekly, student-run newspaper serving the Auraria Campus in downtown Denver since 1979.TRANSCRIPT
mymetmedia.com The Student Voice of MSU Denver Volume 37, Issue 17 January 15, 2015
Senior guard Mitch McCarron takes � ight for a lay up against a Regis defender Dec. 6 at the Auraria Event Center. The Roadrunners are 12-3 after 15 games and have 13 remaining regular season games. Photo by Cos Lindstrom • [email protected]
Year turns new as season rolls along
ReviewsMet
“Taken 3” offers more of the same action.
PAGE 9
SpectiveMet
Graduate begins career with prominent multinational firm.
Aviation students take off for new horizons and opportunities.
NewsMet 3
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By Kate Rigot
MSU Denver’s Department of Aviation and Aerospace Science has initiated an agreement with re-gional carrier Great Lakes Airlines to actively recruit and prioritize the hiring of recent graduates of the department. While the pro-gram doesn’t guarantee placement for the recruits, it does ensure interviews for seniors who meet certain requirements.
Airline officials plan to inter-view students and alumni twice a year on the Auraria campus.
The airline, which is headquar-tered in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and has its hub in Denver, employs more than 100 pilots. The airline’s CEO, Chuck Howell, said in a Jan. 7 press release that Great Lakes has long appreciated the quality train-ing of the MSU Denver graduates it hires.
“Partnerships like this will help us create a direct pipeline of well-trained and capable first officer candidates, who in most cases learned to fly in the area and already call the region their home,” Howell said.
Department of Aviation and Aerospace Science associate chair Kevin Kuhlmann said that work-ing at a small regional airline within a few years of graduating is a common stepping stone career
move for university-trained pilots. “Some people will want to stay (at a regional carrier) as a career. But most people will want to use it as an experience-building step and move up to the majors (larger carriers like United, Delta, and American). I would say the major-ity want to do it that way,” he said.
In 2013, certification require-ments for commercial airline pilots mandated they log 1,500 hours of flight time — up from the previ-ous requirement of 250. This has resulted in a shortage of pilots who meet the new requirements, espe-cially coming out of school, and new graduates can expect they’ll need to spend a few years as a flight instructor before racking up enough hours to qualify for their air transport pilot certification.
What’s special about the part-nership with Great Lakes is that some incoming hires will able to avoid the higher hours required for air transport pilots under a differ-ent section of the Federal Aviation Regulations, called Part 135.
“What they’ve done to make this happen is that they’ve changed some of the configurations of their planes to have only nine seats, so they operate under Part 135 — and Part 135 can hire a pilot with lower hours,” Kuhlmann said. New pilots flying these planes can then rack up hours and be certified to get their ATP license.
Great Lakes is not the only
airline that has this arrangement, but it is the only such airline that MSU Denver has a priority hiring agreement with.
“What this helps with,” Kuhl-mann said, “is you won’t have to flight instruct as long.”
The pilot job resource web-site Will Fly For Food lists the estimated starting wage for Great Lakes first officers flying turboprop planes as $16.24 per hour, which would equal less than $34,000 per year. A July 2014 BussinessWeek article places this estimate much lower, at less than $15,000 per year.
However, Kuhlmann said he believed the starting salary for a first officer at Great Lakes to be a bit higher, closer to $18,000, believ-ing the list in the article had been based on older information.
He emphasized that working at small, lower-paying carriers for a few years or so at first before getting into higher paying jobs at larger carriers was standard prac-tice for new aviation graduates, and that the higher salaries pilots can expect later in their careers are thought to balance out the first few years.
“Everybody who doesn’t go the military route probably has a five to seven year period where they are probably making pretty skimpy money,” Kuhlmann said. “But you aren’t looking at your first four years, but your last four years when you’re making $250,000 –
your last four years, you can make $1,000,000. That’s what you need to look at.”
Kuhlmann did acknowledge that this uneven arc in pay could be problematic for new graduates trying to pay off student loans dur-ing the first few years, but said that new pilots usually find a way, and that the most important thing was to keep sight of the overall earning potential for pilots over the course of their careers. “You can’t judge it by the first five years. You got to look past that.”
Furthermore, small regional carriers typically don’t even turn a profit without the government sub-
sidies they receive, and thus don’t have the revenue to offer higher starting salaries like the larger car-riers do, according to Kuhlmann.
Aviation and aerospace science department chair Jeffrey Forrest stated in the Jan. 7 press release that as Great Lakes “grows and their needs continue to change, we will be well-positioned to support them.”
MSU Denver students inter-ested in interviewing with Great Lakes can call 307-432-7075 or email [email protected].
Denver Water funds One World One Water Center
Great Lakes Airline partners with aviation department to recruit MSU Denver graduates
January 15, 2015 3
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By Matthew Lilley
MSU Denver’s One World One Water Center for Urban Water Education and Stewardship announced last month that it is continuing its collaboration with Denver Water, which is providing $20,000 to the center.
The funding from Denver Water, which contributed a similar amount last year, will help the cen-ter in its stated mission of educat-ing Coloradans on water issues.
Starting in the fall of 2015, the center will offer a water studies
certificate, similar to the interdis-ciplinary water studies minor al-ready available to all MSU Denver students regardless of their majors.
The center’s director, Tom Cech, said he was excited about the new certificate, which will require 15 credit hours of study.
The pre-existing minor has an 18 credit hour requirement and provides students with skills neces-sary to become more knowledge-able of Colorado’s limited water resources, Cech said.
The funding will also help underwrite workshops, field trips, speaking events and movie screen-ings for MSU Denver students.
Additionally, the funds will support the Denver Metro Water Festival to be held at Auraria May 19. The purpose of the event, Cech said, is “to get students interested in wanting to learn more about water.”
The festival will bring 1,200 sixth-grade students from Denver Public Schools to campus to learn about all the ways water influences and impacts everything.
Cech said that while there is a growing awareness of water issues in Colorado, much of that aware-ness flows in large part from the state’s severe drought that took place in 2002. “Prior to that, people
didn’t really pay attention to the water issue,” he said. “Now the state has a plan.”
With 1.5 million people ex-pected to move to the Front Range by 2030, finding enough water for new residents is going to have to involve some creative solutions, according to Cech.
With ongoing public op-position to piping more Western Slope water into the Front Range and resistance to building more reservoirs, Cech said Colorado would have to divert water from agricultural production in order to be able to allocate enough water for residential use by its future
population.There is still work to be done
in raising awareness, Cech said, pointing out that severe rains in California last month didn’t neces-sarily end that state’s record-set-ting drought. Likewise, a few wet years on Colorado’s Front Range do not eliminate the challenges for meeting water demand for a fast-growing metro area in a semi-arid climate.
“The weather out here — it can change on a dime,” Cech said.
MSU Denver aviation student Emily Salley sits in a training cockpit in 2014. MSU Denver’s department of aviation and aerospace science offers a bachelor’s degree in aviation and aerospace science, another bachelor’s in aviation and aerospace management, and several related minors and certificates.File photo by Michael Ortiz • [email protected]
The Metropolitan accepts submissions in the form of topic-driven columns and letters to the editor. Column article concepts must be submitted by 1 p.m. Thursdays and the deadline for columns is 9 p.m. Sundays. Columns range from 500 to 600 words. Letters to the editor must be submitted by 5 p.m. Mondays to be printed in that week’s edition. There is a 500-word limit for letters to the editor. The Metropolitan reserves the right to edit letters for formatting and style. All submissions should be sent by e-mail to [email protected].
The Metropolitan is produced by and for the students of Metropolitan State University of Denver and serves the Auraria Campus. The Metropolitan is supported by advertising revenue and student fees and is published every Thursday during the academic year and monthly during the summer semester. Opinions expressed within do not necessarily reflect those of MSU Denver or its advertisers.
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What we do
By Melanie J. Rice
Commentary
I clutched my phone, shaking with frustration, while I watched life slip away from a dog that had been hit on my street. I was on the phone with Animal Control and they were asking for my stats, instead of sending someone to help him. It wasn’t my first call about dogs running loose in my neigh-
borhood that day. Animal Control blamed
Denver’s 311 system. Denver 311 blamed Animal Control. I and an-other kind soul who had stopped to help seemed to be the only ones who cared.
It was too late for him. I gritted my teeth and headed back inside, thinking, “Well, this is messed-up.” If they came out hours ago when I had first called, he wouldn’t be dead.
It wasn’t my first experience with Denver’s 311 and Animal Control systems. They both pro-vide alibis for the other, and no one does what needs to be done.
I wondered if Denver was unique in having a system that just doesn’t work — where those who are supposed to benefit most end up suffering as a result of its incompetence.
I realized that what I had expe-rienced with this system of failures
was nothing compared to what many Americans go through when trying to navigate through life.
For example, I’ve never seen life from the perspective of a young black man.
As I looked at the now lifeless dog lying in the street, the words “shot down like a dog” flashed through my mind and triggered a memory. A Denver minister spoke those words just months before, regarding Michael Brown, an unarmed black teen who was shot and killed by a police officer in Fer-guson, Missouri. And, just like this pup, his body lay on the street for hours before it was removed.
The American justice system had failed him, just like it fails countless other young men of color. A trip down the block for milk can quickly turn into a trip to jail.
Recently, Dr. Winston Grady-Willis, chair of Africana Studies
at MSU Denver, reminded me that black parents need to have conver-sations with their children about how to act if they are stopped by police. These are conversations not often heard in white homes, because statistics show that young white kids fare better than their black or Latino peers in confronta-tions with police.
Shara Tonn, of Stanford News Service, reported in 2014 that African-Americans represent 12 percent of the U.S. population, but 40 percent of the U.S. prison inmates.
It’s time to stop ignoring systemic racial injustice and have an honest conversation about race in America. We can’t undo the wrongs already done, but, we can ensure that those who come after us will not have to work to remedy what we left undone. It starts with acknowledging that we have a problem.
Shot down like a dog: Crime and race in America
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InsightMet
You could “indict a ham sandwich”
By Steve Musal
Commentary
I’m not a lawyer. I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that the majority of the Metropolitan’s readers are also not lawyers. And while there are a few exceptions, I know most of my Facebook follow-ers aren’t lawyers.
And yet, there are many people who seem to be so sure of their understanding about how a grand jury works, that they’re willing to take any decision made at face value — as proof of innocence or guilt.
That’s not actually how a grand jury works. In a grand jury hear-ing, the prosecution (usually only the prosecution) presents evidence in a relaxed setting to the grand jury, who decide whether to issue an indictment — whether there is enough evidence to charge some-
one with a crime. Since, tradition-ally, the defense doesn’t get a say, it’s pretty easy to get a grand jury to indict someone in most cases.
In fact, it’s so easy in most cases that a former New York state chief judge, Sol Wachtler, famously remarked that a prosecutor could persuade a grand jury to “indict a ham sandwich.”
On a federal level (differ-ent than the state level, like in Ferguson, Missouri, where most cases are brought before judges for an indictment rather then grand juries), in 2010 (the last year for which we have statistics), grand ju-ries returned just 11 out of 162,000 violent crime cases without an indictment, according to the FBI’s Bureau of Justice Statistics.
There is one exception, and we saw it frequently in 2014: when a police officer is charged with a crime, a grand jury only rarely returns an indictment.
We saw this in action when a grand jury failed to indict Fergu-son police officer Darren Wilson for the killing of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown, even on a charge of involuntary man-slaughter. We saw it in New York, when a grand jury failed to indict NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo in the choking death of unarmed Eric Garner (an indictment was, however, handed out for the man who videotaped Garner’s death,
with about as much difficulty as it would take to indict a ham sandwich).
According to research by Philip Stinson , an assistant professor of criminal justice at Bowling Green State University, Ohio, only 41 officers in the United States were charged with murder or man-slaughter between 2005 and 2011. Total numbers of officer-related shootings are unclear, as the FBI’s report of 2,718 “justified homi-cides” by officers over the same period is considered a low esti-mate, as police organizations aren’t required to submit their records to this report.
So why the discrepancy? If it’s so easy to indict for violent crime, why are so few officers indicted?
There’s a few theories. The first is that we’ve trained the public to trust police officers. That trust can be necessary for those officers to do their jobs, but it may be given too blindly: as the military intelligence community put it when I was in the Air Force, “trust, but verify.”
Since, in officer-involved shootings, the events are often the word of a police officer carry-ing a public trust versus a victim, who are often busy being dead and unable to defend themselves, grand juries may not give as much credence to evidence against police officers than they do to ordinary citizens.
Another possibility is that prosecutors, on whom much of the burden of securing an indictment in a grand jury falls, are naturally reluctant to push for the prosecu-tion of the officers they have to work with, every day, to enforce the law. This isn’t necessarily some-thing that happens consciously, but prosecutorial bias could easily be a factor, especially if combined with juror bias.
Finally, a misunderstanding in the general public of the lower standards of evidence needed to secure indictment, rather than the “beyond reasonable doubt” required for a conviction, could result in confusion on a jury — and certainly does in the court of public opinion.
Is there a way to fix this? Pos-sibly, require a special prosecutor for all grand jury investigations or indictment hearings involving a police officer, to relieve prosecutors of the inherent conflict of interest in attempting to indict their co-workers. Another would be to do away with grand juries altogether, as a majority of the world has done, and bring charges against officers to a full trial, where guilt or inno-cence can be determined “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Until we fix the problems with indictment in this country, justice won’t be done. Innocence, or guilt, is not determined in a grand jury.
Goldman Sachs lands Roadrunner
By Mario Sanelli
MSU Denver alumnus Jared Zinanti was hired by Goldman Sachs, a multinational investment banking and management firm, as an operations analyst. Photo by Alyson McClaran • [email protected]
In a crop dusted with Ivy Leaguers, Jared Zinanti took flight on Roadrunner wings, which landed him with arguably the most prominent banking firm on planet Earth.
Zinanti, a MSU Denver alumnus who double-majored in finance and accounting and gradu-ated summa cum laude this past December, was hired by Goldman Sachs as an operations analyst.
“Goldman Sachs hires mostly Ivy League (graduates) so when I go out to Salt Lake, I’ll be work-ing next to people from Harvard, Yale,” Zinanti said. “I’ll be the lone Metro student.”
Zinanti’s future is bright and the road of his past is littered with sacrifices. In recent years, Zinanti chose to refrain from distractions such as video games and social events.
“I had a goal in mind when I started. Once I declared as a finance major, I knew I wanted to get into a really nice firm,” he said. “With that goal in mind, I was able to stay self-disciplined. When I’d see friends online posting pictures (from social events), part of me was jealous but I knew I was on
my own path and I found solace in that.”
He hasn’t taken this journey alone, however. By his side for the past five and a half years has been Elizabeth Fischer, his high school sweetheart and a fellow Roadrunner. Fischer is the student organization accountant for the Office of Student Activities and the president of the Eta Pi Chapter, Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority at MSU Denver.
“We met through one of my friends. Her brother played lacrosse in high school (and) Jared played lacrosse so we met through that,” Fischer said. “We clicked and have been together ever since. It’s been cool to go through every single big life event together. I feel like we’re such a support (to one another).”
Zinanti’s humbleness, the qual-ity Fischer sees most in him, is a reflection of his hero. His grandfa-ther, Stephen, a 97-year-old former coal miner who fought in World War II, is Zinanti’s role model.
“That generation — they were all really humble. They went and did their duty and came back and weren’t looking for any glory,” Zi-nanti said. “I’ve never been one to brag. I try my best, work hard and let that speak for me.”
Richard Branson and Bill Gates also influence Zinanti because, like him, they’re compassionate toward the human race.
“A lot of times business is asso-ciated with greed and profit. Both (Branson and Gates) care about their employees and making the world a better place,” Zinanti said.
“Business should enrich everyone it’s involved with. I try to carry that forward and have that mental-ity as I advance in my career, and hopefully I can do the same.”
The beauty of Zinanti is that he is already leaving his mark in the world through Sun Valley Youth Center, located in one of the poorest neighborhoods in Denver. Zinanti volunteers weekly at the center and serves as a strong male role model for the youth.
“We pick them up from school and then play on the playground to get some energy out. We play ‘sharks and minnows.’ That’s their favorite,” Zinanti said with a smile. “We make sure they get fed and then we do homework so they’re advancing and getting better. I love that youth center. They do a lot of good for the kids.”
Zinanti has built relationships everywhere he’s gone. From Chat-field High School where he met Fischer, to the children he interacts with at the youth center. While these have continued to enrich his life, it was his experience at MSU Denver that directly benefitted him for the working world in which he’s about to enter.
His résumé speaks for itself. Through the interview process prior to landing with Goldman Sachs, however, Zinanti was the one talking. He continually answered a linear question among
many of his potential employers, “So, what’s Metropolitan State? We haven’t heard of that school.”
“It was a challenge, to tell them more about our school,” Zinanti said. “Whereas if you come from Stanford, they know.”
Zinanti introduced MSU Denver to them for what it is — a strong teaching school with small class sizes that nourish the learn-ing experience.
“All my professors knew me by name. A couple I have really close relationships with,” he said. “Professor (Timothy) Mayes, he taught me so much. I contribute most of my success to him because they ask tough, technical questions in interviews. The rigor of his class prepared me. That (experience) really helped lead to my position at Goldman. I’m not just another number (at MSU Denver) like I would be at a larger university.”
Zinanti’s world of finance has merged with his new company that engages in global investment banking. His education amplified his character. Together they add up to a priceless success story that took root and flourished at MSU Denver.
“A lot of education is what you put into it,” Zinanti said. “Some-times the name on the degree helps a bit to open the first couple doors, but if you work hard and you net-work, you can really go anywhere.”
January 15, 20156
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Jared Zinanti and his girlfriend Elizabeth Fischer, who is the student organization accountant for the Office of Student Activities at MSU Denver, pose together Jan. 9 at the Tivoli Commons. Photo by Alyson McClaran • [email protected]
I wasn’t terribly taken with “Taken 3,” the latest installment in Luc Besson’s action franchise, but there were some good moments to the film. It wasn’t a bad film, it just wasn’t a particularly good one.
“Taken 3” opens with Brian (Liam Neeson) continuing to bal-ance his life as a man with a very
particular set of skills with trying to be a good father to his daughter, Kim (Maggie Grace) and reconcile with his ex-wife Lenore (Famke Janssen).
When Brian is framed for Lenore’s murder, he tries to track down the real killers while being chased by dogged detective Frank Dotzler (Forest Whitaker). I won’t spoil how it ends, but the frame-up depends on answering the ques-tion “haven’t people learned not to mess with Brian’s family by now?”
with “Yes. Yes they have.”Neeson continues to be relat-
able and badass, Grace’s acting has only improved over the course of these films, and Whitaker brings gravitas to whatever he does — I’d love to read a book about Frank Dotzler, honestly.
But “Taken 3” wastes Jans-sen as yet another dead woman motivating the male protagonist. It also takes place in the U.S., so the massive collateral damage that could be excused in the first two
films as other countries not want-ing to cause an international inci-dent seems inexcusable here. And as much as the action continues nonstop, it feels stale. The biggest problem, of course, is that I saw this film 22 years ago when it was called “The Fugitive.”
So if you want a nonstop ac-tion film without a whole lot of thought, and you liked the first two films, you could do worse than “Taken 3.” Just don’t expect too much from it.
Ending on a sold out New Year’s Eve show at the Larimer Lounge, it’s pretty safe to say that 2014 was a hell of a year for Denver-based band Rose Quartz.
The band shared stages, tour busses and studio space with the likes of Future Islands, Cut Copy, St. Lucia, !!! (Chk Chk Chk), Holy Fuck and many, many others. They were also picked up by energy drink conglomerate Red Bull as a featured artist as part of their
nationally touring Sound Select series, and have now released their first official EP, “Axis of Love.”
Founded by Ethan Converse and Alex Anderson, the duo morphed into a four piece with the addition of the seminally con-sistent, and incredibly proficient drumming from Matt Tanner (dé-Collage), and the six-string genius of Clay Cornelius (also of déCol-lage and Wild High) to round out the band.
In a mere three tracks and 13 minutes, we get an intimate look at what the band calls “sultry synth.”
Rose Quartz have embedded their rose-colored heart deep into this EP, pulling out some of the perkiest and genuine disco meets
synth-pop meets house grooves that one could ask for. There’s a sense of intelligent analog instru-mentation found throughout, while possessing a certain ‘80s electro-pop-wave feeling that plays on a much darker level.
Opening with subtle intro on “Leaving Now,” the band properly lays the groundwork for what’s to come throughout the duration of “Axis of Love.” Converse is a born lyricist, with charisma and soul behind each and every verse. His vocals echo like a pine-barren wasteland turned Narnia-esque wonderland. Anderson’s grooves are layered and pack a fruitful resonating punch.
“Medicine,” the EP’s second
track, is a funky, yet mysterious track that features a heavy and prominent synth line so original and epic that it reverberates over each and every groove laid down by Anderson. It’s reminiscent of early new wave dance-rock that came out of the late ‘80s.
Ending with “Something to Believe,” the band donates a classically produced indietronica masterpiece with a heavy bassline and catchy, yet danceable riffs.
It’s an album that will no doubt get your feet moving, and asks the question: What’s next from the band?
By Tobias M. Krause
“Taken 3”Movie poster from wikipedia.org
“A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night”
By Steve [email protected]
ROSE QUARTZ“Axis of Love”
“Axis of Love”Album Art from soundcloud.com
A-
“Taken 3”
C+
Snake Rattle Rattle Snake — a delectable and eclectic Denver-based band, has released their sophomore follow-up album dubbed, “Totem.”
The album was released last November, and comes to us after a few years of diligent prep work.
“Totem” is a riveting and
vividly emotional record that showcases the band’s sophisti-cated songwriting and intelligent muscianship. With a strong set of vocal arrangements from lead singer Hayley Helmericks — the band was able to capture the zeitgeist sound of the late ‘70s, all the while adding an urban gothic feel to each and every track.
The album is also a lo-fi slice of awe-inspiring music that fea-tures this dark, Stanley Kubrick-esque feeling throughout.
The opening track “Evil Eye” is an emotional four minutes that features a pulsating bassline from Jon Evans that reverber-ates over Helmericks’ echoing
vocals. Guitarist Doug Spencer’s magnificent six-string skills match up perfectly over Hayley’s brother Wilson on keys, as he mutters out some synthy, post-punk sounds reminiscent of what Ian Curtis and Joy Division had wished they sounded like. The song lays the foundation for the rest of the albums as “Totem” comes to us in a more developed, mature and refined way than their previous album, 2011’s “Sineater.”
The band slows things down a bit and shifts its gears with track three, “Versus.” It’s a down tempo electro representation that hosts an echoing set of progres-
sive vocals, as the band slowly builds one by one.
Track seven, “Wild Dogs” landscapes an eerie and animat-ed guitar riff from Benson, while Evans provides a dynamic set of grooves that proves “Totem” to be no joke — but, it’s not like that was ever a question.
Snake Rattle Rattle Snake took their time putting “Totem” together, and the end result was well worth the wait.
And after it’s all said and done, this is easily the band’s best work up to this point, which leaves us patiently wanting more.
By Tobias M. Krause
SNAKE RATTLE RATTLE SNAKE
“Totem”
“Totem”Album art courtesy of the band
A-
A
Womanizers beware; there’s a new girl in town and she’s thirsty for blood.
“A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night” is the directorial debut of writer Ana Lily Amirpour. The story of an ageless, youth-ful, skateboard-writing vampire who protects the women of her community from misogynist’s
men, “A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night” is part vampire movie, part western and all awesome.
Though shot in Los Angeles, the movie is set in Iran. Amir-pour, along with the majority of her cast, claim both American and Iranian heritage, making the film an interesting blend of Iranian and American customs and ideology. The Girl, the one who walks home alone at night, wears a traditional chador, rides a skateboard and loves western electronic music. Arash, The Girl’s would-be suitor, lives a life torn between his obligation to
care for his deadbeat father and finding a place for himself in the world. Though the young men and women of the film choose not to be in a room alone with one another out of decency, they find themselves partying long into the night in skimpy outfits in abandoned warehouses.
The story is stripped to its barest bones to expose the true hole sitting deep in the chests of both Arash and The Girl; an insatiable loneliness that pounds harder than any heart or thirst for blood ever could. The Persian dialogue is far and few between,
leaving space for the characters to wander through their warped worlds’ alone before finally find-ing something in the darkness.
“A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night” marries horror and western beautifully in a black and white melodrama that is as mesmerizing as it is entertain-ing. Amirpour’s use of high contrast in place of color creates an aesthetic reminiscent of hor-ror classics such as “Nosferatu,” while her modern multi-cultural soundtrack acts as the perfect conduit by which this ethereal horror film floats on.
January 15, 20158
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“Taken 3”Movie poster from wikipedia.org
By Hañalina Lucero-Colin
The Metropolitan review staff rates works on a standard “A to F” scale, which means exactly the
same thing as it does in all of your classes.
Nearing the midway point of the season, both men’s and wom-en’s basketball has had a fair share of exciting games—from thrilling victories to crushing losses.
This is how both teams fare at this point in the season:
Men’s Basketball (12-3)Key wins:82-52 vs. Regis University73-68 vs. Rogers State (Okla.)61-59 vs. Colorado Christian
The Runners are coming off a season where they were knocked out in the final four of last year’s tournament, and are only two years removed from an appearance in the national championship.
The Runner’s biggest personnel departure could be last year’s Divi-sion II player of the year, Brandon Jefferson.
The three losses this season have come from top-10 ranked teams: an 80-75 loss to No. 6 ranked Florida Southern, a 69-66 loss to then No. 2 nationally ranked UC-Colorado Springs—the first-ever loss for the Runners against the Mountain Lions—and their most recent loss that came on a last-second buzzer beater in overtime against the then No. 9 Colorado School of Mines, 59-57.
A telling stat for this team is a 2-3 record away from the Auraria Event Center. Metro continues its dominance at home, where they posted a perfect 22-0 record last season, and are still perfect with a 9-0 record.
Senior forward Nicholas Kay is leading all scorers this season with 20 points per game, with senior guard Mitch McCarron right behind him at 19.9 ppg. McCarron leads in assists per game at 4.3 and rebounds per game at just under five.
The Metro Roadrunners still have the talent and drive to push into the postseason, however, the Rocky Mountain Athletic Confer-ence has been more difficult to navigate this season as the Runners post a current 7-2 conference record.
The remainder of their sched-ule contains two top-10 matchups against UCCS and Mines. The rest of the field in the second half of the season contains a four-game road trip to Colorado Mesa, Western State, Chadron State and Black Hills State.
Women’s Basketball (9-4)Key wins: 67-60 vs. SW Minnesota State73-62 vs. Regis University79-56 vs. Colorado Mines
The Lady Runners are giving every team their best shot this sea-son with head coach Tanya Haave at the helm.
While this team is young—only one senior—they’ve kept their re-cord above .500 at 9-4 through the first 13 games this season.
Metro opened the season against Division I Colorado State University and the Rams came away with a 90-62 win. Coach Haave said that experience will only help this team get better. The Roadrunners have a 4-1 mark on their own court, with a 3-3 mark away.
Senior forward Deni Jacobs leads all scorers this season at 15.2 points per game and all rebounders with a 5.4 average. Freshmen guard Georgia Ohrdorf and forward Em-ily Hartegan are quickly finding their rhythm in their first year with Metro, scoring 11.4 and 10.3 points per game respectively.
The Lady Runners have out-scored opponents 409-363 in the first half and average just over 65 points per game.
The remainder of their sched-ule includes conference play, with six home games and only one game against a ranked opponent when they play UCCS in the regular season finale.
The Runners continue play Jan. 16 and 17 when both the men and women take on Adams State and Fort Lewis at the Auraria Event Center.
By Scott Corbridge
January 15, 2015 10
SportsMet
mymetmedia.com f: themetropolitan @themetonline
Roadrunners basketball midseason report
Metro redshirt freshman center Bounama Keita lifts off to block a layup from South Dakota School of Mines junior guard Mark Mazzucco Nov. 21 at the Auraria Event Center. Keita had three blocks on the night. Since that game against the Hardrock-ers, the Roadrunners have gone 9-3, with losses to Florida Southern, UCCS and Colorado School of Mines. Photo by Philip Poston • [email protected]
The No. 10 Roadrunners escaped
the claws of the Colorado Christian
Cougars, 61-59, Jan. 9 in Lakewood.
The first half saw both teams
unable to find an edge with the score
evened up at 25. Neither squad was
able to take full control, with both
shooting under 50 percent. The Runners
weren’t able to hit a shot from behind
the arc, going 0-for-3 from the 3-point
line.
Free throws almost sunk Metro,
going 5-for-12 from the charity stripe in
the first half. Colorado Christian went a
perfect 6-for-6 in the first 20 minutes.
The senior tandem of guard Mitch
McCarron and forward Nicholas Kay
gave the Runners a needed spark to get
the win, combining for 48 points, 10 re-
bounds and four blocks. Kay (25 points)
and McCarron (23 points) accounted for
a third of Metro’s points, as the bench
was unable to give them the backup
needed to pull away from the Cougars
for the rest of the game.
Although the Runners lost the
turnover battle 9-8, they won the all
important battle of the boards 39-30,
while continuing to attack the paint,
with Kay getting 36 points in the paint
and 16 second chance points—com-
pared to just 16 points for the Cougars.
While the Runners maintained their
composure, the Cougars hung with them
until the end. Metro’s largest lead in the
game was four, while at one point, the
Cougars were up by seven in the first.
The Runners were back in action
Jan. 10 against the Colorado School of
Mines Orediggers.
The Orediggers hit a buzzer beater
in overtime to shock the Roadrunners
59-57.
The then No. 9 ranked Mines team
started the game with a 9-1 run. The
Runners trailed until overtime.
Mines continued to take the lead
back and McCarron hit a shot to tie the
game at 51 with just under 90 seconds
left.
Kay also hit two key free-throws to
send the game into overtime.
The Runners had their first lead
of the game after two foul line shots
by Kay, but ultimately, it was costly
turnovers and missed free throws that
sunk Metro.
The key stats of the game were
the 16 percent from behind the arc for
the Runners, going just 1-for-6, and 72
percent on free throws for the game.
Junior forward DeShawn Phenix
gave Metro some extra help off the
bench, adding 11 points and four
rebounds.
The rebounding advantage went
to the Runners, 32-29, and it was an
even game in turnovers, as both teams
commited 12.
McCarron led all scorers with 27
(10-for-17) and Kay added 13 (3-for-10).
McCarron also grabbed eight rebounds
and came away with one steal.
Points in the paint was a key factor
in allowing the Roadrunners to stay with
Orediggers, outscoring Mines 34-22.
For the second consecutive game,
the Runners struggled off the bench.
The Roadrunners battle the Adams
State Grizzlies (8-4) Jan. 16 at 7 p.m. at
the Auraria Event Center.
By Scott Corbridge
Roadrunners play two close; beat CCU, lose to Mines
Check out MyMetMedia.com for wrap ups on the Lady Runners’ games against Colorado Christian and Colorado School of Mines Jan. 9 and 10.
January 15, 2015 Met Sports 11@themetonline f: themetropolitan mymetmedia. com
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Main CampusColfax
120th Ave
Orchard Rd
map not to scale
North Campus
Free Parking!At both locations
Complete your General Studies courses Additional core course offerings in:
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MSU Denver North: Northglenn (N) MSU Denver South: Denver Tech Center (S)
For a printed class schedule, call 303-721-1313 EXT. 99
or visit www.msudenver.edu/optionsnow
Enroll now for Spring 2015
SUCCESS AT YOUR CONVENIENCE!Register for MSU DenverEXTENDED CAMPUS
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1.19: Classes Begin
1.21: First-Year Success Spring Open House10 a.m.First-Year Success Of� ce and Student Success Building Second Floor Lounge
1.21-1.22: Welcome Week10 a.m.Tivoli Commons
1.22: Welcome Week Movie: “Guardians of the Galaxy” and free pizza5 p.m.Multicutural Lounge
Seven-Day Forecast
“New Charlie Hebdo Cover Creates New Questions for U.S. Media” (New York Times)
“Congressman apologizes for saying Obama worse than Hitler” (New York Daily News)
“John Elway to Peyton Manning: ‘We want you back’”(Denver Post Sports)
“Split On Mitt: Capitol Hill Republicans Can’t Decide on a Romney Re-Run” (ABC News)
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1. Hold My Home, Cold War Kids 2. Content Nausea, Parquet Courts 3. Seeds, TV on the Radio4. La Isla Bonita, Deerhoof5. Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper, Panda Bear
OpenAir 1340 Top Five
Source: www.weather.com
1.15: Sunny 55º/25º
1.16: Sunny 59º/30º
1.17: Cloudy 54º/28º
1.18: Sunny 55º/29º
1.19 Cloudy 53º/25º
1.20: Sunny 45º/22º
1.21: Snow 38º/18º
Page compiled by Steve Musal
Men’s Basketball1.16: vs. Adams State, 7 p.m.1.17: vs. Fort Lewis, 7 p.m.1.23:@ Colorado Mesa,7:30 p.m.1.24:@ Fort Lewis,7:30 p.m.
Women’s Basketball1.16: vs. Adams State, 5 p.m.1.17: vs. Fort Lewis, 5 p.m.1.23:@ Colorado Mesa,5:30 p.m.1.24:@ Western State,5:30 p.m.
Men’s & Women’s Track and Field1.17:Potts InvitationalBoulder, Colorado1.23:Air Force InvitationalU.S. Air Force AcademyColorado Springs, Colorado
Denver Nuggets1.16: @ Dallas MavericksAmerican Airlines CenterTime: 6:30 p.m.
12.7: v.s Minnesota TimberwolvesPepsi CenterTime: 1:30 p.m.
Colorado Avalanche1.15: @ Florida PanthersBB&T CenterTime: 5:30 p.m.1.17: @ Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaTime: 5 p.m.
My Met Media FREEBIES!
January 15, 201512
EventsMile
High
mymetmedia.com f: themetropolitan @themetonline
1.15: Furbie Cakes, MYTHirst, Felix FAST4WARD, Suffers and Brisco JonesLocation: Larimer LoungePrice: $10Time: 8 p.m.
1.15: Reel Big Fish, Less Than Jake, Authority ZeroLocation: Ogden TheatrePrice: $25Time: 7:30 p.m.
1.16: High Plains Honky, Ol’Hickery, Andy Hamilton & the Whiskey Hitchers, Larry NixLocation: Larimer LoungePrice: $10Time: 8:30 p.m.
1.16: Fox Street feat. Todd Smallie, Andy Palmer & Grub Street Writer, Tomahawk FoxLocation: Bluebird TheaterPrice: $15Time: 9 p.m.
1.17: Instant Empire, The Royal, MontonerosLocation: Larimer LoungePrice: $8Time: 9 p.m.
1.17: Rob Drabkin, SHEL, David RynhartLocation: Bluebird TheaterPrice: $16Time: 8 p.m.
1.18: Engage the Hammer, Lowdead, Companion to the Emperor, Tragedy From AboveLocation: Larimer LoungePrice: $10Time: 6 p.m.
1.19 Russell Grande feat. Special GuestsLocation: Larimer LoungePrice: $10Time: 9 p.m.
1.21: Cold War Kids, Elliot MossLocation: Ogden TheatrePrice: $27Time: 8 p.m.
Here’s the deal: All you have to do is
come to the Met Media office in Tivoli
313 with this newspaper, and you’ll
automatically be eligible for these
sweet prizes.
So hurry while supplies last, and
make sure to grab a paper each and
every week to see what’s new!• Go Fish Sushi - one free entree• DP Dough - one free entree• Colorado Symphony ticket
Reel Big Fish will play the Ogden Theater Jan. 15, co-headlining with Less Than Jake. Authority Zero is set to open for the ska-punk bands.Photo courtesy of Reel Big Fish
Difficulty: EASY
H o r o s c o p e sH o r o s c o p e sOverheard on campus
“Seems like the Ducks could’ve used a little bit of magic from Gordon Bombay, or Emilio Estevez to the laymen.”
“I can’t believe school starts next week, man. What a drag.”
“They’ve got Taco Bell here? And McDonalds? Dude, I’m in fast food heaven.”
“You can’t be serious.”
“What is the meaning of all of this?”
“You mean, I need to take two tests just to get into a stupid math class?”
“I hate math, and everything about it.”
Hear something that makes you laugh? Shake your head? Roll your eyes or say WTF? Tweet it to @themetonline with the hashtag #overheardoncampus
Sudoku
AriesMarch 21 -April 19
TaurusApril 20 -May 20
GeminiMay 21 -June 20
CancerJune 21 -July 22
LeoJuly 23 -August 22
VirgoAugust 23 -September 22
LibraSeptember 23 -October 22
ScorpioOctober 23 -November 21
SagittariusNovember 22 -December 21
CapricornDecember 22 -January 19
AquariusJanuary 20 -February 18
PiscesFebruary 19 -March 20
Over the weekend, you’ll be presented with the opportunity to hold 20,000 volts in your hand. Don’t be afraid to ride the lightning (Editor’s Note: we are not responsible for any consquences of lightning-riding).
Real or paint?
� at trip to Ted’s Montana Grill proves fruitful when your server pens their number on your receipt.
Take a deep breath.
You begin to ponder why Scorpio’s sign has a small arrow protruding o� of it. � en you remember you already know the reason. Do share.
� e goose is on the loose. Go � nd it.
Might be a good idea to get rid of all that John Fox Broncos material.
Roll the dice this weekend, try something new. We don’t however, recommend wrestling with a lion.
If you get hurt and miss work, it won’t hurt to miss work. And you’ll be paid in cash, which is just as good as money.
“Born on the Bayou” isn’t just the name of a CCR song. You’ll come to realize that you, too, were born on the Bayou. And all this time you thought you were from the Midwest...
Like Frank Azar, you have a strong arm. It’s up to you to � gure out which arm it is before the clock strikes 12.
You try to understand that there’s a hen, a chicken and a rooster. � e rooster and the hen go together, so who goes with the chicken?
Difficulty: Medium
Answers:
Riddles
A: I can run but not walk. Wherever I go, thought follows close behind. What am I?
B: I’m tall when I’m young and I’m short when I’m old. What am I?
C: Why did the chicken stop in the middle of the road?
D: What jumps when it walks and sits when it stands?
E: What’s brown and has a head and a tail but no body?
F: What has a neck and no head, two arms but no hands?
Source: funhuh.com/fun-riddle/riddles-and-answers-501/
Answers: A nose. B: A candle. C: He wanted to see his � at mate. D: A kangaroo. E: A penny. F: A shirt.
Across:1. Meatloaf serving5. Swindled10. PBS request14. A hardhat might drive one15. Book after Daniel16. Unspeci� ed people17. It preceded Germany, once
18. Cathedral parts19. Undiluted, as liquor20. This23. Talk tempestuously24. Roxy Music member Brian25. Crown material, notably28. Broken-down horse30. Keyboard key
33. Brother of Moses34. High-quality cotton35. Bustle36. That39. Art colony in New Mexico40. Clumsy bumblers41. Rousseau book42. Start’s start?43. Shetland, e.g.44. Hereditary social classes45. Specialized kitchenware item46. It’s home to Castro47. The other55. All � red up56. Squander57. Duncan product58. Can’t help but59. ‘’My Name is ___ Lev’’60. Decorative liquid holder61. Asian nurse62. What some candles represent63. Fifty cents per mile, e.g.
Down:1. Architect’s detail2. Ananias, e.g.3. ‘’Let’s not forget ...’’4. Famous � ag fashioner5. Garments for granny6. ‘’Fiddler on the Roof’’ Oscar nominee
7. Superpower until 19918. Destitution9. You may step on it10. Hunter S. Thompson’s style11. ‘’The Gondoliers’’ character12. Scaloppine meat13. Powerful Italian family21. Yellow-� owered plant22. Arles article25. Have a bit of26. Laugh track sounds27. Treats with milk28. ‘’I’ll be ready in a ___!’’29. Book of prophecies30. Namely31. Fred Astaire’s sister32. Hardly the best guests34. Think ahead35. Aunt Polly’s nephew37. Avert one’s eyes38. The absolute minimum43. ‘’Annabel Lee’’ author44. Provides provender45. Board measure46. More adorable47. Big, bad role of � lm48. Start of something big?49. Traveler’s need, maybe50. Foundation51. Workplace inspector, for short52. River or city53. Thumbs down, in the Kremlin54. Hot under the collar
Source: OnlineCrosswords.net
January 15, 201514
BreakMet
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January 15, 2015 Study Break 15@themetonline f: themetropolitan mymetmedia. com
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For more information about any of these events listed in this ad please contactVeteran and Military Student Services • Tivoli 243 • 303.556.4294
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