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8/14/2019 2009 November: Community News
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• Explore Denver prog
• Convocation addres
• New restaurants
• Hollywood producer
• DU hockey annivers
Inside
UNIVERSITY OF DENVER 1 1 . 2 0 0 9
[C A M P U S | N E I G H B O R H O O D L I F E | R E S E A R C H A R T S | E V E N T S | P E O P L E
]
John Moore, theater critic for The Denver Post, reads his part during DU’s
production of The Laramie Project: 10 Years Later, an epilogue to the original
off-Broadway play The Laramie Project. The project paid tribute to gay
University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard, who was lured from a
Laramie bar, tortured and left for dead in 1998. DU was one of the many
theaters around the world that simultaneously performed the epilogue on
Oct. 12, the anniversary of Shepard’s death. Local luminaries joined DU faculty
and staff in the staged reading, including Moore, DU Provost Gregg Kvistad,
Gov. Bill Ritter and Denver-area stage actors.
Remembering Matthew J e
f f H a e s s l e r
Think pinkCoors Fitness Center was
graced with a splash of pink
during the month of October
thanks to a cancer awareness
project. In recognition of
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month, fitness equipment
manufacturer Cybex donated
10 cents for every mile logged
on a pink treadmill that was
in the center’s cardio deck.
The money will be donated to
the Breast Cancer Research
Foundation. As of Oct. 27, DU
members logged 1,224 miles,
raising $122.
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DU scores high marks on green report card
The University o Denver hit the books last year on sustainability,
and this month’s “Green Report Card” shows the rewards o hard
work.
The 2010 Sustainable Endowments Institute’s College
Sustainability Report Card gives DU a B-plus grade, an
improvement over last year’s B-minus. The higher grade
stems rom improvements in several categories, including en-
dowment transparency, administrative leadership and com-
mitment to combating climate change.
Lyndsay Agans, chair o the DU Sustainability Council, says
she’s happy with the grade but says there is room or improvement.
DU dropped a grade in the “green building” category despite a
number o new buildings recognized as “green” by nationally accepted
building standards. Tom McGee, DU’s energy engineer, says the reason or
the drop may be due to some reporting mandates that will be rectied this year.
Regionally, DU was a strong perormer on the report. The top rating in the Rocky
Mountain Region went to the University o Colorado, which earned an A-minus. DU’s B-plus
tied or second with Colorado College. Further down the list, University o Colorado-Colorado
Springs, University o Montana-Missoula and University o Utah rated Bs. Colorado State Univer-sity earned a C-plus and the Colorado School o Mines trailed with a D-plus. The lowest-rated
school in the region is Brigham Young University, with a D-minus.
The institute proled 332 schools through 48 indicators — including building assessments,
recycling programs and endowment investment policies — to create the ratings. The institute is a
special project o the Rockeeller Philanthropy Advisors and is based in Cambridge, Mass.
>>www.greenreportcard.org.
—Chase Squires
New program helps undergrads explore Denver
Denver oers many cultural and scientic acilities, and now DU undergraduate students can
explore some o the city’s gems or ree.
The new Explore Denver program provides ree tickets to undergraduates or the Denver
Art Museum, the Denver Zoo, the Denver Botanic Gardens and the Denver Museum o Nature
and Science. The program also oers deeply discounted tickets to Denver Center or the Per-
orming Arts perormances. For instance, tickets to the musical Wicked are available or $10.
Explore Denver is an initiative o DU’s Undergraduate Student Government — ormerly
the AUSA Senate — and the Student Comptroller’s oce, and the tickets are unded by the
student activity ee. The Undergraduate Student Government has allocated $30,000 or the
program this year.
“Part o being a student at DU is enjoying what Denver has to oer and being an active par-
ticipant in the lie o the city,” says Carl Johnson, director o student programming and Greek lie.“There is so much to do here, it’s just a matter o choosing what to do.”
“This program is a great and inexpensive way or students to get o campus and enjoy the
many attractions that the city o Denver has to oer,” says Antoine Perretta, president o the
Undergraduate Student Government. “Students will be able to broaden their cultural experi-
ences by attending shows, visiting the museums, and enjoying the outdoors.”
Faculty members are encouraged to utilize the ree tickets or class outings.
Tickets are available at the Explore Denver ticketing counter on the rst foor o Driscoll
North. The ticket desk is open Monday–Friday rom 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
—Jordan Ames
w w w . d u . e d u / t o d a yVolume 33, Number 3
Vice Chancellor for University Communications
Carol Farnsworth
Editorial Director Chelsey Baker-Hauck (BA ’96)
Managing Editor Kathryn Mayer (BA ’07)
Art Director Craig Korn, VeggieGraphics
Community News is published monthly by theUniversity of Denver, University Communications,2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208. TheUniversity of Denver is an EEO/AA institution.
Contact Community News at 303-871-4312or [email protected]
To receive an e-mail notice upon thepublication of Community News, contact us
with your name and e-mail address.
U N I V E R S I T Y O F D E N V E R
[ ]
2
i S t o c k ph o t o
Students pitched about 40 tents
outside the Ritchie Center box ofce
Sept. 25–26 in anticipation o the
sale o DU hockey season tickets.
Some students even camped out
or 24 hours. Nearly 350
student tickets were sold. Season
tickets cost $52 or13
games. The Pioneers
hockey team—now in
its60th year—is
looking to add another
NCAA championshiptitle to the7
the team has
already won.
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3
Menu options near DU
grow with two new
restaurants
Holy guacamole! Illegal Pete’s is open at
last.
The Boulder-born taco and burrito chain
that has struggled or nearly two years to set up
shop in a ormer pizza parlor at the intersection
o East Evans Avenue and Williams Street
started serving customers Oct. 8.
“We’ve been waiting or this since the end
o our reshman year,” says DU senior Diana
Hocker.
“I think it’ll be a great spot or people to
come and hang out,” says Jamie Gingrass, an
international business major who ancies the
vegetarian burrito bowl. “It’s casual and laid
back. They’ll attract a lot o students.”
David Berenson, chie operating ocer o
Illegal Pete’s, hopes she’s right.“Pete’s has been in business or 14 years,
and this restaurant represents everything we
know about how to design a restaurant and
how to run a restaurant,” Berenson says.
It’s been a long time coming. Company
owner Pete Turner has ve other healthy
restaurants in Denver and Boulder, but he
struggled to get nancing when the recession
dried up credit. It was only ater President Obama
goaded the Small Business Administration in the
spring that nancing began to loosen.
Once a loan was secured, Turner began
a major overhaul o the 55-year-old buildingat 1744 E. Evans Ave., including roo, utilities,
fooring and a nity garage-style pass-through
rom the bar to an outdoor seating area.
Turner’s bid to open the business became
something o a race ater Noodles & Company
announced it was taking over a ormer
Blockbuster store across the street and would
open in October.
Pete’s ended up winning. Noodles opened
its 1737 E. Evans Ave. restaurant on Oct. 14.
Berenson, ironically a ormer vice president
o the 200-store, Broomeld-based Noodles
chain, welcomes the budding competition.“We meet dierent needs by and large,
once you get past hunger,” he says. “Besides,
there’s a certain synergy that happens when
there are [dining] options in a neighborhood.
It may be that they’ll have dinner at Noodles
then come over here or a beer aterward. And
that’s great. They’re a great company.”
>>www.illegalpetes.com
>> www.noodles.com
—Richard Chapman
Coombe says University is weathering financial
storm with ‘sacrifice’
The economic condition o the nation is still trying the resiliency o the University
Chancellor Robert Coombe said in his Oct. 2 Convocation address to aculty and sta.
“I we bend but don’t break, they are times o extraordinary opportunity,” Coombe
said.
He said the University nished scal 2009 with a positive operating margin and predicted
DU will stay on track or another balanced budget this year. Coombe attributed DU’s good
nancial ooting to a combination o budget cuts, a moratorium on salary increases in 2010
and last winter’s realignment — in which DU sta was reduced by 122 positions. The u
impact o realignment, he said, will be elt in the current year and years to ollow.
O the money saved this year, more than $4.5 million has gone to support increase
in student nancial aid or undergraduate and graduate students. Another $3.5 million o the realignment unds were used to support new aculty positions and ll some essentia
positions let vacant ater some sta members took voluntary buy-outs as part o realignment
Coombe explained. The rest o the saved unds were used to hold down tuition increases
While Coombe spent time addressing the University’s nancial position, he also took
time to highlight the University’s accomplishments. Fall enrollments or the University tota
more than 12,000 students, greater than in any year since World War II. Coombe cal led the
quality o students “unabated,” adding that nearly hal o the rst-year students were in the
top 10 percent o their high school classes.
>>Read the speech: www.du.edu/chancellor/speeches/convocation09.html
—Kathryn Maye
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4
Business professor offers hope, advice for transitioning baby boomers
During times o lie transition, baby boomers should ocus on enhancing their skills and
celebrating existing strengths, says Karen Newman, a Daniels College o Business manage-
ment proessor.
For many boomers, the economic conditions acing the country are necessitating a re-
turn to the job market or a postponement o ret irement plans. Rather than despair, Newman
says, boomers should have hope and see this time as an opportunity or sel improvement.
“This will pass, and at this time next year, we will be having a very dierent conversa-
tion,” Newman advises. “For people looking at postponing their retirement, they should hangin there, take time to brush up on their skills and do a personal inventory o strengths and
weaknesses. As soon as the initial shock o the need or change passes, they will be better
able to deal with it.”
However, some boomers postponing retirement or re-entering the workorce may ace
a challenge to convince employers o their continued value.
“Boomers command higher salaries, and their health care costs more,” says New-
man. “But the loyalty and reliability that they oer employers more than compensates or
their expense.”
Newman recommends boomers acing career-related challenges invest in themselves
and their own capabilities.
“Do an inventory, and decide what you are good at,” Newman says. “Don’t be shy
about telling people what you can do — not what you can’t or won’t do.”
She also recommends boomers make sure they are up to date on the latest knowledge and sotware in their elds, such as Twitter and
LinkedIn.
There are 76 million baby boomers in the country, Newman says, and there is strength in that number even in a down economy.
“We have been social change agents since day we were born,” she says. “As a result, we collectively are accustomed to reorming th is country
to cope with us, and to benet rom us.”
Karen Dowd, executive director o the Suitts Center or Career Services at the Daniels College o Business, agrees.
“I do believe the boomers are going to once again lead the way. They are the rst generation to have the luxury o extending their career lives
indenitely and our notions o the ‘right’ age to retire just got more nebulous — courtesy o the recent economic meltdown,” Dowd says.
Along with career consultant Caela Farren, Newman has coauthored a book about lie transitions o all sorts. While targeted to boomers, the
as-yet unnamed book oers tips to anyone who is acing transition such as retiring, re-entering the workorce, changing careers or marital status
relocating, increasing community involvement or starting a new hobby.
—Jordan Ame
DU professor translated book by 2009 Nobel Prize winner
Sieglinde Lug, a DU proessor emerita, helped introduce the writing o 2009 Nobel literature prize
winner Herta Müller to English-speaking countries.
Lug translated Müller’s Nadirs (University o Nebraska Press, 1999) rom German to English. Müller
a German author, was awarded the prize Oct. 8.
“It’s really wonderul that a book that is so powerul will get more attention now,” Lug says.
Nadirs is based on Müller’s childhood experiences in Romania. She describes a troubled lie where
violence and corruption are prevalent under the oppression o the state.
Lug made nal revisions to the book while she was teaching a Techniques o Translations course atDU. She mentions our o her students in the aterward. Since the announcement o the Nobel Prize
Lug’s received e-mails rom some o those students.
“The students were quite helpul in making suggestions,” she says. “It is wonderul that they heard
about this.”
Lug taught German, comparative literature and women’s studies at the University o Denver rom
1978 to 2005. She acted as the director o the women’s studies program rom 1995–99.
—Kristal Grift
“Boomers command
higher salaries, and their
health care costs more…
But the loyalty and
reliability that they
ofer employers more
than compensates or
their expense.”
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5
With credits on some of the biggest movies of the past 15
years — including The Sixth Sense, Rush Hour, Shanghai Noon
and Bruce Almighty — Roger Birnbaum (attd. 1968–71) has made
his mark in Hollywood. He returned to his alma mater Oct. 2–3 as
a keynote speaker at DU’s Alumni Symposium, which gives alumnithe chance to participate in classes taught by University faculty.
More than 250 alums participated in this year’s symposium.
Birnbaum attributes much of his success to his time at DU
— it was as president of the Board of Governors, a student group
that brought speakers and musicians to campus, that he was first
bitten by the entertainment bug. He later held vice president
positions at A&M and Arista records, which led to similar jobs in
the film industry at United Artists and 20th Century Fox. In 1998,
Birnbaum co-founded the production, finance and distribution
company Spyglass Entertainment.
We asked Birnbaum more about his star-studded career.
Q What exactly does a movie producer do?
A If there’s an analogy to sports, a producer of a film is pretty
much the general manager of a team. The way it usually works
is there is a piece of material that a producer has developed, and
he brings the material to a studio and says, “I would like to make
this movie.” If they like the material then they’ll ask, “How much
do you think it will cost, can you put a budget together?” If the
budget is something that sounds reasonable to the studio, they’ll
say, “Let’s go find a director and some stars.”
Q We keep hearing how the industry’s focus has shifted
to a film’s opening weekend gross — have you seen that
change during your years as a producer?
A Yes, because it’s very expensive to open a movie. You can
make a $35 million movie and still have to spend $50 million [on
advertising] to get to the first weekend. And when there are six
other movies in the marketplace, if [your film] doesn’t catch fireright away, it’s not going to.
Q What’s the movie you learned the most from as you
were making it?
A My Cousin Vinny. At that point I was the president of 20th
Century Fox and I was making two movies at the same time.
One of them was My Cousin Vinny, and the other was a film
called Come See the Paradise. And Come See the Paradise was being
made by Alan Parker, who is a very well-known, Academy Award-
winning director of films like Midnight Express and Fame. And he’s
making this movie for me, Come See the Paradise, which is abou
the American internment camps during World War II, where the
Japanese were sent.
I’m looking at the dailies of Come See the Paradise, and I’m
thinking, “Wow, this is really beautiful, this is really important
— this is great.” And I’m looking at My Cousin Vinny, which looks
not funny, a little over the top, and sloppily made. And then the
movies are done, and Come See the Paradise is boring and just does
not really work emotionally for me as I thought it might, and My
Cousin Vinny, regardless of how over the top and how sloppily it
was made, was hysterical and became a big hit. I realized, “You
know what? You can’t really know what a movie is going to be unti
you’re done with it.” — Greg Glasgow
Movie masterDU alum produced ‘Sixth Sense,’ ‘Bruce Almighty’
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6
W a y n e A r m s t r o n g
Executive MBA
program ranked
among world’s best
The Financial Times ranked the
Daniels College o Business’ Ex
ecutive MBA Program as one o the
top EMBA programs in the world
According to the Times’ 2009 EMBA
rankings released Oct. 18, Daniel
ranked No. 85.
The Daniels EMBA Program is
an 18-month curriculum designed o
students with 10 years o signican
proessional experience rom small
medium and large organizations
entrepreneurial start-ups and
nonprot organizations.
“The working proessional
in our EMBA program learn how
to innovate even in the midst ouncertainty and change,” say
Christine Riordan, dean o the
Daniels College o Business.
This is the second consecu
tive year Daniels made the Financia
Times EMBA rankings. In 2008, Dan
iels ranked 90th.
The annual rankings are
compiled using data rom two sets
o surveys: one completed by alumn
who graduated rom their program
three years ago and another b
business school EMBA directorsThe methodology measures salary
career progression, diversity and
aculty research.
Daniels was the only Colorado
school on the list.
Barbara Kreisman, an assistan
dean who oversees the Executive
MBA Program, knows why the
program is highly rated.
“It’s a highly selective
academic program or experienced
proessionals, tailored to the needs o
strategic decision makers,” Kreismansays. “While the quantitative and
analytical skills gained here are
important, the ability to adapt and
lead sets our students apart rom
others.”
Daniels also has been ranked as
a top business school by Business-
Week and U.S. News & World Report
—Jordan Ame
DU sign maker is third-generation staffer
Working at the University o Denver just seemed natural to Dave Ostrom because he’d been
around the school most o his lie.
As young boy, Ostrom’s grandather, John Ostrom, would usher him around campus to dierent
events.
“He’d take me to almost all o the hockey games and let me sit with him up above the press boxes
o the old arena,” Dave Ostrom recalls. “When he had to come in over the weekend, I was usually
standing in his shadow and seeing how things worked and seeing parts o the campus nobody ever
saw.”
John, it turns out, would be the rst o three generations o Ostroms to work at DU. He began
at DU in 1938 (during the Franklin Roosevelt administration) and retired in 1976 as supervisor o plant
operations. He died in 1979.“I know my grandather enjoyed working here,” Ostrom says. “He would work at all the sporting
events and any other event going on around the campus to make sure they all ran smoothly.”
Then it was Ostrom’s dad’s turn: David Ostrom, who worked part time at DU in high school and
started a ull-time job in 1971. He handled several duties, including painter, yard crew oreman and
maintenance oreman or the married student apartment complex and student housing until he retired
in 1999. He died in 2007.
Between 1974 and 1976, all three Ostrom generations were on campus together. The junior
Ostrom started at DU in high school in 1974, watering lawns by pulling hoses (no sprinkler systems in
those days).
Today, Ostrom is the man behind many o the signs on campus: nameplates or employees, signs
or buildings, room numbers (with Braille) and re evacuation signs.
When the University rst bought a computerized sign-making machine, Ostrom took a computer
class at DU.“My superiors knew I took the class and gured I might not break their new machine, so they
asked i I would like to try it out,” Dave says. “From then on they would bring me a challenging project
and I would get it done.”
So, is there another amily member waiting in the wings to make it a ourth generation?
Actually, yes. And technically, it’s already happened. Ostrom’s daughter, Charice, worked or DU
or two weeks in 1997 cleaning dorm rooms. “She didn’t like it much and quit,” he says.
But his two sons, Timothy and Jonathan, have talked about working at DU.
“My hope or them is to see DU in a dierent way than I did,” Ostrom says. “Meaning rom the
classroom and getting a degree. Then i they want to work here, that would be ne with me.”
—Doug McPherson
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Even though the game is played on ice, the memories of former DU hockey players and coaches are some of the warmest of their lives.
More than 300 faces and voices from DU’s legendary hockey heritage recalled stories, re-lived past glories and rekindled friendships at
an Oct. 10 reunion honoring the program’s 60th anniversary season.
And the memories went back to the beginning.
“If you don’t have a first year, you can’t have a second year,” says Doug McKinnon (BS ’52, JD ’54) with a warm, deep chuckle. McKinnon
played on DU’s first team in 1949 and served as the squad’s first team captain.
At 81, McKinnon looks spry, clear-eyed and full of wisdom. When asked what hockey taught him as he entered his life as a successfu
Denver lawyer, he quips, “You have to understand you win some and lose some, but if you do your best and still lose, that’s OK.”
McKinnon, who began playing at age 5 in Canada, says one of his favorite memories on the ice was simply, “I was a defenseman and
I liked to shoot on the net and get one in now
and then.”
The reunion was a massive undertaking
headed by a committee of former players, staff
student managers and fans who approached Peg
Bradley Doppes, DU’s vice chancellor of Athletics
and Recreation, two years ago.
“Denver hockey has meant so much to
the University and the community of Denver
since its inception nearly 60 years ago,” Bradley
Doppes says.
To borrow a metaphor from another sport
“it was a grand slam home run,” says Tom
Sampson (BSBA ’70), a committee member and
team student manager from 1967–70.
Sampson helped organize a weekend ful
of activities for the former players, which
culminated in an Oct. 10 game against Vermont
One of those players was a fellow teammate ofMcKinnon’s, Norman Kasch (BA ’52), who was full of praise for his former team captain.
“We needed somebody who could carry their thoughts out on the ice to make it go,” Kasch says. “Doug was that guy — a coach-player
the guy who was there, the spark plug — and after 60 years, it all boils down to Doug. He’s the guy who made it fly.”
Kasch, a forward, downplayed his contribution that first year. “I don’t recall the coach ever saying two or three words to me. I was jus
meat out there during the practice.”
Today, Kasch is a retired architect who acts much younger than his 84 years. He lives with his wife of 59 years, Julia, in Aurora in a
senior community and is a regular at water aerobics, sailing and golf.
His sentiment about hockey’s life lessons mirrored McKinnon’s: “Keep the honor of what you’re doing, no matter if you’re losing and
at the bottom of the heap.”
And they are lessons younger players echoed as well.
“It sculpts you as a person, you learn how to work on a team,” says Mark Rycroft (BSBA ’03), who played from 1997–2000 and who
retired last year from a thriving career with the Colorado Avalanche. “It shaped my life, I met my wife here and built my mind to be asuccessful person. I look back and realize it helped me become confident to solve problems.”
Erik Andersson (BSBA ’96, MS ’97), who played from 1993–97, could have won the award for traveling the farthest for the reunion — he
and his family flew from Sweden, where he’s an investment banker.
“It means a great deal to me to have been a part of the program,” Anderson says. “When you look at all the history, it’s unbelievable
and incredible.”
DU’s current coach, George Gwozdecky, says he’s been happy to be a part of the tradition of “so many great players and great teams
who’ve fought and won the many championships and to be part of the players who’ve gone on to play professional hockey. It’s an amazing
ride.”
—Doug McPherso
Ice legends Alums reunite to celebrate 60 years of DU hockey
N a t h a n S o l h e i m
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Events[ ] Around campus
3 Music and meditation: “Gratitude.” Noon. Evans Chapel. Free.
“Jerusalem in Transition: An AncientCity at the Forefront of ContemporaryIssues in the Middle East.” By JersusalemMayor Nir Barkat. 6:30 p.m. Gates ConcertHall. Free and open to the public. To RSVPcall 303–871–2357.
6 “An Academic Adventure for theGenerations.” 10 a.m. Tuscan Ballroom,HRTM building. $75; parking and lunchis included. RSVP at 303–744–3733 or 303–871–3958.
7 Holiday Gift Market. Proceeds benefitpeople in need. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Also openNov. 8 from 1–4 p.m. University Park Methodist Church, 2180 S. University Blvd.
8 DU Vin Wine Festival. 2 p.m. HRTMbuilding. duvinfestival.com.
9 Faculty and staff flu shot clinic. AlsoNov. 11. 11 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Driscoll Bridge.Kaiser Permanente members free with IDcard; $20 for non-members.
“Creating a Game Plan for Business toTransition to a Sustainable Economy.”
Jeff Hollender, “chief inspired protagonist.”Davis Auditorium, Sturm Hall. Free.
10 “The Future City Beautiful.” FranklinL. Burns School of Real Estate andConstruction Management’s Rocky Mountain Expo and Fall Forecast. 7 a.m.Colorado Convention Center. $190.
www.rmexpoforecast.com
11 School Days Off. 8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m. AlsoNov. 25. Gates Field House, Ritchie Center.$45/day or $20/day with the DU work options benefit. recreation.du.edu/sdo
14 King of Champions Rage 2009. 6 p.m.Hamilton Gymnasium. $25.
20 Chaplain’s book discussion. The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell. Noon. DriscollStudent Center, Suite 29. Free.
26 Thanksgiving holiday. Campus closed. Also Nov. 27.
Exhibits1 The Family Stage. Photographs by Janet
Delaney, Todd Hido and Cecil McDonald.Through Nov. 15. Myhren Gallery. Noon–4 p.m. daily. Free.
Masqueparade. An exhibit of masks. Through Nov. 30. Museum of
Anthropology, Sturm Hall Room 102.Monday–Friday 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Free.
9 Justice and Peace Exhibit: TheEffects of Nuclear War onHiroshima and Nagasaki. ThroughNov. 13. Great Hall, Iliff School of Theology. 9 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Free.
12 John Edward Thompson: ColoradoModernist. Opening reception 5–8p.m. Exhibit open through Jan. 17(closed Dec. 19–Jan. 3). MyhrenGallery. Noon–4 p.m. daily. Free.
Arts3 First Tuesday Student Concerts.
Noon. Hamilton Recital Hall. Free.
4 The Climb, Lamont faculty jazzcombos. 7:30 p.m. Hamilton RecitalHall.
5 Quake by Melanie Marnich. 8 p.m. Additional performances Nov. 6, 7,13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and Nov. 14 and15 at 2 p.m. Byron Theatre. Generaladmission: $12; students: $8; Military:free with ID.
The Idan Raichel Project. 8 p.m.Gates Concert Hall. $28.50–$48.50.
6 Flo’s Underground. 5 p.m. Also Nov.13. Williams Salon. Free.
7 Opera Scenes. 7:30 p.m. HamiltonRecital Hall. Free; tickets required.
8 Pianist Aldo Ragone. 3 p.m. HamiltonRecital Hall.
9 “Jazz Night.” 7:30 p.m. GatesConcert Hall. Free.
10 Percussion Ensemble. 7:30 p.m.Gates Concert Hall. Free.
11 Lamont Steel Drums Ensembles. 7:30 p.m. Hamilton Recital Hall. Free.
12 String Chamber Ensembles. 7:30 p.m. Hamilton Recital Hall. Free.
13 Collegiate Chorale Concert featuring the Lamont Chorale. 7 p.m. GatesConcert Hall. Free.
14 Newman Center presents Mariza. 7:30 p.m. Gates Concert Hall. $28–$48.
15 Organist Joseph Galema. 3 p.m.Hamilton Recital Hall.
Lamont Composer’s Series.7:30 p.m. Hamilton Recital Hall. Free.
16 Guitar Ensembles Concert. 7:30 p.m.Hamilton Recital Hall. Free.
17 Rebel, Ensemble for Baroque Music,Kingdoms and Viceroys: Music of Spain and its Dominions. 7:30 p.m.Gates Concert Hall. $28–$48.
Pianist Jerome Rose. 7:30 p.m.Hamilton Recital Hall.
18 Lamont Chorale, men’s and women’s choirs. 7:30 p.m. GatesConcert Hall. Free.
19 Lamont Wind Chamber Ensembles.4 p.m. Hamilton Recital Hall. Free.
Lamont Symphony Orchestra. 7:30 p.m. Gates Concert Hall. Free;
tickets required.
Unless otherwise noted, performances are $18 for adults, $16 for seniors and free for all students andPioneer card holders.
Sports1 Volleyball vs. Arkansas-Little Rock.
1 p.m. Hamilton Gymnasium.
5 Volleyball vs. New Orleans. 7 p.m.Hamilton Gymnasium.
7 Women’s basketball vs. Regis.Exhibition game. 7 p.m. Magness
Arena.
Volleyball vs. Louisiana-Lafayette.7 p.m. Hamilton Gymnasium.
8 Volleyball vs. Louisiana-Monroe.1 p.m.
13 Women’s basketball vs. Wyoming. 5:30 p.m. Magness Arena.
Men’s basketball vs. Northern Iowa. 7:30 p.m. Magness Arena.
15 Men’s basketball vs. Arkansas-PineBluff. 1 p.m. Magness Arena.
18 Women’s basketball vs. ColoradoState. 7 p.m. Magness Arena.
19 Men’s basketball vs. Montana. 7 p.m.Magness Arena.
20 Hockey vs. North Dakota. 7:37 p.m.Magness Arena.
21 Hockey vs. North Dakota. 7:07 p.m.
25 Men’s basketball vs. Wyoming. 7 p.m. Magness Arena.
27 Hockey vs. St. Cloud State. 7:37 p.m. Magness Arena.
28 Hockey vs. St. Cloud State.7:07 p.m. Magness Arena.
Volleyball: $8; women’s basketball: $8–$11; men’s
basketball: $9–$15, hockey: $18–$27
For ticketing and other information, including a fulllisting of campus events, visit www.du.edu/calendar.
November