UNIVERSITY OF 11.2010

[ CAMPUS | NEIGHBORHOOD LIFE | RESEARCH ARTS | EVENTS | PEOPLE ]

#DI?:; t School renaming t New art studios t Animal abuse research t Denver Pizza Company t Pioneer hockey t Alumna’s rescue effort

“The kinds of people that we’re graduating and what they do with

Rendering Rendering by Spence Nickel of 5Design in collaboration with Mark Rodgers their lives … those are the measures of a really DU remembers great university, and A new Holocaust Memorial Social Action Site at DU is designed to that’s what we’re after this time.” transform the memory of the millions in Europe murdered by the Nazis —Chancellor Robert Coombe more than 65 years ago into acts of social justice. More than 200 people on kicking off DU’s giving campaign and the effect it attended a ceremony Oct. 10 to dedicate the outdoor gathering place will have on the University >>www.du.edu/ascend with the setting of the memorial’s first stone near Buchtel Tower. The memorial is linked to an endowed chair of Holocaust studies and will be home to performances, lectures, readings and vigils that advance humanitarian causes, foster intercultural dialogue and incubate empathy and public good works. Funded by alumni and community members, the memorial is scheduled for completion by December 2012. Knoebel School dedicated Most-watched videos DU’s Daniels College of Business changed the on DU’s YouTube name of the School of Hotel, Restaurant and Tourism channel Management to the Fritz Knoebel School of Hospitality Management at a private naming event on Oct. 19. 1. Skiing on Carnegie Green Betty Knoebel, widow of Denver food services pioneer Ferdinand “Fritz” Knoebel, gave DU $17.5 2. Pioneer Passage million in May. The Daniels College of Business will use 3. $7.5 million of the gift to increase student scholarships, Why I Chose DU faculty support, industry partnerships and experiential 4. Free Bike Library Launches learning programs. The overarching goal is to achieve international distinction for the school. 5. Finding DNA Markers in “This generous gift will enable us to enhance the Forensic Testing hands-on, experiential learning opportunities we pro- Wayne Armstrong Wayne vide our students,” says David Corsun, director and as- 6. Centennial Residence Hall Tour sociate professor of the Knoebel School. 7. Graduate Commencement 2009 Denver native Fritz Knoebel founded Knoebel Mercantile Co. — a bakery distributor — in 1929 and built it into the nation’s largest privately owned food service distribution company. Known 8. Archaeological Dig at as Nobel Inc., it was acquired by Sysco Inc. as a subsidiary in 1982. Amache Internship Knoebel was chairman of Nobel/Sysco Food Services Co. until his retirement in 1999 at age 90. He died in 2005. Betty Knoebel, now 78, and Fritz received honorary degrees from DU in 9. Nagel Residence Hall Tour 1992 in recognition of their role in the Denver business and philanthropic communities. 10. Around Campus Additionally, DU will use the Knoebel gift to establish the Knoebel Center for the Study of Aging, which will expand DU’s role in interdisciplinary research on aging and aging-related conditions. —Jordan Ames

Watch these videos and more at Community group helps old electronics go to www.youtube.com/uofdenver hard-drive heaven

You don’t need a bike to go e-cycling. What you need instead is the pedal power to haul

unwanted electronic junk out of the basement and down to the Asbury Elementary School parking lot on Nov. 6. [ ] That’s when Action Recycling will be on hand to take computer towers, batteries, TVs, www.du.edu/today stereos, mice (the inorganic kind), laptops, printers, cell phones, keyboards and monitors off your Volume 34, Number 3 hands and out of your life. Action is an EPA-sanctioned recycling outfit that knows electronic trash from treasure. Its Interim Vice Chancellor for technicians strip electronic items down to what’s recyclable and what’s not, then see that the University Communications Jim Berscheidt pieces go where they belong. They can even scrape your computer’s hard drive to a safe, dataless Editorial Director magnetic strip before sending it off to hard-drive heaven. And they’ll mail you the papers to prove Chelsey Baker-Hauck (BA ’96) that the hard drive was “degaussed” for only $8 per hard drive. Otherwise, disposing of electronic Managing Editor junk, including hard drives you don’t want cleaned, will cost a donation of at least $10 or more per Kathryn Mayer (BA ’07, MLS ’10) household. Art Director The beneficiary of this electronic clean-up is University Neighbors, a registered neighborhood Craig , VeggieGraphics

association that ran an identical e-cycling event last year. That event raised about $500, which Community News is published monthly by the helped pay for the group’s annual ice cream social in August. University of Denver, University Communications, 2199 S. University Blvd., Denver, CO 80208-4816. “It’s as much a community service as it is outreach for us,” says former president Liz Ullman. The University of Denver is an EEO/AA institution. “It keeps electronics out of the landfill and from being scattered in the alleys. It also brings neighbors together. They meet and hang out. It’s great.” This year’s e-cycling event will be from 9 a.m.–noon, rain or shine, at Asbury School, which is one block north of Evans Avenue between Marion and Lafayette streets. Bring all the electronic Contact Community News at 303-871-4312 or [email protected] junk you want, but not fluorescent bulbs or devices containing mercury or Freon. To receive an e-mail notice upon the >>www.universityneighbors.org publication of Community News, contact us with your name and e-mail address. —Richard Chapman

2 Daniels’ microfinance class WayneArmstrong named to Forbes list of most innovative business classes

The Deutsche Bank Microfinance Class at DU’s Daniels College of Business has been named to the Forbes.com list of the 10 Most Innovative Business School Classes. The list includes courses from business schools around the country that “appeal to a different kind of student — one who increasingly looks to do good while also doing well.” Students in the Daniels class work directly with managers from Deutsche Bank’s Global Commercial Microfinance Consortium to evaluate loan applications from microfinance institutions (MFIs). MFIs borrow from Deutsche Bank’s $80 million fund and use the money to make small loans — some as low as $50 — to individuals and groups in rural villages. “The idea of microfinance has been around a while, but we’re now finding that larger financial institutions are getting involved, in addition to not- for-profits,” says Professor Mac Clouse, who teaches the course. “The idea is taking hold that you can earn a rate of return as well as provide benefits to the poor.” The Daniels-Deutsche Bank partnership was established five years ago when Daniels Professor and Dean Emeritus Bruce Hutton was leading an interterm course to New York. The group met University dedicates new Nagel Art Studios with the director of Deutsche Bank’s microfinance The University of Denver celebrated its new center for drawing and painting with a division. The director was so impressed with the DU dedication ceremony Oct. 19 that drew around 300 people to the Ralph and Trish Nagel students and their questions that he invited Hutton Art Studios, the new copper-plated structure located between the Shwayder Art Building and the University of Denver to join as the bank’s and the . Classes began there in September. only academic partner. Built along with the University of Denver Soccer Stadium and the Pat Bowlen Training The students in the class — which is capped Center for DU’s athletic teams, the 12,500-square-foot structure features a large, open at around 20 graduate students — receive a set of studio area, high ceilings, concrete floors, movable walls and plenty of natural light. loan applications from MFIs. Following a set of criteria Equivalent in space to an entire floor in the Shwayder Art Building, the new studio provided by Deutsche Bank, the students research also frees up space in Shwayder for DU’s pioneering program in electronic media arts the applying organization, compile information about design (eMAD). The building’s third floor has been turned from a labyrinth of classrooms the economic and political environment in the region; and hallways into a large open space with the latest in digital equipment. talk to people from the finance, human resources Chancellor Robert Coombe told those gathered at the ceremony that the art scene and IT side of the MFI and examine past successes to in Denver is “absolutely percolating,” citing recent developments at the Denver Art determine their suitability to receive a loan. Museum, the Vance Kirkland Museum and the soon-to-be-built Clyfford Still Museum. After conducting initial research, the class then “It is an extraordinary time, and our goal is to once again position the School of travels to the MFI’s location during spring break in Art and Art History in the center of things for the sake of our students, for the sake of order to conduct on-site due diligence. Student our faculty, for the sake of our community,” he said, referring to the time in the 1950s groups have traveled to Cambodia, Uganda and and 1960s when DU was the center of modern art in thanks to Kirkland, the Kenya to meet the MFIs and visit local borrowers. painter who was the director of the art school from the late 1920s until 1969. “[Students] can see how microfinance can The studio is named for Ralph and Trish Nagel, who donated $2.3 million to the provide a real benefit to the poor of society,” Clouse project. Ralph Nagel also serves on the DU Board of Trustees. says. “You can make a difference by approaching a Trish Nagel said the purpose of the studio is to “provide a welcoming home for the problem from a business perspective.” art spirit and the students and professors who will do their work here.” —Jordan Ames —Greg Glasgow

3 New hope Professor receives $1.5 million grant to study children exposed to animal abuse

ere’s what we know about the WayneArmstrong Heffects of animal abuse on children who witness it: It can’t be good. Here’s what we don’t know: Everything else. What mental health problems arise when children are exposed to brutality against a much-loved pet? How do children cope when they see an animal beaten or tortured? These are among the questions social work Professor Frank Ascione (pictured) plans to explore in a four-year study that follows children who have seen or heard animal abuse at home. The project, funded by a $1.5 million grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, will allow Ascione, who holds the American Humane Endowed Chair at the Graduate School of Social Work (GSSW), to advance his groundbreaking research into the dynamics of domestic violence and animal maltreatment. As executive director of GSSW’s Institute for Human-Animal Connection, Ascione has emerged as the nation’s go-to authority on questions related to the topic. His research has fueled a nationwide campaign to increase the number of domestic violence shelters extending the welcome mat to family pets. And thanks to his publications and expert testimony, more than a dozen states have passed legislation that makes it possible to include at-risk pets in civil protection orders. For his new study, Ascione will partner with the Colorado Coalition Against Domestic Violence to interview 300 mother-child pairs from domestic violence shelters around the state. Participants will be required to have had pets within the last year and be willing to be re-contacted for two years following the initial interviews. Children will range in age from 7–12. By the time the study ends, those children will be ages 9–14, allowing researchers to examine mental health over time. To Ascione’s knowledge, no other study on animal abuse and domestic violence has attempted to follow its participants for such an extended period. “We may see serious behavioral issues at first,” Ascione says. “Two years later it may be very different.” GSSW Dean James Herbert Williams considers the grant a breakthrough for scholars studying the human-animal connection — whether they work at DU or elsewhere. “This is the first time that federal funding has been put forward to look at this kind of issue,” Williams explains, noting that such funding signals the importance of foundational research in this emerging field. Ascione’s new project comes on the heels of his 2007 study revealing the strong connection between animal abuse and intimate partner violence. From that project, Ascione learned that abusers often use animals to manipulate or terrorize family members. Troubled by that information, Ascione felt compelled to address the next logical question: How is exposure to animal abuse related to a child’s mental health? Preliminary findings with adults suggest that witnessing animal abuse has lasting consequences for the individuals involved and for society. True, the majority of children who have seen their pets mistreated grow up to have healthy relationships, but others become abusers themselves. Earlier interventions will help professionals reach these young people. “One of the findings that has been emerging is derived from studies of men who reminisce about their childhoods. If they were exposed to animal abuse before age 13, that exposure is linked to a greater likelihood that they perpetrate abuse,” Ascione says. Curiously, he adds, the same findings do not hold true for women who witnessed animal abuse. The study will also examine how adults shape children’s responses to the violence. “It really is going to provide information that has not existed in the scientific community in this field,” Ascione says. —Tamara Chapman 4 Penrose hosts Weaver’s latest installation

Timothy Weaver, a DU associate professor of electronic media arts and design and digital media studies, has installed his art in museums and festivals from Ecuador to Germany. Fans won’t have to travel nearly that far for his latest creation, Hylaea (pictured). The video, print and rare book installation opened Oct. 14 at DU’s Penrose Library; it runs through Feb. 14, 2011. The exhibition will be distributed across three levels of Penrose in four media clusters. Weaver also incorporates two different types of archives into the exhibit: rare books in the Penrose Library Special Collections and the remains of extinct birds from the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. “The project is an interactive video and print installation that seeks to reanimate the residues, record and archives of lost ecological memory from the extinct species cabinets of the museum and the rare book shelves of the library,” Weaver says. Professor Peggy Keeran, an arts and humanities reference librarian at Penrose and coordinator of the exhibit, says Weaver causes people to think about heritage and the cost of not preserving wildlife and the Courtesy of Weaver Tim environment. Keeran saw Weaver’s installation that was part of the Embrace exhibition at the Denver Art Museum and asked him if he’d show the work at Penrose. Instead, Weaver created an entirely new installation. “My intention in seeding motion, sound, interaction and macroscopic detail across the library is for viewers to recall that within less than a century of the publication of the first written and painted records of the astounding bird life of North America, both common and mythological species became the icons of human-induced extinctions,” Weaver says. The exhibition is free and open to the public. —Kristal Griffith WayneArmstrong Alumnus takes slice of local pizza market

For Phil Coan (BSBA finance ’07) and Mark Huebner, a good business idea is simple: Create a good product and bring it to the masses. The rest, they say, should fall into place, and that is exactly what is happening for the partners who own and run the Denver Pizza Co., a Denver-based takeout and delivery pizzeria. They have two locations — at 5022 E. Hampden Ave. and 309 W. 11th St. — with a third in the works. They say the short-term goal is to be running five stores within two years. Long-term planning? Global expansion. “We’ve been doing great,” Coan says. “We started profiting at our second location in the first month of operation [in August 2010].” Despite a slumping economy, the partners weren’t worried about whether their business would thrive. “That’s the thing about the quick service industry — you can serve a family for as much as you can go out to eat yourself,” Coan says. Pies range from $5 (8-inch personal) to $15 (18-inch extra-large). Specialty pies cost more. Coan’s favorite is “The Hero,” which has tzatziki sauce, lamb, feta, kalamata olives, tomato and basil leaves. Huebner’s favorite is “The 5280,” which has mozzarella, pepperoni, mushrooms and a special blend of spices. Calzones, salads and Glacier ice cream also are offered. Their competitors, the partners say, are the places that are locally grown and owned — say, an Anthony’s Pizza and Pasta — but Coan and Huebner are confident they can take them over eventually. That’s because they claim the “highest quality” ingredients — they shred their cheese daily off the block, bake dough daily and use Wisconsin mozzarella, which is not only “delicious” but has a lower fat content, Coan says. Coan, in the driver’s seat, is pictured with two of his “The toughest part is getting the doors open and people in them,” Coan says. But that’s employees been taken care of, in part due to Huebner’s national exposure as a contestant on season five of ABC’s The Bachelorette, which he admits he did for Denver Pizza Co. publicity. On the show, Huebner’s profession was simply dubbed as “pizza entrepreneur,” a fitting description since neither partner had any prior culinary experience. “We cooked for nine months straight so we knew what we were serving,” Huebner says. Recently, the duo has been making their presence known by donating food to charity fundraisers and events throughout the Denver area. “I’m willing to do whatever it takes to make people happy,” Coan says. “I love hearing people who eat our food say that it was a great experience and that they love the food.” The Denver Pizza Co. is open Friday–Saturday from 11 a.m.–midnight and Sunday–Thursday from 11 a.m. –11 p.m. —Kathryn Mayer 5 Sports Beau Freshman Pioneer contributes to success of the team, Gwozdecky says

efore he even set foot on the University of Associates and Clarkson Rich BDenver campus this fall, freshman Pioneer Beau Bennett became a National Hockey League first-round draft pick and then met the Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sidney Crosby, arguably hockey’s biggest superstar. Not a bad summer. “It was really an unreal moment,” Bennett says of his meeting with Crosby. “You grow up watching him and seeing all the things he’s doing, and then you end up meeting him and hopefully playing with him down the road. Just the opportunity to play with him down the road would be unbelievable.” Bennett’s still got a ways to go before he plays for the Penguins, who took the 18-year- old forward with the 20th overall pick. But DU coach says he’ll get his chance to develop this season, one of a talented trio of offensive newcomers, along with Jason Zucker, a second round pick of the Minnesota Wild, and Nick Shore. The coach says the Pioneers still have plenty of upperclassmen to provide leadership and shoulder the burden on the offensive end of the ice, and no one is expecting any one first- year player to bear too much of the burden. Instead, Gwozdecky says Bennett will get time to learn and develop, while still getting an opportunity to contribute. “We’ve got three freshman forwards who are all very, very good offensively,” Gwozdecky says. “I think Beau is going to share his role with a lot of different forwards on this team. Beau is a very gifted offensive player, but it’s not going to fall on his shoulders. We’ve got three very experienced seniors in Kyle Ostrow, Anthony Maiani and Jesse Martin, and we expect them to carry a lot.” Highly touted by scouts, Bennett brings quickness and “hockey smarts” to a Pioneers team that needs to replace starters lost over the summer to graduation or the professional ranks. But listed at 6-feet, 1-inch tall and 180 pounds, Bennett says he knows he needs to add muscle and hone his game. Coming out of California and wearing the same No. 9 sweater worn last year by fellow Californian Rhett Rakhshani, who graduated, Bennett says he’s adapting well to Denver and settling in to school. “I’ve got great roommates, great teammates, and Denver’s not so much different from California yet … at least until the winter hits. So it’s been a smooth transition so far, and I’m loving every minute of it.” For the record, his roommates are Shore, Zucker and freshman netminder Sam Brittain, all guys he knew before arriving on campus. Without declaring a major just yet, Bennett says he’s taking core classes and getting used to college life, with an eye toward earning a business degree. Someday, he says he’d like to open a chain of restaurants with his brother, Wade. Bennett says he knows he’s expected to hit the books and that DU’s hockey team has a reputation for excelling in the classroom as well as on the ice. “We do expect a lot from each other academics-wise. The captains especially are staying on us and making sure we’re going to class and doing the right thing.” Bennett says NCAA hockey is also providing him with the on-ice education he sought. “The guys are a lot older, a lot stronger, and a lot faster,” he says. “Being in the gym has helped a lot and being with the guys has helped a lot …[The WCHA] is one of the best leagues. You’ve got to bring it every night, and it’s a short schedule, so you’ve got to make every game count.” —Chase Squires 6 A humanitarian effort Alumna rescues woman from coursing floodwaters

lizabeth Tromans has sterling credentials: an MA in international human rights with a humanitarian assistance certificate from EDU’s Korbel School of International Studies, a stint in the Peace Corps, numerous international service trips, fluency in Spanish and Bengali, and now an International Development Fellowship with Catholic Relief Services (CRS). But it’s the experience gained during her summer job as a teenager in Hamilton, Ohio, that has proved most valuable so far in her work for the CRS in India. On Sept. 19, while she was helping distribute humanitarian aid supplies in the northern part of the country, she rescued a woman from rushing floodwaters and saved her life. All part of a day’s work for the former lifeguard, who says she “didn’t anticipate having to use this skill in India.” Tromans began serving her yearlong fellowship in July and was assigned to India to support the Disaster Management team. In non- disaster times, she’s part of a team that helps communities vulnerable to disasters better prepare. During recent flooding in the Gonda district of Utter Pradesh state, she assisted in emergency response efforts.

Just before the rescue, her group Services Relief Catholic had hiked past a stretch of road with knee-deep rushing water where a small bridge had been washed out. She recounts the incident this way: “We stopped because a phone was ringing in my backpack. As my colleague fished it out, I turned and saw a man coming quickly on a bicycle with his wife sitting sidesaddle on the back. He came into the water quickly, perhaps not realizing how strong or deep the water was. As he teetered, the wife fell off the bike right away and was immediately under the water. I ran over, and as I approached she had managed to get one hand above the surface … and so I could see her location in the murky water.” Tromans jumped in and, although she couldn’t reach the bottom because of the deep water, grabbed the woman. She managed to pull and carry her 500 to 1,000 yards to a house surrounded by shallower water, where the woman’s husband met them. Tromans had long planned on a career helping people, although perhaps not in such a direct way. After earning her bachelor’s degree in psychology and considering a career in clinical counseling, she served in the Peace Corps in Bangladesh and “started thinking about development as a career.” Among her travels during her graduate study were trips to Costa Rica and Colombia for research. Tromans credits her education at DU for preparing her well for her current work. She recalls with admiration the work of Associate Clinical Professor Ted Zerwin, with whom she had several courses. Upon hearing of Tromans’ actions in India, Zerwin said, “That doesn’t surprise me at all.” He described her as a “very conscientious” person who was serious about her studies even as she looked for opportunities to learn and serve. That fit with the qualities the CRS looks for in its fellowship candidates, according to spokeswoman Laura Sheahen, who listed them as “flexibility, resourcefulness, intelligence, kindness, and a good sense of humor — so you can roll with the punches when things get crazy.” — Leslie Lyon

7 [EventsNovember ]

20 Lemon Sponge Cake Contemporary DU opens Center for Around campus Ballet presents Vertical Migration. 4 Bridges to the Future: Richard Clarke. 8 p.m. Byron Theatre. $33.75; $28.75 for World Languages 7 p.m. Gates Concert Hall. Free and open to students. the public. RSVP to 303–871–2357. and Cultures 5 An Academic Adventure for the Generations, a WLA event. Featuring Exhibits Elise Wiggins, Corbin Douglass and Leonard 1 “The Art Group.” Through Nov. 30. DU students have a significant Barrett. Knoebel School. 9:30 a.m.–1:30 Hirshfeld Gallery, Chambers Center. Gallery new campus resource: the Center p.m. $75, benefiting DU’s Penrose Library. hours: Monday–Friday 7 a.m. –7 p.m.; for World Languages and Cultures. Book discussion with Chaplain Gary weekend hours vary. Free. 9 The center’s goal is to promote Brower. Talking about Speaking of Faith by 2010 Juried Alumni Exhibition. Through Krista Tippett. Noon. Driscoll Center South, Nov. 14. Myhren Gallery. Gallery hours: intercultural communication through Suite 29. Free. Noon–4 p.m. daily. Free. a University-wide resource center Labyrinth Meditative Walk. 9 a.m. Iliff Great Hall, Iliff School of Theology. Free. that supports languages and litera- RSVP to Barbara Gish at [email protected] or Sports tures education and builds bridges 303–765–3115. 5 Women’s swimming vs. Colorado State between disciplines across campus. 11 Soul and Role. 4 p.m. Fireside Room, University. 4 p.m. El Pomar Natatorium. Professor Kathy Mahnke, direc- Driscoll University Center. Free. For infor- Hockey vs. . 7:30 p.m. tor of the center, says it will enhance mation, contact Gary Brower at gary.brow- Magness Arena. [email protected]. students’ preparation when studying Men’s soccer vs. Air Force. 7 p.m. Ciber 12 Jackson/Ho China Forum. China’s 6 abroad and in their mandatory lan- Returned Foreign Scholars: Contributions, Field. Roles and Influences. By Wang Huiyao. 7 Women’s basketball vs. Regis University. guage studies. It will also “leave DU Noon. Cherringon Hall, Room 150. Free. 2 p.m. Magness Arena. graduates better prepared for the RSVP to Dana Lewis at [email protected] or 303–871–4474. 12 Hockey vs. Minnesota State. 7:30 p.m. global citizenship that is their inheri- Magness Arena. 22 Soul and Role. Noon. Fireside Room, tance as adults of the 21st century,” Driscoll Student Center. Free. 13 Hockey vs. Minnesota State. 7 p.m. Mahnke says. Magness Arena. 25 Thanksgiving Holiday. University closed. The center — located on the Also Nov. 26. 16 Women’s basketball vs. Colorado. 7 p.m. Magness Arena. second floor of Sturm Hall — is de- 18 Men’s basketball vs. Colorado State. signed to be a welcoming and com- Arts 7 p.m. Magness Arena. fortable place for undergraduate and 2 Friends of Chamber Music presents 19 Hockey vs. Bemidji State. 7:30 p.m. graduate students to spend time in Kremerata Baltica with Gidon Kremer, Magness Arena. violin. 7:30 p.m. Gates Concert Hall. groups or individually. Contact 303–388–9839 or tickets@friend- 20 Hockey vs. Bemidji State. 7 p.m. Magness “We also have a goal of reaching Arena. sofchambermusic.com for ticket informa- out to the large international com- tion. 24 Men’s basketball vs. Alcorn State. 7 p.m. 3 Buika: “El Último Trago,” a tribute to Magness Arena. munity here on campus,” Mahnke Chavela Vargas. 7:30 p.m. Free behind- 26 Hockey v. Lake Superior State. 7:30 p.m. says. “Their potential for contribut- the-curtain lecture at 6:30 p.m. Gates Magness Arena. Concert Hall. $32–$48. ing to and gaining from the vitality of 27 Hockey vs. Air Force. 7 p.m. Magness this campus is limitless.” 4 William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Arena. Presented by DU’s theater department. The center also will examine 8 p.m. Byron Theatre. Additional perfor- Swimming: free. Soccer: $5 for adults; free for DU DU’s current language placement mances Nov. 5, 6, 12 and 13 at 8 p.m. and students and children two and under. Hockey: $18–$27; Nov. 13 and 14 at 2 p.m. $10–$15. Students, $5 for DU students. Men’s basketball: $9–$15; free for and proficiency assessments with an staff and faculty may pick up two free tickets DU students. Women’s basketball: $8–$11; free for DU eye toward making them more ef- with Pioneer ID at the box office for open- students. ing weekend. ficient and effective for students. For ticketing and other information, including a full listing 6 Mizel Arts and Culture Center at the of campus events, visit www.du.edu/calendar. The center also will be an JCC presents David Broza. 8 p.m. Gates important resource for faculty by Concert Hall. $27.50–$47.50. offering guidance on how to inte- 10 Moscow Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra. Correction: The October issue of Community 7:30 p.m. Gates Concert Hall. $49.75– News incorrectly stated that the class of 2014 grate technology into languages and $80.25. was the largest in DU’s history. DU had some of culture education, finding tutors for its largest first-year classes in the late 1940s when 14 Colorado Youth Symphony Fall Concert. World War II veterans attended college on the students and assessing language pro- 3:30 p.m. Gates Concert Hall. $12. GI Bill. The incoming 2010–11 class is one of the ficiency. largest since that era. We apologize for the error. —Kristal Griffith

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