Volume 3, Issue 13 - Nov. 26, 1980

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JUSTICE?: Robert Shaw pulled the trigger, but former UCO student Royal Foreman got life in prison. SKY KINGS: The MSC Flying Team has won the regional championship, but they are just getting started. Up, up and away! INSIDE ART: MetroStyle' s critic takes a criticanook at...critics. SPORTS: The soccer team didn't quite achieve their goals at the regional tourney, but Coach Harry Temmer says winning isn't always everything.

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Volume 3, Issue 13 ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 漏 MetroPress November 26, 1980 J.1

Faculty evaluation

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Macintyre gets poor report card by Sal Ruibal

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If the 1980 Faculty Association

evaluation of MSC president Donald J. Macintyre was a report card, he would have to take a note .home to his parents pinned to his shirt. It was that bad. Maclntyre's overall evaluation was dismal. Of the 23 faculty members who participated in the ....evaluation, 14 rated Maclntyre's performance as ''quite inadequate,'' and eight said he was "rather inadequate." The president received no "exemplary" or "adequate" votes. One ..faculty member did not respond to tbe question. The 13-question evaluation was submitted Nov. 21 to the Trustees of the Consortium of State Colleges (MSC's gov~ming board) ~s part of the Trustees' investigation of Maclntyre's jQb performance. Another evaluation report by the MSC Faculty Senate is also in the hands of the Trustees, but the ~board has declared the evaluation procedure a "personnel matter" and stamped the Senate report "confidential.,, Sources close to the Senate

evaluatio11 have indicated that its results are almost identical to those in the Association survey. Because the board has place~ the Senate report off-limits, there is no way to confirm or deny its contents. The Association report is not considered "official" and did not fall under the Trustees imposed silence rule. The Association report was highly critical of Maclntyre's inability to select "effective and

requirements. Macintyre also received extremely low ratings of his ability to provide "information as it develops about areas of common concern to faculty and administration.'' The president received 16 "quite inadequate" ratings and five "rather inadequate" votes. Again, he received no "adequate" or "exemplary" ratings. Maclntyre's . most positive

ticulated clearly and coherently his aims and plans for the future of MSC. Nothing has been provided in writin,g for faculty I staff consideration. The ideas that have been expressed have been 路vague, fragmentary, out of touch with current education trends, overemphasizing non-traditional offcampus programs at the expense of campus programs. A number of respondents indicated resentment that they had heard some of the President's ideas about MSC for the first tinie in local press ac''The majority of those who commented ... singled out counts." Rhody McCoy ... and former Vice President Michael When asked what areas of Howe as examples of very bad judgement." Maclntyre's performance were ''seriously ih need of imcompetent administrative person- ratings came in response to the provement,'' the largest number nel." He received 22 "quite question, "Has the President of responses cited poor cominadequate" ratings and one represented MSC effectively with munication and rapport with the "~ather inadequate" vote in this respect to CCD, U CD, and faculty. area. The respondents said MacinAHEC?" He received five According to the evaluation "adequate" votes, five "rather tyre' s ''most exemplary'' characsummary, "The majority of those inadequate" tallies and eight teristics were that he was "perwho commented ... singled out "quite inadequate" ratings. Five sonable, presentable, active and Rhody McCoy, Special Assistant - respondents did not answer the pleasant.'' to the President, and former Vice question. Students interested in the results President Michael Howe as examof the Faculty Association The report was also critical of ples of very bad judgement.'' evaluation can pick up copies of Maclntyre's failure to provide "a Howe resigned Oct. 27 after it clear direction to the college com- the report at The Metropolitan , was revealed he had lied about the unity. '' The summary stated room 156 in the Auraria Student completion of his doctoral degree '' ... the President has not ar- Center.


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The Metropolitan November 26, 1980

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The Metropolitan Nove'mber.i6,

News

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The Royal Foreman case- part three

Justice blind to Foreman's plight by Brian J. Weber I Roy· Foreman is a worried man. The state pri~on in Canon City is a rough place and Roy may have to spend the rest of his life there for a crime he did not commit. "The evidence used to support the charges against me was all but nonexistent," Foreman avers. "I would not hesitate for -one moment to believe that the fear _of 'what if he?' motivated the jurors into thinking 'he could have' or even 'maybe he did.' " "One of the prosecutors admitted at the jurors 'may have gotten a little rried away.' They got carried away m the issues and convicted me on e other pretense." Robert Shaw, a 22 year-old hanic .and a friend of Foreman's has nfessed to the crime. He has onerated Roy of any involvement and as accepted full responsibility for the uary 16, 1979, shooting death of his riend and former employee, Dale Stublefield. The police believed it was an execution-style shooting with robbery ' and revenge as the motive. · Foreman knew that was not the truth. The police arrested Foreman and Shaw after extricating a statement from Don Morgan about the shooting. ,;. Morgan, a (riend of Shaw,_a known.dope ·· 1

''Of the eighty prospective jurors, only one was black. She was not chosen." dealer and paPOlee, told the police what they wanted to hear - that Bob Shaw shot stubblefield and Roy Foreman accompanied him. Shaw admitted to police that he shot Stubblefield, but said it was an accident. The police thought they had the necessary ingredients for a mUJder conviction. They needed to tie it all together to convict Shaw. But the knot could not be secured without an eyewitness and Robert Shaw was the only one still alive. The police told Foreman they knew Shaw killed Stubblefield. Shaw con,fessed, they said. They wanted Roy to sign a statement confirming it. Roy refused. Roy felt if they had as strong-a case as they said, they could convict Shaw on their own. He was also still concerned over the threats Shaw had made the day {of the shooting. Attempting to keep the knot from slipping, the police and the District Attorney took the evidence they did have and made it fit the charges. At the preliminary hearing in March, Morgan denied knowing anything about ,Roy Foreman. '· The prosecution's case then centered on Anita Soffa. After being arrested with Shaw and Foreman she bad made a statement to gain immunity from prosecution. Even though she did not witness the shooting, she implicated ,Shaw and placed Foreman at the scene of the shooting. Foreman and Shaw were both charged with first-degree murder but were to be tried separately. This arrangement was intended to avoid the chance that Roy, the alleged complicitor, t

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would not be found guilty by association with Shaw, the principal. Normally, the alleged complicitor is tried after the principal co-defendant. But not in this case. Presiding Judge Richard Greene says , now he did not like this unusual sequen- : ce. But, since Foreman's attorney would not waive his client's right to a speedy trial, Foreman would be tried first. Foreman's attorney was not too concerned about his unorthodox course. He felt, with good reason, that the evidence against Foreman was weak and that the chances of a jury convicting his client were slim. The burden would rest on the prosecution to prove Foreman was guilty of anything·more than being in the wrong place at the wrong time. The U.S. Constitution says an accused person has the right to a trial by his peers. Roy Foreman really had no peers on bis jury. Of the eighty prospective jurors, only one was black. She was not chosen. The impact of this situation is as difficult to determine as prejudice is to prove, but it left Roy Foreman as the only black in the courtroom of Judge Richard Greene on September 4, 1979. When Soffa took the stand at Roy's trial, she was uneasy and confused. She had become a pawn in a game that might send two men to prison, possibly for life. She felt helpless. But she proved helpful to the prosecution. The prosecutors wanted to know precisely what Roy Foreman said to her before Shaw shot Stubblefield. She responded, "Roy said, 'Annie, you'd better get out of here.' " Soffa's testimony was the only 'hard' evidence against Foreman. But there was something missing: Roy said he told Annie to ''get some help.'' On cros~-examination, Foreman's lawyer asked for more details of Roy's attitude. Soffa replied that Roy displayed fear and anxiety. When pressed further to remember what Foreman communicated to her, Soffa said, "To the best of my knowledge, Roy Foreman said, 'Annie get out of here' and something about get-

ting some help. I don't know the exact became less stable than during words at all." Foreman's. She was not cooperating with She was again questioned by the DA. the DA and they tried to discredit her, He asked her to remember what she had even though she was a prosecution witsaid in her original statement and at the ness. Shaw took the stand to explain what preliminary bearing. She recalled that on those occasions she said that Foreman had happened the day he shot Dale Stubhad simply told her to get out of there. blefield. He spoke of being despondent Without consistent testimony from over his marriage and business failures Soffa about Roy Foreman's actioBS and and how he imagined how much easier intentions that day, the prosecution was everything would be ifhe were dead. He recalled how he ignored Roy left with circumstantial possibilities revolving around a missing nucleus of when Roy tried to calm him and take his proof. The prosecutors said that the fact gun. He concluded his testimony with that Roy had driven Stubblefield to the this account of how Stubblefield was crime-scene instead of tlte drag-strip im- shot: plied a conspiracy. "l can remember walking with my Foreman's attorney replied that arms swinging at my side and all of a there was no evidence of a conspiracy, sudden somebody pinned by arms. Inside robbery or even of anything worth I blew up, it scared me to death. I was stealing. He said the felony murder and ·pushing away from whoever it was and the robbery charges should be dropped then I heard the explosions. I don't really due to lack of sufficient evidence. He fur- remember pulling the trigger or feeling ther argued there was no evidence that the gun in my hand; everything seemed Roy Foreman knew Stubblefield would distant to me ... I looked down and saw be killed or that he had, in any way, con- Dale, then I realized who it was and what had happened. I- put the gun in my mouth tributed to his death. and I pulled the trigger and there were no Judge Greene disagreed. He denied the motion to drop any of more shells in the gun." Shaw's attorney insisted the jury the charges. He declared the prosecution had presented sufficient evidence to en- consider Shaw's mental condition at the dorse their claim that robbery and time. He had intended to kill himself, not revenge had been the motives for the Stubblefield. The prosecutors countered with a killing. Greene also sajd, the evidence was substantial enough for the jury to con- tale of Shaw, the drug dealer, who had sider Robert Shaw responsible for Dale Stubblefield's death. "I put the gun in my mouth He also determined, based on Anita and I pulled the trigger ... '' Soffa's testimony, that the jury could infer that Roy Foreman had been a com-Shaw plicitor in the crime. It took the jury less than four hours been betrayed and whose ego forced him to acquit Roy Fore~an of robbery and to settle the score with Stubblefield. felony murder but to convict him of Judge Greene told the jury to bring premeditated murder and conspiracy to in a verdict of guilty for first degreecommit murder. murder if they felt Shaw had contemTwo weeks later, Robert Shaw went plated, for even an instant, to kill his to trial before Greene, but a different friend. jury, on charges of first-degree murder Greene refused to instruct the jury and robbery. For reasons they did not that they could consider manslaughter or explain, the prosecutors dropped the con- negligent homocide if they concluded the spiracy charges against Shaw. shooting was not knowingly or willfully In Shaw' s trial Soffa' s testimony done. Roy Foreman, the alleged complicator, was convicted of first-degree (pre-meditated) murder. Robert Shaw, the confessed killer, was convicted of second-degree (unplanned, unpremeditated) murder. Roy Foreman was found guilty of conspiring with Shaw to commit a murder. Bob Shaw was not even tried for conspiracy. The police and he was going to commit until it hapDA had insisted that robbery was one of pened. Nevertheless, despite hearing the motives for the shooting of Dale both cases, Judge Richard Greene senStubblefield. Foreman and Shaw were tenced Roy Foreman in January 1980 both acquitted of the robbery charges. to life for a murder committed by Roy Foreman explained these conanother person, plus 25-50 years for tradictions to Judge Greene on Feb. 4, conspiracy - a charge upon which 1980. At a hearing on June 2, 1980, Shaw, who did the actual shooting, Greene noted the "apparent inconsistenwas never even tried." cies of the verdicts," but he refused to Speakers at the Student Center grant Roy Foreman's motion for a new rally will include: Nellie Foreman trial. (Roy's wife); Akbarali Thobani, Greene sent Royal Foreman to professor of black studies at MSC; Canon City for the rest of his life, plus 25 representatives of the Auraria INCAR to 50 years for conspiracy. chapter and the Progressive Labor Two days later, Shaw appeared for Party; and Doug Vaughan, a former sentencing. Remembering Roy Foreman, journalism instructor at MSC. Fred Greene said, "To impose other than a Hopkins, vice-president of the MSC substantial sentence here would make a student government, has been invited of the criminal justice system.'' mockery to speak also b¥t is not confirmed. Shaw received 38 to 50 years. Next week: Roy Foreman's future.

INCAR to hold rally supporting Foreman The Auraria Chapter oi the International Committee Against Racism will hold two events this week to help free Roy Foreman. A rally will be held on Wednesday, November 26, at the Auraria Student Center plaza and INCAR plans to picket the Governor's mansion on Saturday, November 29. INCAR is calling for the immediate release of Roy Foreman, a former UCO student, who is serving a life sentence for a crime another man has confessed to. "Foreman was · convicted of helping plan a crime which was not planned," Victoria Stasica, an IN CAR spokesperson said. "One jury convicted Foreman of helping· Shaw (the actual killer) carry out a crime which a second jury decided Shaw didn't know


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The Metropolitan November 26, 1980

"ews

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MSC Flying Club wins regionals · .----------------~

by Mary Jo Gretz

The MSC flight team won top honors in a regional meet earlier this month and will go on to compete in the Nationals next year. The team competed Nov. 7 and 8 against four other teams at the National Intercollegiate Flying Association meet held in Bozeman, Montana. The team will represent this region in the national meet to be held in Monroe, La., next April along with the second place team from Salt Lake City's Westminster College. Mark Jannakos, air coach, said they won because of lots of practice, even more effort, and plenty of faculty support. "We are No. l," said one team member. "That's what the judges decided." The five teams competed in five events: three ground events and two air events. Points were given for precision and accuracy, Jannakos said. Points also could be deducted. . In the aircraft identification event, the MSC team dominated. In that event, slides of airplanes were flashed on a screen for three seconds and the competitors then had to write down the name, manufacturer and model number of the plane shown. Ground coach Keoki Gray placed first, with Rich Bradfield coming in

· second in that event. Mark Brown was sixth and Scott Sammons placed seventh. "It'll never happen again," Gray said, laughing about his win. The second ground event, computer accur.acy, involved computation of flight patterns using a type of slide rule, he said. Gray placed second and Bradfield was third in that event. The last ground event was pre-flight, in which a specified plane had to be inspected and readied for flight, Gray said. Placing second and sixth there were Mike Peterson and Jay Martinez. The two air events were power-on landing and power-off landing. In both events the object was to land on the line in the center of a 300 foot "box" on the runway, Jannakos said. The take-offs, the accuracy of the flight pattern and the approaches all counted, as well as the landings. The difference between the two events is that in power-off landings the engines had to ~e on idle while approaching the runway, he said. · Dave Wood was first in the poweroff landings, with Dave Hill and Rich Bradfield coming in seventh and eighth. Three members also ·placed ill the power-on event. Bill Dysart was fourth, Hill was sixth and Peterson came in tenth. A third air event, the message drop, had to be cancelled because of strong

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cross winds of 30 mph, Jannokos said. In that event, a balsa wood block would have been dropped fr9m a plane 250 feet in the air, supposedly landing on a target of only a few feet square. The team was not upset about the cancellation, though, since they had only started practicing it a few days before the meet, Gray said. The flight team, which is one of the oldest clubs on campus, is made up of any MSC student who is interested in flying and who is serious about flying, Jannakos said. Lee· Ohrt, team advisor, said before the meet that safety is the key point in any competition. Jannakos said if points had been given for safety measures, MSC would have gotten even better scores. They used wing-walkers (people who hold on to the wings as the plane is being moved), had fire extinguishers in each plane and were very safety conscious. The other teams, he said, were more careless. "We'll take the safety award in the Nationals for sure," he said. Thirteen team members, ten faculty members and several students went to the meet. Ten planes were flown up, with three of them used in the competition, Ohrt said. Team members started arriving in Bozeman on Nov. 5 and used the next two days practicing. Two planes were grounded 30 miles away because of

weather, Jannakos said, but made it to· · Bozeman by Friday. The competition started Friday evening and lasted through Sunday, Ohrt said. The teams attended a banquet Saturday night and then the awards ceremony Sunday. The MSC team wore "Kamikaze headbands" to distinguish them from the other teams who all wore special jackets. The headbands were emblazoned with a red sun and Japanese writing. "We wanted to be different," Gray said. The team received $500 to cover registration fees, hotel rooms and gas, Ohrt said. Half of it came from Alph· Eta Rho, the aviation fraternity on pus, the rest from the flight team fund. The other three teams compe · were from Oregon State Univer Montana State University and Treasu Valley (Oregon), Ohrt said.

Racquetball tournament scheduled The Intramural · Program has scheduled a racquetball tournament December 4-6. Competition will be. ~ divided into men's and women's divisions, and by skill level. There is no cost, so students, faculty and staff from all three schools on the Auraria campus are encouraged to sign up in room 107 of the P .E. building.

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The Metropolitan November 26, .1980

5

Looking through a~ critical eye I ..-----------__;__;____, .,.,,r..,'1>,

by Emerson Schwartzkopf .....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '· "I wonder what the Rolls Royce in his movie meant?" "I think it represented his car ••• " -Woody Allen's Stardust Memories Critics. Who needs 'em? Nearly every publication catering to the general public retains some sort of entertainment critic, Issue after issue, these self-appointed judges proceed to rip .>1 apart everyone's favorites, hail the strangest artists, and highlight the most obscure points of anyone's work. As a result, these actions make critics about as popular as smallpox. Just who are these folks - and who needs 'em? The art of criticism, unfortunately, is fast becoming a sidelight of the entertainment under scrutiny. From jokesters such as ' Gene Shalit to Rex . Reed to the reviewing crew at Rolling Stone, popular criticism is generating (oi: degenerating) into negative wit and sneering snobbery. ~ Criticism, in simple terms, should accomplish three things: it should give some indication of the subject under review; in a reasonably intelligent manner, the critic should judge the subject on its own merits; and, there should be a recommendation to the critic's audience. One consideration is paramount 2... the critic needs to respect the audience's intelligence and their needs, too. · Take, for example, the beginning quote. Woody Allen, in Stardu-st Memories, pokes fun at the esoteric critic examining an unimportant, miniscule part of a film - instead of taking the work .as a whole, the critic tries to pry "meaning" out of a stupid piece of schtick. Several critics, though, took offense fo this in their reviews of Memories. Their cries of 'unfair,' however, under.;-. scored Allen's original intent of critics using the insignificant to fulfill their own petty judgments. Criticism, above all, is an art of simplicity. Even the most casual movie goer, theater patron, or record buyer can differentiate good from bad, if they give -."enough careful thought. The most · popular critics always seize this theme, and judge a subject with honest, common sense criteria. .

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critic does, and should be able to make some sense of each instance for an audience. A critic can also recognize patterns and themes of subjects and make the audience aware of these matters. A critic can look at Apocalypse Now and make viewers aware of why the movie enthralls or bores an audience; or, a critic can note circumstances in music and society and how they genuinely affect the music of Karl-Heinz Stockhausen or Elvis Costello. Foremost, however, a critic is a communicator helping the audience to gain a· better understanding of a particular art. Whether through agreement or disagreement, a critic's audience. should be able to learn more about a subject and its medium. Despite what the imparters of entertainment think, audiences are far from being a bunch of dumb hicks. With the help of the critic, the public can gai ' knowledge to better comprehend - an• enjoy - a movie, play, record, or an~ other form of entertainment. And to get that extra bit of en· joyment, maybe the public should tolerate the critics. They may not be needed - but their disappearance would be missed.

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\._'\' \~. \ , , , l. ' t ,"' ,,,·_1 ,f•' ·~· . .. ,· . · .~ .,,. • , ,-, The Metropolitan November 26, 1980

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SRorts

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Soccer team tails in tourney bid by Bruce Riley The MSC Soccer Team left Witchita Falls, Texas last Saturday losers - and winners. They placed fourth 01.tt of four teams at the NAIA Region II Tournament, losing to Rockhirst College 2-0, and to Midwestern State College 2-1. . But according to Coach Harry Temmer District 7's 1980 Coach of the Year, the MSC ranking was not indicative of his team's performance. "We played good enough to win," · he said. "l'tn really proud of the way they played. They represented Metro well. If we played them (the other teams) again, we could beat them - I know we could." · "Against Rockhirst, who's ranked 5th in the country, we dominated play for the last 10 minutes of the first half and almost the entire second half. We set up a lot of shots but just couldn't get one in." Despite the loss of three starting players (including season high-scorer Bobby Myers) to injuries and flu, the team played well, Temmer said. Something else Temmer was pleased about was his team's standing up to more experienced clubs. "Only two out of all my players had ever seen Regional competition," he said. "All three of those teams (Rockhirst, Midwestern, and Benedictine) have been

at the Regionals the last four years. We were in both of the games the whole wa"f." · ' Three MSC players, Dennis Daly, Oscar Lara, and Loren Donaldson, made the Tournament's All-Area II Team. Daly was also named Outstanding Back of the tournament. Also, MSC has five players on the NAIA District 7 first All-Star Team and four players on the seeond team. Named to the first team; Goalie Marcus Motte;_ Backs Tim Ipson and Daly; Forwards Donaldson and Myers. Named to the second team: Dave Urban, Phil Dienning, Tim.Vetter, and Lara. Temmer said the 1980 schedule was the toughest one a MSC team has ever had and he is satisfied with how his team handled it. Besides taking their district, he said the team played tough all season with seven double overtime games, and did well against two nationally-renowned Canadian teams: the Univer~ity of Alberta and University of British Columbia. Temmer said both he and the team are looking forward to next season. "They're really excited," he said. "On the way back (from the tournament) everyone was saying how they have to study hard so they can be eligible to play next year. Now they've been there (the tournament). They know what this team is capable of doing.'' Temmer will lose two defensepieo, Ipson and Daly, who are seniors, but

hopes to solidify the defense with students who will become eligible next year. Because MSC will host the touma- · · ment next year, Temmer said he would especially like to win the regionals. The MSC team is outstanding, according to Temmer because it plays as well as or better than teams that get more money from their schools. He said he

RPS Reports · • by Ed Kraus A woman student, walking through Lot Eon the morning of November 13, noticed a man masturbating in his car. No arrest was made, as the suspect left before police came. APS officers arrested a student in t he cafeteria November 18 when the suspect left the checkout line and refused to pay for his food. The food, valued at 41¢, was not recovered. Three purses, with contents valued at over $177, were lifted during the past week on campus. No arrests w.ere made. A male student was sprayed with Mace during an afternoon altercation on November 14 at the Student Center. The man received the chemical dousing from a woman after an argument over a pinball game.

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the team will con.ti~ue t~ get the backing of the MSC adrmrustrat1on. ·:The soccer team has been. an asse,t, to th1~ sc~~ol the past couple of years, he said. Even though they lost ~o~ there (at the tourn_ament), they did it with class. Eve~ though they ~~st, they brought a good unage to Metro.

Women's Caucus holding elections At the November 19 meeting of the MSC Women's Caucus, a constitution ;'was adopted that identifies me_m bership through the collection of $2 dues, and calls for an election of representatives to serve on the Steering Committee. These representatives will be elected December 10 and 11, but December 3 is the deadline for nominations. To get in- ._ volved in the Women's Caucus, contact the Women's Center in CN 209, or call · Janice Sublett at 629-2925 or Barbara Blansett at 629-2926 for membership forms and more information.

Mail-in registration due Dec. December 1 is the last day for MSC students to turn in mail-in registration forms . Forms may be picked up in the admissions office, room 103 of central classroom.

America's Leading.Expens In Test Preparation

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Educational Achievements Programs, Inc. D/ B/ A Sexton Educational Centers P.O. Box 18929 Denver, CO 80218

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Top artistsPop to Classical. Albums,Box sets and Cassettes!

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

Air Force is currenlly accepting applications f rom seniors and graduates with Mechanica l Engine ering Technology degrees. Excellent salary, 30 days vacation with pay, ar>Q graduate educational opportunities . For further Information call:

Jim Gregory 837-4134

Auraria Book Center 955 Lawrence 629-3230 Closed this Thursday-Sunday

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GMAT/GRE for additional information or free brochure write to:

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LSAT/SAT Inquire now · for 1981 Classes CALL: (303) 696-9265

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AIRBRUSH TECHNIQUE Is BEING TAUGHT AT CCD-AURARIA \

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AFTERNOONS AND EVENINGS BEGINNING JAN-26, 1981 ·FOR INFORMATION CALL 629-8393

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The Metropolitan November.26, 1980

Classified HOUSING .

FOR SALE DAYPACK Special $4.99 with student I.D. ($15 value) plus similar bargains on name brand - new and u~ - ski clothing, packs, sleeping bags, tents, ga1tars, gore-lex clothing, snowshoes and much more. Trade in your used gear at the Mountain ....... Miser Ltd. 2749 S. Broadway 692-9222 open · everyday. (pd 12/10)

YAIL .CONDO by the '¥eek, cooking, firewood, 1accu21, 2 baths, fully furnished, cable TV. Call Larry 629-2481, 758-2880 or 755-7766 eves.

DALEBOOT RACER: 80/81 model, size 8-9 shell, brand new Sl50. Also, Lange XL-1000, 2 yrs. old, $50. Call Brian at 761-9693.

EXPAND ;your heights! Loft space and lofty onebedroom apartments available. From $190 including utilities. Manager on premises. Call 3200457. (pd 11/~)

MINI MOOG, $600 or best offer; Teac 4 track, $600 or best offer. Call 237-6632. • VW Poptop camper 1969 complete rebuilt engine 1ess than 100 miles, fresh paint, has oil cooler, extractor.exhaust, orig. camping tents, propane tank, catalytic heater, stove, AM/FM cass., polyester radials, $2100.00 447-2082. SEWING MJ\CHINE Singer Futura 900 with at.:- tachments. Excellent condition. $250 or best offer. Call Pat after 6 pm 781-6118. RED Schwinn '10 speed bicycle 23" like new. Cast Sl90-3 months ago. $130-call 863-1156. EMERSON Compact AM/FM stereo receiver and record player with cassette player-recorder and 2 Emerson speakers, a 6" woofer and 2Vi" bass port. 3-5 watts per channel. $75. Also 2 Sanyo speakers with 6" woofer and 2 l.1" bass port. $40. Will sell all for $100. Call 422-2778 after 3 p.m. NATIVE AMERICAN fine arts and crafts sale in student center on Dec. 8 & 10. Limited edition prints, beadwork, silverwork, and lots more. Support. fellow students and give some very unique gifts this year. (12/10) · '-,

TV 19" color. Excellent condition $200. Hardly used. Call Louise days 825-8243 wknd & eves 831• . 4589. CAR POOL in style with 1970 Buick Electra. Power everything. Very good condition. Includes 2 extra snow tires. $600. Call 777-5530.

NON-SMOKING roommate wanted to share house with same. $150/mo."Call days: 388-5712 evenings 744-9333. (pd 11/26)

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom unfurnished apt. located at 12th and Leyden. SI 16.00 a month plus l.1 utilities. Call Maureen 399-9836. FEMALE ROOM MATE wanted to share my 3 bedroom duplex. City Park area, washer/ dryer. Fireplace. Furnished. Dog OK. $125/ mo. plus share utilities. 322-3543. (pd 11/26~ . SHARE w/grad architecture student. 2 bdrm., 2 bath, fireplace, dishwasher, pool, $162.50 avail. immediately or for Jan. I. Call Dave now 756-9133 "late evenings or mornings. (also try 629-3397 evenings). SUNNY', one' bedro~m apt. in newly renovated building with balcony and closed-in back porch. Fully carpeted. Close to bus-lines, shopping and laundry. $195 plus $100 deposit. 119 W. Maple. 794-2381, keep trying. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom duplex. Fully furnished. S. Logan & Yale. 175 mo. plus Vi utilities. Call Peggy 744-7126. 55 SQ. F~ot one bedroom apt., north Capitol Hill, clean, qwet bldg., basement apt., good security la~ndry f~~il.ities, wooden floors. $180 month plu~ wmter utilities and $100 deposit. Call Alex 8325992. MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3 bedroom house in Lakewood. Close to 6th avenue $158.00 per month plus l.1 utilities. Call 232-9420.

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LOW on bucks? Need a place to live near downtown. 1150 Logan. All utilities paid off street parking $165.00 month. Call 935-9421 after S pm · weekdays, all day weekends. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share house in Westminster with fireplace. $130 month plus l.1 utilities. Call Cher 426-7889. RESPONSIBLE roommate male/female to share three Qedroom house with ~wo males. Location near City Park. Ren $107 month plus 1/ 3 utilities. 3556741. 2 BDRM., !st floor 1000 sq. ft. apt., great deal in quiet, clean bldg. north Capitol Hill. Close to bus & bike lines. Utility room. $295 month, 6 month lease, winter utilities not included, call Alex/Mike 8325992. I HAVE 3 bedroom house located in South Denver, I need 1 or 2 roommates (male or female) at 120 dollars a month. Includes full range, dishwasher, washer & dryer, large finished basement with workshop, fireplace, deep rock water cooler, and a lot of other extras. Call Ty at 797-3796.

SERVICES IMFROVE YOUR GRADES! Resc;arch catalog 306 pages - 10, 278 descriptive listings - Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box 25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226. (pd 12/10) PERSONAL AND CAREER counseling is available at the University of Colorado at Denver Counselor Training Center. All counseling is free. The center, under the supervision of Dr. Corky Stradburg, is located in the Central Classroom Bldg. Suite 107, 629-2861. PROFESSIONAL TYPING - manuscripts, theses. .$1.50 per page includes paper, correct spelling and punctuation. Near !st and Broadway. Call after 5:00 and on weekends. LEO's LETTERS 777-2070 (pd 11126) RESUMES by professional writer. Reproducable typed copy included. Most styles, $25.00. Call for appointment: 399-7026. (pd 12/3)

rteftN'o'.' My Xerox' s90 does everythfng b'ui write your term paper. By appointment: 399-7026. (pd 12/ 3) .

V2 Day Full _ P ay l I

Enjoyable phone sales work with guaranteed hourly pay PLUS commission arid bonu.s for a 24 hr. week. You can earn $4.00 to $8.00 per hour selling popular Time Life Boo~s. throughout 9 Western States from our office near the campus. Morning, afternoon and evening shifts available. We train energetic, articu· . late people.

572-1011 TIME LIFE Equal Opportunity Employer

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LINDA.'S Typing Service - thesis, term paper, dissertation, specialized in stylized, professional ' typing, S1.50 per page, call 458-5188, 7 days. TYPING SERVICE - grammar and spelling guaranteed. Only 60¢ per double-spaced page. Call Pam at 422-1534. Leave name and number. Pick-up and delivery at Auraria. SOUTHEAST ASIAN: Workshop on transitional problems encountered in USA. 17th December 1980, 6:00 p.m. Room 254 Auraria Student Center.'

- HELP WANTED FULL TIME & PART TIME positions now available with a growing company. Work your own hours. Good pay. Call ~ark or Sherry Wed-Sun bet. 10 am-10 p.m. 333-2504 PART TIME COOK for lunch shifts, hours fr. 11 am to 2 pm. Days negotiable. My Brother's Bar ~376 15th St. 455-9991. Ask for Jim or Kelly. NEED reliable, ambitious people interested in building own business on spare-time basis for appt. . 433-7888 (pd 1/7) WAITRESS NEEDED - experience pref. Full or part-time. Apply in person - Zcnobia's, 225 E. 7th Ave. COMPUTER STUD6NTS - need two hours/week of simple data entry on Apple II. Will trade for four hours free access. Excellent opportunity. Call 3200457 (pd 12/3) WESTERN STATES FILM INSTITUTE needs volunteer receptionist. Will trade for free access to 16mm film equipment. 320-0457. (pd 12/3) METROPOLITAN STATE COLLEGE is now accepting appli.cations for its proposed AdultGeriatric Nurse Practitioner Program which begins September, 1981 and extends through May, 1982. Applicants must be enrolled in Metro's BSN Program or have a BS in nursing. For further information and applications, contact: Cathy Klein, RN, MS or Jan Thum, RN, MS Metropolitan State College 1006 11th St., Box 96 Denver, CO 80204 (303) 629-3472. Metropolitan State College is an equal opportuility employer.

WANTED THE NEW University of Colorado at Denver Counselor Training Center -is looking for a logo. Student with best design will· win $50.00. Contact Jim Dragna or Dr. Corky Strandburg for details at 629-2861 - UCO Office for Student Affairs, Central Classroom Bldg. Suite 107. RELIABLE used typewriter, prefer electric. ·wm pay for quality. Call Mary at 238-3997, evenings. DANCE BAND for hire. Countryrock. rock & standard country repertoire. Reasonable rates for 4piece band to add life to a party or other function. Al~ ex~rienced musicians. Call 341-0923 evenings tomqu1re. TRAVELING COMPANION WANTED - Help person to retrieve personal belongings from former school in Muncie, Indiana. Flying out 11 /25/80 retu~ning 11/30/ 80 with automobile. Pay neg.: requtre personal recommendations. Call 863-9235 evenings 5:00-7:00 or leave message in Music Dept. MSC.

HANDIVAN - transports handicapped students across campus. Why wheel it in the snow when accessible transportation is at your service? The Disabled St1\lient Services has more information. 629-3474.

ROCK! Need lead guitar, bass, and drummer to form the "second wave" of R&R with vocalistguitarist & key-man. No washed up pros need call. You don't need to be the best - just insane & gutsy. We'll become the best. Call Duane at 985-0102 or 985-0752 before 2 pm or after 7 pm.

SPECIAL OCCASION? Lovely Belly Dancer now available to perform for parties, clubs, and banquets. Call Kristina 322-3505.

PERSONALS

FOR THE FINEST in inexpensive and professional haircuts come to the·Colorado Barbers College, 31st at 14th Avenue, 20 blocks from campus. Open M-S 8:00-5:00.

"TRUTHFUL LIPS will be established forever but a lying tongue is only for a moment." (Proverb~ 12:1 9) " Think about it" Campus Crusade for Christ.

PINE CONE WREATHS made to order . $20 a~d up. Call Cathy 333-4589 eves, or 629-3474 days.

TYP~NG: Cor'rect spelling, hyphe~ation, pun-ctuallon and grammar. Proofreading. Accurate. SI per double spaced page. Elise Hakes 1535 Franklin, 9M, Denver, CO 80218. 832-4400 (pd 12/1~ .

CHRISTIAN, Contact me in the Mission usually M thru Fat 11 :00 a .m. until 2:00 p.m. I'd like to talk. Scooby TO THE ART STUDENT Mark, Desperate to meet you for an H.D. From the art student, Joe

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· CLASSIFIED ORDER FORM . , FREE TO AORARIA STODE"TS, FACULTY A"D STAFF* ~~D~E,IOMBER: ~ PHO"E "UMBER: _ _ _ _ _ , SE"D TO 1006 11 TH STREET, BOX 5 7, DE"VER, CO 80204 OR DELIVER TO THE STODE"T CE"TER RM. 1 56 •FOR OTHER fl.DVERTISERS: 10¢ PER WORD·PREPfllD


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Go ahead and be aggressive. Get out of line and plan yoor spring semester right now.

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Select your courses and fill out 1he easy mail-in registration form listing fhe coorses want. It's simple, quick and you woo't have to wait in line when registration begins in January.

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Doo't stand still. Get out of line. Register before December1. If yoo need reg,is1ration forms call 629-2953 a 629-2987 and we will send them to you. Or. sfop by the Admissions Office, Room'103 • and we will give yoo one. . Pre-registration ends December1.

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