volume 3, issue 7 - oct. 15, 1980

16
Auraria is in the parking business for a very good reason. Lynn Welch examines the ins and outs of Page 3 Auraria's second favorite pastime., That ol' brown cloud has got you coughing again. If you exercise in Page 3 the downtown area, it could have you dying. Hey! Get your red hots! Yankee Stadium? Nope, just Auraria's sidewalk purveyors of those plump Page 4 pups commonly known as hot dogs. Whether we like it or not, oil shafe will play a major role in the future of Colorado. UCO has been picked p to examine an important area of age 5 this new industry. ) Center council termed inefficient by Joan Conrow A new proposal intended to in- crease the efficiency of the student center policy council is now being _,nsidered by a number of )\uraria officials. The student center - builf, operated and maintained with student monies - is under the of the Auraria Higher .Bducation Center board of direc- tors. The Student Services Policy Council is responsible for advising the board on issues concerning the center, and also sets policies regu- building use. The SSPC is staffed by student and administra- tive representatives from UCD, MSC, and CCD. "The SSPC is functioning, from my perspective, very ineff ec- iively," said Jerry Wartgow, executive director. ''Over the last two. years the SSPC has not been helpful to me." Wartgow met with the Student Advisory Council to the ..<uraria Board (SACAB) and the student executive officers from UCD and MSC (CCD failed to send a representative), and asked them to ''look at the structure of iheSSPC.'' The SACAB - created by state statute in 1975 - is com- prised of two representatives from UCD, CCD, and MSC, acting as direct student advocates to the Auraria Board. At the meeting, it was agreed the SSPC was "loosely organized, not a very smooth operation, and student input was not that great," said Sonny Wasinger, president of the Associated Students of MSC. Wasinger said he was initially "concerned" AHEC was trying to take power away from the SSPC. He said he wants students to have ''a say in every damn thing that happens." 2 But, after hearing Wartgow's suggestion for restructuring the g SSPC, Wasinger said he thinks the a: proposed changes would make the body a "smoother running operation with more student in- put, that AHEC will be responsive to." the SSPC, but would also report to the SACAB. Wartgow suggests making the SSPC one of several advisory boards reporting to the SACAB, which would then report to the AHEC board of directors. The Parent Advisory Board, to the Child Care Center would no longer be under the jurisdiction of Don Gaeddert, chairman of the SACAB, said Wartgow's suggestion is ''part of a process of negotiation, not a formal proposal.'' He said it is ''terribly important to come up with a com- promise in restructuring the SSPC,'' and the SACAB would meet with the SSPC ''to come up with a formal proposal.'' · Gaeddert said there is "a lot of controversy'' associated with Wartgow's suggestion because "it is feared students would lose voice and influence." He said the restructuring would not make the SSPC merely an advisory board, and they would still set policy for the Student Center. "Their voice, their influence, their power, whiit you. contiaaed on page 4

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

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

Auraria is in the parking business for a very good reason. Lynn Welch examines the ins and outs of Page 3 Auraria's second favorite pastime.,

That ol' brown cloud has got you coughing again. If you exercise in Page 3 the downtown area, it could have you dying.

Hey! Get your red hots! Yankee Stadium? Nope, just Auraria's sidewalk purveyors of those plump Page 4 pups commonly known as hot dogs.

Whether we like it or not, oil shafe will play a major role in the future of Colorado. UCO has been picked p to examine an important area of age 5 this new industry.

)

Center council termed inefficient by Joan Conrow

A new proposal intended to in­crease the efficiency of the student center policy council is now being _,nsidered by a number of )\uraria officials.

The student center - builf, operated and maintained with student monies - is under the

~-•iur.isdiction of the Auraria Higher .Bducation Center board of direc­tors.

The Student Services Policy Council is responsible for advising the board on issues concerning the center, and also sets policies regu­~ting building use. The SSPC is staffed by student and administra­tive representatives from UCD, MSC, and CCD.

"The SSPC is functioning, from my perspective, very ineff ec­iively," said Jerry Wartgow, executive director. ''Over the last two. years the SSPC has not been helpful to me."

Wartgow met with the Student Advisory Council to the ..<uraria Board (SACAB) and the student executive officers from UCD and MSC (CCD failed to send a representative), and asked them to ''look at the structure of iheSSPC.''

The SACAB - created by state statute in 1975 - is com­prised of two representatives from UCD, CCD, and MSC, acting as direct student advocates to the Auraria Board.

At the meeting, it was agreed the SSPC was "loosely organized, not a very smooth operation, and student input was not that great," said Sonny Wasinger, president of the Associated Students of MSC.

Wasinger said he was initially "concerned" AHEC was trying to take power away from the SSPC. He said he wants students to have ''a say in every damn thing that happens." 2

But, after hearing Wartgow's ~ suggestion for restructuring the g SSPC, Wasinger said he thinks the a: proposed changes would make the body a "smoother running operation with more student in­put, that AHEC will be responsive to."

the SSPC, but would also report to the SACAB.

Wartgow suggests making the SSPC one of several advisory boards reporting to the SACAB, which would then report to the AHEC board of directors. The Parent Advisory Board, to the Child Care Center would no longer be under the jurisdiction of

Don Gaeddert, chairman of the SACAB, said Wartgow's suggestion is ''part of a process of negotiation, not a formal proposal.'' He said it is ''terribly important to come up with a com­promise in restructuring the SSPC,'' and the SACAB would meet with the SSPC ''to come up with a formal proposal.'' ·

Gaeddert said there is "a lot of controversy'' associated with Wartgow's suggestion because "it is feared students would lose voice and influence." He said the restructuring would not make the SSPC merely an advisory board, and they would still set policy for the Student Center.

"Their voice, their influence, their power, whiit h~ve you.

contiaaed on page 4

Page 2: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

2 The Metropolitan October 15, 1980

Shop and save.

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' even get simple repair needs taken care of. · But there's an even better reason to visit a Phone­

Center Store-you save money. If your house has modular jacks, you save $4 on the total installation .. , charge for your main phone, plus $1 on each additiorial ·· phone you take home and plug in. So the next time .. you're out shopping, drop around to your nearest PhoneCenter Stor~ and check out the styles andLsa

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Page 3: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

- - -- - -- - ~

. ,

The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 3

News There's a lot to learn about parking

~ ~~~~~~-b_y_L_y_nn~W_e_lc_h~~~--' Every time two quarters plunk down

into the slots of the parking ticket machine, they defray the cost of a bond that won't be paid off until 1998.

The principle and interest due on the • bond this year is .$322,360, according to

Raul Gomez, director of administrative services. Those quarters have to slide into the machine 644, 720 times to pay the bond portion of the parking budget alone.

The rest of the $750,000 budget is < being spent on maintenance and

operating expenses. No state monies can be used for any parking purposes on campus, so all the funds for painting stripes, plowing snow and paying salaries must be raised from lot usage.

The lots vary in price and distance • from close-in metered lots at 20 cents per

hour, to lots a couple of blocks away for 25 cents for all day. A map of the lots and a list of the rules are available at the parking office just for the asking.

A person using parking facilities on campus would be wise to know the rules,

r since the state has the authority to ticket and tow violators, Gomez said. A violator coulq face anything from a $5 to $25 fine or find their vehicle towed away.

"Towing is a last resort," he said . . "But anyone with four or more tickets or _ a gross violation like parking in a han­

"tlicapped space or obstructing a fire lane can and will be towed."

The parking office is trying to streamline their bookkeeping system to avoid ticketing or towing in error.

"We know that tickets are sometimes written in error or are stolen

r or blown off windshields. Our new com­puter system will give us a list of violations which we will send out to in­dividuals every ten days," Gomez ex-

plained. "That way if someone has received a ticket in error or they didn't know they had one, they can let us know and avoid being towed."

According to the parking rules, not responding to tickets is the same as waiving the right to notification of an impending tow. Once a vehicle gets four or more tickets the license number gqes on a boot list and the public safety of­ficers start looking for the car when they make their rounds.

"We've had quite a few tows recently," public safety officer Cpl. Jerry Miller said, "mostly from handicapped and fire lane areas. I did 18 tickets Wed­nesday and I could have towed them all. I only towed one because it was a car I'd ticketed several times b~fore. He ob­viously hadn't learned not to park illegally."

The parking rules state if you catch up with your vehicle as it's about to be towed, you can get it released at the scene by going to the parking office right away and paying your fines. Otherwise, you must arrange to make payment on the fines, get a release and then go to C&C Towing at 1739 Central Ave. and pay $20 before you can pick up your car.

"For some reason, people don't seem to like paying for parking," Gomez said. "But it's much easier to pay to park than it is to have the hassle of being towed." . -

The parking office does take its customers into consideration when adop­ting and applying rules. There is a Parking Advisory Council which .meets periodically during the semester, Gomez commented. Students, staff and faculty are all represented on the council.

The council is meeting for the second B tiine this semester, Wednesday Oct. 15, !; 1:30 p.m. in the 1020 9th St. conference ~ room. ii.

Brown doud may be worse thcin it looks

;:::::::.===-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,

by James R.-Laursen

It is time for winter pollution to in­vade the pristine valley of Denver, its open spaces, miles of bike paths and jogging trails.

December and January are the worst months for air pollution in Denver, ac­cording to Dan Barbarick of the

.Colorado Department of Health. The · cooling long nights, the snow cover usually around that time of year and the chinook winds intensify the inversions so common to Denver, he adds.

An inversion is created when cold air is trapped close to the ground by a layer

.,_of warm air above it. The warm air prevents the cool polluted air from rising into the atmosphere, trapping the pollutants in a small concentrated layer of cold air close to the ground.

"I've had heart patients call me and tell me they were downtown and were breathing heavy concentrations of

' pollution. It takes 24 hours for them to recover," said Barbarick.

Concentrations in the downtown area are almost always highest for carbon monoxide (CO) according to a report released by the Colorado Department of

Health: Early morning and late afte!noon

are the times of highest concentration of CO in Denver. Because of Denver's r.are­fied air the effects of CO are especially intense 'on older people or people with respiratory and heart ailments.

According to the Colorado Air Quality ~ata Report the effects of ex­posure to CO levels of carbon monoxide in the blood vary with the amount of CO absorbed. A 2.5-3.0 per­cent CO level in the blood causes normal heart function to be impaired in some in­dividuals. With 3.5-6.5 percent in the G>

7 blood, attention span and work capacity :c: decreases and sight becomes impaired. A ~ 5-20 percent CO level in the blood causes ~ a decrease in oxygen consumption during 1-L-------------------------------' strenuous exercise in young healthy men, As the days get shorter and the 'Since Auraria is close to downtown, a slight headache, general exhaustion and nights get colder the realization that Den- strenuous sports on campus should be general psychomotor problems. Above ver does have a problem with its air will monitored more carefully on days of high 40 percent, death will occur. become more and more evident as the pollution.

On a bad day with an inversion, brown cloud continues to hang in the sky. Rarely do we ever experience a CO Denver may experience a level of 65 CO For those who jog or ride bicycles, it blood level above 2.5-3.0 percent, but parts per million in the air during a one is something to consider. The health im- reports have shown that tests on athletes hour period according to the Colorado plications from jogging in a highly who exercised downtown did have Air Report. This is equivalent to a 2.5-3.0 polluted area such as downtown should elevated CO levels. ·percent level of CO in the blood. be explored, according to the report.

Page 4: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

4 The Metropolitan October 15, 1980

rtvws-It's a dog's life at lunchtime

The Metropolitan Photo Contest

Get your photograph pub­lished «;>n top of The Metropoli­tan 's front page. by James R. Laursen

Steam rises from the hot dog as it is nestled into a waiting bun. Next, a spoonful of sauerkraut and onions. A bag of chips and a drink complete the menu for lunch.

Marilyn Clements owns and operates the silver hot dog stand located on Lawrence between the student center and library. The cart, with its blue and orange umbrella, is near the busiest walkway through the campus.

"I like chile dogs," said Tim Gaf­figan as he waits in line to place his order at the cart. "The cart's cheaper, except for the drinks," he adds.

In addition to those items men­tioned, the menu includes a polish san­dwich, an all-beef regular hot dog, and a quarter-·pound beef hot dog. Garnishes -include mustard, ketchup, and relish.

"I gotta get ready for lunch. They're going to hit me soon," says Clements as she takes a package of buns from a side door on her cart. Lunch time brings the greatest number of students to her cart.

The noon hour classes are out, the line lengthens at the cart.

Ms. Clements lifts the lid of the steamer faster and faster, putting hot dogs in their place.

"It's a great spot," she says as the

swish of a pop can being opened and the whoosh of steam from the hot dog steamer fill the air.

Ahh, it's a dog's life.

All Auraria students are eligible. Photo subject should be about

Auraria. Submit one 5x7 horizontal format

black and white print.

'

Include in pencil on the-back bor- , der of the print name and phone.

Entries due before Thurs. Oct. 23 Rm. 155 Auraria Student Center 11-6 Mon • 11-3 Tues~Fri. ' ,.

The winning print will be published in the November 5 issue with photo credit and inside mention.

The winning print becomes property of The Metropolitan as do en­tries not picked up before Nov. 10.

Photos are juried by The Metro­politan staff and decisions are final.

Board continued from p8ge t wouldn't be diminished," Gaeddert said. "Their members would sit on the various (advisory) boards." •

-Barnes says AMC won't listen

Gaeddert said that although the SACAB is "facing some pressure from: time" in working on a restructuring of the SSPC, "we're not trying to push this .thing through.''

"People don't understand where their power is going to be coming from," Gaeddert said. "I think it's a normal fear and it's appropriate to address it."

by WUliam A. Struble There are a lot of good people

working at the Auraria Media Center, but those in control of the center do not want any input on the program by its em­ployees, said Barry Barnes, temporary supervisor of audio-visual services.

"You like it or get out," he said, ex"' plaining there is no channel for em­ployees to propose anything different than what the media center management already wants.

Barnes gave an example of recom­mending that the center invest in more remote field production equipment which is the trend of most modem television groups in Denver. He said instead the in­terest of the management bas been towards the production studios.

"It' s important that people disagree, it's healthy," he said.

Barnes said when he gives input into the program however he finds many

Barry Barnes: "You like it or get out."

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something is wrong Toe> many hairstylists dep_end on blow-drying your hair to make your

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No appointment needed. Shopping Center on European·tralned. Colfax Ave. dlrectly across from Aur11rta.

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He said that UCD would probably not be able to intervene since there is a shuffle taking place in its administration.

"That leaves the ball in Metro's court," he ' said, adding that Auraria probably has the authority to step in and make the program work for students and faculty. ·

In the past two years the media cen­ter has been used as a financial "cutting post" by the Joint Budget Committee, he said. ·

He explained maybe the only way to. get increased funding for the center is if CCD, UCO, MSC, and AHEC stood together before the Joint Budget Com-mittee.

times his desk is moved and his phone He said it would be better to keep a changed. centralized media center since the per-

The management cannot handle sonnel of the center know the trends o( dissent, he said. equipment and what would be the best

He gave an example of Tom Lyons, investments. a work-study student speaking out again- He said that some Auraria depart­st the system. Lyons was fired. He added, ments are already investing in their own " It's easy to get rid of work-study equipment and limiting use of the media people." center.

Barnes explained that with a masters This could backfire, he said, becaus~ degree in educational communication owning equipment eventually results in and technology he has a very professional maintenance, parts, and repair person­background and extensive knowledge of nel. how a media center should function. Barnes said he doesn't feel the Media

Many times at the media center he is Center Advisory Board has worked well. sent out to deliver equipment to- A board made up of students and classrooms, he said, adding, ''in my · faculty might be the answer, he said. , opinion it is a punishment and no one will One of the most important things is deny it." that all persons at Auraria should be able

The resl)Onsibility for the media cen- to complain and express their opinions. ter has been with CCD, Barnes said, but The management of-AMC likes to there is no reason why UCD or MSC delay and stall, he said, adding student couldn't step in. complaints will be forgotten.

Page 5: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

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The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 s

UCD gets $880,000 shale grant ':.'\ by Michael Dann Hayes I

Oil shale - the words bring a breath of fresh air to a country that has grown dependent on the Middle East for its oil.

The United States Department of Energy has provided $880,000 to the University of Colorado at Denver for

•development of oil shale research. Why all that money just to extract some oil from rocks? Well, it's not that easy.

The funds, as explained by Willard R. Chappell, Director of the Center for Environmental Sciences at UCO, are to be used for research on the trace elements which are released during oil shale production and the impact those elements will have on the environment.

"Trace elements are those elements that are found in small amounts in the oil shale itself," said Chappell. "To get the oil out of the rock, the elements may

>be changed in such a way that they could

)...

RPS Reports · ·i 1 ' · • by Ed Kraas

Seven typewriters were reported stolen from the Auraria campus during the first week of October.

Four of the typewriters were taken between 5 p.m. October 6 and 8:15 a.m. October 7 from the South Classroom

~uilding. Three more machines, valued at

$1850, disappeared October 8. No arrests have been made in the typewriter thefts.

A scllool employee was threatened with a coffee cup by a student on the

. morning of October 6. The student was said to have become foul-mouthed and frightened the employee. The report did not indicate if the coffee was decaf­finated.

An $1100 bicycle was stolen from the bike rack south of the Science Building October 6 after security cables were cut.

r --rwo more bikes, including a $1200 custom racer, were taken October 7.

APS officers charged four young men and a juvenile with second-degree criminal trespassing on the night of Oc­tober 8 for breaking into the Tivoli Brewery.

1 The Child Care Center has been re-keyed following the theft of the master key this past week.

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harm the environment." Chappell said that to get one barrel

of oil out of the oil shale itself will take up to 1 !t2 tons of rack. When that is done, trace elements, which survive in small amounts in the shale, would then be released. The research will follow what hapens to those elements after the distilling process and what can be done in case of any environmental danger.

· Other schools participating in this

research are Colorado State Up.iversity, Colorado School of Mines, the Univer­sity of Colorado at Boulder and the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technol­ogy. Each institute will develop a dif­ferent.aspect of the trace element study and send in results and specimens of plant life to UCO for further analysis.

The funds will also be used to sup­port activities of the Oil Shale Tasic Force. The task force, chaired by Chap-

pell, is an organization. of sc:;ientists from various national laboratories and univer­sities for the purpose of coordinating the activities being done in the environmental aspect of oil shale research.

The OSTF, founded ten years ago to research molybdenum, will plan,- im­plement and coordinate the r~search required for the project and assure adherence to government regulations, both federal and state.

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Page 6: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

Gee, can I be.in government, too? by Lou Chapman

Golly, Sonny, after your "Student Body Presiden­tial Report" in last week's Metropolitan, I just had to get in touch with you - and also let the students know I'm behind you 100 percent. ·

Gee, Sonny, can I be in student government, too? Canl,Sonny,canl,huh,canl?

If I'm part of student government, can I stay up . nights, like you said you did, "laying in bed thinking," although it is grammatically incorrect, unless of course you were laying an egg or_ sc;>mething. .

If I join student government, can I worry a lot about "social life on campus" and spend student fees on neat things like Halloween parties. Can I help per­petuate a "continuously growing" student government

. - I'm with you, Sonny: more is always better! Could I do really groovy things like help in

"building momentum in many directions," like Wonder Bread used to do?

And if I'm in student government, can I do like you and President Nixon do: speak of myself in the third person like when you said, "when we ran for president, ,

we promised.:." I really dig the images of alienated om­nipotence tinged with thoughtful understanding con­veyed by such phrases.

I mean, Sonny, what I really want for us, for MSC, for Auraria, is to someday be listed in Rolling Stone or

. Esquire when they do their annual reviews of campuses nationwide. Like your Halloween party is for you, those listings would be, as you said, turning a "small dream" into a "big reality" for me. I'm sick of CU-Boulder get­ting all the attention.

Obviously like yourself, Sonny, I don't give a shit if the average student at MSC is almost 28 years old and fully-employed. Like yourself, I am worried· that we have no chauvinistic, racist, myth-perpetrating Greek societies. Like yourself, · I can overlook our campus being located miles from the homes of its students ... including Capitol Hill residents!

No matter all that, Sonny, no matter at all. We need a social life and the student government, you and I, Sonny, is going to provide it. Right here in the heart of one of the fastest growing cities in America, by God, we're going to create a social life for the students. No matter how much of their money we have to spend to do

Two jokes in every pot by Sal Rulbal

There has been a real shortage of political jokes this year. I know, most of them are running for office, but when was the last time you heard a real rip-snorter about Jimmy Carter? I mean one that was original, not some warmed over scatological, psycho-sexual jive that could be applied to any procto-politician.

Take Ronald Reagan ... please. When he got the_. nomination, I really thought we would get some great wrinkle jokes, maybe some real clever stuff about car­cenogenic pomade, etc. So far, all we've seen are some feeble attempts to place Nancy Reagan in the usu~

Letters· An open letter to Phil Winslow, President, Trustees of State Colleges

I am writing to advise you of a potentially destruc­tive situation regarding morale and efficiency that results from recent reassignments of office space for the Education Department of Metropolitan State College, on the Auraria Campus.

As a senior student in education, I have had the opportunity to know and work with many of the ex­cellent faculty members in this department. It is my feeling that the recent changes are leading to deterioration of morale and efficiency among faculty members and students.

The cause of this problem is the movemen't of faculty departmental <Jffices from their former location, in the West Classroom Building, where the laboratory classrooms were constructed specifically for education classes, to a distant location at 14th and Arapahoe Streets in downtown Denver; a distance of more than five city blocks. The result is reduced availability of faculty to students, reduced accessibility of instructors to their instructional materials and resources for classroom use, and a separation of the students from their departmental office. Although I realize that all buildings and facilities available to the Auraria Campus must be utilized as effectively as possible, it is also my opinion that the recently assigned office spaces are definitely substandard.

In summary, I respectfully request that you look in­to the purpose and logic of this grossly inefficient move in order to eliminate what I feel is a serious imposition upon an excellent faculty and a growing student body. Jt

- -.-~---.--

compromising situations with various ethnic, racial and biological subsets of partners. Really bland stuff, right?

What can you say about John Anderson? If no one can joke about the guy, how do they expect to get any votes? There is no great tradition of third-party or in­dependent candidate jokes in America. It's one more reason to maintain the two-party system. There are only enough jokes for two candidates.

Have you ever tried to joke about the Socialist Workers' Party? Hey, those guys don't laugh. Has anyone ever seen Andrew Pulley make a joke?

We need more humor in politics. We need more pratfalls and buffoonery. We need Gerald Ford.

should be noted that I am writing this letter based on my own observations and not at the specific request of any member of the administration.

Thank you very much for your fair consideration of this situation.

Linda H. Cochran

May I take this opportunity to remind each of you of the procedures to be taken when a fire begins or when a fire alarm sounds. These steps are set forth to protect you and prevent serious injury or problems. It is im_..... perative that you observe the following: 1. Report any fire to Public Safety at 629-3271 and/ or pull a fire alarm box which is automatically relayed to Public Safety and Denver Fire Department.

2. Immediately evacuate from the building through the nearest exit. Close doors when you leave a room to con­tain the fire. 3. DO NOT USE ELEVATORS, ONLY STAIR­WELLS. 4. Handicapped persons should head toward the stair­wells and request assistance. Please assist handicapped

.persons down the stairwell. 5. Do NOT re-enter the building until advised to do so by Public Safety or Denver Fire Department staff: 6. Report all fires, regardless of seriousness.

In any incidents of reported fires and/ or alarms, Auraria Public Safety and Denver Fire Department will respond to investigate and check out the area.

David V. Rivera, Director Auraria Public Safety

it, tool I'm serious, Sonny. I'm with you, big boy. Who

cares that we're trying to create a social climate for senior citizens, 18-year-old disco lovers, fully-employed parents and war veterans.

I agree with you, Sonny. All those students ought to eagerly anticipate going home every day after classes and one or two jobs, fulfill whatever domestic obli-• gations they may have, visit their friends or maintain their outside (echhl) social life, and then rush back down here to Auraria for their collegiate social life. Hell of a deal, Sonny!

You're right, obviously no one on this campus ever talks with each other. Hell, you even won the presiden­tial election last spring without a majority of the vote! ~ And that's another thing: I think it's cool the way you · keep digging at the previous student body ad­ministrations, like when you said to compare your work with "past student governments here, if you will."

Anyway, it's ~e to make the students talk to each other.

One more thing. If I can, Sonny, I'd really like th~ privilege of helping at the Halloween party. I think you need someone as committed to your goals as I to ensure there are, as you said, no "wallflowers." We'll show 'em, won't we, Sonny. We'll beat socialization into them, won't we, Sonny.

Now let's get out there and make ·sure everyone starts socializing with their "fellow students."

Call me if I can help. Have a dianetic week.

Lou Chapman, former editor of The Metropolitan, is now a reporter for both the Rocky Mountain Journal and the Sentinel newspapers. His hobbies are reading, writing, and leatherwork.

EDITOR Sal Ralbal

BUSlftESS MflftflQER SteveWerges

PRODUCTIOft MflHflGER Cllnton G. Fank

ASSISTANT EDITOR Joan Conrow COPY EDITOR

Emerson Schwartzkopf r CREDIT MANAGER

Katie Unarls REPORTERS

K. Breslln, L. Welch, B. Riiey, c. Hoysoya W.R. Strable, T. Hatt, E. Klaas, J. Laanen

R. Perkins, T. Hedrick, D. Hayes, B. J. Weber, C. Bal"'

PRODUCTIOft i J. Ylnay, Janice Swanson, Ron DIRlto Tammie Hesse Cara ftewman

DISTRIBUTIOft Robert Waln, Kmn Gallagher

·11 pabllcatlon _for the flararla Higher Edacatlon Center sapported by adnrtlslng and stadent ffts from Metropolltan Stat• College ond th• Unlnrslty of Coloro4o­Denver.

Edltorlal and baslness offices are located In Room 156 of the flararla Stadent Center, 10th and Lawrence, Denver, CO.

Edltorlal Department: 619·1507 Baslneu Department: 619..aJ6 I

MfllLIHCI ADDRESS: The Metropolitan P.O. Box 4515

Box57 Dftver, CO 10104

n. ......... , .... ,..u ...... •"'Y .......... , .., Met,...lltH ltete Cell•1• .... tlM aalweralty er c.M1aa Dcwuu. v,........,....... ...... _....._., .............. - _.., nflect ......... ., ,.. ........................ _.... __ ~ ...... - ............ i.ttan .......... -•t M .. ._."" H kier tllH -• H Pllfty ,_...... ................... _ .. "'"' ........................ twe ,.... .. '"'"'· ... ...............

"'

Page 7: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

A Student Body Presidential Report

The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 7

''Things have changed at MSC!'' , We have talked with Dr. Macintyre about the Win-

'lerim issue. After talking with him receiving the vibes that we received from him, we feel optimistic that the Winterim will not be cancelled. If, however, it turns out that the administration comes to the definite conclusion that Winterim must be cancelled, then I am open to any actions that the students feel appropriate. This includes petitions and demonstrations at· the state capitol.

r Sometimes you have to get radical to make bureaucrats sensitive to your needs. This statement is one that I wrote in last week's article, but due to a typesetting error, this whole paragraph was left out of the article. .

We have been in office since May and have come to some very definite conclusions about the entire setup at . this campus. The balance of power between students

'\mid administration is quite lopsided. What makes it even more amazing is the fact that Metro State College is the second largest four year state college in the United States of America, and yet the students are not necessarily taken seriously by the administration. Our average age here is 29 years. We are quite old enough to make decisions and to be considered responsible human

.. ?beings. And yet, due to administrative decisions, there are five faculty members on the S!udent Affairs Board, which allocates our money (student fees). The adminis­tration can decide not to have faculty members on that board if they wish. Well, the students wish, that's for sure. It is not just the administration of one school, either. Look at the Auraria Media Center. It comes un-

;---der the CCD administration and it is about as respon-

sive to students as a mouthful of wet sawdust. Look at the student center, which comes under the administra­tion of AHEC. There are all these jewelry peddlers and plant peddlers and junk peddlers who, believe it or not, are at this very moment getting priority tables in the student center over our Halloween Bizarre ticket table. Here we have a student event for all three colleges that should have a priority spot in the student center to make these tickets quite visible and available to the students. The administration could, if they wanted to, give the students a priority spot here, but they will not. We have already approached them vehemently: the student cen­ter director all the way up to the Executive Director of AHEC. They say they can do nothing, their hands are tied and other bureaucratic cliches that would mean the same thing. When the fact is, if they did give students priority in these instances it would not be the students who would complain, it would be the junk peddlers. Another thing that was given low priority was the Chemshield self-protection' program. You know, those l_ittle spray things that look like mace.

The athletic commission, from what we have been able to determine thus far (because we have been given a considerable run-around) has little or no power in dic­tating the wishes of the students, who fund athletics with student fees. Same goes for the Board of Publications, which should supposedly give student in­put to the campus newspaper ... another runaround ... we can't even get a hold of a copy of their by-laws.

Look, I could go on for quite a while. The fact is,

• we, the students, have very little to say in what goes on around here, and unless we do something about it now, it will get worse.

We are doing many things in that direction. As your representatives in the student government, we get a first hand look at all this crap ... we get frustrated ... we get disappointed and run into administrative obstacles every turn of the way. But we are just radical enough, and just confident enough, and just persistent enough, that we can say right now, "Administrative people of Auraria, you are backing yourself against a wall you won't even be able to climb. The students have been quiet for a few years, but.now we are not. You had bet­ter listen to us. Students are the reason for this campus . We are the consumer. Without us, you don't have a job here. We now see the situation for what it is, and you had better realize we are serious in what we say about what we see. If you think the student governments do not represent the students, well, this year things have changed. You are now mistaken about that. THINGS HA VE CHANGED."

Are you dissatisfied, as a student, as a consumer? Do you see something you don't like? Come and tell us about it, we will be all ears. We're on the warpath now and believe us, we are just getting started and we're making a snowball that won't even stop rolling now or three years from now, or whatever. Come to Room 340 of the Student Center with your complaints, or call 629-3253. Do it now. Have a dynamite week! .

Sonny Wasinger

Auraria kids sound.off on 1980 election

Tanya Halstead "Carter, he's cute."

•-!t'llo· , ...

•• -~- .,__..._,.. --~~- .... '"'""r--·-- . ... . ;

Who would you vote tor? photos by Ron DiRito

Jason Martinez "Ronald Reagan· he'~ laughing."

Fenessa Lucero "Reagan, because I see him on TV all the time."

Kaveh Rastegar "Anderson, he talks alot."

Page 8: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

8 The Metropolitan October 15, 1980

The Deri1 for the Perl

P.hotosl>)

Part I of The MetropolitaJ

.,..

Page 9: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

.-~

rerCenter ~rmingArts

_,.

1's Denver Landmark Series

The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 9

Page 10: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

10 The Metropolitan October 15, 1980

~· lll~5~~~ Frank sex necessary in 'Timing'

byF.menenScbwamkopf I revolves uound an Ame<ican . . .. psychoanalyst (Art Garfunkel), a young ,

BAD TIMING: A SENSUAL OB­SESSION/starring Art Garfunkel and Theresa Russell/screenplay by Yale Udoff/produced by Jeremy Thomas/directed by Nicholas Roeg.

For Nicholas Roeg's Bad Timing: A Sensual Obsession the release of this film could be bad timing, indeed.

In a time of movies pushing Star Wars fantasies and silly "sophisticated" comedy-dramas, a psychological-sexual introspection seems to indicate a road to disaster. The days of Terror Train give a bad foreboding to intelligent, com­plicated films.

Such an atmosphere today in American cinema could kill Bad Timing

Timing, though, deserves a better fate; Roeg's newest exploration into the human psyche easily rates among the best movies of 1980.

Bad Timing is a film of questons -questions about sexuality, obsession, and identity. Director Roeg interweaves these three themes to create a combination detective story/psychological inquiry delving into a possible crime both in fact and human spirit.

The film's subtitle -A Sensual Ob­session - provides a key in understan­ding the depth of Bad Timing. The story

American (Theresa Russell), and their af­fair of sexual abandon in modern Vien-na.

Bad Timing follows Garfunkel and Russell as they continue a relationship based totally on the pursuit of new 1evels in animalistic ecstacy. Such a path, as Roeg shows, leads to actions of despair, decadence, and behavior far beyond normal comprehension.

· In telling this story, however, Roeg uses techniques - and actions -sometimes alien and possibly revolting to movie audiences. As is his style, Roeg plots Bad Timing as a disjointed series of flashbacks interspersed with views of the present. The "now" of Timing - the treatment of a drug overdose 6'y Russell, and a parallel police inquiry - becomes constantly interrupted by visions of Gar­funkel and Russell during their affair.

This effect, going backward and forward to fill. in the plot, may confuse viewers unaware of Roeg's direction. Bad Timing calls for good concentration.

Some viewers might also become disgusted by Roeg's frank use of sex in Timing. Although there are no clitoral close-ups oi; ejaculation shots connected with sexual acts in the film, Roeg nonetheless portrays sex at some ex­tremely intimate levels; i.e. a strip trapeze

sponsored by

Baptist Student Union

"The Hound of Everyman" October 21 - 12:00 noon

Au raria Student Center Plaza

show, some brutal intercourse on a stair­way, and a final ravishment of an uncon­scious woman.

More than a few viewers will note such scenes as possibly extraneous and violent towards women. Roeg, however, uses the sex scenes to convey not masculine victory or the degrading of women, but a genuine failure of

emotional involvement between two per-rom. _

Instead of success in Bad Timing, there always remains questions. Even with the music - a mixed bag including Wolfgang Mozart, and Tom Waits -questiom are set rather than answered. The effective use of The Who's "Who

continuted on page 12 -

.FREE FILM

\\~'O.~~\\\' \l~~~~\\~\\ . : A student is trapped by a cult. ~

This is a real life story of Chris Elkins' involvement in and escape from the "Moonies."

Thursday, October 16, 12:30 p:m. ~ Room 254·6 Auraria Student Center

sponsored by the Baptist Student Union

Thirsty's Fundrai,ser . Saturday· October 1811 AM to 7 PM

$4 All the beer you can drink Music from the 60s and 70s

admission to this event denotes a political contrtbution

!!.~ ~r.""' •

Page 11: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 11

'

. -

Doobies one step closer to clone by Emerson Schwartzkopf

Reviewed this week:

ONE STEP ·CLOSER/The Doobie "" Brothers/Warner Brothers HS 3452

GUILTY /Barbra Streisand/Columbia FC36750

Just as politics, gas consumption, • · and Broncomania move toward

moderation, so has some of today's music taken a large step right smack in the middle of the road.

Perhaps resulting from disillusion­ment from heavy metal sounds and rock­politik of the early 1970s, a strain of non-

~ committal, easy-sounding, music began a dramatic emergence in the latter part of the decade. Fueled by both discotheque and up-tempo folk-based music, artists such -as James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt, Barry Manilow, Chuck Mangione, and the Bee Gees began to present some

" watered-down - and big money -material.

The money, of course, comes from the music's accessabi/ity - the ability to promote a style to a wide range of the public. While such a quality makes mid­dle-of-the-road (or "pop") music

,,.._..desirable to a great number of persons, it sometimes encouraged talented artists to -churn out banality listenable only when washing dishes.

One· group relinquishing little of its integrity while becoming more moderate, however, is the Doobie Brothers.

r Originally a hard-driving San Francisco · Bay rock band, the Doobies took on a

milder persona in the mid 1970s under the · guidance of Michael McDonald.

The end result of the Doobie Brothers moving into rock-pop was Minute By Minute, last year's top album in sales and awards. On One Step Closer, their newest release, the Doobies now at­tempt to score two giant successes in a

·· row on the middle-of-the-road market. The major problem with One Step

Closer, though, lies in its similarity with ·Minute By Minute. Without becoming a carbon copy of last year's effort, One Step Closer raises enough stylistic ghosts to almost become a reasonable -facsimile

../ of Minute. The Doobies "base" sound - the

two percussionists with a constant chop­py rhythm guitar - could take much of the blame for the similarity between the two albums, as that backing sound the

. .

Doobies rode to success now starts to .become monotonous.

A larger problem, though lies in One Step Closer's material. The hit, "Roal Love," bears more than a slight' resem­blance to last year's ''What A Fool Believes" and "South Bay Strut," Closer's instrumental, takes its theme almost directly from Minute's "How Do Those Fools Survive."

STARTS FRIDAY!

WESTMINSTER V 88th & Sheridan

427-7884

NORTH DRIVE IN 72nd &Zuni

429-1408

To fans of Minute By Minute, though; such artistic problems mean lit­tle. The similar style of One Step Closer can assure the Doobie Brothers of another million-selling album ... as long as the public doesn't tire of the sound.

Although the Doobie Brothers may sell their latest album fast, an even faster seller is Barbra Streisand's Guilty. After less than a month after release, the record

by the big noise from Brooklyn stands at Number Two on the Billboard charts last week.

Guilty marks a significant change for Streisand, as she leaves the plushy arrangements of standards and strange selections on past albums to try an album of songs either written or co­written by one person - with that person_

. continuted on page 12

pH• . 1,f!.•+s:rmn·

LPnJ. ~-1'e0 .... _....... --,. .. a.t~

'

NORTHGLENN 104th&~25 452-7981

COLORA004 Colo. Blvd. & Alameda

BUCKINGHAM SQUARE v 1340 So. HavlM

756-4440

TARGET VILLAGE Sheridan & Evan•

1188-5255

LAKESIDE TWIN 4855H8ft.n

421.ee:M

CHERRY KNOUS TWIN ...,._ & UllMr91ty

7704185

- -~

Page 12: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

12 The Metropolitan October 15, 1980

WINNER "BEST FILM" TORONTO FESTIVAL OF FESTIVALS

"NICOLAS BOEG MADS llOVID THE WAY PABLO· PICASSO PAINTED PICTIJRI&" Associatffi Press

"ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST FILMS, DAZZLING. EXCEPTIONAL ACTING BY ART GARFUNKEL." -After Dark

"The most thoroughly adult movie ever made in the English language.'' _ -Maclean' s Magazine

"Miss Russell brings to her role a reckless physicality that is overwhelming."

-New York Times

"Uncommonly bold .. .fascinating ... wildly unconventional. Nicolas Roeg' s time has come around at last. 'Bad Timing' could be the long awaited breakthrough that sends·· him into super·star territory."

-National Public Radio . "~ fascinating as it is striking about obsession with male possessiveness and female independence caught in erotic compulsion." -Judith Crist Saturday Review

"* * * * -Newsday

The Rank Organization Presents A NICOLAS ROEG FILM

BAD TIMING A SENSUAL OBSESSION

ART GARFUNKEL THERESA RUSSELL HARVEY, KEITEL DENHOLM ELLIOTT in BAD TIMING/ A SENSUAL OBSESSION

Director of Photography Anthony Richmond Director of Music Richard Hartley Editor Tony Lawson

Associate Producer Tim Van Rellim SCREENPLAY BY YALE UOOFF

PRODUCED BY JEREMY THOMAS DIRECTED BY. NICOLAS ROEG

A Recorded Picture Company Production Filmed in Technovision A Sondra Gilman/Louise Westergaard Presentation

l!9 . AW RLD NORTHAL ALM

MATINEE 2:20&4:40 EVENING 7:00&9:20

OPENS Oct.15

~-m~J~~ St{eisand's ''Guilty''

continued from page 11 handling the album's production.

The main surprise, though, is that the person turns out ~o be Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees. Working with Albhy Galuten and Karl Richardson (who, with Atif Mardin, created the "Bee Gees sound"), Gibb takes Streisand's talent and produces a surprisingly good pop album.

evident in past albums, and she delivers. with a performance showing her ability to go beyond the soppy stuff of the mid­seventies.

On. Guilty, Gibb manages to per­form a type of fusion between Streisand's conservative vocal style and his own, · more exuberant music. While there's no busting loose' a la "More Than A Woman" on this album, such wretched excess as Streisand's total desecration of David Bowie's "Life on Mars" (Butter· fly) is also absent.

With the success of Guilty (and its single, "Woman In Love," the merging of the Gibb and Streisand sounds shows diversity for both artists. Fans of .... Streisand will love this album (as they seem to do countless other Streisand discs) and Bee Gees fans may find some of Guilty good, and the rest tolerable.

Persons disliking both Gibb and Streisand, though, may become violently ill upon listening to ·Guilty 's super- . • smooth sound. But, in sales figures (the main factor in middle-of ·the-road music), those in the third category seem .

very rare. · . ~- -

-

The Gibb.penned-and-produced music of Guilty gives Streisand more complex and melodic material than 1235 E. Evans Ave. & 7301 Federal Blvd. -

'Bad Ti~ing' continued from page 10 Are You" at key points in the film iri- stuff; Timing nU!.y be more avoidediih~ volving Garfunkel adds to the confusion ignored. (and ultimate resolution) of Bad Timing's This would be a terrible fate for such story. a movie. Altho~gh possibly stretching.at

The extreme complication of Bad times to excess, Bad Timing sh6Ws a sit!e Timing may work to its disadvantage, of the human soul - total debauchery -however. As witnessed by this summer's and behavior recessed in many, but movies, ·audiences go for less than strong evident in few.

Poro mount Pie: tut a. Presents A Brookstim• f'Toduction Antnonv Hopkiru and John ~t os The Elephonl Mon Anne Bancroft John Gielgud WendV Hitler MuSlc by John Morr~ D11ector of Photogrophy Freddie Fronci•

Eicecutille Producer Stuort Cornleld Screenplay by Chr;.topher Del.Ore & Etic Betgren & David Lynch Produced bv .Jonathon Songer D11eclect bv David Lynch Read the Bolcntine Book

Based upon the life ol John Merrick. the Elephant Mon. ond IA I l!2L':!'!.~~.:!'"°~I ~~-~r not upon theBrOOdwoyptoyoronyolher lictionoloccounl. :· • . ~ i , MCMl.JOCCC>¥P.,_,.Pw:vft~ ""~~ PonovisiOn' APorornc::iu1t Pie ure · --= ·.

STARTS FRIDAY MANN 6 AT UNION SQUARE

West of Union on 2nd Place in Lakewood 989-1310

2:45-5:15-7:30-9:45

U-HILLS3 2800 S. Colorado Blvd.

757-7161

2:15-4:45-7:15-9:45

,_

Page 13: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

-~-

The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 13

-SR Orts Team depth key to soccer success

~- -------------~ 'I · by Bruce Riley I According to MSC Coach Harry

Temmer, the difference between the 1980 men's varsity soccer team and past MSC teams is depth.

"In years past, we used to have 11 or ~ 12 players on the team and anytime

someone got injured it really set us back," he said. "This year we've got 20 players and every one of them-cim go ·out there and do the job."

· The team's depth has proven itself through the team's performance, accor­

, ding to Temmer. "We have lost only one game in

regular time and we've tied or lost to six teams in overtime," he said. "And two of these teams are rated in the national top 20. In the game against Mines, even though we were missing two of our star-

~ ters, we shut them out (4-0)." Despite the team's new dimension,

Temmer feels a few kinks have to be worked out before the team really starts to mature.

ber of local people coming out for the team. He said that of 80 people who tried out, 65 were local residents.

He has also noted ari increase in the quality of players and attributes this to the developing soccer programs at the local grade school and high school levels.

Both Temmer and assistant coach Bill Chambers, agree the team is the best they have seen in a long time. But accor-

· ding to Chambers, talent is not the only thing that helps win games.

"As far as I'm concerned, we've really been playing well," he said. "Some of the games we've lost, we should have won. Soccer's a game of breaks and we haven't always gotten our fair share;"

With a third of the season gone, the team seems to be getting some share of g the breaks. They are just about breaking ~ even with an overall record of 5-5-3 and ~ their NAIA District record is perfect at 2- 6 Q ~

<D The team's high scorer is Bob Myers a..

"The new players are not used to p1_aying with the older, more experienced guys who can do more things with the ball," he said. "Once they get used to playing with the older players, the team will really be able to force itself on the opposing team. Then we'll really start clicking."

who so far this year has five goals and en five assists.

Parking Council seeks input MSC Scoreboard

According to Temmer, the reason ,; _ for the increase in team depth is the num-

The Auraria Parking Advisory Council would like student, faculty and employee input on what they would like to see changed with the parking situation on campus. Please bring your ideas and comments to the Student Government Office, Room 340, in the Student Center.

Men's Varsity Soccer Oct.9

MSC 1 British Columbia 2 Oct.11

MSC 2 Hardln-Sinlmons 0

OH No! HE'S EATING AT Ht5 FOLKS' PLACE IDNtGHT(

~ "v 't·• \w • • A'•' •: •'-,I• ..., •• '. • ...,:

WHYOOES H15 MOTHER. WAITTILL HE'S COMIN6 TO DINNt:=R TO TRY

Al.L TH~E WEJl<.0 "101 WAYS WITH

L.fVER11R£CIPE5 P

Women's Varsity Volleyball Oct. 7

MSC 0 Colo. College 3

MSCl

MSCO

Oct.8

Oct.11 CSU3

Utab3

Page 14: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

- --- ....

14 The Metropolitan October 15, 1980

I ~~~,~~~~~~~,.~.~~:~.~ exhibit in the lobby of the American National Bank , 17th and Stout streets . Through October 24th. Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

wcrdncrsday 1 5 Public Law Forum at the Denver Public Library, Wyer Auditorium. 7-9 p.m. Free.

"New Faces of 1980" at Bonfils Theatre, Colfax Avenue at Elizabeth Street. Thur­sdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. Through October 25th. Written by Den­verites, choreographed by MSC's own Claudia Newcomb. For more information call 322-7725.

Water Media Works by T.F. Poduska at the Women's Bank 17th and Stout streets. Through November 21st.

Dixie Dregs at Rainbow Music Hall. 8 p.m. Tickets $7 through Select-a-Seat or at the Rainbow. ·

Rock &: Roll High School and The Punk Rock Movie at the Ogden Theatre. Call 832-4500 for times. $3

The Naked Civil Servant and The Balcony on Cinema Six at 9 p.m. on Channel 6.

The Canterville Ghost, The Ghost Goes West The Undying ·Monster and Curse of the Werewolf at the Denver Center Cinema. Call 892-0983 for times. $3.

"Distant Voices" on Connections at 8 p.m. on Channel 6.

Students for Early Childhood Education meets at noon in Rm. 3.54 of the. Student Center.

Bake Sale located between the Library and the Arts Building. Sponsored by Students for Early Childhood Education.

Clothing Exchange for children ages 1-8 at the Childhood Development Center. 2()()1: A Space Odyssey and Dr. Strange/ave in Rm. 330 of the Student Center. 12:15, 2:35, 7 and 9 p.m. 75¢

t>hoebe Snow and David Bromberg at 10 p.m. on Sounds/age. Channel 6.

)ohnnY. Winter at Rainbow Music Hall. 7:30 p.m. Tickets $8.50 through Select-a­Scat or at Rainbow.

Romeo and Juliet and Taming of the Shrew at the Ogden Theatre. Call 832-4500 for times. $3.

Comedy Connection at Bo-Ban's Cabaret, Bonfils Theatre. Satirical improvisation­based revue. 7 p.m. $4.

_"Heaven and Hell" on Cosmos at 7 p.m. on Channel 6.

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thursday 16 Auraria Nuclear Education Project meets at 7 p.m. in Rm. 151 of the Student Center.

Organizational meeting for the MSC Ski Club at 12 p.m. in Rm. 211 of the PER Building. Anyone interested must attend. Call 629-3201 for more information.

Support and Discussion group with the Lesbian/Gay Resource Center. 3 p.m. in Rm. 352 of the Student Center.

Murder in the Zoo and The Laurel&: Hardy Murder Case at the Denver Center Cinema. Call 892-0983 for times. $3.

Heavenly Deception at 12:30 in Rm. 254 of the Student Center. Free.

MSC Ski Club meets at noon in Rm. 151 of the Student Center.

MSC Accounting Students Association Oil & Gas Night meeting at 7 p.m. in Rm. 330 of the Student Center. Refreshments provided.

Vampyr and Kiss of the Vampyr at the Denver Center Cinema. Call 892-0983 for times. $3.

Women in Love and Lady Chatterly's Lover at the Ogden Theatre. Call 832-4500 for times. $3.

friday 17 War at Rainbow Music Hall. 8 & 11 p.m. Tickets $8.50 through Select-a-Seat or at Rainbow.

"Raising Healthy Children" presented by Dr.1lichard A. Gardner at 7:30 p.m. Glenn Miller Ballroom, University Memorial Cen­ter, University of Colorado.

l UCD Student Government meets 'at 5 p.m. irr RM. 340 of the Student Center.

The 2nd Annual FUBAR at 2· p.m. in Rm. 330 of the Student Center. Featuring The Gluons in a benefit concert for the Democratic Students of Auraria.

The Ruling Class and Magic Christian at the Ogden Theatre. Call 832-4500 for times. $3.

MSC Student Association of Social Work meets at 11 :30 a .m. in Rm. 257 of the Student Center.

The Hound of Everyman presented by Lamb's Players Street Theatre at 12 p.m. Student Center patio.

Federal Career Days, 9 a.m.-4 p .m. St. Cajetan's Auditorium. Representatives from 40 different agencies will be present to assist students interested in a career in the Federal Government. Free.

Lesbian/ Gay Resource Center general meeting at 3 p.m. in Rm. 352 of the Student Center. All friends invited.

.Y2 Day _Full Pay

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

572-1011 --------4 TIME LIFE

Equal Opportunity Employer

Page 15: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

Classified FOR SALE

MAG WHEELS 14x 7 Western Bullets complete with 60 series radial, set of chrome lugs, set of locks. $ISO. 935-6670 anytime.

FIREWOOD: $90/cord cut, split & delivered. Call ..[ Marko 4S8-0360.

74 TOYOTA CELICA. Air, auto, runs great, good gas mileage, silver, $2000 or best offer. 778-0664.

WOMENS SIZE 611, tennis sneakers worn less than an hour. Asahi by Yamaha. Will sell for $16. Call 444-4619 evenings.

( 13" HITACHI color television. Picture is excellent. Tuner needs some work. $SO. Call 696-14S8.

~

1970 PORSCHE 914, new paint, mag wheels, good body. Asking $4,000 or best offer. Call John 832-9008 Mon., Wed., before 4:00. Friday & Sunday all day.

SKIS: Yamaha 200 cm W/Tyrolia bindings, new racing set up, best offer over $200. 733-3620.

CABER SKI BOOTS - 4 yrs. old, good condition. Size 10. $4S. Rich 674-6078.

BICYCLES for sale - call Carolyn Berke - 985-7137.

CINELLI BICYCLE, silver, 25" frame, excellent condition, call 798-3029.

HAND MADE Persian rug, 12 years old, please call 861-S713 Mon., Wed., after 8:00 p.m., Tue., Thur. after 10:00 p.m.

LE BLANC alto sax. Excellent condition. Includes case, mo11thpieces, etc. $200.00 call 985-9311.

NEVER WORN wedding set with small diamond of excellent cut, color, and clarity. Appraised at $750.00 will sell for $375.00 or best offer. 777-7786.

CANON 35 mm $1 lS.OO or best offer.

' '66 BELAIR, V-8, 283, good tires, transmission, reliable engine, body upholstery need work, $2SO or best offer. Call Jim 722-6918.

COLLECTOR ITEM: .380 Beretta automatic, new condition, $200. Call 761-5220.

1968 CHEVELLE Malibu 4-dr, orig. owner, power steering, air cond., st!. radials, always garaged, 86,000 miles, regularly maintained, excellent cond. throughout. Best offer, 936-6670 anytime.

llELP WANTED PART TIME 9 pm to midnight. Great for insom­niacs and close to Auraria campus. Apply Superior Liquors 509 14th St.

PART TIME bartender needed for lunch shift from approx. 10-2 pm 3 days during the work week, days are neg. Call Jim at4SS-9991, My Brother's Bar.

ONE BLACK and one white male, age 18-23, for five month research project. Good pay, excellent conditions and hours. Call 492-8378 M-F 9-4. (pd 10/8)

OVERSEAS JOBS - summer/year round, Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing, free info. Write IJC Boe 52-COZ, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. (pd 10/29)

PART TIME sales opportunity. No exp. necessary. Will train. Pays well. Call 333-2504 anytime day or night. Wed-Sun ask for Mark or Sherry.

MARKETING PRODUCTS that save energy is a timely business. Get in on the action marketing AMS/oil gas-saving synthetic lubricants. Set your own hours and be your own boss. Call 770-3699.

EARN $4-$10 hr. comm. selling TV Guide from our comfortable offices. Leads, renewals, easy hours. Excellent Speech, Marketing, and Sales experience. Call 759-9130.

HOUSING ROOMMATE(S) NEEDED for nice spacious 3 bedroom house in Aurora right on bus line approx. $14S a month util. included. Please call after 9 pm on weekends anytime. 364-7347 or contact Chris at Mercantile Restaurant.

The Metropolitan October 15, 1980 15

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share basement apartment near DU. Close quarters but very inex­pensive. Non-smoker, responsible, quiet, and neat. Call Jay at 722-4262 or 433-9022 anytime (keep trying).

FOR RENT - 1 bedroom apt. at 1635 Pearl St. $SO plus house utilities or flat rent. Leave message at 399-2778.

APARTMENT FOR rent in older house near Auraria, unique, must see to appreciate. I bedroom $185 utilities paid. Quiet person only. Call 986-8924.

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom apar­tment in Golden. Responsible female non-smoker prcfered. $150/mo. and Vi utilities. Call 279-3496. Available Nov. lst.

MALE ROOMMATE needed immediately. Non­smoker preferred. Aurora area. Contact Wayne at 341-5526 or 340-4886.

),986 SQ. FT. tri-level home in Mission Viejo in southeast Aurora. 3 bdrms., 2 baths, very well kept. January occupancy. $20,000 assumption. 690-9038.

FEMALE ROOMA TE wanted to share house in Westminster. Prefer non-smoker. Cher 426-7889.

RESPONSIBLE, MATURE nonsmoking person to share large 4 bedroom house in Arvada. On bus route. $140/mo. and share utilities. 427-8796 evenings.

ROOMMATE WANTED: Male or female to share large, older home at 620 Steele. Very lovely, safe neighborhood near #6 bus and bikeways. Prefer non-smoker and person who can relate to 34 year old faculty member and S year old son. Ren $150, $50 dc~it. 322-464-0.

AROUND OCT. IS, 3 plus I bedr., !iv., din., 3 baths, fin. basement, fireplace, double garage, water-heat, quiet area, near bus, vicinity 21 Ave. and Wadsworth. Adults, no dogs. 550.00 plus deposit. Lease. 936-6145.

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 3 bedroom house in Thornton. $ISO mo. and 'h util. Call 288-7541.

PERSONAL WRITE YOUR own bumper sticker. l or 2 lines; red, green or blue ink. $1.00. Stickers, P.O. Box 625, Tabernash, CO 80428.

ALL ARE invited to the Oil & Gas Night sponsored by MSC Accounting Students' Association. Come to room 330 of the Student Center on Monday, Oct. 20 from 7-9 p.m. to learn more about this exciting field. Refreshments will be provided.

WIN $25 - design a T-shirt for MSC Biology Club and win $25. Bring entries to the Biology office SC 213 by noon on Oct.17. Design must be of one color, fairly simple and related to Biology. If you have any questions call Janet at 423-0756.

: RIDER WANTED to pay half of gas and share driving to Portland, OR. Leaving Friday, Oct. 31. You must have minimum luggage. Call Stephanie at 837-2288/days and 320-1690/evcnings.

SHY? Uneasy with people? I was until I found in­fallible method to cure this "disease." Want to destroy your shyness problems? Just send stamped envelope to: Franco Gaudiano, 2822 W. 28th Ave. No. !OS, Denver, CO 80211.

NEED A chance to be good join the gymnastic team. It's not too late. Last time worked out 10 years ago, it OK. We perform miracles in the Auraria gym Mon., Tue., Thur., Fri 4-6 see ,Eric . •

SLAPPING HER in the face is no way of ex­pressing your anger. A REAL MAN is in touch with his emotions and und~rstands how to express them NON-VIOLENTLY. If you physically abuse your mate and feel bad about it, call AMEND. 289-4441. We're a self-help group for abusive men. Com­pletely confidential.

SHY? UNEASY with people? I was, until I found infallible method to cure this disease. Want to destroy your shyness problems? Just send stamped envelope to: Franco Gaudiano, 2822 W. 28th Ave. #105, Denver, CO 80211.

SERVICES YOU SHOULD be in pictures. Let us create a distinctive portrait of you and your family. Photo­graphy West Ltd. 2812 East Sixth Avenue. 322-3557. (pd 10/ 31)

HOT AIR balloon - the best time of year to fly is here. You don't have any idea what you've missed. Photographers dream. Call 831-1247.

TOP OF the morning: Hate that alarm clock? Sleep right thru? Try waking up to a cheerful "Top of the Morning" wake-up call. $10/month. S-8 a.m. Call 457-0466 Today and get up on time tomorrow!

EXPERT TYPING by legal secretary. Proofreading: grammar, punctuation, coherence, diction. IBM Selectric 11. DIVORCE papers, term papers, legal papers. Rhonda 428-8655.

ARE YOU a "foodaholic?" If compulsive overeat­ing makes you unhappy, why not do something about it? Attend the Overeater's Anonymous meeting this Monday from 12-1 p.m. ,in EC 61. There arc no dues, no fees, no weigh-ins. Only un­derstanding support and friendship from other members. For more information, telephone Dorothy at 629-8345.

'PHANTOM TYPIST - accurate in grammar, etc., and appearance. Call 7pm to 7am weekdays, .'A hours weekends. Lynn 355-6528.

THE AURARIA Child Development Center preschool program has limited openings. Mornings only. Ages 2Vi-5 yrs. For more information call 629-2758.

EVERY BODY needs some body work. Profession­al dancers take every body seriously - at the Colorado State Ballet, 1412 W~ Street. For in­formation about modern dance and dancercizc classes, call S72-819S. (pd 10/1)

LOOKING FOR your direction in life? Find out how your Astrological chart can reveal your creative talents and abilities. Call Roy Neal at 399-4970 for information and appointment.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN funk is back and sounding even better. For disco's, private parties, and fund raisers call Rudy Torrez at 934-2071. Ask about discount prices.

TAKE CHESS lessons from a certified master. Dave Jellison 778-8184. (pd 12110)

DON'T GET married without seeing me first! Creative wedding photography. Photography West, LTD. 2812 E. Sixth Ave. 322-3557.

WANTED BASEBALL CARDS wanted: Prior to 1976. Call Phil at 693-7664 or 830-S538. ·

WANTED TO buy inexpensive manual or electric typewriter. Also student's desk and chair. Contact 629-8462 mornings after 9 a.m.

CLASSIFIED ORDER FORM FREE TO fHIRflRlfl STODE"TS, FflC<ILTY fl"D STAFF*

"AME: PHO"E "OMBER: -11.D. "OMBER:

SE"DTO 10061 lTH STREET, BOX 57, DE"VER. CO 80204 OR DELIVER TO THE STODE"T CE"TER RM. 1 56 •FOR OTHER ADVERTISERS: 10¢ PER WORD-PREPAID

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Page 16: Volume 3, Issue 7 - Oct. 15, 1980

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THE PRICE IS RIG.HT ON NEW · FALL AND HOLIDAY CLOTHES

MEN'S: SWEATERS• SHIRTS• PANTS• BOOTS • SHOES • PREWASHED DENIM JEANS • DOWN VESTS & COATS • JACKETS• VESTED SUITS• LEATHER COATS. WOMEN'S: DRESSES• PANTSUITS• SKIRTS• SWEATERS•· BLOUSES • JACKETS • SHOES • BOOTS • DOWN VESTS • LEATHER COATS• BLUE JEANS• AND MORE.

2553 south _colorado blvd.

.. THIS WEEK

denver, colorado

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