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JUNE 1, 2017
A publication of
JEFFERSON COUNTY, COLORADO
RULES OF THE ROAD:
Teen drivers learn how to navigate the world P16
MEMORIAL DAY:
Arvadans honor the memory of those who served P4
ELATED EAGLES: FCA graduates the Class of 2017 P5
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PAPERS PLEASE: Arvada Center’s new art exhibit shows versatility of paper P22
THE BOTTOM LINE
‘We have more work to do to ensure all graduates are career and college ready.’ CO -PR ESENTED BY
SPO NSORED BY
SPONSORED IN PA R T BY
Susan Harmon | Jeffco Board of Education | Page 11 INSIDE
VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 16 | CALENDAR: PAGE 22 | SPORTS: PAGE 24
ArvadaPress.com
VOLUME 13 | ISSUE 1
2 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
Law Enforcement Torch Run set for June 1
Olde Town preps for summer concerts Summer Sounds kicks off June 10
The Fab 4 will play in Olde Town Arvada June 10.
BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
The sounds of summer will soon float through the streets in Olde Town Arvada with the kickoff June 10 of Summer Sounds on Second Saturdays. Hosted by Historic Olde Town Arvada, this is the sixth year of the concert series that aims to draw a crowd to the streets of Olde Town on the second Saturday of summer months. This year, the event will utilize a new location, with the concerts centered in Olde Town Square and stretching to 57th and Grant. “The square is here — this is where the concert should be,” said Karen Miller, president of the business improvement district and Historical Olde Town Arvada. The new location also means the library can be used for kids activities. The June 10 event will feature music from Relic, Ugly Rumor and The Fab 4 — a Beetles Tribute Band. The night
COURTESY PHOTO
will be themed with Beatles trivia and memorabilia, and attendees are encouraged to dress in costume, as their favorite Beatle or reflecting the 1960s era.
“It’s so cool to see our streets filled with people,” Miller said. “We want to bring people to Olde Town and want them to have fun while they’re here.”
WHO’S PLAYING? June 10, 3-9 p.m. A Night with The Beatles and 1960s Era Fun
Aug. 13, 3-9 p.m. A Night of Elvis Classics and 1950s Era Fun
Musical guests: Relic, Ugly Rumor and The Fab 4
Musical Guests: Aaron Black: Elvis in Concert, The Beverly Belles, and Shelvis and the Toustabouts
July 8, 3-9 p.m. A Night of Big Band and Legends of American Jazz Musical guests: The Jazz Spiders, Swing City Express and The Boulder Big Band
All concerts are at Olde Town Square, on the corner of 57th Avenue and Olde Wadsworth Blvd., and adjacent streets in Arvada. For more information, go to OldeTownArvada.org.
STAFF REPORT
The Annual Law Enforcement Torch Run will be June 1 and citizens are invited to join in the celebration. Members of the Arvada Police Department, along with those from surrounding agencies including Westminster, Jefferson County, Wheat Ridge and Lakewood, will run the 13.1 miles from 88th and Wadsworth to the Colorado State Capitol. The route will run south on Wadsworth to Colfax Avenue, then East on Colfax to the Colorado State Capitol. Residents, businesses and neighbors are invited to come out and cheer along the race route. Estimated times at various locations are: 8:30 a.m. - 64th & Wadsworth 8:55 a.m. - I-70 & Wadsworth 9:30 a.m. - Colfax & Wadsworth 10:05 a.m. - Federal and Colfax 10:30 a.m. - Arrive at the State Capitol Upon arrival at the State Capitol, agencies from across the state will gather for the Opening Ceremonies of the Colorado Special Olympics. Each year, local law enforcement agencies gather as a community to raise awareness and money for Colorado Special Olympics with the Law Enforcement Torch Run. The mission of Special Olympics Colorado is to provide year-round training and athletic competition in a variety of Olympic-type sports for children and adults with intellectual disabilities, giving them continuing opportunities to develop physical fitness, demonstrate courage and experience joy. While sharing their gifts and skills, they experience friendship with other Special Olympics athletes and their families.
We’re stretching our hours!
Primary care earlier, later and Saturdays. With 30 CHPG Primary Care practices open from Lakewood to Longmont, one is almost certainly close to your home. And with many now offering early morning, evening and Saturday appointments, we can make your life easier. See how we measure up! Visit chpgprimarycare.org to find the Front Range office near you.
Find a doctor near you. chpgprimarycare.org
Centura Health does not discriminate against any person on the basis of race, color, national origin, disability, age, sex, rel religion, creed, ancestry, sexual orientation, and marital status in admission, treatment, or participation in its programs, services and activities, or in employment. For fu further information about this policy contact Centura Health’s Office of the General Counsel at 1-303-673-8166 (TTY: 711). Copyright © Centura Health, 2017. ATENCIÓN: Si habla español, tiene a su disposición servicios gratuitos de asistencia lingüística. Llame al 1-303-6 1-303-643-1000 (TTY: 711). CHÚ Ý: Nếu bạn nói Tiếng Việt, có các dịch vụ hỗ trợ ngôn ngữ miễn phí dành cho bạn. Gọi số 1-303-643-1000 (TTY: 711).
Arvada Press 3
7June 1, 2017
ARVADA NEWS IN A HURRY Historical Society hosts Garden Tour The Arvada Historical Society will host its seventh annual Garden Tour 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, June 24, rain or shine. Cost is $15 per person, cash only, with tickets available for purchase at 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., from 8:30 a.m. to noon. For more information, call Mary Jo Giddings, 303-421-2032. Death with Dignity This past November, Colorado voters passed the Access to Medical Aid-in-Dying Medication (Proposition 106), which legalized
the option of assisted death for terminally ill patients who have six months or less to live. Jessica Radke, elder abuse prosecutor for Jefferson County, will share about what the new law allows and does not allow at a talk at 1:30 pm, Tuesday, June 27, at the Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office, 500 Jefferson County Parkway, Golden. The talk is free and open to the public. Call 303-271-6980. Nonprofit acquires Arvada senior living Haverland Carter LifeStyle Group, a mission-driven, faithbased New Mexico nonprofit has
during the open application period, based on available funds. The application period will be determined based on response. AEDA created the Exterior Improvements Grant Program to support existing Arvada businesses and property owners who wish to make capital improvements to the exterior of their properties. The program leverages AEDA funds and private sector investment to enhance commercial properties in Arvada. To apply, visit: arvadaeconom icdevelopment.org/resources/ financial-assistance/.
purchased Ralston Creek Senior Living in Arvada. Formerly a forprofit community, the name will be changed to Ralston Creek Neighborhood and will become a not-forprofit assisted living and memory care affiliate of Haverland Carter LifeStyle Group. Grant program accepting applications The Arvada Economic Development Association (AEDA) Board of Directors approved funding for the 50/50 matching grant program and is now accepting applications. Businesses and property owners may apply for the grant anytime
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You’ve Heard About Geothermal Energy, But How Does It Work, Anyway?
We’re all familiar with solar power — har- a perfect marriage of renewable energy. vesting the radiational energy of the sun — Cooling requires little energy, since the but there’s an equally abundant source of glycol coming out of the earth is already at energy right under our feet — 55 degrees. All that’s required is REAL ESTATE to blow air across copper coils the natural warmth of the earth. TODAY Geothermal energy is most containing the cold liquid. commonly exploited in areas Heating requires a little more with geysers and hot springs, energy, using the heat pump to which are heated by magma extract heat from the 55-degree close to the surface. Iceland glycol and pumping the chilled produces 99% of its electricity glycol back into the earth where it by harvesting geothermal eneris brought back to 55 degrees. gy, and northern California genAgain, you can find instructive erates 60% of its electricity in YouTube videos explaining the this manner. YouTube has some process. Domestic hot water can great videos explaining how be created the same way, elimiBy JIM SMITH, electricity is generated from nating the need for water heaters ® Realtor geothermal energy. using fossil fuels. But you don’t need to be near geysers or The diagram at right shows a heat pump hot springs to take advantage of the earth’s drawing heat from the earth in winter and natural heat. Geothermal energy for heating drawing coolness from the earth in summer. and cooling is available to everyone, everyAlthough it’s common to drill vertical pipes where on the earth, and you can expect to a couple hundred feet into the earth, it’s also see it increasingly utilized in coming years. possible to lay horizontal pipes just 10 feet or The best gas forced air furnaces are 94% so below the surface, if you have a wide efficient, but a geothermal heat pump is enough area. about four times more efficient than that. Geothermal heat pumps are also called People who explore caverns know that the “ground source heat pumps.” Such a system earth’s temperature below the surface in our can cost $20,000 or more to install, much of latitude is about 55 degrees Fahrenheit. The that for drilling/excavation. My own home has most common form of geothermal heating an “air source heat pump” which extracts and cooling involves circulating a liquid such heat from the outside air instead of from the as glycol through pipes deep under ground to ground, but it only works when the outside air bring that 55-degree temperature into a heat is above 40 degrees Fahrenheit. When the pump, which could be powered by the sun — outside air falls below that temperature, a
Perfect Closing Gift for Buyers: Home Energy Audit Golden Real Estate has a well-deserved reputation for its commitment to sustainability. Our agents are certified EcoBrokers® and we earned the City of Golden’s Sustainable Award for Business in 2010, in recognition of our solar powered office, recycling of Styrofoam, and other practices, which have only expanded since then. Now we’ve come up with the perfect closing gift for our buyer clients. We have partnered with Andrew Sams of Alpine Building Performance, LLC, to provide a fullblown home energy audit after closing — a $385 value! A home energy audit, also known as a
home energy assessment, is the first step to assess how much energy your home consumes and to evaluate what measures you can take to make your home more energy efficient. An assessment will show you problems that may, when corrected, save you significant amounts of money over time.
gas burner kicks in and functions like any other forced air furnace. In the summer, an air source heat pump functions like any other compressor-based central air conditioning unit, extracting heat from inside the house and dissipating it into the outdoors. Although installation of a geothermal heat pump system is most practical with new construction, I saw it done as a retrofit for an older home in the Applewood neighborhood on the north side of South Table Mountain. Last October, the Golden Solar Tour featured a new home development under construction in northwest Arvada called the Geos Community. This community will include 300 homes using geothermal heating combined with solar power to create homes which require no externally generated electric power or natural gas, even powering one
electric car per household from solar power. I produced a 12-minute video interview with the developer, which you can view on YouTube by searching “Geos Community.” This article is by necessity a somewhat simplistic description of geothermal heating and cooling, so I urge those in a position to consider such an installation to 1) Google the subject for more detail and 2) consult a company in the business of installing geothermal systems to see if such a system would make sense for you.
Our Google Listing Now Includes an Interior Tour of Our Office We’re proud of the fact that our website is the #1 unpaid listing when you Google “golden real estate,” but now our listing has been enhanced with interactive pictures (called a “Google Business View”) created by Mediamax Photography Agency. Mixed in among other still photos, you’ll find pictures of our office and parking lot which you can rotate using your mouse, showing myself and two other agents at work. It’s pretty cool! Thanks, Mark Schow, Mediamax owner!
Golden Farmers’ Market Opens This Saturday ...and Golden Real Estate will have a booth there!
It’s an annual tradition. As a longtime member of the Golden Chamber of Commerce, we are given the opportunity to have a “showcase” booth at the Golden Farmers’ Market, which takes place in the parking lot next to the Golden Public Library on 10th Street in downtown Golden. This is one of the state’s highest rated farmers’ market. Hours are 8am to 1pm.
Jim Smith Broker/Owner
Golden Real Estate, Inc.
CALL OR TEXT: 303-525-1851
MAIN: 303-302-3636 EMAIL: Jim@GoldenRealEstate.com
All Agents Are EcoBrokers
17695 South Golden Road, Golden 80401
Honored as Metro Denver’s #3 Brokerage of its size (6 to 10 agents) for the number of closed transactions in 2016
4 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
Arvada honors fallen soldiers
M
embers of the Arvada VFW and American Legion came together Monday, May 29 to honor fallen soldiers in a Memorial Day Ceremony at the Arvada Cemetery. “Today we honor over one million Americans who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our nation,” said Ron Logan, VFW Post Commander. “By their sacrifice, the flag of our nation still flies over a free people.” PHOTOS BY SHANNA FORTIER
Bill Pollack, with the Arvada American Legion Post 161 honor guard, prepares to fire his rifle.
Sandy Jones places a wreath on a memorial for fallen soldiers.
CO- PRE SE N TE D BY
S P O N S O R E D BY
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Arvada Press 5
7June 1, 2017
Faith Christian graduates say goodbye
A
s parting words to graduates of Faith Christian Academy High School, teacher Stephen Twedell told them not to focus on the past because it could lead to discouragement. “Forget about your failures, forget about your successes and press on,” he told the graduates, reminding them to focus on Jesus. The Christian school graduated 97 students May 25, at the the Faith Christian Family Worship Center West. Valedictorian was Meredith Wirth and salutatorian was Julaina Payne. PHOTOS BY SHANNA FORTIER
Jonathan Hardcastle shows off his excitement for the camera at his graduation from Faith Christian Academy.
Chandlyr Applegate was one of 97 seniors to graduate from Faith Christian Academy. Faith Chrstian Academy graduated 97 students this year.
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June 1, 2017J
Long View alternative school graduates a lucky 21 The alternative school will stay at its location one more year BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Twenty-one students earned their diplomas May 27 from Long View High School — a small alternative school serving Jefferson County students. The ceremony, scheduled to be outside at the school, was held at Warren Tech due to rain. Graduates were individually celebrated by their teachers with unique introductions and each student sharing their thoughts on graduation day. Keynote Speaker Colorado Senator Andy Kerr told the graduates that listening is the heart of learning and to never stop doing that. “You have arrived where many never do and you took the harder road,” Kerr said in his address to the students, who enrolled at Long View because their needs were not being met by their home school for variety of reasons: hyper activity, drugs, playing video games, tremendous anxiety or being with-
drawn for example. “You are an accomplished family,” Kerr said. “Inspire each other to do more.” Long View, in its 23rd year of operation, graduated its 300th student this year. Avalon Yates was celebrated as the 300th graduate. He was the first student to receive his diploma at this years commencement ceremony. The alternative school is housed in a 50-year-old temporary structure on the hill of Jefferson County Public Schools’ Life Long Learning Center campus in Lakewood. It was the subject of some debate earlier this year when Jeffco Public Schools staff proposed moving the school into the larger campus at McClain High School, which is also located on the Life Long Learning Campus. But parents, students, alumni and staff said doing so would be the demise of the program. After negotiations with the district, Long View will remain on the hill for the 2017-18 school year. Then the fate is up in the air again, said head teacher Jennifer PerryDaly. “We hope to remain in our current location forever,” PerryDaly said. “We work really well up there.”
Graduates Justice Gallegos and Solomon Ulibarri hug each other at the Long View High School graduation. PHOTOS BY SHANNA FORTIER
Long View High School graduated 21 students at its 23rd commencement ceremony held May 27 at Warren Tech.
Long View graduate Matene Strikes First Wanna prepares to walk into the commencement ceremony.
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Avalon Yates was the 300th student to graduate from Long View High School. His was the first diploma given at the 2017 commencement.
Arvada Press 7
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June 1, 2017J
Wheat Ridge High School embraces districts 2020 vision Jeffco Schools hopes to teach students more about life than textbooks BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
The goal for all Jefferson County Schools graduates is for them to not only master the Colorado academic standards, but also excel in civic and global engagement; communication; critical thinking and creativity; and self direction and personal responsibility. Those are the guidelines laid out in the districts 2020 Vision plan, which was launched in 2015. Though the school district reports that several of its schools are making strides towards the goals of the vision plan, one example of a place that embraced the mission is Wheat Ridge High School. “In my mind, the 2020 vision is taking care of all kids and their differing needs and including the community in helping us to do that,” said Wheat Ridge High School Principal Griff Wirth. Most recently the school created a new partnership with the Colorado Construction Institute to solve shortages in skilled trades. “It’s a good opportunity for me to learn about instruction,” said Donal
Donal McGrail, 18, says that construction class is a good way for him to learn about and be a part of the workforce.
FOR MORE INFO Information and videos explaining the goals of the district’s 2020 Vision can be found at: http://jeffco.ss12.sharpschool.com/ about/2020 McGrail, 18, who wants to incorporate his love of theater and construction skills to be a set designer. McGrail is one of four students learning construction skills at the Colorado Construction Institute. “I think what we have been trying
to figure out in Jeffco 2020 it opportunities for all kids,” Wirth said. “We’re doing very good for opportunities for advanced learners, but what about our at-risk kids? So, we decided to attack that challenge.” Wheat Ridge put together a career exploration program that focuses on three industries that are dying for workers: hospitality, construction and health care. The school identified 28 students for the program who were considered “at-risk” of not succeeding in school because of a lack in credits, free and reduced lunch status, special education needs, or did not attend school regularly. Before enrolling in the construction class, Jesus Hernandez, 18, wasn’t showing up for school. But his instructor at the Construction Institute, Mark Babcock, says now he arrives 30 minutes early for class. Jesus now has aspirations of being a framer and eventually a developer. “We designed the program to try to see if we can re-engage them in school and give them work skills,” Wirth said. Students in the program attend two months of academic boot camp blended with career exploration. In boot camp, they work on soft skills and employability. After that, they work with community partners for skill training. Training is three to eight weeks long followed by a paid internship. “I think the problem we’ve had is the way we’ve looked at education for a long time says all kids need to go to college,” Wirth said. “I think a lot of times kids feel like if they don’t go to college they’re a failure. But the research tells us that 30 percent of our jobs require a four year degree right now. We’ve been trying to send 100 percent to college, when economy doesn’t support that.” Wirth hopes that the skill trade programs offered by Wheat Ridge help change that. But even before the 2020 Vision was implemented Wheat Ridge and other district schools were already embracing programs like STEM and STEAM. The high school started a STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) program which would allow students to take on big projects, re-
SHANNA FORTIER
search them, design, tweak and build them while partnering with community engineers. Recently that STEM Team claimed a first-place victory at the annual Shell Eco-Marathon in which they showed off their prototype hydrogen fuel cell car. The win marks the second national title won by the Farmers. The cars are displayed inside the school. “They continue to use critical thinking and creativity and expand the frame of what might work,” said Matt Flores, Chief Academic Officer for Jeffco Schools, of the STEM students. “That to me is a great example of Jeffco 2020.” From the STEM program, grew STEAM with a “A” added for art. Those students have installed a statue at Lutheran Hospital and worked this year on creating a fog wall that utilizes ionized water to create pictures. Before both of those programs, the Gifted and Talented Center was launched at the school, nine years ago. Wirth says the center filled a void for the GT students who were getting bored in class and dropping out. “GT kids, I think there’s a misperception about who they are,” Wirth said. “People look a gifted kids as an easy road, but there’s a whole lot of different giftedness. They view the world differently.” The GT program at Wheat Ridge, which pulls high school students from the whole district, allows gifted students to pursue passions and interests in an advanced academic setting. “It’s an opportunity for them to be in that group with like peers,” Wirth said, adding that a lot of students in the program are twice gifted — meaning that they fall on the gifted scale academically but also struggle with things like anxiety, depression or autism. Wirth is retiring this year, but he said he is excited that newly named Superintendent Jason Glass will be coming on board in Jeffco. “I hope that he embraces the 2020 Vision,” Wirth said. “If he embraces that, then schools like Wheat Ridge will become models for what a school could look like.”
Arvada Press 9
7June 1, 2017 Paid Advertisement
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K5438;L& & J#0& 4#& .1"+%*& "2"%3454#@& 51+,/0&1"/7&8#""&)%.1%4.45; &&&&&&DG'$(#&#$)*$'(#$DI1$A&8NB#;-$ M#""& )%.1%4.45& 45& 3+#04.4+#& .1).& 0%4"5& up the lubricating fluids in your knee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he major lubricating fluid in your knee joint is called synovial fluid. Synovial fluid is the fluid that “dries ,7L&61"#&*+,&5,=="%&64.1&)%.1%4.45; &&&&&&DG'$'(#&#$)*$H885$"#7*-$$A+6& 0+3.+%5&3)#&4#I"3.&+#"&+=&.1"&-,4/04#@& blocks of synovial fluid directly into *+,%&8#""&I+4#.; &&&&&&G145&-,4/04#@&-/+38&+=&5*#+$4)/& fluid is called hyaluronic acid. And 61"#& 1*)/,%+#43& )340& 45& 4#I"3."0& 04' %"3./*& 4#.+& .1"& 8#""& I+4#.?& B)#*& "2'
!"#$%&'(%))'*+,-+$,$.'/"$%'01+.)2' !"#"$%&'('$#()*#&+,"%")(-'$-(."+/ .0"($%"(#122"%*34(5*-'($%-'%*-*#(61&'( 7+134"%(-'$3("8."&-")9((:$;*34( -'"(%*4'-(-%"$-6"3-(&'+*&"#(3+5(&$3( .+##*<07(#-+.(-'"(.%+4%"##*+3($3)( "0*6*3$-"(-'"(.$*39
7"%.5& -"/4"$"& 4.& 1"/75& /,-%43)."& .1"& I+4#.; &&&&&&O+B"&5)*&4.&45&/48"&5P,4%.4#@&+4/& +#& )& %,5.*& 0++%& 14#@";& & G145& )//+65& .1"&8#""&I+4#.&.+&@/40"&B+%"&5B++.1/*& )#0&+=."#&%"0,3"5&+%&"$"#&"/4B4#)."5& 7)4#; &&&&&$%"5$(#&#$)*$'(#$;8*'$);A8&',"'$ A,&'-$&A+6&.1).&.1"&I+4#.&45&/,-%43)."0& )#0& 3)#& B+$"& 64.1& /"55& +%& #+& 7)4#& - specific exercises can be a tremen'
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lubricating fluid (synovial fluid) in *+,%&8#""&I+4#.&0%4"5&,7; & & & & & & G145& B")#5& 4#5.")0& +=& @/404#@& 5B++.1/*& '& *+,%& -+#"5& 5.)%.& .+& %,-& )#0&@%4#0&)@)4#5.&")31&+.1"%; & & & & & & G145& 3),5"5& )& /4../"& 7)4#& 4#& .1"& -"@4##4#@& '& -,.& +$"%& .4B"& .1"& 7)4#& 5.")04/*& @".5& 6+%5"& ,#.4/& 4.& 45& "23%,' 34).4#@;& &&&&&&(*)/,%+#43&)340&6+%85&5+&6"//&-"' 3),5"&4.&45&/48"&KI+4#.&+4/;L&&<.&45&)&#).,' %)/&5,-5.)#3"&)#0&45&+#"&+=&.1"&#).,%)/& building blocks of the synovial fluid .1).&/,-%43)."5&*+,%&8#"";& & & & & & & O34"#.45.5& )#0& %"5")%31"%5& 045' 3+$"%"0&.145&#).,%)/&-,4/04#@&-/+38&.+& synovial fluid in the rooster’s comb '& .1).& -4@& %"0& .14#@& +#& .+7& +=& .1"& %++5."%5& & 1")0;& & <.& 45& "2.%)3."0& =%+B& the roosters comb, purified and con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fluoroscopy imaging called “Hologic E%3%-',*F"'3%23G*)4*7#*&'2*)##*$%3.-* %2-4*-.#*A4%2-;**H.%)*',,47)*6)*-4*96-* -.#*+?',3'2*#0'&-,?*7.#$#*%-*2##:)*-4* >#;**B-6:%#)*).47*:4&-4$)*:4%23*A4%2-* injections without fluoroscopy miss -.#*A4%2-*69*-4*IJK*4@*-.#*-%"#;G&5)40& .1"&04%"3.+%&+=&J%.1%4.45&G%").B"#.&).& [5."+&T"/4"=&<#5.4.,."; &&&&&&[5."+&T"/4"=&<#5.4.,."&45&)&5.)."&+=& .1"&)%.&B"043)/&=)34/4.*&+=="%4#@&+#/*& .1"&-"5.&."31#+/+@*; &&&&&&%"5$'(,'@*$"8'$,BB&'&[5."+&T"/4"=&
Hyalgan Injected Directly Into Knee Joint Like Joint Oil
Research Shows Doctors Miss The Joint Space About 30% Of The Time Without Advance Imaging
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10 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
Parents should ‘speak now’ about drugs and alcohol Statewide campaign urges parents to have those conversations with children BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
When Jay Martin was 13 years old and living in Nebraska, he answered the family phone to hear a state trooper explain his brother had been in a wreck and he needed to speak with Martin’s parents. Martin’s 19-year-old brother was killed in a car accident in which he was driving drunk. The experience hurt not only his family, Martin said, but also others who were involved in his brother’s crash. Today, Martin is a deputy with the Douglas County Sheriff ’s Office working with the department’s Y.E.S.S. program, in which officers visit local schools and teach about such topics as online safety, relationship safety and substance use. But Martin isn’t the only one trying to teach kids the dos and don’ts of alcohol and drug use. A campaign run by the Colorado Department of Human Services Office of Behavioral Health called “Speak Now Colorado” is targeted at helping parents have
those difficult conversations with kids, especially around prom and graduation seasons. On the Speak Now website, speaknowcolorado.org, parents can: • Learn how to spot risky behavior. • Explore hypothetical scenarios to help them prepare for real-life situations involving kids and substances. • Take a quiz to test their knowledge of drug and alcohol use. • Get tips for starting and continuing conversations with their children about drugs and alcohol. Start conversations early Rob Valuck, a professor of pharmacy at the University of Colorado, has worked in substance abuse prevention for nearly 25 years. He says the main reason for parents to keep their kids away from alcohol and drugs, including misuse of prescription drugs, is to protect their health. “We really think it’s a critical time in people’s lives — behaviorally and emotionally and psychologically, but also biologically,” he said of adolescence. “There’s a lot of changes going on in people’s bodies up until about age 25.” Mainly, he said, a person’s brain is still developing during those years. Drugs and alcohol affect how
the brain functions, and possibly impact a person’s reward system and self-control. “We know that there’s issues if people start to use substances in those early years,” he said. When talking to kids, he recommends parents start young, even as early as grade school age, he said, although using ageappropriate terms. It’s important for young people to know their parents don’t think using drugs and alcohol is acceptable. “It’s not a moral thing,” he said. “It’s a safety issue.” Valuck also cautions that people’s risk assessment of substances has decreased, and he reminds people of all ages that no substance is perfectly safe, including over-thecounter and prescription drugs. “There is no totally safe drug,” he said. “Every drug has side effects.” Personal stories connect with kids When it comes to teaching kids about substance use and the power of prescription drugs, Martin believes they have to be reached on an emotional level. So, he’s willing to get personal. In those Y.E.S.S. sessions, he opens up about undergoing back surgery a year and a half ago. Martin was prescribed strong painkillers. He says he felt firsthand the effects of becoming
reliant on the drugs and then the withdrawal symptoms that followed when he took himself off the drugs to avoid addiction. And it wasn’t just physical side effects, Martin said. In addition to cravings, Martin said he also began having thoughts and feelings he’d never had before. Both Martin and Valuck advised parents to let their children know that the “everyone-is-doing it” mentality is a big misconception. “If you truly want to fit in with your peers,” Martin said, “most kids are not using.” Martin also recommends that parents stay up-to-date on what’s new in the world of substances. For example, he said, the sheriff ’s office has encountered many students with vape pens that look like USB ports, which can contain a variety of drugs. “It’s not always nicotine,” he said. “They can be swapped out for THC. We’ve found heroin in them.” Most importantly, Valuck emphasized that parents shouldn’t doubt the impact they can have on a child by openly discussing the dangers of drugs and alcohol — not only around times like prom and graduation, but also year-round. “Research has shown,” he said, “that they listen to us more than we think.”
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RED ROCKS CONCERTS From left, Brad Rupert, Susan Harmon and Ron Mitchell pose for a promotional photo taken in 2015, as they campaigned, successfully, to recall and replace three members of the Jeffco school board. COURTESY PHOTO
Jeffco school board members announce re-election campaigns Rupert, Harmon and Mitchell will seek reelection this November BY SHANNA FORTIER SFORTIER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A majority of the Jefferson County Board of Education will seek to maintain three seats this November. Board president Ron Mitchell, Susan Harmon and Brad Rupert have filed to run for re-election. The three were elected in 2015 following the recall of former board majority members Ken Witt, Julie Williams and John Newkirk. Harmon, Mitchell and Rupert have been serving the remaining two years of the recalled members’ terms. Rupert serves District 1, which covers Arvada, Pomona and Standley Lake areas; Harmon serves District 2, which covers Conifer, Evergreen, Golden and Green Mountain areas; and Mitchell serves District 5, which covers Chatfield, Columbine and Dakota Ridge areas. “We are asking voters for support to continue the work we began two years ago to create a positive, collaborative work environment in Jeffco that results in student success and improved achievement,” Mitchell, a former high school principal, said.
“We look forward to working with our new superintendent Dr. Jason Glass to make the Jeffco School District one of the best in the nation.” Harmon, an attorney, said Jeffco schools have turned the tide and board members want to ensure continued success. “We have more work to do to ensure all graduates are career and college ready,” Harmon said. “We must attract and retain top teachers and principals. We’re excited to continue to work with our community on these issues and others.” In 2015, an entirely new five-member board was elected when minority members Lesley Dahlkemper and Jill Fellman announced that they would not seek re-election. Ali Lasell and Amanda Stevens won those seats. Lasell serves District 3, which covers Arvada West, Ralston Valley and Wheat Ridge areas. Stevens serves District 4, which covers Alameda, Bear Creek, Jefferson and Lakewood areas. Lasell and Stevens are serving four-year terms that expire in 2019. The incumbents filed their intent to seek re-election and opened their campaign committees with the Colorado Secretary of State on May 24. According to the Secretary of State, as of May 25, no other candidates had filed to run for these seats. Candidates must file before August for inclusion on the 2017 November ballot.
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JEFFCO NEWS IN A HURRY Jeffco Library summer reading Jefferson County Public Library’s 2017 Summer Reading Program begins on June 1 and runs through July 31. This year’s goal is to read 30 million minutes this summer. Jeffco library patrons of all ages are welcome to participate. To learn more or to sign up, visit www.summerreading.jeffcolibrary. org.
Excavation of Magic Mountain The community is invited to participate in a new excavation effort of the Magic Mountain archaeological site, which is located near the Apex Trailhead in Golden. Participants may choose one of three options: a general site tour, which lasts about an hour; a handsSEE BRIEFS, P15
September 21
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12 Arvada Press
LOCAL
VOICES
I
HITTING HOME
Michael Alcorn
June 1, 2017J
Our mistakes may weigh heavy on our children’s heads
recently finished reading “Gods and Generals,” by Jeff Shaara. It is the story of several of the battles in the time period leading up to the Battle of Gettysburg, which was the pivotal battle of the American Civil War. It is a glorious book, as was its predecessor, “The Killer Angels,” written by Shaara’s father, Michael. I don’t feel it quite reaches the artistry of prose of “Angels,” but “Gods” is an excellent and necessary companion to the former. Mustreads for anybody even slightly interested in the Civil War or in American history. And, again, every time I read a Civil War history, I am struck by the degree to which it feels like the war was not so much won by the Union,
as it was not lost. In other words, if the Civil War had been a football game, it would have been a 0-0 tie midway through the 4th quarter, with Jay Cutler and Brock Osweiler quarterbacking the two teams: the winner was going to be the one who did not screw up last. On several occasions, the Union was in a position to strike a decisive blow, and failed to. In some cases, because the general in charge refused to attack until he had more men (even though he had vastly greater numbers already), or until the plan was in perfect order (even if it meant waiting months to attack and losing tactical surprise), or until their intelligence was completely accurate (even if it meant al-
lowing an army in a rout get away). I think it’s just dumb lucky for all of us that Robert E. Lee and Jeb Stuart returned the favor and allowed themselves to be sucked into an unfavorable battlefield at Gettysburg. But had the Union acted more decisively sooner, there is the real possibility that the war would have ended much sooner with many, many fewer deaths. What is fascinating about the way the Shaaras tell their stories is that they do so from a revolving first-person perspective, so we hear the (imagined) thoughts and conversations of the central players. As a result, even though it SEE ALCORN, P13
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR New era for Jeffco schools The expected failure of the experiment to have a school district run by a militant labor union is now obvious. Voters in this November’s election can toss out the three board members now in office through the unfair recall, and give the new superintendent a chance to function in a professional climate. He will be able to restore the former superintendent’s efforts to balance student needs with taxpayer confidence, neither of which have received even incidental consideration under union direction. Tom Graham, Arvada
The magic of being authentic BUSINESS AIKIDO
Glenn Bott
I
f you want to increase your personal power and influence, and feel better, start being authentic. Be 100 percent you 100 percent of the time. Authentic people radiate good juju. They’re being themselves in every moment and this vibe is contagious. People like being around them because they feel better — more relaxed and safe. They know authentic people don’t have hidden agendas and are always straightforward and honest. Being authentic is available to
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all, but few choose it or have the courage to behave and live this way. Authentic people love and accept themselves for who they are — they’re comfortable in their own skin. They know they aren’t perfect (who is?), and they don’t really care. While they accept themselves in the moment, they continually strive to be a better version (Me 2.0) as they move forward. New experiences give them new vantage points from which to grow and expand SEE BOTT P13
Student Performance Not a Priority in Jeffco The Jeffco school board recently hired a new superintendent. The bad news, and there is a lot, is he does not have any performance based bonuses in his contract. There are zero bonuses tied to gains in student achievement. Why ? Is it because in Eagle County, where he came from, student performance was quite mixed. In 2014 , after his first year in Eagle graduation rates were 88-89 percent, but in 2016 they decreased to 79-80 percent. Is it too much to handle coming from a district with 7,000 students to a district with 85,000 students? Some more bad news: Tax payers already pay 20.15 percent of his salary into his PERA retirement account, and we pay (his) 8 percent contribution to his retirement (why do we fund 28
percent without any performance requirements?!) and an additional 7 percent for retirement will be deposited into a separate annuity. Wow! His annual raise is tied to the consumer price index (teachers do not receive that) so he makes more money next year regardless of performance. We hoped this board would set a rational salary for our new Superintendent. They announced $300,000 was the target compensation for the search but Mr. Glass looks to be pulling in closer to $400,000 a year. For what? Guess Jeffco really didn’t need that billion dollar tax increase after all. Anne Warren, Littleton Million Dollar Superintendent Wow, I am shocked that the new Jeffco Superintendent will have a 3-year compensation package that is worth over a million dollars! Isn’t Jeffco short of money? Wasn’t the comment “we need more money” mentioned at practically every school board meeting? Let’s not forget, the school board asked for a billion dollars this past November. In his previous position Mr. Glass had a base salary of $195,000, his new base is $265,000. That’s a 35 percent increase and a 20 percent increase over his predecessor. As a reminder, Mr. McMinimee had a base salary of $220,000 and Cindy Stevenson had a base salary
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SEE LETTERS, P13 Arvada press A legal newspaper of general circulation in Jefferson County, Colorado, the Arvada Press is published weekly on Thursday by West Suburban Community Media, 722 Washington Ave, Unit 210, Golden, CO 80401. Send address change to: 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Arvada Press 13
7June 1, 2017
LETTERS FROM PAGE 12
of $205,000. As if Mr. Glass’s salary wasn’t outrageous enough evidently he can’t afford a car because he is also getting $750 a month car allowance ($9,000 a year). He also gets 25 days extra vacation, annual raise equal to consumer price index (regardless if our hard working teachers receive a raise.) and nearly $94,000 in retirement benefits plus a $795,000 life insurance policy. Does he think this job will kill him? And we are going to pay his living and moving expenses for six months. Who does that? To top it off, there is no bonus for student achievement, none. Both of his predecessors had bonuses tied to gains in student achievement. That is right, for over a decade Jeffco Superintendents have had performance bonuses, but not Mr. Glass. Makes me wonder exactly what Mr. Glass sees as a priority if not student achievement. His contract screams of greed with zero accountability. But let’s not forget, it is all for the students. Thank you Jeffco School Board! Stephen R. Alley Jr, Lakewood New salary way out of hand Not only is the new Jeffco Superintendent’s salary out of control, but there is no accountability to improving results whatsoever. No student achievement goals, no goals to reducing overhead,
BOTT FROM PAGE 12
who they are. When you walk your talk, speak your truth and have to courage to boldly be yourself, the world notices and respects you. The only magic in this is that so many don’t behave this way — by default you are noticed and are remembered. We all know those who say anything to get your attention or close a sale. After a few times of being burned we have our shields up and begin to doubt our fellow man. Flim-flam artists are everywhere. They may do very well initially, but they don’t have repeat business or true friends because they’re constantly scamming and lying to others. Successful solopreneurs I work with have cultivated this empowering trait of being authentic. Their personal and professional integrity oozes from their pores — they walk their talk. They move forward with confidence knowing they have the necessary skills and beliefs to see them through any potential hardships. They will find a way. Inauthentic people say whatever is convenient in the moment yet never follow through on their spoken words. By doing this, they continually shoot themselves in the foot and undermine their personal power and professional stature. They blame others for their predicament and often play the role of a victim. They don’t realize we’re all being watched and judged every moment of every day. Anything that diminishes your integrity also diminishes your power and influence.
no bonuses tied to any type of improvement. He walks away with over a million dollar contract with zero accountability. How is that a win for Jeffco students and teachers? This is a waste of our hard-earned tax dollars. As a full-time worker, I have goals and objectives to meet and if not, I could lose my job. I am held to high levels of accountability but I also achieve financial rewards for achieving those assigned goals. What is Mr. Glass held accountable to – nothing! A million-dollar contract with zero accountability. It’s a win for him, a loss for tax payers and more importantly, the students he is supposed to serve. If you want to give him a CEO salary, then hold him accountable like a CEO. Absolutely shameful that our current school board would waste a million dollars and expect no results. Karen Buelter, Golden Thanks for accepting view I’d like to thank the Arvada Press for running a two page article about the local Muslim community on May 25th. In a time that there is so much fear mongering going on in this country we need the press to help expose people to things outside of their day to day life. Muslims are just like everyone else and we need to accept them in our communities and learn from their unique life experiences. The reason America is Great is because we are a melting pot of every culture around the world. Taylor Rose, Arvada
Whenever you lie or miss a commitment you create tension in yourself. This is because every time you speak you’re also listening. You’re training yourself and others that you can’t be trusted. This incongruence creates tension within your body. Your heart hears you commit to something, yet your mind has no intention of doing it. This discord creates an ongoing tension that slowly increases over time unless consciously put to rest. This tension ultimately results in physical ailments. Western medicine is beginning to prove that our thoughts and words have power. Dr. Masaru Emoto’s famous water molecule experiments on the power of words and intentions is one of the easiest to demonstrate and verify. Dr. Joe Dispenza’s book, “You are the Placebo,” further proves the power of our minds and thoughts. We all know very intelligent and capable people who live a life of turmoil because of the diminishing thoughts they repeat to themselves many thousands of times per day. Use the power of authenticity to your advantage. Begin to monitor your thoughts and tell a new story. The single best way to move forward powerfully is to begin being impeccable. Walk your talk and meet your commitments. Do this with a song in your heart and watch your health and world change for the better. Glenn Bott of Arvada is enthusiastic about life and everything he does. He speaks and consults on empowerment and resiliency. He shares what he learned by successfully reinventing himself after recovering from a severe brain injury.
ALCORN FROM PAGE 12
is a fiction based in fact and meticulously constructed from historical records, the readers get a glimpse into the thinking of the characters. And, the way the Southern generals are portrayed is quite sympathetic: these are smart, devoutly religious men who just want to defend their homes (of course, in the process, preserving slavery). And then I noticed that, from the telling of Lee and Jackson, they saw the whole affair as a matter of God’s will, and they did their part, and then accepted His judgment, to the degree they could discern it. As such, I wonder if it ever occurred to them that the unnecessary prolonging of the war, with the thousands of deaths that followed, might have been God’s punishment for the “original sin” of slavery. And then I got to thinking, “what sins are we committing today, as a nation, that our grandchildren will end up
paying a terrible price for?” I know there are those reading this who will immediately jump to income and justice disparities as the great stain that will be atoned for in 50 years; I know there are also those who think the great sin is the abandonment of our Judeo-Christian heritage and mores. Personally, I think the widespread and unchecked corruption — the perversion of the rule of law — of the political process is something that will have to be reckoned with someday. But the terrible truth is that, whatever mistakes we are making today will be paid for, not by us, and certainly not by the D.C.-dwellers codifying those mistakes, but by our children and by our children’s children. I just pray that the next “Sins of the Father” do not leave us with hordes of new people to honor like those who fell at Gettysburg … or like we just honored on Monday. Michael Alcorn is a teacher and writer who lives in Arvada with his wife and three children. His novels are available at MichaelJAlcorn.com
OBITUARIES SODERHOLM
Henry A. Soderholm
Henry A. Soderholm, 84, of Boynton Beach, FL and formerly of Westminster, CO passed away on May 23, 2017. Henry was born in Malden, MA. He was a retired Master Sergeant, US Air Force, veteran of Vietnam. After his retirement, he joined the US Postal Office in Denver, CO. He is predeceased by his wife Jo An, 2 children Karen & Richard Soderholm and a brother Arthur Soderholm, sister-in-law Betty Soderholm and brother-in-law Patrick Griffin. Henry is survived by his son Jon Viscione of MA, step children Jill, John, Jeff & Theresa, 2 sisters Barbara and husband Marcel Koval of TX and Karen Griffin of Delray Beach, FL, 2 grandchildren Morgan & Kyler Soderholm and many
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step grandchildren & great grandchildren, daughter-inlaw Kym Soderholm, several nieces & nephews and close friend Alice Russell of Boynton Beach, FL. Funeral service and military honors will be at South Florida National Cemetery, 6501 South State Road 7 (441) Lake Worth, FL, Lane 5 on August 10, 2017, 11:00AM. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Trustbridge Hospice, 5505 East Ave., West Palm Beach, FL 33407 www.trustbridge.com. Lorne & Sons Funeral Home, Delray Beach, FL (www.Lorneandsons.com) in charge of arrangements.
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14 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
You’ll never get off the ground if you’re trying to avoid the grind
I
don’t believe in wishing and hoping and praying for things to get better. I don’t believe in positive thinking all by itself, or slogans to grease the way. There’s work to be done. Meditation and tent meetings and retreats and colonic irrigations aren’t on my list. I don’t believe that you get there from here by being out there. I would sooner make summer camp moccasins than sit in a room with hundreds of others and listen to a heap of calibrated phrases. Most of us are recovering from something. Bad relationships, job failures, drugs, alcohol, financial woes, the recent election. We like to be handed pamphlets at the door. Given DVDs. Hear a deep voice say, “Listen without interrupting. Speak without accusing. Give without sparing, but we don’t accept American Express.” I take my cues from observation and
lots of research, and then I simply roll up my sleeves and get to work. Others need others. My friend H. L. Mencken said, “Deep within the heart of every evangelist lies the wreck of a car salesman.” Elsewhere, practically everywhere, it’s Craig Marshall easy enough to find Smith packaged motivation. Lose-weight-withthis-pill kind of stuff. No one loses weight by taking a pill, unless it puts you to sleep for 20 years. Washington Irving wrote “Rip Van Winkle” after filing for bankruptcy in 1818, hoping to write his way out of debt. He could have gone away just like Van Winkle, and bent elbows at the bar with a bunch of dwarves, just like Van Winkle.
QUIET DESPERATION
Instead, he got to work. I watched a film the other night. It was made before they figured out how to blow things up, including people, when films depended upon scripts and directors and good acting, instead of junk in space. I watched and listened for dialogue and dialogue pauses, editing, lighting, and “Dutch” camera angles. The soundtrack is unforgettable. I thought about the director, Carol Reed, who knew what he was doing because he studied film, and got to work. I’ll name it at the end of this, but here are some other clues: zither, postwar Vienna. I am recovering from something — maybe a number of things — but the main one is the bottle. There is a lot of work that is involved that others never see, unless you know an alcoholic. And who doesn’t? I can hear Dusty Springfield right now. “Wishing and hoping and thinking
and praying, planning and dreaming” won’t get the job done. The point is that I have to do much more than sign up for a seminar. A long, long time ago, I heard about record albums that you could listen to in your sleep, so you didn’t have to do the work when you were awake. You could learn a foreign language in your sleep. You could learn about self-help in your sleep. Bunkum. The film I referred to is “The Third Man.” No one watches films like it now. It takes too much work. It’s all substance. It’s intelligently made. No one flies without wings. The galaxy in it is right here on the ground. My best motivational speaker is myself.
o Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, edu- 4 cator and Highlands Ranch resident. p He can be reached at craigmarshallt smith@comcast.net. o o l i t
Rainy day games with the kids can brighten dreary days LIFELONG LEARNING Esther Macalady
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healthy lifestyle. Keep the following items handy: a beach ball, large pail, wrapping paper tubes, large storage container, paper plates, and marker.
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Arvada Press 15
7June 1, 2017
MACALADY FROM PAGE 14
ball back and forth with your legs shaped like a V to enclose the ball. The soft beach ball helps children grip the ball and won’t damage the house. Start close together and move farther and farther apart keeping the experience successful. Stay on the floor and gently throw and catch guiding the ball into their arms. Show children how to place arms and hands to catch. Children can graduate to sitting on the couch so the ball lands in easy reach when they miss. Next stand very close together
BRIEFS FROM PAGE 11
on option, which lasts about 45 minutes and provides people with the opportunity to help professional archaeologists excavate the site; or the combo option, which lasts about two hours and includes both the tour and the hands-on dig. Tours will begin on the hour between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on June 10-June 16 and June 19-June 24. Being put on by the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, it is free to participate, but attendees should book
and ease the ball into your children’s arms. Gradually move farther apart. Some children will be ready to learn and learn quickly. Others may not be ready as children learn at different rates. When your child has mastered catching like this, count or say the ABC’S, as you catch. Beach Ball Sports Who needs a beach? Throw a beach ball into a laundry basket to play basketball or tap a ball back and forth for volleyball. Playing kickball is a good way to start running bases. Make numbered bases out of paper plates taped to the floor. Practice running around the bases
a tour in advance. To do so, send an email to Sarah. Fischer@dmns.org. To learn more, visit www. dmns.org/magicmountain. Golden Rotary golf tournament The Golden Rotary Foundation is hosting its 16th annual International Classic, an all-day golf event, beginning at noon on June 23 at Applewood Golf Course, 14001 W. 32nd Ave., in Golden. The golf tournament is a four-person scramble. Golfers may create their own foursome, or event organizers can set one up. All levels of golfers are welcome. Cost is $125 per player or $500 for
a team of four. Cost includes a box lunch and buffet dinner. For those who do not want to play golf, but would like to attend the event, cost to attend the silent auction and buffet dinner is $25 per person. Proceeds will benefit Rotarians and help fund the organization’s Golden and Jefferson County community projects. To learn more, register or find a schedule of the tournaments events, visit www. rotaryclubofgolden.org. Quilt museum free day A Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD)
HA N IC & D IESE L M EC D N A S R E IV SS A & B DR a st le R o c k) LOCA L C LA S NE ED ED (C R E P L E H R E D R IV
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together and tap each one as you say its number. Soccer can also be played indoors. For an indoor soccer net, turn a large plastic storage container on its side. Bowling is easy with a few plastic containers and an old ball that has lost some of its air. To play indoor hockey, or golf, hit a ball with a wrapping paper tube reinforced with tape. Some other active games include Twister. Call out colors to jump on. There are also many variations of freeze tag, if you have room. When tagged call out a number, color, letter, geography feature, or story character when tagged. You can close the curtains and play flashlight tag.
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Families can also set up an obstacle course with cushions, pillows, chairs and blankets. Children can crawl around and try to beat their best time. You can add a little math by making a chart of their times. These obstacle courses are fun, expend a lot of energy, and easy to pick up.
Esther Macalady lives in Golden. Grandparents Teach Too is an organization that helps families prepare young children for success in school and a lifetime love of learning. For more fun check out grandparents teachtoo.blogspot.com, also Facebook and Pinterest. Follow us on wnmufm.org/ Learning Through the Seasons live and podcasts.
free day will be offered at the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum, 200 Violet St., Suite 140, in Golden, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 9. To learn more about the quilt museum, visit www. rmqm.org. For more information on the SCFD, visit www.scfd.org. NREL campus tour The National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) sustainable campus walking tour takes place from 9:30 - 11:30 a.m. June 16 at the NREL Education Center, 15013 Denver West Parkway, in Golden. Tours are free and open to the public, but space is
limited and advance registration is required. Attendees are urged to register early, as space fills up quickly. Participants must be 18 or older, a U.S. citizen and have a photo ID. The tour is an outdoor walking tour, so attendees should wear comfortable walking shoes and dress appropriately for the weather. Visits include the NREL Education Center, Research Support Facility, NREL Parking Garage and Central Detention Pond. For more information, visit www.nrel.gov or call the education center at 303384-6565.
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LOCAL
June 1, 2017J
LIFE
Teenagers behind the wheel Teaching a teen to drive is both exciting and nerve-wracking
FIVE STEPS FOR TEENS TO OBTAIN A DRIVER’S LICENSE 1. Take a driver’s education class. A 30-hour class, which is usually offered online or in a classroom setting, will teach a teen everything he or she needs to know to pass the test required to obtain a learner’s permit.
BY CHRISTY STEADMAN CSTEADMAN@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
R
ayelyn Lockard is looking forward to being able to do some simple tasks on her own in the near future — helping her mother with the day-to-day errands, making a quick trip to the grocery store to pick up a few items and leaving her high school campus during her lunch break. “I just enjoy driving around,” she said. “I’m excited to be able to start doing stuff on my own time.” The first street that Lockard, 16, drove on was Delaware Street in Englewood, and for the past 10 months, she has been practicing her driving skills. Now, she only lacks documenting two nighttime driving hours before she is eligible to obtain her driver’s license. “She was a good student,” her mother Annie Bennett said. But that still didn’t make the experience any easier, she added. “It was not always a smooth process.” For lots of American teenagers, getting a driver’s license provides a sense of freedom. They can drive themselves to and from school, and they no longer have to depend on parents for rides to hang out with friends or meet up with study groups. But for parents, although excited about the milestone in their child’s life, it can be a nerve-wracking experience of relinquishing control of being their child’s safest mode of transportation. “I think I was the problem at first,” Bennett said. “I was really nervous — I struggled a lot. But now, for the most part, my nerves seem to be a little more normal.” It is normal for parents to feel anxious about their teen learning to drive, said Ben Baron, owner and founder of DriveSafe Driving Schools, which teaches about 5,000 teens to drive annually through its 10 locations in the Denver-metro area. “When we lose the ability to solely protect our kids, it’s normal for parents to feel anx-
2. Obtain a learner’s permit. In Colorado, anybody under the age of 18 must have a learner’s permit for one year before being able to get a license. So, if a teen wants to get his or her license on their 16th birthday, they must get their learner’s permit on their 15th birthday.
Rayelyn Lockard, 16, practices driving in preparation for her driver’s examination. Lockard only has two nighttime driving hours left to document before she is eligible to obtain her driver’s license. COURTESY PHOTO ious,” Baron said. But “people get through it. Learning to drive is a milestone in their lives. It can and should be a great thing.” Baron went through the experience with his two children, who are now in their 20s. He encourages all families with a teen who will soon start the learning-to-drive process to have an open and honest conversation about each other’s nerves. “Be genuine with your teen,” he said. “Tell them, we’re super-excited, but also nervous because we’re losing our control of your protection.” Bennett agrees that having conversations throughout the learning-to-drive process is important and beneficial. It strengthened their relationship, she said. “Rayelyn and I have grown because of this,” Bennett said. “We’ve gotten closer, with our communication and trust.” Another thing that helped Bennett was Lockard’s weeklong driver’s ed course, which she took through Peak Drivers Ed last July. “It helped a ton because I didn’t have to be the first person to be in the car with her,” Bennett said. “I thought, OK, at least she knows how to turn the car on and where the gas and brakes are.” Some parents are terrified to teach their teen to drive, said Jake Dinwiddie, the lead instructor of DriveSafe’s
BE COURTEOUS TO TEEN DRIVERS student driver. Jake Dinwiddie, 29, has been teaching teens to drive for 4 1/2 years. Being cut off or honked at in heavy He has a background in sports traffic can terrify a teen or new broadcasting and acting, but driver, he said. sought out his career with DriveSafe Driving Schools because he missed “Realize it might be a kid behind the the interaction and connection he wheel doing their best,” Dinwiddie had with teens during the time he said. “When they’re making a coached high school football. mistake, they’re not purposefully trying to make that mistake. Dinwiddie would like to remind Mistakes happen when learning to everyone who drives in Colorado drive, just like they do with any new to be courteous on the roads — skill.” especially to cars marked as a Littleton/Lakewood location and the company-wide manager of academic quality. So after completing each lesson, he said, parents are generally excited to hear about how the lesson went and willing to take advice on what to work on. “We have the same goal,” he said, “and that is for their son or daughter to become a safe driver. It’s really neat to see the a-ha moments from both the parents and the students.” Much of teaching a teen to drive is patience and providing a supportive environment, Baron said. But two tips he would give parents are to lead by example by modeling good driving behavior and focus on safe decision-making in all scenarios of driving, for both local roads and highways. “When you think about learning to drive, you often first think about teaching the
physical, behind-the-wheel aspect,” Baron said. “But more importantly, it’s also learning the mental aspect of driving — safe decision-making.” Once Lockard had completed her driver’s ed course, she and her mother had their first driving lesson together in an RTD parking lot on a Sunday evening. “I didn’t know what to expect,” Bennett said. “So I wanted to go somewhere where there was no traffic.” But her daughter was already confident enough in her own skills — she knew what all the street signs meant, understood how to turn and how the streetlights work. And with Lockard’s grandfather putting in about 25 percent of the driving supervision work, Bennett and her daughter eventually made their way to driving on well-known, predictable side streets and
3. Complete behind-the-wheel training. State law mandates that any teen younger than age 16 ½ at the time of applying for his or her driver’s license must complete six hours of behind-the-wheel training with a professional driving instructor. 4. Practice driving with an adult. The state requires that teens practice driving with a supervising adult for a minimum of 50 hours within the time of obtaining a learner’s permit and applying for a driver’s license. The hours must be documented by a supervising adult, and the written log must be provided to the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) at the time of applying for a driver’s license. 5. Pass the DMV’s driver’s exam. Once a teen successfully passes the driver’s exam, he or she can obtain a driver’s license and legally drive in Colorado. However, some restrictions concerning curfew and number of minor-aged passengers allowed do apply. For more details on obtaining a driver’s license, visit www.colorado.gov/pacific/dmv/licenses. eventually to 45 mph. “The highways are still intimidating because most accidents happen on the highway,” Lockard said. “But otherwise, it’s fun to drive.” She drives almost every day for about an hour. And Bennett is proud of what her daughter has accomplished. “I’m confident she can do it — she knows what she’s doing,” Bennett said. “But you never get used to them growing up. And then, all of a sudden, they’re driving.”
Arvada Press 17
7June 1, 2017
The art and possibility of paper Arvada Center’s three summer exhibits explore how paper is used to make art
IF YOU GO WHAT: Stan Meyer: Poetic Presence, Paper on Paper: The Art of Chine-Collé, and Paper. Works WHERE: Arvada Center 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada WHEN: June 1 - Aug. 6. Gallery hours - 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday COST: Free INFORMATION: 720-898-7200 or www. arvadacenter.org
BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Paper is not just a canvas on which art can be created. In its myriad incarnations — tissue, cast, folded and countless others — it can also be used as the medium and form of creative expression. And that’s just what the artists in the Arvada Center’s three summer exhibitions — Stan Meyer: Poetic Presence, Paper on Paper: The Art of ChineCollé, and Paper.Works — did. “We’ve been wanting to do a paper show here for a while,” said Kristin Bueb, exhibition coordinator at the center. “In the exhibits, we tried to find a mix of representational and abstract works. Some of these artists have shown here before, but for others, this is their first time.” The three exhibits run at the center, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., June 1 through Aug. 6. Galleries are open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. The galleries also remain open until 7:30 p.m. on evenings with theater performances. In the Main Gallery, Paper.Works
Ken Elliott’s “Descending Trees I.” COURTESY OF ARVADA CENTER
Mark Lunning’s “Fragments of Entropy, No. 3.” COURTESY OF ARVADA CENTER
exhibits the work of 20 artists who work in paper. The works on display range from miniature, extraordinarily detailed creations to huge sculptures and wall installations. “This is the first time I’ve seen this work installed at full size,” said Peter Yumi, whose massive work, “The Mark of the Beast SOS,” hangs in the gallery. “The piece is about the 2016 election, how people reacted to it and acted toward each other on social media.” Yumi’s creation blends classical images from Greek and biblical myths with distortions and images from modern society. “It was a tremendous challenge doing it in the time span I had, but I get teary-
eyed seeing it now,” he said. “I hope people who see it ask some questions and take a look at online behavior and how we communicate.” The Theatre Gallery is home to Paper on Paper: The Art of ChineCollé, which features the work of Mark Lunning, Ken Elliott, Jane Braley, Lynn Heitler and Amy Metier — printmakers who utilize the technique of chine-collé in creative ways. Chine-collé is a printmaking process that transfers a print onto a support surface and thinner, more delicate papers that become a part of the printed image, according to information provided by the center.
The end result is a piece that appears both simple and of great depth. In the Upper Gallery, visitors will see the works of Stan Meyer in his exhibit, Poetic Presence. Meyer creates flat-woven pieces out of roofing paper, taking inspiration from the designs of ancient cultures like the Celts and Maori, nature and architecture. “I like the idea of language and calligraphy,” Meyer explained. “I want the pieces to be something positive, and that means different things to different people.” Creating his large-scale works requires a lot of time and attention to detail, especially during the weaving portion of their creation. “For me, it’s all about the language and shape,” he said. “What’s great about abstracts is you can take whatever you want out of them.”
Life is a “Cabaret” at Miners Alley Playhouse Classic musical takes on new resonance BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Those who doubt the adage that those who forget history are doomed to repeat it should take note of the lessons from “Cabaret,” a classic musical which details the rise of fascism and the stifling of creativity that goes hand-in-hand with such an event. And it doesn’t hurt that the show features some top notch musical numbers as well. “It’s a romp with a sobering message,” said Jim Walker, who stars in the Miners Alley Production. “There are amazing musical numbers, sexy boys and girls, and a message that will shake you a bit.” Directed by Len Matheo, Miners Alley, 1224 Washington Ave., is hosting Tony Award-winning show from May 19 through June 25. Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2 p.m. on Sunday. The show focuses on a nightclub in Berlin in the late 1920s, as a dark cloud moves over Europe. Into the vibrant scene comes Cliff Bradshaw (Luke Sorge), an American writer
IF YOU GO WHAT: “Cabaret”
Friday and Saturday - 7:30 p.m.
WHERE: Miners Alley Playhouse
Sunday - 2 p.m.
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looking to live a little. He quickly falls in love with singer Sally Bowles (Adriane Wilson), and finds himself pulled into the world of the cabaret. And The Emcee (Jim Walker) is there to share it all with the audience. “The great thing about the way this show is staged is that the entire theater is made into the cabaret,” Sorge said. “Miners Alley leaned into its smaller space and came up with an idea that brings everyone into the show.” People may remember the show for its racy costumes, elaborate song and dance routines, and vivacious characters, but all the glitz and glamour points to a world under assault. “I didn’t realize how politically relevant it would be. It’s way more than singing and dancing,” Wilson said. “The show is about important issues,
and takes place during a scary rise to power. That comes across in its tone.”
That the show manages to contain the disparate tones of flash and foreboding is a testament to the power of the music and story. All three actors said the cast is having a blast working on the show, and that makes for an even more entertaining theater experience for the audience. “In a way, it’s almost like seeing two plays, but that provides a full emotional experience,” Wilson said. “That is what the theater is supposed to do.”
18 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
‘The Luckiest People’ in first run at Curious Theatre Family issues are explored in play commissioned by local operation
IF YOU GO “The Luckiest People” plays through June 17 at Curious Theatre, 1080 Acoma St., Denver. Performances: 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: curioustheatre.org, 303-623-0524.
BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
There are two living rooms, expertly designed by Charles Packard to set the scene at Denver’s Curious Theatre: on the lower level, a dingy looking living room in a retirement home apartment, almost done in sepia, with a sentimental landscape painting on the wall. The other, a bright, contemporary living room with a large abstract painting and red furniture, is backed by a wall of windows that bring the changing sky into the picture — an important element. They set a scene for a conflicted Jewish family, after a funeral for the recently deceased mother, Dorothy. Meet sad, cranky father Oscar (Randy Moore, who observed that he’d played old men since he was a teen); thin-skinned doctor/son Richard (Eril Sandvold); Richard’s appealing, articulate partner David (John Jurachek); and Richard’s emotional (and funny) sister Laura (Karen Slack), who flew in from Shanghai to help sit Shiva. A look at the cast list assures the audience of the strong performances generally expected at Curious
Randy Moore plays the testy father, Oscar; Erik Sandvold is his distraught son Richard; John Jurachek is Richard’s partner in the world premiere of “The Luckiest People” at Curious Theatre. COURTESY PHOTO Theatre. This is the world premiere of “The Luckiest People,” a play Curious commissioned after working with playwright Meredith Friedman as artist-
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in-residence — and the company has commissioned two more plays following this family and issues of middle age, in the spirit of “storytelling” the company has adopted.
“I don’t want to make jewelry from macaroni,” declares Oscar, who has refused all of the center’s activities. Turns out he plans to move in with his son when his lease is up … But said son and partner are seriously talking about adopting 10-year-old Joshua and housing him in the spare bedroom. In an effort to cheer Oscar up, they play “Funny Girl,” with its song about “people who need people are the luckiest people on the world” — thus the title. There are funny lines and situations and sad ones in this well-crafted script, although the theme of family issues after a funeral would seem to be a bit overdone — probably because it allows for the accumulation of a cast of differing, quirky characters. Skillfully directed by Chip Walton, the play looks at love, family relationships, careers, sandwich generation, women’s roles, marriage, children and aging — the stuff our lives are made of — offering a satisfying evening at the theater. Try to stay for the talkback with these articulate actors if possible.
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Arvada Press 19
7June 1, 2017
Up close and personal with Lakewood’s arts world INSPIRE week returns with old favorites, new experiences BY CLARKE READER CREADER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Lakewood is not only home to some vital and transformative arts groups and organizations, but also a city where many artists make their homes. It’s easy to remain unaware of this fact, but the Heritage, Culture and Arts’ annual INSPIRE Arts Week wants to change that by bringing art lovers into the spaces where creation happens. “We have something going on this year that I’ve wanted to do for a long time,” said Lorene Joos, arts programming curator for the Heritage, Culture and the Arts division. “People often don’t think of Lakewood as having all this arts stuff, but we have so many artists here.” The annual 11-day event highlights the city’s creative energy through free and discounted events presented by more than 20 arts and cultural organizations like Rockley Music, 40 West
Arts, Belmar Block 7 and the Washington Heights Arts Center. “We have people who look forward to INSPIRE all year,” Joos said. “For people who are hesitant about the arts, this is a great time to come out and see what’s going on in the community.” Community favorites like the Rockin’ Block Party and Lakewood Symphony concert are returning for another year, but it’s some new events that give people an up-close look at Lakewood’s art world. One first-time event will be a block party from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, June 10, at Belmar’s Block 7 art district. Many of the galleries on Block 7 have taken part in INSPIRE events before, according to Valerie Savarie, with the Valkarie Gallery, but this is the first time they’re all celebrating together. “We have a lot of new artists in the block, and we’ll have a lot of booths out for people,” she said. “So many people don’t know about us, and we want to get the word out.” For years, Joos said she’s been trying to set up some kind of studio tour, and this year, it’s finally a reality. From 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 4, visitors can take the first Artists in Residences Studio Tour, in
which area artists will open up their home studios to the public. “We have artists participating all over the city who will be allowing people to see how they live and work,” explained local artist and tour organizer, Carrie MaKenna. “Lakewood has been promoting the arts for a long time, and I thought it would be really great for people to see how many art-
ists we have.” The tour is a driving one, where tourists are provided a map of the city with the homes of more than 20 participating artists clearly marked. “I hope people are surprised by how many artists we have in our community,” MaKenna said. “It’s not often you actually get to go into these people’s homes and see how they work.”
IMPORTANT BENEFIT INFORMATION FOR FORMER
Rocky flats Workers
Cold War Patriots is a community resource and advocacy group helping nuclear weapons and uranium workers and their families get the recognition, compensation and health care they have earned.
MEETING TIMES & LOCATIONS Tuesday, June 6th Wednesday, June 7th Thursday, June 8th
Lakewood’s INSPIRE Arts Week returns June 1 through 11 to highlight the city’s many creative offerings. Creative businesses like the Art of Her gallery will be participating in the first Belmar Block 7 party on June 10. COURTESY PHOTOS Valkarie Gallery artist Zachary Reece work “Complete Control,” and others like it will be part of the first Belmar Block 7 party on June 10. The party is part of Lakewood’s annual INSPIRE Arts Week.
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20 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
CLUBS Ongoing Activities Mondays Golden Chapter, Order of DeMolay meets at 7 p.m. every first and third Wednesday in the town of Golden. Walt Disney, Mel Blanc & Walter Cronkite are counted amongst its Alumni. DeMolay is an organization for young men between the ages of 12 and 21 that offers character building, leadership training, and life skill development. We offer many activities, academic opportunities and scholarships. Please contact the chapter for more information. Email demolaygolden@gmail. com or www.coloradodemolay.org and visit Golden’s page under the Chapter tab by clicking on the Golden photo. Golden Nar-Anon family group meets 7:30-9 p.m. Mondays at Calvary Episcopal Church, 1320 Arapahoe St. We ask that people enter on the east side of the church and follow the signs to the upstairs meeting room. Call the Nar-Anon Family Groups World Service Organization at 800-4776291 or go to Nar-Anon.org. Jefferson County Republican Men’s Club meets 7-9 a.m. Mondays at Davies’ Chuck Wagon Diner, 10151 W. 26th Ave., Lakewood. Meeting fee is $5 (cash preferred). Order from diner menu (pay on you own). Call Fred Holden at 303-421-7619 for information. Republicans, especially students, youth and women, welcome to join. Job’s Daughters, Golden Chapter Bored? Lonely? Make life-long friends. Join a group of young ladies from ages 10-20 learn leadership and organizational skills in meetings with support from friends.
16th
Meetings are the second and fourth Monday of the month in Golden. Meet periodically to do fun activities. Rewards of membership include life skills, community work and significant scholarships for college. Interested, call Job’s Daughters at 303-204-1572 to join us for an activity. Open mic Living Water Unity Spiritual Community presents open mic night – celebrate your teen self 4:30-6:30 p.m. Mondays at 7401 W. 59th Ave., Arvada. This program gives teens the opportunity to express their performing art including voice and instrument, acting, poetry, stand-up comedy, mime, etc. Open to all students in sixth to 12th grades. Email bellbottoms809@gmail.com. Square Dancing Want some fun exercise? Learn to square dance. Start at 7 p.m. any Monday at the Wheat Ridge Grange, 3850 High Court. Call 303-973-9529. Wheat Ridge Rotary Club meets noon to 1:30 p.m. Mondays for lunch at the Wheat Ridge Recreation Center, 4005 Kipling St. Come as our guest and learn about our service projects for the community. Tuesdays Applewood Kiwanis Club meets 7-8 a.m. Tuesdays at the Applewood Golf Course, 14001 W. 32nd Ave., Golden. You are invited to attend a meeting. Our goals are to serve children worldwide and in our community. We ring the bell for Salvation Army, deliver Christmas baskets to needy families and, assist the Jeffco Action Center with school supplies for children from low-income families. These are just three of our many projects. For more information, contact
Annual FREE FAMILY FUN One centralized location
TWO PONDS NWR
Visit www.arvadafestivals.com for walk/ride times Outdoor, Nature and Educational Booths Kids Activities Live Animal Presentations
Saturday, June 3, 2017
Fr Refreshmee ents
10:00 to 2:00
TWO PONDS NWR West 80th Ave., east of Kipling St.
Contact 720-898-7405 or visit www.arvadafestivals.com
NO DOGS ALLOWED IN THE REFUGE
Thank You Founding Sponsors - Since 2002
Annual Sponsors
Fred McGehan at 303-947-1565. Arvada Fine Arts Guild: 2-4 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month at Indian Tree Golf Club, 7555 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada, in the restaurant/clubhouse. Meetings are free and open to the public. Go to http:// arvadafineartsguild.com/ Arvada Sunrise Rotary Club meets 7-8 a.m. Tuesdays at The Arvada Centre For The Arts and Humanities, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. for a breakfast meeting. Come join us as our guest and learn about our community service projects and what Rotary does in the world to help people. Denver Apple Pi, an Apple/Mac computer user group, meets 7-9 p.m. the third Tuesday each month at the Applewood Community Church (downstairs), 12930 W. 32nd Ave., Golden. Program varies each month. We welcome those interested in learning more about their Apple or Mac computer. Visitors are welcome to see if you like our more mature group. More information may be found at denverapplepi. com. Golden Rotary meets 7:15-8:30 a.m. Tuesdays at Rolling Hills Country Club, 15707 W. 26 Ave., Golden. This active organization reaches neighbors in need. We build, support, and organize. We save lives locally and globally. For additional information visit www.rotayclubofgolden.org or contact Pat Madison at 303-279-1021. Lakewood Chapter of Retired and Active Federal Employees meets at 1 p.m. the second Tuesday of most months at the Episcopal Church, 10th and Garrison. Call Greg Kann at 303-718-7307 with questions. Lake Arbor Optimist Club Bringing Out the Best in Kids meets at 7 a.m. Tuesdays at Indian Tree Golf Course, 7555 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Breakfast served. Contact Terri Kearney, president, 303-5066692; or Debbie Espinoza, treasurer, 720937-2550. New members welcome. Northside Coin Club is a group of collectors that meets monthly to promote the hobby of numismatics among its members and the public. The club meets at 7 p.m. the second Tuesday of the month at 12205 Perry St., at the Friendship Hall in the Cimarron Village in Broomfield. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Find more information about our club at www.northsidecoinclub.org/ or look for us on Facebook. Master Networks of Belmar Entrepreneurs and professionals interested in growing their business and personal connections, this is the group for you. We use a national platform that includes an educational component along with traditional networking aspects. Group is oriented toward entrepreneurs and professionals. The group meets 10-11 a.m. Tuesdays at DeMarras Bourbon Bar & Eatery, 11100 W. Alameda Ave. For information, visit a meeting or call Suzie at 303-979-9077 or email Littleton@Mathnasium.com. Ports of Call Singles Club, 55 Plus Social hours take place 4-6 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at 3 Margaritas in Lakewood (contact Carol at 303-389-7707), and the fourth Tuesday of each month at Chads in Lakewood (contact Darlene at 303-233-4099). Denver meetings are the fourth Thursday of each month at Baker
St. Pub, 8101 E. Belleview, in the Tech Center (contact Harold at 303-693-3434). For info and a monthly newsletter, call JoAnn, membership chairperson, at 303-751-5195, or Mary, president, at 303-985-8937. Rocky Mountain Team Survivor, a health, education and fitness program for women of all abilities who have experienced cancer or are currently in treatment, offers weekly free, fun, supportive activities. Tuesdays, 10 a.m., Boulder Creek Walk (meet at Boulder Public Library main entrance). Tuesday, 11-11:30 a.m., Yoga, Boulder Senior Center, 909 Arapahoe Avenue. Thursdays, 6-7 p.m., Fitness Training, Boulder Center for Sports Medicine, 311 Mapleton Avenue (entrance on Maxwell Avenue.). Learn more at rockymtn-teamsurvivor.org. Wheat Ridge Art League meets at 7 p.m. the last Tuesday of the month at the Active Adult Center, 6363 W. 35th Ave, Wheat Ridge. Social time starts at 6:45 p.m. Enjoy an art demo by an award-winning artist each month at 7:30 pm. All art mediums and abilities welcome. Contact Pat McAleese at 303-941-4928 or mcpainter03@comcast.net for information. No meeting August or December. Wednesdays Adult Roller Skating is offered from 10:30 a.m. to noon every Wednesday at Roller City at 64th and Sheridan, Arvada. Cost is $5 plus $2 to rent skates. Contact Toni at 303-868-8273. American Legion Auxiliary presents Burger Nite, 5-7:30 p.m. every Wednesday at Post 178, 1655 Simms St., Lakewood. Members, their guests and active military invited for varied food and reasonable prices. Visit www.alpost178.org. Arvada Business Connection is a friendly group of Arvada Business owners who meet once each month on Wednesdays at various restaurants in the Arvada area. All are welcome – friends, kids and spouses, too. We collect a $5 donation, given to one of the attendees to donate as they wish. They share how they donated the money at the next meeting. For meeting and contact information, check the Arvada Business Connection Facebook page @ ArvadaBusinessConnection or call 303995-9919. Arvada Jefferson Kiwanis meets 7-8 a.m. Wednesdays at the Arvada Center, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., for a breakfast meeting. We invite you to join us for great fellowship, interesting programs, and the satisfaction of serving your community. This Kiwanis organization supports the Arvada Community Food Bank, the school backpack program, Santa House, Ralston House, and many other local organizations. For information or to visit a meeting, call Brad at 303-431-4697. Arvada Rotary meets from 6:30-8 p.m. Wednesdays at Indian Tree Golf Club, 7555 Wadsworth Blvd. The club engages in a variety of community service projects, with emphasis on assistance to and support of Arvada’s youth. Visitors are always welcome. For additional information visit www.arvadarotary.org or call Dave Paul at 303-431-9657. SEE CLUBS, P21
Arvada Press 21
7June 1, 2017
CLUBS FROM PAGE 21
Buffalo Toastmasters meets from 11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. the first and third Wednesday of each month at the Denver West Office Park, 14142 Denver West Parkway, Building 51, Suite 195, Golden. Go to www.buffalotoastmasters.org or www.meetup.com/ Buffalo-Toastmasters-Golden/ for more information. Buffalo Toastmasters, where public speaking and leadership excellence is encouraged in a safe environment. Dawn Yawn Toastmasters meets 6:458:30 a.m. Wednesdays at Denny’s Restaurant, 565 Union Blvd., Lakewood (on the southwest corner of 6th Avenue and Union Boulevard). You need Toastmasters training because communication is not optional, it is required. Do you communicate with confidence, are you worried about your next big presentation or job interview. Attend the first three meetings for free. Call 303-988-2025 for directions. For information about the club, contact dawnyawn. toastmastersclubs.org or John Googins, VP of membership, at 303-547-0084, john. googins@gmail.com. Foothills Music Teachers Association meets 9:30 a.m. to noon the third Wednesday of each month. FMTA is a local group of independent music teachers, affiliated with Colorado State Music Teachers Association and Music Teachers National Association. Call Kathy at 303-988-9565. Golden Elks Lodge meets at 7:30 p.m. the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month at 16795 W. 50th Ave. Contact golden2740@hotmail.com or 303-2792740 for more information, or to learn how to join. Kiwanis Club of Alameda West: 7-8 a.m. Wednesdays at Garrison Street Grill, 608 Garrison St., Lakewood. Kiwanis is a global organization of volunteers dedicated to improving the world one child and one community at a time. The Alameda West Kiwanis Club is dedicated to serving the community through various service and fundraising projects. Our club has been of service to our community for more than 35 years. Join us at one of our meetings or for a service project. Contact Bob Zachman at 303-988-5678 or visit us at Alameda West Kiwanis on Facebook. Music Teachers Association Suburban Northwest meets 9:30 a.m. to noon the first Wednesday of the month at Community in Christ Church, 12229 W. 80th Ave., Arvada. Meetings are open to the public and include refreshments, business meeting and program featuring music teaching professionals from around the state lecturing on the latest teaching developments. New Apostolic Church Food Pantry: Open 9-11 a.m. every Wednesday at 5290 Vance St., Arvada, rear entrance. All are welcome. We provide food to anyone in need. Please visit us once a month. Call 720-722-FOOD (3663) or email foodpantry@nac-denver. org. Go to www.nac-denver.org/foodbank. html. Order Sons of Italy in America Denver Lodge 2075 meets every third Wednesday of the month at 5925 W. 32nd Ave., Wheat Ridge. Dinner is at 6:30 p.m. and meeting follows at 7 p.m. Lots of fun activities
planned for summer meetings. Everyone welcome. Call 303-238-8055. Professional women NW Metro Business and Professional Women meets the first Wednesday of each month from September to May. Our mission is to achieve equity for all women in the workplace through advocacy, education and information. Call Marcia at 303-827-3283 to RSVP. Thursdays All Comforting Things of Colorado Inc. A nonprofit organization dedicated to bringing comfort and encouragement to individuals by providing items made by hand. We encourage you to bring your skills and enthusiasm to a fun group. We meet at 10 a.m. the third Thursday of each month at Phillips Methodist Church, 1450 S. Pierce, Lakewood. Contact actofcolo@gmail.com for more information. Arvada Associated Modelers hosts training night, 4-8 p.m. Thursdays from May to September (weather permitting) at the Arvada Airpark, 7608 Highway 93, Golden (use the Pioneer entrance between Leyden Road and 64th Avenue). Anyone interested in learning to fly radio control models is invited to take a introductory flight with an instructor. No previous experience is needed, and the club provides radios and airplanes. Training is free and open to everyone. It’s fun for the entire family. Go to www.arvadamodelers.com/pilot-training/. Business spirituality Business Honoring Spirituality meets 7-9 a.m. every Thursday at the Community Center of Mile Hi Church, 9079 W. Alameda Ave., Lakewood. Meetings include networking, a brief meditation by a licensed practitioner, guest speaker and breakfast. For additional information, visit www.bhsmilehi.org or call Patty Whitelock at 303-274-0933. Caregiver’s Support Group: 1 p.m. the fourth Thursday of each month at the Apex Community Recreation Center, 6842 Wadsworth Blvd. Share ideas and resources; learn to take care of yourself. Led by Senior Reach and sponsored by Home Instead Senior Care. CERTUS Professional Network meets for its Lakewood networking event 9:30-11 a.m. the third Thursday of the month at Panera Bread, 650 S. Wadsworth Blvd., Lakewood. Build your network, grow your business, network less. Our events are structured to connect professionals with the resources, power partners and leaders to expand their business and the business of others. Open to all industries, includes 30 minutes of open networking and organized introductions to the group. Cost: $12 non-CERTUS members at the door. First participants pay half price. RSVP not required. More info about CERTUS™ Professional Network at www.CertusNetwork.com. Community Coffee Join Rep. Tracy KraftTharp on the fourth Thursday of each month to talk about issues that are important to you. Community Coffee will be 7-8 a.m. at La Dolce Vita, Ice Cream Room, 5756 Olde Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada; and from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at Panera Bread, 10450 Town Center Drive, Westminster. Drop-in Storytimes Bring the kids to get lost in the world of wonderful words and fabulous illustrations, from timeless classics to new discoveries, all with a nature theme.
Drop-in storytimes are at 10 a.m. the first Thursday and third Monday of each month at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Go to www.arvada.org/ nature or call 720-898-7405. Suitable for all ages. No registration required. Golden Lions Club meets at 6:30 p.m. the first and third Thursdays at Buffalo Rose Events Center, 1119 Washington Ave., Golden. For information, contact Ed Dorsey at 303-829-5195, or go to www.goldenlionsclub.org Golden Men’s Support Group meets from 7-8:45 p.m. Thursdays near the National Renewal Energy Lab. Call Roger at 720-2896396 or Terry at 303-748-3748.
Lakewood Rotary Club meets at 7:15 a.m. the first, second and fourth Thursday of each month at the Egg and I, 7830 W. Alameda Ave., Lakewood. The club meets at Baker Street, 7260 W. Alaska Drive, for happy hour social at 5:30 p.m. the third Thursday. Rotary is a service organization dedicated to helping children in the community. If you are interested in speaking to the club please contact Genie at 303-5063923. Visitors welcome. Low Vision Support Group: 11 a.m. the fourth Thursday of each month at the Apex Community Recreation Center, 6842 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Led by the Center for People with Disabilities. Share ideas and resources on vision loss. Call Laura Stewart at 303-790-1390, ext. 207.
Investors’ meetings The Rocky Mountain Inventors Association meets 6:30-8:30 p.m. the fourth Thursday of every month (excluding November and December) at Vesta Technology, 13050 W. 43rd Drive, Suite 300, Golden. Presentations in marketing, manufacturing, engineering, finance, business and legal, followed by networking. Go online to www.rminventor.org for details.
NEW Connection: 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursdays, at the Arvada Public Library, 7525 W. 57th Ave., Arvada. Networking and support group for job seekers and budding entrepreneurs. Contact Jane Grogan at JGrogan@career-match.com. LinkedIn group page: www.linkedin.com/ groups/6753121.
CATHOLIC
PRESBYTERIAN
ST. JOAN OF ARC C AT H O L I C C H U R C H
Proclaiming Christ from the Mountains to the Plains www.StJoanArvada.org 12735 W 58th Ave · 80002 · 303-420-1232 Daily Masses: 8:30am, Mon-Sat Confessions: 8am Tue-Fri; 7:30am & 4:00pm Sat Saturday Vigil Mass: 5:00pm Sunday Masses: 7:30, 9:00, 11:30am, 5:30pm
UNITED METHODIST
S ERVICES 8 &10 am Church School
9 &10 am
Pastor: Bill Sanders
Living and Sharing the Love of Christ Worship: 10:00am every Sunday Sunday School: 9:00am Sept – May (nursery provided)
5592 Independence St. 80002 Tel. 303-422-3463 www.Arvada-pres.com Email: office@arvada-pres.com
Now enrolling for All Precious Children Learning Center
Golden First Presbyterian Church
On the round-about at South Golden Rd. and West 16th Ave. Sunday Praise & Worship................... 9:00 am Fellowship Time ................................. 10:00 am Church School ................................... 10:30 am
Pastor: Rev. Dr. Miriam M. Dixon
Nursery provided
303-279-5591
6750 Carr St. Arvada, CO 80004 303.421.5135 • www.arvadaumc.org Nursery Available
To advertise your place of worship Call 303-566-4100
G/W/L/A
22 Arvada Press
THINGS to DO
MUSIC
Ancient Shadows: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 3; 2 p.m. Sunday, June 4 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Allison Parkway. An exploration into the spiritual ancestry and mythology of the indigenous peoples of Central and South America. Original score by Boulder musician and composer Jesse Manno. Presented by Zikr Dance Ensemble. Tickets at 303987-7845 or www.lakewood.org/ tickets. Timberline Handbell Ensemble Auditions: 7 p.m. Monday, June 12 at Wheat Ridge United Methodist Church, 7530 W. 38th Ave., Wheat Ridge. Short-term, long-term and substitute ringers are needed. Skills include playing level 3-5 music, rhythm, and various handbell techniques. For an audition, please make an appointment by emailing audition@timberlineringers.org.
THEATER
Miners Alley Playhouse Presents `Cabaret’: 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday through June 25 at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Tony Award-winning musical about following your heart while the world loses its way. Additional shows at 6 p.m. Sunday, May 28, June 4, June 11 and June 18. Call 303-935-3044 or go to minersalley.com.
ART
‘Damage’ Art Exhibit: open through February 2018 at Red Rocks Community College, Lakewood, in the mezzanine near the library. Denver artist Sharon Brown’s exhibit features psychologically charged paintings created mostly from photographs. Go to www.rrcc.edu.
EVENTS
Round Table Issues Breakfast: 7 a.m. Friday, June 2, at American Legion WilmoreRichter Post 161, 6230 W. 60th Ave., Arvada. Casey Tighe, Jefferson County Commissioner, District 2, is the speaker. Open to the public. Contact 303-424-0324 for cost and other information. This is the final roundtable breakfast until September. Whale of a Used Book Sale: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday, June 2-3, and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
June 1, 2017J
this week’s TOP FIVE Inspire Arts Week: Thursday, June 1 to Sunday, June 11. Event showcases the arts culture that exists in Lakewood, with 20plus organizations producing more than 30 events. Presented by Lakewood Heritage, Culture and the Arts. Kickoff event is from 5-7 p.m. Thursday, June 1 at the Lakewood Cultural Center. Go to www.Lakewood.org/ Inspire. Piano Jazz Concert: 7:30 p.m. Monday, June 5, at the North Highlands Presbyterian Church Events Center, 29th Avenue and Julian Street. Bryan S. Wright is the featured pianist, fresh from performing at the Scott Joplin International Ragtime Festival in Sedalia, Mo. Go to www.bryanswright.com. An informal presentation with the artist is planned at 10 a.m. Tuesday, June 6. Summer Series: ‘Mud Blue Sky’: 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from June 9 to July 2 at The Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Tickets and passes for the Edge Theater Summer Series available by calling 303-232-0363 or online at www.theedgetheater.com. Other shows in the
Sunday, June 2, at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds, 15200 W. 6th Ave., Golden. More than 75,000 gently used books, DVDs, CD, and audio books will be sold; prices range from 50 cents to $3. Fill a bag with your favorite items for $6 per bag on Sunday. Jefferson County Public Library’s sale is free and open to the public. Go to www.jeffcolibraryfoundation.org. 2017 Arvada Trails Day: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 3 at Two Ponds National Wildlife Refuge, West 80th Avenue, just east of Kipling Street. Get outdoors and move your feet, pedal your bike or just enjoy a day of appreciating the outdoors as you explore nature, participate in eco-friendly activities, learn about resource conservation, and experience some of Arvada’s 150 miles of wonderful hiking, biking and horseback riding trails. Go to http:// arvadafestivals. com/arvada-trailsday/. Fox Hollow Tournaments: All CGA men members are welcome to play the Fox Hollow Amateur Open on Saturday, June 3; a 7:03 a.m. shotgun with lunch and prizes for several places in each flight following play. The Men’s Club is hosting the Mayor’s Cup June 24 and its Red, White
series are “Bad Jews” from July 14 to Aug. 6; and “Dinner” from Aug. 25 to Sept. 17. Baugh House Tours, Open House: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. the second Saturday of each month at a log cabin encapsulated in a Victorian 1900s house at 44th and Robb Street in Wheat Ridge. Join us for rocking on the chairs reminiscing about Wheat Ridge back in the day. Presented by the Wheat Ridge Historical Society. Dates are June 10, July 8, Sept. 9, Nov. 11 and Dec. 9. Spa Day: noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 10, at Natural Grocers/Vitamin Cottage, 7745 N. Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Learn how to nourish your skin with plant extracts and oils, not harsh chemicals. Stop by and make your own sugar scrub. Go to https://www.naturalgrocers.com/ store-location/arvada-north-wadsworth/. Call 303-423-0990.
and Blue member guest event including women July 2. This year Lakewood’s award winning 27hole facility at 13414 W. Morrison Road added more tee options for all player levels. Join the golfing fun through October; go to fhmgc. com. Colorado Stock Horse Association Open All Breed Shows: June 4, July 16, Aug. 20, Sept. 3 at the Indiana Equestrian Center, 7500 Indiana St., Arvada. Large outdoor arena with second arena for warm-up. Registration at 7:30 a.m. Classes at 8:30 a.m. Information and entry forms at 720-935-2026 (call or text), or 720-560-3646 (call or text), www.ColoradoStockHorse. com, and ColoradoStockHorse@ yahoo.com. The Church and Gays: noon and 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 6, at Lifetree Café, 5675 Field St., Arvada. Explore the church’s stance regarding same-sex attraction. “The Church and Gays: One Pastor’s Dilemma” features a filmed interview with Danny Cortez, a pastor whose changing views regarding same-sex attraction led to his being removed from his denomination. Participants will have the opportunity to share their views and stories of their encounters with the church regarding the issue. Contact Polly Wegner at 303-424-4454 or pwegner@ peacelutheran.net. Republican Men’s Club: 7-9 a.m. Mondays at Davies’ Chuck
Wagon Diner, 10151 W. 26th Ave., Wheat Ridge. Meetings open to everyone; women and students especially invited. Upcoming meetings include Monday, June 6, Colorado governor candidate Lew Gaiter (invited); Monday, June 12, David V. Cooke, Arvada presiding judge, “Colorado Munic-
River Stewardship in the 21st Century: 3-4:30 p.m. Saturday, June 10 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Presentation by the West Denver Chapter of Trout Unlimited is on water and macro invertebrate (insects) sampling and learn why these processes are key to keeping data on the condition of a river or stream. Sign up in advance at Arvada.org/public-classes. National Get Outdoors Day: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 10 at the north shore of Sloan Lake. Enjoy live music, fishing classes, paddling activities, rock climbing, bike riding and more. Go to www. getoutdoorscolorado.org/ngod. Beekeeping Up Close: 8-10 a.m. Saturday, June 10, June 17 and June 24 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Three-part series designed to build on the basic information presented in introduction to backyard beekeeping. Each week covers a different topic relating to beekeeping and includes a visit to the observation area of Pioneer Farmsteaders’ bee yard for an up close look at the bees. Sign up in advance at Arvada.org/publicclasses. Food Pantry: open from 9-11 a.m. Wednesdays at New Apostolic Church, 5290 Vance St., Arvada, rear entrance (across the street from Beau Jo’s restaurant). Contact Gertrude at 303-902-6794. Fun with Animals: 10-10:45 a.m. Wednesdays in March at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. For ages 3-6 years. Learn about coyotes, beavers, bugs and fish. Use books, stories, crafts and games. Sign up at arvada.org/public-classes.
HEALTH
ipal Courts Changes, Bail Reform, Sentencing and Evidence-Based Practices”; Monday, June 19, Jeff Shrader, providing updates on Jefferson County Law Enforcement following the 2017 General Assembly conclusion. Contact Fred Holden, president, at 303421-7619. American Legion Post 161 Meeting: 7 p.m. Thursday, June 8, at 6230 W. 60th Ave., Arvada. Contact 303-424-0324 for cost and other information. Garden Myths: 10:30-11:30 p.m. Saturday, June 10 at Majestic View Nature Center, 7030 Garrison St., Arvada. Learn from a Jefferson County CSU Master Gardener about the truth and myths of back yard gardening. Sign up in advance at Arvada.org/publicclasses.
Turmeric, the Spice of Life: 11 a.m. Saturday, June 3, at Natural Grocers/Vitamin Cottage, 7745 N. Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Learn the recipe for chicken curry; class led by Kate Sheets, MNT. Go to https://www.naturalgrocers.com/ store-location/arvada-northwadsworth/. Call 303-423-0990. Protect Skin from Inside Out: 11 a.m. Saturday, June 10, at Natural Grocers/Vitamin Cottage, 7745 N. Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Class led by Kate Sheets, MNT. Go to https://www.naturalgrocers.com/ store-location/arvada-northwadsworth/. Call 303-423-0990. Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Thursday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.
Arvada Press 23
7June 1, 2017
Marketplace ANNOUNCEMENTS
Misc. Notices Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201
FARM & AGRICULTURE
Farm Products & Produce Grain Finished Buffalo
quartered, halves and whole
719-775-8742
GARAGE & ESTATE SALES
Garage Sales Arvada
Huge Garage Sale 8308 Ames Way Friday and Saturday June 2nd & 3rd 8am-4pm Kids Clothing, Tools and more! Bradbury Ranch
Community Garage Sale
in Parker off of Jordan between Lincoln & Mainstreet. Fri. & Sat. June 9th and 10th 8am-2pm. Mapquest 10925 McClellan Road. Castle Rock
Block Garage Sale Whitekirk Place Diamond Head at Plum Creek June 9th & 10th Plum Creek Parkway to Emerald Drive Follow Signs 9am-2pm
COMMUNITY PATIO SALE HOLIDAY HILLS VILLAGE
2000 W 92ND AVE FRI-SAT, JUNE 9-10, 8 TO 4 Fellowship Covenant Church is having their annual Giant Church Yard Sale Thursday June 1 8a-4p, Friday June 2 8a-4p and Saturday June 3 8a-2p. There will be lots of great items and we hope to see you there. We're at 5615 W. 64th Ave., Arvada, 80003. For questions or more information, please call 303-420-6292. GIANT INDOOR RUMMAGE SALE Westminster United Methodist Church 76th & Lowell Fri. & Sat. June 2nd & 3rd 8am-4pm Huge Church Garage Sale St. Joseph Episcopal Church 11202 W. Jewell Ave. Lakewood Fri & Sat, June 2nd & 3rd 8am – 4pm
Garage Sales Huge Annual Antique, Collectible & Horse Drawn Farm Equipment Sale Horse Drawn Farm Equipment, Wood Wheel Wagons, Buggy, Steel Wheels, Misc. Farm Tons of Collectibles, Glasware June 1, 2, 3 & 4 Thurs-Sun 8:00AM-4pm & June 8, 9, 10 & 11 Thurs-Sun 8:00AM-4PM 10824 E Black Forest Dr Parker 80138 720-842-1716 HUGE COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE, Friday June 9th and Saturday June 10th from 8am-1pm at Newlin Meadows HOA in Parker, CO. Many homes participating throughout the homeowner’s association with many great items. Located on Newlin Gulch between Chambers and Mainstreet in 80134. Lakewood Multi Family Garage Sale Many Home Decor Items and much more 9am-3pm Friday and Saturday June 9th and 10th 2189 South Xenophon (Corner of Warren - 1 block East of Youngfield Street) Maplewood Estates Annual Neighborhood Garage Sale Friday & Saturday June 2nd & 3rd Starts at 8:00 am 50 -75 Families Lots of Food, Fun & Great Stuff! Follow the Signs From W. 64th or W. 72nd Ave. Between Kipling & Simms in West Arvada Sponsored by DON & ROBYN SIKKEMA RALSTON VALLEY REAL ESTATE 303-200-4657 Multi-family cul-de-sac sale: Sat/Sun, June 3 & 4, 9 am-3 pm. Too many items to list! Substantial discounts on Sunday. 1287 Columbine Dr. in Castle Rock.
Multi-Family Mid-Lakewood Neighborhood Garage Sale. Fri-Sat June 9-10 from 8am-4pm. Boundaries are N. of Alameda, E. of Garrison, W. of Wadsworth and S. of 6th Ave.
North Thornton Community Garage Sale 144th & York Quail Valley Sub Division June 2nd 8am-5pm & June 3rd 8am-3pm
PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!
303-566-4091
Garage Sales
MULTI-NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE THIS WEEKEND! Southglenn & Southwind Arapahoe Rd. & S. Clarkson St.
Centennial Maps Available Fri & Sat, June 2 & 3
PETS
Parker
Yearly Farm Item Sale 1952 VAO Case Tractor w/bucket and blade, Iron Wheels, 23 spike rotary hoe wheels, 10 horse drawn items, walking horse plow, farm pump, milk cans, horse leather, barn wood and iron, wood block planes, old tools, records, 80% of the sale old farm items Lots of nice farm items, cash only please 8258 Inspiration Drive, Parker Friday - Sunday June 2, 3 & 4 9am-7pm (303)841-0856
Dogs AKC English Golden Retrievers Ready in 4 short weeks 5 females, 4 males 720-660-6712
Sapphire Pointe Community Garage Sale Castle Rock Friday Jun 2nd - Sunday June 4th Subdivision off of Crowfoot Valley Road
Electric Bicycle Sale Buy 1 ebike & get 1 ebike FREE All 2016 New & Used electric Bikes on sale LIMETED SUPPLY HURRY FAST – BRAND NEW 2016 ELECTRIC BIKES 303-257-0164
40+ HOME GARAGE SALE! SAVE THE DATE!
Building Materials
THE KNOLLS NEIGHBORHOOD
Southglenn/Centennial E. Geddes Ave. & S. Colorado Blvd.
Maps Available Fri & Sat, June 9 & 10
Estate Sales
All Brands 1995 Prices - Motivated Air Staples for Upholstery, Roofs, Framer, Trim, Cabinets, Pin Nails, Truss, Carpets, Printers All sizes Bostitch, DuoFast, Senco etc. Pins, Loads and Anchors Paul. Glenn 303-287-1601
MERCHANDISE
B&K Appliance Repair
-30 years Experience -Quality Service -Fair Pricing -One year Warranty -All appliances -Same Day Service 720-416-3642 bkapplianceco@gmail.com Based in Castle Rock & Family Owned
Arts & Crafts 27TH ANNUAL CRAFT SHOW October 27, 28, 29, 2017 Douglas County Events Center 500 Fairgrounds Drive Castle Rock CO 80104 VENDOR SPACE AVAILABLE Call: 303-455-3470 Email: director@eljebel.org
TRANSPORTATION
*2002* 35th Anniversary Chevrolet Camaro Z-28 Convertible For Sale. It Is In *Excellent Condition*! It Only Has 30,500 Miles! The Car Is Platinum And The Top Is Black. Beautiful Chrome Wheels! It Has Always Been Stored In Garage. This Is A Very, Very Beautiful Automobile! $17,500. 303-997-7979.
Split & Delivered $275 a cord Stacking available extra $25 Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173
Two arm chairs $20 each; will sell separately One Red Couch with Three cushions for $75 224-688-8279
FOR SALE 2011 Ford Mustang convertible black in good condition 31,000 miles, FUN To Drive Asking $13,000 or best offer Call Al at 970-471-4913
Health and Beauty I
BUY DIABETIC Test Strips! OneTouch, Freestyle, AccuChek, more! Must not be expired or opened. Call Chris Today: 800-506-4964 Whirlpool electric stove for sale. It is clean , complete & works. SELF CLEANING $69.99. Why pay more?? Linda 303-257-0121
Missing Jack Russel Terrier Female Solid white, with brown spot covering right eye and both ears Wearing mostly pink collar with attached black leash 22 pounds, 9 years old has tags and microchip Needs meds, REWARD!!!! Last seen at Hampden and Quay Lakewood Call Janna 575-302-2775 jrjanna@yahoo.com
Autos for Sale
Furniture Appliances
Lost and Found
Firewood
Castle Rock Yard/Estate Sale Friday & Saturday June 2nd & 3rd 9am, 1183 Foursome Drive Castle Rock 2 minutes from Plum Creek exit proceed to Emerald Drive Lots of Quality Items for cheap
Parker
Community Garage Sale Regency Sub Division Located South of Main Street on Newlin Gulch Blvd June 2nd & 3rd 8am-2pm Many homes participating within the community Furniture, books, clothing, "mans stuff', kids items and so much more
Bicycles
Miscellaneous Collection of Liquor store Cars, all in mint condition and few other home bar accessories Moving to smaller living quarters so everything at must sell prices (303)431-2856
Office Equipment FREE Six used metal filing cabinets, five drawers each. Must take all or none. Basement location. You move them. Call 303-551-4930
Place an ad to sell your car on this page $25 for 2 weeks in 16 papers and online 303-566-4091 Wanted
Cash for all Vehicles! Cars, Trucks, Vans, SUV’s
Any condition • Running or not Under $700
(303)741-0762
Cell: (303)918-2185 for texting
Bestcashforcars.com
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK, BOAT, RV; Running or not, to www.developmentaldisabled.org Tax deductible! 303-659-1744. 19 years of service (go onto website to see 57 Chevy)
24 Arvada Press
LOCAL
June 1, 2017J
SPORTS
Ralston Valley girls win first state title
Quite the feller: Legend’s baseball coach has ‘had a great run’
L
Ralston Valley’s girl’s golf team holds up their school’s first state title trophy.
Team made up five strokes on final day STAFF REPORT
Ralston Valley’s girls golf team definitely peaked at the right time. The Mustang foursome was five strokes behind after the first day on May 22. Led by Remley’s 74 on May 23, the team carded a second
round 229 (three golfer total with the fourth not counting) to win at 474 to Rock Canyon’s 483. The team was comprised of Jordan Remley, senior Riley McKibbon, along with sophomores Sydney Eye and Lexi Mueldener was led by Coach Wendy Davies. In the individual standings Remley finished tied for fourth at 82-74, for a combined score of 156. “It’s really cool. I’m so very proud of the team,” said Davies. “The
JIM BENTON
round (May 23) was phenomenal. Everyone played really well today.” On the final day, Remley carded an 74, Mueldener a 77, Eye a 78 and McKibbon an 81. “Our highest score was 81 that we threw out. Any time you can throw out an 81 you know you can come back to win. We were hunting,” said Davies. The team also won the league and regional title this year.
Ralston Valley senior Jordan Remley watches her opening tee shot during the Class 5A girls golf state tournament May 22 at The Club at Rolling Hills in Golden. Remley finished tied for fourth in the individual standings with round of 82 and 74. DENNIS PLEUSS/JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Arvada West’s Miranda Schiffbauer drives of the first tee during Day 1 of the Class 5A girls golf state championship tournament May 22 at The Club at Rolling Hills in Golden. Schiffbauer placed 20th in the two-day tournament. A-West finished tied for fourth in the team standings. DENNIS PLEUSS/JEFFCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS
egend baseball will not be the same next season. Scott Fellers has been Legend’s baseball coach since the school opened in 2008. He is retiring from the coaching post and his last game was a 1312 loss to Cherry Creek in OVERTIME the Class 5A state baseball tournament on May 22. The Titans were 17-7 in Fellers’ farewell season. “I could not have asked for a better season with me going out and retiring,” Fellers, 46, said. “I’m fortunate to have some good kids and everything kind Jim Benton of worked for us this year. It’s a good way to go out. “We beat all the big teams, won the league (Continental), won the district and played high-level baseball.” Fellers’ teams won or shared three league championships, captured four district titles and was the Class 5A state runner-up in 2012. He will continue to teach at Legend. “I will have two kids in high school next year and a fourth-grader as well,” he said. “It’s just time I focus on my kids. I’ve had a great run, had fun, had great relationships and good teams. It’ll be different because this is all I’ve done. “I’m just going to take a year off, teach and see what the future brings.”
Shootouts should go Winners of state playoff soccer games should not be determined by penalty kick shootouts. I know it’s in the rules and shootouts are used to determine winners across the world. In Colorado high school competition, after two sudden-victory, 15-minute overtime sessions, if a match is still tied, then a penalty kick shootout begins. That’s fine and exciting for regular-season games, but come on, there has to be a better way in the playoffs that involves the entire team to break the tie. Shootouts generally come down to the players taking the kicks making mistakes — a keeper has no chance unless he or she guesses right. I don’t have a perfect solution. My only suggestion for an alternative is that a tie game could be suspended and the teams would resume another sudden-victory overtime on the next playable day. There were several baseball games suspended this spring because of weather and resumed the next day. Jim Benton is a sports writer for Colorado Community Media. He has been covering sports in the Denver area since 1968. He can be reached at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com or at 303-566-4083.
Arvada Press 25
7June 1, 2017
HOW TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE Send volunteer opportunities to hharden@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.
Founders and Friends of Two Ponds National Wildlife Refuge Restores native habitat and wildlife; provides opportunities to experience wildlife and nature; promotes awareness and appreciation of the National Wildlife Refuge System Need: Volunteers needed to update website and Facebook page by developing relevant resource materials, articles about refuge events and calendar postings; assist with developing a short introductory video for website; manage and organize volunteer activities; maintain and update information posted in the refuge kiosks; remove noxious weeds from the refuge; and perform regular clean-up and maintenance (picking up trash, spraying weeds, cutting t grass with weed whacker) of the kiosk areas. Location: Two Ponds National Wildlife Refuge is at 9210 W. 80th Ave., Arvada. Age requirements: Adults, or children with adult supervision; training will be provided if needed. Contact: Janet Torma-Krajewski, 303-4232069 or jtorma79@gmail.com. Gateway Battered Women’s Services Serves domestic violence victims in Aurora and Arapahoe County Need: Volunteers for various fundraising, planning committees Contact: Jeneen Klippel, 303-343-1856; email jkworden@gatewayshelter.com. Girl Scouts Youth organization for girls Need: Volunteers for jobs ranging from running troops to helping with a science event or office work Age requirement: Men and women 18 and older Contact: girlscoutsofcolorado.org, email inquiry@gscolorado.org or call 1-877-4045708 Global Orphan Relief Develops and supports programs bringing light, comfort and security to orphans around the world Need: Super stars with website development, users of the abundant resources of social media. Those with great connection ability are needed to help with the development of the donor pool. Contact: Those interested serving this faith-based Colorado nonprofit can
.
Support your local paper!
contact Deitra Dupray, 303-895-7536 or dadupray@comcast.net. Golden Optimists Bicycle Recycle Group helps repair or recycle bicycles in the community Need: All ages, knowledge levels to work on bicycles Contact: www.goldenoptimists.org Golden Visitors Center Provides information about Golden and surrounding areas Need: Volunteers to man front desk and greet visitors, open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; two 4-hour shifts offered Requirement: Must be 18 and older, training provided Contact: Mary Gomez, 303-279-2282 or marygomezvisitorcenter@gmail.com Habitat ReStore Nonprofit home improvement stores and donation centers Need: Volunteers for Wheat Ridge, Denver or Littleton Habitat ReStores, helping with the cash register, dock and warehouse floor Contact: 303-996-5468, email Alice Goble at Alice@habitatmetrodenver.org Hospice of Covenant Care Nonprofit, faith-based hospice Need: Volunteers to support patients and families Contact: 303-731-8039 [Run through early Feb.] Jeffco 4-H Mentoring Program/Youth & Families with Promise Provide mentoring for ages 9-13 to help kids improve academically, increase social skills and strengthen bonds with their families. Group has 4-H clubs in several Jeffco schools, including Allendale Elementary, Parr Elementary, Rocky Mountain Deaf School, and Hutchinson Elementary. Need: Adult volunteers to mentor kids for 1 ½ hours per week, starting in February 2017. Commitment is one year. Requirements: Must go through 4-H leader screening process and pass background check through CSU. Ongoing training also provided. Contact: Lisa Stavig, Jeffco 4-H mentor coordinator, 303-271-6623. Legacy Grace Community Development Corp. Starts social enterprises, provides low-cost transitional housing and job training/
placement for all people in the Denver area Need: Volunteers to help with resumes, 5-8 p.m. Wednesdays. Also need help in the art gallery (from noon to 4 p.m. Wednesday to Sunday); training provided. Contact: legacygrace@live.com or Rick Roberts, 303-815-4914 Lutheran Family Services: Cultural Mentoring Program We welcome refugee families and help them adjust to their new home Need: People who can commit to working with refugees on skills for self-sufficiency and helping them learn about their new home. Requirements: Must be 18 or older (although children of volunteers are welcome to participate). One-hour training and orientation required. Contact: David Cornish, 303-225-0199 or david.cornish@lfsrm.org; go to www.lfsrm. org. Lutheran Hospice Need: Volunteers to assist in a couple of areas: 1. Be a friendly visitor by providing companionship or emotional support to patients and families in their own homes or visit patients in nursing facilities. Visits may include providing respite for caregivers. 2. Work at the Collier Hospice Center reception desk, welcoming family members and visitors, and assisting with administrative projects. Contact: Rose Kauffman, rose.kauffman@ sclhs.net or 303-403-7274. Jefferson County Library Foundation Supports Jefferson County Public Library through fundraising and advocacy Need: Volunteers to help book sales and sorting book donations at the warehouse year-round Age requirements: Ages 12 and older are welcome Contact: 10790 W. 50th Ave., Suite 200, Wheat Ridge; call 303-403-5075 Nature’s Educators Volunteer driven educational wildlife program that cares for non-releasable raptors, along with reptiles and amphibians for educational programming. Need: Tasks include cleaning enclosures, feeding and leading programs. Requirements: Must commit to 10 hours per month for at least a year. Must be 18-plus, have reliable transportation and be able to check email regularly. Fee applies that covers the volunteer equipment
Voluntary Contribution
Behind your weekly community newspaper is a dedicated team of skilled journalists, designers, administrative staff, printers and carriers who work hard to deliver quality content to your doorstep. If you enjoy your hometown newspaper, we invite you to make a voluntary contribution. We will continue to deliver your news free of charge, but your assistance helps us maintain a high-quality product and superior service.
P RO G R A M
needed to do programs. Contact organization for details. Training: All training done on site; however, animal experience is a must. Contact: info@natureseducators.org or www.natureseducators.org.
PeopleFirst Hospice Denver hospice Need: Volunteers to provide companionship to hospice patients and their families. Contact: Rachel Wang at 303-546-7921 Seniors’ Resource Center Need: Do you want to make a difference where you live? Do you like to drive? If so, sign up to be a volunteer driver helping seniors in Broomfield through Seniors’ Resource Center. Your volunteer driving means seniors can make it to medical appointments, take care of shopping and other critical needs. Your ride makes it possible for seniors to continue living in their own homes. You’ll pick the time and the trip. Our volunteer drivers find they make new friends and are very impressed by the people they help. Requirements: Must be able to pass a background check and have a clean Motor Vehicle Record. Contact: Pat Pierson at 303-332-3840, 303 904-2258 or ppierson@srcaging.org. Victim Outreach, Jefferson County Offers support and access to resources during critical stage of trauma Need: Volunteer victim advocates to respond on scene, to ensure victims’ rights are upheld Requirements: Must be 21-plus, pass background check and attend 40-hour training; training provided Contact: Jennifer at 303-202-2196, victimoutreachinfo@gmail.com or www.victimoutreach.org
Whiz Kids Tutoring Nonprofit, faith-based program that provides free tutoring to low-income and academically low-performing students Need: Volunteers to read, help with homework and play education games with teacher selected students. Requirement: Typically age 16 and up, but exceptions made for teens who have a parent participating; must pass a background check. Commitment: Tutors work for an hour and a half, from October to April; may chose day (M-Th) and location Contact: Angie Kinney, 303-669-7339, angie@whizkidstutoring.com or http://www. whizkidstutoring.com/
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PROFESSIONAL SERVICES GUIDE
26 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
Michael’s Handyman Services • Home Beautification • Home Repair & Interior Painting
303-301-4420
Have a Hail Damaged Roof? - Call Golden Spike Roofing - We are 100% Local & Have Great References - Roofing • Siding • Paint • Windows • Gutters
- Call Dave Vaughn 720-427-7422 - davegoldenspikeroofing@gmail.com
MINOR HOME REPAIRS
No job is too small • Free Estimates
THE GLASS RACK 7475 W. 5th Ave., Unit 150H. Lakewood, CO 80226 Automotive • Residential • Commercial Screens • Tabletops • Patio Doors • RV Glass
Complete Home Remodeling
Quality Work Low Prices Senior Discounts Gary (303)987-2086
Interior - Exterior - Kitchens - Baths - Basements Additions - Master Suites - Decks - Doors - Windows Siding - Roofing
Ron Massa Owner
Licensed - Bonded - Insured
Office 303-642-3548 Cell 720-363-5983 35 Years Experience
A-1 PfStump Removal 1
Residential • Commercial Rep Nancy
“Interiors Too!” Over 44 years experience
Sandi
• ROOFING Client Total Discount • GUTTERS The Glass Rack Paint & Stain Papers • PAINTING Mile High Classifieds • SIDING • WINDOWS Owner; Project • CONCRETE
Cosimo
Manager; & Friend READ > C ONNECT > LEARN > LIVE
“Customer Service & Satisfaction” You Can Count On!
Comment
Advertise Authoriz Most stumps $75.00 QC: _________
grinding specialist Call Stump REP: _________ Svc Guide
Size Pub date
or
4-12-12 Text
$45 Minimum.
EPS’d: ________
Comments to Tina: Free estimates. Licensed
PH: 303-279-5599 extA228 father and son team! tinameltzer@milehighnews.com
10% off when This proof must be returned to your ad rep at Mile High Newspapers within stated deadline time, orcoupon the A + as originally produced. Please contact us at 303-279-5541. Publisher will assume the ad is correct
720-938-5405
15 YEARS
AAA-Total Discount
& Insured.
FAX: 303-468-2592 36 years experience.
presented
Call Terry or Corey 303-424-7357
Roofing; Painting; Home Improvements
Michael’s Handyman Services
Let Me Help You Beautify Your Home – Quality Workmanship Free Estimates • Reliable • Quick Response
Interior • Painting • Minor Home Repair Basic Plumbing & Electrical Services*
Call Michael
303-301-4420
* 10% discount with this ad *
To advertise your business here, call Karen at 303-566-4091
or email kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Arvada Press 27
7June 1, 2017
Services A/C Serving the Front Range Since 1955
JOHNSON’S Heating • Cooling Super AC Summer Specials! •Furnaces •Boilers •Water Heaters
•Install •Repair •Replace
720-327-9214
LicenSed/Bonded/inSuRed
Concrete/Paving
G& E Concrete • Residential &Commercial Flatwork • Driveways • Patios • Walks • Garages • Foundations • Colored & Stamped Concrete • Tearout/Replace • FREE Estimates 25+ yrs. Experience Best Rates • References
303-451-0312 or 303-915-1559 www.gandeconcrete.com
PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!
303-566-4091 Drywall
A PATCH TO MATCH
OWNER OPERATED
Bathroom & Kitchen Remodeling All Phases Windows/Doors, Deck Repairs Glass Block Walls/Windows
720-434-8922
NAVARRO Concrete, Inc.
Commercial/Residential quality work at reasonable prices. Registered & Insured in Colorado.
• Home Renovation and Remodel • 30 years Experience • Insured • Satisfaction Guaranteed Highly rated & screened contractor by Home Advisor & Angies list
Sanders Drywall Inc. Acoustic scrape and re-texture Repairs to full basement finishes Water damage repairs Interior paint, door & trim installs 30+ years experience Insured Free estimates
Darrell 303-915-0739
Driveways Tear Outs & Replace
• patios • sidewalks • garage floors • • porches • stamped/colored • exposed agregate • lic.& ins. free estimates
720-218-8849 www.delsolconcrete.com
Contessa’s Cleaning Service Professional, reliable and affordable residential cleaning. Give your home the royal treatment at an affordable price. References available. Call Elaine Musselman at 303-515-0117 or email rileyrosie1@gmail.com
Concrete/Paving
Affordable & Reliable • Stamped Concrete Restoration • Calking/Grinding • Concrete lifting/leveling • “A” Rating with BBB • Many Satisfied Customers
FREE ESTIMATE CALL NOW
303.638.0350
Estimates@ConcreteRepairsDenver.com ConcreteRepairsDenver.com
FBM Concrete LLC.
All Phases of Flat Work by
T.M. CONCRETE
Driveways, Sidewalks, Patios Tear-outs, stamped & colored concrete. Quality work, Lic./Ins. Reasonable rates "Small Jobs OK!" 303-514-7364 tmconcrete.net
• Springs, Repairs • New Doors and Openers • Barn and Arena Doors • Locally-Owned & Operated • Tom Martino’s Referral List 10 Yrs • BBB Gold Star Member Since 2002
(303) 646-4499 www.mikesgaragedoors.com Handyman Bob’s Home Repairs
All types of repairs. Reasonable rates 30yrs Exp. 303-450-1172
HANDY MAN Screwed up your plumbing?
CALL DIRTY JOBS Plumbing repair & Drain Cleaning $100.00
Carpentry
Cleaning
TV’s
All phases to include
Electricians
Semi retired but still ready to work for you! 34 years own business. Prefer any small jobs. Rossi's: 303-233-9581
FOR ALL YOUR GARAGE DOOR NEEDS!
Free Estimates 17 Years Experience Licensed & Insured Driveways, patios, stamp & colored concrete. All kinds of flat work. Let us do good work for you! (720)217-8022
Small Jobs Welcome
Call Ed 720-328-5039
303-423-8175
Carpenter/Handyman:
Hauling Service
Drywall Repair Specialist
Bathrooms www.rutherfordconstruction.biz Hardwood Floor – Refinishing, Installation, Dust Containment
Garage Doors
Affordable Electrician
Over 25 years experience • Residential Expert • All electrical upgrades • No Job Too Small • Senior Discounts – Lic/Insured
Cell: 720-690-7645 ELECTRICAL SERVICE WORK
All types, licensed & insured. Honest expert service. Free estimates.
720-203-7385
720-308-6696 www.askdirtyjobs.com
Fence Services
Mark: 303.432.3503 AFFORDABLE HAULING You Call - I Haul Basement, Garages, Houses, Construction, Debris, Small Moves Office - 303-642-3548 Cell 720-363-5983 Ron Massa BBB - Bonded - Insured
AFFORDABLE
HANDYMAN
Carpentry • Painting Tile • Drywall • Roof Repairs Plumbing • Electrical Kitchen • Basements Bath Remodels Property Building Maintenance Free Estimates • Reliable Licensed • Bonded Insured • Senior Discount
Home Improvement HOME IMPROVEMENTS One Stop Shop - We Do It All
15% OFF Decks*Arbors*Sheds
Ron Massa
Office 303-642-3548 Cell 720-363-5983 No Service in Parker or Castle Rock
Deck or Re-Deck Stamped Concrete
Arbors Painting sheds landscape
Kitchens, Bathrooms, Framing , remodeling, Flooring, Handyman
Call (303)908-5793 Visa MasterCard
TM
HOME REPAIRS & REMODELING • Drywall • Painting • Tile • Trim • Doors • Painting • Decks • Bath Remodel • Kitchen Remodels • Basements & Much More! Call Today for a FREE ESTIMATE 303-427-2955
D & D FENCING
Hauling Service
720-434-7822 or 303-296-0303
Trash / Rubbish / Debris and Junk Removal Professional and Reliable Year Round Service Rubin (720)434-8042 Kerwin (720) 519-5559
Commercial & Residential All types of cedar, chain link, iron, and vinyl fences. Install and repair. Serving all areas. Low Prices. FREE Estimates. BBB Call For SPRING SPECIAL
Trash Cleanup • Old Furniture Mattresses • Appliances • Dirt Old fencing • Branches • Concrete Asphalt • Old Sod • Brick • Mortar House/Garage/Yard clean outs Storm Damage Cleanup Electronics recycling avail.
Call for advice and Phone Pricing
Radiant Lighting Service **
Electrical Work All types. Honest and reliable, licensed & ins. Free estimates. Craig (303)429-3326
HAULING
$$ Reasonable Rates On: $$
Cut Rate Hauling
Landscaping/Nurseries
LANDSCAPE • Paver and Natural Stone Patios • Retaining Walls • New Plantings • Landscape Lighting • Xeriscaping • Irrigation Systems • Fire Pits • Water Features
COMPLETE LANDSCAPE DESIGN Licensed
720.436.6340
www.arterralandscaping.com
Insured
28 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
Services Landscaping/Nurseries
ATM Concepts And Design Landscaping and Lawn Maintenance Full Service | Sprinklers Water Features available Sod, Roto Tilling, Gutter Clean Large item removal and haul off
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Moving/Storage
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Arvada Press 29
7June 1, 2017
President Dad: Book looks at First Dads throughout history
A
h, dear old dad… He can fix almost anything, make something from nothing, and he tells great bedtime stories. He’s BOOKWORM the Workshop King, Master of the TV, Lord of the Grill, The Yard Czar, and he likes to think he rules the house, too. Or, as in the new book “First Dads” by Joshua Kendall, he might rule a different House. George WashingTerri ton, the Father of Schlichenmeyer Our Country, was not. He wasn’t a father, that is, and that, according to Joshua Kendall, is one of the “key” reasons why Washington was “unanimously elected as our first President.” Yes, George helped raise Martha’s children, which apparently didn’t count among his peers. “Of the forty-three men” who’ve become President, says Kendall, “thirty eight have produced progeny.” He classifies them in groups according to their parenting styles, which sometimes reflected their leadership styles. Because Franklin Delano Roosevelt, for example, “was simply too busy to provide much guidance to
Author Joshua Kendall COURTESY RACHEL YOUDELMAN
THE BOOK “First Dads: Parenting and Politics from George Washington to Barack Obama” by Joshua Kendall c.2016, Grand Central $27.00 / $32.50 Canada 392 pages … his children,” he was a “preoccupied” First Dad. It probably didn’t help that, for much of their early lives, he was fighting polio; still, being a father “did not come naturally” to the charming FDR. Ronald Reagan also fell under the “preoccupied” category, as did Zachary Taylor, Jimmy Carter, and
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Lyndon Johnson. Kendall says that Ulysses Grant and Teddy Roosevelt were both “Playful Pals”: they were permissive fathers who were happiest with their children around. Woodrow Wilson, despite his “dour” reputation, was lighthearted with his kids, too. John Tyler was an example of a “Double-Dealing Dad.” He had nine children with his first wife, seven kids with his second wife, and a rumored fifty-two children by slaves and free black women. He didn’t publicly acknowledge any of the latter, nor did Warren Harding, Thomas
Jefferson, or Grover Cleveland publicly acknowledge their illegitimate offspring. John Quincy Adams, his son John Adams, and Dwight Eisenhower were “tiger dads” who demanded exceptional behavior from their children. Harry Truman, Rutherford Hayes and Barack Obama go in the “nurturer” category. And Franklin Pierce never recovered from the death of his youngest son, nor has George H.W. Bush, the death of his preschool daughter decades ago. Imagine having a family of your own … and then being responsible for 124 million more families. Some Presidents have done well at both and some, as you’ll see in “First Dads,” were real duds. Much of that, of course, is a matter of conjecture and history but author Joshua Kendall takes things a little further in this book. Here, we get an idea of the parenting the presidents received and the childhoods they enjoyed (or didn’t) which, perhaps, affected the kind of parenting they gave their own children. Kendall also reveals what it was like for the wives of these men, the emotional legacy they left their children, and what became of those sons and daughters. This is a great book for dad, the Historian, or Grandpa, who’s a political animal. It could make a perfect Fathers Day gift, “First Dads” could be very dear.
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30 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
MILESTONES 25 artists chosen for ’Capturing the Beauty of Open Land’ Twenty-five Colorado-based artists have been chosen to participate in the 2017 “Capturing the Beauty of Open Land” plein air painting event, presented by Douglas Land Conservancy. Free and open to the public, the fourth annual exhibit takes place Saturday, June 24 and Sunday, June 25 at the White Pavilion in downtown Castle Rock. Go to http://douglaslandconservancy.org/upcoming-events/pleinair/. Artists include Tricia Bass, of Arvada and Deborah McAllister, of Lakewood. Arvada Madison B. Bader, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Matthew S. Barry, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 president’s honor roll at the University of Wyoming. Kayla Boelsterli, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Kevin D. Carpenter, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Ellen Dicks, of Arvada, graduated in May 2017 with a master’s degree in education from the University of Kansas. Hayden S. Green, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Sarah Greer, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at
Creighton University. Benjamin Samuel Leech, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Milanna Maria Matillaro, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Emily Grace Moore, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Andy Pruett, of Arvada, graduated in May 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting from the University of Kansas. Eric D. Rush, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at the c m University of Wyoming. Morgan R. Schumann, of Arvada, h was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list a at the University of Wyoming. Alexandria M. Smith, of Arvada, g was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list r d at the University of Wyoming. a Ariana Nicole Strasheim, of a Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 president’s honor roll at the Univer- J sity of Wyoming. Luke Turner, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 president’s honor roll at the University of Wyoming. Kyle Daniel Weber, of Arvada, graduated in May with a degree in wildlife biology from Hastings College. Emma Welsh, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at Creighton University. Bryan Wenger, of Arvada, was named to the fall 2016 dean’s list at Creighton University.
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Arvada Press 31
7June 1, 2017
‘Do at the Zoo’ is quite the to-do Denver event is major source of funding for programs, animal care BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
The Denver Zoo’s gates will close at noon on June 15 so animals, their keepers and a crew of helpers-for-a-day can get ready for a big party. Tasty snacks for visitors from a great variety of Denver’s restaurants will blend with cocktails, drafts and wines and ciders from area breweries at the annual Do at the Zoo from 7 to 10 p.m. on June 15. In the past 27 years, zoo guests
have contributed more than $12 million to support the Denver Zoo’s many programs, including state-of the art animal care, age-appropriate education events and internationally recognized conservation programs. Our message from the zoo says more than 4,100 animals live there, representing more than 600 species. Well recognized this spring is baby giraffe Dobby, who has scored lots of ink and television coverage in the past few months — especially since he was a surprise. Appealing photos of Umi, the polka-dotted baby tapir, have also hit the news, and a visit to the Denver Zoo will allow a view of these two and many other creatures that run, creep, slither, swim, fly and climb.
IF YOU GO THE DO AT THE ZOO will run from 7 to 10 p.m. on June 15. (No guests under 21 allowed.) The Zoo, in City Park, has an address: 2300 S. Steele St. Tickets for Do at the Zoo cost $175 per person and are available at denverzoo.org/doatthezoo. The event will be held rain or shine. Each animal requires a special diet and safe, suitable place to live, designed for the individual species. In return, they teach children and adults about the wide world we live in with them — and the growing scarcity of many species. The zoo’s mission is “to secure a better world for animals through human understanding.”
A smiling baby giraffe, Dobby, will be on hand with his mom to greet visitors at Do at the Zoo on June 15. COURTESY PHOTO
Seed library — check it out
Feed store offering a resource that may be unique in area BY KYLE HARDING KHARDING@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A seed library is just what it sounds like — patrons check out seeds, plant them in their garden, save some seeds from the plants they grow, and return those seeds back to the library. A wall of envelopes full of fruit,
vegetable and flower seeds in Lewis & Cluck Critter Goods comprises what appears to be the only permanent seed library in the Denver area. Lewis & Cluck employee and founder of the seed library Nickolas Paullus learned about the idea while living in Manitou Springs, where the public library hosts a seed library. “It was a great resource for the community,” Paullus said, who has spent the last 10 years working on farms or in greenhouses, honing his green thumb. He received the blessing from his
boss to start it, and began distributing seeds in January. “It’s a good way to give back to the community that everyone can benefit from,” said Lewis & Cluck owner Pete McClintock. Most of the varieties in Lewis & Cluck’s library are tolerant of drought and cold weather. “I like the idea of truly local varietals,” Paullus said. In conjunction with the seed library, he has begun hosting classes on how to use it. “My mom and grandma taught me the art of seed-saving,” he said.
Public Notices City and County
City and County
City and County
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING A public hearing will be held before the Arvada Planning Commission on June 20, 2017, 6:30 p.m., Arvada Municipal Building, 8101 Ralston Rd., Arvada, when and where you may speak on the matter to consider an outline development plan amendment 6, and a preliminary development plan/plat for CANDELAS ODP AND CANDELAS FLG. 4, bounded by NW Indiana St. & SH 93 & N of SH 72; and, NE of W. 94th Ave. & Yucca Wy. Additional information can be obtained from the Community Development Dept. or written comments may be filed therewith no later than 8 days prior to the hearing. CITY OF ARVADA PLANNING COMMISSION /s/ Patricia Connell, Secretary
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING A public hearing will be held before the Arvada Planning Commission on June 20, 2017, at 6:30 p.m., Arvada Municipal Building, 8101 Ralston Rd., Arvada, when and where you may speak on the matter to consider an alternative sign program for THE SHOPS AT RALSTON CREEK, located at the NE Corner of Independence St. & Ralston Rd. Additional information can be obtained from the Community Development Dept. or written comments may be filed therewith no later than 8 days prior to the hearing. CITY OF ARVADA PLANNING COMMISSION /s/ Patricia Connell, Secretary
Legal Notice No.: 41855 First Publication: June 1, 2017 Last Publication: June 1, 2017 Publisher: Golden Transcript Wheat Ridge Transcript and the Arvada Press
Legal Notice No.: 41857 First Publication: June 1, 2017 Last Publication: June 1, 2017 Publisher: Golden Transcript Wheat Ridge Transcript and the Arvada Press
Contact information and special offers area available at the Lewis & Cluck Website https://www.lewiscluck.com One benefit of local seed libraries is that the seeds come from a stock grown in the same climate where they are to be planted. “You can get seed from a seed company, but you don’t know that was grown in a super-humid place back east,” Paullus said.
Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING A public hearing will be held before the Arvada Planning Commission on June 20, 2017, at 6:30 p.m., Arvada Municipal Building, 8101 Ralston Rd., Arvada, when and where you may speak on the matter to annex and rezone (and amend the official zoning maps) from Jefferson Co. SR2 (Single Family 2) to City of Arvada PUD-BP (Planned Unit Development-Business/Professional), and consider a preliminary development plan for TRINITY STORAGE, located at 15350 SH 72. Additional information can be obtained from the Community Development Dept. or written comments may be filed therewith no later than 8 days prior to the hearing. CITY OF ARVADA PLANNING COMMISSION /s/ Patricia Connell, Secretary
Legal Notice No.: 41856 First Publication: June 1, 2017 Last Publication: June 1, 2017 Publisher: Golden Transcript Wheat Ridge Transcript and the Arvada Press
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32 Arvada Press
June 1, 2017J
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