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October 13, 2016 VOLUME 96 | ISSUE 39 | 75¢
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‘People’s moods this year are very different’ Unpopular candidates and a polarized electorate typify 2016 presidential race By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com
and the earlier time will be in effect from then on. City Manager Eric Keck said the new start time will be for the city council meetings held on the first and third Monday of each month. The meeting is moved to Tuesday if a Monday falls on a city holiday.
Dorothy Dhooge, 82, has watched a lot of election cycles come and go, but this year’s presidential race may be the most divisive she’s seen. Dhooge, an Arapahoe County resident, said the tension has caused her to avoid talking politics with some of her own family members. “We steer clear Don’t miss of it,” she said, Colorado Community adding that she Media’s guide to the 2016 local and state thinks the divielections in next sions run beyond week’s edition. just her own family. “I think it’s split people in the country.” Kyle Saunders says she’s right. “It’s no wonder people feel that there’s a little more hate, it’s no wonder that people feel that society’s a little more on edge,” said Saunders, a political-science professor at Colorado State University since 2004. “It’s because it is.” “Basically what we are seeing is a reflexive dislike for somebody on the other side, and the fear that goes along with that,” Saunders said. Pundits, pollsters and people on the street have all pointed to this year’s election as the most polarizing in recent history. Some blame the divide on the candidates themselves, some on their disparate approaches to government. Whatever the cause, the effect has been evident at the national level for months. As November nears, the rift has become more and more evident to south metro Denver residents.
Council continues on Page 18
Election continues on Page 7
Steve Nolan of Grist Brewing Company pours beer and chats with festival-goers at Great American Beer Festival on Oct. 8. Nolan said taking part in the Meet the Brewers portion of the event helps smaller brewers get the word out. Photo by Kyle Harding
South metro brewers hold their own Breweries from area are well-represented at Great American Beer Fest
By Kyle Harding kharding@coloradocommunitymedia.com For newer breweries, like Littleton’s Locavore Beer Works, partaking in the Great American Beer Festival was a
chance to market its offerings to beer drinkers who might not know of the many options south of Denver. “Our green chile has probably been the most popular,” Locavore co-owner Andy Nelson said. He was referring to the brewery’s Heisenberg Green Chile Pale Ale. Locavore Beer Works was among a bevy of breweries from Littleton, Highlands Ranch, Centennial, Lone Tree,
Castle Rock and Parker that participated in the Great American Beer Festival, held Oct. 6-8 at the Colorado Convention Center in Denver. About 800 brewers from across the country, including more than 100 from Colorado, took part. Last year, 3 Freaks Brewery brought its staple beers to the national fest. But last week, the Highlands Ranch brewery showed off a different side. Brewers continues on Page 2
City council moves meeting times earlier Proposal for 7 p.m. start is approved on first reading By Tom Munds tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com An ordinance that received unanimous approval on first reading Oct. 3 would change the starting time of Engle-
wood City Council meetings. Beginning with the Nov. 7 meeting, the start time would move a half-hour earlier from its current schedule, meaning meetings would start at 7 p.m. going forward. The second and final reading of the ordinance is tentatively scheduled for Oct. 17. If it passes without major changes, that meeting will be the last one with a regular start time of 7:30 p.m.,
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ENGLEWOOD HERALD (ISSN 1058-7837) (USPS 176-680) OFFICE: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 | PHONE: 303-566-4100 A legal newspaper of general circulation in Englewood, Colorado, the Englewood Herald is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media, 2550 S. Main St., Littleton, CO 80120. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT LITTLETON, COLORADO and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address change to: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 DEADLINES: Display: Thurs. 5 p.m. | Classifieds: Tue. 8 a.m. | Obits: Tue. 11 a.m. | Legals: Thurs. 11 a.m.
2 The Independent • The Herald
Brewers
FACES AMONG US
Continued from Page 1
“This year,” brewer Jess Anderson said, “we brought our fun, experimental beers.” That would be, for instance, the Lloyd Christmas Peppermint Chocolate Porter, named for the “Dumb and Dumber” character. It was the third year at the festival for Grist Brewing Company of Highlands Ranch, but the first year taking part in the “Meet the Brewers” portion, in which the 60,000 beer drinkers who converge on the festival can talk to the minds behind the beer. The experience was helpful for letting people know about south
October 13, 2016 metro area breweries, said Steve Nolan, of Grist. “It’s always fun here.” One of Grist’s more unusual offerings, the Ponche de Burro, proved popular. The cinnamonapple-pear beer is a perfect offering for early fall, Nolan noted. At Living the Dream Brewing’s table, Jerod Scott of the Highlands Ranch brewery said the Belgian raspberry ale was most popular. But not all popular beers at the festival were outside of the norm. Jeff Scharlau of Lone Tree Brewing Company said the Hop Zombie India Pale Ale was a favorite. And at Littleton’s 38 State Brewing Company, general manager Steve Schuett said its red and brown ales were among the most well-received.
Doug Martin is a native of Illinois and a Navy veteran. Photo by Kyle Harding
HELLO
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A glimpse of the people in our community
DOUG MARTIN Vietnam vet, VFW member, Chicago transplant About me I grew up in Illinois in the suburbs of the Chicago area. I’ve been out here for 38 years. My wife had been in Colorado during the ’60s, so we decided to leave Illinois and come out here. We enjoy the climate and all that. We did the mountains and everything, but I’ve still never skied. We did a lot of hiking and that type of thing.
What I’ve done I worked in wholesale metal distribution, but I’ve been retired for 10 years. I went to Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois, and was a business major, then I volunteered for the Navy after I graduated in 1965. I did two tours of duty in Vietnam. I was with the Fleet Marine Force in a SeaBee battalion — that’s a construction battalion — out of Chu Lai in ’66, ’67 and ’68. My length of service Two years, nine months, 28 days and 12 hours, 42 minutes and 15 seconds. My shorttimer count started in boot camp. I liked the service and I’m proud of being a veteran. I did my duty, but I didn’t care for Chu Lai. The retirement life I’m a member of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9644 in Littleton. We get together three days a week. If you have suggestions for My Name is… contact Kyle Harding at kharding@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Littleton’s Breckenridge Brewery, one of Great American Beer Festival’s sponsoring breweries, drew long lines at the festival. Photo by Kyle Harding
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The Independent • The Herald 3
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4 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
Ordinance to abolish urban renewal passes first reading Second reading set for December; Columbine Square is exception
By Kyle Harding kharding@coloradocommunitymedia.com The Littleton City Council on first reading voted in favor of an ordinance to abolish Littleton Invests for Tomorrow, the city’s urban renewal authority, but kept one of the city’s four urban renewal plan areas alive. The Oct. 4 vote to abolish LIFT came after a lot of back and forth, including an unsuccessful motion at the beginning of the meeting by Councilmember Debbie Brinkman to postpone the first reading until Dec. 6 and another unsuccessful motion by Councilmember Phil Cernanec to indefinitely postpone the ordinance. The council compromised, passing the first reading as scheduled and postponing the second reading until Dec. 6, giving time for
property owners to respond. CMCB Enterprise Inc., owner of the vacant Columbine Square shopping center, which comprises the plan area that was kept, sent a letter to the council saying it was unaware of the impending action against LIFT and that it is interested in using urban renewal for a project at the site. Columbine Square is on Federal Boulevard, just south of Belleview Avenue. “The continuation for 60 days is not to kick the urban renewal plan down the road, but it is to show a little fairness to our property owners,” Brinkman said. The first reading passed unanimously. The motion to abolish LIFT was separate from the votes on each of the city’s four urban renewal plan areas: Columbine Square, Littleton Boulevard, Santa Fe and North Broadway. Each plan area required its own vote by council. Councilmember Jerry Valdes pulled the motion to repeal the Columbine Square plan area from the consent calendar, saying that
the area is more site-specific than the other three. “In my mind, that’s what urban renewal is supposed to be,” he said. Valdes’ amendment to keep the area passed 4-3, with Mayor Bruce Beckman and councilmembers Doug Clark and Peggy Cole voting to repeal the area. The council voted to repeal all three of the other plan areas. While keeping the Columbine Square plan area necessitates a governmental body to administer urban renewal, Cernanec said it’s possible the council could fill that role itself. Urban renewal has long been a point of contention in Littleton, with opponents claiming it is an unnecessary overreach and supporters saying it is necessary to bring some projects that are good for the city to the point of economic viability. Another mark against LIFT by opponents is its lack of urban renewal projects. The LIFT board voted in August to terminate Executive Director Jim Rees, saying the position is unnecessary without any projects.
Littleton selects acting city attorney Staff report The Littleton City Council approved an agreement with a contract city attorney to replace outgoing city attorney Kristin Schledorn later this month. Ken Fellman of Kissinger & Fellman, P.C. will serve part-time as acting city attorney beginning Oct. 18. Other attorneys at the firm may also do legal work for the city. The city will pay Fellman an hourly rate of $250. Work done by other partners at Kissinger &
Fellman will range from $235 to $350 per hour, with work done by associate attorneys costing $160 to $225. The fee for paralegals and law clerks is $85 per hour. Fellman, a former Arvada mayor, also served as the city’s acting attorney previously, from June 2013 until Schledorn was appointed to the position in December 2014. Schledorn announced last month that she will return to private practice with McGeady Becher, a Denver firm that specializes in special district law.
NEWS IN A HURRY ACC hosting law enforcement career day Arapahoe Community College will host a law enforcement and criminal justice career day on Oct. 19. Attending agencies include Denver, Boulder, Commerce City, Golden, Aurora, Thornton, Englewood, Greeley, Broomfield, Sterling and Silverthorne police departments, Gilpin County Sheriff’s Office, Federal Bureau of Prisons, Allied Universal RTD Transit Security and Blue Line Protection Group. Representatives from ACC’s criminal justice program, law enforcement academy and campus police department will also be on hand. Applicants must be at least 21 years of
age. For more information, contact Kayla Maestas at kayla.maestas@arapahoe.edu or 303-797-5793. Littleton police survey solicits feedback Littleton police are looking for feedback from residents. The Littleton Police Department Community Survey asks for a rating of overall performance, competence of department employees, officers’ attitude and behavior and concern for community safety, as well as recommendations for improvement. The survey can be found at www. littletongov.org.
ACC hosting women’s self-defense seminar Arapahoe Community College will host a women’s self-defense seminar by Rocky Mountain Self Defense. The seminar will educate about environmental awareness as a tool to escape or de-escalate a dangerous situation. It is limited to the first 50 women to register and costs $25. ACC students and employees may attend at no cost. The seminar will be held from noon to 2:20 p.m. on Oct. 21 at the ACC fitness center. For more information and to register, go to www.arapahoe.edu/ event/2016/womens-self-defense-seminar.
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The Independent • The Herald 5
October 13, 2016
Workout studio hosts class for breast cancer awareness Proceeds benefit Stamped with Love, a glamsquad to help women feel beautiful again By Alex DeWind adewind@coloradocommunity Valerie Franklin lost her cousin to breast cancer in 2008. A year later, she lost her aunt to the disease. To honor her family members, the Highlands Ranch resident started Stamped With Love, a group of photographers and makeup artists who provide their services for free to those battling breast cancer and breast cancer survivors. “It’s our celebration day — that’s what we call it,” Franklin said. “It’s an opportunity for them to forget about everything they are going through.” Franklin, a Realtor and former wedding photographer, hosts the special event in her basement, where she has a photography studio. She invites three to four women at a time so they can share their experiences while getting pampered for a photo shoot. “Not only is it makeup and hair,” she said, “it’s something that these women can take with them to remember that day.” Her goal, her website says, is to make women affected by breast cancer feel beautiful again. Stephanie Foster, a five-year survivor, had a photo shoot about a year ago with three other women, who are also longtime friends of hers. They went to Franklin’s house, had breakfast, drank champagne and talked. Foster, who has straight hair, had her hair curled and her makeup done. “It was a way to get our mind off the things we had been through,” said Foster, a Highlands Ranch resident. “It’s a time when you don’t have to worry about breast cancer.” A Highlands Ranch workout studio is raising money so more people, like Fos-
Ladies show off their ballet moves in a previous Plie for Pink class, hosted annually to raise funds for a breast cancer organization. Funds from this year’s event, at 9:45 a.m. on Oct. 15, will go towards a local breast cancer awareness organization, Stamped With Love. Courtesy photo ter, can have a carefree day of pampering. April Norris owns the women’s fitness studio called Xtend Barre. Every October — National Breast Cancer Awareness Month — she holds a fundraising event called Plié for Pink. Plié is a ballet movement, which is fitting for the ballet- and Pilates-based studio. Each year, funds from Plié for Pink go to a person or organization touched by the disease. Last year, Norris raised about $400 for a Highlands Ranch woman whose mother needed a double mastectomy, a procedure in which a doctor removes both breasts to remove as much of the cancer as possible. When she was choosing a person or organization to donate to this year, Norris thought of Franklin. The two have been friends for a couple of years. Norris will donate all funds from her Oct. 15 Plié
Members of the African Children’s Choir will sing traditional African songs as well as gospel and spiritual music at the Good Shepherd Episcopal Church in Centennial on Oct. 19. Courtesy photo
African Children’s Choir to perform in Centennial Music for Life helps by providing education By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com When the African Children’s Choir steps onstage at the Good Shepherd Episcopal Church in Centennial on Oct. 19, these children will bring a message of hope for many others in Africa. Music for Life, the parent organization, was formed over 30 years ago by Canadian Ray Barnett, who started in Uganda, where he was charmed and inspired by a little boy’s singing. The organization now works in seven countries in Africa, providing stable homes and education for many young children. A number of them have been orphaned by the ongoing wars, and others are from families who don’t have enough food or money to pay for schooling. That first tour raised enough money to build a home at Makere for choir members and others who needed care. Subsequent tours have provided six more
IF YOU GO The African Children’s Choir will sing at 7 p.m. on Oct. 19, at the Good Shepherd Episcopal Church, 8525 E. Dry Creek Road, Centennial. Admission is free, but a free will offering will be welcomed. 303740-2688. homes and made it possible for these children to have an education, continued through secondary school. Many have gone on to higher education in Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan, Nigeria, Ghana and South Africa. MFL has educated more than 52,000 children and affected the lives of over 100,000 people with its relief and development programs. The children will sing favorite African songs as well as traditional spirituals and gospel favorites. They recently appeared at the Diamond Jubilee celebration for Queen Elizabeth II of England and have sung with Paul McCartney, Annie Lennox, Mariah Carey, Keith Urban and other well known musicians.
MORE ON STAMPED WITH LOVE Valerie Franklin, executive director and photographer of Stamped With Love, usually hosts about 15 to 20 photo shoots per year. Services last up to two hours and include professional makeup and hairstyling and a photo shoot with three to five wardrobe changes. Guests leave for Pink event to Stamped With Love. “We want to be able to touch a personal life,” said Norris, who lost her aunt to breast cancer. Plié for Pink will be at 9:45 a.m. Oct. 15 at the Xtend Barre studio, 3620 E. Highlands Ranch Parkway. Norris asks that guests register before the class online at www.xtendbarre.com/studio/ highlands-ranch or by phone at 303791-2100. The cost is $20 per person.
with a personal collage of up to 10 photos and a CD with 75-100 photos. She accepts referrals from those who know someone with breast cancer or a breast cancer survivor. Email valerie@stampedwithlove.org for more information. Norris will be accepting donations, from members and nonmembers, through the month of October. She also encourages guests to sport the color pink to the class. Her studio, she said, is a positive environment for women. “This is a place of friendship, challenge and change,” Norris said. “We challenge people to do things they don’t normally do — physically and in the community.”
6 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016 PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
The Independent • The Herald 7
October 13, 2016
DECISION 2016: LOCAL PERSPECTIVES
Election
Voters say civility has suffered as election nears
Continued from Page 1
‘It’s a strange year’ Joy Hoffman, chair of the Arapahoe County Republican Party, said she’s definitely noticed a more emotional tone to this year’s election. “People’s moods this year are very different from (what) they’ve been in different years,” she said. In addition to leading the Arapahoe County GOP, — Number of Hoffman, 60, electoral votes up for co-chairs the grabs in Colorado Arapahoe County Trump — Number of campaign. times the state Donald Trump has voted for supporters, a Democratic she said, are candidate since more involved statehood in 1876 than voters percent — The she’s seen in amount by which recent years. George W. Bush, “People the Republican motivated by candidate, beat John Mr. Trump are Kerry in 2004 people who feel like they percent — The have been amount by which ignored,” she Barack Obama, the said. “I’m not Democrat candidate, sure who they beat Mitt Romney in feel was ignor2012 ing them, but they do feel ignored.” Hoffman wouldn’t give her own reasons for supporting Trump, but said supporters she talks to are worried about safety and immigration. “Many people are concerned about their safety,” Hoffman said. “They have a fear of immigration and, whether it’s real or imagined, the illegal activity that comes with it, like human traffick-
BY THE NUMBERS
9 5
4.7
5.4
By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Has this year’s presidential campaign brought out the best in people, brought out the worst in people, or has it done neither?
given the current state of the country?
A poll conducted by Monmouth University Polling Institute asked respondents about the tone and impacts of this year’s election campaign. The poll was conducted from Sept. 22 to Sept. 25, with a national random sample of 802 registered voters. Interviews were conducted in English, live, over the phone. The breakdown of respondents is as follows: 402 from a list of registered voters (201 landline and 201 cell phone) and 400 using random digit dial (200 landline and 200 cell phone).
4% Brought out the best
65% Unjustified
70% Brought out the worst
1% Language is not harsh
20% Neither
4% Don’t know
93% No, has not happened
11% More from Clinton supporters
Some questions and responses from the survey:
Do you feel that the harsh language used in politics today is justified or unjustified
50% From supporters of both equally
ing, drug smuggling and just general crime.” Hoffman acknowledged some of Trump’s comments are controversial, such as his criticism of Arizona Sen. John McCain’s heroism and of the Khans, a Gold Star family from Virginia whose son, Capt. Humayun Khan, died protecting his platoon in the Iraq War. But his statements haven’t fazed volunteers, she said. “A lot of comments I hear are something like ‘I’m sorry for their loss but they’re a little disingenuous,’ ” she said. “Some people react negatively to what he says and some people applaud it.” The emotional tone of the campaign is largely a product of people too focused on political correctness and being “thin-skinned,” she said. Hoffman talks politics freely with her campaign co-workers, but said
5% Both 1% Don’t know Have you lost or ended any friendships because of this year’s presidential campaign, or has this not happened? 7% Yes, did lose/end friendship
she and her friends steer discussions toward safer topics in social situations, for fear of offending each other. “It’s a strange year,” she said. “A lot of people don’t want to talk about politics this year. Many people are afraid of the reactions they’ll get.” ‘Pitting people against each other’ Meredith Thatcher, 29, has supported Democrat Hillary Clinton since the day she announced her candidacy for president. The Colorado press secretary for the Clinton campaign likes the former U.S. senator’s foreign policy experience as Secretary of State and her plans to reform Wall Street. “She has concrete solutions for these problems,” Thatcher said. “Not just talking points.” The most common criticisms against Clinton, regarding her use of a private email account and claims she mishan-
30% Justified
Do you think this harsh language tends to come more from supporters of Donald Trump, more from supporters of Hillary Clinton, or from supporters of both equally? 37% More from Trump supporters
2% Don’t know dled the attack on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi, have been resolved, Thatcher said. “The 11 hours of testimony speak for themselves. She answered every question without tiring and without flinching,” Thatcher said. “To keep that story going is certainly a benefit to the Republican side… It’s an attempt to spin old news that’s been pretty well dissected.” Thatcher, who worked on President Obama’s 2012 campaign, also feels there is a more antagonistic tone this time around. The cause, she said, can be traced back to Trump’s campaign announcement, when he called for a wall to keep out Mexican criminals and “rapists.” “As the campaign has gone on, the rhetoric has ramped up,” she said. “It really does seem like an unprecedented level of rhetoric focused on dividing people and pitting people against each other.” Election continues on Page 8
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8 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
DECISION 2016: LOCAL PERSPECTIVES
Election
you get a lot of people who are upset on both sides.”
Continued from Page 7
‘Not what we’d heard before’ The chair of the Douglas County Republican Party said people on both sides of the aisle don’t know how to handle a candidate as unconventional as Trump. “It’s no secret that initially, as he was on the debates, he answered and his rhetoric was not what we’d heard before,” Tanne Blackburn, 72, said. “A lot of people don’t like change. It makes them uncomfortable not knowing what the change is.” For Blackburn, Trump’s background in business and lack of political experience are bonuses. “He’s the first absolutely total businessman, not a politician,” she said. “This whole country needs a different perspective than what we’ve had.” Trump’s controversial statements — including derogatory comments against women, Muslims and Mexicans — are a result of his unpolished nature, Blackburn said. “He is not a politician,” she said. “Do I think these statements are good? No. But I’m more concerned with the welfare of our country.” Robert Blaha, chairman of the Colorado for Trump campaign, also likes his candidate’s businessman’s perspective. He describes the election as “contentious” rather than “divisive.” Both candidates have made inappropriate comments, Blaha said, but they are only “one of the things in the mix.” A bigger cause of the divide, he said, is their different approaches to issues like the economy and immigration. “There is a lot of emotion about this race,” he said. “When you add that emotion and excitement to the mix,
‘My jaw is on my chest’ Centennial resident Laurie Ritchie believes the differences between the two candidates, and their rhetoric, couldn’t be clearer. “She has been under the media spotlight for 30 to 40 years,” Ritchie said. “If you look at what she’s done — where the rubber meets the road — she has measurable accomplishments. The contrast is amazing. Experience counts.” Ritchie, a 55-year-old Democrat and small business owner, has volunteered for Democratic campaigns since 2008. She blames Trump’s comments about immigrants, Muslims and minorities for creating a “frightening” campaign. “The extreme views, the racism — I listen to him speak and my jaw is on my chest,” she said. “The comments are just so extreme.” Sitting in the food court at Park Meadows mall in Lone Tree, Dhooge said she feels the same as Ritchie, and the first presidential debate on Sept. 26 reaffirmed her opinion. “He just kept on interrupting her,” she said. “I thought ‘I better shut it off before I put my foot through the TV.’ ” Dhooge said she’s never voted a straight ticket, always choosing individuals over their party. And though she’s “not crazy about Clinton,” she will vote for her. “She has the knowledge,” Dhooge said. “And he always has a plan for everything, but he never tells you what it is.” ‘We’re all Americans’ Saunders, the CSU professor, said polarization in Congress has become unyielding in the last 10 to 15 years, with party lines taking precedent over principle. That opposition, he said, is
Did you know? By Tom Skelley tskelley@coloradocommunitymedia.com Since the mid-1800s, the Democratic and Republican parties have consolidated the presidential election process into essentially a two-party competition. The last president who wasn’t either a Republican or a Democrat was Millard Fillmore, a Whig, who ended his term in 1852. The last time a third-party candidate came in second was 1912, when Teddy Roosevelt split from the Republican Party. Running as the candidate for his newlyformed Progressive Party, Roosevelt won 88 electoral votes and came in second to Democrat Woodrow Wilson. This year’s election cycle, featuring two widely unpopular major-party candidates, has seen a lot of buzz about third-party resurgence and theories that many voters may not cast a ballot at all. But political veterans aren’t sure whether there is any truth to the speculation. Marlu Burkamp, director-at-large for the League of Women Voters in Arapahoe and Douglas counties, is “not that worried” that dislike of the top candidates will keep people home on Election Day. But she added that there has been a slight uptick in third-party interest. reflected in the electorate. “How do we get past that?” Saunders asked rhetorically. “It’s really hard to think about how that would happen without a pretty large reset of the system.” If voters supporting Trump and Clinton follow their leaders’ example, there may not be much cause for optimism. “We have one candidate who says ‘Can’t we all get along?’ and another
Community voices: “Foreign relations and foreign policy because I feel like there is a lot of turmoil in the world and the U.S. isn’t particularly viewed in a positive light.” — Shannon Vance, teacher, independent, Highlands Ranch
“I’d say the most important issue is the economy because we’re still having sluggish growth since the downturn in 2008. We haven’t fully recovered from that and I think people are still worried about jobs and the fact that incomes haven’t risen at the same rate as inflation. There’s still a lot of fear about out there about that, I think.” — Ben Lachman, registered nurse, Democrat, Castle Rock
“There is probably a resurgence in voting for a third party,” she said. “They’re picking up, but I don’t know that it will be significant.” A Real Clear Politics poll on Sept. 23, showing Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson polling at 8.9 percent nationally, bears out her assessment. Burkamp worries the drama surrounding this year’s presidential race will overshadow important local issues and candidates. “Everything starts locally,” Burkamp said. “If you’re not very happy with the presidential candidates, your vote still counts down the ballot, it’s very important. If you don’t vote for them, you’re missing the boat.” Political science professor Kyle Saunders of Colorado State University said there is always a level of non-participation among the college-aged citizens he teaches. But he doesn’t necessarily see this year’s candidates causing widespread voter apathy among older voters. Saunders said 43 percent of voters selfidentify as Independents, but when they are alone in the ballot box, a majority still vote primarily with either Republicans or Democrats. “Seventy to 75 percent of them are closet partisans,” he said. “If you push them or watch how they vote, they vote the same as a straight Republican or a straight Democrat down the ticket.” candidate who says ‘Nope, we can’t,’ ” Saunders said. “It’s a tough time.” But Dhooge has hope. Differences between the candidates and their supporters run deep, but she believes the rift will mend, regardless of who wins. “We’re all Americans,” she said. “If you are at all patriotic, you stick with your country.”
What do you believe is the most important issue in this presidential race, and why? “I believe that change is needed. I think some of the poor decisions the first Clinton made would be repeated because he would probably be one of her advisers.” — Marx Coleman, retired, Republican, Centennial
“Political and social divisiveness. It’s just my general feeling that we’re fighting now politically and socially more than any time I can remember.” — Glen Stearns, welder, Libertarian, Parker
“I would have to say that it is the economy. I just think that we’re in a bad place as far as our ability to retain the right companies in this country.” — Daniel Hall, contractor, Republican, Castle Rock
“I’m very concerned about the Supreme Court. If Trump gets in, good Lord, who knows what he will do. The next president will likely be nominating and putting into office two, three or four Supreme Court justices.” — Frank Haskins, retired, Democrat, Centennial
“I’m going to say partisanship over issues. Because we’re ignoring issues at the expense of being partisan.” — Brad Crooks, journalist, independent, Parker
The Independent • The Herald 9
October 13, 2016
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10 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
Johnson makes first stop in Colorado Libertarian candidate draws capacity crowd at CU South Denver
By Kyle Harding kharding@coloradocommunitymedia.com In his first campaign stop in Colorado, Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson tried to chart a course for libertarianism as a centrist position rather than one at the fringes of politics. “I think my stance on the issues is actually reflective of most Americans,” the former Republican governor of New Mexico repeated several times to reporters as well as to the crowd at his Oct. 3 rally at CU South Denver, just west of Parker. “That being: fiscally conservative, socially inclusive, skeptical of wars, skeptical of military interventions, regime change and supporting free markets,” he continued. Johnson noted that he and his running mate, former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, were both re-elected as Republican governors in Democratic-majority states. Johnson has polled well in Colorado, the birthplace of the national Libertarian Party, where the leading presidential candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump are unpopular. Johnson received 1.38 percent of the state’s vote in 2012, and in a CNN poll conducted Sept. 20-25 he got 13 percent
Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson drew a crowd of about 1,000 to CU South Denver on Oct. 3. The former governor of New Mexico made his pitch to disaffected Republicans and Democrats, saying he believes most Americans broadly agree with his ideas. Photo by Kyle Harding among likely voters. Johnson used the rally to hit Trump on two of his signature issues of restricting immigration and free trade, criticize Clinton on her record of supporting military interventions as a senator and the secretary of state, and praise Colorado for
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October 13, 2016
Johnson Continued from Page 10
popular vote in 1992. He also pushed back against the idea that voting for third-party candidate is a wasted vote. “A wasted vote is voting for somebody you don’t believe in,” he said. Johnson addressed his recent gaffes — not recognizing the city of Aleppo in Syria or being able to name a foreign leader he admires — and the idea that he is an unserious candidate for voters concerned about foreign policy by saying that other politicians who can name foreign leaders or citizens have involved the U.S. in military entanglements in the Middle East. “We arm the Free Syrian Army, those arms end up in the hands of the Islamists,” he said. “We support the Kurds against the Islamists but the Kurds are sideways with our Turkish allies, who aren’t such good allies since we invaded Iraq.” Johnson said it should be as easy as possible to immigrate to find a better life. “I recognized in 2012 that 30 percent of Republicans believe the scourge of the earth is Mexican immigration, and it is my voice in 2012 saying this is a political bogeyman,” he said. “It doesn’t exist. It’s made up. Immigration is really a good thing.” “The main reason that there are 11 million undocumented workers in this country is because you can’t get a work visa,” he said. While Johnson made his pitch to defectors on both sides of the aisle by acknowledging a need for a social safety net, a national defense and a discussion of how to keep guns out of the hands of the mentally ill, he also threw
LAST WEEK’S WINNER Gary Johnson answers questions prior to his rally at CU South Denver. The Libertarian presidential candidate said his goal is to break up the two-party system. Photo by Kyle Harding out red meat for the Libertarian faithful with harsh criticism of the government’s monetary policy, surveillance and criminal justice. To cheers, he announced that, based on what he knows, he would pardon NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and said that he believes drug prohibition drives violence. People at the rally sported shirts or buttons with a wide variety of unofficial campaign slogans, including “Make America Sane Again.” Nolon Cochron, of Milliken, wearing a “Veterans for Johnson” T-shirt, said that he came to the Libertarian Party from the conservative side and the biggest issue for him is scandals within the Department of Veterans Affairs. “I’ve heard both parties want to take care of veterans and when they say they want to
take care of veterans, I haven’t seen it,” the Marine Corps veteran said. Unlike many Johnson supporters, Cochron, 35, does not consider himself to be completely anti-war. “I’m not a radical Libertarian,” he said. Coming from the other end of the political spectrum was Sam Short of Fountain, a former Bernie Sanders backer. “I stand very much where (Johnson) stands with personal liberties,” said Short, 23, who registered as a Democrat to support Sanders but said that he will switch his affiliation to the Libertarian Party. Johnson knows the presidency isn’t in the cards for a third-party candidate. But he described his end-game before the rally. “To ruin the two-party system,” he said.
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12 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
VOICES
LOCAL
4B: Pennies add up to something beautiful “Life without the collective resources of our libraries, museums, theatres and galleries, or without the personal expression of literature, music and art, would be static and sterile – no creative arguments about the past, no diverse and stimulating present and no dreams of the future.” That quote comes from “The Value of Arts and Culture to People and Society,” a report by Arts Council England, an organization similar to our Scientific Cultural Facilities District in that it distributes public monies to a bevy of arts and cultural entities. Like the SCFD, the Arts Council’s goal is not only sustainability for those institutions, but also — and perhaps more importantly — the creation of thriving and diverse experiences that enrich communities, expand horizons and inspire us to reach for the best of humanity. That’s what the SCFD has accomplished since 1988, for the incredible bargain of a penny for every $10 in sales tax paid in Arapahoe County and the six other Denver metro area counties that comprise the district. Voters renewed that deal in 1994 and 2004. And we should again do so on Nov. 8 by saying yes to Ballot Issue 4B. The amendment would reauthorize and extend the collection of the 0.1 percent sales tax for 12 more years until 2030. It also revises the distribution formula of money to the three tiers of organizations — 310 in total — that it funds. Besides Arapahoe County, the other counties that receive SCFD funding are Adams, Broomfield, Boulder, Denver, Douglas (with the exception of the towns of Castle Rock and Larkspur) and Jefferson. The bulk of the money would continue to go to the five largest entities: the Denver Zoo, Denver Botanic Gardens, Denver Art Museum, Denver Museum of Nature and Science, and
OUR VIEW Denver Center for the Performing Arts. But the smaller regional and local organizations would receive a larger percentage of distributions than they have in the past. Opponents argue the tax unfairly hits everyone, regardless of whether they patronize the cultural facilities. They argue the distribution formula favors the five largest organizations, while the grants to smaller institutions would continually shrink because their share would be divided among more. But there can be no argument that for 28 years the SCFD has succeeded in its mission of creating a dynamic, vibrant arts, science and cultural environment that is recognized far beyond the metro area. We derive an intrinsic benefit from arts and culture: We learn. We explore. We consider new perspectives. We dream. But arts and culture also directly energize our economy and workforce. They attract tourists and create jobs. They spill over into classrooms and education arenas. They foster collaboration and inspire creative thinking that can lead to social change. And, especially, they build community, reminding us how we’re connected while celebrating and providing needed outlets for expression and diversity. Just last week, the nonprofit Colorado Business Committee for the Arts released an economic activity study of Denver metro-area culture. The report, released every two years, was based on grant reports from the institutions that participate in the SCFD. The results show that in 2015: • Arts and culture generated $1.8 billion in economic activity.
• SCFD distributed $53.2 million, 14.6 percent more than in 2013. • Jobs in the arts, science and cultural organizations grew by 5 percent since 2013 to 10,731. • Cultural tourists, about 18 percent of the nearly 14 million people who visited cultural attractions, added $367 million in new money to the state’s economy, the largest impact to date from that sector. • 3.9 million children benefited from outreach. The SCFD institutions also are working to increase outreach and improve access to underserved communities and those who might not be able to afford admissions. At Denver Botanic Gardens, for instance, 5.3 million people were served through the SCFD’s free days in 2015. Gardens officials realized some also might not be able to visit because they just can’t get there. So they started free shuttle transportation from community centers, such as Denver’s Mariposa Housing Authority, the Asian-Pacific Development Center and refugee communities to bring people in on days other than traditional free days — but also with free admission. While the process may not be perfect, what the Scientific Cultural Facilities District has built in 28 years of existence can only be applauded and met with gratitude. Its institutions — from the Denver Zoo to Hudson Gardens to the Englewood Cultural Arts Center Association, Littleton Town Hall Arts Center and Cherry Creek Chorale — continually work to give us the joy of discovery and simple enjoyment, moments that let us breathe in a world that runs too fast. All this for a penny on every $10 in sales tax. The decision is easy: Approve 4B. It’s a small price to pay for the arts.
A state between love and hate As I have shared in the past, one of my very favorite things about writing this column is the interaction and communication with our communities. Many of those conversations or email exchanges inspire my thoughts and sometimes even provide great material for a future column. Such as this one. These past few weeks I have received more “negatively” Michael Norton charged emails than I can remember at any time over the WINNING past 10 years. The negativity was WORDS not so much pointed at me, but rather about the current state of life, politics, terrorism, national anthem protests and the growing chasm between our communities and our police departments. And by the way, although we all recognize there is work to be done and improvements that can be made within our police departments and processes, a big shout-out to anyone who wears the uniform and has worn the uniform, you are greatly appreciated and deeply respected. The negative question contained in one email was this, “So what do you hate more, the insanity of the presidential election and our sorry choice of candidates or the Colin Kaepernick driven National Anthem protest?” Another reader called me out and asked me if I was ever going to take a stand or share my beliefs or opinions on some of these “harder than life issues,” as he called them. And there have been several others that carried a similar message that have been born out of frustration, lack of clear information, and opposing belief systems on both a grand and small scale. Without sidestepping the questions or avoid declaring my position or belief on the above topics and other important issues, let me share my responses with you here. As far as which do I hate more, I can honestly say neither. First of all, “hate” would not be my word choice. Disappointed, saddened, sick to my stomach, frustrated would all come well before “hate.” I cannot turn a blind eye to the massive shortfalls of both candidates, nor can I tell you that I don’t feel a gut-punch every time I see an Norton continues on Page 13
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To boldly goat where no man has gone before
Craig Marshall Smith
QUIET DESPERATION
During an interview with National Geographic several years ago, I was asked, “What animal would you like to be?” At the time, I was wearing a lot of black eye makeup and eating shoots and leaves. I said, “Isn’t
it obvious?” But seriously. A man named Thomas Thwaites decided that “goat” would be his answer. He spent three days living with goats as a goat in the Swiss Alps. He had some prosthetic legs made for himself, wore tight black and white clothing, and a white speed-cyclist’s helmet.
For breakfast he ate grass. For lunch he ate a tin can. I made that up. Thwaites said, “My goal was to take a holiday from the pain and worry of being a self-conscious being, able to regret the past and worry about the future.” Vodka used to do that for me, and I didn’t have to leave the house. “I was able to keep up with them for maybe a kilometer or so on this migration down the side of a rocky mountain, and then they just left me in the dust.” I went to see my doctor and said, “Doctor, I feel like a goat.” The doctor said, “Craig, how long have you felt like that?” I said, “Since I was a kid.” There are several videos of Thwaites amid goats, doing his best on all fours on his special legs, and chewing grass. A television news anchor was overcome when she was reporting the story. That’s the video I recommend. I think we have all contemplated Smith continues on Page 13
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The Independent • The Herald 13
October 13, 2016
Unpresidential audio stirs up memories When I was 18, the summer between my freshman and sophomore years in college, I worked at the front desk of a manufacturing plant, and was the only woman on the site. One of my duties was to go into the production area and collect the time cards for payroll processing. One day the superintendent of the plant – a married man – was waiting for me in the back. He pushed me against the wall, trapped me with his body against mine, and pressured me for sex. I got away and, from then on, only went for the time cards when he was off the site. He continued to stalk me, sometimes following me on my way home to hang around outside the post office while I dropped off the company’s mail. But I didn’t tell anyone. Some years later, while vice president of an advertising agency, one of my clients was a wealthy real estate developer. We were driving to one of his job sites when he took his right hand off the steering wheel and reached across the car to grab my breast. I couldn’t move. I couldn’t speak. I wondered what I could possibly have done to invite this crude advance.
He was married, I was married. And yet I didn’t tell anyone. I was in a situation familiar to many women, especially in those days when it seemed more acceptable for men who believed they wielded power Andrea Doray to take advantage of women. I didn’t want ALCHEMY to risk offending a significant client of our agency, even though I was traumatized by these actions. He invited me to fly with him on his private jet to another of his properties, and when I declined, we lost the account. Having launched my business career in the ’80s, I have been subjected to these and other kinds of harassment for more than 30 years, sometimes from the men who directly employed me. So it’s no surprise to me when stories such as those about Bill Cosby, Roger
Ailes and – God help us – the Republican nominee for president have come to light. What does surprise me is that 1) people are shocked by these revelations, 2) people believe that such behavior is uncommon, and 3) people continue to blame and shame the victims. I know why women stay silent. I know why they endure the objectification, the humiliation, the fear. It’s because this type of discrimination and harassment doesn’t only happen at the exalted levels of celebrity. It happens to wives, mothers, sisters, daughters, girlfriends and best friends in all walks of life. It’s because women are not believed or, worse, are believed but brushed aside as inconsequential. I read a comment in the New York Times the day the latest news broke about Donald Trump’s boasts of what is classified as sexual assault, and I paraphrase here: If you are female, you have had someone else grab a private part of your body without your consent. This is certainly true for me and most of my contemporaries. I think of the younger women in my life and can only fervently hope this is no longer true for them.
And that’s why I’m telling my story now. What makes anyone believe they have the right, the permission, to take away my control of who touches my own flesh? I believe – I have to believe – that this happens less frequently, less systematically than in the past, due in large part to the women who have come forward, the women who support them, and the decent, compassionate men – and they are in the majority – who are appalled and outraged by what goes on. It’s unlikely there will be any kind of justice for the women in Trump’s lewd legacy, but there can be a victory for the women and girls of the United States – and the people who love them – in the defeat of Donald Trump. Vote for anyone other than the most unqualified person, on any level, ever to seek leadership of the (still) greatest country on the Earth.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
makes sense that we should protect our constitution from outsiders and that amendments should be of enduring value. Currently, special interests face the same ballot process to change state law as they do the constitution. Not surprisingly, three out of every four initiatives seek an amendment because of the greater weight it carries over a state law. These constitutional amendments inject permanent policies into our governance that are difficult to change or remove. This creates a vulnerability for our state and particu-
larly our economic development efforts. And that, in turn, affects all working Coloradans. Bringing new businesses to our region better positions our communities for the work-life balance people want: less time on the roads and more time with families. But the level of certainty necessary for them to operate and grow is jeopardized by the ease of potential constitutional amendments. Amendment 71 will protect our constitution and increase the level of certainty by requiring that signatures are gathered in every state Senate district. This ensures broad-
based support and equitable representation. The proposed constitutional amendment then needs to pass by more than 55 percent, thereby, raising the bar. While Amendment 71 raises the bar for constitutional amendments, it leaves intact the easiest process in the country for citizeninitiated changes to law. This November, I hope you’ll join me in raising the bar and protecting the Colorado Constitution by supporting Amendment 71. Jim Gunning Former mayor of Lone Tree
“It’s a miracle.” The goat said, “No it isn’t. Your name is on the inside cover.” Thwaites wrote a book about his experience. It’s called “GoatMan: How I Took a Holiday from Being Human.” The wrap on the book is that while it does a fine job of outlining his extensive preparation, which includes designing a prosthetic goat stomach to digest grass, it is less attentive to his actual time as a goat. Please read it on my behalf and let me know. During World War II, metal was needed for the war effort, so license plates were made out of soybeans. Guess who ate them off of farm vehicles? If you know baseball, you know about the Hartford Yard Goats. The Yard Goats are the Rockies Double-A farm team. They finished third in the Eastern League Eastern Division with a record of 74-67. I don’t have a joke here. However, the
Rockies’ season sometimes seemed like one. The expression about getting someone’s goat comes from the practice of putting a goat in a race horse’s stall prior to a race, to calm the horse down.
Rascals would swipe the goat. Goats and I have something in common. We both listen to Baaa-ch.
Vote yes on Amendment 71 Our state’s constitution has become cluttered with directives pushed by special interests. This isn’t a good thing, but there is a good reason it has happened: It’s easy to do. Special interests from all over the country look to Colorado as a testing ground for laws and constitutional amendments. What is wrong with voters directly stating their preferences for laws and constitutional clauses? Absolutely nothing. But it also
Smith Continued from Page 12
existence as something other than a human being, and some people take the next step, like college mascots and furries. Furries are people who dress up like animals. They even hold conventions. Why isn’t a Halloween costume enough, once a year? Beats me. What do you call an unemployed goat? Billy Idol. A good friend of mine told me a story about his cherished Bible. He lost it in the Rocky Mountains when he was on vacation, and he spent the next three days looking for it. Then one day, a goat came to his hotel with the Bible in his mouth. My friend raised his hands and yelled,
Norton Continued from Page 12
athlete at any level kneel, sit or protest our national anthem. It’s the same gut-punch feeling when the Pledge of Allegiance and prayer were challenged and taken away from our schools or when Christmas displays and celebrations on public property became governed and directed by the minority instead of the majority. And as for as taking a stand or sharing my beliefs, I am sure you understand those from my response in the above paragraph. I have heard it said that it is our differences that make the world go ‘round, and that keep the earth spinning. I also grew up as an amusement park kid, where there were rides that continued to spin you around and around and around. Some were able to tolerate it regardless of how much spinning was going on and the velocity at which they were spun. The ride was fantastic for them. Others would either throw up on the ride or vomit as they walked weak-legged off of the ride. So if it is our differences that make the world go ‘round, I am amongst the many who have emailed me and tolerating as much as I possibly can. Sick to my stomach? Yes. I just want the ride to stop, slow down, and let me off before I do actually throw up. Here is where I net this out for myself
in our challenging times. Again, I don’t use the word “hate” because I still do believe we live in a world that is mostly filled with love. I believe we live in a world where the mistakes and agendas of the few are amplified so loudly that they seem to take center stage over the goodness, love, and grace that abounds in our communities. We are living in this state of being or state of mind that is centered right between love and hate as we are caught up in the chaos created by the decisions and actions of our past. And as we seek to break that cycle and we seek new change and as we come together to achieve both, the words I hope that we will use to replace “hate” and the words I hope we can live with and live by example with include: love and forgiveness, love and kindness, and love and grace. How about you? Are you living with that gut-punch feeling about any of the topics or issues mentioned here? Or maybe there is something else that has your attention right now. And if you are feeling that gut-punch I hope that you can ease the pain or nauseated feeling by turning to grace. As always, thank you for your emails and I would love to hear from you this week at gotonorton@ gmail.com. And when we can get our head around the fact that grace usurps hate every time, it will be a better than good week. Michael Norton is a resident of Castle Rock, the former president of the Zig Ziglar Corporation, a strategic consultant and a business and personal coach.
Andrea Doray is a writer who is not surprised, sadly, that it took this long for people to become indignant about Trump’s treatment of women…or of most anyone else, for that matter. Contact her at a.doray@andreadoray.com.
Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net.
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14 The Independent • The Herald
LIFE
LOCAL
CULTURE FA I T H FA M I L Y FOOD HEALTH
October 13, 2016
Shutterstock photo
Keeping kids active Fun and encouragement key to getting kids to exercise By Kyle Harding kharding@coloradocommunitymedia.com
THE IMPORTANCE OF UNSUPERVISED PLAY TIME
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arents worry that today’s children aren’t getting enough exercise, spending more time playing video games and less time playing outdoors. But throughout the metro area, there are efforts to spark kids’ interest in physical fitness. They include running programs in Littleton and Parker and a beforeschool program in Arvada that encourages students to play sports. Kaiser Permanente offers options for Colorado schools that want to encourage exercise, via its Thriving Schools Initiative, which offers grants of up to $200,000 to fund physical or nutritional education programs. At North Arvada Middle School, the program funds a zero-hour class beginning at 7:30 a.m. daily in which students play a friendly game of basketball or handball, tracking activity with pedometers, with a goal of at least 3,000 steps. At Damon Runyon Elementary School in Littleton, physical education teacher Jason Hill has been working for 10 years to get and keep kids interested in running. His Runyon Running Club gathers weekly during the fall and spring at the school’s track, with about 80 students ranging from kindergarten to fifth grade. Parent Adrian Jordan, whose son Tariq is a second-grader at Runyon and takes part in the club, said it helps to have something else to do besides sitting in front of a computer. “It’s not good for a kid to be staring
A fear of letting kids play unsupervised can also lead to lower levels of physical activity, some parents believe. “I think now people are more afraid to let their kids go out and play,” said Joy Getz, whose son, Brady, a kindergartner, takes part in the Runyon Running Club in Littleton.
A Runyon Elementary School physical education teacher plays tag with students in the school’s running club. The club promotes exercise among children. Photo by Kyle Harding at a screen for hours,” he said. Though many parents or educators may be worried that today’s children may not be as active as in generations past, Hill said they may just need encouragement. “I think they’re active with adults’ help,” he said. “There’s not a lot of kids coming down here playing soccer or shooting hoops without it being a scheduled practice.” Many Runyon parents are into running, which helps, Hill said. “There are a lot of triathletes and distance runners here.” Hill runs 5Ks and used to trail run when he lived in western Colorado.
He ran one half-marathon before sustaining an ACL and meniscus tear in his knee. His son took part in the club during his elementary school years and now runs track at Euclid Middle School in Littleton. “Many kids from here are now doing track there,” he said. Kids Running America is a Parkerbased nonprofit organization that encourages running among children throughout the Denver metro area. The group uses an “incremental marathon” approach, with the kids logging mileage over eight to 12 weeks.
Lenore Skenazy, founder of the Freerange Kids movement and the blog Freerangekids.com, which advocates raising children to be independent, said that fear is unfounded and negatively affects child-rearing, including by keeping kids from being as active as they should be. “We really have lost our perspective on what is dangerous,” she said. Skenazy, an author and former journalist who lives in New York City, believes that unsupervised play is crucial to childhood development.
They run the final mile at Washington Park in Denver on Oct. 23, completing either a marathon of 26.2 miles or an ultra-marathon of 100 miles. “Our main goal is to get kids out and active,” spokeswoman Rachel Levi said. Active continues on Page 15
The Independent • The Herald 15
October 13, 2016
Local orchestra keeps jazz beat alive Denver’s jazz scene will never match the bustling birthplaces of the genre — New Orleans, Chicago and New Orleans — but the Mile High City still boasts an impressive jazz history. Art Bouton, executive director Clarke Reader of the Colorado Jazz Repertory OrchesLINER tra, is among those NOTES working to keep that history alive through performance. “The goal of the orchestra is simple — gather the best players in town to play the best big band jazz,” he said. “Every town should have a band playing great stuff like this.” Entering its fifth season, the orchestra brings its take on big band leaders like Count Basie and Duke Ellington, and unique arrangements from such legends as Miles Davis, Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald, to smaller venues up and down the Front Range. In the coming six months, the 18-piece band will perform at the Arvada Center, Lakewood Cultural Center and Parker Arts Center. “These 500-seat theaters are our sweet spot,” Bouton said. “There’s not any other large jazz ensemble in town doing what we’re doing.”
Denver’s jazz scene dates back to the 1920s and 1930s, when Five Points in central Denver was known as the ‘Harlem of the West.’ The neighborhood was home to famous clubs like the Rossonian, the Casino Cabaret and Lotus Club. Bouton, also a professor of saxophone at the University of Denver’s Lamont School of Music, has been a lifelong advocate of jazz in the area. “This music deserves people with an attention to detail,” he said. “Anybody can feel it when it really starts grooving.” Denver’s jazz scene dates back to the 1920s and 1930s, when Five Points in central Denver was known as the “Harlem of the West.” The neighborhood was home to famous clubs like the Rossonian, the Casino Cabaret and Lotus Club. Towering figures like Louis Armstrong and Fitzgerald stopped by to perform. One of the biggest names in the big band era, Glenn Miller, also left an im-
CLARKE’S ALBUM OF THE WEEK Selection: Norah Jones’ “Day Breaks,” released on Blue Note records. Review: Jones’ sixth album is her jazziest since her award-winning debut. But while “Come Away With Me” was brimming with love songs, “Day Breaks” goes deeper and darker. Jones tackles the tense national
pression on the area. He attended the University of Colorado in Boulder in 1923 and played in clubs around Denver before dropping out of the university to pursue music fulltime. Today, Denver is home to such jazz clubs as Dazzle on Capitol Hill and El Chapultepec on Market Street, which are great places to experience live jazz. “Live jazz is amazing, because you’re able to see and hear people create music on the spot,” Bouton said. “Jazz is always changing, and I can’t wait to hear what the music sounds like in six years.” In a world with so many musical options at one’s fingertips, getting young people interested in jazz is one of the genre’s biggest challenges. Since its creation, hip-hop has been inspiring new generations of jazz investigators, and artists like Kendrick Lamar, Chance the Rapper and Oddisee are blending jazz
climate in songs like “Flipside” and “Tragedy,” and her compositions call to mind Charles Mingus and Thelonious Monk. Few vocalists, jazz or otherwise, bring the same warmth and melancholy to their music. Favorite song: “Once I Had A Laugh” Best song for our troubled times: “Peace”
and hip-hop in new, inventive ways. To help keep jazz alive, Bouton and the orchestra work with Youth on Record, a nonprofit that partners with the local music community, public schools, housing authorities and philanthropic organizations to ensure high-risk young people graduate high school ready to enter college or the workforce. “We’re building an audience one person at a time,” Bouton said. “We play music at such a high level, and that’s the way it should be played.” Clarke Reader’s column on how music connects to our lives appears every other week. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he has been a jazz fan since hearing Miles Davis in seventh grade. Check out his music blog at calmacil20.blogspot. com. And share your favorite jazz music at creader@coloradocommunitymedia.com.
COLORADO JAZZ REPERTORY ORCHESTRA SCHEDULE For more information, visit www. coloradojazz.org.
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Though Colorado consistently ranks as the state with the lowest level of adult obesity, childhood obesity is on the rise, she said. In 2015, the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment said approximately 25 percent of kids 5 to 11 in the state are overweight or obese. Kids Running America is in
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Big Band Christmas with the CJRO
Oct. 21 - 7:30 p.m.
Continued from Page 14
Beatles
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CJRO Presents Phröntrange Sextet - Acoustic Fusion
Active
PACE Center - The Schoolhouse Theater
about 40 schools throughout the area, and about 550 kids are taking part this fall, Levi said. She serves as a team mentor at Northridge Elementary School in Highlands Ranch, where 70 kids are in the club. “It’s really fun to see these kids and their love of running,” she said. Making exercise fun is key to keeping kids interested in it, according to the Roadrunners Club of America, a national association of running organizations.
To that end, Hill’s running club at Runyon isn’t just about running in circles. The kids warm up with an interval run and then play a runningfocused game, like tag. The kids then take part in two “fun runs” per year, with those in third, fourth and fifth grades running one mile and younger kids running half a mile. The one in the spring is a cross country course. “It’s fun,” Hill said, “to get them a taste of jumping over rocks and running through trees.”
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WHAT IS CHILDHOOD OBESITY? Generally, a child is not obese until he or she is at least 10 percent heavier than the recommended weight for his or her height and body type, according to Kids Running America, a Parker-based organization that encourages running during childhood. Obesity most commonly begins at age 5 or 6 or during adolescence, and a child who is obese between the ages of 10 and 13 has an 80
percent chance of being overweight or obese as an adult, Kids Running America said. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, childhood obesity rates have shown small improvements, but the level of healthy-weight children is “far from ideal.” AAP recommends that all children receive at least one hour of physical activity per day.
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16 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
Corvid program worth crowing about
Crows, ravens, magpies, jays and the Clark’s nutcracker are familiar among the 120 species worldwide in the corvid family. Though often associated with Halloween, there are many more facets to these commonly found species. “Curious Corvids” will be a program from 1 to 3 p.m. on Oct. 22 at the Audubon Nature Center, 11280 Waterton Road, Littleton (south edge of Chatfield State Park.) A special guest will be Keyo, the white-naped raven from the Denver Zoo. Register: adult members $8; adult non-members $11; kids/teen members $5; kids/teen non-members $8. Den-
veraudubon.org, 303-973-9530. Wonderbound at PACE “A Gothic Folktale,” a ballet choreographed by Garrett Ammons, is set to the music of Jesse Manley. Performances at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker, will be at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 22 and 2 p.m. Oct. 23 . The Fool watches various elements in a circus performance. Tickets: parkerarts.org, 303-805-6800. Expressionistic painting workshop Colorado contemporary artist Lance Green will teach a workshop for the Heritage Fine Arts Guild on Expressionistic painting from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 5. Green’s mentor was Fritz Scholder. For registration and details on cost and supplies, see: heritage-guild.com/currentworkshops. Cost is $35, members, $50 non-members. For further information, call Mary Kay Jacobus, 303-594-4667. (The Guild’s “This is Colorado” exhibit opened Oct. 11 in the Colorado Gallery of the Arts at Arapahoe Community College.)
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Careers
Careers
Santa Claus Shop benefits Romano’s Restaurant, 5666 S. Windermere, Littleton, will donate 20 percent of profits to the Arapahoe Santa Claus Shop on two dates this fall: from 11 a.m. to closing: Mondays, Oct. 24 and Nov. 14. Pick up a coupon at the front desk to submit when you pay your dinner bill. Volunteers and donations will be needed: arapahoesantashop. org. Highlands Ranch Historical Society “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life,” will be presented by Alice Herz-Sommer at 7 p.m. Oct. 17 at the October meeting of the Highlands Ranch Historical Society at Southridge Recreation Center, 4800 McArthur Ranch Road, Highlands Ranch. Winnick will represent the story of Sommer, Holocaust survivor and the world’s
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oldest living pianist (109 years old). A Guests welcome — a $2 donation is B appreciated. s At the MOA Museum Outdoor Arts, on the second floor of the Englewood Civic M Center, 1000 Englewood Parkway, T opens a new exhibit, “Reinventing B the Image” on Oct. 15 with a recep- c tion from 6 to 9 p.m. The exhibit shows 21 Colorado-based artists p Sonya Ellingboe exploring fresh methods to interpret s SONYA’S external forms of objects, nature C and the human figure. On display u SAMPLER through Dec. 17. 303-806-0444. f h Popular author a Sara Gruen, author of “At the Water’s Edge” and “Water for Elephants,” will speak on Oct. 21 at Koelbel Library, i 5955 S. Holly St., Centennial. Readers who purchase a $25 t VIP ticket can meet Gruen at a 6 p.m. question and answer B session (hors d’ oeuvres) and have her sign a book. At 8 p.m., a free event will feature a question and answer session about her writing process and her books. (Tattered Cover will have books available for purchase.) 303-LIBRARY, arapahoelibraries.org/gruen. High Line Open House Chapter 4 of “Adventure on the High Line Canal” will take shape following open houses on Oct. 19 and 20, the final sessions in the interactive High Line Canal Vision Plan process. For past material, see: highlinecanal.org/ community. Interested in walking the canal? Contact the Conservancy. Sonya continues on Page 17
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COMMUNITY BASED FAMILY THERAPIST The mission of Tennyson Center is to work with children, youth, and their families to overcome a variety of life crises, including abuse and neglect. Tennyson Center is a community of people dedicated to serving children and youth and strengthening families. As professionals and concerned citizens we strive to provide competent and caring treatment, education, and advocacy services that are community-based, family-focused, and child-centered. Looking for a clinician with a framework that incorporates a solution-focused, trauma- informed approach and is strength-based. Skills in connecting families with the use of community resources. Flexible schedule to accommodate for evenings and/or weekend times when families are available Provides individual and family therapy and case management, working collaboratively with both internal and external resources in the home, school, community, and within TCC. Will be part of a small team starting a satellite office of Tennyson Center in El Paso County, CO to provide community based services to local families. Education and Experience: • Master of Social Work or a graduate degree in a related field required. • Two years or equivalent post-graduate work experience treating families and children preferred. • Family therapy skills and theory base required.. Must have the ability to work independently, make clinically sound decisions, and have a teamwork approach. • Strong initiative in building positive relationships and maintaining excellent communication with community partners and team members. Please send resume and cover letter to: employment@tennysoncenter.org. $1500 sign on bonus
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Wind Crest is hiring due to growth! Please join us for an Open House! Saturday, October 15th • 10:00am to 2:00pm Meet our staff and learn about career opportunities with the industry leader in integrated senior health and wellness. We will be interviewing RNs, LPNs, CNAs, Caregivers, and Dietary Aides! We are currently hiring for both full time and part time positions. At Wind Crest, we have a strong commitment to our employees. Our dedication to our staff shows in many ways, including our award winning benefits. We offer a great benefit package consisting of health insurance, dental insurance, company paid life insurance, short term disability, company paid long-term, 401k (eligible upon hire), accrued vacation & sick time, paid holidays, bereavement leave, tuition reimbursement, employee help line, flexible spending accounts, wellness fund, value plan and much more. Even if you aren’t looking at the moment come down for a tour of our beautiful facility!
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Writer/photographer wanted! Colorado Community Media needs a freelance journalist for coverage of Elbert County, focusing on the communities of Elizabeth and Kiowa. You must be able to write clear, concise news stories as well as compelling feature articles. You will need your own camera for this job and will be responsible for providing us with a front-page worthy photograph each week. We are looking for someone who has the time to commit to doing two articles, with accompanying photos, each week. This is a contract position. Pay is negotiable. For more information or to apply, contact editor Chris Rotar at crotar@coloradocommunitymedia.com
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Assessment Administrators Seeking motivated individuals to proctor assessment sessions with 4thand 8th-grade students in schools for the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Must be available to work January 30 –March 10, 2017. Paid training, paid time and mileage reimbursement for local driving, and weekly paychecks. This is a part-time, temporary position. To apply, visit our website at www.westat.com/CAREERS and select "Search Field Data Collection Jobs." Search for your state, find the NAEP Assessment Administrator position, and select the "apply to job" button. For more information email NAEPrecruit@westat.com or call 1-888-237-8036. WESTAT EOE
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Flagship Biosciences, Inc., 7575 W 103rd Ave #102, Westminster, CO 80021 seeks Chief Technology Officer to be responsible for development and management of Flagship Biosciences’ computational tissue analysis technology. Requires PhD in Computer Engineering, Computer Science or closely related field. Foreign Degree Accepted. Requires 10 years experience as a Chief Technology Officer, Chief Scientist, Senior Scientist, Director level in R&D, Director level in Product Development, Director level in Product Management, or similar positions. For a full description of duties and requirements and to apply, go to http://careers.ieee.org/ and enter keyword Flagship Bioscience.
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The Independent • The Herald 17
October 13, 2016
Moscow Jazz Orchestra is coming to Lone Tree Arts center to host Igor Butman group By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com Saxophone virtuoso Igor Butman will bring his Moscow Jazz Orchestra on a return visit to the Lone Tree Arts Center at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 19 for a concert of Big Band music featuring 16 musicians performing American standards and Russian jazz numbers. Butman, born in St. Petersburg in 1961, started playing the clarinet at age 11, but switched to jazz saxophone a year after he entered the Rimsky-Korsakov College of Music. His online bio says he also “took unofficial lessons from nightly radio broadcasts of jazz from 11:15 to midnight on Voice of America.” In 1987, he emigrated to America and majored in performance and composition at Berklee College of Music in Boston. He was already acquainted with some of America’s important jazz artists after being invited to play with them when they were on tour in Russia. Included: Dave Brubeck, Chick Corea, Pat Metheny, Gary Burton, Louis
Sonya
• Oct. 20, 6-8 p.m. Goodson Recreation Center, 6315 S. University Blvd., Centennial.
Continued from Page 16
• Oct 19, 4-8 p.m. Dry Dock Brewing Co. North Dock, 2801 Tower Road, Aurora. • Oct. 20 2-5 p.m. Eisenhower Recreation Center, 4300 E. Dartmouth Ave., Denver.
Littleton Leadership Academy announced A follow-up of the most recent Littleton Leadership Retreat is a plan to launch the Littleton Leadership Academy in early 2017. It will run for 10 months, one Saturday per month,
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Igor Butman, director of the Moscow Jazz Orchestra, studied at Berklee College of Music in Boston, as well as in Russia. His instrument is the saxophone. Courtesy photo
Bellson and Grover Washington Jr. Washington took Butman “under his wing” and had him play as guest artist with his band in concert and in the recording studio. Butman moved to New York in 1989, worked with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, released a solo album in 1993 and performed at major jazz festivals in the U.S. He then returned to Russia, forming his big band orchestra, but stayed in touch with American jazz contacts, bringing them to perform in Russia. When Wynton Marsalis played in Russia, he invited Butman to perform with his band. This is a connection that lasted — with Butman’s band performing with Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York and Marsalis appearing on a Butman jazz recording in Russia. The Moscow Jazz Orchestra has appeared at every Olympics since 2004 in Athens and produced the “AquaJazz” International Festival in Sochi. They are on a tour that takes them to American cities, to Europe, to Australia and India. But on Oct. 19, they will be onstage at Lone Tree Arts Center!
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Count the
October 13, 2016
Renaissance art visits Denver Exhibit shows how Venice’s distinctive styles changed By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com
PINK RIBBONS in this week’s paper!
Colorado Community Media is proud to support Breast Cancer Awareness Month with a fun contest for you, our readers!
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Search this week’s paper and count the pink ribbons. Search carefully, you will find pink ribbons in ads, editorial features, and more!
your guess online for a chance to win 2 Enter weekly prizes! Online submissions must be received before 11:59 PM October 16, 2016. Winner will be announced in next week’s paper. ● For each ribbon in the paper, CCM will make a monetary donation to local breast cancer research. ● CCM will also feature inspirational stories throughout the month of October to encourage further awareness and support within our local communities.
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About 50 paintings are beautifully installed in the Gallagher Gallery on the first floor of the Denver Art Museum in a new exhibit called “The Glory of Venice: Masterworks of the Renaissance.” Of these, 19 came from the Gallerie dell’Accademia in Venice, one rare Giorgione painting from the Scuola Grande di San Rocco in Venice, several from the Denver Art Museum’s collection and others from museums in Europe and the United States, including the North Carolina Museum of Arts, where the exhibit will travel in February. From 1450 into the early 1500s, Venetian Renaissance art developed rapidly into the treasure trove it is today, displaying a distinctive light and brilliant use of color. Northern artists traveled to Venice, bringing oil paints with them, which eventually replaced the tricky-to-use egg tempera technique that Venetian painters had been using. They couldn’t contemplate frescoes, popular in Florence “Portrait of a Gentleman” by Bartolomeo Veneto, a later and elsewhere in northern Italy, because the climate was Venetian Renaissance work, shows the inclusion of nature too damp. (Frescoes are painted on wet plaster.) and the influence of northern European painters in Venice. Enter the gallery where “Triumph of Venice,” painted in It is included in the “Glory of Venice” exhibit at the Denver 1737 by Pompeo Girolamo Batoni is exhibited and step into Art Museum. Courtesy photo a distinctive world. The Batoni painting is about the period represented by the exhibit: the Republic of Venice, represented allegorifigures twisting and paintings divided horizontally, which cally by a beautiful woman in a chariot drawn by a pair allowed for the addition of landscapes, saints, patrons and of winged lions (St. Mark’s symbol), was the more. center of trade and culture, according to coThe Annunciation is pictured, with Mary curator Angelica Daneo, who compared it to and the Angel depicted by several artists, and IF YOU GO the position New York holds today. we begin to see works by the very influential The Denver Art Mu(The other co-curator is Dr. Giovanna DaJacopo Bellini, who taught many other artists seum is on 13th Avenue, miani, former director of the Museums of the of the period in his workshop, including Titian between Broadway and City of Venice and current director of the State in his later years. Acoma Street in downMuseums of Sardinia. She also spoke at the A gallery called “The Color of Nature” iltown Denver. Parking press preview we attended on Sept. 29.) lustrates how landscape becomes more and is on 12th Avenue, just “The exhibit is based on the geography of more an element in paintings and finally, the west of Broadway. See Venice, where little squares open into a view of gallery called “Portraiture” has examples of denverartmuseum.org other little squares,” Daneo said. At the time, how portraits progressed from a ¾ view, with for hours and admisVenice was fighting the pope, The Holy Roman the subject looking to the side, to a full-on sion costs. “Glory of Emperor, the king of France, Turkey and othfront view, with the subject’s eyes engaging Venice” runs through ers, but remained dominant. Venice was very with the viewer. These were influenced by Feb. 12, 2017. wealthy and the gold in the earlier paintings painters from the Netherlands. in the exhibit represented that. The first galI’d recommend a second trip around lery is focused on paintings of the Madonna through the galleries after one has watched and Child. Divine protection was assumed. “Gold says this the progression, to revisit and consolidate thinking. The installation, with architectural details and several scene belongs to another world,” Daneo explained. photomurals, is beautifully planned, with richly colored As Humanism became more prevalent, paintings began walls that enhance the paintings. to show the natural landscape, perhaps including elements There is also a short video about the transition from egg from the artist’s own town. The beautiful light and color tempera to oil paints that one should watch. continued as composition became more dynamic, with
Council Continued from Page 1
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“This ordinance addressed the council meetings,” Keck said. “The council also agreed there will be no study sessions on council meeting nights. Study sessions will be held on the second and fourth Mondays of the month, and study sessions begin at 6 p.m.” The Oct. 3 vote comes after several discussions about starting council meeting earlier to avoid the recent late-night sessions that were necessary to complete all the agenda
business. The city manager suggested staff provide more in-depth information for council members on issues that are on the agenda for adoption. “I think the new schedule with two study sessions a month will help speed things up,” Keck said. “A study session each week means a short turnaround time for all the information for the council packet to be completed. We also must be very diligent that as the deadlines for the turnaround times are met, all the important information is included in the staff report.” Councilmembers agreed with the proposed schedule, and Councilmember Rita Russell said the new
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schedule can be put in place and if it is found it isn’t working, the council can change it. Mayor Joe Jefferson suggested the meetings start at 6:30 p.m., but the proposal did not receive the support of the other members of the council. The original proposal was to start council meetings at 6 p.m. Englewood resident Scott Gilbert spoke to the council as a scheduled visitor at the Oct. 3 meeting. He said most Englewood residents work and it would be difficult for them to attend council meetings starting at 6 p.m. He said he checked with nearly four dozen communities in the Denver metro area and the majority started their council meetings at 7.
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October 13, 2016
CURTAIN TIME Second chance at love “Last Romance” by Joe DiPietro plays through Oct. 30 at Cherry Creek Theatre, ShaverRamsey Gallery, 2414 E. Third Ave., Denver. Directed by Robert Michael Sanders. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 6:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets, $35/$30, 303-800-6578, cherrycreektheatre.org. Concert series offering “Guys on Ice: The Ice Fishing Musical” plays Oct. 14 to Oct. 23 at Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W.
Main St., Littleton. On tour from the Aurora Fox, where it has run it for six years. Directed by Robert Michael Sanders, it will present Seth Maisel, Town Hall’s education director, as Ernie the Moocher and Mark Middlebrooks, who teaches theater at both branches of American Academy in Douglas County, as Lloyd. Songs include: “Fish is a Miracle Food.” Performances: 7:30 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: $25, 303-794-2787, ext. 5, townhallartscenter.org.
Friendship “Stella and Lou” by Bruce Graham plays Oct. 28 to Nov. 27 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St., Aurora. Directed by Lorraine Scott. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: $22-$30, vintagetheatre.com, 303-856-7830. Suspense classic “Wait Until Dark” by Frederick Knott, adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher, plays Oct. 8 through Nov. 5 at the Avenue Theater, 417 E. 17th Ave., Denver. Directed
by John Ashton. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays and some Sundays. 303-321-5925, avenuetheater.com.
31; 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: $24/$22, ignitetheatre.com, 866811-4111.
Edgar Allan Poe “Nevermore: The Imaginary Life and Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe,” a musical by Jonathan Christenson, is presented Oct 21 to Nov. 13 at Crossroads Theatre, 2590 Washington St., Denver. Directed by Peter Dearth and Becky DiLio. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays and Monday, Oct.
Political becomes personal “Marie Antoinette” by David Adjami plays Oct. 14 to Nov. 13 at the Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Directed by Robert Kramer, with Missy Moore as Marie. Performances: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and Monday, Oct. 31; 6 p.m. Sundays, except Oct. 30. Tickets: $28, 303-2320363, theedgetheater.com.
MILESTONES Englewood David Book, of Englewood, graduated with a doctor of pharmacy degree from Drake University. Charles David Maguire III, of Englewood, graduated in May with bachelor’s degrees in biology and economics from Denison University. He was recognized as a senior fellow by the economics department and was the recipient of the Denison Founder’s Award and the Margaret Watkin Scholarship. Sanjana Puskoor, of Englewood, graduated in May with a bachelor’s degree in economics and a minor in history from Denison University. Puskoor was a recipient of the Tyree/Parajon Scholarship and was recognized by the economics department as a senior fellow. Debbie Rochau, of Englewood, graduated in May with a master’s degree in teaching from Morningside College. William Saltz, of Englewood, graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in business administration/marketing from Adams State University. Littleton Jennifer Callison Bliss, of Littleton, graduated in May with honors, earning a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Mark Brown, of Littleton, graduated with a master’s degree in education, linguistically diverse educator, from Adams State University. Joshua Calvert, of Littleton, earned a master’s degree in mechanical engineering from Iowa State University. Matthew Debban, of Littleton, accepted a $1,500 Hays City Scholar Award from Fort Hays State University. A 2016 Heritage High School graduate, Debban is the son of Sharon Glynn and Daren Debban. He plans to major in business. Jack Donelson, of Littleton, graduated in May with honors, earning a bachelor’s degree from Montana State
University. Paulina Erices, of Littleton, was awarded a 2016 literacy grant from the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest and most selective collegiate honor society for all academic disciplines. Erices is one of 16 recipients nationwide to receive the award. Krista Gouin, of Littleton, graduated in May with honors, earning a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Mitchell Griebel, of Littleton, graduated in May with a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Justin D. Hambleton, of Littleton, graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in exercise science from Wichita State University. Bailey Heinen-Colby, of Littleton, accepted a $1,500 Hays City Scholar Award from Fort Hays State University. A 2016 Rock Canyon High School graduate, Heinen-Colby is the daughter of Angela Colby. She plans to major in health and human performance. Kaitlin Ireland, of Littleton, graduated in May with honors, earning a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Kendall Klein, of Littleton, graduated in May with a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Jenna E. Long, of Littleton, was named to the spring or summer 2016 dean’s list at Columbia College, online campus. Jamie Mai, of Littleton, recently participated in Kent State University’s 2016 Piano Institute. Jamie’s mother is Thanh Nguyen and her aunt is Jenny Nguyen. The Piano Institute is a highly intensive festival for piano students in grades 7-12 and is in association with the Piano Division of the Hugh A. Glauser School of Music at Kent State University. Jenelle Mohr, of Littleton, accepted a $1,500 Hays City Scholar Award and a $500 Academic Opportunity Award
HAVE A STORY IDEA? Email Englewood Community Editor Tom Munds at tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com or call 303-566-4108.
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in nursing from Fort Hays State University. A 2016 Columbine High School graduate, Mohr is the daughter of Dave and Dana Mohr. She plans to major in nursing. Jared Omoto, of Littleton, graduated with a master’s degree in counseling, school counseling, from Adams State University. Chase Roberts, of Littleton, graduated in May with honors, earning a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Mark Stenbeck, of Littleton, graduated with a master’s degree in counseling, school counseling, from Adams State University. Parker Tilton, of Littleton, graduated
in May with a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University. Zoey Wallis, of Littleton, accepted a $2,000 University Scholar Award and a $900 Academic Opportunity Award in biological sciences from Fort Hays State University. A 2016 Chatfield High School graduate, Wallis is the daughter of Scott and Marcia Wallis. She plans to major in biology. Evan Walsh, of Littleton, was named to the spring 2016 dean’s list at Indiana University. He is a graduate of Arapahoe High School. Michela Zafferani, of Littleton, graduated with a bachelor’s degree in business administration, accounting/ marketing, from Drake University.
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20 The Independent • The Herald
Editor’s note: To add or update a club listing, email calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. Political Arapahoe County Republican Breakfast Club meets the first Wednesday of each month at Maggiano’s DTC, 7401 S. Clinton St., Englewood. Breakfast buffet opens at 6:45 a.m. and program lasts from 7:15-8:30 a.m. Contact Myron Spanier, 303-877-2940; Mort Marks, 303-7706147; Nathan Chambers, 303-804-0121; or Cliff Dodge, 303-909-7104. Professional AAUW, American Association of University Women, Littleton-South Metro Branch, invites graduates who hold an associate or higher degree from an accredited institution to participate in activities that advance equity for women and girls through advocacy, education, philanthropy and research. Meetings are usually the second Monday of each month, September through May, at Southglenn Library, Vine and University in Centennial. Social time at 6:30 p.m. is followed by a short business meeting and informative programs. Contact membership chair Barb Pyle at barbpyle@yahoo.com. American Business Women’s Association meets on the second Wednesday each month at 6:30 p.m. welcoming women, working or not, to Success Chapter programs for success and positive living. Call Lori Smith at 303-688-3100 ext. 360 or e-mail loris@intermountain-rea.com for upcoming speakers and events at Marriott Denver South, 10345 Park Meadows Drive, Littleton. BNI Connections (www.thebniconnections. com) invites business owners to attend its meeting held each Tuesday, 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. at the Lone Tree Recreation Center, 10249 Ridgegate Circle. There is no charge to attend a meeting as a guest. Please visit www.thebniconnections.com or contact Jack Rafferty, 303-4142363 or jrafferty@hmbrown.com. CERTUS Professional Network meets for its
AREA CLUBS Littleton networking event from 9:30-11 a.m. the fourth Thursday of the month at Panera Bread, 3702 River Point Parkway, Littleton. 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 http://www. CertusNetwork.com. Contacts Unlimited is a business and professional leads group that meets at Courtesy Ford, 8252 S. Broadway, Littleton in the meeting room on the first, second, and third Thursday of every month. Meeting time is 8-9:15 a.m. Visitors are welcome. Call Jenifer at 303-221-6550. Non-Practicing and Part Time Nurses Association meets from 12:30-2:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at the Southglenn Library, 6972 S. Vine St., Centennial. All nurses are invited to attend for medical presentations. Contact: Barbara Karford, 303-794-0354. Women Investment Group Master Mind Group meets to empower all women to build a real financial freedom through the power of real estate in any market condition. We network, share ideas, leads, resources and encourage each other. We meet once a month. For meeting information, call Lorena 303-981-6539 or e-mail WomenInvestmentGroup@comcast.net. Recreation Adventures in Dance offers a number of dance classes for adults. Line Dance Aerobics is Mondays; West Coast swing is Tuesdays; Merengue and bachata is Wednesdays; Viennese waltz and slow waltz is Thursdays; and a social Latin dance sampler is offered over two Fridays. Adventures in Dance is at 1500 W. Littleton Blvd., Littleton. Go to www.adventuresindance.com for details and to sign up.
Camping Singles is a group of Colorado single adults who enjoy camping, fishing, hiking, swimming, biking, sightseeing, photography, the camaraderie of others, and starry nights around the camp fire. We usually camp in designated forest service or state park campgrounds within 2 to 5 hours of Denver. We welcome all single adults. Our membership ranges from the 40s to 60-plus. We usually meet at 7 p.m. the first Tuesday of the month. For specific meeting information, contact campingsingles@gmail.com Denver Walking Tours Denver area residents and visitors are invited to experience downtown Denver through a free walking tour, a two-hour excursion that starts in Civic Center Park, winds through downtown past more than a dozen of Denver’s distinctive landmarks and ends in front of Coors Field. Tours are offered every day. No reservations needed. Tours are free, and tips are encouraged. Go to http://www.denverfreewalkingtours.com/ for details. Draw from Life sessions are offered from 6-8 p.m. the second Wednesday of each month at The Depot Art Gallery, 2069 W. Powers Ave., Littleton, just north of the Buck Recreation Center. Class offers a chance to work with a clothed model with a variety of pose times. Reserve space with Cheryl at mbadamsjr@msn.com. Cost is $5. Call 303-795-0781. Duplicate Bridge If you enjoy duplicate bridge, come join us for an ACBL sanctioned open game at 12:30 p.m. every Monday at the Lone Tree Recreation Center. Please arrive by 12:15. All are welcome; it’s a fragrance-free environment. A free question-and-answer session from 11 a.m. to noon covers bidding boxes, hand records, losing trick count, conventions, rules of duplicate bridge and more. Cost is $1.50 for South Suburban Park and Recreation District residents; $1.75 for non-residents. Reservations required. Call Sue Bauer at 303-641-3534. Friday Dance Night Saint Patrick’s Brewing Company offers First Friday Dance Nights. Dance floor complete with lights and DJ. Outdoor beer garden with fire pit right on the river at Santa Fe and Bowles. Call 720-366-9147. Front Range Woodturners Club meets from 6-9 p.m. the first Tuesday of each month in the basement of the Rockler Woodworking store
October 13, 2016
at 2553 S Colorado Blvd. Anyone interested in woodturning is welcome. Contact Jim Proud at cavaleon1956@gmail.com for more information. Ladies Golf League at Raccoon Creek Golf Course, Littleton, is accepting new members. Call 303-973-4653. Meadows Women’s Golf League offers relaxing Tuesday mornings of friendly golf for ladies at the Meadows Golf Course, 6937 S. Simms St., near Ken-Caryl Ranch. The league plays 18 holes weekly from mid-April to mid-October. This fun group competes for prizes while playing from the red tees. Afterward, lunch can be ordered on the patio overlooking the course. Call Laura at 303-526-9598. Oil painting classes are offered at The Depot Art Gallery from 1-4 p.m. Mondays at 2069 W. Powers Ave., Littleton, just north of the Buck Recreation Center. Class is taught by Jennifer Riefenberg. Join anytime; pay by the session or the month. Contact JenniferRief@comcast.net. Call 303-795-0781. Peer critique of art offered at 9 a.m. the fourth Friday of every month, except November and December, at The Depot Art Gallery, 2069 W. Powers Ave., Littleton, just north of the Buck Recreation Center. Any medium welcome. In conjunction with The Colorado Watercolor Society. Free. Call 303-795-0781. Rocky Mountain Basketball Academy club, expert training for youth basketball players grades fifth through 12th meets twice per week and operates all year. Play in leagues and tournaments. Send inquiries to ronkburgin@ yahoo.com. Rocky Mountain Woodturning Club meets at 6 p.m. the first Tuesday of every month in the basement of Rockler Woodworking Store, 2553 S. Colorado Blvd. Saint Patrick’s Brewing Company offers bocce ball and ping pong tournaments. Bocce ball tournaments are at 2 p.m. Sundays, and ping pong is from 7 p.m. to close Thursdays. Play is first-come, free play. Saint Patrick’s is at Santa Fe and Bowles, right on the river. Call 303-718-7575. Clubs continues on Page 21
The Independent • The Herald 21
October 13, 2016
Clubs
The Arapahoe Community College fitness center offers the SilverSneakers Fitness and Silver&Fit programs for seniors in the south metro Denver area. For more information about health and fitness options at ACC, call 303-797-5850.
Continued from Page 20
Salty Dog Sailing Club If you love to sail or want to try, if you don’t have a boat, if you have a boat but don’t sail enough because you cannot find a crew, the Salty Dog Sailing Club is for you. The club meets the second Thursday of the month. Dinner begins at 5:30 p.m. with the business meeting commencing at 7 p.m. Go to www.saltydog.org for meeting locations and directions.
Tea, cookies and coloring is offered from 1-3 p.m. the first and third Sunday of each month at The Depot Art Gallery, 2069 W. Powers Ave., Littleton, just north of the Buck Recreation Center. Grab a friend or two and come color away your stress. Coloring books for Adults and coloring tools provided. Great for groups. Cost is $5. Call 303-795-0781.
Stroller Strides is a group fitness program that provides moms with a challenging workout and the opportunity to build relationships and gain the emotional support needed to adjust to the tremendous life change called motherhood. Classes are offered at 9:30 a.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at DeKoevend Park, near University and Arapahoe, and at 9:30 a.m. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays at Clement Park, near Wadsworth and Bowles. For more information, visit the Stroller Strides Web site at www.strollerstrides. com or call Kathy or Karen Zawadzki at 888-6840641 or e-mail kandk@strollerstrides.net.
Weekly Painting Sessions The Heritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County invites member and non-member artists to participate in Paint Day, the guild’s weekly group painting sessions. Artists bring their own media and supplies; Paint Day runs from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursdays in the lower level of Ascension Lutheran Church, 1701 W. Caley Ave. in Littleton. Contact Bob Yackel, 303794-2722 or yackelrobert@gmail.com.
SilverSneakers Fitness, Silver&Fit at ACC
Wesley Writers is a small group of vignette memoir writers who meet at 10 a.m. the third Saturday of each month at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St. Share stories of the joys and sorrows of our yesteryears. No fees.
Service American Legion George C. Evans Post 103 Attention military veterans: Do you believe in patriotism and in helping our veterans, our children and our communities? Join the Littleton American Legion George C. Evans Post 103 at 7 p.m. the first Wednesday of every month at the Buck Recreation Center, 2004 W. Powers Ave., Littleton. Visit www. legionpost103.org or call 720-287-2139. Creative Counseling Center is a network of mental health providers with offices in Denver, Aurora, Lakewood and Littleton. To meet therapists or to learn about locations, scheduling and fees, visit www.ccc-denver.com or call 303-267-2310. English Conversation Sessions. Go to the Bemis Public Library Friday mornings from 9-10:30 a.m. to practice English in an informal group and learn about American culture. No registration is required. Call 303-795-3961. Nutrition classes. Free bootcamp class meets at 8:30 a.m. three Saturdays per month at L-Town Nutrition, 1360 W. Littleton Blvd., Littleton. Go to the park for a fun, energizing start to the weekend. Visit our Facebook pages for updates: Littleton 24Fit Club or L-Town Nutrition. Also offered is a Body Exchange Challenge. This consists of weekly meetings to discuss both nutrition and fitness. We deliver all of the tools that you need to help you
reach your goal. There is an optional fitness class offered after the class. The class meets Wednesdays at noon or 6 p.m. You can join the challenge anytime, the fees are prorated. Visit L-Town Nutrition, call Gen McKenna at 303-730-2038 or email ltownnutrition@gmail.com to sign up. Single Dads Resource Center Inc., a nonprofit organization, offers free parenting classes such as “The Ins and Outs of Single Fathering Parenting” focused on single fathers. Classes are from 5:307:30 p.m. Wednesdays at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 6322 S. Lakeview St., Littleton. Call Jamey O’Donnell, founder and executive director of the group, at 720-298-2021 or e-mail info@sdrci.org. Summit Cancer Solutions is a nonprofit organization that offers exercise programs in the Denver Metro area to adult cancer survivors. Our goal is to improve the health and well being of cancer survivors through exercise. Contact us at 303-4092206, e-mail us at info@summitcancersolutions. org or visit www.summitcancersolutions.org. Social American Needlepoint Guild, Colorado Columbine Chapter, meets third Mondays each month, except August and December. Call Doris at 303-403-8703.
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22 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
VOTE
Yes
ON
4B!
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GET A JUMP START HIGH ON HI HIG GH G H SCHOOL! Littleton Public Schools
303.347.7700 Littleton.littletonpublicschools.net
Helping Families for Over 60 Years How do I know if my child is struggling? • • • • • • • •
Worries that impact daily activities Not wanting to go to school Not interested in taking part in activities Difficulty focusing on or completing tasks Frequent nightmares Aggressive behaviors Frequent temper tantrums Periods of sadness without a specific reason
• • • • • • •
Change in sleeping pattern Fighting Poor or declining grades Isolation Drastic change in friends Talk of suicide Substance use
When to seek professional help: As a parent or guardian you are the expert on your child and if you think there is reason to be concerned, you’re probably right. Typically parents, guardians, teachers and other caregivers are the first to notice if a child is struggling with emotions and/ or behavior. If you have questions, concerns or a problem is suspected, we are here to help.
Call today to schedule an appointment.
Information & Appointments - 303-730-8858 Emergency & Crisis Information - 303-730-3303 Arapahoe/Douglas Mental Health Network is now AllHealth Network.
The Independent • The Herald 23
October 13, 2016 Contact: www.animalrescueoftherockies. org.
org for information and volunteer application. Next training session is Saturday, July 30.
ASSE International Student Exchange Program Send volunteer opportunities to hharden@ coloradocommunitymedia.com
Contact: Sharon McCreary, 720-423-4843 or sharon.mccreary@emilygriffith.edu.
Organizes student exchange programs
18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office Domestic Violence Program
Need: Local host families to provide homes for boys and girls age 15-18 from a variety of coutries.
Provides information and support to crime victims
Contact: Cathy Hintz, 406-488-8325 or 800-733-2773
Need: Victim Adocates interact with and support victims of domestic violence. They also provide resource referrals and explain processes to victims.
Castle Rock Senior Activity Center
Requirements: 20 hours of training required; volunteers must commit to one morning a week at the Justice Center in Castle Rock. Contact: Mel Secrease, 720-733-4552 or msecrease@da.18.state.co.us. AARP Foundation TaxAide Helps Colorado taxpayers who need assistance prepare and file their tax returns Need: Volunteers for the upcoming tax season. Requirements: Free training provided; volunteers do not have to be AARP members or retirees. Contact: www.aarp.org/money/taxes/ aarp_taxaide/ or 888-OUR-AARP. Deadline: Apply by Dec. 15 Angel Heart Project Delivers meals to men, women and children with life-threatening illnesses Need: Volunteers willing to deliver meals to clients in the South Denver area. Requirements: Attend an orientation and submit to a background check before volunteering. Training provided to all new drivers. Deliveries start at 1 p.m. and last until 3 p.m. Contact: 303-830-0202 or volunteer@ projectangelheart.org. Animal Rescue of the Rockies Provides foster care for death-row shelter dogs and cats throughout Colorado Need: Foster families for animals on lists to be euthanized
Court Appointed Special Advocates Works with abused and neglected children in Arapahoe, Douglas, Elbert and Lincoln counties Need: Advocates for children, to get to know, speak up for and ensure their best interests in court
Provides services to local seniors
Contact: 303-695-1882 or www.adv4children.org.
Need: Volunteer drivers to take seniors to appointments, the grocery store, pharmacies and more.
Denver Asset Building Coalition
Contact: Steph Schroeder, 303-688-9498 Colorado Humane Society
Provides low-income families with free tax preparation Need: Volunteers to join the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program
Handles animal abuse and neglect cases Need: Volunteers to care for pregnant cats, dogs and their litters, as well as homes for cats and dogs that require socializing or that are recovering from surgery or injuries. Contact: Teresa Broaddus, 303-961-3925
Requirements: Volunteers are needed from Jan. 21 to April 17. No accounting background necessary; DABC trains all volunteers through an IRS-approved certification. Volunteers can choose their schedule and time commitment. Contact: Marissa Stanger, volunteer coordinator, at 303-388-7030 or go to www. denverabc.org.
Colorado Refugee English as a Second Language Program Teaches English to recently arrived refugees, who have fled war or persecution in their home country. In Colorado, refugees are from Afghanistan, Burma, Bhutan, Somalia, Iraq, Eritrea and D.R. Congo, among others.
Douglas/Elbert Task Force Provides assistance to people in Douglas and Elbert counties who are in serious economic need, at risk of homelessness or in similar crisis.
Need: Volunteers to teach English. Tutoring takes place in the student’s home. Refugees live throughout Denver, but the largest concentrations are in Thornton, near 88th Avenue and Washington Street, and in east Denver/Aurora, near Colfax Avenue and Yosemite Street.
Need: Volunteers to assist in the food bank, client services and the thrift store Treasures on Park Street. Contact: Marion Dahlem, 303-688-1114, ext. 32
Other details: Tutors do not need to speak the student’s language. Most participants are homebound women and small children, adults who are disabled, and senior citizens. Many are not literate in their first language, and remain isolated from American culture. Requirements: Volunteers must attend training at Emily Griffith Technical College in downtown Denver. Sessions take place every 6-8 weeks. Go to www.refugee-esl.
Dumb Friends League Harmony Equine Center Cares for homeless horses and other equines. Need: Volunteers to work with horses and other opportunities. Requirements: Must be 16 years old, pass a background check, and be able to commit to at least three hours a week for three months. Contact: 303-751-5772.
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24 The Independent • The Herald
THIS WEEK’S
TOP 5
Craft Fair, Bake Sale The Parker Senior Center craft fair and bake sale is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, and Saturday, Oct. 15, at the Parker Senior Center, 10675 S. Longs Way, Parker. Among the beautiful handcrafted creations will be home decor, knitwear, jewelry, Christmas decorations, cut-glass items, painted gourds, baby sweaters and blankets, and much more. You will be able to find unique gifts for those special people or something for yourself. The bake sale will feature many fresh, delicious, homemade goodies. Join us for lunch on Friday. Holiday Boutique Find hand-crafted jewelry, wood-worked pieces made by local artists, candle decor for any occasion and other gifts at a holiday boutique from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, at the Castle Pines Community Center, 7404 Yorkshire Drive. Salem Witch Hunt and Genealogy Millions of people worldwide can claim descent from someone involved in the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. The trials marked a turning point in Colonial American history from Puritan communalism to Yankee independence and from faith in a collective conscience to skepticism toward moral governance. Columbine Genealogical and Historical Society presents “The Salem Witch Hunt and How it Relates to Genealogy” with Karen Smith Pavone, a Mayflower descendant and indirect descendant of five of those executed and 55 of those accused as a result of the trials. Program takes place at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Go to www.ColumbineGenealogy.com. Great Pumpkin Haul Pick out a pumpkin from the pumpkin patch and carry it over, under and through a variety of obstacles during the fifth Great Pumpkin Haul. Mini pumpkins are provided, and families can participate in the event together. A free pumpkin bootcamp, led by Orange Theory Fitness, allows participants to use their pumpkins in a full body workout. The Great Pumpkin Haul begins at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 22 at Chatfield Botanic Gardens. Post Haul participants enjoy a fall festival, which includes seasonal brews, hot apple cider, food trucks, a Pumpkin yoga class to stretch out, hay rides, a free kids’ course and discounted tickets to the annual corn maze. Details about the event available at www.thegreatpumpkinhaul.com. Proceeds benefit Camp Como, a Christian-based nonprofit that organizes adventures and camps to get kids outside and active. Go to www.campcomo.com. History Walk Join the Castle Rock Historical Society on Saturday, Oct. 22, as we walk leisurely for about 40 minutes stopping at about a dozen selected gave sites to hear brief stories of the deceased. The tour will include historical society members portraying some of our local people in history. Cedar Hill was founded in 1875 and is the only cemetery in Castle Rock. It contains the remains of pioneers significant in the early history of Castle Rock and Douglas County. The historic section of the cemetery contains numerous unique stones and markers that represent the culture and lifestyles of various Douglas County families. Meet at the Cedar Hill Cemetery; tour starts at 4:30 p.m. Refreshments will be served following the tour. Contact the Castle Rock Museum at 303-814-3164, museum@castlerockhistoricalsociety.org, www.castlerockhistoricalsociety.org. Tour is free. FIND MORE THINGS TO DO ONLINE ColoradoCommunityMedia.com/events
THINGS TO DO THEATER/FILM
Ghost Walk, Theatrical Séance Dream Masterz Illusionists present a ghost walk and theatrical séance at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14 at Theatre of Dreams, 735 Park St., Castle Rock. Show is limited to 30 spirit seekers, ages 12 and older. Wear walking shoes and dress for the weather. Guests will be outside for about 40 minutes. Lanterns and glow sticks are provided. A Saturday, Oct. 15, show may be added if Friday fills up. Reservations required. Call 303-660-6799 or go to http://tickets.amazingshows.com for tickets. Guests welcome to wear a costume or Victorian accessories. Meet at the theater for some haunted illusions before the ghost walk through the historic town of Castle Rock. We will walk across the bridge into town and hear documented stories of ghosts. After the walk, return to the theater to learn about “Nell’s Curse” as you witness a re-creation of a turn of the century séance. Evening wraps up with cider and doughnuts. Guys on Ice Town Hall Arts Center welcomes The Aurora Fox’s production of “Guys on Ice” from Friday, Oct. 14 to Sunday, Oct. 23. Show times are 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays at 2450 W. Main St., Littleton. For tickets, call 303-794-2787 ext. 5 or stop by the Town Hall box office. Come hang out with ice fishing buddies and home-grown philosophers Marvin and Lloyd as they talk about life, love and Leinies. With musical numbers like “The Wishing Hole,” “Ode to a Snowmobile Suit” and “Fish is the Miracle Food,” how can you go wrong? This musical is fun for the whole family. Go to www.TownHallArtsCenter.org.
MUSIC/CONCERTS
OpenWorks at AerialWorks Come see the first showcase at the newly opened AerialWorks in Castle Rock. Novice and professional aerialists will showcase finished works and works in progress. Performers will fly on aerial hoop, fabric, trapeze, sling and more. Attended this family-friendly fun event at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14 at AerialWorks, 1050 Topeka Way, Unit I, Castle Rock. Kids 7 and under are free. Go to www.aerialworkscastlerock.com. Littleton Symphony Season Opener The Littleton Symphony Orchestra opens its 33rd season with “The Planets” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St., Littleton. Concert will open with the finale from Mozart’s Jupiter Symphony and will feature Sean Hennessy on trumpet. Tickets available at www.littletonsymphony.org. Contact 303-933-6824 or info@littletonsymphony.org. Brightenstar Performs Brightenstar, a two-person band, will entertain you with a variety of pop, rock and country hits, including the music of the Beatles, Coldplay, Tom Petty, Neil Diamond, Jimmy Buffett and others. Performance runs from 2-3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, at Bemis Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Jenna Laurise sings and plays keyboard, guitar and ukulele; she has performed in theater companies around the country. Neil Zimmerman sings and plays guitar, ukulele and bass; he has been doing musical shows for more than 20 years. Enjoy cake and beverages at this performance. Call 303-795-3961. Afternoon at the Piano David Nevue and Christine Brown perform a free concert at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16, at St. Andrew United Methodist Church, 9203 S. University Blvd., Highlands Ranch. These two award-winning composers share their original piano compositions and the life stories that inspired their songs.
October 13, 2016
registration is required; information at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org. Colorado Ballot Issues 2016 The fall Colorado ballot promises to stir up strong emotions in the state. With a variety of complex issues coming to a vote, it is important that we understand the ballot and what is at stake. Join Active Minds from 1:30-2:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, for an objective review of the ballot issues and a presentation of the arguments on each side of the proposals. Location is the Columbine Library, 7706 W. Bowles Ave., Littleton. Call 303-235-5275 to RSVP. Saint Anthony Relics The holy relics of Saint Anthony of Padua will visit All Souls Catholic Parish in Englewood as part of a 10-day tour of the Archdiocese of Denver from Oct. 14-23. The relics will be at All Souls from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18. The church is at 4950 S. Logan St., Englewood. Mass times are 8:15 a.m., noon and 7 p.m. An Evening with Terry Hershey, Author and Inspirational Speaker Terry Hershey is the author of several books including “The Power of Pause” and “Sanctuary: Creating a Space for Grace in Your Life.” He will speak from 6:30-8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, 8817 S. Broadway, Highlands Ranch. His work has been featured on The Hallmark Channel, CNN, PBS and NPR. Join us as Terry inspires us to step back from the stressed driven pace of life and return to presence, awareness, centeredness, faith, balance, gratitude, permission, sanctuary and delight. Go to www.stlukescse.org for ticket information. Genealogical Research with Estate Records Learn about the types of records generated when a person dies without leaving a will at a hands-on program from Columbine Genealogical and Historical Society. In “Genealogical Research with Estate Records: Where There’s Not a Will, There’s Probably Still a Way,” presented by Kirk Woosley Patton, JD, an actual probate case will be examined to illustrate the legal process and suggest additional lines of research. Patton is an attorney and professional genealogist whose primary genealogical focus involves research with original estate and land records. The early bird program is from 9:30-11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Go to www. ColumbineGenealogy.com. Ballot Issues Take an objective look at the important ballot issues and the arguments of those on each side. At 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, program is presented by Active Minds, an organization that expands lives and minds with community-based educational programs. The 2016 Colorado ballot promises to stir up strong emotions in the state. With a variety of complex issues coming to a vote, it is important that we understand the ballot and what is at stake. Among the statewide ballot issues this election year are proposed increases in the minimum wage, restoration of presidential primary elections, legalizing assisted death in defined circumstances, a new state healthcare system and a proposed increase in the tax on cigarettes. Program takes place at Bemis Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Call 303-795-3961. Highlands Ranch Mansion Volunteer Orientation Get involved in your community, learn about history and meet new people while volunteering at the historic Highlands Ranch Mansion. The final volunteer orientation of the year is at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19 at the Mansion. Contact info@highlandsranch.org to sign up.
African Children’s Choir Concert The African Children’s Choir performs at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19, at Good Shepherd Episcopal Church, 8525 E. Dry Creek Road, Centennial. The program features well-loved children’s songs, and traditional spiritual and gospel favorites. The concert is free and open to all. A freewill offering is taken at the performance to support American Children’s Choir programs, such as education, care and relief and development programs. Call 303-740-2688 or go to www.africanchildrenschoir.com.
League of Women Voters Speaker A speaker from the League of Women Voters will speak about voting issues at 9:30 a.m. at the Wednesday, Oct. 19, meeting of the American Association of University Women, the oldest women’s organization in the country. The local group meets the third Wednesday of each month at various times and sites in Castle Rock. The group will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 16; topic to be announced. Information available at http://douglascounty-co.aauw.net/. Contact Beryl Jacobson at 303688-8088 or berylmjacobson@gmail.com.
Social Swing Dance Sampler Adventures in Dance presents its social swing dance sampler from 6-8 p.m. Fridays, Oct. 21 and Oct. 28, at 1500 W. Littleton Blvd., Ste. 207, Littleton. Learn popular swing dances with four hours of instruction. Go to https://www.adventuresindance.com/
Kids Travel: Next Stop the Philippines Kids ages 6-12 can learn about The Philippines through fun games and activities at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19, at Douglas County Libraries in Roxborough, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road, Suite 200. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org.
Live! With Peter Fletcher Enjoy an evening of classical guitar performed by Peter Fletcher at Live! With Peter Fletcher at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 22, at the Lone Tree Library, 10055 Library Way. Fletcher will perform selections of classical masterworks, including Paganini’s dazzling “Caprice No. 24,” the ever-popular “Cordoba” by Spanish composer Isaac Albeniz, and Bach’s monumental “Lute Suite No. 3,” among other arrangements. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org.
AAUW Meetings Upcoming meetings of the American Association of University Women are at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19 and 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 16, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Founded in 1881, AAUW is the oldest women’s organization in the United States. It has a mission of promoting equity for women and girls through advocacy, education and research. Scholarships are provided to Douglas County women who are in college, and cash awards are presented to senior girls from Douglas County high schools who have an interest in the areas of science, technology, engineering or math (STEM). Go to douglascounty-co.aauw.net. Contact Beryl Jacobson at 303-688-8088 or berylmjacobson@gmail.com.
ART
Quilt Sale, Boutique The Ave Maria Mission Quilters plans its Quilt Sale and Boutique from noon to 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 22 and from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23 at Ave Maria Catholic Church, 9056 E. Parker Road in Parker. A beautiful selection of quilts, table runners/toppers, home accessories and children’s items will be available for sale. Proceeds enable the Quilters to make and donate quilts to various charities and are also distributed to various community organizations as well as the Hands of Hope Ministries.
EVENTS
Third Thursday Mystery Group Join the Lone Tree Mystery Group for a book discussion and lunch at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 20 at the Lone Tree Golf Club Grille. The group will discuss William Landay’s “Defending Jacob.” What if your son is accused of a crime, and you are an attorney who decides to defend him? Can you be objective? What are the decisions you must make and how will it change your life and your family? Find out more about the group by contacting Sue at 303-641-3534.
Lifelong Learning Fridays: Local Ghost Stories Adults can get the spooky scoop on tales of ghosts from local history lore from Douglas County Libraries archivist Shaun Boyd at 1:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, at Douglas County Libraries in Highlands Ranch, James H. LaRue branch, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd. Registration is required at 303791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org.
Calling All Book Lovers Need a new book list? Join Book Lovers at 1 p.m. Friday, Oct. 21, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch, for a fun presentation by library staff and a special guest via Skype, Virginia Stanley of Harper Collins. Door prizes will be given out and refreshments served. Registration is required at 303-791-7323 or DouglasCountyLibraries.org.
Lego DIBS Families and kids of all ages can Drop In and Build Something (DIBS) with Legos at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, at Douglas County Libraries in Highlands Ranch, James H. LaRue branch, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd. No
Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Wednesday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.
October 13, 2016
Marketplace Misc. Notices
MERCHANDISE
SELL YOUR STUFF HERE Email up to 140 characters of items totaling under $200 and we will run your ad at no charge for 2 weeks submit to- kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com Ads must be submitted by email
FARM & AGRICULTURE ANNOUNCEMENTS Farm Products & Produce Grain Finished Buffalo
Appliances Essickair Model N43/48D Bottom Discharge Swamp Cooler - exc. cond. $375 303-425-4107
719-775-8742
GARAGE & ESTATE SALES
EDUCATIONAL CAMPAIGN/ FREE MURAL - NEED WALL
The Education is #Notacrime Campaign is Seeking a Business or Organization in the South Metro District to Donate a Wall for an Artistic Mural - the purpose of which is to promote Art, and Education as a Human Right. The Mural will be linked to a world-wide social media campaign demonstrating diverse murals from countries around the world.
Schools and/or like minded organizations are encouraged to inquire. To support our project, please contact Kari at 303-587-1513 to see the 3 optional designs available.
Your wall is your donation there are no other costs.
Garage Sales Arvada
6016 Simms Street Friday & Saturday Oct 14th & 15th 8am-5pm Lost my wife - lots of nice high end small women's clothing
Gigantic Church Sale
St. Michael & All Angels' Church 1400 S. University Blvd, Denver Pre Sale 10/20 5:00 to 7:00 pm Surcharge $5.00 for presale Sale 10/21/ 9:00am to 5:00pm Bag Sale 10/22 Fill our bags for $5:00 ea. or your trunk for $25.00 Antiques, furniture, estate items, books, housewares, pottery, books, collectibles, jewelry, new linens and more. Arvada
Sponsored by the Baha'is of Littleton
OPOCS SINGLES CLUB-55 PLUS A CIRCLE OF FRIENDS Social hours monthly 4-6pm Lakewood 3 Margaritas 2nd Tuesday of the month Guest Hostess Carol @ 303-389-7707 Lakewood Chad's 4th Tuesday of the month Hostess Darlene @ 303-233-4099 4th Thursday Denver - Baker Street Pub 8101 East Bellview Host Harold @ 303-693-3464 For more info and monthly newsletter call JoAnn membership chairman or Mary President @ 303-985-8937
Neighborhood Garage/Estate Sale 8261 West 67th Drive Friday & Saturday 10/14-10/15 8am-4pm Antique - Trunks, Dolls, Clock, Tin Types, Vaseline Glass, 2 Hi Fi Consoles, Elvis Records, Large Piece of Marble, Military Uniforms, Quilts, Buttons Also Generator, Dinette Set and much more
Lakewood Tim "The Tool Man" Taylor Garage Sale- Lots and lots of tools, camping gear, fishing, 2 kayaks, snowblower, welder, generator, and more. 1631 S Welch Circle Lakewood, CO 80228 Saturday 10/15 8:30-4 and Sunday 10/16 10-noon
Estate Sales Arvada
Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201
6532 Kipling Street Saturday Oct 15 8am-3pm Sunday Oct 16 8am-12 65 years of things same house 55 years Cash Only
Free 19" color T.V. old style works great, great picture Also 17" color T.V. old style, works great great picture call (303)717-8173
Firewood
Arts & Crafts 10th Annual Arts & Crafts Fair
Support Local Artists Thursday, Oct 20th 10am to 3pm Hand-Crafted items Something for every budget 5554 S. Prince St. Littleton, CO 80120
Arts & Crafts Fair October 14 & 15 9:00 to 3:00 Parker Senior Center Family in Christ Church 9th Annual Craft Fair Friday, October 28th, 10am-4pm & Saturday, October 29th, 9am3pm 11355 Sheridan Blvd., Westminster Suggested admission is nonperishable food for the Growing Home Food Pantry. Café and Cookie Walk available to support our Nursery & Children’s Ministries.
Bicycles
TRANSPORTATION
KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killers/KIT Complete Treatment System. Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com
Autos for Sale
Wanted to Buy
Pine/Fir & Aspen
Split & Delivered $250 a cord Stacking available extra $35 Delivery charge may apply Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173
Furniture Canadel Pedestal Kitchen Table w/4 chairs 40" round with 2 - 10" leafs Light Oak with a deep blue wood grain table top chair seats originally $2200 asking $350 (303)420-6211
1996 Ford E-150 Van Conversion original owner, great shape, very clean, seats 7, seats convert to bed 77K miles, $5000 Must see to appreciate exc vehicle for soccer moms and traveling 303-618-7892
Autos for Sale
I
I BUY DIABETIC Test Strips! OneTouch, Freestyle, AccuChek, more! Must not be expired or opened. Call Brian Today 303-810-1993
PETS
1999 Chevy 1 ton pick up CK3500 in very good shape 454 engine, 4 wheel drive,$13,200 Power steering/locks & windows ABS Brakes, AC, 1 owner Must see to appreciate Ray (406)253-1005 78 Chev Monte Carlo 2 door sport coupe white with red interior 45k miles, V8 305, at, ac, ps, cc, ts, 1 of a kind, Rally Wheels, Gene (303)346-3724 $9800 For Sale 1990 Mazda MPV 4x4 Not Running body needs work Good interior Call 720-877-4802
Loveseat for $50, maple end tables & coffee table for $25 ea., bookcase for $10 & couch table for $25. Call (720) 851-1297.
Place an ad to sell your car on this page $25 for 2 weeks in 16 papers and online 303-566-4091
Thomasville all leather burgundy sofa 2 chairs and 2 ottomans Good Shape $300 (303)933-3627
Health and Beauty
Wanted
Cash for all Vehicles! I BUY DIABETIC Test Strips! OneTouch, Freestyle, AccuChek, more! Must not be expired or opened. Call Chris Today: 800-506-4964
Miscellaneous Fun & easy to ride Fly up hills with ease Peddles Like a Regular Bike No Drivers License Needed BEST PRICES IN-TOWN 303-257-0164
Advertise: 303-566-4100
Miscellaneous
Free Whirlpool dish washer, white, works great, looks great call (303)717-8173
quartered, halves and whole
Misc. Notices
Electronics
The Independent • The Herald 25
Beautiful Ottoman Lift Chair, Spinet Piano with needlepoint bench 303-279-0602 Child folding wheelchair used once $60 Dog carrier $20 Large soup pot $5 7 quart crock pot $10 Food warming server 3 sections $15 all excellent (720)840-0176
Dogs
Cars, Trucks, Vans, SUV’s
Any condition • Running or not Under $700
(303)741-0762
Thousands of dogs are bred in cramped, unsanitary cages. Purchasing dogs online or from pet shops allows this cruel practice to continue. Find puppies to rescue at CanineWelfare.org
Cell: (303)918-2185 for texting
Bestcashforcars.com
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK, BOAT, RV; Running or not, to www.developmentaldisabled.org Tax deductible! 303-659-8086. 19 years of service (go onto website to see 57 Chevy)
For local news any time of day, find your community online at
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ADVERTISE IN THE MARKETPLACE CALL 303-566-4091 EMAIL kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com
26 The Independent • The Herald
SPORTS
October 13, 2016
LOCAL
Quarterback is living a sweet dream
Arapahoe senior Killy Winz, left, drives the ball over Cherry Crerry blockers during the Oct. 6 league volleyball game at Cherry Creek High School. Winz and her teammates staged a comeback after losing the first two sets to win the match, 3-2. Photo by Tom Munds
Warriors edge Bruins on court Arapahoe comeback earns 3-2 win over Cherry Creek By Tom Munds tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com The Oct. 5 Arapahoe-Cherry Creek volleyball match lived up to its billing of a classic clash between two teams with 11-2 overall and 1-0 league records. The Bruins appeared to have the match under control as they won the first two sets 25-23 and 25-14. But Arapahoe came back and won two sets in a row, 25-22 and 25-23, to force the fifth and deciding set that Arapahoe won 15-9 to win the match, 3-2. The loud vocal support from fans of both teams plus the intensity on the court created an almost electric
KEEPING SCORE WITH... SYDNEY MARCHANDO , Senior softball, diving track athlete hool Rock Canyon High Sc
What is your favorite movie? My favorite movie is “Monsters Inc.” because it’s such a cute and funny movie and Mike Wazowski is my favorite Pixar character. What is your favorite pre-competition meal? My favorite food in general is pizza, so that’s probably my favorite meal before games too. I also like chocolate chip pancakes before games.
atmosphere in the Cherry Creek gymnasium. The match provided avid volleyball fans with quality play that made points hard to come by. There were very long volleys with blocks at the net, smashing spikes and diving digs.
working together and playing harder. When we won the fourth set we just pushed harder. Winning the deciding set and the match is such a great feeling because we beat a very good team and a league rival. It is really exciting.”
Key moments Cherry Creek appeared to be in control after a close first-set win and then jumping out to an 8-2 advantage, maintain a sizable lead and winning the second set, 25-14. But Arapahoe regrouped and staged a comeback. “We didn’t get down after the second set. My teammates and I never stopped believing in each other because we are such a strong team,” Arapahoe captain Jayden Liberty said after the match. “We just focused on
Key players/statistics Both teams amassed statistics testifying to the quality of competition. The Warriors scored 59 kills as Amanda Maggiore led the team with 25 and Kaylee Rogers had 13. Cherry Creek recorded 42 kills as Katie Sherman scored 14 and Maya Borenstein had 10. Defensive play kept the ace serves to a minimum as Arapahoe had five and Cherry Creek had four.
Who is your favorite professional or collegiate athlete (past or present)? My favorite athlete is definitely Carlos Gonzalez. The Rockies are my favorite Major League Baseball team, and since I’m an outfielder too, he’s definitely my favorite player for them, and I have a life-size poster of him in my room.
Volleyball continues on Page 29
William Willis, football, senior, Lutheran: Willis went 20-26-3 for 248 yards and three touchdowns in the Lions’ 35-8 West Metro League win over Alameda on Oct. 7.
Why do you participate in sports? I participate in sports because I love being a part of a team, and I love the competition. Being able to see where hard work can take me is something that’s very satisfying and makes all the hard practices and early mornings worth it in the end.
KJ Phillips, football, senior, Chaparral: He scored two TDs and rushed for 233 yards on 28 carries in the Wolverines’ 28-14 Mount Evans League triumph over Cherokee Trail.
What are your plans for after high school graduation? After high school, I am planning on attending Colorado School of Mines to play softball, and I want to major in chemical and biological engineering with a minor in bioengineering and life sciences.
Addi Iken, cross country, junior, Littleton: Iken trimmed 30 seconds off her personal best in winning the Windjammer Cross Country Invitational on Oct. 8. She was timed in 18:44.00.
“Keeping Score With…” is a Q&A with high school athletes in the south metro area. Email Colorado Community Media sports writer Jim Benton at jbenton @coloradocommunitymedia.com if you or someone you know would like to participate.
Robert Lanz, soccer, senior, Valor Christian: He tallied three goals in the Eagles’ 6-1 4A Jefferson County League victory over Wheat Ridge on Oct. 5.
Melissa Evans, volleyball, senior, Highlands Ranch: Evans had 31 kills in a 3-2 victory over Ponderosa on Oct. 6. Evans leads the Continental League with 294 kills and a .391 hitting percentage. Colorado Community Media selects five athletes from high schools in the south metro area each week as “Standout Performers.” Preference is given to athletes making their debut on the list. To nominate an athlete, contact Jim Benton at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com
I’m sure Judd Erickson sometimes feels like he is sauntering away from a sweet dream when he walks off the football field. Erickson is Mountain Vista’s senior quarterback in the Golden Eagles’ spread, hurry-up offense. He throws an average of 41 passes a game. He leads Class 5A quarterbacks with an impressive 2,168 yards and 23 touchdowns. He played only the first half in Vista’s 46-0 romp over Aurora Hinkley on Oct. 7 at Aurora Public Schools Stadium, but still passed for 205 yards and three Jim Benton TDs. “It’s amazing,” OVERTIME Erickson said. “I mean every quarterback dreams of it and with the skilled receivers we have and the offensive line that can hold up in pass pro(protection), it’s unreal.” The 6-foot-4, 205 pounder who still hasn’t drawn a lot of attention from college recruiters, credits the coaching staff and his teammates for his success this season. Still, he did pass for 2,174 yards in the 2015 season with 20 TDs. Vista offensive coordinator TJ Rubley illuminated that Erickson is bigger and stronger so his arm strength is up probably 30 percent. He’s running the offense better and is more comfortable in the pocket. ”He gets to throw the ball a lot but he has to get us in the right play,” said Rubley, who was a quarterback at the University of Tulsa and was on five pro teams, including the Denver Broncos. “If he doesn’t have those abilities, he doesn’t get the ability to throw the ball. “He has to have accuracy. He’s throwing a lot with five in the box. This isn’t easy football. A majority of his yards have come against difficult coverages.” Erickson, who could pass for 3,600 yards if he continues at his current pace, claims that running the offense isn’t hard. “It’s not too difficult,” he said. “There are a lot of calls on me but our offensive coordinator is incredible and prepares me well each week, so I know what I’m going to see. He makes it easy for me.” Fundraising for McKee family The Highlands Ranch football family and friends raised $1,663 and the Highlands Ranch TD club contributed another $500 to help support the McKee family for their injured son. Dylan McKee was a former Highlands Ranch football player who is now a freshman on the Concordia football team. He was injured in an automobile accident along with four other Bulldogs freshman players on Oct. 2 near Surprise, Nebraska. McKee was still in intensive care last weekend after his second surgery but was improving. He is expected to recover. McKee’s brother Hunter is a senior linebacker on the Falcons football team this season and youngest sibling TJ is a freshman player at Highlands Ranch. Parents Larry and Kelly McKee have been with Dylan since the accident, but Larry returned home briefly to watch the Highlands Ranch game Oct. 7 against Lakewood. 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.
The Independent • The Herald 27
October 13, 2016
VOTE NOW! HIGH SCHOOL
Englewood’s two varsity girls runners, Megan Trail (491) and Milagros Hernandez Vasquez (488), head towad the two-mile mark during the Oct. 8 3.1-mile Windjammer Invitational Cross Country Meet. Both Pirate runners posted personal best times. Trail finished 128th in the field of 166 runners with a time of 24:22 and Hernandez-Vasquez placed 141st with a time of 25:17. Photo by Tom Munds
AWARDS
Pirates post personal best times Englewood coach praises runners’ efforts at Windjammer By Tom Munds tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com Englewood Coach Ryan Wess smiled as he read the results, noting every Pirate runner posted personal best times at the Oct. 8 Windjammer Invitational Cross Country Meet. The Pirates hosted the Windjammer and the biggest field of runners and teams since the invitational was first held in the early 1980s, with 31 schools entering about 1,200 runners. The Pirates didn’t capture any trophies. The boys team was 20th in a field of 25 schools. Two Englewood girls ran in the varsity race and a school must have five runners in competition to post a team score. “I am proud of all our kids,” Wess said after the race. “All the athletes pushed themselves, and I believe everyone, varsity and junior varsity, posted their fastest times of the season today.” The first Englewood runners in both the boys and the girls varsity races were also pleased with their efforts. Zack Avjean led Englewood’s boys
team across the finish line at 73rd in the field of 190 runners with a time of 18:29. “It was a fun race and my last Windjammer because I am a senior,” he said. “It was great because this is our home course and there were a lot of people out here cheering for us. I heard them yelling my name and it made me feel great.” Avjean was happy with his race, saying his time was about 90 second faster than his previous personal best. He said he has always liked to run and cross country is great conditioning because he plays soccer in the spring. “I think I like running because I like to be challenged,” Avjean said. “There is a mental challenge, of course, but there also is the mental challenge to not give up, work to pass the runners ahead of you and keep pushing yourself to pass another runner ahead of you.” Megan Trail was the first Pirate girl across the finish line. She said it was long run over a difficult course as she was 128th in a field of 166 runners with a time of 24:22. “There was a big field in today’s race and that is always a challenge,” she said. “But I had a really good race because I think I cut about two minutes off my previous personal best time — and that feels great.”
Lions girl finishes in first place Littleton’s Addi Iken wins cross country girls race By Tom Munds tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com Littleton girls finished 15th in the girls varsity race at the Oct. 8 Windjammer Invitational Cross Country Meet. But Addi Iken took home the first-place medal in a race with 166 other runners. Englewood High School hosted the Windjammer Invitational. A total of 31 schools entered about 1,200 runners in the invitational that held separate races for boys JV, girls JV, boys varsity and girls varsity. It was the most schools and runners ever participating in the 3.1-mile Windjammer, an annual cross country meet since the early 1980s. When the gun started the girls varsity race, Iken sprinted out quickly, moved rapidly through the field and, when she took the lead, set the pace and remained the No. 1 runner all the way to the finish line. “I felt really good today. I like the course because it is a fast course and I just pulled ahead and stayed there,” she said after the race. “Sometimes, I have led the field but then couldn’t hold it. I got out in front and stayed there today.” Coming across the finish line first as an awesome feeling, said Iken, who also established a personal best time with 18:44, more than 30 seconds faster than her previous best time. “I have always liked to run and I decided to try running track in the seventh grade,” she said. “I tried running the sprints but I decided that wasn’t for me. So I started running distance races in track and also started running cross country.”
Littleton’s Addi Iken (781) leads the field of 166 runners as they head into the home stretch of the girls varsity race at the Oct. 8 Windjammer Invitational Cross Country Meet. Photo by Tom Munds Alamosa won the boys team title with 32 points. Littleton finished seventh with 228 points in a field of 25 teams. Christian Sapakoff was the first runner to finish the race for the Lion boys at 16th in the field of 190 runners with a time of 17:12. Arapahoe was another area team at the Windjammer. The Warrior boys finished 11th with 283 points. John Ficker was the first Warrior boy across the finish line, placing 36th with a time of 17:47. Rapid City won the girls varsity team title with 97 points and the Warrior girls were fourth with 107 points. Kelly Waugh led her Arapahoe teammates across the finish line, placing 14th with a time of 20:24.
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28 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
Mullen cracks Valor softball’s winning streak Softball teams across state head into regional playoff action By Jim Benton jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com Valor Christian’s softball team got a wake-up call a week before state playoffs begin. Mullen, ranked third in the CSHAANow. com Class 4A poll, snapped the 33-game winning streak of the top-ranked Eagles with a 4-3 win in the regular-season finale Oct. 8 on the Mustangs’ field. Eight regional, four-team state playoff regional tournaments in Class 3A, 4A and 5A will take place Oct. 15 with two teams from each region advancing to the state tournament, which will be held Oct. 21-22 at the Aurora Sports Complex. Valor, the two-time defending Class 4A state champions, has gone 65-3 over three seasons, and the Eagles feel comfortable taking one loss in the state tournament, which they have done the past two seasons
“Last year we lost one game in the regular season and came back,” said Valor coach Dave Atencio. “Same thing two years ago. They will bounce back. This loss wakes us up a little bit and refocuses us. And, it was great timing with the state regional tournaments starting.” The top eight teams, according to the RPI standings, earned host roles for the regional tournaments. In Class 5A, Douglas County, Legend and Arvada West earned the right to play host to a regional tournament. Douglas County will hold the Region 4 tournament at the Metzler complex in Castle Rock and the Region 6 tourney hosted by Legend will be the Salisbury fields in Parker. In the opening pairings, 16th-seeded Legacy (13-6-0) will face No. 17 Castle View (11-7-1) in the Region 1 tournament at Broomfield High School. Cherry Creek, seeded 25th with a 9-10-0 record, will take on No. 8 and host Loveland (13-6-0) in the Region 2 tournament at the Barnes Softball Complex in Loveland. No. 12 Ralston Valley (11-7-0) will meet No. 21 Mountain Vista (12-7-0) in the Re-
gion 3 tourney hosted by Eaglecrest at the Aurora Sports Park. The Region 4 tournament has first-round games pitting No. 4 Douglas County (15-4-0) against No. 29 Horizon (8-11-0) and No. 20 Rock Canyon (10-9-0) going against No. 13 Prairie View (16-3-0). Sixth-seeded Legend (14-4-1) will face No. 27 Smoky Hill (11-8-0) in the Region 6 tournament while the Region 7 tourney finds No. 28 and defending 5A champion Mountain Range (10-9-0) challenging No. 7 Arvada West (13-5-1) in an opening contest. No. 18 ThunderRidge (13-6-0) travels to Grand Junction and will play No. 16 Fort Collins (12-7-0) to begin Region 8 action. Valor reserved Aurora Sports Park for the Region 5 Class 4A tournament. The Eagles, seeded third with an 18-1-0 record, will play No. 30 Pueblo East (7-12-0). No. 19 D’Evelyn will face No. 14 Pueblo Central (12-7-0) in the other opening game. Fifth-seed Wheat Ridge (13-6-0) faces No. 28 Pueblo Centennial (6-12-1) as host for Region 3 and No. 16 Golden (14-5-0) faces the challenge of playing No. 17 Ber-
thoud (12-7-0) in the Region 1, Class 4A tourney in Erie. Advancing to the state playoffs was an accomplishment for Arvada. The Bulldogs are 11-8-0 this season and the most wins Arvada managed in a single season over the previous seven years was six. Arvada, seeded No. 29, plays No. 4 Pueblo West (15-3-0) in the Region 4 tourney at Runyon Field in Pueblo and No. 22 Ponderosa (9-10-0) will open against No. 11 Frederick (12-7-0) in the Region 6 event hosted by Mountain View at the Barnes Softball Complex in Loveland. No. 23 Holy Family (11-8-0) meets No. 10 Air Academy (14-4-0) in the Region 7 meet at Garden Acres Park in Longmont. Twenty-four teams qualifyied for the Class 3A playoffs and No. 14 Faith Christian (10-9-0) plays No. 19 St. Mary’s (10-90) in the Region 3 tournament, while No. 7 The Academy (15-4-0) will be at home to play the winner of the Cedaredge-Akron game in the Region 7 tournament. Two fields must be available for a school to host a regional tournament so all the sites have yet to be determined.
State tennis tournament has a familiar look Cherry Creek again poised for a championship By Jim Benton jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com Not much appears to have changed this fall. Cherry Creek and Fairview head into the boys Class 5A state tennis tournament as the teams to beat. The Class 5A tournament will be played Oct. 13-15 at the Gates Tennis Center in Denver, while the 4A tournament is set for the same days at Pueblo City Park. Cherry Creek has won 41 state championships and the Bruins are the five-time defending champs. In each of the past five seasons, Fairview has finished second to the Bruins. In the Region 1 qualifying tournament,
Creek swept all the titles in the seven divisions and will have 11 players in the state brackets. Fairview will send all 11 of its players to the Gates Tennis Center while Heritage, Ponderosa, Grand Junction and Mountain Vista qualified enough players to be contenders. The following are the local qualifiers for the Class 5A and 4A state tennis tournaments: Arapahoe: No. 1 singles - Tyler Landen, Soph. (8-3); No. 1 doubles - Nick Stephenson, Soph. and Jake Hall, Soph. (7-4); No. 2 doubles - Garrett Lumley, Sr. and Simon Alger, Sr. (10-1); No. 3 doubles - Kirk Zieser, Jr. and Jay Kikkeri, Jr. (8-3); No. 4 doubles Chase Wern, Fr. and AJ Nelson, Soph. (9-2). Cherry Creek: No. 1 singles - Ethan Hillis, Sr. (12-5); No. 2 singles - Robby Hill, Sr., (14-3); No. 3 singles - Alex Gordon, Fr., (11-5); No. 1 doubles - Jacob Bendalin, Sr.
and Ben Murray, Jr. (14-3); No. 2 doubles Sam Angell, Jr. and Drew Hill, Soph. (16-2); No. 3 doubles - Stone Heyman, Jr. and Nick Eidler, Jr. (15-2); No. 4 doubles - Zach Smith, Jr. and Nick Svichar, Fr. (17-0). Heritage: No. 1 singles - Skyler Gates, Jr. (10-1); No. 2 singles - Jack Alexander, Jr., (10-0); No. 3 singles - Cameron McGregor, Sr., (9-3): No. 2 doubles - Cole Hancock, Sr. and Will Jones, Fr. (7-5); No. 3 doubles Zach Kennedy, Fr. and Cole Sullivan, Jr. (73); No. 4 doubles - Carson McLeod, Soph. and Ryan Dicker, Sr. (9-1). Legend: No. 4 doubles - Luke Lyman, Sr. and Luke Grant, Jr. (5-8). Mountain Vista: No. 1 singles - Ben Antonsen, Sr. (10-0); No. 2 singles - Max Probst, soph. (7-3); No. 1 doubles - Matt Szmyd, Sr. and Grant Smith, Sr. (8-2); No. 2 doubles - Collin Bean, soph. and Tommy Hipp, Jr. (8-2); No. 3 doubles - Chris Schauer, Sr. and Brian Benson, Jr. (10-0);
No. 4 doubles - Cameron Mahoney, Sr. and Naman Kapasi, Fr. (6-4). Ponderosa: No. 1 singles - Josh Fields, Sr. (6-4); No. 2 singles - Henry Cox, Soph. (8-2); No. 3 singles - Hayden Smith, Jr. (6-4); No.1 doubles - Josh Peterson, Sr.and Luke Lindell, Jr. (7-3); No. 2 doubles - Trent Lowe, Fr. and Peyton Correll, Jr. (3-7); No. 3 doubles - Tyler Liberati, Soph. and Grant Hitchings, Jr. (6-4). Ralston Valley: No. 2 singles - Jackson Johnstone, Jr. (5-4). Rock Canyon: No. 2 doubles - Jack Wahlenmaier, Sr. and Wes Wainright, Sr. (12-2); No. 3 doubles - Gavin Burkholder, Sr. and Luke Smith, Soph. (10-3). ThunderRidge: No. 2 singles - Zach Keith, Sr. (8-6); No. 3 singles - Benton Haensel, Jr. (12-2); No. 1 doubles - Daniel Auerbach, Sr. and Carson Sexton, Jr. (6-7) Valor Christian: No. 1 singles - Carter Logan, soph. (6-4)
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The Independent • The Herald 29
October 13, 2016
Blueberries are a super hero super food This year marks the 100th anniversary of the first commercial harvest of domesticated blueberries. Little did we know this fruit, so tiny in stature, would gain worldwide popularity as the Super Hero of Super Foods, and even have a place in the White House kitchen garden. Today, more than 1 billion pounds of blueberries are produced annually on five continents, with the United States leading the
way with 35 states supplying the crop. Heralded for their brain and heartboosting benefits, people of all ages toss them into salads, stir them into sauces, sprinkle them on ice cream and eat them by the handful. These little blue dynamos have reached such an elite super food status because they are: • Low in fat – one cup serving has only 80 calories • Full of dietary fiber – one serving provides about 14 percent of the daily fiber requirement
Volleyball Continued from Page 26
The opposite is true of the defensive digs, which is when players keep play going by diving to prevent the ball from hitting the floor. Arapahoe had 73 digs, with Abby Anderson the leader with 12 and teammate Jessica Girard with 13. Cherry Creek players made 53 digs with Kate Chapman the leader with 16. Carly Killorm was Arapahoe’s assist leader with 23 while Daisy Schultz and Kathryn Fish each made 18 assists for Cherry Creek. They said it Arapahoe Coach Jordan Wright
• High in vitamin C – one serving delivers 25 percent of the daily requirement of vitamin C • Full of dietary fiber – one serving provides about 14 percent of the daily fiber requirement • An excellent source of manganese – plays an important role in bone development The power of the blueberry “Blueberries are one of the more potent foods in terms of protecting the brain,” stated Martha Clare Morris, ScD, a nutritional epidemiologist who codeveloped the MIND diet (blend of the Mediterranean and DASH diets). According to a study
said this is a veteran team with eight seniors on the roster. “We are better team now than we were at this time last year when we had about a 500 record,” she said before the match. “We are playing very well this season and this is a key game against a very good Cherry Creek team.” She said the team’s strength is its way the athletes work together as a team. She said although this is a senior-dominated team, the future of Arapahoe volleyball looks good because the underclass teams, the junior varsity, sophomore and freshmen teams, all have winning records. After the match, she hugged and congratulated her players. She told they had played solid volleyball and to celebrate a win over a very good Cherry Creek team.
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TO SOLVE SUDOKU: Numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
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from Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center, which found adhering to the MIND diet helped reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other cognitive degeneration, blueberries can also help prevent brain aging by 7 1/2 years. And take heart, blueberries, rich in antioxidants, can help reduce the buildup of “bad” LDL cholesterol in artery walls that contributes to cardiovascular disease and stroke. Studies conducted at the USDA Human Nutrition Center have found that blueberries rank No. 1 in antioxidant activity when compared with 40 other fresh fruits and vegetables.
When the match was over, Arapahoe players and coaches remained on the court to celebrate with fans, friends and families. Cherry Creek Coach Sally Moos and her players left the court and headed to the locker room. Moos said she did not want to talk about the match as she left for the locker room. Joan Dalton, one of the Bruin assistant coaches, said it was a great match, both teams played very well, and it was fun to see some players step up to do their jobs to fill vacancies, including the loss of two starters to injuries. “Our team played really well and I think I expected we would win the match in four sets,” she said. “But they battled back, rallied very well, but Arapahoe played very well like they always do.”
Picking the perfect blueberry Blueberries should be deep purple-blue to blueblack and feel firm, dry, plump and smooth-skinned to the touch. Frozen, dried or fresh, blueberries’ nutritional value remains the same. Rinse them just before snacking and eat them within 10 days and be sure to keep them refrigerated. Blueberries have earned a well-deserved place in your daily diet for better health. For delicious recipes
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Public Notices RENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE OF SALE
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
Public Trustees PUBLIC NOTICE COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0437-2016 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 22, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records. Original Grantor(s) Francis C Milan and Rosalinda A Milan Original Beneficiary(ies) Argent Mortgage Company, LLC Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for, Argent Securities Inc. AssetBacked Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-M2, Under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement Dated August 1, 2006 Date of Deed of Trust June 23, 2006 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust July 07, 2006 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) B6099227 Original Principal Amount $245,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $206,039.48 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 1, BLOCK 5, BEL-VUE HEIGHTS WEST, FILING NO. 1, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 7688 S Windermere St, Littleton, CO 80120. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 11/09/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 9/15/2016 Last Publication: 10/13/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO Statement of Ownership, Management, FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE and Circulation (All Periodicals PublicaBY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO tions Except Requester Publications) CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
1. Publication Title: Englewood Herald IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOL2. Publication Number: 176-680 ATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SEC3. Filing Date: 9.21.16 TION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SEC4. Issue Frequency: Weekly TION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE 5. Number of Issues Published COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, Annually: 52 CONSUMER FINANTHE FEDERAL CIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), Annual Subscription OR6.BOTH. THE FILINGPrice: OF A $30.00 COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORE7. Complete Mailing Address of Known CLOSURE PROCESS. Office of Publication (Not Printer): 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Colorado Attorney General Highlands Ranch, 80129 1300 Broadway, 10thCO Floor Contact Person: 80203 Lindsay Nicoletti Denver, Colorado Telephone (include Area Code): (800) 222-4444 303-566-4071 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov
8. Complete Mailing Address of HeadFederal Consumer Financial quartersBureau or General Business Office Of Protection P.O. Box 4503 Publisher (Not Printer): Iowa City, Iowa 52244 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, (855) 411-2372 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 www.consumerfinance.gov
DATE: 07/22/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) the legal holder of UNITED representing STATES POSTAL SERVICE the indebtedness is: Statement of Ownership, Management, David Shore #19973 andA.Circulation (All Periodicals PublicaMartin H.Except Shore #1800 tions Requester Publications) Stephen A Hall #38186 1. Publication Title: Littleton Independent Hellerstein and Shore PC 5347 S. Valentia 2. Way, Suite 100, Greenwood Village, Publication Number: 315-780 CO 80111 (303) 573-1080 Attorney File # 16-00334SH 3. Filing Date: 9.21.16
The above is Weekly acting as a debt 4. Attorney Issue Frequency: collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be 5. Number of Issues Published used for that purpose. Annually: 52 ©Public Trustees' Association 6. AnnualRevised Subscription of Colorado 1/2015Price: $30.00 7. Complete Mailing Address of Known Legal Notice NO.: 0437-2016 Office of Publication (Not Printer): First Publication: 9/15/2016 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Last Publication: 10/13/2016 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent Contact Person: Lindsay Nicoletti Telephone (include Area Code): 303-566-4071 8. Complete Mailing Address of Headquarters or General Business Office Of Publisher (Not Printer): 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 11/09/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
Public Trustees
First Publication: 9/15/2016 Last Publication: 10/13/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS. Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau P.O. Box 4503 Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov DATE: 07/22/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: David A. Shore #19973 Martin H. Shore #1800 Stephen A Hall #38186 Hellerstein and Shore PC 5347 S. Valentia Way, Suite 100, Greenwood Village, CO 80111 (303) 573-1080 Attorney File # 16-00334SH The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Legal Notice NO.: 0437-2016 First Publication: 9/15/2016 Last Publication: 10/13/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
Notices
IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN 32 The Independent • The Herald IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CUR-
Public Trustees
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 11/16/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
Public Trustees
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0452-2016 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On July 29, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records. Original Grantor(s) LINDA R. CALKINS Original Beneficiary(ies) BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (“FANNIE MAE”), A CORPORATION ORGANIZED AND EXISTING UNDER THE LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Date of Deed of Trust February 24, 2003 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust March 04, 2003 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) B3047595 Original Principal Amount $144,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $112,086.65 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 126, THE KNOLLS WEST FILING N O . 1 , C O U N T Y O F A R A P A H O E, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 7097 S KNOLLS WAY, CENTENNIAL, CO 80122. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 11/16/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law.
First Publication: 9/22/2016 Last Publication: 10/20/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS. Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau P.O. Box 4503 Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov DATE: 07/29/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee
9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing: Publisher: Gerard Healey, Marcari-Healey Publishing Company 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 Editor: Chris Rotar, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 Managing Editor: Ann Healey, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
©Public Trustees' Association 15. Extent and Nature Of Circulation: of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Average No. Copies of Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months Legal Notice NO.: 0452-2016 No. Publication: Copies of Single Issue Published First 9/22/2016 Nearest to Filling Date: Last Publication: 10/20/2016 a. Total Number of Copies Press Name of Publication: Littleton(Net Independent Run): 1679 1528 b. Paid Circulation (By Mail and outside 11. Known Bondholders. Mortgagees, the Mail) and Other Security Holders Owning (1) Mailed Outside-County Paid or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or Other (include paid distribution above nomiSecurities. If none, check box nal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and [X] None exchange copies) 350 12. Tax Status (Check one) The purpose, 237 10. Owner: Full Name and Complete Mailing Address: Gerard Healey, Marari - Healey Publishing Company 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 Ann Macari Healey, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Public Trustees
Public Trustees
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
First Publication: 10/13/2016 Last Publication: 11/10/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
On August 5, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
Original Grantor(s) Michael Gentala Original Beneficiary(ies) Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., acting solely as nominee for First Option Lending. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Franklin American Mortgage Company Date of Deed of Trust May 01, 2014 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust May 07, 2014 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) D4037886 Original Principal Amount $235,850.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $230,523.00
IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS.
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 19, BLOCK 19, SOUTHGLENN FOURTH FILING, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 6715 S Gilpin Cir E, Centennial, CO 80122.
Holly Ryan #32647 Toni M. Owan #30580 Jolene Guignet #46144 Medved Dale Decker & Deere, LLC 355 Union Blvd., Suite 250, Lakewood, CO 80228 (303) 274-0155 Attorney File # 16-914-29393
The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Legal Notice NO.: 0452-2016 First Publication: 9/22/2016 Last Publication: 10/20/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0466-2016 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On August 5, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s)
Original Beneficiary(ies) paid distribution above nominal rate, Mortgage Electronic Registration advertiser’s proof copies, and Systems, Inc., acting solely asexchange nominee copies) for First Option Lending. 161 Current Holder of Evidence of Debt 165 Franklin American Mortgage Company (3) Paid Distribution Date of Deed of Trust Outside the Mails including Sales Through Dealers and May 01, 2014 Carriers, Vendors, Counter Sales, County ofStreet Recording and Other Paid Distribution Outside Arapahoe USPS® Recording Date of Deed of Trust 100 May 07, 2014 100 Recording Information (Reception No. (4) Paid Book/Page DistributionNo.) by Other Classes and/or of Mail Through the USPS (e.g. First D4037886 Class®) Original Principal Amount 0$235,850.00 0Outstanding Principal Balance $230,523.00 c. Total Paid Distribution (Sum of 15b (1), (2), (3). and (4) Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you 325 are hereby notified that the covenants of 278 theFree deed trust have violated( as d. or of Nominal Ratebeen Distribution follows: failure to pay and inBy Mail and Outside theprincipal Mail) terest due together with all other (1) Freewhen or Nominal Rate Outside-County payments provided the evidence of Copies included onfor PSinForm 3541 debt secured by the deed of trust and oth53 1er violations thereof. (2) Free or Nominal Rate In-County THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE Copies included on PS Form 3541 0A FIRST LIEN. 0 LOT 19,orBLOCK SOUTHGLENN (3) Free Nominal19, Rate Copies Mailed FOURTH FILING, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 6715 S Gilpin Cir E, Centennial, CO
Ownership Statement Littleton Independent 80122.
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of Public the indebtedness is: function, and nonprofit status of this Holly Ryan #32647 organization and the exempt status for Toni M. Owan #30580 federal income tax purposes: Jolene #46144During Preceding [X] HasGuignet Not Changed Medved Dale Decker & Deere, LLC 355 12 Months Union Suite 250,Preceding Lakewood, [ ] HasBlvd., Changed During 12 CO 80228 Months(303) 274-0155 Attorney File # 16-914-29393 13. Publication Title: Littleton The Attorney above is acting as a debt Independent collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any Date information providedData may be 14. Issue for Circulation used for8.25.16 that purpose. Below:
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/07/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the inTo advertise your publicdebtedness notices call 303-566-4100 provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, CRS §38-38-103 all as provided by law. FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0466-2016
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST.
Public Notice Michael Gentala
IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO Afederal LATER DATE, DEADLINE TO 9. Full Names and Complete Mailing income taxTHE purposes: FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and [X] Has Not Changed During Preceding BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO Managing: 12 Months CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; Publisher: Gerard Healey, [ ] Has Changed During Preceding 12 Marari-Healty Publishing Company Months IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLHighlands Ranch, CO 80129 13. Publication Title: EnglewoodFOR Herald ATED THE REQUIREMENTS A Editor: Chris Rotar, SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SEC9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, 14. Issue Date for Circulation Data TION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBIHighlands Ranch, CO 80129 Below: TION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECManaging Editor: Ann Healey 8.25.16 TION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 15. Extent andATTORNEY Nature Of Circulation: COLORADO GENERAL, Average No. Copies of Each Issue THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINAN10. Owner: Full Name and Complete During Preceding 12 BUREAU Months (CFPB), CIAL PROTECTION Mailing Address: No. BOTH. Copies of Single IssueOF Published OR THE FILING A COMGerard Healey, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Nearest WILL to Filling Date: PLAINT NOT STOP THE FORESuite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 a. Total Number of Copies (Net Press CLOSURE PROCESS. Ann Macari Healey, Run): 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, 500 Colorado Attorney General Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 453 Broadway, 10th Floor 1300 b. Paid Circulation (By Mail and outside Denver, Colorado 80203 11. Known Bondholders. Mortgagees, the Mail) (800) 222-4444 and Other Security Holders Owning (1) Mailed Outside-County Paid www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or Other (includeConsumer paid distribution above nomiFederal Financial Securities. If none, check box nal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and Protection Bureau [X] None exchange copies) P.O. Box 4503 64 City, Iowa 52244 Iowa 12. Tax Status (Check one) The purpose, (855) 13 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov function, and nonprofit status of this (2) Mailed In-County Paid Subscriporganization and the exempt status for tions Stated on PS Form 3541 (include DATE: 07/29/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee
October 13, 2016
The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is:
Ownership Statement Englewood Herald
First Publication: 9/22/2016 Last Publication: 10/20/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust.
THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN
IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURNotice
RENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OFMailed THE DEED OF TRUST. (2) In-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 (include NOTICE OF SALE paid distribution above nominal rate, advertiser’s proof of copies, and exchange The current holder the Evidence of Debt copies) secured by the Deed of Trust, described 947 herein, has filed Notice of Election and 916 Demand for sale as provided by law and (3) PaidDeed Distribution in said of Trust.Outside the Mails including Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, THEREFORE, Notice Is Counter Hereby Sales, Given and Distribution that Other I will atPaid public auction, atOutside 10:00 A.M. USPS® on Wednesday, 12/07/2016, at the East 125 Hearing Room, County Administration 125 Building, 5334 South Prince Street, (4) Paid Distribution Othersell Classes Littleton, Colorado, by 80120, to the of Mail Through USPS highest and best the bidder for (e.g. cash,First the said Class®) real property and all interest of the said 0Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns 0therein, for the purpose of paying the inc. Total Paidprovided Distribution (Sum of 15b of debtedness in said Evidence (1), (2), (3). andby(4)the Deed of Trust, plus Debt secured 1422 attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and 1278 other items allowed by law, and will issue d. or Nominal Rate Distribution ( to Free the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, By Mail and Outside all as provided by law.the Mail) (1) Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies included10/13/2016 on PS Form 3541 First Publication: 116 Last Publication: 11/10/2016 3Name of Publication: Littleton Independent (2) Free or Nominal Rate In-County IF THE included SALE DATE IS Form CONTINUED Copies on PS 3541 TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
NOTICE OF SALE
THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/07/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 10/13/2016 Last Publication: 11/10/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED;
Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau P.O. Box 4503 Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov DATE: 08/05/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Lauren Tew #45041 Randall Chin #31149 Monica Kadrmas #34904 Weldon Phillips #31827
Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP 1199 Bannock Street, Denver, CO 80204 (303) 350-3711 Attorney File # 3850.100264,F01
The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Legal Notice NO.: 0466-2016 First Publication: 10/13/2016 Last Publication: 11/10/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0445-2016 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
On July 26, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records.
Original Grantor(s) Danielle McNulty Original Beneficiary(ies) Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Guild Mortgage Company, a California Corporation IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A Current Holder of Evidence of Debt LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLGuild Mortgage Company, a California ATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A Corporation POINT Through OF CONTACT IN SEC- Publication atSINGLE other Classes The USPS of Statement Date of Deed of Trust TION 38-38-103.1 (e.g. First-Class Mail)OR THE PROHIBI- of January Ownership 31, 2012 0TION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SEC- [X]County If the publication of Recordingis a general publiTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER 0 cation, publication of this statement is Arapahoe MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE (4) Free or Nominal Rate Distribution required. Will be printed 10/13/16 Recording Date of Deedin of the Trust COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, Outside the Mail (Carriers or other of this publication. February 08, 2012 THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINAN- issue means) Recording Information (Reception No. CIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), 125 Signature and TitleNo.) of Editor, Book/Page OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COM- 17.and/or 125 Business Manager, or Owner D2014736 PLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORE- Publisher, e.CLOSURE Total Free PROCESS. or Nominal Rate DistribuGerard J. Healey Original Principal Amount tion (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3) and (4) Date 9.26.16 $302,141.00 178 Outstanding Principal Balance Colorado Attorney General 126 I certify that all information furnished on $277,898.29 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor f.Denver, Total Distribution this form is true and complete. I underColorado 80203 (Sum 15c and 15e) stand that anyone furnishes falseyou Pursuant to CRSwho §38-38-101(4)(i), (800)of 222-4444 hereby notified that the 503 orare misleading information on covenants this form of www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov of material trust have been violated 404 orthe whodeed omits or information re-as follows:onfailure to pay and g.Federal CopiesConsumer not Distributed (See Instrucquested the form mayprincipal be subject to inFinancial terest when due together with all other tions to Publishers #4 (Page #3) criminal sanctions (including fines and Protection Bureau payments provided in the evidence of 50 imprisonment) and/orfor civil sanctions P.O. Box 4503 debt secured the deed of trust and oth50 (including civil by penalties). Iowa City, Iowa 52244 er violations thereof. h.(855) Total411-2372 (Sum of 15f and g) 553 www.consumerfinance.gov THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE 454 A FIRST LIEN. October 13, 2016 i.DATE: Percent Paid First Publication: 08/05/2016 (15c divided by 15fPublic timesTrustee 100) in and for Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Cynthia D Mares, LOT 15, BLOCK 6,Herald THE HIGHLANDS 64.61% the County of Arapahoe, State of Color- Publisher:Englewood 460, FILING NO. 4, COUNTY OF AR68.81% ado APAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee 16. Electronic Copy Circulation Also known by street and number as: The name, address, business telephone N/A 3776 E Phillips Circle, Centennial, CO number and bar registration number of the 80122. attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURLauren Tew #45041 RENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN Randall Chin #31149 OF THE DEED OF TRUST. Monica Kadrmas #34904 Weldon Phillips #31827 NOTICE OF SALE Barrett, Frappier & Weisserman, LLP The current holder of the Evidence of Debt 1199 Bannock Street, Denver, CO 80204 by the Deed of Trust, described 0(303) 350-3711 16.secured Electronic Copy Circulation herein, has filed Notice of Election and 0Attorney File # 3850.100264,F01 N/A Demand for sale as provided by law and (3) Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed in said Deed of Trust. Attorney above is acting as a debt Publication atThe other Classes Through The USPS of Statement collector and isMail) attempting to collect a of Ownership (e.g. First-Class THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given debt. Any information provided may be 0 [X]that If the publication is a general publiI will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. 0used for that purpose. cation, publication11/16/2016, of this statement on Wednesday, at the is East (4) Free or Nominal Rate Distribution required. Will be printed in the 10/13/16 Hearing Room, County Administration ©Public Trustees' Association Outside the Mail (Carriers or other issue of this 5334 publication. Building, South Prince Street, of Colorado Revised 1/2015 means) Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the 200 17.highest Signature and Title of for Editor, and best bidder cash, the said Legal Notice NO.: 0466-2016 200 Publisher, Business Manager, real property and all interestor ofOwner the said Publication: 10/13/2016 e.First Total Free or Nominal Rate DistribuGerard J. Healey Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns Last Publication: 11/10/2016 tion (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3) and (4) Date 9.26.16 therein, for the purpose of paying the inName of Publication: Littleton Independent 316 debtedness provided in said Evidence of 203 I certify that all information Debt secured by the Deedfurnished of Trust, on plus f. Total Distribution this form is true I underattorneys' fees,and the complete. expenses of sale and (Sum of 15c and 15e) stand anyone who false otherthat items allowed byfurnishes law, and will issue 1738 or to misleading information on this form the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, 1481 or all who material as omits provided by law.or information g. Copies not Distributed (See Instrucrequested on the form may be subject tions to Publishers #4 (Page #3) to First criminal sanctions (including fines Publication: 9/22/2016 56 and imprisonment) Last Publication: 10/20/2016 50 and/or sanctions Littleton (including civil Namecivil of Publication: Independent h. Total (Sum of 15f and g) penalties). 1794 IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO 1531 First Publication: October 13, 2016 A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO i. Percent Paid Last Publication: 13, 2016 FILE A NOTICEOctober OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO (15c divided by 15f times 100) Publisher: Littleton Independent CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; 81.82% 86.29% IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBI-
Littleton Englewood * 1
FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0445-2016
October 13, 2016
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust:
Public Trustees
On July 26, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records. Original Grantor(s) Danielle McNulty Original Beneficiary(ies) Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Guild Mortgage Company, a California Corporation Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Guild Mortgage Company, a California Corporation Date of Deed of Trust January 31, 2012 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust February 08, 2012 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) D2014736 Original Principal Amount $302,141.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $277,898.29 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 15, BLOCK 6, THE HIGHLANDS 460, FILING NO. 4, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as: 3776 E Phillips Circle, Centennial, CO 80122. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 11/16/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/22/2016 Last Publication: 10/20/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS. Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau P.O. Box 4503 Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov DATE: 07/26/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Eve Grina #43658 Jennifer Cruseturner #44452 Jennifer Rogers #34682 Holly Shilliday #24423 Joan Olson #28078 Erin Robson #46557 Courtney Wright #45482 McCarthy & Holthus LLP 7700 E Arapahoe Road, Suite 230, Centennial, CO 80112 (877) 369-6122 Attorney File # CO 16-740666-JS The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose.
2006-CIBC16, Commercial Mortgage Pass-Throught Certificates, Series 2006CIBC16 Date of Deed of Trust May 23, 2006 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust June 05, 2006 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) B6083326 Original Principal Amount $86,680,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $6,800,000.00
Public Trustees
Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the evidence of debt secured by the deed of trust and other violations thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. See Exhibit A Also known by street and number as: 12876 E Adam Aircraft Cir, Englewood, CO 80112. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 12/07/2016, at the East Hearing Room, County Administration Building, 5334 South Prince Street, Littleton, Colorado, 80120, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 10/13/2016 Last Publication: 11/10/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS. Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau P.O. Box 4503 Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov DATE: 08/10/2016 Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee in and for the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado By: Cynthia D Mares, Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: Craig M.J. Allely #17546 Perkins Coie 1900 Sixteenth Street, Suite 1400, Denver, CO 80202-5255 (303) 2912300 Attorney File # Portfolio Real Estate The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 EXHIBIT A Legal Description Adam Aircraft 12876 East Jamison Circle Englewood, Colorado Lot 2, Block 1, Dove Valley Business Park Subdivision Filing No. 11, according to the plat thereof recorded April 28, 2000 Under Reception No. B0049738, Plat Book 178 at Pages 7 and 8, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado (the “Real Estate”) TOGETHER WITH all of Borrower’s estate, right, title and interest in, to and under any and all of the following described property, whether now owned or hereafter acquired (collectively, the “Property”):
Legal Notice NO.: 0445-2016 First Publication: 9/22/2016 Last Publication: 10/20/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
A. The Real Estate, together with all of the easements, rights, privileges, franchises, tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances now or hereafter thereunto belonging or in any way appertaining and all of the estate, right, title, interest, claim and demand whatsoever of Borrower therein or thereto, either at law or in equity, in possession or in expectancy, now or hereafter acquired;
COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 0473-2016
B. All structures, buildings and improvements of every kind and description now or at any time hereafter located or placed on the Real Estate (the “Improvements”);
©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015
To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On August 10, 2016, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Arapahoe records. Original Grantor(s) Portfolio Real Estate Englewood, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company Original Beneficiary(ies) CIBC Inc., A Delaware corporation Current Holder of Evidence of Debt Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as trustee for the registered holders of J.P. Morgan Chase Commerical Mortgage Securities Trust 2006-CIBC16, Commercial Mortgage Pass-Throught Certificates, Series 2006CIBC16 Date of Deed of Trust May 23, 2006 County of Recording Arapahoe Recording Date of Deed of Trust June 05, 2006 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) B6083326
C. All furniture, furnishings, fixtures, goods, equipment, inventory or personal property owned by Borrower and now or hereafter located on, attached to or used in and about the Improvements, including, but not limited to, all machines, engines, boilers, dynamos, elevators, stokers, tanks, cabinets, awnings, screens, shades, blinds, carpets, draperies, lawn mowers, and all appliances, plumbing, heating, air conditioning, lighting, ventilating, refrigerating, disposal and incinerating equipment, and all fixtures and appurtenances thereto, and such other goods and chattels and personal property owned by Borrower as are now or hereafter used or furnished in operating the Improvements, or the activities conducted therein, and all building materials and equipment hereafter situated on or about the Real Estate or Improvements, and to the extent assignable, all warranties and guaranties relating thereto, and all additions thereto and substitutions and replacements therefor (exclusive of any of the foregoing owned or leased by tenants of space in the Improvements) (hereinafter, all of the foregoing items described in this paragraph C, collectively, the “Equipment”);
and all building materials and equipment hereafter situated on or about the Real Estate or Improvements, and to the extent assignable, all warranties and guaranties relating thereto, and all additions thereto and substitutions and replacements therefor (exclusive of any of the foregoing owned or leased by tenants of space in the Improvements) (hereinafter, all of the foregoing items described in this paragraph C, collectively, the “Equipment”);
Public Trustees
D. All easements, rights-of-way, strips and gores of land, vaults, streets, ways, alleys, passages, sewer rights, air rights and other development rights now or hereafter located on the Real Estate or under or above the same or any part or parcel thereof, and all estates, rights, titles, interests, tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances, reversions and remainders whatsoever, in any way belonging, relating or appertaining to the Real Estate and/or Improvements or any part thereof, or which hereafter shall in any way belong, relate or be appurtenant thereto, whether now owned or hereafter acquired by Borrower; E. All water, ditches, wells, reservoirs and drains and all water, ditch, well, reservoir and drainage rights which are appurtenant to, located on, under or above or used in connection with the Real Estate or the Improvements, or any part thereof, whether now existing or hereafter created or acquired; F. All minerals, crops, timber, trees, shrubs, flowers and landscaping features now or hereafter located on, under or above the Real Estate; G. All leases (including, without limitation, oil, gas and mineral leases), subleases, licenses, concessions and occupancy agreements of all or any part of the Real Estate or the Improvements now or hereafter entered into and any guaranty thereof (each, a “Lease” and collectively, the “Leases”) and all rents, royalties, issues, profits, revenue, income, claims, judgments, awards, settlements and other benefits (collectively, the “Rents and Profits”) of the Real Estate or the Improvements, now or hereafter arising from the use or enjoyment of all or any portion thereof or from any present or future Lease or other agreement pertaining thereto or arising from any of the Contracts (as hereinafter defined) or any of the General Intangibles (as hereinafter defined) and, subject to the rights of the tenants and all applicable legal requirements, all cash or securities (including, without limitation, any letter of credit or cash security deposit) deposited to secure performance by the tenants, lessees, subtenants, sublessees or licensees, as applicable, of their obligations under any such Leases, whether said cash or securities are to be held until the expiration of the terms of said Leases or applied to one or more of the installments of rent coming due prior to the expiration of said terms; H. To the extent assignable, all contracts and agreements now or hereafter entered into relating to the ownership or operation or management of the Real Estate or the Improvements or any portion of either of them (collectively, the “Contracts”), including, without limitation, management agreements, franchise agreements, co-tenancy agreements, service contracts, maintenance contracts, equipment leases, personal property leases and any contracts or documents relating to construction on any part of the Real Estate or the Improvements (including plans, drawings, surveys, tests, reports, bonds and governmental approvals) or to the management or operation of any part of the Real Estate or the Improvements and any and all warranties and guaranties relating to the Real Estate or the Improvements or any fixtures, equipment or personal property owned by Borrower and located on and/or used in connection with the Property, together with all revenue, income and other benefits thereof and all claims, judgments, awards and settlements arising thereunder; I. All present and future monetary deposits given to any public or private utility with respect to utility services furnished to any part of the Real Estate or the Improvements; J. All present and future funds, accounts, instruments, accounts receivable, documents, causes of action, claims, general intangibles to the extent assignable, (including, without limitation, trademarks, trade names, servicemarks and symbols now or hereafter used in connection with any part of the Real Estate or the Improvements, all names by which the Real Estate or the Improvements may be operated or known, all rights to carry on business under such names, and all rights, interest and privileges which Borrower has or may have as developer or declarant under any covenants, restrictions or declarations now or hereafter relating to the Real Estate or the Improvements) and all notes or chattel paper now or hereafter arising from or by virtue of any transactions related to the Real Estate or the Improvements (collectively, the “General Intangibles”); L. All water taps, sewer taps, certificates of occupancy, permits, licenses, franchises, certificates, consents, approvals and other rights and privileges now or hereafter obtained in connection with the Real Estate or the Improvements and, to the extent assignable, all present and future warranties and guaranties relating to the Improvements or to any equipment, fixtures, furniture, furnishings, personal property or components of any of the foregoing now or hereafter located or installed on the Real Estate or the Improvements; M. All building materials, supplies and equipment now or hereafter placed on the Real Estate or in the Improvements and all architectural renderings, models, drawings, plans, specifications, studies and data now or hereafter relating to the Real Estate or the Improvements; N. Any insurance policies or binders now or hereafter relating to the Property including any unearned premiums thereon; O. All proceeds, products, substitutions and accessions (including claims and demands therefor) of the conversion, voluntary or involuntary, of any of the foregoing into cash or liquidated claims, including, without limitation, proceeds of insurance and condemnation awards and proceeds of refunds of any Taxes or Other Charges (as defined in the Deed of Trust described in the attached Notice of Election and Demand for Sale by Public Trustee); and P. All other or greater rights and interests of every nature in the Real Estate or the Improvements and in the possession or use thereof and income therefrom, whether now owned or hereafter acquired by Borrower. Legal Notice NO.: 0473-2016 First Publication: 10/13/2016 Last Publication: 11/10/2016 Name of Publication: Littleton Independent
The Independent • The Herald 33 Name Changes
Name Changes
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
County Court Arapahoe County, Colorado 1790 W. Littleton Blvd. Littleton, Colorado 80120
Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name
In the Matter of the Petition of: Parent/ Petitioner: Eli and Valery Bowser For Minor Child: Ethan Saldana To Change the Child’s Name to: Ethan Saldana Bowser Case Number: 2016 C 100731 NOTICE TO NON-CUSTODIAL PARENT BY PUBLICATION Notice to: Non custodial parent. Notice is given that a hearing is scheduled as follows: Date: October 12, 2016 Time: 9:00 a.m. Location: 1790 W. Littleton Blvd. Littleton, Colorado 80120 For the purpose of requesting a change of name for Ethan Saldana. At this hearing the Court may enter an order changing the name of the minor child. To support or voice objection to the proposed name change, you must appear at the hearing. Date: August 31, 2016 Legal Notice No.: 58017 First Publication: September 15, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice County Court, Arapahoe County, Colorado 1790 W. Littleton Blvd. Littleton, Colorado 80120 In the Matter of the Petition of: Parent/ Petitioner: Keonni Guerue For Minor Child: Millio Miramontes To Change the Child’s Name to: Millio Ala’Kai Guerue Case Number: 16 C 100812 NOTICE TO NON-CUSTODIAL PARENT BY PUBLICATION Notice to: Calef Miramontes, non-custodial parent. Notice is given that a hearing is scheduled as follows: Date: November 22, 2016 Time: 9:00 a.m. Location: 1790 W. Littleton Blvd. Littleton, Colorado 80120 For the purpose of requesting a change of name for Millio Ala’Kai Guerue At this hearing the Court may enter an order changing the name of the minor child. To support or voice objection to the proposed name change, you must appear at the hearing. Date: September 22, 2016 Legal Notice No.: 58052 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: November 3, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice County Court Arapahoe County, Colorado 1790 W. Littleton Blvd. Littleton, Colorado 80120 In the Matter of the Petition of: Parent/ Petitioner: Cory Hodge For Minor Child: Jyah Lee Andrew Lee Wiley To Change the Child’s Name to: Jyah Lee Andrew Hodge Case Number: 16 C 100826 NOTICE TO NON-CUSTODIAL PARENT BY PUBLICATION Notice to: Derrick Lee Wiley, non custodial parent.
Public notice is given on September 22, 2016 that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The petition requests that the name of Wanming Shen be changed to Sarah Wanming Quagliato Case No.: 16 C 100807 Cheryl Lane By: Kim Boswell, Deputy Clerk Legal Notice No: 58047 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name Public notice is given on August 16, 2016 that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The petition requests that the name of Sandra Michelle Jerdetski be changed to Sasha Michelle Jerdetski Case No.: 16 C 100685
PUBLIC NOTICE Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name Public notice is given on September 20, 2016 that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The petition requests that the name of Kenneth Tracy Mills be changed to Kenneth Tracy Vincent Case No.: 16 C 100786 Cheryl Lane, Clerk of the Court By: Laura Larson, Deputy Clerk Legal Notice No: 58036 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name Public notice is given on September 21, 2016 that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County Court. The petition requests that the name of Phuong Vo Ngoc be changed to Emily Phuong Nguyen Case No.: 16 C 100800 By: J. Kaufmann, Deputy Clerk Legal Notice No: 58044 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Legal Notice No.: 58070 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of David Grove Cox, Deceased Case Number: 16PR417 All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before February 13, 2017, or the claims may be forever barred.
Legal Notice No.: 58074 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 27, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice of Petition for Change of Name
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Olga Ann Talley, Deceased Case Number: 2016 PR 30856
Public notice is given on September 29, 2016 that a Petition for a Change of Name of an adult has been filed with the Arapahoe County District Court. The petition requests that the name of Brandon Jeffrey Slapper be changed to Brandon Jeffrey Armstrong Case No.: 2016 CV 32368 By: Charles M. Pratt District Court Judge Legal Notice No: 58083 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 27, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Notice To Creditors PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Henry Hewitt Fuqua, Jr., aka Henry H. Fuqua, Jr., aka Henry Hewitt Fuqua, aka Henry H. Fugua, aka Henry Fuqua, aka Hank Fuqua, Deceased Case Number: 2016 PR 30911 All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before January 29, 2017 or the claims may be forever barred. Karen A. Dawson Personal Representative C/O Breeze Trusts & Estates, LLC 10465 Park Meadows Drive, Suite 108, Lone Tree, Colorado 80124 Legal Notice No: 58043 First Publication: September 22, 2016 Last Publication: October 6, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of MICHELLE JOAN BERRY, AKA MICHELLE BERRY, AKA MICHELLE J. BERRY, Deceased Case Number: 16PR30858
G. James Berry Personal Representative 6033 S. Beeler Street Greenwood Village, CO 80111
Legal Notice No.: 58079 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: November 10, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Nancy Canady Personal Representative c/o Sigler Law Offices, LLC 13949 W Colfax #195 Lakewood, CO 80401
Legal Notice No: 58051 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
For the purpose of requesting a change of name for Jyah Lee Andrew Lee Wiley
Date: October 4, 2016
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before February 7, 2017, or the claims may be forever barred.
Thomas B. Cox Personal Representative 5688 Fernhurst Drive NW Hackensack, MN 56452
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before January 29, 2017, or the claims may be forever barred.
To support or voice objection to the proposed name change, you must appear at the hearing.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Barbara Jean Marts, a.k.a. Barbara J. Marts, a.k.a. Barbara Marts, Deceased Case Number: 16PR30931
Cheryl Lane By: Kim Boswell, Deputy Clerk
Notice is given that a hearing is scheduled as follows: Date: November 17, 2016 Time: 9:00 a.m. Location: Arapahoe County Court 1790 W. Littleton Blvd. Division A Littleton, Colorado 80120
At this hearing the Court may enter an order changing the name of the minor child.
NoticePublic To Notice Creditors
Legal Notice No.: 58040 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Daniel A. Wein, a/k/a Daniel Aaron Wein, Deceased Case Number: 16 PR 30903 All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before January 30, 2016, or the claims may be forever barred. Courtney Criner, Personal Representative c/o Law Office of Byron K. Hammond, LLC 3900 E. Mexico Ave., Ste. 300 Denver, CO 80210 Legal Notice No.: 58042 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Eileen L. Hawlk, Deceased Case Number: 2016PR30883 All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before February 6, 2017, or the claims may be forever barred. S. Blake Harris 1610 Wynkoop St., Suite 550 Denver, CO 80202 Legal Notice No.: 58053 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Barbara Jean Marts, a.k.a. Barbara J. Marts, a.k.a. Barbara Marts, Deceased Case Number: 16PR30931
All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before January 30, 2017 or the claims may be forever barred. Deanna M. Talley, Personal Representative 1212 South Idalia Street, Unit C Aurora, Colorado 80017 Legal Notice No: 58037 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Margaret Elizabeth Mathre, Deceased Case Number: 2016 PR 395 All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before February 6, 2017 or the claims may be forever barred. Douglas W. Mathre Personal Representative 1714 S. Estrella Avenue Loveland, Colorado 80537 Legal Notice No: 58050 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Lorraine Mary Maez, Deceased Case Number: 2016 PR 030874 All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado on or before February 7, 2017 or the claims may be forever barred. Andrea Marie Hunt Personal Representative c/o Legacy Law Partners, PLLC 1750 Humboldt Street, Suite 100 Denver, Colorado 80218 Legal Notice No: 58056 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Wynema T. Buehler, Deceased Case Number: N/A All persons having claims against the above-named estate are required to present them to the Personal on or before February 13, 2017 or the claims may be forever barred. Douglas A. Buehler Personal Representative 4325 SW 30th Street Topeka, KS 66614 Legal Notice No: 58081 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 27, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Misc. Private Legals PUBLIC NOTICE DISTRICT COURT, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO 7325 S. Potomac Street, Centennial, CO 80112 Court Phone: 303-649-6355
Plaintiff: MURPHY CREEK METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOS. 1-4 v. Defendant(s): SHIRLEAN SANDERS; PRINCIPAL RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE, INC.; MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.; PUBLIC SERVICE CREDIT UNION; MIDLAND CREDIT MANAGEMENT, INC.; CAPITAL ONE BANK USA, NA; MURPHY CREEK MASTER ASSOCIATION, INC.; LVNV FUNDING LLC; FIRST FINANCIAL INVESTMENT FUND V, LLC; and THE PUBLIC TRUSTEE OF ARAPAHOE COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO Attorney: Heather L. Hartung Firm: White Bear Ankele Tanaka & Waldron Address: 2154 E. Commons Avenue, Ste. 2000 Centennial, Colorado 80122 Phone: 303.858.1800 E-mail: hhartung@wbapc.com Atty. Reg. No. 39142 Our File No. 391.0024 Case Number: 2016CV032042 Division: 204
Littleton Englewood * 2
Attorney: Heather L. Hartung Firm: White Bear Ankele Tanaka & Waldron Address: 2154 E. Commons Avenue, Ste. 2000 Centennial, Colorado 80122 Phone: 303.858.1800 E-mail: hhartung@wbapc.com Atty. Reg. No. 39142 Our File No. 391.0024 Case Number: 2016CV032042 Division: 204 SUMMONS
of Lyn Meadows Condominium Associ-
ation. WHICH LIEN BEING FORE34 The Independent • The Herald CLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN
Misc. Private Legals
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to file with the Clerk of this Court an answer or other response to the attached Complaint. If service of the Summons and Complaint was made upon you within the State of Colorado, you are required to file your answer or other response within 21 days after such service upon you. If service of the Summons and Complaint was made upon you outside of the State of Colorado or by publication, you are required to file your answer or other response within 35 days after such service upon you. If you were served by publication, service shall be complete on the last day of publication. Your answer or counterclaim must be accompanied with the applicable filing fee. If you fail to file your answer or other response to the Complaint in writing within the applicable time period, the Court may enter judgment by default against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint without further notice. Dated: August 24, 2016 WHITE BEAR ANKELE TANAKA & WALDRON Original signature of Heather L. Hartung is on file with the law offices of White Bear Ankele Tanaka & Waldron pursuant to C.R.C.P. 121 §1-26(7). /s/ Heather L. Hartung Heather L. Hartung, No. 39142 Attorneys for Plaintiff Legal Notice No.: 58085 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: November 10, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice DISTRICT COURT, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO CIVIL ACTION NO. 2016CV030897 DIVISION NO. 402 COMBINED NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
Plaintiff: RIDGEVIEW EAGLE BEND OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., a Colorado nonprofit corporation v. Defendants: SHIRLEY ANN TAYLOR; MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.; COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE; THE OFFICE OF THE ARAPAHOE COUNTY PUBLIC TRUSTEE, as ARAPAHOE Public Trustee Regarding: Lot 9, Block 3, Ridgeview Eagle Bend Subdivision Filing No. 1, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado Also known and numbered as: 7513 S Sicily Way, Aurora, CO 80016 TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS, Please take notice:
You and each of you are hereby notified that a Sheriff's Sale of the referenced property is to be conducted by the Civil Unit of the Sheriff's Office of Arapahoe County, Colorado at 10:00 A.M., on the 10th day of November 2016, at 13101 E Broncos Pkwy, Centennial, CO 80112; phone number 720-874-3935. At which sale, the above described real property and improvements thereon will be sold to the highest bidder. Plaintiff makes no warranty relating to title, possession, or quiet enjoyment in and to said real property in connection with this sale. **BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE CASH OR CERTIFIED FUNDS SUFFICIENT TO COVER THEIR HIGHEST BID AT TIME OF SALE. ** Further, for the purpose of paying off, curing default or redemption, as provided by statute, intent must be directed to or conducted at the above address of the Civil Unit of the Sheriff’s Office of Arapahoe County, Colorado. PLEASE NOTE THAT THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY. DATED at Centennial, Colorado this 2nd day of August, 2016. David C. Walcher Sheriff of Arapahoe County, Colorado By:Sgt. James Osborn Deputy Sheriff ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF: ORTEN CAVANAGH & HOLMES, LLC 1445 Market Street, Suite 350 Denver, CO 80202 Legal Notice No.: 57865 First Publication: September 15, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Published In: Littleton Independent 2550 W. Main St., Littleton, CO 80120 PUBLIC NOTICE Arapahoe County District Court Civil Action No. 2015CV329664, Div. 202 (Plaintiff) Lyn Meadows Association, a Colorado nonprofit corporation (Defendant(s) Stanford Eugene Cooper aka Stanford E. Cooper, III, aka Stanford Cooper aka Stan Cooper; Tracie Jean Cooper aka Tracie J. Cooper aka Tracie Cooper fka Tracie Jean Cheatum; Bank of America, N.A.; Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; James L. Aab; Alpine Credit Inc.; Stellar Recovery Inc.; Cynthia Mares, The Arapahoe County Public Trustee NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: RE: Sheriff’s Sale of Real Property pursuant to Court Order and §38-38-101 et seq., C.R.S. This is to advise you that a Sheriff’s sale proceeding has been commenced through the office of the undersigned Sheriff pursuant to an Order: Amended Order Granting Verified Motion for Default Judgment and Entry of Decree of Foreclosure, dated May 27, 2016, and §38-38-101 et seq., C.R.S., by the Lyn Meadows Condominium Association, the current holder and owner of a statutory lien against the real property located in the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado for the benefit of Lyn Meadows Condominium Association. WHICH LIEN BEING FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY AND IMPROVEMENTS legally described as follows, to wit: Lot 11, Block 1, Lyn Meadows Subdivision, 2nd Filing, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado Also known as: 11823 E. Canal Dr., Au-
ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY AND IMPROVEMENTS legally described as follows, to wit:
Misc. Private Legals
Lot 11, Block 1, Lyn Meadows Subdivision, 2nd Filing, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado Also known as: 11823 E. Canal Dr., Aurora, Colorado. The Sheriff’s sale has been scheduled to occur at 10:00 a.m. on December 1, 2016 at the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office, 13101 E. Broncos Pkwy., Centennial, CO 80112. **BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE CASH OR CERTIFIED FUNDS SUFFICIENT TO COVER THEIR HIGHEST BID AT TIME OF SALE.** All telephone inquiries for information should be directed to the Civil Unit at the office of the undersigned Sheriff at 720874-3851. The name, address and telephone number of the attorney representing the legal owner of the above described lien is: Tammy M. Alcock, Esq. Nixon | Shefrin | Hensen | Ogburn, P.C. 5619 DTC Parkway, Suite 1200 Greenwood Village, CO 80111 (303) 773-3500 Dated: August 30, 2016 David C. Walcher, Sheriff Arapahoe County, Colorado By: Deputy Sheriff Legal Notice No.: 57978 First Publication Date: October 6, 2016 Last Publication Date: November 3, 2016 Published in Littleton Independent 2550 W. Main St., Littleton, CO 80120 PUBLIC NOTICE DISTRICT COURT ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Arapahoe County District Court 7325 S. Potomac St Centennial, CO 80112 303-649-6355 Case No.: 2016CV031765 Division: 204 Plaintiff: SECOND APPLETREE EAST CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, a Colorado nonprofit corporation v. Defendants: DIAMOND PORTER; STONEPINE INVESTMENTS LLC; ENRICO D DAVID; ALPINE CREDIT, INC.; INTEGRAL RECOVERIES, INC.; THE OFFICE OF THE ARAPAHOE COUNTY PUBLIC TRUSTEE, as ARAPAHOE Public Trustee Attorneys for Plaintiff: Orten Cavanagh & Holmes, LLC Hal R. Kyles, #23891 Kelly K. McQueeney, #45175 1445 Market Street, Suite 350 Denver, CO 80202 (720) 221-9780 Matter ID #1980.039 SUMMONS [BY PUBLICATION] THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned and required to appear and defend against the claims of the complaint filed with the court in this action, by filing with the clerk of this court an answer or other response. You are required to file your answer or other response within 35 days after the service of this Summons upon you. Service of this summons shall be complete on the day of the last publication. A copy of the complaint may be obtained from the clerk of the court. If you fail to file your answer or other response to the complaint in writing within 35 days after the date of the last publication, judgment by default may be rendered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the complaint without further notice. This is an action of foreclosure pursuant to Rule 105, C.R.C.P. to the real property situate in Arapahoe County, Colorado more particularly described as Condominium Unit 5, in Condominium Building X, the Second Appletree East Condominiums, Arapahoe County Colorado according to the condominium map for the 2nd Appletree East Condominiums - Phase III recorded June 11, 1981 in Book 51 at Pages 21-26, in the records of the office of the Clerk and Recorder of Arapahoe County, Colorado and as defined and described in the condominium declaration for the Second Appletree East Condominiums recorded July 28, 1980 in Book 3252 at Page 654 and the First Amendment to the Condominium Declaration recorded December 30, 1980 in Book 3342 at Page 588 and the supplement thereto recorded June 11, 1981 in Book 3428 at Page 713, County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado. Dated: September 23, 2016. ORTEN CAVANAGH & HOLMES, LLC By: /s/Hal R. Kyles Hal R. Kyles, #23891 Legal Notice No.: 57979 First Publication: October 6, 2016 Last Publication: November 3, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE DISTRICT COURT, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO CIVIL ACTION NO. 2016CV030498 DIVISION NO. 14 COMBINED NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Plaintiff: EMBARCADERO CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., a Colorado nonprofit corporation v. Defendants: FARASH ELMARAGANI; OCWEN LOAN SERVICING, LLC; MIDLAND CREDIT MANAGEMENT, INC.; WAKEFIELD AND ASSOCIATES, INC.; THE OFFICE OF THE ARAPAHOE COUNTY PUBLIC TRUSTEE, as ARAPAHOE Public Trustee Regarding: Condominium Unit No. F, Building 45, Embarcadero in Willowridge Condominiums, in accordance with the Declaration recorded on July 14, 1982 in Book 3661 at Page 145, Fourth Supplement to Declaration recorded on April 1, 1983 in Book 3828 at Page 498, the Condominium Map recorded on July 14, 1982 in Book 57 at Page 40 and the Fourth Supplement to the Condominium Map recorded April 1, 1983 in Book 62 at Page 76 through 78 of the Arapahoe County Records, Together with the exclusive right to use the following Limited Common Elements: Garage Space Number(s) F45
ments: Garage Space Number(s) F45
the adoption as sought by the Petitioner.
Also known and numbered as: 12543 E Pacific Cir, #F, Aurora, CO 80014
Respectfully submitted, ANTOLINEZ MILLER, LLC /s/ Joseph H. Antolinez Joseph H. Antolinez, #25737 Attorney for Petitioner
Misc. Private Legals
TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS, Please take notice: You and each of you are hereby notified that a Sheriff's Sale of the referenced property is to be conducted by the Civil Unit of the Sheriff's Office of Arapahoe County, Colorado at 10:00 A.M., on the 8th day of December, 2016, at 13101 E. Broncos Pkwy, Centennial, CO 80112; phone number (720)874-3935. At which sale, the above described real property and improvements thereon will be sold to the highest bidder. Plaintiff makes no warranty relating to title, possession, or quiet enjoyment in and to said real property in connection with this sale. **BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE CASH OR CERTIFIED FUNDS SUFFICIENT TO COVER THEIR HIGHEST BID AT TIME OF SALE. ** Further, for the purpose of paying off, curing default or redemption, as provided by statute, intent must be directed to or conducted at the above address of the Civil Unit of the Sheriff’s Office of Arapahoe County, Colorado. PLEASE NOTE THAT THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY. DATED in Colorado this 8th day of September, 2016. David C. Walcher Sheriff of Arapahoe County, Colorado By: Sgt. James Osborn Deputy Sheriff ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF: ORTEN CAVANAGH & HOLMES, LLC 1445 Market Street, Suite 350 Denver, CO 80202 Legal Notice No.: 58015 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: November 10, 2016 Published In: Littleton Independent 2550 W. Main St., Littleton, CO 80120 Public Notice DISTRICT COURT, ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO 7325 S. Potomac Street Centennial, CO 80112 Plaintiff: VALERIE S. TELCK fka VALERIE S. JONES v. Defendant: DAVID CARL JONES Case Number: 16CV32111 Attorney for Plaintiff: Yoav Sicker, #46784 Easy Legal of Colorado 3845 Wadsworth Blvd. Wheat Ridge, CO 80033 P: (303) 422-1277 F: (303) 432-2577 info@easylegalcolorado.com SUMMONS To the Respondent named above: This Summons serves as a notice to appear in this case. If you were served in the State of Colorado and if you wish to respond to the Complaint, you must file your Response with the clerk of this Court within 21 days after this Summons is served on you. If you were served outside of the State of Colorado or you were served by publication, and you wish to respond to the Petition, you must file your Response with the clerk of this Court within 35 days after this Summons is served on you. You may be required to pay a filing fee with your Response. The Response form (JDF 1270) can be found at www.courts.state.co.us by clicking on the “Self Help/Forms” tab. The Complaint requests that the Court enter an Order affecting your ownership rights to the real property located at 15001 E. Gunnison Place, Aurora, CO 80012, attorney fees, and costs to the extent the Court has jurisdiction. If you fail to file a Response in this case, any or all of the matters above, or any related matters which come before this Court, may be decided without any further notice to you. This is an action to Quiet Title as more fully described in the attached Complaint. Date: 09/21/2016 /s/ Yoav Sicker Yoav Sicker, #46784 Easy Legal of Colorado 3845 Wadsworth Blvd. Wheat Ridge, CO 80033 P: (303) 422-1277 Attorney for Plaintiff Legal Notice No.: 58038 First Publication: September 29, 2016 Last Publication: October 27, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE DISTRICT COURT, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, COLORADO 7325 South Potomac Street Centennial, Colorado 80112 In re: the Matter of the Petition of: ARDIST HILL IV, for the adoption of a child. Attorney for Petitioner: Name: Joseph H. Antolinez, Esq. ANTOLINEZ MILLER, LLC 6834 South University Blvd., #461 Centennial, Colorado 80122 Phone: (303) 322-7749 Atty Reg: 25737 Case Number: 16 JA 101 Division: 14 NOTICE OF FINAL ADOPTION HEARING TO: CHARLES SIMPSON You are hereby notified that the above named Petitioner has filed in this Court a verified Petition seeking to adopt a child. If applicable, an Affidavit of Abandonment has been filed alleging that you have abandoned the child for a period of one year or more and/or have failed without cause to provide reasonable support for the child for one year or more. You are further notified that a Final Adoption Hearing is set on the 18th day of November, 2016, at 9:00 a.m. in Division 14 of the Arapahoe County District Court located at 7325 South Potomac Street, Centennial, Colorado 80112. You are further notified that if you fail to appear for said hearing, the Court may terminate your parental rights and grant the adoption as sought by the Petitioner.
TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS, Please take notice:
Respectfully submitted, ANTOLINEZ MILLER, LLC /s/ Joseph H. Antolinez Joseph H. Antolinez, #25737 Attorney for Petitioner
You and each of you are hereby notified that a Sheriff's Sale of the referenced property is to be conducted by the Civil Unit of the Sheriff's Office of Arapahoe
Legal Notice No.: 58084 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: November 10, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Also known and numbered as: 12543 E Pacific Cir, #F, Aurora, CO 80014
Misc. Private Legals
Legal Notice No.: 58084 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: November 10, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice DISTRICT COURT, WATER DIVISION 1, COLORADO SEPTEMBER 2016 WATER RESUME PUBLICATION TO: ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN WATER APPLICATIONS IN WATER DIV. 1 Pursuant to C.R.S. 37-92-302, you are notified that the following is a resume of all water right applications and certain amendments filed in the Office of the Water Clerk during the month of SEPTEMBER 2016 for each County affected. 16CW3122 South Suburban Park and Recreation District, 6631 South University Boulevard, Centennial, CO 80121, (303) 798-5131, through counsel Evan D. Ela and Joseph W. Norris, Collins Cockrel & Cole, P.C., 390 Union Boulevard, Suite 400, Lakewood, CO 80215, (303) 986-1551, APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE DILIGENCE FOR CONDITIONAL WATER RIGHTS in ARAPAHOE COUNTY. 2. Names of Water Rights and Structures: Upper Big Dry Creek Diversion, Lower Big Dry Creek Diversion, Upper South Pond, Lower South Pond, North Pond, and Entrance Pond. 3. Description of the subject conditional water rights: (a) Original Decree: The Upper Big Dry Creek Diversion, Lower Big Dry Creek Diversion, Upper South Pond, Lower South Pond, North Pond, and Entrance Pond (collectively referred to as the “South Suburban Golf Course Surface Water System”) were confirmed by the decree issued November 13, 2003, Case No. 00CW230, District Court, Water Division 1, State of Colorado, Findings of Fact, Ruling of the Referee, Judgment and Decree; (b) Prior Diligence Decree: Case No. 09CW170, District Court, Water Division 1, State of Colorado, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, Ruling of the Referee, Judgment and Decree, decreed on September 22, 2010, granted a finding of reasonable diligence for the Subject Water Rights; (c) Locations: (i) Upper Big Dry Creek Diversion, located on the left bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 31, Township 5 South, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately 2050 feet from the east section line of said Section 31 and 250 feet from the south section line of said Section 31, in Arapahoe County; (ii) Lower Big Dry Creek Diversion, located on the left bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 31, Township 5 South, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately 1050 feet from the west section line of said Section 31, in Arapahoe County; (iii) Upper South Pond, located in the southeast 1/4 of the southwest 1/4 of Section 31, Township 5 South, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately 1800 feet from the west section line of said Section 31 and 1140 feet from the south section line of said Section 31, in Arapahoe County; (iv) Lower South Pond, located in the southeast 1/4, and in the southwest 1/4 of the southwest 1/4 of Section 31, Township 5 South, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately 1200 feet from the west section line of said Section 31 and 850 feet from the south section line of said Section 31, in Arapahoe County; (v) North Pond, located in the northeast 1/4 of the southwest 1/4, and in the southeast 1/4 of the northwest 1/4, of Section 31, Township 5 South, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately 1920 feet from the west section line of said Section 31 and 2280 feet from the south section line of said Section 31, in Arapahoe County; (vi) Entrance Pond, located in the southwest 1/4 of the northwest 1/4 of Section 31, Township 5 South, Range 67 West of the 6th P.M. at a point approximately 300 feet from the west section line of said Section 31 and 3050 feet from the south section line of said Section 31, in Arapahoe County. (d) Amounts: (i)Upper Big Dry Creek Diversion, 10.0 cfs, CONDITIONAL, direct flow; (ii) Lower Big Dry Creek Diversion, 10.0 cfs, CONDITIONAL, direct flow; (iii) Upper South Pond, 5.0 acre-feet, CONDITIONAL, with right to fill and refill to achieve a total storage volume of 10.0 acre-feet by capture of inflow tributary to the pond and by diversion at a maximum rate of 10.0 cfs from the Upper Dry Creek Diversion; (iv) Lower South Pond, 21.0 acre-feet, CONDITIONAL, with right to fill and refill to achieve a total storage volume of 42.0 acre-feet by capture of inflow tributary to the pond and by diversion at a maximum rate of 10.0 cfs from the Upper Big Dry Creek Diversion; (v) North Pond, 15.0 acre-feet, CONDITIONAL, with right to fill and refill to achieve a total storage volume of 30.0 acre-feet by capture of inflow tributary to the pond and by diversion at a maximum rate of 10.0 cfs from the Upper Dry Creek Diversion; (vi) Entrance Pond, 5.0 acre-feet, CONDITIONAL, with right to fill and refill to achieve a total storage volume of 10.0 acre-feet by capture of inflow tributary to the pond and by diversion at a maximum rate of 10.0 cfs from the Lower Dry Creek Diversion. (e) Source: Big Dry Creek, a tributary of the South Platte River, for all water diverted and/or stored by the named structures. (f) Date of appropriation: December 13, 2000. (g) Beneficial uses: South Suburban will use water diverted or captured by direct flow, or after storage for more than three days in the reservoirs described above, for irrigation, recreation, augmentation, exchange, wildlife and aesthetic purposes, along with the right to use and reuse to extinction. Reuse to extinction may include release from storage after use, for recreation, wildlife and aesthetic purposes, and reuse of such releases, along with irrigation return flows, for augmentation, exchange, subsequent irrigation and storage of such reuse water, which stored reuse water may be later released for irrigation, augmentation and exchange purposes. South Suburban intends to capture or divert water when in priority, temporarily hold such water in the reservoirs described above and to apply such water for irrigation use within three days whenever possible, all as an irrigation use of the direct flow water rights. Water will also be stored for longer periods, when not needed for direct irrigation use, for later release for all of the purposes described herein. 4. Outline of work done and funds expended by Applicant during the relevant diligence period toward completion of the appropriation: (a) The Subject Water Rights are intended to allow for developing a mixed source of supply for the South Suburban Golf Course comprised of nontributary well pumping and diversions from Big Dry Creek when the Subject Water Rights are in priority. During the diligence period, South Suburban has negotiated with Denver Water concerning the use of lawn irrigation return flow credits in Big Dry Creek, installed a stream gage at the lower end of Big Dry Creek (at a cost of approximately $20,000), and completed an amendment to its Big Dry Creek augmentation plan (originally decreed in Case No. 92CW166 and amended in Case No. 06CW236) that integrated the Subject Water Rights into the augmentation plan. South Suburban is proceeding in its planning and budgeting to design and construct the structures necessary for diverting water using the Subject Water Rights; (b) South Suburb-
installed a stream gage at the lower end of Big Dry Creek (at a cost of approximately $20,000), and completed an amendment to its Big Dry Creek augmentation plan (originally decreed in Case No. 92CW166 and amended in Case No. 06CW236) that integrated the Subject Water Rights into the augmentation plan. South Suburban is proceeding in its planning and budgeting to design and construct the structures necessary for diverting water using the Subject Water Rights; (b) South Suburban is the owner of other water rights, which together with the subject conditional water rights form an integrated and unified water supply system. Pursuant to §37-92-301(4)(b), C.R.S., work on one feature of an integrated system shall be considered in finding that reasonable diligence has been shown in the development of water rights for all features of the integrated system. Work on any part of Applicant’s integrated water supply system must be considered in finding that reasonable diligence has been shown for the subject conditional water rights. Described below are specific examples of expenditures related to the properties to be served by the Subject Water Rights; (c) South Suburban spent in excess of $ 11,700,000 for continued improvement, maintenance, and operation of its South Suburban Golf Course facilities that will benefit from use of the subject conditional South Suburban Golf Course Surface Water System water rights. In addition, South Suburban has incurred engineering and legal costs related to protection of its water rights, including the Subject Water Rights. Such capital improvement, maintenance, and other costs have contributed to the completion of the appropriations and application of water to the beneficial uses conditionally decreed in Case No. 00CW230. The following described work and expenditures were done, all or in part, toward perfection of the Subject Water Rights and in further development of the specific structures identified in Case No. 00CW230. The work performed and costs expended as described below were occurred during the relevant diligence period of November 24, 2009 through September 30, 2016; (i) South Suburban invested approximately $ 1,300,000 in capital improvements to the South Suburban Golf Course; (ii) South Suburban incurred expenses in excess of $ 10,400,000 in operation and maintenance of its South Suburban Golf Course facilities; (d) South Suburban incurred in excess of $ 150,000 in legal and engineering costs associated with acquisition, development, protection, and adjudication of its water rights. 5. Name(s) and address(es) of owner(s) or reputed owner(s) of the land upon which any new or existing diversion or storage structure, or modification to any existing diversion or storage structure is or will be constructed or upon which water is or will be stored, including any modification to the existing storage pool: Applicant is the sole landowner of properties underlying the structures that are the subject of this Application, and thus has no obligation under §37-92-302(2)(6), C.R.S., to provide notice to landowners. (6 pages)
Misc. Private Legals
THE WATER RIGHTS CLAIMED BY THESE APPLICATIONS MAY AFFECT IN PRIORITY ANY WATER RIGHTS CLAIMED OR HERETOFORE ADJUDICATED WITHIN THIS DIVISION AND OWNERS OF AFFECTED RIGHTS MUST APPEAR TO OBJECT WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY STATUTE OR BE FOREVER BARRED. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that any party who wishes to oppose an application, or an amended application, may file with the Water Clerk, P. O. Box 2038, Greeley, CO 80632, a verified Statement of Opposition, setting forth facts as to why the application should not be granted, or why it should be granted only in part or on certain conditions. Such Statement of Opposition must be filed by the last day of NOVEMBER 2016 (forms available on www.courts.state.co.us or in the Clerk’s office), and must be filed as an Original and include $158.00 filing fee. A copy of each Statement of Opposition must also be served upon the Applicant or Applicant’s Attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service of mailing shall be filed with the Water Clerk. Legal Notice No.: 58090 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: The Englewood Herald Littleton Independent Public Notice DISTRICT COURT, WATER DIVISION 1, COLORADO SEPTEMBER 2016 WATER RESUME PUBLICATION TO: ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN WATER APPLICATIONS IN WATER DIV. 1 Pursuant to C.R.S. 37-92-302, you are notified that the following is a resume of all water right applications and certain amendments filed in the Office of the Water Clerk during the month of SEPTEMBER 2016 for each County affected. 16CW3123 South Suburban Park and Recreation District, 6631 South University Boulevard, Centennial, CO 80121, (303) 798-5131, through counsel Evan D. Ela and Joseph W. Norris, Collins Cockrel & Cole, P.C., 390 Union Boulevard, Suite 400, Lakewood, CO 80215, (303) 986-1551, APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE DILIGENCE FOR CONDITIONAL WATER RIGHTS in ARAPAHOE COUNTY. 2. Names of Water Rights and Structures: Cherry Knolls Park diversion system, deKoevend Park diversion system, Regional Park No. 1 diversion system, Regional Park No. 2 diversion system, Progress Park Pond No. 1, Progress Park Pond No. 2, and Progress Ponds Exchange. 3. Description of the subject conditional water rights: (a) Original Decree: November 1, 1993, Case No. 92CW166, District Court, Water Division 1, State of Colorado, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, Judgment and Decree; (b) Prior Diligence Decrees: (i) Case No. 09CW78, District Court, Water Division 1, State of Colorado, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, Ruling of the Referee, Judgment and Decree, decreed on September 14, 2010, by which 1.37 cfs of the Regional Park No. 1 diversion system and 4.375 acre-feet of the Progress Park Pond No. 1 were confirmed as absolute, the Englewood Wells Exchange was abandoned, and all other remaining conditional water rights were continued; (ii) Case No. 99CW193, District Court, Water Division 1, State of Colorado, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, Ruling of the Referee, Judgment and Decree, decreed on June 9, 2003, by which 0.13 cfs of the Regional Park No. 1 diversion system was confirmed as absolute and all other remaining conditional water rights were continued. (b) Locations: (i) Cherry Knolls Park diversion system. On the north bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 25, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M. at a point located approximately 1,400 feet from the west section line of Section 25, and 1,600 feet from the south section line of Section 25; (ii) deKoevend Park diversion system. On the south bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 24, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point located approximately 600 feet from the west section line of Section 24, and 1,100 feet from the south section line of Section 24; (iii) Regional Park No. 1 diversion system. On the south bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 15, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 150 feet
from the south section line of Section 25; (ii) deKoevend Park diversion system. On the south bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 24, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point located approximately 600 feet from the west section line of Section 24, and 1,100 feet from the south section line of Section 24; (iii) Regional Park No. 1 diversion system. On the south bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 15, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 150 feet from the west section line of Section 15 and 950 feet from the north section line of Section 15; (iv) Regional Park No. 2 diversion system. On the north bank of Big Dry Creek in Section 15, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 150 feet from the west section line of Section 15 and 950 feet from the north section line of Section 15; (v) Progress Park Pond No. 1. In the Northeast 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4 of Section 16, Township 5 South, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 650 feet from the east section line of Section 16 and 450 feet from the north section line of Section 16; (vi) Progress Park Pond No. 2. In the Northeast 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4 of Section 16, Township 5, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 400 feet from the east section line of Section 16 and 400 feet from the north section line of Section 16; and (vii) Progress Ponds Exchange. From Progress Park Ponds No. 1 and No. 2 to the Cherry Knolls Park diversion system and the deKoevend Park diversion system, locations previously described. (d) Amounts: (i) Cherry Knolls Park diversion system, 1.0 cfs, CONDITIONAL; (ii) deKoevend Park diversion system, 0.75 cfs, CONDITIONAL; (iii) Regional Park No. 1 diversion system, 1.5 cfs, ABSOLUTE; 0.50 cfs, CONDITIONAL; (iv) Regional Park No. 2 diversion system, 2.0 cfs, CONDITIONAL; (v) Progress Park Pond No. 1, 4.375 ac-ft, ABSOLUTE; 4.625 ac-ft, CONDITIONAL. Off-channel diversion rate for filling: up to 2.0 cfs through the Regional Park No. 1 diversion system; (vi) Progress Park Pond No. 2. 5.0 acre feet, CONDITIONAL. Off-channel diversion rate for filling: up to 2.0 cfs through the Regional Park No. 2 diversion system; (vii) Progress Ponds Exchange, 1.0 cfs, CONDITIONAL. (e) Source: Big Dry Creek, a tributary of the South Platte River. (f) Date of appropriation: September 11, 1991. (g) Beneficial uses: Municipal (within the jurisdictional boundaries of the Applicant), domestic, irrigation (including irrigation of parks and medians), recreation, fish and wildlife propagation and maintenance, fire protection, augmentation, and storage. 4. Outline of work done and funds expended by Applicant during the relevant diligence period toward completion of the appropriation: (a) The Subject Water Rights are intended to allow for developing a non-potable water supply for South Suburban’s park properties located within the Big Dry Creek watershed. During the diligence period, South Suburban negotiated with Denver Water concerning the use of lawn irrigation return flow credits in Big Dry Creek, installed a stream gage at the lower end of Big Dry Creek (at a cost of approximately $20,000), and completed an amendment to its Big Dry Creek augmentation plan (originally decreed in Case No. 92CW166 and amended in Case No. 06CW236) that added water rights and structures into the augmentation plan. South Suburban is proceeding in its planning and budgeting to design and construct additional structures as needed for diverting nonpotable water from Big Dry Creek by exercise of the Subject Water Rights. (b) South Suburban is the owner of other water rights, which together with the subject conditional water rights form an integrated and unified water supply system. Pursuant to § 37-92-301(4)(b), C.R.S., work on one feature of an integrated system shall be considered in finding that reasonable diligence has been shown in the development of water rights for all features of the integrated system. Work on any part of Applicant’s integrated water supply system must be considered in finding that reasonable diligence has been shown for the subject conditional water rights. Described below are specific examples of expenditures related to the properties to be served by the Subject Water Rights. (c) South Suburban spent in excess of $ 6,385,000 for continued improvement, maintenance, and operation of its recreational park properties that are benefited by its Big Dry Creek raw water system. In addition, South Suburban has incurred engineering and legal costs related to protection of its water rights, including the Subject Water Rights. Such capital improvement, maintenance, and other costs have contributed to the completion of the appropriations and application of water to the beneficial uses conditionally decreed in Case No. 92CW166. The following described work and expenditures were done, all or in part, toward perfection of the Subject Water Rights and in further development of the specific structures identified in Case No. 92CW166. All work performed and costs expended occurred during the relevant diligence period of May 29, 2009 through September 30, 2016. (d) South Suburban expended in excess of $ 1,540,000 for operation and maintenance of its facilities located in Cherry Knolls Park. (e) South Suburban expended in excess of $ 2,450,000 for operation and maintenance of its facilities located in Cornerstone Park. (f) South Suburban expended in excess of $ 1,619,000 for operation and maintenance of its facilities located in deKoevend Park. (g) South Suburban expended in excess of $ 771,000 for operation and maintenance of its facilities located in Progress Park. (h) South Suburban has incurred in excess of $ 150,000 in legal and engineering costs associated with acquisition, development, protection and adjudication of its water rights, including the Subject Water Rights. 5. Name(s) and address(es) of owner(s) or reputed owner(s) of the land upon which any new or existing diversion or storage structure, or modification to any existing diversion or storage structure is or will be constructed or upon which water is or will be stored, including any modification to the existing storage pool. Applicant is the sole landowner of properties underlying the structures that are the subject of this Application, and thus has no obligation under §37-92-302(2)(6), C.R.S., to provide notice to landowners. (6 pages)
October 13, 2016
Misc. Private Legals
THE WATER RIGHTS CLAIMED BY THESE APPLICATIONS MAY AFFECT IN PRIORITY ANY WATER RIGHTS CLAIMED OR HERETOFORE ADJUDICATED WITHIN THIS DIVISION AND OWNERS OF AFFECTED RIGHTS MUST APPEAR TO OBJECT WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY STATUTE OR BE FOREVER BARRED.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that any party who wishes to oppose an application, or an amended application, may file with the Water Clerk, P. O. Box 2038, Greeley, CO 80632, a verified Statement of Opposition, setting forth facts as to why the application should not be granted, or why it should be granted only in part or on certain conditions. Such Statement of Opposition must be filed by the last day of NOVEMBER 2016 (forms available on www.courts.state.co.us or in the Clerk’s office), and must be filed as an Original and include $158.00 filing fee. A copy of each Statement of Opposition must also be served upon the Applicant or Applicant’s Attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service of mailing shall be filed with the Water Clerk. Legal Notice No.: 58091 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: The Englewood Herald
Littleton Englewood * 3
office), and must be filed as an Original and include $158.00 filing fee. A copy of each Statement of Opposition must also be served upon the Applicant or Applicant’s Attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service of mailing shall be filed with the Water Clerk.
October 13, 2016
Misc. Private Legals
Legal Notice No.: 58091 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: The Englewood Herald Littleton Independent
Government Legals PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF HEARING PETITION FOR INCLUSION OF REAL PROPERTY POLO RESERVE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Petition for Inclusion of Real Property has been filed with the Board of Directors of the Polo Reserve Metropolitan District, (“District”). The Board of Directors will hear the Petition during a special meeting of the District’s Board of Directors which will convene at the hour of 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 27, 2016 at 4481 W. Caspian Circle, Littleton, Colorado 80128. The Petitioners’ name and address are as follows: Petitioners’ Name Polo Reserve Metropolitan District Petitioners’ Address c/o William D. Steigers 4481 W. Caspian Circle Littleton, Colorado 80128 The real property, which is the subject of this Petition, is legally described as follows: Legal Description: Lot 1, Block 3, and Tracts C, E, and G, The Polo Reserve – Polo Ridge Farms Filing No. 1 County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN to all interested parties who may object to the inclusion of the above described real property to appear at said time and place and show cause in writing, if any, why the Petition should not be granted. The failure of any municipality or county which may be able to provide service to the real property herein described or any person in the District to file a written objection to the Petition shall be taken as assent to inclusion of the above described real property. By Order of the Board of Directors of the Polo Reserve Metropolitan District. Dated this 3rd day of October, 2016. POLO RESERVE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT By: /s/ Steve Wagner, Secretary Legal Notice No.: 58073 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Government Legals PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF POLLING PLACE ELECTION §§ 1-13.5-502, 1-13.5-1105(2)(d), C.R.S. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and particularly, to the eligible electors of the Southglenn Metropolitan District (the “District”) in Arapahoe County, Colorado: PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given of a special election to be conducted on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, from 7:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. The purpose of the election is to submit to the eligible electors of the District certain ballot issues. This election is being conducted as a polling place election. At said election, the eligible electors of the District shall vote on the following Ballot Issues certified by the District: Ballot Issue 5A (Operations, Administration and Maintenance Mill Levy – Ad Valorem Taxes) Eligible electors may cast their vote in the office of the Designated Election Official at the following location: Southglenn Metropolitan District c/o WHITE BEAR ANKELE TANAKA & WALDRON Attorneys at Law 2154 E. Commons Avenue, Suite 2000 Centennial, Colorado 80122 Tel: (303) 858-1800 The office of the Designated Election Official is open Monday through Friday, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., beginning at least 22 days prior to Election Day (October 17, 2016) and from 7:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. on Election Day (November 8, 2016). By: /s/ George M. Rowley Designated Election Official Legal Notice No.: 58075 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent and the Centennial Citizen PUBLIC NOTICE DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE STATE OF COLORADO
Plaintiff: THE SUNRIDGE PATIO HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Colorado non-profit corporation vs. Defendant: KAYLA LAKE
Government Legals COMBINED NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
This is to advise you that a Sheriff sale proceeding has been commenced through the office of the undersigned Sheriff pursuant to the Arapahoe County District Court’s ORDER RE: REVISED VERIFIED MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT AND DECREE OF FORECLOSURE dated June 6, 2016, and C.R.S. §38-38101 et seq., by The Sunridge Patio Homeowners Association (“Association”), the current holder of a statutory lien. The judicial foreclosure is based on a default under the Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions of Sunridge Patio Homes, recorded with the Arapahoe County Clerk and Recorder on April 14, 1978, at Reception No. 1726081, book 2757, and page 768, as amended (“Declaration”). The Declaration, as recorded, establishes a lien for the benefit of The Sunridge Patio Homeowners Association, WHICH LIEN BEING FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY AND IMPROVEMENTS legally described as follows: LOT 10 BLK 4 SUNRIDGE SUB 2nd FLAG PARCEL #1975-07-4-07-010, COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, STATE OF COLORADO Also known by street and number as 68 S. Eagle Circle, Aurora, CO 80012 The Property being foreclosed is all of the property encumbered by the Association’s lien. You are advised that the parties liable thereon, the owner of the Property described above, or those with an interest in the subject property, may take appropriate and timely action under Colorado statutes. In order to be entitled to take advantage of any rights provided for under Colorado law, you must strictly comply and adhere to the provisions of the law. The Sheriff’s sale has been scheduled to occur at 10:00 A.M., on the 17th day of November, 2016, at the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office Administration Building, located at 13101 East Broncos Parkway in Centennial; telephone number 720-874-3935. At the sale, the Sheriff will sell the above described real property and improvements thereon to the highest bidder. Plaintiff makes no warranty relating to title, possession, or quiet enjoyment in or to said real property in connection with this sale.
CASE NO. 2015CV032484 DIV. 204
BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE CASH OR CERTIFIED FUNDS SUFFICIENT TO COVER THEIR HIGHEST BID AT THE TIME OF SALE.
Plaintiff: THE SUNRIDGE PATIO HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Colorado non-profit corporation vs. Defendant: KAYLA LAKE
The name, address, and telephone number of the attorney representing the Plaintiff is: Travis B. Keenan, #41354, Vial Fotheringham, LLP, 12600 W. Colfax Ave. Ste. C200, Lakewood, CO 80215; telephone: 720-943-8811.
COMBINED NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
DATED at Arapahoe County, Colorado, this 4th day of August, 2016.
ber of the attorney representing the Plaintiff is: Travis B. Keenan, #41354, Vial Fotheringham, LLP, 12600 W. Colfax Ave. Ste. C200, Lakewood, CO 80215; telephone: 720-943-8811.
Government Legals
DATED at Arapahoe County, Colorado, this 4th day of August, 2016. David C. Walcher Sheriff of Arapahoe County, Colorado By: Sgt. James Osborn Deputy Sheriff Legal Notice No.: 57866 First Publication: September 22, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE CONCERNING PROPOSED BUDGET OF SOUTH SUBURBAN PARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT A PROPOSED BUDGET HAS BEEN SUBMITTED TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF SOUTH SUBURBAN PARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT FOR THE ENSUING YEAR OF 2017. A COPY OF THE PROPOSED BUDGET HAS BEEN FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT AT 6631 S. UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD, CENTENNIAL, COLORADO, WHERE IT IS OPEN FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION. THE PROPOSED BUDGET WILL BE CONSIDERED AT A PUBLIC HEARING OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS. THE HEARING WILL BE HELD AT THE GOODSON RECREATION CENTER AT 6315 S. UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD ON NOVEMBER 9, 2016 AT 7:00 P.M. ANY ELECTOR WITHIN THE DISTRICT MAY AT ANY TIME PRIOR TO THE FINAL ADOPTION O F T H E B U D G E T , I N S P E C T T HE BUDGET AND FILE OR REGISTER ANY OBJECTIONS THERETO. SOUTH SUBURBAN PARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT BY PAMELA M. ELLER (SECRETARY) Legal Notice No.: 58076 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent Public Notice SHERIDAN REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Sheridan Redevelopment Agency will hold a Public Hearing at its Meeting on October 24, 2016 immediately following the City Council meeting scheduled for 7:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, Sheridan City Hall, 4101 South Federal Blvd. to receive citizen input on the Proposed 2017 Sheridan Redevelopment Agency Budget and to consider an amendment to the 2016 Sheridan Redevelopment Agency Budget Interested parties may express opinions in person at the Public Hearing or in writing to be received by the City Clerk by 4:30 p.m. on October 24, 2016.
2016 Sheridan Redevelopment Agency Budget
A copy of the proposed 2017 budget and
Interested parties may express opinions in person at the Public Hearing or in writing to be received by the City Clerk by 4:30 p.m. on October 24, 2016.
fices of Mulhern MRE, Inc., 2 Inverness Drive East, Suite 200, Englewood, Colorado. Any interested elector within the Authority may, at any time prior to final adoption of the 2017 budget and the amended 2016 budget, if required, file or register any objections thereto.
the amended 2016 budget, if required, are The Independent • The Herald 35 available for public inspection at the of-
Government Legals
Arlene Sagee, Secretary Sheridan Redevelopment Agency Legal Notice No.: 58077 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: The Englewood Herald Littleton Independent Public Notice CITY OF SHERIDAN NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Sheridan Colorado will hold a Public Hearing at the City Council Meeting of October 24, 2016 at 7:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, Sheridan City Hall, 4101 South Federal Blvd. to receive citizen input on the Proposed 2017 City of Sheridan Budget and to consider an amendment to the 2016 City of Sheridan Budget. All interested parties may express opinions in person at the Public Hearing or in writing to be received by the City Clerk by 4:30 p.m. on October 24, 2016. Anyone wishing to speak at the Public Hearing may sign the speaker’s list at the door. Arlene Sagee, City Clerk City of Sheridan Legal Notice No.: 58078 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: The Englewood Herald Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE AS TO PROPOSED BUDGET AND NOTICE CONCERNING BUDGET AMENDMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the proposed budget for the ensuing year of 2017 has been submitted to the Cherry Creek Project Water Authority ("Authority") of Arapahoe and Douglas Counties, Colorado. Such proposed budget will be considered at a regular meeting and public hearing of the Board of Directors of the Authority to be held at Mulhern MRE, Inc., 2 Inverness Drive East, Suite 200, Englewood, Colorado, at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, October 19, 2016. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that an amendment to the 2016 budget of the Authority may also be considered at the above-referenced meeting and public hearing of the Board of Directors of the Authority. A copy of the proposed 2017 budget and the amended 2016 budget, if required, are available for public inspection at the offices of Mulhern MRE, Inc., 2 Inverness Drive East, Suite 200, Englewood, Colorado. Any interested elector within the Authority may, at any time prior to final adoption of the 2017 budget and the amended 2016 budget, if required, file or register any objections thereto.
Government Legals
Dated: October 13, 2016 Cherry Creek Project Water Authority By: /s/ Steve Witter, President Legal Notice No.: 58082 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent PUBLIC NOTICE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY Proposed Flood Hazard Determinations for Arapahoe County, Colorado and Incorporated Areas
The Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has issued a Preliminary Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM), and where applicable, Flood Insurance Study (FIS) report, reflecting proposed flood hazard determinations within Arapahoe County, Colorado and Incorporated Areas. These flood hazard determinations may include the addition or modification of Base Flood Elevations, base flood depths, Special Flood Hazard Area boundaries or zone designations, or the regulatory floodway. Technical information or comments are solicited on the proposed flood hazard determinations shown on the preliminary FIRM and/or FIS report for Arapahoe County, Colorado and Incorporated Area. These flood hazard determinations are the basis for the floodplain management measures that your community is required to either adopt or show evidence of being already in effect in order to qualify or remain qualified for participation in the National Flood Insurance Program. However, before these determinations are effective for floodplain management purposes, you will be provided an opportunity to appeal the proposed information. For information on the statutory 90-day period provided for appeals, as well as a complete listing of the communities affected and the locations where copies of the FIRM are available for review, please visit FEMA’s website at www.fema.gov/plan/prevent/fhm/bfe, or call the FEMA Map Information eXchange (FMIX) toll free at 1-877-FEMA MAP (1-877-336-2627). Legal Notice No.: 58089 First Publication: October 13, 2016 Last Publication: October 20, 2016 Publisher: Littleton Independent
Arlene Sagee, Secretary Sheridan Redevelopment Agency David C. Walcher This is to advise you that a Sheriff sale Sheriff of Arapahoe County, Colorado proceeding has been commenced through Dated: October 13, 2016 Legal Notice No.: 58077 By: Sgt. James Osborn the office of the undersigned Sheriff purCherry Creek Project First Publication: October 13, 2016 Deputy Sheriff suant to the Arapahoe County District Water Authority Last Publication: October 13, 2016 Public Notice Court’s ORDER RE: REVISED VERIFIED By: /s/ Steve Witter, President Publisher: The Englewood Herald Legal Notice No.: 57866 MOTIONIN FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT ACCORDANCE WITH THE CITY OF LITTLETON CHARTER,September SECTION 8322, (J), 2016 THE FOLLOWING IS A LISTING OF DISBURSEMENTS OVER $500.00 FOR THE MONTH OF AUGUST 2016 Littleton Independent First Publication: AND DESCRIPTION DECREE OF FORECLOSURE Legal SURPLUS Notice No.: 58082 PUBLIC $2,425.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DRIVE TRAIN INDUSTRIES $6,268.91 PARTS AND SUPPLIES VENDOR NAME AMOUNT Last Publication: October 20, 2016 dated June 6, 2016, and C.R.S. §38-38FirstPEDAL Publication: October 13, 2016 $5,389.33 EQUIPMENT PUSH PULL-CORP EAST JORDAN IRON WORKS, INC. $699.90 PARTS AND SUPPLIES Publisher: Littleton Independent 101 et seq., by The Sunridge Patio Last Publication: October 13, 2016 QUICKSTART INTELLIGENCE $1,000.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION EB BACKGROUND INVEST $740.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION A & S BURGER INVESTMENTS $5,145.00 RENT Association (“Association”), Homeowners Publisher: Littleton Independent RAINBOW BOOK COMPANY $4,793.04 BOOKS ELECTRONIC RECYCLERS INC $1,936.75 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES A&E TIRE $919.70 TIRES holder of a statutory lien. The the current REGENTS OF UNIVERSITY EMPL COUNCIL SERVICES $612.70 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES A.J. ELECTRIC SYSTEMS, INC. $8,135.00 REPAIR SERVICES judicial foreclosure is based on a default OF COLORADO $3,800.00 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS EON OFFICE PRODUCTS $1,049.39 OFFICE SUPPLIES ACCIDENT INVESTIONS $1,500.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION under the Declaration of Covenants and RETIREMENT PLANNING SERVICES, INC. $825.85 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS ETG FIRE LLC $1,245.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ACORN MANUFACTURING $868.96 SUPPLIES Restrictions of Sunridge Patio Homes, reROCKY MOUNTAIN CATERING $554.00 CATERING SERVICES EVENT PROMOTION SUPPLY $5,654.25 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ADPI $13,385.63 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES corded with the Arapahoe County Clerk $549.38 REPAIR SERVICES ROCKY MOUNTAIN CFC E EVIDENT INC $884.00 SUPPLIES AEGIS ITS INC. $11,500.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE and Recorder on April 14, 1978, at RecepROCKY MOUNTAIN HOSTAGE FALCON LABORATORIES $1,363.93 SUPPLIES AFL MAINTENANCE GROUP, INC. $833.30 JANITORIAL tion No. 1726081,SERVICES book 2757, and page NEGOTIATORS $1,100.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION FATHEAD $806.98 SUPPLIES AFW-COMPARK #61 $1,913.80 CAPITAL PROJECTS 768, as amended (“Declaration”). The DeRPM MOTORSPORTS $576.58 REPAIR SERVICES FELDMAN, ETHAN D $5,715.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGGREGATE INDUSTRIES WCR INC $97,935.52 PARTS SUPPLIESestablishes a lien claration, as &recorded, RYDERS PUBLIC SAFETY $3,128.95 UNIFORMS FERSZT RAQUEL $686.25 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ALLDATA CORP #8601 $1,500.00 DATABASE SUBSCRIPTION for the benefit of The Sunridge Patio S&S COMM CITY PARTS $683.31 PARTS AND SUPPLIES FINDAWAY $1,274.85 SUPPLIES ALSCO INC. $575.91 UNIFORMS Homeowners Association, WHICH LIEN SAINT PATRICK BREWING COMPANY LLC $810.00 SUPPLIES FIRE CRAFT SAFETY PRODUCTS $2,763.17 UNIFORMS AM SIGNAL, INC $2,249.45 PARTS & SUPPLIES MAY NOT BE A BEING FORECLOSED SAMBA HOLDINGS, INC $575.68 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES FIRE SAFETY SERVICES $2,083.00 SUPPLIES AMAZON $5,535.26 FIRSTSUPPLIES LIEN ON THE SUBJECT PROPSAMS CLUB $4,449.91 SUPPLIES FIRED UP RESCUE LLC $7,344.00 TOOLS AMERICAN PUBLIC WORKS ASSOCIATION $3,750.00 & EDUCATION legally deERTYLEARNING AND IMPROVEMENTS SANTA FE SAND & GRAVEL $2,171.89 SUPPLIES FLEX TECHNOLOGIES INC $663.92 PARTS AND SUPPLIES AMERICAN SAFETY ASSOCIATION $924.00 UNIFORMS scribed as follows: SCL HEALTH MEDICAL GROUPFRONT RANGE FIRE APPARATUS $2,967.44 PARTS AND SUPPLIES AMICH & JENKS $2,375.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DENVER, LLC $2,065.20 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES GEORGE T SANDERS $1,260.64 PARTS AND SUPPLIES AMS OF COLORADO #930 $3,286.91 REPAIR SERVICES LOT 10 BLK 4 SUNRIDGE SUB 2nd SEARS ROEBUCK $1,181.67 SUPPLIES GLIDDEN, KIM LOUISE $10,676.44 GRANT ANKMAR/PACE DOOR SER $1,178.94FLAG REPAIR SERVICES PARCEL #1975-07-4-07-010, SEASONS LAWN CARE, INC $4,500.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES GLOBAL MOUNTING SOLUTIONS $2,283.50 PARTS AND SUPPLIES APCO GRAPHICS $1,125.15 CAPITAL PROJECTS COUNTY OF ARAPAHOE, SECURE SITE SSL $798.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE GOLDEN TRIANGLE CONSTRUCTION, INC. $445,665.90 CAPITAL PROJECTS AQUATIQUE INDUSTRIES, INC $552.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES STATE OF COLORADO SEECLICKFIX INC $6,300.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE GOODYEAR COMMERCIAL $6,465.01 TIRES ARAPAHOE COUNTY FINANCE SENTER GOLDFARB & RICE, LLC $3,630.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES GRANICUS, INC. $3,111.48 DATABASE SUBSCRIPTION DEPARTMENT $13,704.01 SPACE USE TAX AlsoOPEN known by street andCOLLECTION number as SHALOM DENVER $1,075.29 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES GREENLEY ENTERPRISES CORP. $5,832.99 REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE ARAPAHOE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE $1,340.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION 68 S. Eagle Circle, Aurora, CO 80012 SHERWIN-WILLIAMS $756.97 SUPPLIES GROUND ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS $652.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ARK ECOLOGICAL SERVICES LLC $953.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES The Property being foreclosed is all of the SHUNNESON, ARNOLD $2,700.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES GRUND, STEVE $1,400.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ARROW SECURITY $4,232.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES property encumbered by the Association’s SIEMENS INDUSTRY INC $1,571.40 SUPPLIES GUIRY’S $659.56 SUPPLIES AURORA WORLD INC $898.41 SUPPLIES lien. You are advisedSERVICES that the parties liSIRSIDYNIX $730.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE H G MAKELIM COMPANY $3,230.48 PARTS AND SUPPLIES AUSMUS LAW FIRM P.C. $5,720.00 PROFESSIONAL able thereon, SITEONE LANDSCAPE S $1,440.48 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES HAROLD KAL & CO., INC. $64,050.74 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AUSTIN HARDWOODS OF $663.90 SUPPLIESthe owner of the Property described above, or those with an interest SLEEP NATION $550.00 SUPPLIES HEADRUSH TECH $2,884.55 LEARNING & EDUCATION PEARSON EDUCATION $501.45 BOOKS in the PROFESSIONAL subject property,SERVICES may take appropriSMITH SECKMAN REID, INC. $13,725.00 REPAIR SERVICES HENSLEY BATTERY&ELEC $1,286.93 PARTS AND SUPPLIES AZTEC CONSULTANTS, INC $5,900.00 ate and timely action under Colorado statSOUND TOWN $700.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES HIGH PLAINS INFORMATION SYSTEMS $11,437.50 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE B&H PHOTO MOTO $818.65 VIDEO EQUIPMENT utes. DVDS In order to be entitled to take adSOUTHBENDIN $638.34 PARTS AND SUPPLIES HILL ENTERPRISES INC $29,468.84 FUEL BAKER & TAYLOR $5,460.43 vantage of any rights provided for under SOUTHWEST AIRLINES $1,059.88 LEARNING & EDUCATION HOFFMANN, PARKER, WILSON BIBLIOTHECA LLC $5,227.08 SUPPLIES Colorado law, you must strictly comply SOUTHWEST METROPOLITAN WATER & $7,500.00 SEWER LEASE & CARBERRY PC $2,165.74 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES BLACKBAUD, INC $1,095.59 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE and adhere to SUPPLIES the provisions of the law. SPEAKWRITE LLC $867.36 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES HOMEOWNER CONCIERGE $1,391.82 REPAIR SERVICES BOUND TREE MEDICAL L $21,740.30 MEDICAL SPECIAL OCCASIONS $786.50 SUPPLIES HYATT REGENCY ORLANDO $1,808.88 LEARNING & EDUCATION BROWN AND CALDWELL INC. The Sheriff’s sale has been scheduled SPRINT $10,534.01 TELECOMMUNICATIONS HYDRO RESOURCES - ROCKY IN COLORADO $22,845.04 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES to occur at 10:00 A.M., on the 17th day STANLEY ACCESS TECH $1,276.28 MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT MOUNTAIN, INC. $2,138.38 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CANNON COCHRAN MANAGEMENT of November, 2016,SERVICES at the Arapahoe STANTEC CONSULTING CORPORATION $4,389.25 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES IAFC $705.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION SERVICES $1,841.13 PROFESSIONAL County Sheriff's Office Administration STATE CHEMICAL MANUFACTURING $796.06 SUPPLIES INGRAM LIBRARY SERVICES $15,244.11 BOOKS CANON $11,781.57 COPIER RENTAL/MAINTENANCE Building, located BENEFITS at 13101 East Broncos STONE, MARK $838.75 REPAIR SERVICES INTEGRATED SYSTEMS $36,535.92 REPAIR SERVICES CAREHERE LLC $22,982.63 EMPLOYEE Parkway in Centennial; STRYKER SALES CRP $28,540.00 SUPPLIES INTERGROUP ARCHITECT $52,352.37 CAPITAL PROJECTS CARL D. ZELLER $665.50 REPAIR SERVICEStelephone number 720-874-3935. sale, the Sheriff will STUARTPARKS FORENSIC $695.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION INT’L CODE COUNCIL $763.45 MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL CAUDILL, RICHARD $966.74 LEARNINGAt& the EDUCATION sell the above described real property and SUNGARD PUBLIC SECTOR INC. $6,000.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE IRON MOUNTAIN $751.46 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CDW GOVERNMENT $4,909.26 COMPUTER EQUIPMENT improvements thereon to the highest bidSUPPLYWORKS CORP $735.62 SUPPLIES J.J. LAY COMPANY INC $1,040.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CESARE, INC. $1,473.25 CAPITAL PROJECTS der. Plaintiff makes noSERVICES warranty relating to TARGET $2,771.72 SUPPLIES JETS PIZZA - CO01 $745.25 CATERING SERVICES CHEMATOX LABORATORY $1,864.40 PROFESSIONAL title, possession, or quiet enjoyment in or TEAM WENDY LLC $6,775.37 UNIFORMS JIM’S PRIDE LANDSCAPING CHETDAN,INC $600.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES to said real property SERVICES in connection with TERRACARE ASSOCIATES LLC $997.40 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES & MAINTENANCE, INC. $682.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CHOICE SCREENING, INC. $529.30 PROFESSIONAL this sale. THE HOME DEPOT $3,487.87 SUPPLIES K & R INVESTMENT LTD $1,075.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CIAAI $825.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION THE LIGHTHOUSE $647.00 PARTS AND SUPPLIES KEN CARYL GLASS INC $2,390.00 REPAIR SERVICES CINTAS $1,480.31 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE THE SUPPLY CACHE $3,339.41 TOOLS KING SOOPERS $1,054.65 SUPPLIES CITICASTERS, CO $3,639.00 CASHADVERTISEMENT OR CERTIFIED FUNDS SUFFITHE TRANE COMPANY $4,304.40 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE KISSINGER & FELLMAN, PC $17,219.67 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CITY LIGHTING PRODUC $651.40 SUPPLIES CIENT TO COVER THEIR HIGHEST BID THOUTT BROS CONCRETE KRAV MAGA WORLDWIDE $750.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION CITY OF ENGLEWOOD $1,295,998.36 BI-CITY AT THE TIMEOPERATIONS OF SALE. CONTRACTORS INC $39,216.10 CAPITAL PROJECTS KSE RADIO VENTURES,LLC CLARION ASSOCIATES $4,520.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES THYSSENKRUPP ELEVATORS $3,832.00 REPAIR SERVICES (KIMN,KXKL,KWOF) $1,050.00 ADVERTISEMENT CLEARWATER DIRECT MARKETING The name, address, and telephone numTRAFFIC SIGNAL CONTROLS INC $3,150.20 SUPPLIES LANDMARK LINCOLN $3,561.55 PARTS AND SUPPLIES SOLUTIONS $13,913.09 PROFESSIONAL ber of the attorney SERVICES representing the TRANSWEST TRUCKS $9,809.94 PARTS AND SUPPLIES LAW OFFICE OF KHALID JBILI, LLC $1,500.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CO COMM MEDIA-NEWSPAPER $969.76 ADVERTISEMENT Plaintiff is: Travis B. Keenan, #41354, ViTRITECH SOFTWARE SYSTEMS $10,200.00 SOFTWARE LAWLOGIX GROUP INC $1,005.25 DATABASE SUBSCRIPTION COGENT INC $4,911.27 REPAIR SERVICES al Fotheringham, LLP, 12600 W. Colfax TUCCY, JAMES JAY $10,500.00 REPAIR SERVICES LEVI CONTRACTORS, INC $5,800.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES COLORADO ASSOCIATION $780.00 RENEWAL CO 80215; Ave. MEMBERSHIP Ste. C200, Lakewood, U S POSTAL SERVICE $7,000.00 POSTAGE LINEGEAR FIRE RESCUE $810.03 UNIFORMS COLORADO CANOPIES LL $663.00 SUPPLIES telephone: 720-943-8811. ULINE $590.45 SUPPLIES LN CURTIS $2,108.00 PARTS AND SUPPLIES COLORADO CIVIL INFRASTRUCTURE INC $30,281.20 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES UNITED SITE SERVICE $520.00 PORTABLE TOILET RENTAL LOGISYS $624.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION COLORADO CODE COUNCIL $4,650.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DATED at Arapahoe County, Colorado, UNITED RENTALS $1,289.18 SCISSOR LIFT RENTAL LOWES $2,301.95 SUPPLIES COLORADO DEP OF PUBLIC HEALTH $810.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES this 4th day of August, 2016. UTILITY NOTIFICATION CENTER MARRIOTT BALTIMORE $1,743.28 LEARNING & EDUCATION COLORADO GARAGE DOO $767.00 REPAIR SERVICES OF COLORADO $1,567.28 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES MARTINEZ JOSE III $600.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES COLORADO INTERACTIVE LLC $69,467.12 SERVICES DavidPROFESSIONAL C. Walcher VEER WEST LLC $2,036.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE MATTRESS FIRM $3,749.95 CAPITAL PROJECTS COLORADO INTERGOVERMENTAL $7,543.16 INSURANCE Sheriff of Arapahoe County, Colorado VERIZON $14,480.02 TELECOMMUNICATIONS MBA DESIGN $3,339.50 SUPPLIES CO RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL By: Sgt. James Osborn VISION CHEMICAL SYSTEMS $902.00 SUPPLIES MEIER, NORMAN $1,255.79 HISTORIC LANDMARK TAX REFUND RESORT AND FAC $23,869.20 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Deputy Sheriff VISION SERVICE PLAN $6,483.25 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS MESIROW INSURANCE SERVICES, INC. $15,762.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES COLORADO STATE TREASURER $8,145.00 INSURANCE VISION TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLC $24,275.00 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE METECH RECYCLING INC $6,899.04 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES COLOSSUS, INCORPORATED $55,067.94 MAINTENANCE Legal SOFTWARE Notice No.: 57866 VORTEX COLORADO INC $3,390.87 REPAIR SERVICES METRO FENCE COMPANY, $9,654.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE $569,309.80 EMPLOYEE September BENEFITS 22, 2016 First Publication: W L CONTRACTORS INC $22,493.52 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES MHO NETWORKS $2,099.00 TELECOMMUNICATIONS CONNOLLYS TOWING INC $1,444.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Last Publication: October 20, 2016 W O DANIELSON CONSTRUCTION MILLER, MICHAEL D. $875.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CONSOLIDATED FLEET SERVICES $2,930.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Publisher: Littleton Independent COMPANY, LTD. $2,468.70 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES MINES & ASSOCIATES PC $2,288.16 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS CONTERRA INC $1,597.08 SUPPLIES WAGNER EQUIPMENT CO $9,166.55 EQUIPMENT RENTAL MINUTEMAN PRESS $9,343.87 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CONTRACT APPLIANCE $904.99 CAPITAL PROJECTS WASTE MANAGEMENT $2,651.96 UTILITIES MOUNTAIN HIGH LAWN & LANDSCAPE LLC $1,017.50 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES COPRO EMERGENCY/ FIRE WAXIE SANITARY SUPPLY $1,044.76 SUPPLIES MOUNTAIN HIGH TREE LANDSCAPING $1,370.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES PRODUCTS, LLC $594.81 UNIFORMS WEST PUBLISHING CORPORATION $1,194.03 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE MOUNTAIN STATES SPECIALTIES $503.64 UNIFORMS COWBOY FENCING $2,000.00 REPAIR SERVICES WESTERN SHOP EQUIPMENT $1,768.00 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE MOUNTAIN STATES WOOD RECYCLERS $560.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CPS DISTRIBUTORS INC $556.89 SUPPLIES WINDERMERE RIDGE HOA $9,999.00 GRANT MUNICIP EMERG/LAWMEN $51,575.79 UNIFORMS CSDC SYSTEMS INC. $26,377.94 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES WINDSTREAM $16,887.34 TELECOMMUNICATIONS MURDOCHS RANCH &HOME $1,317.31 SUPPLIES CTL / THOMPSON INC $5,340.00 CAPITAL PROJECTS WIRELESS ADVANCED NEVE’S UNIFORMS & $2,323.03 UNIFORMS CURRIER, BENJAMIN E $800.00 JUDICIAL SERVICES COMMUNICATION $14,944.80 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES NICOLETTI FLATER ASS $6,805.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES CYGNUS EXPOSITIONS $678.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION WISEMEN SEEKING, INC OCLC $1,728.97 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE DAVID G MONTGOMERY ELECTRIC INC $1,623.00 CAPITAL PROJECTS DBA FISH WINDOW CLNG $2,119.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES OFFICE DEPOT $8,221.82 OFFICE SUPPLIES DBC IRRIGATION SUPPLIES $1,283.00 REPAIR SERVICES WOLHURST ADULT COMMUNITY OFFICESCAPES $8,132.30 OFFICE FURNITURE DECCAN INTERNATIONAL $56,196.60 SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE MEN’S CLUB $5,000.00 GRANT OLDCASTLE PRECAST, INC $4,358.00 PARTS AND SUPPLIES DELTA DENTAL PLAN OF COLORADO $36,162.57 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS WPSG. INC $749.74 SUPPLIES OMNI LAMANSION HOTEL $3,346.65 LEARNING & EDUCATION DENVER CIVIC VENTURE $2,500.00 SPONSORSHIP WRIGHT WATER ENGINEERS, INC. $5,791.80 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES PERSONNEL EVALUATION $1,460.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DENVER HEALTH & HOSPITAL AUTHORITY $680.00 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES XCEL ENERGY $232,350.35 UTILITIES PHYSIO CONTROL INC $4,178.55 SUPPLIES DENVER INDUSTRIAL SALES & SERVICE $2,657.00 PARTS & SUPPLIES Grand Total $4,195,059.60 PORTABLE COMPUTER SYSTEMS $4,106.00 COMPUTER EQUIPMENT DENVER POST $2,800.00 ADVERTISEMENT PRE-PAID LEGAL SERVICES INC $655.12 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS DENVER WATER $12,512.12 UTILITIES PROFORMANCE APPAREL $2,713.67 UNIFORMS DESKS, INC $3,629.00 CAPITAL PROJECTS Legal Notice No.: 58080 PROGRESSIVE URBAN MANAGEMENT DIVE RESCUE INTERNATIONAL $807.40 EQUIPMENT First Publication: October 13, 2016 * Last Publication: October 13, 2016 ASSOC INC $34,254.12 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DIVISION OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION $1,866.39 INSURANCE Publisher: Littleton Independent PROSCI INC $4,260.00 LEARNING & EDUCATION DOORS WEST $1,384.00 REPAIR SERVICES
Government Legals
Littleton Englewood * 4
36 The Independent • The Herald
October 13, 2016
REGISTER TO VOTE BY OCTOBER 31, 2016 ELECTION DAY IS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2016
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