News
Elbert 8.8.13
Elbert County
August 8, 2013
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A Colorado Community Media Publication
ourelbertcountynews.com
Elbert County, Colorado • Volume 118, Issue 28
Residents challenge decision by county Group wants oil, gas question on fall ballot By Deborah Grigsby
dgrigsby@ourcoloradonews.com
Patrons at the SaddleUp! Suitcase Party enjoyed posing for photos in front of the private jet that was waiting to whisk one lucky couple away on a trip to the California wine country. Photos by Deborah Grigsby
SaddleUp! gala reins in local jet set Airport event benefits equine therapy ranch By Deborah Grigsby
dgrigsby@ourcoloradonews.com Travelers adorned in gauzy light summer pastels packed their bags for the third annual SaddleUp! Suitcase Party, each hoping to win seats on a private jet bound for California wine country, departing directly from the event. The popular gala filled the Mayo Aviation Hangar at Centennial Airport on Aug. 3 with patrons, prizes, fine wine, saddleup! and an “A” list of foundation local media, sports celebrities and To learn more about politicians, all with SaddleUp! or to pay for hay, hopes of helping go online to www.saddle others. upfoundation.org or call The SaddleUp! 303-788-1666 Foundation is nonLocations: profit organizaSaddleUp! at Bear’s Barn tion that provides 11152 E. Daley Circle equine-assisted Parker, CO 80134 therapy to adults and children with SaddleUp! at Swift Creek special needs. 39850 Swift Creek Circle With facilities in Elizabeth, CO 80107 Parker and Elizabeth, SaddleUp! conducts supervised therapies in a familyfriendly ranch environment. “Although I’ve never had need, myself, for equine therapy, I think what this organization does with kids is absolutely amazing,” said Joan Marks, of Denver. “There is just something so special in that connection between kids and horses. I just can’t
Supporters of equine-assisted therapy packed the Mayo Aviation Hangar at Centennial Airport on Aug. 2. The annual gala event is a fundraiser for SaddleUp!, a nonprofit organization with locations in Parker and Elizabeth that provides therapy horses for children and adults with special needs. explain it, but it seems to work.” Sporting a throwback aviation theme, patrons were treated to live entertainment and dancing by “American Idol” contestant Richie Law, as well as The Moderators, a Denver-based band comprised of local titans of industry, including presidents and CEOs of Colorado’s small businesses and Fortune 500 companies alike. Silent and live auction items included VIP tickets to the Solheim Cup, weekend
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use of a Ferrari and mountain vacation packages. Some patrons chose the “pay for hay” option, donating directly to a fund that feeds the organization’s 15 horses. “I have horses of my own and know that it’s not cheap, so this option fits our family better than a set of golf clubs or something,” said Anna Steele. “Besides, I always have a soft spot for anything that has to do with horses.” SaddleUp! Foundation programs provide therapy for mentally, emotionally and physically challenged individuals. Working with several established healthcare providers such as Craig Hospital, Children’s Hospital and the University of Denver Graduate School of Social Work, the program serves an average of 4,500 participants per year. More than 150 volunteers guide horses and spot riders, so participants can ride safely and train with therapists.
A local grassroots initiative is challenging a decision by the Elbert County commissioners that many say ignores the efforts and desires of the residents they were elected to serve. Jill Duvall, co-coordinator of the Elbert County Oil and Gas Interest Group, says the surprising July 10 decision not to amend land-use regulations for oil and gas exploration is a slap in the face not only to residents, but to the all-volunteer group that spent more than two years developing the accompanying documents. Now Duvall and others want this fall’s ballot to include the question of whether those regulations should be adopted. “While some of the commissioners suggest the vote reflects exactly what the people want, we challenge them to put it on the November ballot,” Duvall said. “If the decision is truly what the people of Elbert County want, then that will be reflected by the vote and strengthen their position even more.” But Duvall, a retired schoolteacher and former candidate for county commissioner herself, said her personal effort to reach out to the commissioners on the subject has received a rather cold welcome. In a July 26 email to District 2 Commissioner Kurt Schlegel, Duvall wrote, “Please put the proposed oil and gas regs to a vote of the people. Since we are already having an election this fall, there is no additional cost to the county. This is democracy in action!” Schlegel declined her request, replying “No thank you. FYI — we live in a Constitutional Republic that is based on democratic principles — not a democracy.” Duvall said the group is now circulating a petition to ask the Board of County Commissioners to put the question on the ballot. The petition is circulated locally and is not the same as a similar online petition, and Duvall says those interested in signing should contact her directly. “The sad part of it is, this is only a symbolic petition,” she explained. “The state of Colorado considers a county an extension of itself, and only a town, city or home rule municipality can circulate a ballot initiative,” she said. “In Elbert County, the BOCC approves everything that goes on the ballot, so we are simply hoping to get enough signatures and show them there are a lot of people who think differently than they do.”
to contact county commissioneRs Robert Rowland, District 1, 303-621-3132 robert.rowland@elbertcounty-co.gov Kurt Schlegel, District 2, 303-621-3139 kurt.schlegel@elbertcounty-co.gov Larry Ross, District 3, 303-621-3114 larry.ross@elbertcounty-co.gov To contact Elbert County Oil and Gas Interest Group: Jim and Jill Duvall, 303-646-3202 jduvall908@aol.com
2-Color
2 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
Tiny old town is nucleus of faith The dim alcove sits to the side of the altar, kept cool by its old adobe walls. A young woman stoops through the low doorway, followed by her three children and her mother. She bends and scoops some of the soft, fine dirt from the small hole in the center of the floor with her fingers. She rubs her hands together, then caresses her mother’s hair with the dusty mist and kisses her forehead. “So you get better,” she says. They step into a narrow anteroom, flanked on one side by a wall quilted with photographs of men, women and children who have come searching for healing and on the other by countless canes and walkers left behind by those who believe they found it. In the bright sunlight just outside the church, Yvonne Roberto, 39, stands with her children, her mother, Rosa María Hernandez, 69, and her father, Joe Hernandez, 75. It has been 22 years since Yvonne last visited the Holy Dirt Room at El Santuario de Chimayó — the Sanctuary of Chimayó — in this small New Mexico town. Her mother’s illness — and her belief — have brought her back. “I’m not really looking for a miracle,” she says. “I’m just hoping it helps my mother better deal with her illness. I’d like her to be happy, instead of sad all the time. She knows she’s sick.” Yvonne pauses, glances at her mother. “She cries all the time.” Rosa María has Alzheimer’s. She believes the dirt can heal. And so, fueled by
faith, the family drove six hours from El Paso, Texas. “I am a very religious person,” Rosa María says, nodding, the eyes beneath her sun hat solemn. “I pray.” As the family strolls away, Yvonne reaches for her mother’s hand.
••• The two-lane road that leads to the simple adobe and wooden church runs north, about 30 minutes from Santa Fe, through a vast, desolate horizon in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo mountains. Pinyon pines and Russian olive trees splotch the dry, austere landscape with dark green and silver gray. The tiny, historic community of Chimayó, founded in the 17th century by Spanish settlers, is known for its Hispanic and Tewa Indian arts, weaving, red chile and sheep-raising, among other longtime traditions. About 200 years ago, it also became known for the miraculous physical and spiritual healings said to have occurred at the site where a wooden crucifix
was discovered in the ground. Some 300,000 people from throughout the world and representing myriad religions visit each year, seeking to sate curiosity or petition for the blessings of la tierra bendita, the sacred earth, that encased the cross. Because in this place — where history, culture and spirituality entwine so thickly they cloak you like a blanket — many believe in miracles. A sign just beyond the church points up a bumpy, rock-pocked road. Fifth-generation woodcarver, it says. That’s Patricio Chavez, 39, a woodcarver of santos — saints. He is a direct descendant of local friar Bernardo Abeyta, who discovered the cross that led to the building of the Catholic santuario in 1816 on land considered hallowed by Native Americans. He shares an art studio with his wife, also an artist, who traces her roots in this village back eight generations. They live in the modest house next door, which has been handed down by Chavez’s family through the ages. He’s not sure if the dirt has healing powers. “I think it’s what you bring to the church, not what you take,” he says. But Patricio, an affable father of three with an easy smile, believes in faith and, therefore, in the possibility of miracles. There was the gentleman about to have his hand amputated because of illness, he says, who after rubbing dirt on it, still had his hand a year later. Some, the santuario’s website says, believe the dirt will alleviate arthritis, paralysis, sadness and other physical and emotional afflictions. Some
say it will cure cancer. “I hear the stories,” Patricio says. “There’s something going on.” But a less extraordinary miracle, perhaps, can be found in the way faith inspires perseverance in those who, as Patricio says, carry heavy burdens: The mother on a quest to visit all the chapels and churches in New Mexico to help her son in prison. The father, who has walked the 88 miles from Albuquerque to the santuario every year since his son died in the Vietnam War. In 2004, Patricio was one of six artists who renovated the historic wooden altar screens, or reredos, in the santuario. Pushed into the cracks and crevices, they discovered letters, locks of hair, notes, necklaces, dollar bills — the offerings left behind in supplication. You may not believe in miracles. But, Patricio says, “You have to believe in faith — it’ll ultimately save you.”
••• The church is quiet and cool. Behind the altar is a tall wooden screen, painted in greens, reds and blacks and gilded with gold, that surrounds the crucifix Abeyta is said to have found. More reredos with images of saints adorn the walls. Light filters through a stained glass window, and several women and an elderly priest sit in the wooden pews reciting the rosary. The Holy Dirt Room — also known as the Pocito, the little well room — can be reached through a door off the altar. Healey continues on Page 7
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3
Elbert County News 3
August 8, 2013
Baby breaks in new hospital Birth is kickoff for opening of Castle Rock Adventist By Virginia Grantier
vgrantier@ourcoloradonews. com At 7 a.m. Aug. 1, Castle Rock’s new hospital opened for business — and things didn’t begin quietly. That was the time Kathryn Palermo, 28, of Castle Rock, arrived at Castle Rock Adventist Hospital, full-term, dilated, and was greeted by a cheering throng. “We came around the corner and they were clapping and cheering,” she said about the nursing staff. Palermo and her husband, Dan Palermo, 31, were expecting to be expected, as they had scheduled the 7 a.m. time slot for her to be induced. But this level of welcome wasn’t expected. Palermo, a hospital nurse there, was now on the receiving side and touched by the support. “It couldn’t have gone better,” she said. The brand-new penthouse
of a delivery room had a Jacuzzi tub, small chandelier over the sink, and a wall of windows full of mountain views. She doesn’t remember seeing the mountain view, for a couple hours, anyway. “Her eyes were tightly closed,” recalls her doctor, Juliet Leman, and they both laughed. The baby was born at 10:57 a.m., healthy and content, no crying, really, and with a name already: Alexander. And that’s because there was a sign. A real sign-sign. Dan Palermo had thrown that name out there for consideration one day, a while back, and the very next morning, Kathryn was driving to work, and on the brand-new medical building next to the hospital was a brand-new sign: “Alexander.” Turns out the building is named after Dr. George Alexander, Castle Rock’s first physician, back in 1902. And there’s more: After that sign, Kathryn, being taken on an orientation tour in the hospital, found out the tour guide’s name was Alex. Enough already. But no, there’s more: The person who related some of this story is Christine
Alexander, another hospital employee and co-worker. In addition to a baby that day, the new hospital had about a dozen patients. “The staff is marvelous,” said Gail Garn, 76, of Pueblo, recovering from knee surgery. She received flowers, handdelivered by the hospital’s CEO, and a basket of goodies. While Alexander was the first to be born there, Garn was the first patient to arrive, so she got special treatment and gifts, too. Alexander and family got baby clothes and things from the Outlets of Castle Rock. The new hospital, at 2350 Meadows Blvd., actually has been partially open for a while. Its emergency room has been operating since 2011. The Aug. 1 opening completes the $130 million project.
The first baby born at the new Castle Rock Adventist Hospital, on itsopening day, Aug. 1, is Alexander Palermo, pictured with his parents, Dan and Kathryn Palermo of Castle Rock, and their doctor, Juliet Leman (standing). Photo by Virginia Grantier
The Essence of Leadership John Brackney, President and CEO of the South Metro Denver Chamber, is passionate about the role of leaders in building a strong, vibrant community. In April, 2013 he embarked on a project to highlight great leaders among Chamber investors and within our community. In a partnership with Julie McCahan of Reach Summit Consulting, they identified outstanding leaders that inspire us to the next level of performance who will be interviewed and their philosophies distilled. Equally important, is how they, as leaders, make invaluable contributions to “community” which can be local, statewide or international in scope. These leaders understand the importance of building strong communities now and for future generations. Over the decades much has been written in an attempt to convey the qualities, skills and characteristics of successful leaders. Amazon.com
lists nearly 90,000 books on the subject of leadership and management as it relates to leadership. A search on Google returns 463 MILLION links to articles, books, videos, and academic research papers. We are fascinated with the topic of leadership, but the topic is not an easy one to grasp. This series of articles will be dedicated to highlighting how each leader describes “the essence of leadership.” “What is meant by the term, Essence of Leadership?” Jonathan Brynes, Senior Lecturer at MIT and an entrepreneur asks. “We know leadership when we see it. But just what are the key ingredients of powerful leaders?” Ingredients of leaders has been sliced and diced in every literary venue from biographies to doctoral dissertations. Yes, we recognize leaders - but what makes them “leaders?” In this series we will strive to uncover the core essence of leaders.
by Julie McCahan, Reach Summit Consulting
For a complete calendar of South Metro Denver Chamber events or more information, visit our web site at www.bestchamber.com or call 303-795-0142.
Thursday, August 8th:
Technology Advocates Group Breakfast Discussion The Egg & I, 6890 S. University Blvd., Centennial Business Watch Seminar with Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Dept The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Women in Leadership: How to Host High Impact Business Events The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial
Becky Takeda-Tinker
In place of skills and styles, we will focus on the core qualities of great leaders in our immediate community. An unknown author wrote: “Leaders are people who leave their footprints in their areas of passion.” This initiative is dedicated to walking in the footprints of the leaders who work and volunteer within our immediate community.
Becky Takeda-Tinker: Passion Partners with Vision Good leaders have passion and most good leaders have vision. However, there is a difference between good leaders and great leaders. What makes great leaders distinguishable is their capacity to meld passion with vision. A leader who exemplifies the remarkable blend of passion with vision is Becky Takeda-Tinker, President of CSU Global Campus. What makes Dr. Takeda-Tinker a great leader? It begins with her insight into our need, as a nation, to maintain our competitive edge and to and sustain our role as a global leader among nations. Her vision translates into an educated work force that produces exceptional goods and services and keeps people actively engaged in a productive society. Her vision is global while her passion is local. Her passion radiates from a deep conviction that an educated work force keeps our economy strong. As she speaks about her passion for education it focuses on the importance an individual makes within an organization. A great leader will impact all within their sphere of influence. Quickly she cites the IT industry as an example: Bill Gates - as an example whose vision and passion to
Calendar of Events
create user-friendly computers impacted the IT industry beyond the realm of what was thought possible 40 years ago. While Steve Jobs proved the axiom: “If we build it, they will come.” With a passion springing from a deep well within, Becky knows she will can play a significant role in converting her vision into a reality. Her passion for education will impact us as individuals and collectively as a productive society. Another aspect of Becky’s passion extends to inspiring others. Her perpetual advice is: “Think Strategically.” As a member of the Chamber’s Board of Directors her goal is to always realize a win-win-win in any situation. The three win is defined as a win for you, a win for SMDC the Chamber and a win for the community. Come walk in Becky’s footprints and challenge yourself to identify your win-win-win opportunity. The South Metro Denver Chamber’s brand promise of “Remarkable Relationships and a Thriving Community” embraces the concept of individual leaders making their mark on the business community and society as a whole. Call 303-795-0142 for more information on how you can help build toward a prosperous future.
Chamber Night at Douglas County Fair Douglas County Fairgrounds, 500 Fairgrounds Drive., Castle Rock
Friday, August 9th:
Board of Directors Retreat & Leadership Conference University of Colorado Denver Business School, 1475 Lawrence St., Denver
Monday, August 12th:
Understanding Energy: A Viewing of “Switch” with Dr. Scott Tinker Location TBD
Tuesday, August 13th:
Inside the Legislature with the South Metro Denver Chamber The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Business Bible Study The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Business After Hours hosted by the Colorado Athletic Club Inverness 374 Inverness Parkway, Englewood
Wednesday, August 14th:
Business Watch Seminar with Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Dept The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Nonprofit & Business Partnership Advisory Board The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial
Thursday, August 15th:
Meet Littleton School Board Candidate Robert Reichardt The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial Centennial Business Appreciation Celebration Centennial Center Park, 13133 Arapahoe Rd., Centennial
Friday, August 16th:
Social Marketing for Business: Measuring Social Media ROI The Chamber Center, 2154 E. Commons Ave., Suite 342, Centennial
Friday, March 1st:
Celebrate Littleton Preparatory Charter School’s Grand Reopening! 5301 South Bannock St., Littleton
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4 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
State begins teacher-grading system Controversial program driven by change in law By Kristen Wyatt Associated Press
The video shows a fourth-grade music teacher leading her pupils through fourbeat patterns with a rest. Two dozen judges are watching, grading how well she’s engaging students and leading the lesson. None of the judges is a music teacher. They’re school administrators learning how to evaluate educators in a discipline not their own. It’s no easy task, and as Colorado prepares for statewide implementation of standardized educator effectiveness ratings, it’s the kind of thing many schools are going to be doing in every classroom. Colorado adopted a statewide teachergrading system three years ago, a rating that sorts educators from “highly effective” to “ineffective.” Teachers with too many consecutive low ratings could lose tenure, while new teachers and those on probationary status will need passing marks before achieving tenure, or non-probationary status. After three years of development and pilot tests, the effectiveness ratings begin for all 178 Colorado school districts this fall. The stakes are high, and many teachers in Colorado aren’t exactly sure how it will work. “There’s massive anxiety about it,” said
Castle Rock
Stephanie Rossi, a social studies teacher at Wheat Ridge High School in Jefferson County, the state’s largest school district. “Are we ready for it? No, because we don’t know what it is.” The teacher and administrator ratings will be 50 percent based on student test scores. The rest of the rating is based on more subjective evaluations of how well teachers perform. Denver is training administrators and teachers in peer evaluations, where teachers will be graded on everything from how they use technology in their lessons to how they respond to pupils who don’t understand certain instructions or terminology. Student feedback is also a factor, with children getting to weigh in on how their teachers are doing. The teacher evaluators were training recently in how to make sure they arrive at similar ratings, even in a subject area they’ve never taught. The evaluators reviewed guidelines after seeing the music video, then raised fingers to show how they would have rated the example lesson. “What did you guys get? Fours? Fives? OK, let’s look at the exact evidence,” said Danielle Ongart, who is leading the training for Denver Public Schools. The administrators reviewed the lesson. Did students learn the pattern, or just mimic the teacher? How did the teacher monitor student progress? Was the lesson adjusted based on how the pupils responded? The
Highlands Ranch
Parker
1200 South Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 303.688.3047 www.fumccr.org
Services:
Saturday 5:30pm Sunday 8am, 9:15am, 10:30am Sunday School 9:15am Little Blessings Day Care www.littleblessingspdo.com
Open and Welcoming
Sunday Worship 8:00 am Chapel Service 9:00 & 10:30 am
Sunday School 9:00 & 10:30 am
www.st-andrew-umc.com
Welcome Home!
Weaving Truth and Relevance into Relationships and Life
worship Time 10:30AM sundays
Affiliated with United Church of Religious Science
303-794-2683 Preschool: 303-794-0510
9:00am Spiritual Formation Classes for all Ages 90 east orchard road littleton, co
Castle Rock Recreation Center 2301 Woodlands Blvd, Castle Rock
9203 S. University Blvd. Highlands Ranch, 80126
303 798 6387
CENTER FOR SPIRITUAL LIVING Sunday Services 10 a.m.
www.OurCenterforSpiritualLiving.org 720-851-0265
Abiding Word Lutheran Church 8391 S. Burnley Ct., Highlands Ranch
(Next to RTD lot @470 & University)
An Evangelical Presbyterian Church
Sunday Worship 10:30 4825 North Crowfoot Valley Rd. Castle Rock • canyonscc.org 303-663-5751
First Presbyterian Church of Littleton
A place for you
Sunday
8:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m.
Franktown
GRACE PRESBYTERIAN
Acts 2:38
Alongside One Another On Life’s Journey
www.gracecolorado.com
Trinity Lutheran Church & School
Sunday Worship 8:00 & 10:45 a.m. Trinity Lutheran School & ELC (Ages 3-5, Grades K-8)
303-841-4660 www.tlcas.org
You are invited to worship with us:
Sundays at 10:00 am
Grace is on the NE Corner of Santa Fe Dr. & Highlands Ranch Pkwy. (Across from Murdochs)
303-798-8485
Sunday 9:30am
Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 www.joylutheran-parker.org
Parker evangelical Presbyterian church Connect – Grow – Serve
Sunday Worship
8:45 am & 10:30 am 9030 Miller road Parker, Co 80138 303-841-2125 www.pepc.org
Parker
Community Church of Religious Science Sunday services held in the historic Ruth Memorial Chapel at the Parker Mainstreet Center
...19650 E. Mainstreet, Parker 80138
Sunday Service
& Children’s Church 10:00 a.m.
Visit our website for details of classes & upcoming events.
303.805.9890 P.O. Box 2945—Parker CO 80134-2945
1609 W. Littleton Blvd. (303) 798-1389 • www.fpcl.org
“Loving God - Making A Difference”
www.parkerbiblechurch.org
SErviCES:
Saturday 5:30pm
www.P a r k er C C R S.org
303-791-3315
pastor@awlc.org www.awlc.org
4391 E Mainstreet, Parker, Colorado 80134 Church Office – (303) 841-3836
LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA
New Thought...Ancient Wisdom
Worship Services Sundays at 9:00am
www.gracepointcc.us
Sunday Worship: 10:45AM & 6PM Bible Study: 9:30AM Children, Young People & Adults
Parker
Joy
Where people are excited about God’s Word.
Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors.
technical assistance to help schools make the change. But I will say, this is a big change,” Anthes said. State education officials are hoping that within a few years, teachers will embrace the ramped-up evaluation process as a chance to become better at their profession. They have reason to hope. Denver physical education teacher David Weiss at Slavens K-8 School said the new evaluation process is a boon for electives teachers who don’t have test scores to point to, or administrators who know his field. “Since this all started, I’ve had conversations about my instruction that I haven’t had before. The conversation was much easier to have, and it’s nice to have a clear framework,” Weiss said. Rossi, the Jefferson County social studies teacher who hasn’t gone through evaluations yet, said teachers are optimistic they’ll have an experience like Weiss. Rossi was an outspoken critic of the evaluation law that was adopted in 2010, but she said she’s optimistic it will result in better experiences for students. “It was a poorly written law, but once it was law, teachers rose to the challenge and said, `What are we going to do, how are we going to implement it?’” Rossi said. “So I’ve noticed a lot more intensive conversations about classroom teachers. Not that those conversations haven’t been going on all along. But I’ve seen more commitment.”
Parker
First United Methodist Church
Littleton
evaluators went through pages of detailed benchmarks to decide a final rating. The goal of the exercise was to make sure observations result in similar scores for the teachers, regardless of who is observing them. DPS started rating all teachers last year, but the ratings don’t start counting toward tenure until this school year. By the 2014-15 school year, the ratings can start damaging teachers rated “ineffective.” Teachers with tenure face losing that status after two years of “ineffective” ratings. Struggling teachers are supposed to receive extra help to improve student outcomes. State education officials say they’re helping smaller districts adjust to the new teacher-rating scheme. But resources are scarce, and schools are still climbing back to budget levels they had before the recession. Denver has received several million dollars from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and has its own rating system that complies with statewide requirements. However, many districts will be using state templates or writing their own to gauge teacher effectiveness. Katy Anthes, who is leading implementation of the educator effectiveness evaluations for the Colorado Department of Education, said state districts will be ready. But she conceded the change won’t be without headaches. “We have the tools and templates and
60 W Littleton Blvd, Unit 101 Littleton CO 80120 303 523 7332
Sunday School
(for children and adults)
9:00 am
Morning Worship Service 10:30 am Evening Worship Service 6:30 pm
Greewood Village Saint Peter Lutheran Church and Rainbow Trail Lutheran Camp
Hilltop United Church Of Christ 10926 E. Democrat Rd. Parker, CO 10am Worship Service www.hilltopucc.org 303-841-2808
Pastor David Fisher Fellowship & Worship: 9:00 am Sunday School: 10:45 am 5755 Valley Hi Drive Parker, CO 303-941-0668
www.SpiritofHopeLCMC.org
Day Camp 2013 August 5 – 8 9300 E. Belleview Ave. Greenwood Village Colorado 80111 303-770-9301 or www.stplc.org
*ages 3 yrs to those entering 6th grade
Breakfast 8:15 am Prayer 6:00 pm
Bible Study
Prayer 5:45 pm Dinner 6:15 pm Additional Meeting Times: Friday 6:30 pm Prayer Saturday 10:30 am—12:00 noon Open Church (Fellowship/Canvassing)
7:00 pm
To advertise your place of worship in this section, call 303-566-4091 or email kearhart@ourcoloradonews.com.
5
Elbert County News 5
August 8, 2013
m Fundraiser to help Black Forest sanctuary
make a bigAfternoon
activities will include barbecue, auction, that bracebluegrass at event center
as a ofes-Special to the News
enver Come join the fourth annual “A Fancy ss atFeast” Fundraiser benefitting Wild Blue Anationimal Rescue & Sanctuary, a local nonprofit, whono-kill rescue and the cats, dogs and horses min-they work to save. The afternoon full of activities is being nver-held on Aug. 18 at The Pinery event center ven’tin Black Forest. Festivities begin at 1 p.m. muchwith a social hour and a silent auction while clearenjoying the bluegrass music of awardwinning local family band The Wielands of udiesMass Destruction. alua- The day’s event will be emceed by Brithey’lltany Bailey, of KRDO News Channel 13. as an that opties for
Dinner, an incredible barbecue buffet, will begin at 2pm, proceeded by the infamous Wild Blue Parade of Pets and followed by a live auction with top items including a foursome of golf at Flying Horse, a Michael Garman sculpture and a six-day photo safari and stay at a beautiful South African lodge. Last year the event raised nearly $7,000 and hosted 200 guests. “This year we hope to raise $10,000 during the benefit to help us begin our regrowth and renewal process in the aftermath of the fire that destroyed the facilities of our veterinary partners and friends at the Black Forest Veterinary Clinic. We will also need to purchase replacement sanctuary materials (like cat trees and furniture) damaged during the recent flooding in Black Forest,” said Lauri Cross, Executive Director. “Our overarching need at Wild Blue is always funding for veterinary care,” continued Cross. “We are committed to saving
animal lives and every rescue pet gets full vet care — regardless of the cost incurred. We have had many kittens and cats who have needed additional medical care due to the stress caused by the evacuations for the recent fire and then the flooding.” Since its launch in 2010, Wild Blue has saved the lives of over 410 animals with adoptions spreading to as far away as Nebraska and North Carolina. With your help in the form of time, donations, and dedication it can help match rescued animals to loving owners, one at a time, and change both lives forever. Tickets to the event are $50 per person. Guests may also purchase eight-person tables at a discount, $380. Purchase advanced tickets/tables or make other donations, if you wish, by going to www.wbars.org and clicking on the Donate button. There are two options available for purchasing tickets. Individual
reservations (will call tickets) may also be made by emailing Lauri Cross at lauri@ wbars.org. Event sponsorships, ranging from $150 to $500, are also available, to include sponsorship of a table hosting first responders for the Black Forest Fire. Please contact Wild Blue for more information or to arrange for a sponsorship. About Wild Blue: Founded in 2010, Wild Blue Animal Rescue and Sanctuary is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization located in the Black Forest area of Colorado Springs, Colorado. Partnerships/Sponsorships and memberships are available. For more information about the shelter or how to make a financial donation call 719-964-8905. Visit www.wbars.org to learn more about Wild Blue and follow them on Facebook at Wild Blue Animal Rescue and Sanctuary.
ELBERT COUNTY NEWS IN A HURRY
Women’s finance class slated
nce it Robert Reiman of Edward Jones Investments will host a e andfinancial planning workshop from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Aug. 21 at e wethe Elizabeth Public Library. This free event will explore a variety of topics, all from nsivea woman’s point of view. Topics include preparing for hers.retirement, retirement living and how to pay for children’s beeneducation expenses. Appetizers and refreshments will be com-served. RSVP to Sandy at 303-646-8871 no later than Aug. 20. Seating is very limited. The Elizabeth Public Library is located at 651 Beverly St.
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Plans are underway for the 2013 Elizabeth Area Chamber of Commerce Golf Tournament. Tee up this year on Sept. 13 at the Spring Valley Golf Course, 42350 County Road 17/21. Sponsorships are available and range from $100 to $700. A barbecue lunch and awards ceremony will follow the tournament. For more information, contact Beverly Durant, executive director at 303-646-4287 or by email at director@elizabethchamber.org. Registration forms can be found online at www.elizabethchamber.org, under the “events” tab.
School board hosts coffee
Elizabeth School District residents are invited to join the superintendent and members of the board of education for an informal coffee social from 4 to 6 p.m. Aug. 14 at Grumpy’s Coffee, 796 E. Kiowa Ave. in Elizabeth. Meet and mingle with board members, new teachers and discuss topics of interest including the BEST grant, the high school roofing project and recommendations for the November ballot. For more information about this and other school district activities, visit http://elizabeth.k12. co.us/.
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6-Opinion
6 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
opinions / yours and ours
Imagine there’s no Frankenstein A two-by-four is not two by four. The Cincinnati Airport is not in Ohio. Einstein never failed mathematics. Einstein said, “I never failed in mathematics.” Golf is not an acronym of “Gentlemen only, ladies forbidden.” George Washington Carver did not invent peanut butter. Thomas Edison did not invent the light bulb. Frankenstein was not the name of the monster in “Frankenstein,” the novel or the films. It was Carl. Just kidding. The monster’s name was “Frankenstein’s monster.” History, science, music, literature, religion, and technology are full of misconceptions that are passed along, generation after generation. The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was not caused by a cow. Cinco de Mayo is not Mexico’s Independence Day. Go ahead and eat a burrito in the pool. You do not have to wait 30 minutes after eating before swimming. Volkswagens will definitely float, but they will not float indefinitely. Henry Ford
did not invent the automobile. Sherlock Holmes never said, “Elementary, my dear Watson.” Men do not think about sex every seven seconds. True or false? Anyone can draw. True. A drawing can be no more than a mark left on a surface. A stick figure is considerably more than a mark left on a surface. If you can draw a stick figure, you can draw. However, if that’s the best you can do, you would have failed my drawing class. Do we believe in misconceptions? Yes. Do we believe in things that don’t exist? Yes. Do we believe in things and people we want to believe in, maybe against rational-
question of the week
What was your best summer trip? As the summer begins to wane, Colorado Community Media asked shoppers and visitors at The Streets at SouthGlenn
in Centennial to recall their most memorable summer vacation and what made it special.
“The best vacation was a trip to Tahiti I made with my wife and kids. As the plane was approaching the island runway, there was a Tahitian choir aboard and they began singing.” — Joe Thompson, Centennial
“Two vacations come to mind; one in Maui and the other in Grand Lake, Colo. I say Maui because it was the most luxurious and Grand Lake because it was the most fun.” — Linda Aumiller, Centennial
“I think the trip I made to Disneyland in California was the best. I was 19 and I drove all the way their with my family. What made it special was that I discovered it really wasn’t just for little kids.” — Carlos Cervantes, Aurora
“My most memorable vacation would be when I was younger and our family would take the traditional two-week vacation and drive from Oregon to Wyoming. We’d stop along the way to see relatives.” — Nancy Aeschlimann, Denver
Driving sheds light on character Sitting behind the steering wheel can reveal what is in the heart! The guy behind me did not think I was going fast enough, but I was going as fast as I could. My commute to Castle Rock was all the way from Lakewood in my Jeep Wrangler. Air conditioning in my Jeep is taking the windows off, so I wanted to go fast. The pedal was to the floor, but the slower traffic just past the hospital slowed my momentum, so I couldn’t get my little four-cylinder to go past 60 mph as I headed up the hill towards Castle Pines a few miles later. My Jeep has a little over 250,000 miles on it, so I knew what was going to happen and got all the way over into the right lane. In my rear-view mirror I could see him waving his hands and saying things that I probably shouldn’t put in the paper. Did he love his wife and kids so much that he was that eager to see them? Did he not recognize there were three lanes to our left so that he could pass me? Did he not know I was going as fast as I possibly could and that I too loved my family and wanted to get home? He continued to express his anger when I kept going straight and he exited. For the few seconds our vehicles were next to each other he lectured me with his horn. It did not warn me I made a mistake or try to caution me for some reason. It was his expression of anger and disapproval of me. I was in his way and, apparently, who he was and whatever he was doing was more important and/or correct than who I was and what I was doing. Discourtesy is really disregard for others. It does not honor who they are or consider what they are going through.
I have caught myself making similar mistakes. The guy in front of me at the coffee shop was way to slow in finding his parking place. “Come on Pops,” I mumbled. “It’s not that complicated. Just put your car into an open space.” You can imagine my chagrin when I saw him get the wheelchair out of his trunk and place his adult son in it so they could enjoy a dose of caffeine. Early one morning I was completing a hospice call. A mother had passed and the grieving family left our facility and headed to their cars. We had been together so I stood still and watched them leave. Since they were getting in their cars, it occurred to me that these dozen people were going to head back into everyday life with weeping inside of them and the people at their work, school, stores and in traffic were going to have no idea how much they were grieving. Maybe one of them was the person that did not go the instant the light turns green, lost in their thoughts. Church parking lots can reveal the level of spiritual maturity of the congregation and the effectiveness of the sermon. A few minutes after they were singing praises, praying about their needs and being exhorted from the Holy Scriptures, they will Hettinger continues on Page 7
ity? You bet. Mudville believed in Casey. Metaphorically we can extend that out to almost anyone — to the lead singer in a band, to an evangelist, to a head coach. Say it ain’t so, Joe. Joe Paterno cried when he realized the extent of the damage that had been done to his program and to his legacy. I am always a little suspicious of just about anything and everyone. A friend sent me a postcard when I was in college. It was a very old postcard, maybe from the 1930s, and under a strange image were the words, “All things are not what they seem.” I have kept that in mind ever since. We want to believe in something or someone other than ourselves, but it should be cautionary, at least when it comes to earthly someones, like Lance Armstrong and priests. The Broncos. If you have a Bronco Basement, you may want to re-evaluate it. Politicians have fallen all over the place.
Sometimes it doesn’t seem to matter. One was re-elected mayor of Washington, D.C. I am still shaking my head. We have short memories, and we are forgiving, although I don’t believe Lance will ever make it all the way back. Faith is one thing, and blind faith is another, at least it is to me. I question everything except who is buried in Grant’s Tomb. You may not be skeptical, but I am. I can’t even trust myself, and that’s been one of my biggest disappointments. Me. I have drifted here and there. I guess we are supposed to, and learn from it. The music for this column could be John Lennon’s “Imagine,” which was very perplexing to me when I heard it for the first 50 times. I think I get it now. “Imagine there’s no heaven.” Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast. net
Coloradans key in fixing immigration It’s not often we witness Colorado’s high-tech innovators, third-generation farmers, prominent business executives, traditional faith leaders, aspiring young immigrants and leading law enforcement officials uniting behind a common cause. It is even less likely in Washington, D.C., for Republicans and Democrats from across the nation to come together to tackle a complex national crisis and write a landmark bill with bipartisan support. The long and tireless work of these unlikely allies culminated in the immigration bill the United States Senate passed with a broad, bipartisan vote earlier this summer. The bill will strengthen our economy and secure our borders. It will establish a sensible and rational system for the flow of future immigrants, put in place a process to reunite families and provide a tough but fair path to citizenship for millions of people who came to this country for a better life but are living in the shadows. The long road to Senate passage began for our office roughly two years ago with the Colorado Compact. We brought together people from throughout the state of different backgrounds, industries and perspectives to talk about the challenges of the current immigration system. Every member of this diverse coalition shared their frustration with our current immigration system and said that it was fundamentally broken.
Elbert County News 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
gerard healey President and Publisher Chris rotar Editor sCott gilBert Assistant Editor erin addenBrooke Advertising Director audrey Brooks Business Manager sCott andrews Creative Services Manager sandra arellano Circulation Director ron ‘MitCh’ MitChell Sales Executive
Traveling around Colorado you’ll see these frustrations exemplified. Farmers on the Western Slopes and Eastern Plains watch their crops wither on the vines because they can’t hire the workers they need to harvest them. Ski resorts and our tourism industry struggle with an unworkable system for their seasonal workers. Start-up and high-tech business owners watch as we educate the world’s best and brightest in our schools of higher ed and graduate programs only to send them back to their own countries, where we then spend the next 20 years competing against them for the ideas and intellectual property our schools help instill in them. The Senate immigration bill streamlines have the visa system and aligns it with the needs they the d of our businesses, while still protecting An American workers and jobs. drive Bennet continues on Page 7us Ch car o It is a you r alone Colorado Community Media Iw Phone 303-566-4100 • Fax 303-566-4098
Columnists and guest commentaries The Elbert County News features a limited number of regular columnists, found on these pages and elsewhere in the paper, depending on the typical subject the columnist covers. Their opinions are not necessarily those of the Elbert County News. Want your own chance to bring an issue to our readers’ attention, to highlight something great in our community, or just to make people laugh? Why not write a letter of 300 words or fewer. Include your full name, address and the best number to reach you by telephone.
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7-Color
Elbert County News 7
August 8, 2013
Standard set for ‘gluten free’ label Market has grown, along with more celiac diagnoses By Mary Clarke Jalonick Associated Press
A label that reads “gluten free” will now mean the same thing for all food, regardless of which kind you buy. After more than a six-year delay, the Food and Drug Administration has set a new standard for labels that will make shopping easier for consumers on glutenrestricted diets. Until now, the term “gluten free” had not been regulated, and manufacturers made their own decisions about what it means. Under an FDA rule announced Aug. 2, products labeled “gluten free” still won’t have to be technically free of wheat, rye and barley and their derivatives. But they will have to contain less than 20 parts per million of gluten. That amount is generally recognized by the medical community to be low enough so that most people who have celiac disease won’t get sick if they eat it.
Healey Continued from Page 2
Although some believe the well replenishes itself, it is commonly known that the dirt is brought in from nearby hills and blessed by a priest. Still, an intense reverence fills this space. A frail, elderly woman, helped by her daughter, bends slowly, with difficulty, her hand trembling slightly and reaching for the silken dirt in the hole. She clutches a small fistful and wrings the dirt through her hands. “Gracias a Dios,” she whispers. Thanks be to God. They slowly walk out, the daughter gently supporting her mother. Ross Milliken, 58, and his girlfriend, Julie Rom, 53, enter and glance quietly around the room. At the poem on the wall: “If you are a stranger, if you are weary from the struggles in life, whether you have a handicap,
Hettinger Continued from Page 6
have the opportunity to prove how much they can let it affect their lives by the way the drive. And if you are going to be an aggressive driver, please save the reputation of all of us Christians and do not put a fish on your car or a bumper sticker about your church. It is a bad testimony, because it shows that you really do not respect other people, let alone the law. I would like to find a cure for cancer,
Bennet Continued from Page 6
Our flawed system has also left 11 million people in the shadows with few options and no opportunity. That’s bad for our economy as Americans try to compete with undocumented workers who are often paid under the table, driving salaries down. It’s also bad for families, when parents live in fear of being deported and separated from their American-born kids. The tough but fair path to citizenship in the Senate bill provides a sensible solution. Undocumented immigrants must pay taxes, pay a fine, learn English and stay out of trouble with the law to access this path, which can’t be completed until the bill’s border security measures are in place. The border security measures were crafted under the leadership of Senators John McCain and Jeff Flake, Republicans
People who suffer from celiac disease don’t absorb nutrients well and can get sick from the gluten found in wheat and other cereal grains. Other countries already have similar standards. Celiac disease affects up to 3 million Americans. It causes abdominal pain, bloating and diarrhea, and people who have it can suffer weight loss, fatigue, rashes and other long-term medical problems. Celiac is a diagnosed illness that is more severe than gluten sensitivity, which some people self-diagnose. Only a very small number of people wouldn’t be able to ingest the amount of gluten that will be allowed under the new rule, FDA officials said. “Adherence to a gluten-free diet is the key to treating celiac disease, which can be very disruptive to everyday life,” FDA Commissioner Margaret A. Hamburg said. “The FDA’s new ‘gluten-free’ definition will help people with this condition make food choices with confidence and allow them to better manage their health.” The new FDA rule also would ensure that foods with the labels “no gluten,” “free of gluten,” and “without gluten” meet the
whether you have a broken heart, follow the long mountain road, find a home in Chimayó ….” At the hole in the floor: As they leave, Ross bends and lets his fingers briefly brush the dirt. The couple has stopped here on their way home to Fort Collins from a wedding in Santa Fe. They are Christians, they say, not Catholic, but they like the spirituality of Catholic tradition. As for the dirt, “I think that people have faith, and it’s faith that heals,” Julie says. “Whether it’s the dirt or not, it’s the faith that heals them.” Ross agrees. But he acknowledges he felt moved to touch the blessed dirt. “There might,” he says, “be something to it.” There just might.
definition. Manufacturers will have a year to comply, though the FDA urged companies to meet the definition sooner. Many companies that market glutenfree foods already meet the standard. But Andrea Levario of the American Celiac Disease Alliance said the federal guidelines will cut down on painstaking shopping for those who suffer from celiac disease. Levario said wheat must be labeled on food packages, but barley and rye are often hidden ingredients in food. The standard will also ensure that companies can’t label products “gluten-free” even if they are cross-contaminated from other products made in the same manufacturing facility. She said shopping can be like “playing Russian roulette” for people who have celiac. “This will eliminate confusion for the consumer and will cut down on calls to companies to try and determine whether their products are safe and gluten free,” she said. Michael Taylor, FDA deputy commissioner for foods, said the rule originally proposed during the George W. Bush administration was delayed because the agency was evaluating what standard was correct.
“We wanted to do a careful scientific assessment of the data and the range of sensitivities,” Taylor said. Congress originally directed the FDA to set the standards in 2004 as part of a larger law that required food packaging to list major allergens. In the decade since Congress considered the standards, gluten-free foods have become big business. Millions of people are buying the foods because they say they make them feel better, even if they don’t have celiac disease. Americans spent more than $4 billion on gluten-free foods last year, according to the American Celiac Disease Alliance. One of the largest manufacturers of gluten-free foods, Boulder Brands, said it has been seeing double-digit growth in sales and is looking at expanding into bigger markets. The company’s brands, Glutino and Udi’s, already meet the new standards. “We expect the new regulations to impact sales in a positive way as consumers can feel more confident in their gluten-free choices,” said T.J. McIntyre, executive vice president of the company.
milestones Education
Katelyn M. Newman, of Elbert, was named to the spring 2013 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Alicia M. Cox, Colette Liane Fleury, Matthew Hughes, Nicole Richelle Long and Kaitlyn Nicole Weitzman, of Elizabeth, were named to the spring 2013 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Adam B. Stanfill, of Kiowa, was named to the spring 2013 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. McKenzi A. Digby and Michael A. Mullin, of Simla, were named to the spring 2013 dean’s list at the University of Wyoming. Nicholas Tokarsky, of Elizabeth, was named to the spring 2013 vice president honor roll at Adams State University.
Jennifer M. O’Day, of Elbert, earned a PHRD in May from the University of Wyoming. PHRD Richard A. Darter and Matthew Joseph Fleury, of Elizabeth, earned bachelor’s degrees in May from the University of Wyoming. Sharon Michelle Totsch, of Kiowa, earned a bachelor’s degree in May from the University of Wyoming. Nicholas Tokarsky, of Elizabeth, was named to the spring 2013 vice president honor roll at Adams State University. Kaylee Campbell and Amanda Short, of Elizabeth, were named to the spring 2013 dean’s honor roll, and Chelsea Kueht, of Elizabeth, was named to the dean’s list of distinction, at the University of Northern Colorado.
Ann Macari Healey’s column about people, places and issues of everyday life appears every other week. She can be reached at ahealey@ourcoloradonews.com or 303-5664110.
eliminate crime, fix the economy and usher in world peace. But I probably should not worry about such grand things until I actually do something that is possible every time I get behind the steering wheel. That challenge reveals what is in my heart and that is something God can change and it will be a difference many times every day. Dan Hettinger is director of pastoral services at Hospice of Saint John and president of The Jakin Group, a ministry of encouragement, especially to Christian workers. You can email him at dhettinger@hospiceof saintjohn.org or dan@welcometothebig leagues.org.
from Arizona. If anyone knows a thing or two about what it’s like to live next to a border, and what border security our nation needs, it’s these two. The border security measures include unprecedented steps to make our borders stronger than ever: doubling the number of border agents, completing 700 miles of fencing and adding new technology to provide 100 percent surveillance. As a member of the group of eight lawmakers who drafted this bill, I am grateful for the input and feedback Coloradans gave us during the process. We came together to fix a broken system and address one of our nation’s major challenges. Now, we’re on the doorstep of success; Colorado needs the House of Representatives to take action and pass a bill so we can solve these problems for our economy and our communities. Michael Bennet is a Democrat who has represented Colorado in the U.S. Senate since 2009.
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8-Color
8 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
Cabela’s offers sneak peek of Lone Tree store Aug. 15 opening expected to lure thousands of visitors By Jane Reuter
jreuter@ourcoloradonews.com Camouflage-clad Cabela’s employee Jake Merritt sounded a duck call to direct Denver-area media from the parking lot into the nearly complete Lone Tree store July 30. Merritt set the tone for the sneak peek event, held two weeks before the store’s Aug. 15 public opening. Inside, Cabela’s employees lounged around a faux campfire, surrounded by Cabela’s tents, backpacks, a lantern and cooler. Others offered samples of the store’s signature fudge and demonstrated fly fishing and archery. Another sounded a duck call from inside a camouflage blind — all of it under the eyes of mounted wildlife posed high on the walls of the 110,000-square-foot store. The employees were playful, the excitement palpable. “We expect thousands of people lined up before the ribbon cutting,” spokesman Joe Arterburn said. “They’ll probably be some overnight campers.” Other Cabela’s employees, known as outfitters, said they’re anxious to share the store with the public. “We want to show customers what we can do,” senior hard line manager Jeff Surry said. “Our job is to create that legendary Cabela’s experience. “We cater to people that are going to go hunting in minus-20-degree weather to people that just want to hang out in the back yard in their flip flops.” The Cabela’s experience, Surry said, includes taking a personal interest in customers, matching their outdoor abilities with the right gear and even pointing anglers to the state’s best fishing holes. “We know where to go and how to get there,” said Jeff Butler, a former Colorado Division of Wildlife employee and lifetime fly fisherman who will work in the fishing department. “We’ll pull out maps and show you. “They’re not just hiring clerks in this store. They’re hiring outfitters who have knowledge. It’s not just selling you something. We sell fun.” Kirby Boos, popping out of a camouflaged duck blind to demonstrate game calls, clearly was having fun. “I’ve had a passion for teaching people about the outdoors all my life, and now I get to do it every day,” said the Littleton resident. In the gun library, Toby Spanel proudly pointed to a late 1800s Winchester rifle bearing a $32,500 price tag he said the Arapahoe County sheriff ordered during the City Hall War of 1894, a conflict prompted by the then-governor’s attempted forcible removal of several City of Denver employees. It’s among several collector guns featured in
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Store employee Kirby Boos of Littleton demonstrated duck calls during the July 30 media sneak peek at the Lone Tree Cabela’s. Photos by Jane Reuter the library. “I feel really honored to be able to work here,” Spanel said. The Lone Tree store also includes a mountain replica with mounted game animals, which Cabela’s calls its conservation mountain. It includes an interactive display with information on each of the mountain’s species. Other features include two coldwater fish aquariums and a cafe. Cabela’s hired more than 200 employees at its Lone Tree site, the larger of two Denver-area stores opening simultaneously. A 90,000-square-foot store also will debut in Thornton. Doors open on both stores at 11 a.m. Aug. 15. The company, launched in 1961, bills itself as the largest mail-order, retail and Internet outdoor outfitter in the world.
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Jeff Surry, a manager at the Cabela’s in Lone Tree, pauses during a July 30 tour with Denver-area media at the new store’s centerpiece — a mountain replica depicting North American game.
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Elbert County News 9 August 8, 2013
Water blossoms in spotlight at Botanic Gardens
At the midday ceremonies that kick off the Colorado Scottish Festival, all the clans march in prior to the air being filled with bagpipes. This year marks the 50th year of the festival. File photo
Colorado Scottish Festival turns 50 Haggis, whiskey, Nessie, bagpipes descend on Ranch By Ryan Boldrey
rboldrey@ourcoloradonews.com Grab your kilt and get ready for some bagpipes. The 50th annual Colorado Scottish Festival is just around the corner. Slated for Aug. 10-11 in Highland Heritage Park in Highlands Ranch, this year’s festivities will feature Highlands Games, haggis tasting, drum, dance and Bonny Knees competitions, games for the kids, live music, and of course, Nessie. Expecting to draw between 10,000 and 12,000 people over the two-day celebration, festival director John Thornton said each year the Celtic party gets a “wee bit better.” “It’s pretty darn exciting,” he said. “This thing started as a family picnic with just a handful of people in a park up near Conifer, cooking some hot dogs and drinking some beer. It’s morphed into a festival that at-
tracts people from all over the world.” The festival outgrew its Conifer roots by the early 1980s, and made the move to the Colorado School of Mines’ athletic complex. It wasn’t long, Thornton said, before it outgrew the school grounds and in 1990, about the time he started running the show, the event moved to Highlands Ranch, where it’s stayed put ever since. “It’s really a family event,” Thornton said. “Unlike a lot of festivals that center around a lot of beer drinking and things like that, we try to cater to all ages. After all, the kids of today are the Scottish enthusiasts of tomorrow.” For those looking to cool off on a hot summer day with an adult beverage, no fretting is allowed, the dog-friendly festival will have adult beverages available on site. Celtic rock group Angus Mohr will also perform from 6 to 9:30 p.m. Aug. 10. Promising more events than ever before packed into two days, Thornton said the festival is a great opportunity to learn more
about one’s own Celtic heritage, regardless of whether it is Scottish, Irish or British. “People can come on down, have a taste of the ol’ Scottish soul food, haggis, and if you are an adult you can have a wee bit of whiskey to wash it down with,” he said. For more information on the festival, including a complete schedule of events, visit www.scottishgames.org or call the festival hotline at 303-238-6524. The festival is from 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Aug. 10 and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 11 at 9651 S. Quebec Street in Highlands Ranch. Single-day tickets, available on the site, range from $9 to $18 with multiple options available for seniors, kids, and adults who wish to spend an entire day on the grounds or just attend the Saturday concert. Children 6 and under receive free admission. Volunteers are still being sought for the festival, and Thornton said for four hours of service, volunteers get in for free for the remainder of the day. If interested in volunteering, please call Thornton at 303-5236469.
Book’s action is mostly interior Character’s minds provide scenes in ‘Kind of Cruel’ By Sonya Ellingboe
sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com British writer Sophie Hannah’s action in “Kind of Cruel” takes place to a great extent within the minds of her characters, interpreted/aided by hypnotherapist Ginny Saxon, whose office is in a small wooden structure at the rear of her home. No chases through busy city streets or in glitzy office buildings, but a focus on words on a slip of paper and puzzling motives of a collection of characters lead one to turn the pages. Hannah, who will be in Denver Aug. 9, has published six previous books featuring perceptive police detective Simon Waterhouse and his wife, Charlotte “Charlie” Zailer. Simon reminds a reader of great British crime solvers such as Sherlock Holmes and Miss Marple, who piece elements together until there is a solution to the crime(s) at hand. She writes this book in several voices — one sometimes needs to revisit the beginning of a chapter to sort that part out — including italicized print for psychotherapist Saxon, who carries the story along. Action takes place from Nov. 30 to Dec. 10, 2010. Hannah tried hypnosis herself to add depth to her story and sort out what the
Meteor shower coming
South Suburban’s Carson Nature Center will host a session from 9 to 10:30 p.m. August 12 to look for the Perseid meteor shower. Open to all ages. Register for #672888, $9/$6 at sspr.org.
Photographer to talk
Nancy Meyer will talk to the Englewood Camera Club on Aug. 13 at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. She will speak about her “Pseudo-line-drawings” and her inspirations from other artists, including Georgia O’Keeffe, Freeman Patterson, Tony Sweet and, Mark S. Johnson. She enjoys experimenting with new photographic techniques in-camera and in digital editing. The doors will open at 6:30 p.m., and visitors are welcome.
Comedy in Parker
The Celtic House Pub in Parker is hosting comedy nights at 6 p.m. the first and third Thursdays and a showcase on the last Monday of the month, according to comedian Jiovani, who is producing them. Free. The pub is at 16572 Keystone Blvd., Parker, 720-951-5454.
Community theater fest
if you go
The Annual Colorado Community Theatre Coalition Festival is scheduled August 7-10 at the Denver Center Theatre Academy, in the Robert and Judi Newman Center for Theatre Education, 1101 13th St., Denver. Presenting companies: Aspen Stage Theatre, Aspen; Bas Bleu Theatre Company, Fort Collins; Coal Creek Theatre, Louisville; Heather Gardens Frolics Club, Aurora; Flying Rabbits Productions, Denver; Ignite Theatre, Aurora; Longmont Theatre Company, Longmont; Longmont Youth Theatre, Longmont; and Vintage Theatre, Aurora. Performances open to the public, $10/$15 for two on the same day. The Denver Center Theatre Academy will offer 12 workshops. For schedule and to register: cctcfestival. com
Author Sophie Hannah will appear at the Tattered Cover/Colfax at 7:30 p.m. August 9 to talk about and read from “Kind of Cruel” and to sign books. The address is 2526 E. Colfax, Denver. 303-322-7727. process might mean. She writes that the idea came to her in part from a Canadian fan, whose address looked like a hypnotherapy site. The carefully crafted words come across as written by a scholarly sort — Hannah, who lives in Cambridge with her husband and children, is a Fellow Commoner at Lucy Cavendish College, a women’s college started at Cambridge in 1965. We first read the phrase “Kind. Cruel. Kind of Cruel” as insomniac Amber Hewardine struggles to figure out its meaning — and its involvement in a murder she is accused of. She embarks on hypnotherapy to cure her chronic insomnia and seeks the meaning of her visual remembrance of those words, written on a school tablet. When and where did she see them? Various characters in her extended family, including a husband and two young daughters of a murdered friend, are developed with enough depth so they have distinctive voices, and settings are pictured with enough detail to make them real, including a Cobham country house called Little Orchard, which almost becomes an-
The Colorado Water Garden Society will host its annual Water Blossom Festival from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Aug. 10 at Denver Botanic Gardens, with experts on hand to answer questions and tours of water features with Jim Arneill at 10:20 and 11:30. The CWGS is celebrating its 30th anniversary, after being founded at DBG as the first water gardening society in the world. Former aquatic collection curator Joe Tomochik will be on hand with stories about those many years before he retired, when the position transitioned to Tamara Kilbane. At 1 p.m., Joe Mascarenas will give a program on photographing water plants in the Plant Society Building. Festival admission is free, but one must pay garden admission, unless a member.
Goldstar arrives
British Thriller author Sophie Hannah’s “Kind of Cruel” was just released in the U.S. She will appear in Denver Aug. 9. Courtesy image other character. Numerous story threads are finally woven together in the final pages, as they should be in any satisfying thriller. The reader feels like she has returned from a brief trip.
Goldstar, which bills itself as “The World’s Biggest Ticket Booth,” arrived in Denver on July 31. Entertainment venues signed on to work with it include Arvada Center, Pepsi Center, Grand Chapiteau, Vintage Theatre. One can become a member free and then buy half-price tickets from Goldstar with a $5 service fee — still less than full price. They claim to help move out unsold tickets for venues to people who may not know about them. For information, see goldstar. com.
10-Color
10 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
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THINGS TO DO SEPT. 30
AUG. 8-10
GOLF TOURNAMENT. Mark Wiebe will again host the 8th annual Adam’s Camp charity golf tournament, presented by Retirement Plan and Investment Providers, to raise funds for the children, youth and families of Adam’s Camp. The tournament is on Sept. 30 at the Colorado Golf Club in Parker, and 132 golfers will have the opportunity to play the exclusive course, home to the 2013 Solheim Cup. Lunch, provided by Noodles and Company, will begin at 11 a.m. and the tournament shotgun start will be at 12:30 p.m.. Play will be followed by cocktails, dinner, live auction and prizes. Foursomes are $1,600, individual registration is $400 and limited sponsorships are available. Proceeds will support the children, youth and families of Adam’s Camp, of Centennial, which provides intensive therapy camps to children with developmental disabilities and their families as well as recreational camps for youth and young adults with disabilities. To sponsor, register or to learn more, visit www.adamscamp. org, call 303-563-8290 or email sarah@adamscamp.org.
merce announces a Business After Hours from 5-7 p.m. Aug. 8 at the offices of Joanne McLain, 34061 Forest Park Drive, Ste. 101, in Elizabeth. Joanne McLain and Alan Dean from Total Merchant Services will be your hosts. Learn about Joanne’s business of counseling, reflexology, and more. Learn about Alan’s services and how he can save you money. Enjoy visiting a local business and meeting other area business people. Great networking tool. Refreshments provided by the local business.
BOOK SALE. The Friends of the Elizabeth Library will have its annual used-book sale from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 8-10 at the Elizabeth Library. Thousands of books will be for sale, and all of the money goes directly to facilities, materials and programs at the Elizabeth Library. The main project that the Friends funded this year was the completion of the landscaping in front of the library building. The Friends also support our annual Halloween and Christmas activities, they provided the money to begin our Lucky Day DVD collection and they purchased our computer in our children’s area. The book sale is a great way to find just the book you’ve been looking for while supporting the public library. If you have questions or need more information about the sale, call the Elizabeth Library at 303-646-3416. AUG. 17
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MUSIC FESTIVAL. The Elizabeth Music & Arts Festival is from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Aug. 17 at Casey Jones Park in Elizabeth. Enjoy a day of live music, arts and crafts vendors, food and more. Activities all day long. Visit www.elizabethfestival.com AUG. 23-25 CAMPDRAFT EVENT. A campdrafting clinic and competition is Aug. 23-25 at Elbert County Fairgrounds in Kiowa. Be sure to be in Elbert County for the first ever in the United States Campdrafting event. Learn how to do this Australian sport at the clinic (champions coming from Australia to show you how it is done) and then test your skills at the first competition in the US. Don’t miss this unique opportunity. Contact Mary Harris at kiowacountryc@earthlink.net or 303-621-5836. Visit http:// campdraft.us. AUG. 25 MONTHLY BREAKFAST. The Elbert Woman’s Club will have its monthly breakfast from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday, July 28, and Sunday, Aug. 25, at the Russell Gates Mercantile Community Hall. Biscuits, gravy, sausage, ham, scrambled eggs, coffee/tea and juice are served for $6/adults and $3/children under 12. The hall is located in Elbert on Elbert Road between Highways 86 and 24, 11 miles south of Kiowa. Proceeds support the maintenance and renovation of the hall, built in 1906.
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chamber.org.
BUSINESS AFTER hours. The Elizabeth Area Chamber of Com-
ANNIVERSARY OPEN house. Elbert Lincoln School 42 will celebrate 100 years at an open house from 1-4 p.m. Sept. 7. SEPT. 13 GOLF TOURNAMENT. The Elizabeth Area Chamber of
Commerce presents the chamber golf tournament on Sept. 13 at Spring Valley Golf Club. Enjoy a morning of golf, fun, and meeting other business people. Shotgun starts at 8 a.m. with lunch and awards following all the fun. Visit www.elizabeth-
OCT. 26 HARVEST FESTIVAL. The Elizabeth Area Chamber of Commerce presents the Harvest Festival from noon to 3 p.m. Oct. 26 on Main Street in Elizabeth. Food, music, games and more. Spend an afternoon in Elizabeth for a safe Halloween by coming for trick-or-treat street throughout the town and enjoying games, vendors, food, and more on Main Street. Visit www. elizabethchamber.org. ONGOING THE OUTBACK Express is a public transit service provided through the East Central Council of Local Governments is open and available to all residents of Cheyenne, Elbert, Kit Carson and Lincoln counties and provides an economical and efficient means of travel for the four-county region. Call Kay Campbell, Kiowa, at 719- 541-4275. You may also call the ECCOG office at 1-800-825-0208 to make reservations for any of the trips. You may also visit http://outbackexpress.tripod.com. DIVORCE AND Post-Decree Clinic. Elbert and Lincoln County Pro Se Divorce Clinic is offered from 9 a.m. to noon the third Friday of each month at the Elbert County Justice Center, 751 Ute St., in Kiowa. For information, call 303-520-6088 or email morgan@hayday.org. The clinic is free for parties who have no attorney and who are going through dissolution of marriage, legal separation, or post-decree cases. All walk-ins are welcome, and will be assisted on a first-come, first-served basis. THE ELBERT County Sheriffs Posse is a nonprofit volunteer organization that is part of the Elbert County Sheriffs Office. As volunteers we support the Elbert County Sheriffs Office, all law enforcement in our county, and the community at large. Membership is open to anyone without a criminal record. It meets the last Monday of the month at the Elbert County Sheriffs Office at 7 p.m. For more information or a membership application, go to http://www.elbertcountysheriff.com/posse. html, or contact Dave Peontek at 303-646-5456. THE ELIZABETH Food Bank, 381 S. Banner in Elizabeth (next door to Elizabeth Presbyterian Church) needs to let the public know that we are available to help anyone who needs food. The hours are Friday 12:30-3 p.m. and Saturdays from 9-11:30 a.m. Other times by appointment.
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Author shares joy of multiple languages Haitian-born writer is teacher in Denver
8th by Re- By Sonya Ellingboe r the sellingboe@ourcolorado ment is news.com olfers me to Writer, teacher, poet om- — Nicole Weaver of Censtart tennial was born in Haiti, inner, the youngest of six, where regis- her language was French; oceeds moved to New York at age amp, of10 with her family, where ildren she quickly learned Engas lish; won a full-ride college bilities. scholarship and eventually mp. became a teacher. She has taught French and Spanish in Denver Public Schools for 22 years — now at South om- High School. Oct. She speaks about the joy more. she found in the “Curious oming George” books, which her g New York teacher read to w. the class. They helped her learn English as she enjoyed the pictures and story content. ed While in college, she open spent a semester in France, on living with a family in Alcient sace-Lorraine. She hoped bell, for a job as United Nations ffice at translator when she gradu. You ated and got a communitycollege job teaching French unty and Spanish while she prerd pared for the necessary 751 exam. “I realized my passion mail ve no for teaching and helping age, le-students and went to gradcome, uate school at Bank Street College of Education,” she said. eer The next move was to ce. Texas for five years, where e, all she met her husband, a nage. tive Coloradan of German
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Elbert County News 11
August 8, 2013
“My Sister is My Best Friend” by Nicole Weaver is published in French, English and Spanish. Courtesy image ancestry. Their first child was born and they moved to Littleton in 1989 — “I have been here since.” Her children are now 25, 23 and 17. When her first, a daughter, left for Pepperdine University in California, Weaver became seriously depressed and a helpful friend took her to a meeting of children’s book authors and illustrators for a presentation on writing picture books. “Write about what you know,” that speaker advised, planting a seed. She remembered being out collecting sea shells and finding a sea turtle stranded upside down on the beach near her Haitian home, and calling on her dad to help
her get it back into the sea. Alas, he sent the cook to collect it for soup, but she wrote a picture book with a happier ending about a little girl who rescued a turtle — “Marie and the Sea Turtle.” She self-published that one, so she could be sure the child was black — “It’s my story.” (Generally, a commercial publisher contracts for illustrations and the author does not have control.) It is available at Tattered Cover in her distinctive style, with each sentence in English, French and Spanish, so a young child can begin to learn another language easily — a plus as our world grows smaller. She also entered a poetry
HAVE AN EVENT? To submit a calendar listing, send information to calendar@ourcoloradonews.com.
contest through the Arapahoe Library District and won $100 about this time. “I got to meet the mayor and had a story in the paper,” she recalls. The tri-lingual book is her trademark and is repeated in “My Sister is My Best Friend,” about the closeness of twins — and the forthcoming “My Brother is My Best Friend,” due in 2013. The illustrator, Clara Barton Smith, provided by her publisher, lives in Australia, she said, and did a fine job of capturing the spirit of her story. She wants to send the message that there’s nothing wrong with being smart — especially for AfricanAmerican kids. She is rewriting a middle school book previously published, which needs sounder editing, she said. English is not her first language and she still makes some errors in grammar, which embarrass her. She recently attended a class at the active Light House Writers Workshop in Denver, where the rewrite was suggested. Another future project will be writing something supportive for biracial kids, who have their own set of challenges. She recalled that at Pepperdine University, people wanted to place her daughter in some sort of category — “What are you?” Her books are available from Amazon or from her publisher at guardianangelpublishing.com.
CURTAIN TIME Dominican-Americans
“In the Heights,” with Lyrics and music by LinManuel-Miranda and book by Quiera Alegra Hudes, plays through Sept. 8 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St., Aurora. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: vintagetheatre. com.
Barth Hotel show
“Steel Magnolias” is the annual summer play at the historic Barth Hotel benefiting Senior Housing Options. It plays through Aug. 24 at the Barth’s lobby, 1514 17th St., Denver. Tickets: seniorhousingoptions.org.
Mythology and change
“Metamorphosis” by Mary Zimmerman plays Aug. 16 to Sept. 22 at the Aurora Fox Studio Theater, 9900 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. Directed by Geoffrey Kent. (The opening night is sold out.) Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays Aug. 25, Sept. 1, 8, 15, 22. Tickets: $26/$22, 303-739-1970; aurorafoxartscenter.org.
‘RFK’ returns
“RFK — A Portrait of Robert Kennedy” returns to the Vintage Theatre in Aurora, 1468 Dayton St., for a third run through Aug. 31, due to popular demand for this fine one-man performance by James O’Hagan
Murphy. Performances will be at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays in the small theater. Tickets: $25 ($20 advance). 303-856-7830, vintagetheatre.com.
‘Producers’ at PACE
“The Producers” will be presented by Inspire Creative from Aug. 23 to Sept. 7 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. Directed by Gary Lewis. Performances: 7 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: inspirecreative.org.
Celebration of womanhood
“A … My Name Will Always Be Alice” is conceived by Joan Micklin Silver and Julianne Boyd as a celebration of womanhood. It’s presented by The Theater Company of Lafayette from Aug. 16 to Sept. 7 at the historic Mary Miller Theatre, 300 E. Simpson St., Lafayette. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays Aug. 25 and Sept. 1. Tickets: 720-209-2154, tclstage.org.
Peanuts play
“You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown” plays Aug. 9 to Sept. 1 at the Curtain Playhouse, 3401 W. 29th Ave., Denver. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 1. Tickets: thecurtainplayhouse.com.
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12
12 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
Demolition man
smashing career has
Centennial resident dishes the dirt on derby racing By Deborah Grigsby
dgrigsby@ourcoloradonews.com It’s a dirty job, but somebody’s got to do it. And according to Tyler Jones of Centennial, that somebody is him. With his long dark locks and well-tanned hide, Jones looks more like some sort of magazine cover than a demolition derby driver, but the driver of “Pig Pen Racer,” a cannibalized Ford F-250 club cab pickup truck, says the idea of driving around in circles smashing into other vehicles is appealing. “Where else can I drive like this and not get a ticket,” he said. “Or worse yet, sued?” Jones was among several derby racers at the Fifth Annual Demolition Derby Race on July 28 at the Arapahoe County Fair. Open to drivers 16 and older with a valid driver’s license, the allamateur event pits drivers against each other in a muddy ring, each vying to disable the other by brute
Mud flies high during the demolition derby at this year’s Arapahoe County Fair.
force. Drivers smash into each other, and the last operational vehicle either advances to the next round or is declared the winner. Jones, who’s been racing for about eight years, said he purchased the Pig Pen Racer for $800. “I actually found it on Craigslist,” he said. “And since then, I’ve put another $2,000 into it.” But according to the doting father, the best upgrade made so far is the custom paint job created by his daughter, featuring the colorful blue and red handprints on the front driver’s side fender. Although Jones said serious injuries in the sport are rare, he has seen some guys who were “pretty banged up.” “I can’t say enough about protective gear,” said Jones, who’s never been injured. “Aside from additional padding within the cab of the truck, I also wear shin guards like hockey players, a helmet and a $600 custom neck brace, just in case.” He cautioned new drivers to do their homework, and start out small. “And always wear protective gear,” he said. “Always.”
Tyler “Pig Pen” Jones smiles from the cab of his Pig Pen Racer. Jones, a resident of Centennial, was part of the annual demolition derby race at the 2013 Arapahoe County Fair. The race pits driver against driver, with the last vehicle moving declared the winner of the event. Photos by Deborah Grigsby
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To: Heirs and Assigns of William Combs; deceased; and All Unknown Persons, Heirs and Assigns Who Claim Any Interest in the Subject matter of This Action.
Plaintiff: JP Morgan Chase Bank National Bank, successor by merger to Chase Home Finance LLC v. Defendants: Donald W. Combs; Brenda K. Combs; Elsie Combs, and Phil Ashburn, Heirs and Assigns of William Combs; deceased, The Public Trustee For The County of Elbert, State of Colorado; LVNV Funding LLC; and All Unknown Persons, Heirs and Assigns Who Claim Any Interest in the Subject matter of This Action Attorneys for Plaintiffs: FRANKE GREENHOUSE LLP Charles Greenhouse, #10506 KITTREDGE BUILDING 511 – 16th Street, Suite 610 Denver, CO 80202 (303) 623-4500 cgreenhouse@frankegreenhouse.com SUMMONS The People of the State of Colorado
Misc. Private Legals PUBLIC NOTICE DISTRICT COURT, ELBERT COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO Court Address: 751 Ute St., Kiowa CO 80117 Case No.: 2012CV260 Plaintiff: JP Morgan Chase Bank National Bank, successor by merger to Chase Home Finance LLC v. Defendants: Donald W. Combs; Brenda K. Combs; Elsie Combs, and Phil Ashburn, Heirs and Assigns of William Combs; deceased, The Public Trustee For The County of Elbert, State of Colorado; LVNV Funding LLC; and All Unknown Persons, Heirs and Assigns Who Claim Any Interest in the Subject matter of This Action Attorneys for Plaintiffs: FRANKE GREENHOUSE LLP Charles Greenhouse, #10506 KITTREDGE BUILDING 511 – 16th Street, Suite 610 Denver, CO 80202 (303) 623-4500 cgreenhouse@frankegreenhouse.com SUMMONS The People of the State of Colorado To: Heirs and Assigns of William Combs; deceased; and All Unknown Persons, Heirs and Assigns Who Claim Any Interest in the Subject matter of This Action. Plaintiff brings its claims by way of a Deed of Trust, dated January 2, 2002, recorded on March 18, 2002 at Book 626, Page 351, at Reception No. 415983, Elbert County, Colorado, and (the Deed of Trust”). You are summoned and required to file with the clerk of this Court an answer or other response to the Complaint seeking a complete adjudication of the
To: Heirs and Assigns of William Combs; deceased; and All Unknown Persons, Heirs and Assigns Who Claim Any Interest in the Subject matter of This Action.
Misc. Private Legals
Plaintiff brings its claims by way of a Deed of Trust, dated January 2, 2002, recorded on March 18, 2002 at Book 626, Page 351, at Reception No. 415983, Elbert County, Colorado, and (the Deed of Trust”). You are summoned and required to file with the clerk of this Court an answer or other response to the Complaint seeking a complete adjudication of the rights of all parties to this action with respect to the property referenced in the Deed of Trust which is located in the County of Elbert, State of Colorado, commonly known as 41028 Thunder Hill Road, Parker, CO 80138, and legally described as follows: LOT 30, THUNDER HILL, COUNTY OF ELBERT, STATE OF COLORADO. (the "Property"). And For a decree that the Deed of Trust, is a valid, first priority mortgage encumbering 100% of the interest in the Property; For a decree that pursuant to the doctrine of equitable subrogation, that the Deed of Trust is a valid Deed of Trust with priority relating back to the date the prior and paid-off deed of trust was recorded; A decree that the Deed of Trust be reformed to include William Combs as a grantor under the Deed of Trust; and For such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper. Such answer or other response to the Complaint must be filed within thirty five (35) days after this Summons is served on you by publication. If you fail to file your answer or other response to the Complaint in writing within the applicable time period, judgment by default may be entered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the Complaint, without any further notice to you. Dated this 2nd day of July, 2013 FRANKE GREENHOUSE LLP
Public Notice
Plaintiff brings its claims by way of a Deed of Trust, dated January 2, 2002, recorded on March 18, 2002 at Book 626, Page 351, at Reception No. 415983, Elbert County, Colorado, and (the Deed of Trust”). You are summoned and required to file with the clerk of this Court an answer or other response to the Complaint seeking a complete adjudication of the rights of all parties to this action with respect to the property referenced in the Deed of Trust which is located in the County of Elbert, State of Colorado, commonly known as 41028 Thunder Hill Road, Parker, CO 80138, and legally described as follows: LOT 30, THUNDER HILL, COUNTY OF ELBERT, STATE OF COLORADO. (the "Property").
SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY JUVENILE DIVISION In re the Welfare of MADDISON SANDRAKAY HOUDEK No. 13-7-00279-0 SHAYEDON LEROY HOUDEK D.O.B.: 12-01-2005 / 02-23-2007 13-7-00280-3 Minor Child NOTICE AND SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION (Termination) TO: JAMES EDWARD HOUDEK A Petition to Terminate Parental Rights was filed on June 13, 2013: A Fact Finding hearing will be held on this matter on: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 AT 10:00 am at the Juvenile Court located at 103 Hagara Street, Aberdeen, WA 98520. YOU SHOULD BE PRESENT AT THIS HEARING.
And For a decree that the Deed of Trust, is a valid, first priority mortgage encumbering 100% of the interest in the Property; For a decree that pursuant to the doctrine of equitable subrogation, that the Deed of Trust is a valid Deed of Trust with priority relating back to the date the prior and paid-off deed of trust was recorded; A decree that the Deed of Trust be reformed to include William Combs as a grantor under the Deed of Trust; and For such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper. Such answer or other response to the Complaint must be filed within thirty five (35) days after this Summons is served on you by publication.
Misc. Private Legals
If you fail to file your answer or other response to the Complaint in writing within the applicable time period, judgment by default may be entered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the Complaint, without any further notice to you. Dated this 2nd day of July, 2013 FRANKE GREENHOUSE LLP Charles Greenhouse, #10506 KITTREDGE BUILDING 511 – 16th Street, Suite 610 Denver, CO 80202 (303) 623-4500 Legal Notice No.: 927700 First Publication: July 11, 2013 Last Publication: August 8, 2013 Publisher: The Elbert County News Public Notice Notice of Sale Contents unknown and boxes of personal items, belonging to Persons Unknown, whose last known address is: Unknown, and stored in the unit #55B STORAGE ONE/Elizabeth, 5229 HWY 86 Elizabeth, CO. 80107, will be sold at auction or otherwise disposed of at this location After 08/23/2013. Legal Notice No.: 927734 First Publication: August 8, 2013 Last Publication: August 15, 2013 Publisher: Elbert County News
THE HEARING WILL DETERMINE IF YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD ARE TERMINATED. IF YOU DO NOT APPEAR AT THE HEARING THE COURT MAY ENTER AN ORDER IN YOUR ABSENCE TERMINATING YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS.
Misc. Private Public NoticeLegals
To request a copy of the Notice, Summons, and Termination Petition, call DSHS at 360/537-4300. To view information about your rights in this proceeding, go to: www.atg.wa.gov/TRM.aspx .
SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY JUVENILE DIVISION
Dated this 30th day of July, 2013 by, CHERYL BROWN, Grays Harbor County Clerk.
In re the Welfare of MADDISON SANDRAKAY HOUDEK No. 13-7-00279-0 SHAYEDON LEROY HOUDEK D.O.B.: 12-01-2005 / 02-23-2007 13-7-00280-3 Minor Child NOTICE AND SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION (Termination) TO: JAMES EDWARD HOUDEK A Petition to Terminate Parental Rights was filed on June 13, 2013: A Fact Finding hearing will be held on this matter on: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 AT 10:00 am at the Juvenile Court located at 103 Hagara Street, Aberdeen, WA 98520. YOU SHOULD BE PRESENT AT THIS HEARING. THE HEARING WILL DETERMINE IF YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD ARE TERMINATED. IF YOU DO NOT APPEAR AT THE HEARING THE COURT MAY ENTER AN ORDER IN YOUR ABSENCE TERMINATING YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS.
Public Notice
To request a copy of the Notice, Summons, and Termination Petition, call DSHS at 360/537-4300. To view information about your rights in this proceeding, go to: www.atg.wa.gov/TRM.aspx .
SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR GRAYS HARBOR COUNTY JUVENILE DIVISION
Dated this 30th day of July, 2013 by, CHERYL BROWN, Grays Harbor County Clerk.
In re the Welfare of MADDISON SANDRAKAY HOUDEK No. 13-7-00279-0 SHAYEDON LEROY HOUDEK D.O.B.: 12-01-2005 / 02-23-2007
W
Legal Notice No.: 927733 First Publication: August 8, 2013 Last Publication: August 22, 2013 Publisher: The Elbert County News
Misc. Private Legals
Legal Notice No.: 927733 First Publication: August 8, 2013 Last Publication: August 22, 2013 Publisher: The Elbert County News
Government Legals Public Notice Call for Nominations Office of School Board Director Board of Education Douglas County School District Re1 Douglas and Elbert Counties, Colorado The Board of Education of Douglas County School District Re1 in the Counties of Douglas and Elbert, State of Colorado, calls for nomination of candidates for School Board Directors to be placed on the ballot for the regular biennial school election to be held on Tuesday, November 5, 2013. At this election, four School Board Directors will be elected representing Director Districts B, D, E, and G for a term of office of four years. To be qualified, a candidate must have been a registered elector of the school district for at least 12 consecutive months before the election and a resident of the director district which they would represent. A person is ineligible to run for School Board Director if he or she has been convicted of committing a sexual offense against a child. A person who desires to be a candidate for School Board Director shall file a written notice of intention to be a candidate and a nomination petition signed by at least 50 eligible electors who are re-
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The Board of Education of Douglasin m County School District Re1 in the Counties of Douglas and Elbert, State ofhapp Colorado, calls for nomination of candidates for School Board Directors tocial p be placed on the ballot for the regular biTh ennial school election to be held on Tuesday, November 5, 2013. “Mak
At this election, four School Board Direct-Man” ors will be elected representing Directorcoun Districts B, D, E, and G for a term of office of four years. To be qualified, a canIt didate must have been a registered elector of the school district for at least 12 con-of its secutive months before the election and a resident of the director district which theyin De would represent. A person is ineligible toform run for School Board Director if he or she has been convicted of committing a sexu-show al offense against a child.
Government Legals
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A person who desires to be a candidateville” for School Board Director shall file a written notice of intention to be a candidate Bu and a nomination petition signed by at least 50 eligible electors who are re-even gistered to vote in the regular biennial school election. Nomination petition packets for the office of School Board Director may be obtained from: Nona Eichelberger Secretary and Designated Election Official Board of Education Douglas County School District Re1 Wilcox Administration Building 620 Wilcox Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 Phone: 303.387.0258 email: nona.eichelberger@dcsdk12.org The deadline for submitting a nomination petition to the above address is no later than 4:30 p.m. on August 30, 2013. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Board of Education of Douglas County School District Re1, Counties of Douglas and Elbert, State of Colorado, has caused this call for nominations to be given this 8th day of August 2013 Legal Notice No.: 927727 First Publication: August 8, 2013 Last Publication: August 15, 2013 Publisher: The Elbert County News
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13
Elbert County News 13
August 8, 2013
LeAnn Rimes to headline music festival Singer on 60-date tour to support latest album By Chris Michlewicz
cmichlewicz@ourcoloradonews.com These days, LeAnn Rimes is in a good place. In a few more, she’ll be in an even better place: Colorado. Rimes, who shot to stardom at the age of 13 with her swooning hit, “Blue,” and has since scored countless hits, is headlining this year’s Rocky Mountain Music Festival Aug. 11 at Clement Park in south Jeffferson County. In the midst of a 60-date tour supporting her latest album, “Spitfire,” Rimes is returning to familiar territory. She has historically been welcomed by the Centennial State with open arms, and performed at Gypsum Daze just three weeks ago. In recent years, Rimes has been head-
Leann Rimes will be performing at the Rocky Mountain Music Festival. Courtesy photo
positivity. Ditching the drama means enjoying the finer things in life, like the side treks she takes while on tour. Aspen is among her favorite spots, and Rimes has tried her hand at snowboarding (she is still mastering toeedge turns) and activities that have become perks of the job. Much like her wanderings across the country, Rimes has been exploring her musical acumen and continues to churn out songs that resonate with fans and those just now discovering her. She is navigating the ever-changing landscape of the entertainment business, including dabbling in movies, but believes she is writing the best music of her career. Rimes is following in the footsteps of idols such as Patsy Cline and Reba McIntyre, but also delving into contemporary artists like Ray Lamontagne who are forging their way in a music era in which meaningful lyrics seem to be an afterthought. “I love people who have something to say and say it well,” Rimes says. For information and tickets to the Rocky Mountain Music Festival, visit www. TheRockyMountainMusicFestival.com.
Western artists fill Littleton gallery Town Hall features joint show during festival
if you go
By Sonya Ellingboe
sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com
Sarah Phippen and Martin Lambuth will be the featured artists in Stanton Gallery at Town Hall Arts Center during Western Welcome Week and through August. “Western Heritage Art” is the title for their joint show. Phippen, who grew up in Douglas County, where she “soaked up sun, dirt and dander that continue to influence her choice of subjects,” creates oil paintings and bronze e and sculptures, which especially celebrate her en- longtime association with animals: pets, livestock and wildlife.
lition r Tyler hes a as he arena apefeat Opera company hopes 3 to draw city crowds
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lining magazines instead of festivals. Becoming a tabloid fixture — criticized for everything from weight loss to relationship issues to rehab stints to treat anxiety — was not exactly part of the career plan. But Rimes now seems to be taking it all in stride. “It’s hard to tune it out when you deal with it every week, but the conversation has changed to my music again,” she said. Citing husband Eddie Cibrian as a main support, Rimes says she has “weeded out anybody who didn’t need to be there” and, as a result, has become more content. She acknowledged that “it’s hard to write when you’re happy,” but she is able to channel any negative emotions into her newer, more rootsy material. “I allow myself to go into darker places when I write, but I am happier and can pull myself out of it at the end of the day,” Rimes said. Besides, maintaining an active presence on Twitter enables her to circumvent the rumors and talk directly with her fans. She receives encouragement from her devoted following and routinely tweets messages of
“Western Heritage Art” will be exhibited in Stanton Gallery on weekdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Sept. 10. A Meet the Artists Reception will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Aug. 15. Stanton Gallery is in Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St., downtown Littleton. 303-794-2787. “Observing the personalities and expressions of horses, cattle and wildlife allowed me to experience their quiet moments along with them or read trouble in their eyes and burst into movement. I see this heritage as part of our age-old relationship with animals. It is part of being human. There is a wonder and privilege that surrounds us every day in the rich variety of relationships available …. How does a horse smile?”
Central City steers ‘Showboat’ to Buell if you go
By Sonya Ellingboe
sellingboe@ourcoloradonews.com “Showboat,” written in 1927 by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II, has become a classic in American musicals, with its rich story and score and a deeper look at American society than was customary in musicals of the day. In addition to light, happy production numbers, it looks at racial prejudice and tragic love. The well-known songs “Ol’ Man River,” “Make Believe” and “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man” are often heard in concerts across the country. It is Central City Opera’s third selection of its 2013 Festival and will be performed in Denver at the Buell Theatre, Denver Performing Arts Complex, Aug. 6-11. Two other shows were performed at the 1877 stone opera house in Central City: “Barber of Seville” and “Our Town.” But that house only has 550 seats, so even a sold-out house doesn’t generate the
“Showboat” plays through Aug. 11 at the Buell Theatre, Denver Performing Arts Center. Performances: 2 p.m. Aug. 10, 11; 7:30 p.m. Aug. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Tickets: centralcityopera.org, 303-292-6700. sort of revenue it takes to stage opera performances. The company has strong support from many donors, but it hopes that a week’s production in a large house will draw the DCPA’s many musical theater fans as well. Director Ray Roderick is makes his debut with the company, although he has extensive Broadway and national tour experience. Hal France returns to lead the Central City Opera Orchestra, and cast members are Gene Scheer, Denise Lute, Julia Burrows, Emily Pulley, Angela Renee Simpson, Troy Cook, Soloman Howard, Curt Olds and Ellen Kaye. An additional “Riverboat Royale-Mardi Gras Ball” is hosted on Aug. 10 at the Dikeou Collection, 16th and California streets, Denver. (Ticket for matinee and ball-$95.)
coRRection An Aug. 1-2 story about Colorado Book Award winner Carolyn Mears included an
Send uS your newS Colorado Community Media welcomes event listings and other submissions. Please note our new submissions emails. events and club listings calendar@ourcoloradonews.com School notes, such as honor roll and dean’s list schoolnotes@ourcoloradonews.com
error about the funding for her doctoral research. She funded her research herself.
Military briefs militarynotes@ourcoloradonews.com General press releases Submit through our website Letters to the editor letters@ourcoloradonews.com Fax information to 303-566-4098 Mail to 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Ste. 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Martin Lambuth paints with old credit cards instead of brushes, which results in rich textures and layers of color. He has a nostalgia for old pickup trucks, found on “grandpa’s farm or along the road.” Sometimes, he finds them reposing in the weeds, abandoned — “they still have the ability to take you on a trip down memory lane and revel in their history.” He writes of the appeal of their wonderful shapes, rounded fenders and amazing grills not found on today’s vehicles. Lambuth has been juried into many national and local shows and won a first place at the 2012 Denver County Fair.
“White Gold,” an oil painting by Sarah Phippen, will be included in “Western Art Heritage” at Town Hall Art Center’s Stanton Gallery. Courtesy photo
ElbertSPORTS 14-Sports
14 Elbert County News August 8, 2013
Bailey contemplates sunset of career Broncos cornerback hopes for Super Bowl ring
‘But nobody’s going to determine when I move if I don’t feel like it’s the right time. It’ll definitely be a
By Eddie Pells
Associated Press It happens to so many of the great cornerbacks, and Champ Bailey knows it will happen to him, too. Entering his 15th year in the NFL and still in search of the Super Bowl title that is the only piece missing from a Hall of Famebound career, Bailey knows the move from cornerback to safety is inevitable for defensive backs trying to prolong their careers. “You’ve got to look at history,” Bailey told The Associated Press after practice on Aug. 1. “Ronnie Lott. Rod Woodson. Aeneas Williams. They all did it and they all did it before I did. History says this is about that time. I understand that and I’m not naive about it.” Lott was 26 when he made the move — a small detour on his way to the Hall of Fame. Williams was 33. Woodson was 34. Bailey turned 35 in the offseason. He knows the whispers and questions get louder with each passing year. Every time he gets beaten badly — and that happened twice in the playoff loss to Baltimore last year — it’s not simply a bad play, but rather a possible sign that his career is dwindling. Every time the Broncos sign or draft another cornerback — and that happened a handful of times this offseason — it’s not simply a transaction but rather a possible sign the Broncos are looking for his eventual replacement. All of which may be true, Bailey concedes. “But nobody’s going to determine when I move if I don’t feel like it’s the right time,” he said. “It’ll definitely be a decision and, whether I’m here or somewhere else, it has to be the right fit.” Through the first week of this, his 10th
decision and, whether I’m here or somewhere else, it has to be the right fit.’ Champ Bailey, Broncos cornerback
Champ Bailey is beginning his 15th season in the NFL. preseason with the Broncos, Bailey and Denver still look to be the right fit for each other, the way they have been since Bailey arrived in Denver in a trade with Washington for Clinton Portis in the 2004 offseason. Bailey is lining up in his usual spot on the corner, sparring with members of Denver’s loaded receiving corps — namely, Demaryius Thomas and Eric Decker. In deference to the mileage on those thirty-something legs, the Broncos are limiting his time on the practice field, the same way they have the last few seasons. “I think that’s going to help in the long run,” Bailey said. But his time on the sideline isn’t down time. It’s time spent observing, studying, mentoring. Bailey didn’t get to his spot as one of the most revered cornerbacks in the
game without becoming a student of the game itself. “I would say the defense, really,” cornerback Chris Harris said when asked what he’s learned from Bailey. “Being able to ID what the offenses are trying to do to try to attack me. Champ gives me an idea how guys want to run routes toward him.” Harris is among those benefiting from playing in the same backfield as Bailey, but also among those who could be in line to take his spot one day. In the offseason, the Broncos signed free agent Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie and drafted speedy Kayvon Webster, who, upon learning he would get the chance to play with Bailey, said, “I love Champ. Favorite corner.” After each move, the underlying question was whether the transaction signaled the official start of the beginning of the end for Roland “Champ” Bailey in the lockdown corner position. “He can still get the job done,” Harris insists. “He wouldn’t be here if he can’t do it. Everybody has confidence in him to still be Champ Bailey.” By “being Champ Bailey” over his first 14 seasons, he has compiled one of the most impressive stat lines in history for a cornerback, including: • 12 career Pro Bowl selections, a record for a defensive back.
Broncos rack up Blooper Bowl wins There are two kinds of reality shows: Those that are bad and those that are worse. “Jersey Shore” was bad. “The Real Housewives of New Jersey” was worse. “Being Bobby Brown,” bad. Being the barren mind behind “Here Comes Honey Boo Boo,” worse. And who among us doesn’t hold at least some sentiment that the producers of “Toddlers and Tiaras” should be considered for execution via guillotine — with a tiara glued to each one’s head, for poetic justice? Like Michael Jordan, you can’t stop reality shows; you just gotta hope to contain them by rolling your eyes and changing the channel. But if you’re a member of the Denver Broncos organization, it’d be hypocritical of you to talk trash about TV’s garbage. That’s because off-season after off-season, all the team does is pump out reality show-like drama. Sometimes it’s fun. Sometimes it’s not. But, seeing as how the team hasn’t been to a Super Bowl since the 1998 season, Broncos’ drama is, at the very least, getting old. The Broncos have been the NFL leaders in off-season drama for about five years now, going back to 2008, with Mike Shanahan’s starring role in the team’s version of “Chopped,” during his firing as head coach. In 2009, the Broncos rolled out the short-lived “Kid Nation,” with the hiring of the 5-year-old Josh McDaniels as their coach. Then, in the spring of that year, McDaniels thought it would be fun to mortgage the team’s future by
trading in their second-, third- and fourth-round NFL draft picks to the Baltimore Ravens, in order to grab Tim Tebow in the first round — kind of like McDaniels was running the team like it was a lemonade stand, but got duped into giving back change for a 50 to a bully who paid him with 20 bucks in Monopoly money. Oh, and on April 2, just a couple of weeks before drafting Tebow, the Broncos traded starting quarterback Jay Cutler to the Chicago Bears. Less than two weeks after that, star wide receiver Brandon Marshall was traded to Miami. It was “Extreme Makeover” time. Then, during the miserable 2010 season, owner Pat Bowlen — who finally realized his mistake of handing over the organization’s keys to a dude who was still getting around on a bicycle that had training wheels — fired McDaniels. Bowlen then brought John Elway into the front office, before Elway, “The Apprentice,” hired John Fox as head coach. Then, in 2011, came everyone’s favorite off-season reality show, “So, You Think You Can Pass?” starring Tim Tebow. Tebow Drama dominated Broncos camp that year, which proved to be too much for the pedestrian quarterback Kyle Orton to
handle. Then, after actually making the playoffs under Tebow, the Broncos embarked on their next reality hit, last year’s “Who wants to marry a Manning?” Peyton, that is. Enter the P-Man, exit the T-Man. And just when you thought the off-season drama would finally come to an end this season, the Broncos produced three more reality shows: The Wes Welker-inspired “Keeping Up With The Patriots”; Elvis Dumervil’s hit, “Are You Smarter Than A Fax Machine?”; And, on the heels of two team executives being arrested on charges of drunken driving — “Cops.” Oh, and last but not least, then came the recent drug allegations against star linebacker Von Miller, proving that “Big Brother” is indeed watching over Denver. Can the Broncos overcome this year’s off-season distractions? We shall see. All I know is that while the team continues to lead the league in reality drama year after year, the organization has been without a fresh Vince Lombardi Trophy for a very long time. Broncos’ reality shows may make for some intriguing, real-life drama. But unless Denver makes it to the Super Bowl this year, the Broncos will look like the “Biggest Losers,” while their fans will be staring in their own reality show: “Punk’d.” In addition to writing sports columns, Vic Vela covers the Legislature for Colorado Community Media. He can be reached at vvela@ourcoloradonews.com, or follow him on Twitter: @VicVela1.
• 52 career interceptions, which places him third on the list of active players. • A total of three pass interference calls in 504 throws his way over the past seven years, according to Stats Inc. Teams are going after him more of late, and figure to do so again in 2013. Bailey was victimized by Baltimore’s Torrey Smith, who caught a pair of long touchdown passes against him in Denver’s 38-35 playoff loss to the Ravens. It made for a long offseason for Bailey, who, like all great cornerbacks, has learned to have a short memory. “I’m still Champ,” he said. “I still can play this game at a high level and I believe in myself 100 percent just as much as when I was 25. There’s no challenge put in front of me that I won’t take on like a man and go out there and try to do the best that I can. I believe in myself and only time will tell if I need to move or anything like that.” For now, the answer is no. But regardless of the position, he knows time is running out in the quest for a Super Bowl ring. “I look at it as my only shot,” Bailey said of the 2013 season. “I don’t know what’s to be said about next year. I’m looking at right now as my only shot. I hope everybody in that locker room feels the same way because nothing’s guaranteed in this league and we could all be in different places next year.”
SportS roundup Fall prep sports gear up
Summer vacation is over. The Colorado High School Activities Association and its 343 member schools open the fall season with the first official boys golf practice Aug. 5. All other sports start Aug. 12 for athletes in cross country, field hockey, football, girls’ gymnastics, boys soccer, softball, boys tennis, volleyball and spirit. Boys golf teams may start scrimmages Aug. 8, girls softball Aug. 12, boys tennis Aug. 15 and Aug. 22 for the rest of the sports. The first match for boys golf can be played Aug. 8, and Aug. 15 for boys tennis. The first girls softball game can be played Aug. 16 and the season openers for other sports Aug. 29. Football teams, with approval from the CHSAA office, may play a Week Zero game if certain criteria have been met. Mountain Vista is the defending boys cross country champion and Valor Christian won the 2012 Class 5A football championship.
Under-par in Colorado Open
Four Douglas County golfers finished with underpar, four-round totals in the HealthOne Colorado Open golf tournament but didn’t finish among the contenders. Amateur Derek Fribbs of Castle Rock, the Douglas County graduate who was the 2008 Class 5A state champion, put together consistent rounds of 70, 70, 70 and 67 to finish
with a 7-under-par total of 277 in the tournament played July 25-28 at Green Valley Ranch Golf Club. The former University of Colorado player tied for 13th place. Ex-ThunderRidge and CU golfer Derek Tolan of Highlands Ranch and Caine Fitzgerald of Parker tied for 21st and each collected $1,660 in prize money. Tolan, a two-time Colorado Open champion, had rounds of 67, 73, 72 and 68 for a 280 total, while Fitzgerald’s 4-underpar 280 included rounds of 72, 69, 70 and 69. Scott Petersen of Parker tied for 29th place and won $1,082. He carded rounds of 71, 68, 71 and 72, which left him 2-under-par with a 282 total.
Foxes ousted in semifinals
The Colorado Real Foxes lost to Forest City London on penalty kicks July 27 in the semifinals of the Professional Developmental League’s Central Conference soccer playoffs. The semifinal match ended scoreless after regulation and two overtime periods. FC London won 4-3 on penalty kicks but then lost to the Thunder Bay Chill in the conference championship game. Colorado finished the regular season second in the Heartland Division with a 9-2-3 record. Oliver Gore was the league’s second leading scorer with 15 goals and was third in points with 34.
15-Color
Elbert County News 15
August 8, 2013
Mount Evans trip can recharge soul
r
If you’re looking for a new, close-to-home adventure, or just want to treat your out-of-town guest to a real taste of Colorado, consider Mount Evans. It’s another world up there. The scenery and views are positively breathtaking, the wildlife abundant, and the weather much cooler than the dog days of summer at the lower elevations. laces The road leading to the 14,000-foot-plus summit is the callshighest paved road in North evenAmerica. The ride twists and climbs through some of the most late,spectacular mountain views and y waspoints of interest in Colorado. whoAlong the way and easily accesassessible is Echo Lake. loss It is regularly stocked and provides good fishing. ailey, There is a restaurant and gift rnedshop overlooking the lake. Farther up the road is Summit Lake, cancomplete with a parking lot, lieve when front nd go an. I ll if I
Mountain goats are among the abundant wildlife found on Mount Evans. Courtesy photo by Tony Lane restrooms, trailheads and more great views. Wildlife, although not always visible, include: deer, elk, bighorn sheep, yellow-belled marmots, pikas and the ever-popular mountain goats. The lambs
nows uper
are about as cute as any baby animal can be, but also one of the toughest. Life above the trees can be a very inhospitable environment, where many life forms cannot survive the eight months of an
alpine winter. Wildflowers are abundant this time of year. Indian paintbrush, wallflower, fireweed and others dot the landscape. Interesting also are the “crooked wood” bristle-
cone pines that grow just below timberline. The remains of the historic Crest House, built in 1941, sit just off the main parking lot at the summit. Vehicle access allows just about anyone to enjoy the trip to the summit. But if you’re up for it, climb the 200-foot “rock pile” at the summit. A rocky trail leads the way. You won’t believe the view and its effects on your inner self. If you go, bring extra clothing, water, snacks, etc. The summit has its own weather, which can change quickly. Brisk to strong winds above timberline can be expected. Be aware of fast-moving storms and lighting. Altitude sickness at 14,000 feet is always a possiblity. Shortness of breath, fatigue, headache or dizziness are some of the symptoms. They can usually be relieved by heading back down to lower elevations. And don’t forget to charge up those camera batteries before you leave home. You’ll want to take a lot of pictures. Tony Lane, the former police chief of Castle Rock, is an avid outdoorsman and wildlife photographer.
What’s on the horizon. Lone Tree, Colorado
said t’s to right dy in y beague next Lone Tree, Colorado
Put us on your summer calendar. The RidgeGate community is thriving this season, with many fun, free events that will inspire you and your family to reconnect with nature, move your body, and hear great music. Plan now to join us. Saturday and Sunday, August 10 –11
know The Wildlife Experience CEO Gary Debus,
A Taste of Lone Tree Food & Art Festival
who grew up on a ranch. Meet one of his horses,
Location: Lincoln Commons at RidgeGate
try roping, and learn about the history of Schweiger
RidgeGate is proud to sponsor the Lone Tree Chamber
Ranch. Visit www.thewildlifeexperience.org to register.
of Commerce signature event, an annual festival dedicated
Scan here to like Colorado Community Media on Facebook
to featuring local culinary delights and the arts. The
Tuesday, August 27, 6:30 – 7:30pm
festival takes place throughout the weekend of August
Free Yoga in the Park
10 -11 in Lincoln Commons at RidgeGate. Visit www.
Location: Belvedere Park (between RidgeGate Parkway and
lonetreechamber.com for tickets and more information.
Friday, August 16, 8 –10pm
RidgeGate Presents Tunes on the Terrace: Soul X
RidgeGate Circle on Belvedere Lane)
Join RidgeGate, South Suburban Parks and Recreation and the Lone Tree Recreation Center for a free yoga class in Belvedere Park. Bring your own yoga mat, or one will be provided for you. In case of heavy rain or
Location: Lone Tree Arts Center
lightning, class will be cancelled. No yoga experience
The Lone Tree Arts Center closes out their outdoor
is necessary. No need to register - just drop in.
summer concert series on August 16 with Soul X. Colorado’s favorite party band will get you up and dancing to top pop and rock hits, all in a beautiful outdoor setting at the state-of-the-art Lone Tree Arts Center. $15 lawn, $20 reserved seats. Tickets at www.lonetreeartscenter.org.
Friday, August 23, 7– 8:30pm
The Wildlife Experience: Nature Nights Campfire Series Location: Schweiger Ranch
Come gather around a fire for an evening of s’mores, stories and activities. This month, get to
OurColoradoNews.com
Friday, August 30, 7:30 – 9pm
Free Nature Hike Series: Sensing the Night Location: Register online to receive location details
While hiking up a gentle path into the RidgeGate bluffs, learn about which animal in nature best masters each of our five senses - sight, smell, sound, touch and taste. Test out the strength of your night vision as darkness falls. Register at ridgegate.com for this free, family-friendly hike.
16-Color
16 Elbert County News
August 8, 2013
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72
DENVER
• 5 rental units on 1.5 acres • Terrific location,land value,cash flow • 1148845 Jim LeuSchner 303-378-2806
9,0
PARKER
$
ELBERT
$
tyLer WiLLarD 303-709-2566
BoB LemBke 303-829-6181
72
• 5200 Fin’d Sq Ft4 BD/4 BA • Nestled in tall pines of Perry Park • 1191150
DouG JoneS 303-770-5140 • 2007 2-story in Gated Vistancia • 4 BD/5 BA, 4 Car Gar.4,890 Fin Sq Ft • 1207306
$
0 ,00 50 1,4
• Over 7000 Fin’d Sq ft-5 BD/7 BA • Cherry Hills home in Parker! Great attn to detail, convenient, gorgeous • 1203835
PARKER
• 5491 Fin’d Sq Ft-5 BD/5 BA • 2005 custom w/o ranch overlooking Pradera #16 • 1200662 pattie tayLor 303-908-6544
LARKSPUR
$
PARKER
• 3000 Sq Ft-4 BD/3 BA • 100 yr old farmhouse on 360 acres • 1163196
0
,00
95
0
,00
LD
LD
00
1,2
6,5
SO
SO
AURORA
• 1344 Sq Ft-3 BD/2 BA • New carpet & paint,great starter hm on quiet culdesac • 1171678 JeSSica reinharDt 303-549-1223
ELBERT
• Developer Closeout! • 5 lots. 10-35 acres - from $59,900 • 1188540 BiLL Dixon 303-865-5127