Lone Tree Voice 1105

Page 1

November 5, 2015

ENTER TO WIN

VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 42

LIFT TICKETS! See ad inside for details LoneTreeVoice.net A publication of

D O U G L A S C O U N T Y, C O L O R A D O

Challengers sweep the slate Lemieux, Vogel and Ray win nearly 60 percent of the vote for Douglas County School Board By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia.com A crowd of supporters gathered on Election Night at the Southern Hospitality barbecue restaurant in Lone Tree to cheer on the incumbent candidates for Douglas County School Board as results came in. The night didn’t go as they expected. Anne-Marie Lemieux, Wendy Vogel and David Ray — candidates who oppose the

school district’s reform policies of the past several years — ousted incumbents Kevin Larsen, Craig Richardson and Richard Robbins. Each challenger won with at least 58 percent of the more than 82,000 votes counted by the end of Nov. 3. “The voters of Douglas County have spoken,” said Larsen, the school board president. “They clearly touched on a nerve that people responded to.” In District C, Lemieux, a former teacher, took 58.3 percent of the vote in her race against Larsen.

Lemieux

Ray

Vogel

“We are happy for our community. We’re happy for our schools,” Lemieux said. “We’re happy for our educators and most especially, we are happy for our kids. This is a very good day for Douglas County.” In District F, Ray, a former DCSD prin-

cipal, won 59 percent of the vote against Robbins. In District A, Vogel, a school district parent and volunteer, garnered 58.7 percent of the vote in the race with Richardson. Despite the Nov. 3 outcome, members who support the district’s reform measures will still hold a 4-3 advantage on the school board. “I hope they assimilate well and work with the rest of the board that remains,” Larsen said of the newcomers. The challengers rallied behind concerns over trust and transparency, what they consider to be the mismanagement Election continues on Page 6

Man gets 160 years for chase Stone would need to live past age 100 to see parole By Chris Michlewicz cmichlewicz@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Seniors who are 65 and older can qualify for a free SilverSneakers card through Medicare. The card grants access to all of the South Suburban recreation centers. Photos by Mike DiFerdinando

SilverSneakers gives seniors a lift Free card a passport to fun, fitness at South Suburban facilities By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia.com The seniors each pick up a chair and set of hand weights before they find their spots in the gym of the Lone Tree Recreation Center. They huddle in groups, chatting and stretching — some making plans for lunch after the class. For older adults in the area, the popular SilverSneakers fitness class offers fitness and fun at a manageable pace for residents in Lone Tree, Littleton, Centennial and Sheridan. “I love this class. I’ve been coming since I retired, just before I was 70, so I’ve been coming for about seven years now,” Lone Tree resident Rita Smith said. “I like Sneakers continues on Page 11

A man who led police on a chase that extended from Longmont to Lone Tree has been sentenced to 160 years in prison. “You held this community hostage for 90 minutes that day,” said Douglas County District Court Judge Paul King when sentencing Ryan Stone on Oct. 30. Stone, 30, drove more than 100 mph along Interstate 25, veered into oncoming traffic and ultimately struck a Colorado State Patrol trooper who was attempting to lay down a spike strip. The impact shattered the Stone bones in Trooper Bellamann Hee’s lower leg and foot. Stone won’t be eligible for parole for approximately 75 years. He sobbed as family members and friends pleaded for leniency, saying his issues with drugs are what led to the chase. They asked that Stone have the chance to rehabilitate and contribute to society. King pointed out that Stone has a lengthy rap sheet, with 19 felony convictions in Colorado. He repeatedly violated his probation and the conditions of his parole in other felony cases. “The opportunity has knocked and has gone unanswered,” said senior deputy district attorney Jason Siers. Stone continues on Page 10

COMING NEXT WEEK Rita Smith of Lone Tree has been coming to Silver Sneakers workout classes for seven years.

Colorado Community Media helps honor the men and women of the United States military with a special package of stories and photos.


2 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

We must target more solutions, not each other

FACES AMONG US ReNee Tracy is a Lone Tree resident, yoga enthusiast and ovarian cancer survivor. Photo by Mike DiFerdinando

HELLO

... My Name Is

A glimpse of the people in our community

RENEE TRACY Retiree, cancer survivor Coming to Colorado We moved here from Philadelphia about a year ago in August. We had been coming out here for 15 years. We have daughters that live out here, skiing and such, and never expected such a great community. A new chapter I was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in the fall of 2012 and went through treatment for about a year after that. On my way to finishing chemotherapy back east, a few months after I was feeling like I could walk and talk again, I saw a physical therapist to help me build my stamina. After my trial of health, my husband retired and we had decided that we were going to come out and live near the girls. We bought a home here up in Montecito in Lone Tree.

Yoga and rebuilding strength We came in (to the Lone Tree Recreation Center) just to see what was here and looking over the classes I thought, gee is there anything I can even do? At that point I didn’t have enough strength and stamina to drive, and I found the yoga class and started taking that. I couldn’t get through the hour class. It took me about six months to have the stamina and strength again to participate for the full hour. I had done yoga before. I’ve tried to step in and do regular yoga class, but my body is still not ready for that. My husband does a lot of mountain biking and golf and such. And I’ll do yoga at home with him a little bit, but he doesn’t have the flexibility that I do. How to spend energy I drift in when I feel like I have the giddy up to do it, but I still have to pick and choose. Am I going to play with the grandson today, am I going to pick up my granddaughter up from school and have time with her, or am I going to spend that time on my health? A caring community I found this support group. It’s called Nelly’s. Its’ the ovarian cancer support group here in Colorado. I’m about a year and a half out of finishing chemotherapy, so I feel really blessed. By Mike DiFerdinando. If you have suggestions for My Name Is...contact him at mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia. com

USE US

In January 2013, two young men bumped into each other in a doorway at a Houston college, sparking a confrontation that ended when one fired at least 10 shots, wounding Ann Macari two students and Healey a maintenance worker. A year later, at a Tennessee high school, two boys — 16 and 17 years old — got into a fight over a girl. One shot the other in the thigh. On Oct. 9 of this year, an 18-yearold student at an Arizona mountain university reportedly pulled a gun, following an altercation, wounding three students and killing another, a Castle Rock resident who had graduated from high school in 2013. There is no doubt mental illness plays a significant role in the school and mass shootings that occur on a much-too-frequent basis in our country. But it also seems, more and more often, gun violence is replacing the art of resolving conflict through discourse, an observation obscured by the politics of gun control that has derailed any movement toward solutions to this devastating problem. My son looks at it this way: “Kids need to learn how to manage and channel their hatred and anger . . . when they feel they are about to break. We need to teach those kids that violence isn’t the answer to your problems.” My son is an 18-year-old college

freshman who, at times — when another shooting occurs — thinks about the possibility it could happen to him, but who overall feels “mostly safe because I feel like there is still more good than evil in the world.” I do, too. But I also believe our world, this country that prides itself on liberty, happiness — and life — for all, needs to face this issue squarely, without partisanship or division, to model a course of action that focuses on one objective we can all agree on: Our children should be safe from this kind of potentially fatal violence when they are in school. But that isn’t the case. The FBI found that education environments were the second-largest location category for active shooters from 2000 to 2013, as reported in a June story in The Washington Post. Between Oct. 1 and Oct. 9, the day Colin Brough died at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, five shootings occurred on college and high school campuses, according to Everytown for Gun Safety, a nonprofit that tracks school shootings since the Sandy Hook Elementary tragedy in December 2012. From Oct. 11 to Oct. 15, guns were fired on another three high school and university campuses, although, thankfully, no one was injured. A common thread running through more than one-third of the shooting incidents in schools shows they occurred after a confrontation or verbal argument intensified, Everytown reports. It’s difficult to know exactly what caused those shooters to explode or how the country’s policies could have Healey continues on Page 9

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Lone Tree Voice 3

November 5, 2015

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4 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

Greens are the most vulnerable part of the golf course during the winter months. Greens at the South Suburban courses are sprayed to ward off snow mold. Photos by Mike DiFerdinando

Bill Ramsey is the director of golf for South Suburban, which includes Lone Tree Golf Club, South Suburban Golf Club, Family Sports Golf and Littleton Golf Course.

Golf courses prepare for winter weather South Suburban sites never officially close; play depends on weather

By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia.com Since 2011, there hasn’t been one month in which people didn’t play golf at Lone Tree Golf Club. In fact, December 2011 is the only month in the last eight years when people didn’t play. “Rarely are there any months in Colorado where people don’t play,” said South Suburban Parks and Recreation Golf Director Bill Ramsey. As fall turns to winter, Ramsey will start taking precautions to winterize the

courses he watches over — Lone Tree Golf and Country Club, South Suburban Golf Club, Family Sports Golf and Littleton Golf Course. Typically, November is when he starts preparing the courses for winter, Ramsey said. “Our primary and most important issue is the irrigation system, obviously, because that a high-dollar repair if there are some freezes,” he said. The irrigation system of the South Suburban golf courses sits about 2 or 3 feet underground and takes two or three days to blow out with large air compressors and get rid of any moisture. The fairways are allowed to die out in the winter months, but the putting greens require special attention. “We just let them go dormant like

any other grass in Colorado would do as it starts getting colder,” Ramsey said. “We really don’t protect anything but the greens with chemicals. We spray antisnow-mold material on the greens to keep the fungus from growing.” The greens are more susceptible because of the type of grass — bent grass — and the fact that they are mowed really short. How the greens are cared for during the winter months is critical to how the course will play in the spring “If you get a little bit of snow mold on your bluegrass at home, it’s not a big deal. But snow mold can really cause some damage to the greens,” Ramsey said. The golf courses never truly close. It’s up to Mother Nature to decide when conditions are playable. Last December, the Lone Tree Golf

Club had 576 players the whole month. In June of the same year the course hosted 5,000. During the winter months, courses may institute cart-path-only rules to protect the fairways and greens. South Suburban will also cover the driving range tees and practice greens during the winter to protect them from the cold. The cold weather will also occasionally lead to reduced rates to draw people in. For those more weary of the cold, the driving range at Family Sports in Centennial offers heaters. “I’ve seen players tee off in single digits,” Ramsey said. “We want to give golfers the opportunity to play during those winter months. If they have been off the golf course for two to three weeks, they start to get a little bit of cabin fever.”


Lone Tree Voice 5

November 5, 2015

Valor unveils $34 million arts venue Facility could be available for community use in 2016

By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia.com Valor Christian has opened the doors on a 94,000-square-foot arts venue that is the first of its kind at the high school level in Colorado. The building took seven years to complete and cost more than $34 million. “The reason we are investing that much is because Valor has this vison — we believe that media and the arts are a huge communications portal to our culture,” said Arie Ringnalda, director of Valor arts+media. “So if we are going to teach kids to be leaders with strong values that benefit society, we have to do that well on the arts side.” According to Ringnalda, the majority of the project was funded by nine anonymous private donors. “We did our research and couldn’t find anything even close to comparable,” said Valor brand manager Kelly Jelniker. “It rivals the PACE Center in Parker, the Arvada Center, all of the regional auditoriums.” Ringnalda said he expects the Valor Center to be open for use by the community next year. Eventually, the center will host professional performances, public speaking series, political debates and local groups such as the South Suburban Community Orchestra. The new building boasts everything from a professional auditorium to a recording studio, animation and design studios, a broadcast center and art spaces, which range from painting and pottery studios to a photography studio with a darkroom. The hallways are decorated with a mix of professional and student art displays and the lobby will serve as a gallery space. The private school in Highlands Ranch has $180,000 worth of pianos throughout the building that were given to the school through a partnership with Yamaha. Yamaha has a similar partnership with the University of Denver. The pianos are donated for free and then replaced with new models every year. Yamaha then sells the old pianos.

Students work on the stage of the new Valor Center at Valor Christian High School Oct. 22. Photo by Mike DiFerdinando

COMPARING COSTS A look at what it cost to build some of the newest arts venues in the south metro area: • Valor Center (Highlands Ranch): $34 million • Lone Tree Arts Center: $23 million • PACE Center (Parker): $21.7 million

“It’s something they have never done with high schools before,” Ringnalda said. Valor also has a partnership with McPherson Guitars. Sophomore Hannah Seely is part of the Valor dance program. She has recently started learning silk aerial, similar to the acrobatics seen at Cirque du Soleil performances. “I never thought something like this would actually come to life,” Seely said.

“But now that I’m actually in it, it’s amazing.” Tony Bossio is an advanced studio recording student. He spends his free periods in the studio working on producing and remixing songs. He’s currently working on a remix of Iggy Azalea’s hit “Fancy.” “It’s absolutely crazy how we can get our hands on this stuff,” Bossio said. “I actually started calling Valor a college now.” What the Valor Center has to offer • A 750-seat performance hall with a full-fly stage, mechanized pit lift, stateof-the-art lighting, rigging and superior variable acoustics. • A recording studio designed to attract professional artists from near and far and facilitate opportunities for students to work alongside the industry’s top talent. • State-of-the-art, professional television studio, including a control room with the latest broadcast advancements. • Media screening and editing suite,

which provides a unique, high-level postproduction environment designed for collaborative media work, client meetings, critiques and editing. • Black box theater, offering flexible use for anything from classical theater-inthe-round to uniquely innovative contemporary performances . • Two dance studios with sprung flooring, full mirrors and bars, and integrated performance lighting and audio. • Hydraulic orchestra pit with space for up to 50 instrumentalists, and an orchestra rehearsal suite and a full complement of acoustically isolated practice rooms. • State-of-the-art design labs, which allow for a full complement of digital design, photography and media production classes. • Professional photography lab that allows for instruction in professional lighting techniques with creative and commercial applications, while at the same time offering space for traditional darkroom.

Douglas County School Choice Fair set for Nov. 12 Open enrollment ends Jan. 5 By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@coloradocommunitymedia.com The Douglas County School District will host its second annual Choice Fair Nov. 12. The event is 6 to 8 p.m. at the Douglas County Fairgrounds in Castle Rock. “Every school in the district will be represented on that night,” said Tom McMillen, director of student and parent choice.

“Parents can visit with different school principals, teachers and learn about all of the different offering the district has. It’s really like an open house. Each school in the district as well as several other representatives from the district will have a table, a couple of chairs and information about their school or program. People can just walk in and browse and talk to everyone they’re interested in talking to.” The type of school options that will be represented include: elementary schools, middle schools, high schools, charter schools, online schools, and alternative

school and home-schooling options. There will also be teachers and district officials at the fair to talk to parents about special education for students in need. Last year, the fair was split into three separate evenings and different locations. This year’s event was consolidated into a single evening at the request of parents, McMillen said. “The parents just loved it,” he said. “They loved to have the opportunity to come in and put a face to a name.” Open enrollment for the district began Nov.1 and goes until Jan. 5. District of-

ficials will be on hand the evening of the fair to walk parents through the open enrollment process. Also new this year is an online tool to help parents understand how to enroll at the school of their choice called EngagED Parents. The tool is on the district website, dcsdk12.org. “It’s a timely opportunity for parents to shop around a little bit,” McMillen said. “(Open enrollment) is not first come first serve, so parents have almost two months to learn about the different schools.”

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6 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

Douglas County School Board President Kevin Larsen, shown at an Election Night party at Southern Hospitality in Lone Tree, lost his race in District C to Anne-Marie Lemieux. Photo by Mike DiFerdinando

Election

tion’s biggest calling cards. “It was totally a grassroots effort,” Ray said. “I’m most proud about the passion we saw from people. It had nothing to do with a political machine. It had nothing to do with money. It had everything to do with people who are passionate and wanted what’s best for their kids.” The incumbents championed payfor-performance evaluations for teachers

Continued from Page 1

of tax dollars, and losses in educational opportunities for students. Car windows painted with the challengers’ names became one of the elec-

DOUGLAS COUNTY COLORADO

Veterans Day Douglas County offices will be closed Wednesday, November 11 in observance of Veterans Day. Many county services are available online at www.douglas.co.us

Applicants Sought for 2016 Community Safety Volunteer Academy

NE

!

W

Applications are being accepted for the 2016 Community Safety Volunteer Academy, offered through the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office. The application deadline is Dec. 31, 2015. Applicants are required to attend the 10-week academy held March - May. For more information please visit www. dcsheriff.net/ and search for Academies.

Veterans Day Tribute Nov. 11 All are welcome to honor veterans – past and present – on Wednesday, Nov. 11 at 11 a.m. at the Veterans Monument Plaza in downtown Castle Rock. Please visit www.douglasveterans. org or dcvmf.org for more information.

Winter Readiness Begins Now Please visit www.douglas. co.us and search for Snow for information about snow and ice removal in Douglas County.

Tracy Eisler, who supported the challengers in the race for Douglas County School Board, checks the results on her phone on Election Night at the Fox & Hound restaurant in Lone Tree. Photo by Shanna Fortier and staff, and school choice. They also expressed concerns about tax dollars leaving the district in a disproportionate amount and said school financing is an issue they hoped to address at the state level. “The three of us won’t be going anywhere,” Robbins said. “We’ll still be here working and volunteering for the district in any way we can. This is something we are passionate about.” Richardson declined to be interviewed. For those who fought for change on the school board, the evening was the culmination of years of work. Lynne Butler is the mother of two students who graduated from the district and one who is still a student in Douglas County. “I cannot be more ecstatic,” Butler said. “This has been such a long, long six years of fighting. So many tears, so many high hopes and we got closer each time. And this time, we did it.”

The challengers said the district’s teachers rallied around them and said their support was critical to their victory. In recent years, many teachers have said they felt as if they had lost their voice on the board. “I can’t wait to go to school tomorrow,” said Robin Handy, a Spanish teacher at Castle View High School. “There’s going to be a lot of excitement.” The current board members will participate in a final school board meeting Nov. 17 before the new members are sworn in early next month. “This has been years in the making,” Vogel said. “People worked really hard in this community for the last five years to get people to listen to what is happening to education. Really, it’s an accomplishment for everyone. People from all different walks of life decided they wanted to do what’s right for kids and our community.”

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Attend a free information session to learn more about the program and the requirements to foster or adopt a child. • Nov. 16, 6-7:30 p.m. Grace Chapel, 8505 S. Valley Highway, Lone Tree For more information please call 303-636-1KID or register online at www.collaborativefostercare. com/infonight.htm This free session is made possible by the Collaborative Foster Care Program of Arapahoe, Douglas & Jefferson Counties.

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Public Meetings and Agendas Our commitment to open and transparent government includes our online posting of information about the public meetings at which the business of government is conducted. To view agendas for Business Meetings, Land Use Meetings and Public Hearings, Planning Commission, as well as the Commissioners’ weekly schedule and more please visit www.douglas.co.us and search for Meetings and Agendas.

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Lone Tree Voice 7

November 5, 2015

A GALA FOR A CAUSE

The Lone Tree Arts Center held its Opening Night Gala in September. From left, gala publicity chairwoman Gayle Spelts, Pam Kelly, executive director of Park Meadows Retail Resort, and her husband, Jim, are shown during the gala. Park Meadows Retail Resort was one of the Gala’s sponsors. The first Opening Night Gala sponsored by The Lone Tree Arts Center Guild raised more than $4,000. Courtesy photo

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NEWS IN A HURRY City seeks committee volunteers The city of Lone Tree is currently looking for civic-minded residents to serve on the Audit Committee, the Citizens’ Recreation Advisory Committee and the Planning Commission. Qualifications include residency in the city for at least one year and the ability to commit time to attend regular meetings. The Audit Committee meets quarterly to ensure the city’s finances are on the right track. Applicants should have expertise and experience in accounting, auditing and financial reporting. Members of the Citizens’ Recreation Advisory Committee meet monthly and serve as an advisory board tasked with developing recommendations to the city council regarding recreation; obtain resident input on recreation issues, and actively participate in regional and local recreation groups to promote the recreation interests of Lone Tree. The Planning Commission helps guide the growth and development of the city by making recommendations to the city council on land use regulations, plans and development proposals. They evaluate how development looks and functions relative to city codes and design guidelines. The Planning Commission meets up to two times a month, as needed. Any Lone Tree resident may apply to serve by submitting an application, resume, and a brief letter of interest explaining why they would like to participate on the commission or committee to: City of Lone Tree Attn: Jennifer Pettinger 9220 Kimmer Drive, Suite 100 Lone Tree, CO 80124 Information can also be emailed to Jennifer.Pettinger@cityoflonetree.com or faxed to 303-225-4949.

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Applications can be found on the city’s website at www.cityoflonetree.com. The deadline for application is Nov. 13 at 5 p.m. For more information, call 303-708-1818 or go online to www.cityoflonetree.com/ cbcvacancy. Lone Tree sees thefts from vehicles A number of vehicles have been left unlocked and property has been stolen in Lone Tree. On Oct. 16, officers were called to the Montecito subdivision on reports of vehicle trespassing and again on Oct. 23 at The Lodge at Willow Creek apartments. This type of criminal activity has been on the rise throughout the Denver metro area and unlocked vehicles are the primary target. The Lone Tree Police Department has increased patrols throughout the neighborhoods and is providing the following tips to residents to help reduce the risk of becoming a victim: • Never leave your keys in your car. • Never leave your car running and unattended. It takes just seconds to steal an unattended vehicle. • Always keep your windows closed and your doors locked. • Always remove or conceal valuables out of sight. • Use an audible alarm or other disabling devices. • Park in well-lit areas where your vehicle can be seen. • If you have a garage, take the time to use it rather than parking outside. • If you hear or see something suspicious, call 911. Anyone with information related to the crimes that occurred on these dates, or witnessed other suspicious activity, is asked to call

the Lone Tree Police Department’s Tip Line, 720-509-1160. ‘Snow Glow’ at Lone Tree Arts Center Learn what made Denver the “Christmas Capital of the World” back in 1914. Then, enjoy classic and contemporary holiday songs to ring in the season, complete with the big man himself and singalongs for everyone. The event is Nov. 22 at the Lone Tree Arts Center. Tickets are $15 with shows at 1:30 and 7 p.m. See lonetreeartscenter.org for more information.

Veterans to be honored This year, on Veterans Day, the Douglas County Office of Veterans Affairs — in conjunction with the Douglas County Veterans Monument Foundation — will honor and recognize the service of the 21,241 veterans living in Douglas County, as well as those who have died. “There is no greater sacrifice or service an American citizen can choose to make than that of serving his or her country,” said Commissioner David Weaver, who will be among the speakers at the event. Joining Weaver at the podium will be state House District 45 Rep. Patrick Neville as well as this year’s keynote speaker, 18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler, both of whom are veterans. The Veterans Day Tribute will begin at 11 a.m. Nov. 11 at the Douglas County Veterans Monument Plaza, located at the corner of Wilcox and Fourth Street in Castle Rock. The program will feature a special remembrance and will honor all veterans — past and present. Visit douglasveterans.org or dcvmf.org for more information.

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8 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

VOICES

LOCAL

Exercising goodwill keeps heart in shape So often in our quest to be the best, or in our race to keep up or come in first, we miss the opportunities to demonstrate goodwill to those around us. I mean sometimes we really miss the mark completely. As an example we can watch the news or read about the events where road rage and anger leads to violence. We can see people pushing and shoving in line just to get through the checkout lane quicker. And how about when we are waiting at the deli counter in the supermarket and they are not using the number system, instead just relying on the customers to let them know who is next in line. Now in most cases and with most people I believe that goodwill and love and kindness are in their hearts and minds. And yet even those of us who live with the spirit of goodwill, love and kindness can sometimes succumb to the pressures and stresses of life, as we are all human. For me, I focus on changing the word “goodwill” to “God’s will.” I make it a conscious choice to think about my day, a business trip or an event and consider the people or situations that may arise that could cause problems or stress. And as I think about that and think of finding the good in all of it, I also gain a calm confidence and strength knowing I am thinking of “goodwill” as “God’s will.”

The important message I want to underscore here is looking for the good in goodwill. Zig Ziglar used to say, “There are some people who go around looking for the ‘bad’ as if there were some kind of reward for it.” And he was right, if we look for the bad, we will Michael Norton certainly find it. And WINNING the same can be said of looking for the good, if WORDS we look for it, we will find it. What if we all had the opportunity to demonstrate and display goodwill to each other? Not just our friends and family, but everyone we come into contact with, what if we extended goodwill to everyone? How much less stress would we have in our own lives? How much better would we feel at the end of each day? Imagine you are driving and someone is swerving in and out of the lanes, driving dangerously, maybe even coming up on your bumper in attempt to encourage you to get out of the way. What if instead of getting angry, nervous or stressed out, you just let them pass. I promise they won’t give you an-

other thought all day. And if you allow them to pass, you probably won’t give them another thought all day either. They could just be and probably are just driving recklessly, or they could be trying to get to the hospital. Look for the good and extend goodwill. If you aren’t in a rush and someone needs to get in line in front of you, grant them the space and the grace and take the pressure off of yourself as you know that the extra five minutes won’t disrupt the incredibly awesome day that you are having and will continue to have. Look for the good and we will find the good, the goodness and the goodwill. Seek to give goodness and goodwill, and we will experience the good. There is someone who needs our good, goodness and goodwill. Maybe it’s an ear to listen, maybe it’s a hug that needs to be given, maybe it’s a hand up, or perhaps it’s just a little patience and understanding. What will your goodwill moment be today? I would love to hear all about it at gotonorton@gmail.com, and when we find the good in our goodwill, it really will be a better than good week. Michael Norton is a resident of Castle Rock, the former president of the Zig Ziglar Corporation, a strategic consultant and a business and personal coach.

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Columnists & Guest Commentaries The Voice 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 Voice.

Trouble seems big, but world is bigger The world’s population is 7 billion. I had no idea When I found out, it changed the way I look at things. There’s a major story every day. It’s just like Top 40 radio in the 1950s and 1960s. A story will chart for a few days or a few weeks, and then disappear, and be replaced by something else. When was the last time you thought about Scott Peterson? Or Casey Anthony? Or Jodi Arias? How about Jared Lee Loughner? Who? Susan Smith? There are so many of us that it explains why there can be millions of racists. But billions of us are not racists. It explains why there is an audience for junk like “The Price is Right.” Millions of people have seen it. But billions have never seen it or won’t watch it. Top 40 stories get our attention, and they dominate the news because good news, generally, doesn’t sell papers. When you have 7 billion people, you are

A publication of

bound to have some of each. Little League parents who get thrown out. Audiences for “I Love Lucy” and “Fifty Shades of Grey.” Or Batman this and Batman that. Billions of us Craig Marshall Smith aren’t in any of those audiences. QUIET hundred DESPERATION andOne fourteen million people watched the last Super Bowl. That may seem like a lot, but it’s less than 2 percent of the world’s population. There might be millions of gang members worldwide. But there are millions of teenagers who aren’t in gangs. You just don’t hear about them very often. They don’t make the Top 40, unless they are

prodigies. There are 1.2 billion Catholics, and for a while there, it seemed like this was nothing but a Catholic country. But it’s not. There are 5.8 billion of us who belong to other denominations, or nothing at all. There’s a gun for every American, but millions of us don’t own guns. The Broncos aren’t the center of the universe. Ask an Eskimo. I’d like to know what everyone on earth knows. The sun and the moon, right? It could be Coca-Cola. It could be Mickey Mouse. Maybe the Beatles. All 7 billion of us need food. We all have that in common. I would like to think that we all want to love and be loved. But, like I said, there are some of each. Unrepentant killers, like Polly Klaas’ killer, who flipped off Polly’s parents in the courtroom, are undoubtedly loveless. (Polly’s killer has been on death row in California since 1996.) Smith continues on Page 9

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. Email letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com Deadline Fri. 5 p.m. for the following week’s paper.

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Lone Tree Voice 9

November 5, 2015

Senior Reach is link to range of services Senior Reach is a new program in Arapahoe and Douglas counties for seniors age 60 and older who live independently and who wish to keep doing so. It is designed as a single point of entry for seniors needing assistance who may not be sure what exactly they need. Senior Reach is a three-part, evidencebased program with 92 percent of seniors who engage receiving the help they were seeking. The main service provided to seniors is therapy through Arapahoe/Douglas Mental Health Network. What makes this program unique is that the counseling is provided in the seniors’ homes or wherever they are most comfortable. “We know many seniors fear the stigma of mental health help and we want to make this as easy as we can for them,” said Maria Pearson, Senior Reach program manager. “They don’t have to come to one of our many locations, worry about running into someone they know or who might see them there. We can chat in their home.” Senior Reach is designed to help with short-term issues such as depression,

Healey Continued from Page 2

helped or might have hindered those situations because politics, over the years, has blocked any significant body of research into gun violence, according to a recent Associated Press article that researched the issue. But Carolyn Mears, whose son spent three hours trapped in a 5-by-7 closet in the cafeteria of Columbine High School with more than 15 other students, says this: “Anger is always the second emotion. I have found anger follows fear.” Mears — her son survived the nation’s first mass school shooting — is the author of award-winning research of the aftermath of the Columbine shootings and other tragedies and consults internationally in communities recovering from trauma. Fear, she says, comes in many forms. Fear of losing status. Fear of being taken advantage of. Fear of not being heard. Fear of not getting your own way. Fear of . . . fill in the blank — aren’t we all afraid of something? An Oct. 30 article titled “How Does Someone Become A School Shooter?” in The National Journal, a publication that covers emerging political and policy issues, suggests these trends also contribute: • Social media’s tentacular reach, which allows anyone to find someone who thinks similarly from the privacy and secrecy of a computer. • An increase in narcissism, which has fueled a desire to be famous and makes

Smith Continued from Page 8

I get upset about things because I shrink the planet. There are days when I think there is more evil in the world than good. But the trick is to remember that there are a lot of us. The bad guys get the press. Every college campus has good guys that you never hear about. Mine has 13 Nobel Laureates, 12 MacArthur Fellows, 10 National Medal of Science winners, three Pulitzer Prize winners, and hundreds of recipients of Guggenheim, Sloan and Fulbright-Hays awards. Plus Academy Awards and Olympic

Maria Pearson

LIVING AND AGING WELL

anxiety or grief. Treatment usually lasts from six to 10 appointments. “We have many issues our folks are working on right now,” Pearson said. “One senior recently lost his beloved dog. As his dog was his main companion and emotional support, he was surprised at how much he was affected and reached out to us

for help.” The second part of the program is case management. Case management is available to seniors in situations where someone might need a little help accessing services, like a change in medical plans, learning to take public transportation, finding volunteer opportunities and many rejection hard to take after a childhood of well-meaning but, many times, undeserved praise. • Easy accessibility to guns. Consider this: Countries such as the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan and Canada have extremely low gun casualty statistics. Each has a mixture of laws that restricts the kinds of weapons allowed and requires mandatory licensing, rigorous safety training, mental health and background checks. Gun responsibility is a separate and important issue from gun control. My 82-year-old mom grew up in the South and hunted squirrels and small game in her youth. She believes some of today’s problems stem from a lack of basic training. She had to practice, repeatedly, how to shoot and handle a rifle before heading out on her own. She remembers, too, how her Uncle Bob told her, over and over, until the words became so ingrained she could under no circumstances ignore them: Never point a weapon at a person. Today is not my time to argue gun control. Today is my time to wish for ways people in our country can disagree without shooting each other, can argue with respect for differences, while understanding we can’t always get our own way. “In our current political situation,” Mears says, “we don’t see really healthy models of resolution offered. . . . It’s us versus them. When that is the model of coping and behavior that young people see, bad things can happen. There needs to be an adult in the room who practices discourse.” I yearn for a time when we can look at what binds us rather than what separates us. I yearn for ways to ensure young

medals all over the place. Every city block has good people you never hear about. Please don’t get me wrong. I am still a pessimist, but I have recently adjusted my thinking. Not every driver is a jerk. It just seems like it. Not every movie was made for a sophomore’s mentality. It just seems like it. We’re not all trigger-happy. It just seems like it. In conclusion, there must be at least a billion good people in the world, right? Next year is an election year. Will a good, wise, and capable individual be elected? Or a game show host? Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@ comcast.net.

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU If you would like to share your opinion, visit our website at www.coloradocommunitymedia.com or write a letter to the editor. Include your name, full address and the best telephone number to contact you. Send letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com.

other things. “We have a fabulous team of professionals to help in whatever way we can,” Pearson said. The third part of Senior Reach is community resources. Pearson vets anyone who is on the referral list from food banks, transportation, handymen and more. “We trust these folks. They know us and we know them,” Pearson said. “If anything changes in their business or the service they provide to seniors, we’ll know and will continue to give out current information to our seniors. We also follow up to make sure the senior has received the help they were looking for.” Senior Reach is designed to be a grassroots program. Pearson asks neighbors to help be the eyes and ears in the community, to help spread the word about the program and to also be aware if they know of someone who might benefit. “We’re hoping folks will return to looking out for their neighbors and friends like communities used to do before we all got so transient,” Pearson said.

Jefferson Center for Mental Health along with the Seniors’ Resource Center and Mental Health Partners started Senior Reach in July 2005 to serve the citizens of Boulder, Broomfield, Clear Creek, Gilpin and Jefferson counties. This Senior Reach Program in Arapahoe and Douglas counties is just one of many that are springing up across the country, including Adams County and Colorado Springs locally. Seniors can contact Senior Reach themselves at 303-723-4289 Monday through Friday. This is not an emergency or crisis line. If someone doesn’t feel comfortable broaching the subject of Senior Reach with a family member or neighbor, they can call the Senior Reach Call Center, give the senior’s name and phone number and staff will reach out to the senior in question, tell them a bit about the program and see if they are interested in participating.

people who feel isolated are connected to adults who care and can engage them in our communities. I yearn for a time when compromise, as Mears says, is seen as an intelligent way of governing rather than a sign of selling out, of weakness. We have to keep our children safe despite the state of politics in our country. “I have great confidence and great hope we will back down off the ledge we’ve forced ourselves on,” Mears says. “By learning to treat others with respect and have dialogue, that’s the only way . . . to preserve our own humanity.” Listen to Doug Brough, talking to a television journalist near the makeshift memorial to his son, soon after his death. “People need to know how good he was. We’ve got to stop this throughout the country. It’s,” his voice trails off, “just devastating.”

Read the Wall of Healing at the Columbine Memorial, inscribed with a series of quotations from students, parents, first responders and the community. One says this: “It brought the nation to its knees, but now that we’ve come back up how have things changed; what have we learned?” The question echoes after each shooting — the most recent just last Sunday on a North Carolina university campus where one student was killed and another wounded. What have we learned? Sadly, not much. And we need to change that. Ann Macari Healey’s award-winning column about people, places and issues of everyday life appears every other week. She can be reached at ahealey@coloradocommunitymedia.com or 303-566-4109.

Maria Pearson is the senior reach manager for the Arapahoe/Douglas Mental Health Network.

In Loving Memory Place an Obituary for Your Loved One. Private 303-566-4100 Obituaries@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com

Funeral Homes Visit: www.memoriams.com


10 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

Stone Continued from Page 1

Defense attorney Anneliese Garlin asked King to order the sentences to run concurrently, which would have given Stone a chance for freedom one day. But the judge decided on consecutive terms for some of the 20 counts for which Stone was convicted during the summer. Stone faced mandatory prison time because of his criminal record. Stone has a history of methamphetamine use and, when addressing the court, blamed many of his legal problems on substance abuse. He said he cannot remember the chase and was shocked when he saw video shot from a news helicopter after his arrest. A toddler was in the back seat of the first vehicle Stone stole in March 2014. Police gave chase and Stone ditched the vehicle and carjacked another. He sped down

I-25, causing multiple accidents, and drove in a manner that “endangered the lives of countless people,” King said. King called the 160-year sentence “just and fair.” Stone was convicted of attempted manslaughter, first-degree assault, two counts of robbery and motor vehicle theft among other charges. George Brauchler, district attorney, said it was a victory for the public to have Stone off the streets. Hee dived out of the way as Stone drove 90 mph down E-470. While addressing reporters after the sentencing hearing at the Douglas County Justice Center in Castle Rock, the trooper said he is lucky to be alive. Hee is eager to get back to full active duty about a month from now and said he does not have animosity when reflecting on the incident. “I’m at peace with it,” Hee said after the sentencing. Hee underwent seven surgeries and has spent more than 600 hours rehabilitating.

Professional Arapahoe Sales Professionals USA meets Thursdays at 7:30 a.m. at Country Buffet, 7475 Park Meadows Drive in Lone Tree. Call Randy Anderson at 303-875-7673 for information. BNI Connections of Lone Tree (www.thebniconnections.com) invites business owners to attend its meeting held each Tuesday, 7:15-9 a.m. at the Lone Tree Recreation Center, 10249 Ridgegate Circle. There is no charge to attend a meeting as a guest. Please visit www.thebniconnections.com or contact Jack Rafferty, 303-414-2363 or jrafferty@ hmbrown.com. The League of Women Voters of Arapahoe County has two meetings per month. No unit meetings are in June through August, but the two unit

meetings per month will begin again in September on second Monday evenings and second Thursday mornings. Call 303-798-2939. The group is open to residents of Douglas County. Littleton LETIP meets from 7:168:31 a.m. every Tuesday for breakfast at Luciles, 2852 W. Bowles Ave., to exchange qualified business leads. Call Bob Hier at 303-660-6426 or e-mail hierb@yahoo.com. Lone Tree Networking Professionals is a networking/leads group that meets Tuesdays at 11:30 a.m. at Rio Grande Restaurant in Lone Tree. Exclusive business categories are open. Visitors and new members are welcome. Contact Don Shenk at 303-746-0093. Professional Referral Network meets at 7:15 a.m. Tuesdays at Great Beginnings, east of I-25 at Lincoln Avenue. Call Ronald Conley at 303841-1860 or e-mail www.professionalreferralnetwork.org.

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Stone addressed the court and apologized for his actions, but said he is “not the person the media would have you believe I am.” Stone also tried to explain audio recordings played during the sentencing hearing in which he can be heard bragging about his international notoriety after the chase and mocking one of the carjacking victims. Stone showed emotion when speaking about the support he has received from his wife and family. Elizabeth Stone called her son “sensitive” and “generous” and said his actions were the direct result of his drug use. “Things got desperately out of control and he didn’t know how to stop,” she told the judge. But King had some pointed final words for Stone while handing down the 160-year sentence in the Colorado Department of Corrections. “I’ve heard people say it’s not who you are,” King said. “It is who you are.”

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Lone Tree Voice 11

November 5, 2015

Sneakers Continued from Page 1

it because it’s given me more energy. My balance is better, and I like coming for the social aspect. I’ve met a lot friends. We go out to lunch once a month.” Many may not know that residents 65 and up are eligible for a free SilverSneakers Card through most Medicare plans. The card will grant users access to any of the South Suburban facilities as well as any participating facility nationwide. “They can go out of state, to any other state, and go into any participating recreation center. They can go in and visit their children or grandchildren, and use those facilities,” said Peggy Golden, fitness coordinator for the Lone Tree rec center. “They can come into any of our facilties, swipe their card, go to this class and walk some laps, use the Jacuzzi, do a healthy back class,

whatever they want.” According to instructor Marci Nicks, who has been teaching the class since 2011, SilverSneakers is about having fun, getting fit and making friends. “This is a tight group,” Golden said. “Not only do they have coffee and chats together, some of them come back and play bridge. They’re social. They know each other.” Open enrollment for Medicare runs until Dec. 7. People age 65 and older should ask if their plan includes the SilverSneakers fitness program benefit. South Suburban works with a company called Healthways, which verifies seniors’ eligibility for the SilverSneakers program. Seniors also can contact Healthways directly if they have questions about their eligibility. SilverSneakers covers facility use, meaning all drop-in fitness classes, including SilverSneakers classes, weight rooms, pools and other facility amenities. For more information about Healthways, call 1-888-423-4632, or Lehiwa Stewart at 303-520-2640.

S2

Real Estate Seniors bounce to the music during a Silver Sneakers workout at the Lone Tree Recreation Center. Photo by Mike DiFerdinando

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12 Lone Tree Voice

LIFE

LOCAL

FA I T H HEALTH CULTURE FA M I L Y FOOD

November 5, 2015

A new twist on Main Street Genuine African Braiding salon in Littleton stays busy, says owner

By Jennifer Smith jsmith@coloradocommunitymedia.com It’s a long way in space and time from 1999 war-ravaged Liberia to 2015 Main Street in Littleton, but it’s a journey that Patient Morgan says made her the strong and confident woman she is today. “I already replaced all those memories,” she said. “The good part of coming from there is that it makes me appreciate who I am right now. … The same day I got in this country, I started working for myself. I’ve never worked for anybody. That’s the kind of person I am.” And part of who she has been since then is the owner and stylist at Genuine African Braiding and Beauty Supply. She recently moved to Main Street in downtown Littleton, where there are a number of other hair salons but none specializing in braiding. “I love different experiences and welcome everybody,” she said. “I like places that bring people together. Here, it’s interesting to be where you don’t see the same kind of variety. It makes it unique and brings warmth. The location makes a difference with the different people you meet.” It’s in some ways quite similar to her last space, which was in downtown Denver but also in a historic neighborhood. But it’s pretty different, too, she said. Just 1 percent of Littleton’s population is black, with 82 percent being white, according to 2013 census data. That’s similar to Douglas County, which is 1 percent black and 84 percent white. But that’s not what’s most important to Morgan. She and her husband, James, are sharing the building at 2699 W. Main St. because they both wanted to be closer to the Greenwood Village home they share with their 13-year-old twin daughters. “This location brought my family together,” she said. She’s not too worried about finding customers, either. She says all of her customers followed her from Denver, and many folks who live on the south end will be relieved to not have to drive to Denver or Aurora, where most braiding shops in the metro area are located. Mary Jones has been a customer for three years and has no problem driving from Thornton for Morgan’s services. “To find a really good braider, it’s a big search in the Denver area,” she said. “They can break it off, you can lose your hair if you don’t braid it correctly. If they pull it too tight, it breaks and it hurts. The way she braids, it doesn’t hurt. You could go to sleep while she’s doing it.” Morgan says that when people find out

Patient Morgan braids the hair of 15-year-od Jasmine Shells in her Main Street store, Genuine African Braiding. Shells, a Highlands Ranch resident, has been going to Morgan for braids ever since she was a little girl. Photos by Jennifer Smith she’s from Liberia, they have more faith in the authenticity of her work. She learned her craft at a school there before she met her husband, who was serving in the Peace Corps. Braiding was a big part of the culture there, she explained. According to an article by Deepa Venkitesh for scholastic-materials company Bright Hub Education: “Braids are a part of the tribal customs in Africa. The braid patterns signify the tribe and help to identify the member of the tribe.” The article continues: “Braid patterns or hairstyles indicate a person’s community, age, marital status, wealth, power, social position, and religion. ... Immense importance is given to the custom of braiding. The person who braids hair performs it as both a ritual and a social service.” By the time Morgan was growing up in Liberia, braiding was done for a more basic reason. “The braids are a way to be professional,” she said. “For example, in my country, when I was going to school, we were not allowed to style our hair until high school. Getting our hair braided was a way to be mature. And especially if we were in uniforms, it showed our identity.” One might think hairstyles would have been the last thing on people’s minds in the early 1990s when Morgan was coming

Patient Morgan twists elaborate braids into a customer’s hair.

of age. One of Africa’s bloodiest civil wars raged there from 1989 to 1996, claiming the lives of more than 200,000 Liberians and displacing a million others into refugee camps in neighboring countries. “Basically it was just surviving,” said Morgan. “Food was scarce. You don’t see how bad it is until you’re out of there. But there are memories you can’t ever erase. Like bodies lying all around you, and fleeing through the jungle.” As happy as she is to be living a good life now, she thinks she might go back to visit one day. “I’m not in a rush to go back, but I’m hoping in the future I can go back, just for my kids to see it,” she said. “Colorado has been nice to my soul. You can live other places, and you don’t feel happy and blessed, and I do.” And she’s hoping to share her enthusiasm about Main Street with all of her customers, old and new. “I was kind of surprised she moved to Littleton,” said Jones. “You get used to going to one spot, and you think it’s going to be forever. This is beautiful compared to where she came from. It’s so bright. I’ve never been on Main Street before; this is my first time. I haven’t had a chance to walk down the street and look at the shops yet, but I’m looking forward to that.”

A LITTLE BIT ABOUT LIBERIA Liberia, which translates into “land of the free,” was founded in 1821 as an American colony. President James Monroe intended it to be a sanctuary for freed African and Caribbean slaves, many of whom were born in the United States. The capital, Monrovia, was named for him. A 1980 coup led to political instability, and by the end of the 1980s, the country had fallen into a state of civil war that lasted, with a short respite, until a peace agreement was reached in 2003. The subsequent 2005 elections resulted in the African continent’s first female president, Harvard-trained economist Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. She is currently serving her second term. Liberia was most recently in the news for the deadly Ebola virus epidemic, which originated in Guinea in December 2013 and entered Liberia in March 2014. The outbreak officially ended on May 8, 2015, after 42 days with no new cases.

Genuine African Braiding sells a variety of wigs and hair accessories in addition to styling services.


Lone Tree Voice 13

November 5, 2015

Only the good dye yarn Englewood Civic Center event will feature demonstrations

IF YOU GO

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com The Rocky Mountain Weavers Guild holds its Fiber Arts Sale each year in the Community Room on the second level of the Englewood Civic Center. This year’s sale will run Nov. 12-14 and will include demonstrations of spinning and weaving by guild members. Admission is free. Here, one finds a riot of colors and textures in both items to wear and home accessories that are an ongoing pleasure to own — or unique, one-of-a-kind gifts for family and friends. In addition to woven garments, hats, handbags, table runners and small rugs, there are beautifully painted silk scarves as well as jewelry, basketry and other fiber arts with a wide range of prices. A happy local connection has developed recently through guild member Donna Brown, whose dye studio overlooks the Chatfield Farms at the Denver Botanic Garden at Chatfield, near C-470 and Kipling. Brown, who has grown, worked with

The Rocky Mountain Fiber Arts Sale will be in the Community Room on the second level of the Englewood Civic Center, 1000 Englewood Parkway, Nov. 12-14. Hours: Nov. 12, 4 to 8 p.m.; Nov. 13, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Nov. 14, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Guild members will demonstrate their art during the show. Admission is free. (Credit cards accepted.) Information: rmweaversguild.org.

and taught about natural dyes (including for DBG) for 25 years, said she walks by the Gardens every day. She proposed to the enthusiastic new director, Larry Zickerman, that a dye garden would fit the historic nature of the old farmstead and a collaborative project began. The Guild had been granted some money in honor of late member Janice Ford. It was applied to developing a dye garden in her name. Members supplied seeds and plants were started in DBG greenhouses, then transfered to Chatfield Farms, where members and staff tended the plants. “We meet once a week on Thursdays. There are about 30 guild members involved. We weed, harvest, hold classes,”

Naturally dyed yarns will be available at the Rocky Mountain Weavers Guild Sale at Englewood Civic Center Nov. 12-14. Courtesy photo Brown said. Kids dyed silk scarves with dyes made from marigolds and will learn to do resist patterns. “It’s a really nice collaboration,” Brown observed. Last year, DBG started seeds including indigo, madder, yarrow, blackeyed Susans and black hollyhocks for the 2015 dye garden. Seeds have been saved for a repeat start-up for next season. Brown also grows dye plants in her back yard and was about to cook some indigo to make dye after we spoke recently. Her busi-

ness is called Trainway silks and she sells dyed ribbons and embroidery floss to shops across the country, where she also travels to teach. A selection of natural-dyed yarns will be available for purchase at the Fiber Arts Sale. Young people are showing a particular interest in pet-based yarns, she added. One can save a husky’s hair after brushing, for example, and learn to spin it into yarn and knit or weave into soft fabric. A few such items may be available at the sale.

1930s stylings come to life in Gypsy jazz Denver’s own songstress, Lannie Garrett, returns with her popular Gypsy jazz show, Under Paris Skies, beginning at 8 p.m. Nov. 7 and continuing every Saturday through Nov. 28 at Lannie’s Clocktower Cabaret in downtown Denver. Doors open at 7 p.m. and tickets are $35. The Under Paris Skies show is a pairing of Garrett’s smooth vocals and the catchy, foot-tapping music of the group, The Gypsy Swing Revue. Gypsy jazz is a blend of two styles of music, traditional Gypsy music and American swing. Featured songs include: “La Vie en Rose,” “Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen,” “C’est Si Bon,” and “Under Paris Skies.” Musicians Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli, from the Hot Club of France, originally conceived Gypsy jazz in the 1930s. The Gypsy Swing Revue features the arrangements of lead guitarist Elliot Reed with Anthony Salvo featured on violin, Stephen Hill on rhythm guitar and Jean-Luc Davis on stand-up bass. Lannie’s Clocktower Cabaret is located underneath the D&F Clock Tower building on the corner of the 16th Street Mall and Arapahoe Street in downtown Denver. Tickets can be purchased at 303-293-0075 or online at www.Lannies.com. Tavern Downtown earns kudos Thrillist.com, the website that never met a “best” list it didn’t like, is now declaring “The Best Sports Bar in Every NFL City.” Here’s what Thrillist said: “... Keep in mind we’re not just talking about the best Giants bar in New York or the best Cowboys bar in Dallas; rather, these are the best places to watch sporting

events based on the outrageous number of TVs, the deliciousness of the food and drink, and the all-around attributes that make them places we want to party on game day.” Best Broncos bar? The Tavern DownPenny Parker town, 1949 Market St., according to MILE HIGH Thrillist. LIFE “Because it’s an official sponsor of the Broncos, one of the perks is that it runs a season-long contest where two bar patrons are whisked off to the Broncos sideline to hang out before every home game. Most people won’t get to watch Peyton warm up, though, so one major draw for everyone else is the massive 11,000-square-foot rooftop patio, which offers views of both Coors Field and beautiful people enjoying the Mile High sunshine. And since the Rockies and Nuggets disappoint fans six months out of the year, billiards, foosball, mini bowling, local beers and chicken nachos can distract those poor Coloradans in their time of need.” For the rest of Thrillist’s picks, go to www.thrillist.com/drink/nation/the-bestsports-bar-in-every-nfl-city. The Tavern has seven other locations, including Lowry, Uptown, Wash Park and downtown Littleton. Uncorked in Centennial

Uncorked Kitchen is celebrating its Grand Opening Celebrations from 2 to 6 p.m. Nov. 8, and guests can join in or watch the live, interactive cooking demonstrations all afternoon. Complimentary beverage tastings will be in the Wine Bar from 2 to 4 p.m. followed by a cash bar until 6 p.m. Chefs Eric and Katie Robbins and their team will be on hand all weekend long to share their story about how at Uncorked Kitchen you don’t just share a meal, you share everything that goes into making one. Professional chefs guide and work side-by-side with guests to help them transform some of the world’s finest ingredients into a family-style meal. Grand opening events are free and open to the public and will be at Uncorked Kitchen, 8171 South Chester St., Suite A, Centennial. Guests need to RSVP at www. uncorkedkitchen.com/grand-opening/. For more information, call 720-907-3838 or visit www.uncorkedkitchen.com.

Need a fab Sunday brunch? Are you fantasizing about a fab Sunday brunch? Do you love seafood, salad, eggs, bacon, sausage, omelets, cheeses, carved roast beast — I mean beef? Check out the Sunday brunch buffet at The Inverness Hotel and Conference Center at 200 Inverness Drive in Arapahoe County. It’s an impressive display of cold dishes such as the seafood spread of crab, shrimp, mussels and more, plus a salad bar, another cold bar with olives and potato salads, etc., sushi, and hot food including an omelet station, carving station and serve-yourself eggs, bacon, sausage, etc. And don’t even get me going on the

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Bloody Mary bar where the server delivers your choice of vodka and you do the rest. The brunch at The Inverness is well worth the trip. Check it out at www. invernesshotel.com/pdfs/ChampagneSunday-Brunch-Flyer---2015.pdf.

The Seen Denver radio celeb Michael Floorwax at Edward’s Pipe & Tobacco Shop in Englewood. Also, Pat “The Gabby Gourmet” Miller dining with famed New York-based restaurateur Danny Meyer (Gramercy Tavern, Union Square Cafe, Shake Shacks) at The Kitchen Denver. That’s telling him Sign at ColoradoLand tire store at Interstate 25 and Broadway: “Don’t be like (New England Patriots quarterback Tom) Brady. Check your air pressure.” Overheard Eavesdropping on a man on Facebook: “One of the things about Yelp that makes me laugh is a one star review of a restaurant that starts out ‘I’ve been here a dozen times and it always sucks.’ Here’s a tip: If it sucks after the third visit, stop going there.” Penny Parker’s “Mile High Life” column gives insights into the best events, restaurants, businesses, parties and people throughout the metro area. Parker also writes for Blacktie-Colorado.com. You can subscribe and read her columns (Monday, Wednesday and Friday) at www.blacktiecolorado.com/pennyparker. She can be reached at parkerp1953@gmail.com or at 303-619-5209.

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14 Lone Tree Voice

Susan Moore of Centennial won the Best of Show award in the 2015 “This is Colorado” exhibit, showing at ACC’s Colorado Gallery of the Arts through Nov. 13. Moore’s winning painting is called “Rhapsody.” The juror was ACC adjunct professor of art Marsha Wooley. Photo by Judy Purcell

November 5, 2015

Art exhibition at college draws strong entries ‘This is Colorado’ will be at ACC through Nov. 13 By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com For many years, the Heritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County has hosted a statewide exhibit of two-dimensional art that draws strong entries from the area arts community. “This is Colorado” opened Oct. 21 in the Colorado Gallery of the Arts at Arapahoe Community College with an Oct. 23 reception filled with artists and art lovers, and it will run through Nov. 13. The 2015 juror was ACC adjunct professor of art Marsha Wooley, a nationally known landscape painter whose “Trees Near Sunset, Canyonlands” is just to the left of the entrance to the gallery. She selected 58 works for the show from 102 submitted. Exhibited works include the expected oils, watercolors, pastels, acrylics, mixed media and a few textile works — representational and abstract. The Best of Show, “Rhapsody,” a 36-by-36-inch oil by Centennial painter Susan Moore, bridges the last two definitions. Velvet ripples of oversized dappled green ribbon flow across the canvas. It’s about the eighth of a series, she said, with the ribbon in all of them. It grew out of her journaling, which happens at the start, middle and end of a painting, contemplating the spirituality involved. The ribbon symbolizes a “path to connectedness with the world.” As one looks further, one sees a small figure running into the shelter of the first ribbon loop. “It’s about seeking sanctu-

IF YOU GO “This is Colorado” runs weekdays through Nov. 13 at the Colorado Gallery of the Arts in the annex on the east side of the main Arapahoe Community College campus, 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton. Hours: noon to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays; until 7 p.m. on Tuesday evenings. Free parking in lots A, B, C. Tickets will not be issued during exhibit hours

ary in life — fearless.” It appears to be a man, but started out from a gesture drawing of a woman running, Moore said. “I used green deliberately (representing) growth, nature, balance and harmony in nature.” This person is “exhilarated, enthusiastic, fearless, inviting challenges …” Moore said Wooley told her she had resolved the work “with brushwork and luminosity.” Moore paints full time now after retiring from a career as an interior designer, which included teaching at ACC. She studies with painters Victoria Kwasinski and Linda Dahl. Other winners included: Susan Yager for her well-executed small acrylic “Vase of Joy,” which she said was inspired by a piece of fabric. Second place went to Lee Wasilik for “October, Please Don’t Go,” a mixed media painting, and third went to Nancy Raskin’s pastel, “Waterfall.” The Juror’s Pick was “Cracker” by Kristie Bradley, an acrylic painting. There are another 13 awards from individuals and businesses — always a nice feature for the artists at this show.


November 5, 2015

Sonya Ellingboe

SONYA’S SAMPLER

Lone Tree Voice 15

Pictures of wildlife will highlight lecture Local photographer Russ Burden is known for his tours and images. “Wings, Hooves, Fur and Talons” is his title for a lecture to members and guests of the Englewood Camera Club at 7 p.m. Nov. 10. His tours include Colorado locations, many others across the U.S. — and he is now booking tours to Africa. He will present a 20-minute show of his images of wildlife and talk about techniques and locations. The club meets the second Tuesday of each month at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit,

is open through the holidays at the bright red 1877 Depot Art Gallery, 2069 W. Powers Ave., Littleton. 303795-0781.

6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Guests are welcome. Dietz works displayed Littleton photographer Peggy Dietz will exhibit her work at Sansone’s Bistro, 5969 S. University Blvd., Greenwood Village, during November and December. 303-794-4026.

him will be Silver Ainomae, CSO principal cello; Ben Odhner, violin; Anne Ainomae, viola. The program will also include F. Schubert Quartet-Satz D 703; J. Haydn, “Emperor” Quartet. Tickets: $20/$15. Box office open one hour in advance.

Concert in Englewood “Clarinet Showcase” will feature Jason Schafer, Colorado Symphony Orchestra principal clarinet, in Brahms’ “Clarinet Quintet in B Minor, Op. 115” at 2 p.m. Nov. 6 at Hampden Hall, Englewood Civic Center, 1000 Englewood Parkway, as part of Englewood Arts Presents. Performing with

Holiday Express The annual Holiday Express exhibit of artwork and fine crafts by Littleton Fine Arts Guild members

Art accessibility is topic A daylong symposium on access, inclusion and community is planned to bring educators, administrators, Sampler continues on Page 19

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The Fort Restaurant, located in Morrison, CO is currently seeking Back of House staff including - Line Cooks, Day Prep, Baker, and Dishwashers. Front of House Staff including - Host/Hostess and Food Runners. Established in 1963, The Fort is a highvolume, fine dining establishment, open for dinner only. Full time and Part time positions available. Advancement opportunities. 401(k). Compensation DOE. Job descriptions and application can be found at https://thefort.wyckwyre.com.

• View status of application • Must have an active E-mail to apply.

(Check E-mail frequently for status for your application) Available Positions: *Immediate Openings Available *Part Time Positions Available *Various Shifts Available *Entry Level Management Positions *Competitive Benefit Package Advancement and Career Opportunities within our Organization Don’t Wait - Apply Today and Become Part of The Best Team!

Adams 12 Five Star Schools is now hiring for Substitute Custodians. Minimum qualifications are a High School Diploma, and at least 18 years of age. For additional information, and to submit an online application, please go to our web site www.adams12.org and refer to job #13673. If you have any questions, please call 720-972-4066.

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Inside Applications Engineer

Join our team. Expect the best. Target.com/careers

Now Hiring You can expect a lot from working at Target. An inclusive, energetic team. A company focused on community. A brand that puts guests first. And the fun and flexibility of a job that works for you.

SEASONAL TEAM MEMBERS (OVERNIGHT AND DAYSIDE) • Deliver excellent service to Target guests • Help keep the Target brand experience consistent, positive and welcoming • Make a difference by responding quickly and responsively to guest and team member needs REQUIREMENTS: • Cheerful and helpful guest service skills • Friendly and upbeat attitude Benefits: • Target merchandise discount • Competitive pay • Flexible scheduling

Keysight Technologies, Inc. has an Inside Applications Engineer (Job Code: IAEVN-CO) position available in Englewood, CO. Provide assistance to design engineers, research engineers, and test engineers in the selection and use of Keysight electronic test and measurement equipment. Submit resume by mail to: Keysight Technologies c/o Cielo Talent, 200 South Executive Drive, Suite 400, Brookfield, WI 53005. Must reference job title and job code IAEVN-CO.

Have a Caring Heart? Want to work for a company that truly cares for you? We are recognized annually as a Top Workplace in Denver. We are actively seeking loving and dependable caregivers to provide compassionate supportive care services to seniors in our community. Immediate placement possible, paid training and competitive wages. 303-736-6688

Worker needed varied jobs inside and outside work on 35 acres $12 per hour. Must be willing to work Hank 303-814-9737

Drivers: $5000 Orientation Completion Bonus! Local and Regional Aurora. Dedicated, No-Touch. Excellent Pay, Full Comprehensive Benefits & More! 1yr Class-A CDL: 1-855-450-2267

Drivers: LOCAL-Home Nightly! Denver Flatbed Runs. CDL-A, 1yr Exp. Req. Estenson Logistics Apply: www.goelc.com 1-855-433-7604

Hiring Snow removal Drivers & Laborers Great Pay, Can lead to Full Time Work

303-525-4081

Target is an equal employment opportunity employer and is a drug-free workplace. ©2015 Target Stores. The Bullseye Design and Target are registered trademarks of Target Brands, Inc. All rights reserved.

Go to: jobs.kingsoopers.com and start your career with the Best in the Business!

call Karen at 303-566-4091

LEGITIMATE WORK AT HOME No Sales, no Investment, No Risk, Free training, Free website. Contact Susan at 303-646-4171 or fill out form at www.wisechoice4u.com

SageWest Health Care, Riverton & Lander Wyoming facilities invites you to join our professional team! We currently have opportunities for Registered Nurses Relocation & housing assistance is available along with a retention bonus and excellent benefits package! Visit: sagewesthealthcare.com To explore our nursing opportunities or to apply online today!

JOIN OUR GREAT TEAM!

To Apply: • Visit Target.com/careers, select hourly stores positions and search for the city of Denver, CO. • Apply in person at the Employment Kiosks located near the front of any Target Store. Visit Target.com/careers to apply

To advertise your business here,

Help Wanted

    

General Merchandise Assistant Manager Produce Assistant Manager Deli Assistant Manager Bakery Assistant Manager Grocery Night-Crew Foreman


Lone Tree Voice 17

November 5, 2015

Serving the southeast Denver area

Castle Rock/Franktown

Greenwood Village

Highlands Ranch

Littleton

Lone Tree

First United Methodist Church

1200 South Street Castle Rock, CO 80104  303.688.3047 www.fumccr.org





Services:

Sunday 8am, 9:30am, 11am  Sunday School 9:15am

Little Blessings Day Care  www.littleblessingspdo.com

Trinity

 

Lutheran Church & School

Sunday Worship 8:00 & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School Bible Study 9:30am Trinity Lutheran School & ELC (Ages 3-5, Grades K-8)

 303-841-4660  www.tlcas.org 

 

 

Church of Christ

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Congregation Beth Shalom Serving the Southeast Denver area

Call or check our website for information on services and social events! www.cbsdenver.org

303-794-6643

Open and Affirming

Sunday Worship

8:00 AM Chapel Service 9:00 & 10:30 AM Sanctuary 10:20 AM St. Andrew Wildflower Sunday School 9:00 & 10:30 am

www.st-andrew-umc.com 303-794-2683 Preschool: 303-794-0510 9203 S. University Blvd. Highlands Ranch, 80126

Lone Tree

Welcome Home!

Weaving Truth and Relevance into Relationships and Life

worship Time 10:30AM sundays 9:00am Spiritual Formation Classes for all Ages 90 east orchard road littleton, co

Sunday Worship - 10:00am Bible Study immediately following

Parker Parker

Community Church of Religious Science Sunday 10:00 a.m. at the historic Ruth Memorial Chapel on Mainstreet

303.805.9890 www.ParkerCCRS.org

Currently meeting at: Lone Tree Elementary School 9375 Heritage Hills Circle Lone Tree CO 80124 303-688-9506 www.LoneTreeCoC.com

Parker

303 798 6387 www.gracepointcc.us

To advertise your place of worship in this section, call 303-566-4091 or email kearhart@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com

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

Joy Lutheran Church Sharing God’s Love

SERVICES:

SATURD ATURDAY ATURD A 5:30pm

SUNDAY A AY 8 & 10:30am

Education Hour-9:15am

Pastor Rod Hank Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 • ELCA www.joylutheran-parker.org


18 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

Science grants go to local arts agencies

Nearly $600,000 will be split among 46 groups

WHERE THE MONEY GOES Arapahoe Philharmonic Orchestra Continental League Honor, $2,000

By Shanna Fortier sfortier@coloradocommunitymedia.com Forty-six arts organizations will receive Scientific and Cultural Facilities grants following Oct. 27 action by the Douglas County commissioners. The tax-funded grants awarded by the commissioners total $596,986. The SCFD is a special tax district in the Denver metro area that supports art, culture and science organizations that enrich the community. Funding comes from a 0.1 percent sales tax. Two organizations received grants in the amount of $102,513.17 to assist with general operations: Cherokee Ranch and Castle Foundation in Sedalia and the Highlands Ranch Cultural Affairs Association. The Highlands Ranch Cultural Affairs Association is a sister organization of the Highlands Ranch Community Association. It produces events and collaborates with other organizations for events with a primary purpose of providing enlightenment and entertainment to the residents of Highlands Ranch. “The grant is obviously very important to our organization because it gives us the ability to put on about 40 different community programs a year,” said Jamie Noebel, director of community relations and events. “It gives us the ability to do some really neat, fun programs that are educational for the community.” Some of those programs include the annual Oktoberfest, the summer concert series, Denver Pops and the winter cultural series. “We think they compete with programs that are going on downtown,” Noebel said, adding that the events are affordable and close to home. “I think there are so many opportunities right here in our back yard that are available. People need to plug into their community.”

Orchestra Augustana Arts, Inc. - The Joy of Music for Douglas, $4,000 County Residents Ballet Ariel - Passport to Culture Performance, $3,000 Ballet Nouveau - Douglas County Performance Season, $46,000

County Outreach and Concert, $3,000

Master Classes at SkyView, $3,000

Denver Audubon Society - Healthy Waters, Healthy Birds, $7,500

Academy New Dance Theatre - Performance and Education Programs, $8,000

Denver Brass Inc. - Brass for All Ages, $8,000

Phamaly Theatre Company - Red Riding Hood, $4,900

Denver Concert Band - GOS, $17,500

Plains Conservation Center - Prairie Preschool, $11,500

Denver Municipal Band - Educational Workshops/Public Concert, $6,000

Baroque Chamber Orchestra of Colorado - Baroque Performance Series, $7,000

Friends of Dinosaur Ridge - Triceratops Trail, $23,000

Boulder Ballet - Ballet In the Park, $9,000

Golden Eagle Concert Band - Concerts in Douglas County, $1,000

Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company BETC Presents “Cyrano” at Lone Tree Arts Center, $15,000

HawkQuest - GOS, $17,500

Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art - Art Stop on the Go, $10,000

Highlands Ranch Cultural Affairs Association - GOS, $102,513.17

Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra Douglas County Concert Series, $7,000

Junior Symphony Guild, Inc. - Tiny Tots, $6,000

Cherokee Ranch and Castle Foundation - General Operating Support (GOS), $102,513.17

Kantorei - Music Alive!, $5,000

Christian Youth Theatre Denver - GOS and Theatrical Arts Classes, $41,000 cmDance - Vintage Music and Dance - High School and Elementary School Intensive, $3,000

Highlands Ranch Concert Band - GOS, $8,500

Rocky Mountain Arts Association Holiday Performance, $2,500 Rocky Mountain Brassworks - Brass Band Festival, $2,600 Roxborough Arts Council - GOS, $10,000 South Suburban Community Orchestra - GOS, $10,000 South Suburban Parks and Recreation - Summer Walk Concerts, $3,200 Tesoro Foundation - Public Education, $6,000 Think 360 Arts Complete Education Arts in the Schools Program, $4,000

Lamb Spring Archaeological Preserve GOS, $10,000 Lighthouse Writers Workshop Inc. Young Writers Outreach, $2,500 Littleton Chorale - Gospel Mass & Spirituals, $3,500

Colorado Chamber Players - Shostakovich Festival in Douglas County, $2,000

Lone Tree Symphony Orchestra - GOS, $15,000

Colorado Dragon Boat Festival - Cultural Edutainment Program, $4,000

Museo de las Americas - Exhibit & Educational Programs, $7,500

Colorado Wind Ensemble Inc.- Douglas

National Honor Band Association -

Thorne Ecological Institute - Thorne Nature Experience In-School Program, $14,000 Up Close and Musical - Performances and Mentor Program, $4,100 Young Voices of Colorado - Music Education and Performance, $10,160 Zikr Dance Ensemble - “Mysteries, Rites and Revelations,” $3,500 (Note: GOS refers to general operating support.)

SOMEW HER E BET W EEN

CLASSIC ROCK INDIE POP

&

T H E R E ’S

PER F EC T H A R MON Y. Standard Pacific Homes (all-ages) NOW OPEN • Toll Brothers (55+) NOW PRE-SELLING Tag-playing and wine-pouring, two-stepping and BBQing. The community of Inspiration believes that when generations live together,

InspirationColorado.com

life is thousands of experiences richer. But don’t take our word for it. Come witness the unique synergy between nature and home, neighbors and community. And while you’re here, sing your very own tune.

A New Home Community in Douglas County with Homes Priced from the High $300,000s • Ranch homes • A dedicated 55+ village

Newland Communities is the largest private developer of planned mixed-use communities in the United States. With our partner, North America Sekisui House, LLC, we believe it is our responsibility to create communities for people to live life in ways that matter most to them. www.newlandcommunities.com | www.nashcommunities.com WARNING: THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF REAL ESTATE HAS NOT INSPECTED, EXAMINED, OR QUALIFIED THIS OFFERING. • This is not intended to be an offer to sell or a solicitation of offers to buy real estate in the Inspiration Community to residents of Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, New York, New Jersey, and Oregon, or in any other jurisdiction where prohibited by law. No guarantee can be made that completion of the Inspiration community will proceed as described. NASH Inspiration, LLC (“Fee Owner(s)”) is the owner and developer of the Inspiration Community (“Community”). Certain homebuilders unaffiliated with the Fee Owner or its related entities (collectively, “Inspiration”) are building homes in the Community (“Builder(s)”). Fee Owner has retained Newland Communities solely as the property manager for the Community. North America Sekisui House has an interest in one of the members in Fee Owner. Newland Communities and North America Sekisui House are not co-developing, co-building, or otherwise responsible for any of the obligations or representations of any of the Builders, and shall have no obligations to any buyer regarding a home purchase from a Builder. Purchasers of homes from any of the Builders waive any claims against Newland Communities and/or North America Sekisui House arising out of their purchase transaction. Prices, specifications, details, and availability of a builder’s new homes are subject to change without notice. All square footage is approximate. © 2015 Inspiration. All Rights Reserved. Inspiration is a trademark of NASH Inspiration, LLC, and may not be copied, imitated or used, in whole or in part, without prior written permission.


MP/S+W

Marketplace Kid’s Stuff

Arts & Crafts

Advertise: 303-566-4100

PETS

YULETIDE BAZAAR Holiday Crafts, Homemade Food, Gift Boutique. November 14th 9am-4pm, PARKER FIELD HOUSE Dransfield & Plaza Drive Sponsored by Mountain Pine Woman's Club

Free parking and admissions, Free gift for 1st 100 shoppers.

Bicycles

Visit today!

Use this special buyer’s discount code and receive a free gift with your first purchase!

CP27023 Not ready to buy? Register using the buyer’s discount code and receive special offers and coupons

ANNOUNCEMENTS Auctions Auction on 11/13/2015 at 11am Unit: 100: Home appliances & furniture, TV, Athletic Gear, & Books U-Store-It CO 3311 W. 97th Ave Westminster, CO 80031

Instruction

ART CLASS Art Instructor with many years art experience offering adult Oil Painting class in Highlands Ranch area Ongoing - Start at any time Monday evenings From 6pm-8:30pm Phone for info (303)990-7407 www.sidneysart.com Math Tutor Available

www.mathdaz.com Online Math Tutors available for middle school, high school and college students. Work with an actual tutor online. Homework help, test prep, every day math help. Get whatever help you need when you need it at www.mathdaz.com

Misc. Notices Want To Purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201

Want To Purchase

Arts & Crafts Dynamic 26th Annual Craft Fair Nativity of Our Lord Church 900 W Midway Blvd-Broomfield (E of Hwy 287 on Midway) Sat, Nov 7, 8:30a-4:30p and Sun, Nov 8, 8:30a-2:00p Adm: non-perishable food item Info: Nicki 303-469-0670

5th Annual Fall Market

Friday, November 13th, 5-8:30 pm At ATA Karate Denver 205 W. County Line Littleton 80129 Email 7SistersGlobal@gmail.com to RSVP or for more information Do some holiday shopping and do some good! A portion of the proceeds from all vendors will be donated to the 7Sisters Scholarship Fund, helping young women in Colorado achieve their educational goals. Featuring locally run businesses! Women’s Bean Project, Bijou Creek Winery, The Knotted Arrow, PB Pocketbooks, Chloe & Isabel, Damsel in Defense, Paisley & Park, Cards to Love, Pink Papaya, From Sensitive to Yum and many more! Free Entry! 50/50 raffle! Door Prizes! Silent Auction! Find us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram www.7SistersGlobal.org

33rd Annual Craft Fair

Community Recreation Center 6842 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada 303-425-9583 Nov. 6, 6-8:30 pm and Nov. 7, 9 am-3 pm Admission $2 or free with donation of school supplies Bring this ad and receive two for one admission

minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201

Fun & easy to ride

Speeds up to 20 MPH Electric Motor Rechargeable Battery Pedals Like a Regular Bike No gas Needed No Drivers License Needed

303-257-0164

If interested in old brass/crystal chandeliers and floor lamps call (303)347-0681

Sons of Italy

Gifts and Craft fair 5925 W 32nd Ave, Wheatridge Fri Nov 6th 9am-6pm Sat Nov 7th 9am-4pm Admission and Parking FREE 303-238-8055

German short hair Pointers AKC Black and Liver, Avail Late October Exceptional Blood Lines Great Hunting Pets (303)346-8985 303-249-2954 Internet & stores selling "healthy puppies" - DON'T BUY IT unless you see the healthy mother & father! AVOID PUPPY MILLS!! Find your next BFF at CanineWelfare.org

Author to appear Craig Johnson, best-selling author of the Walt Longmire mysteries, will appear for Arapahoe Libraries at 7 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Denver Marriott Tech Center, 4900 S. Syracuse St., Denver. His series is the basis for the television drama series “Longmire,” and he has a new book, “Dry Bones,” to introduce. The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Arapahoe Library District. He will talk and then sign copies of his newest book, provided by Tattered Cover. The program is free, but registration is required: arapahoelibraries.org or 303-LIBRARY. ‘Hamlet’ repeated The National Theatre Live production of “Hamlet,” with Benedict Cumberbach, will be repeated at 7 p.m. Nov. 10. Check local theaters that carry these films — listings are not available as we go to press.

Autos for Sale 2002 Chrysler Sebring Convertible 6 cyl, 1 owner, 92,000 miles, FWD, Garaged, clean detailed interior, red/black cloth top, $3700 (720)217-4289

Cash for all Vehicles!

White, faux fur maxi length coat size M-L. Elegant for the Holidays! $280 new; askig $90. 303-979-9534 (Highlands Ranch)

Cars, Trucks, Vans, SUV’s

Any condition • Running or not Under $700

(303)741-0762

Cell: (303)918-2185 for texting

Bestcashforcars.com

B I G D E A L #2

REG. 29.59

• Full Rack of Baby Back Ribs • 1/2 BBQ Chicken • Baked Beans (pint) • Cole Slaw (pint) • Garlic Toast (5 pc)

SAVE $10 WITH THIS COUPON

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Limit 3 • Valid Any Day • Take Out ONLY • Expires 11/12/2015

10335 S. Parker Rd. Parker • 303-805-9742

Pine/Fir & Aspen

Split & Delivered $225 Stacking available extra $25 Some delivery charges may apply depending on location. Hauling scrap metal also available (appliances, batteries etc.) Call 303-647-2475 or 720-323-2173

South Metro SBDC

HH 10.20.13ColoNwsBigDeal#2.indd 1

10/20/13 8:49 A

TRAINING

Medical

The Aurora—South Metro SBDC helps existing and new businesses grow and prosper through workshops and consulting.

Scooter is like new, has all accessories,oxygen tank carrier,front and rear baskets and new battery's-scooter easily disassembles into 5 pieces to easily fit into a car trunk. Asking $650 or best offer. 303-253-4585

The following workshops will be held in the South Metro area:

Miscellaneous PLAN AHEAD

Business Plan Basics Wednesday, December 9th, Free 6:30—8:30 PM

Save your loved ones from having to make a decision about your final resting place Help them by having this expense already covered Companion Crypts for 2 Crown Hill Tower of Memories Mausoleum Wheat Ridge Now sell for $19,000 and up asking $10,000 obo 303-909-8693

To advertise your business here, call Karen at 303-566-4091

architects, designers, artists and concerned citizens together to discuss full participation and engagement in the arts for persons with disabilities, according to Bryce Alexander, artistic director of Phamaly Theatre Company. “Art of Access” will be held 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Nov. 9 at History Colorado, 1200 Broadway, Denver. Registration: $20, clyffordstillmuseum.org/event/ access+

TRANSPORTATION

Clothing

Arvada Schwinn Home Trainer 730 FitChildren for Christmas ness Center, complete w/manuals Craft & Bake Sale 3 Bridgestone 205/60/R16 Turanza By Women of Columbine Village Tires Saturday November 7th (303)885-5971 FARM & AGRICULTURE CraftFairArvadaPressAd.indd 1 10/9/15 2:00 PM From 9am-4pm Proceeds go to the Headstart Children Musical Farm Products & at Headstart School Corner of 52nd West Produce MARANTZ Console w/bench, and Allison Street 43", has working Grain Finished Buffalo Pianocorder player system. quartered, halves and whole Craft Bazaar & Bake Sale Mounted on moving dollys 719-775-8742 Friday & Saturday makes it a good party rental November 6th & 7th or can be removed. GARAGE & ESTATE 9am-4pm each day Near new condition. $800. Epiphany Lutheran Church Photos available, Denver location. SALES 550 East Wolfensberger Road Call 303-988-1092 Castle Rock Homemade crafts, quilts, jellies, WEBER Grand piano w/ bar baked & canned goods and more for your Lounge , Garage Sales 6' Ebony, seats 10-12 , or.... use at home without the bar. Craft & Vendor Bazaar Multi Group Upscale. S#71390. $3,850. Photos available. FREE Admission Precious Treasures Garage Sale Denver location. Call 303-988-1092 Sat Nov 7th 10a– 4p Also Jam, Crafts and Baked Goods Handmade jewelry, accessories, Saturday November 7th clothing, hair bows, 8am-2pm ornaments, baked goods, home Arvada Methodist Church décor, bath products, Origami Owl, 6750 Carr Street Wildtree, Arvada Arbonne, Juice Plus, Rodan & Fields, doTerra, It Works, & Pampered Chef! MERCHANDISE Wildcat Mountain Elem School, 6585 Lionshead Pkwy, Littleton

Antiques & Collectibles

Dogs

Wanted

Firewood

Sampler Continued from Page 15

Holiday Hills Village 2015 Art & Craft Fair Saturday November 14th 2015 8:30am-4pm 2000 West 92nd Ave Federal Heights Featuring fiber arts, illustration, drawing, painting, wood working, ceramics, home made bath products, leather goods, pet bedding/clothing, purses/hats ornaments, baked goods Free Admission

www.SmartyPantsCartoons.com

Lone Tree Voice 19

Phillip S. Miller Library, Castle Rock

---------------—————————— Successful Business Fundamentals Monday, December 14th, $30 10:00 AM 12:00 PM

BUSINESS

November 5, 2015

City of Lone Tree—Municipal Building, #200

----------———————————— Learn what it takes to compete successfully in today’s business climate.

Local ads, coupons, special offers and more!

The 2016 workshop schedule will be online soon.

(two seminars required prior to start-up consulting)

Register online:

SmallBusinessDenver.com (303) 326-8686

P O W E R E D

B Y

ShopLocalColorado.com

Funded in part through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration.


20 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

THINGS TO DO THIS WEEK’S

TOP 5

THEATER/SHOWS

Yuletide Bazaar The Mountain Pine Woman’s Club plans its 10th Yuletide Bazaar from 9 a.m. ‘Bye, Bye, Birdie’ Musical to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14, at the Parker Fieldhouse, at Plaza Drive and Douglas County High School presents “Bye, Bye, Birdie,” the first all-school Dransfeldt Drive, Parker. The bazaar features more than 100 vendors and musical originally presented in the 1965-1966 school year, then directed by the Mountain Pine craft booth, which includes an array of handmade items Wally Larson. The musical comedy is presented at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 6, such as scarves, home décor and doll clothes. The bake shop will offer a and Saturday, Nov. 7. Tickets available at www.SeatYourSelf.biz/dchs. number of delectable goodies. The café offers coffee, water, snack or sweet treat. The bazaar is a major fundraiser for the Parker Woman’s Club and the ‘Legally Blonde’ Spotlight Performing Arts Center, 6328 E. County Line Road, Unit 102, High- money goes toward scholarships and to organizations such as the Parker lands Ranch, presents “Legally Blonde” at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. Task Force, Arising Hope, Operation Smile, Santa’s Workshop, Freedom Service Dogs, Skycliff and other projects as needed. A special gift bag will 14. A fun show for the entire family. Show is the product of a 15-week class be given to the first 100 customers. for children ages 10-18 years. Call Spotlight at 720-443-2623 or visit www. spotlightperformers.com for information and to purchase tickets.

MUSIC/CONCERTS Art Contest, Exhibit The Greater Castle Rock Area Art Guild plans its ninth annual contest and exhibit of the National Arts Program through Friday, Nov. 13 at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. An awards ceremony and reception will from 4:30-6 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 7 at the library. For information, call 303-814-3300, e-mail etherealflinn@yahoo. com or go to www.nationalartsprogram.org/ venues/front-range. ‘Shrek The Musical’ Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main St., Littleton, presents “Shrek” from Friday, Nov. 13, to Sunday, Dec. 27. Based on the Oscarwinning DreamWorks Animation film, “Shrek The Musical” is a Tony Award-winning fairy tale. Shrek brings all the beloved characters you know from the film to life on stage, and proves there’s more to the story than meets the ears. Irreverently fun for the whole family, Shrek proves that beauty is truly in the eye of the ogre. Tickets available at the box office, 303-794-2787, ext. 5, or online at www. TownHallArtsCenter.org. Women Pioneers of Summit County Sandra F. Mather, Ph.D., author, historian and president of the Summit Historical Society, presents “They Weren’t All Prostitutes and Gamblers,” from 1-3 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Program is presented by the Columbine Genealogical and Historical Society. Mather brings the female pioneers of Summit County to life through research using newspaper accounts, census records, photos and diaries. Anna Sadler Hamilton was one such settler whose diary from the mid-1880s gives an account of the challenges facing newcomers to Colorado’s high country. Go to www.ColumbineGenealogy.com. Lamb Spring Archaeological Site Nathan Boyles presents a program on the Lamb Spring Archaeological site at Chatfield Reservoir. Program is at 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 12, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Refreshments will be served at 6:45 p.m. Contact the Castle Rock Museum at 303-814-3164, museum@ castlerockhistoricalsociety.org, or www. castlerockhistoricalsociety.org. Admission is free. Free Child Heart Screening Free heart screenings for students, athletes and young adults ages 12 and older are offered through the Anthony Bates Foundation. Sharon Bates, whose 20-year-old college football-playing son died from a sudden cardiac arrest, helps parents avoid the heartbreak she and other parents have experienced by providing this service to communities. Screenings are Saturday, Nov. 14, at Mountain Vista High School, 10585 Mountain Vista Ridge, Highlands Ranch; and Sunday, Nov. 15, at Chaparral High School, 15655 Brookstone Drive, Parker. The screening checks children for heart conditions leading to sudden cardiac arrest. Go to www. anthonybates.org/preregistration-az.html to register, or www.anthonybates.org/donations/index.html to make a donation. For information, contact Sharon Bates at 602482-5606 or go to www.AnthonyBates.org. FIND MORE THINGS TO DO ONLINE ColoradoCommunityMedia.com/events

EVENTS

Operation Wedding Gown Brides Across America will kick off its nationwide Operation Wedding Gown campaign with a special event Friday, Nov. 6, at Compleat Couture Bridal and Formal, SouthGlenn Square, 7562 S. University Blvd., Centennial. The salon will celebrate the American spirit by giving military brides-to-be free designer wedding gowns from a selection of more than 500 pieces, valued at $4,000. The bride or her fiancé must be serving in the military, be currently deployed, be deployed in the last five years, or be scheduled for Broadway on Broadway deployment to Iraq, Afghanistan, the Middle East, Korea, Japan or surroundCome one, come all to a musical of Broadway favorites from “Kiss Me, Kate,” ing territory. Proper identification and deployment papers will be required “Anything Goes,” “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang;,” “West Side Story,” “Fiddler on on event day. Eligible brides may register at www.bridesacrossamerica.com. the Roof,” “Will Rogers Follies,” “Mary Poppins,” “Bye, Bye Birdie,” “Newsies,” Appointments are offered from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and should be scheduled “Grease,” “The Lion King,” “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown,” “Matilda,” directly with the store at 720-287-077. An additional Operation Wedding “Pajama Game,” “Annie, Get Your Gun,” “Wizard of Oz,” “A Chorus Line,” Gown events is offered Friday, Dec. 4. “Little Shop of Horrors,” “Gypsy,” “Spamalot,” “Into the Woods” and “A Little Bowling Benefit Night Music.” It’s a Broadway buffet. Shows are Friday, Nov. 13, through Sunday, Nov. 15, at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, 8817 S. Broadway, Bowlers of all ages are invited to participate Highlands Ranch. Tickets available at www.stlukeshr.com, or at the door for in Bowl-A-Rama to benefit nursing home elders and at-risk youth. a little more. A benefit dinner at 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14, benefits Pura Vida and Urban Peak. Priority seating for Saturday’s show included in dinner Bowl-A-Rama is Saturday, Nov. 7; check-in and lunch begin at 11:30 cost. Go to www.stlukeshr.com. a.m., with bowling at 12:30 p.m. Children’s Concert and awards at 2:30 p.m. Cost per The Littleton Symphony Orchestra presents its free children’s concert, “The bowler starts at $40; however, Sneetches: Oh, The Music You’ll Hear,” at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14, at bowlers are encouraged to gather Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St., Littleton. A mad donations. Proceeds benefit romp through the Dr. Seuss’s classic The Sneetches, narrated by audience Bessie’ Hope, which brings together favorite Big Jim Conder. The Sneetches tells a story of class and prejudice elders and youth to cultivate mutually within a community of yellow, bird-like animals, with a moral message that rewarding relationships. Register at speaks to all of us about tolerance. And you won’t want to miss other play- www.bessieshope.org or call 303-830ful pieces, including the finale from William Tell, Sousa’s Liberty Bell March 9037. Bowling available at Brunzwick Zone, 9150 and a solo on a very unusual instrument, the marimba. Be sure to wear your Harlan St., Westminster; AMF Littleton Lanes, 2530 E. County Line Road, most outrageous hat in honor of the occasion. Doors open at 2 p.m. No Littleton; or AMF Monaco Lanes, 6767 Leetsdale Drive, Denver. tickets necessary. Call 303-933-6824 or visit www.littletonsymphony.org. Photographic Journey Through Southeast Alaska Father-Son Piano Duo Award-winning nature photographers Wendy Shattil and Bob Rozinski will Simon & Son, a father-son piano duo, will perform at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. show stunning images of Alaskan wildlife at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, at 15, at St. Andrew United Methodist Church, 9206 S. University Blvd., HighBemis Public Library, 6014 S. Datura St., Littleton. Among the stars of this lands Ranch. Peter Simon and his son Saling present keyboard acrobatics, wild section of America are humpback whales, bears, eagles and marine popular and classic music, humor and tales of their travels on the world life that abound in tide pools. Shattil and Rozinski will take you to southeast concert stage for an afternoon of non-stop entertainment appealing to Alaska through images and stories gathered while exploring the region on a all ages. Concert is free and open to the public. Contact Mark Zwilling at 12-passenger classic wooden boat built in 1932 as a marine research vessel. mzwilling@st-andrew-umc.com or 303 794-2683. Shattil was the first woman awarded grand prize in the world’s most prestigious wildlife photography contest, England’s BBC Wildlife Photographer of Vienna Boys Choir the Year Competition. She and her partner, Rozinski, have photographed as The world famous Vienna Boys Choir will perform at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. a team since 1981. They are working on their 17th book. Call 303-795-3961. 15, at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. For more than 500 years the Vienna Boys Choir has delighted and thrilled listeners of all ages. Colorado Historic Newspapers Their program includes favorite Strauss waltzes, classical masterpieces by Parker Genealogical Society presents “Colorado Historic Newspapers Mozart and Haydn, as well as folk songs from around the world. For tickets Collection: Reading Yesterday’s News Online Today” by Regan Harper of and information, go to www.ParkerArt.org or call 303-805-6800. the Colorado State Library and History Colorado. The presentation us at Arapahoe Philharmonic Concert The Arapahoe Philharmonic presents “Tales from the North” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 6, at Mission Hills Church, 620 SouthPark Drive, Littleton. A silent auction begins at 6:30 p.m. and continues through intermission. The concert will include music of Edvard Grieg, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and Jean Sibelius. Go to www.arapahoe-phil.org.

ARTS/CRAFTS

Arts, Crafts Show More than 150 vendors from all over Colorado will bring a variety of jewelry, holiday decorations, wood products, gourmet packaged food, soaps, candles and other items from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 7, at the Douglas County Fairgrounds, Castle Rock. The show benefits the Castle Rock Senior Center. In addition to the arts and crafts available for purchase, Castle Rock seniors will showcase their talents with quilts, crocheted hats, scarves and baby items, bowling ball lawn art, snowman kits and jewelry. In addition, seniors will sell their homemade “from scratch” baked items, along with jars of pickles, pickled beets and dried spices from the center’s garden harvest. The sale also includes the “Grandma’s Attic” section and a silent auction. Bidding closes at 3 p.m. A raffle of an iPad mini 3 and a quilt will take place at 2:30 p.m. All vendors donate items for door prizes through the day. Area businesses and organizations set up booths in the community corner and in the holiday wreath silent auction by decorating wreaths for visitors to bid on. Call 303-688-9498 or go to www.castlerockseniorcenter.org.

1:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14, at the Stroh Fire Station, 19310 Stroh Road in Parker. Event is free and all are welcome.

Fundraising Poker Tournament The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4266 will host a poker tournament Saturday, Nov. 14, to raise money to fight homelessness among veterans in Colorado. Sponsors are needed. Homelessness among veterans in Colorado is estimated to be around 600 men and women, according to the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless. Post 4266 plans to work with CCH to get the state to Functional Zero, which is achieved when a city or state can temporarily provide housing to any homeless veteran within 24 hours. For information about the event, or to become a sponsor, contact Peter Solano, Post 4266 Adjutant, at adjutant@vfwpost4266.org or at 303-718-4256.

HEALTH

South Metro Community Blood Drives A number of community blood drives are planned in the South Metro area. For information or to schedule an appointment, contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300, unless otherwise noted. Go to www. bonfils.org. Upcoming blood drives are: Friday, Nov. 6, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker; Saturday, Nov. 7, 8 a.m. to noon, Cherry Creek Presbyterian, 10150 E. Belleview, Englewood; Sunday, Nov. 8, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, 2746 5th St., Castle Rock (contact Larry Bauer at 720-220-2394); Monday, Nov. 9, 9-10:40 a.m. and noon to 2:30 p.m., Cascades Building, 6300 S. Syracuse Way, Centennial; Wednesday, Nov. 11, 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Walmart, Art Exhibition 2100 Legacy Circle, Elizabeth; Wednesday, Nov. 11, 9-10:40 a.m. and noon Town Hall Arts Center presents “Romantic Brushstrokes,” an art exhibition to 2:30 p.m., Triad Office Park, 5680 Greenwood Plaza Blvd., Greenwood in the Stanton Art Gallery at Town Hall. Featuring work by Rita Campbell, Village; Wednesday, Nov. 11, 10-11:40 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m., The Club at Patricia Barr Clark, Christopher Clark, Susan Gordon, and Tiffiny Wine, the Pradera, 5225 Raintree Drive, Parker (contact Tiffany Messer at 303-607exhibit runs through Tuesday Nov. 10. The Stanton Art Gallery is inside 5684); Thursday, Nov. 12, 10-11:40 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m., Plaza Tower One, Town Hall Arts Center and is open weekdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more 6400 S. Fiddler’s Green Circle, Greenwood Village; Saturday, Nov. 14, 8:30 information go to www.townhallartscenter.org/stanton-art-gallery/. a.m. to 12:30 p.m., St. Andrew United Methodist Church, 3350 White Bay This is Colorado Art Show Drive, Highlands Ranch (contact Charles Green at 720-231-7908); SatHeritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County and the Colorado Gallery of urday, Nov. 14, 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox the Arts are sponsoring “This is Colorado,” a statewide art show juried by St., Castle Rock; Sunday, Nov. 15, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Providence professional artists and Arapahoe Community College professor Marsha Presbyterian Church, 18632 Pony Express Drive, Parker (contact Steve Mato Wooley. The show runs through Friday, Nov. 13, at the gallery on the at 281-799-8348). campus of Arapahoe Community College. Go to www.heritage-guild.com/ Calendar continues on Page 21 shows.html.


Lone Tree Voice 21

November 5, 2015

Dementia expert says care takes a village Problem can’t be fixed, so management is goal By Jennifer Smith jsmith@coloradocommunitymedia.com

Laura Wayman has a story to tell about Jack and Peggy. Jack had dementia, and Peggy was bound and determined to take care of her husband herself. Jack wandered sometimes, and one evening he wandered to his neighbor’s to say that Peggy must be very tired, because she was sleeping on the floor. By the time the neighbor realized Peggy had actually suffered a massive heart attack, it was too late. “She was gone,” said Wayman. “And Peggy was my mother.” After that, Wayman dedicated her life to helping people like Peggy take care of people like Jack. Today the gerontologist is known as the “Dementia Whisperer” who wrote the book “A Loving Approach to Dementia Care.” She travels the country to help people understand the experiences of both the caretaker and the patient, and she stopped at Malley Senior Recreation Center in Englewood on Oct. 20 as part of that journey. Stories like Jack and Peggy’s are all too common, she said. More than 65 percent of spouses get sick and die before the patient. “We forget to pay attention to that caregiver’s needs,” she said. “You must ask for help. You must build your village to care for someone with dementia.” The key to understanding how to cope with a dementia patient is to understand the underlying disease. Wayman explains that “dementia” is really just an umbrella term for a list of symptoms that can be caused by a number of conditions, including Parkinson’s, stroke and Alzheimer’s, which is the most common.

Calendar Continued from Page 20

Commitment Day 5K Fun Run/Walk Life Time Fitness in Parker kicks off the New Year with a part run/walk, part festival that includes an expo with numerous vendors on race morning. Run starts at 10 a.m. Friday, Jan. 1, at Life Time Fitness, 9250 Crown Crest Blvd., Parker. Event is open to runners and walkers of all levels and abilities. Members and non-members welcome. Discounted registration available through Sunday, Dec. 13. Children 12 and younger may register for free with a registered adult. Go to www.commitmentday.com/colorado/ parker-aurora. Group training for the event starts Tuesday, Nov. 10; go to www. lifetimerun.com/group-run-training/cocommitment-day-5k-2016-parker. Contact Heather Crosby at hcrosby@lifetimefitness. com for additional information. Free Nutrition, Cooking Class Free Heart Health nutrition classes and cooking demonstrations are offered from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 18 (Eating to Prevent Cancer), at the South Denver Heart Center, 1000 Southpark Drive, Littleton. Join Richard Collins, M.D., “The Cooking Cardiologist,” along with Susan Buckley, RD, CDE, as they share their expertise on Heart Healthy nutrition and cooking solutions. For more information or to register, call 303-744-1065, www. southdenver.com.

EDUCATION

Estate Planning Workshop Protecting your family’s assets and future is easier than you think. A few easy steps can save you, and your beneficiaries, a lot of money and heartache. Don’t wait until it’s too late, or your beneficiary could be our federal government. Free educational workshops on estate planning are planned from 4-5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock; and from 4-5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 17, at the Parker Library, 10851 S. Crossroads Drive, Parker. RSVP is required; call 720-440-2774.

Laura Wayman, known as the “Dementia Whisperer,” speaks to a full house at Malley Senior Recreation Center in Englewood on Oct. 20. Photo by Jennifer Smith Regardless of the cause, the brain is literally eroding. Wayman likens dementia to a rat randomly stealing pieces of cheese, and where the holes are correlates to what symptoms appear. In Alzheimer’s, the first hole usually — but not always — appears in the region of the brain that controls short-term memory. And because there are no pain receptors in the brain, the patient feels normal, which leads to one of the hardest things in the situation — resistance to care is actually a symptom of the disease. They don’t feel sick, so they think they don’t need help. “They don’t know what they don’t

know,” she said. Feelings and emotions stay intact, but patients lose the ability to process them or express them appropriately. Wayman likens it to when a baby is first born: The child can only cry to express negative feelings until growing up and learning new ways. “Someone with dementia is unlearning,” she said. And just like you wouldn’t expect a screaming newborn to answer a question about whether she’s hungry, you shouldn’t expect a helpful answer from a dementia patient, either. “What we are asking her to do is think,

and her thinker’s broken,” said Wayman. “Stop doing it. Talk less and do more. … It’s OK to think for them. It’s already broken. You can’t fix it. You can just manage it.” And since their world has been reduced to feeling and reacting, that’s what matters most. “Act like it’s the most normal thing in the world, because they don’t know what’s normal anymore,” she said. “It’s all about how you make them feel with your actions. Don’t ask questions or give options, because they can’t process them. If they’re angry, agree. Let them be angry. Just be with them.”

Grapes to Grads The Arapahoe Community College Foundation plans its sixth annual Grapes to Grads wine tasting and silent auction from 6:30-9 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 12, at Mike Ward Infiniti, 1800 Lucent Court in Highlands Ranch. Enjoy music, networking, a silent auction, food from Littleton-area restaurants, and samples of more than 45 wine and craft beer selections courtesy of Lido Wine Merchants. All food, wine and beer samples are included in the ticket price, and all proceeds will support the mission of the ACC Foundation. Go to www.conta.cc/1GeZJBq to register. For information, contact the ACC Foundation at foundation@arapahoe.edu or 303-797-5881. Practice English Skills Practice your English class gives adult mixed level English language learners an opportunity to practice speaking English. Adults from all levels and language backgrounds are welcome at 10:30 a.m. Saturdays at Douglas County Libraries in Parker, 10851 S. Crossroads Drive, and in Highlands Ranch, James H. LaRue branch, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd. No registration is required. Continuing Education Program Metropolitan State College of Denver offers a continuing education program for adults. Most classes are from 6-8 p.m. Wednesdays, for two to four weeks, and cost varies. Most take place at the Student Success Building on the Auraria Campus, with other classes taking place at the South Campus (I-25 and Orchard) and the Center For Visual Arts on Santa Fe Drive. For list of classes, go to www.msudenver.edu/learnon or call 303556-3657. Application not required. More information on Facebook www.Facebook. com/msudenverlearnoninitiative. Editor’s note: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Wednesday for publication the following week. Send listings to calendar@ coloradocommunitymedia.com. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.

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Danksgiving NOVEMBER 2015


22 Lone Tree Voice

SPORTS

November 5, 2015

LOCAL

Mountain Vista wins fourth straight title Skyview Academy’s Butler repeats as 3A champion By Jim Benton jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com There were no strange happenings Oct. 31 on a sunny Halloween day at the Norris Penrose Events Center in Colorado Springs during the state high school cross-country championships. SkyView Academy’s Ben Butler ran off with his second consecutive Class 3A boys title, and Mountain Vista’s boys were crowned the team champion for a record fourth straight season in Class 5A. Butler, a senior, repeated as the individual champion and finished some 26 seconds ahead of second-place Taylor Stack of Salida. Butler’s winning time was 15:50.50, and he led the Hawks to a fourth-place finish. “There were a lot of good guys pushing me, and it feels special to win,” said Butler. “I always like to start off fast. It’s always been one of the things that has worked for me. I just wanted to set the tone. I was just so happy crossing that line. It’s unbelievable. Every time you get on this stage, it is something to remember. “The last year has been tough having two different coaches. Coach (Craig) Wagner stepped in right before the season and has done a good job with the program.” SkyView Academy’s girls, led by Cassie Unruh’s seventh-place finish, were sixth in the team standings. Mountain Vista senior Paxton Smith

was fifth, junior Joshua Romine sixth and senior Alex Fu ran eighth to pace the Golden Eagles’ 50-point, first-place finish in the 5A boys race. Fort Collins was second, but 65 points behind Vista. “I ran a pretty good race,” said Smith. “But, hey, we got the team and two on All-State. You couldn’t ask for more.” Mountain Vista’s girls were fourth in the girls 5A team standings. Sophomore Allie Chipman, running despite painful plantar fasciitis, was fourth while freshman Caroline Eck came in sixth. It was the first time that two Vista girls have finished in the top 10 at the state meet. “It was pretty hard to run,” admitted Chipman, who had ice on her foot and hobbled onto the awards platform. “The worst part is this was my first day running since league (Continental League championships). There was a lot of thought about not running, but I wanted to do it for the team. “I wanted to do better, but under the circumstances of my injury that was the best I could do. I tried to push through it.” Mountain Vista’s boys were the first to win four straight titles in 5A, although Pueblo Centennial won six consecutive championships between 1969-76 when there wasn’t a 5A classification. Vista Nation is a name associated with the Golden Eagles cross-country program, and coach Jonathan Dalby believes the designation is accurate. “It was the first time we put two girls Vista continues on Page 23

Ben Butler heads for the finish line to successfully defend his individual title at the Class 3A boys cross-country championship race in Colorado Springs. The SkyView Academy senior took top individual race honors as he finished the course in a time of 15:50.50. His performance helped the Hawks finish fourth in the team standings. Photos by Tom Munds

Paxton Smith nears the finish line at the state boys cross-country championship race in Colorado Springs. Smith finished fifth individually and helped Mountain Vista win its fourth straight 5A boys cross-country title.

Valor, Creek earn No. 1 seeds in football playoffs Nine south metro schools qualify for 32-team bracket Staff report

Valor Christian’s Ben Waters (3) gets caught up by Grandview’s Joe Richart (54) on Oct. 30. Waters had 130 all-purpose yards between pass receptions and kickoff returns in Valor’s 31-14 win. Photo by Paul DiSalvo

Valor Christian and defending state champion Cherry Creek were two of the four teams to get top seeds when the Class 5A state football playoff brackets were released Nov. 1 by the Colorado High School Activities Association. The 32-team bracket was divided into four quadrants with unbeaten Columbine and Grandview getting the other No. 1 seeds. Wild card points were used to determine the 32 playoff teams, and all first-round games will be played between Nov. 5-7. Centennial League champion Valor Christian (7-2) will host Legend (4-5) in a Region C opening game at 7 p.m. on Nov. 6. Cherry Creek (7-2) will entertain Rock Canyon in a Region D, first-round contest set for 7 p.m. Nov. 6 at the Stutler Bowl.

Five other south metro teams besides Valor, Creek, Legend and Rock Canyon qualified for the playoffs, which will conclude Dec. 5 with the state championship game as Sports Authority Field at Mile High. Cherokee Trail (5-4) will play at Heritage (7-2) in a Region A game, which is scheduled for 6 p.m. on Nov. 5 at Littleton Public Schools Stadium. Denver East (6-3) will test home-standing Mountain Vista (7-2) in the Region B bracket. The game will be at 7 p.m. Nov. 6 at Shea Stadium. Region C features two other south metro teams in addition to Valor Christian. Chaparral (6-3) will play at Fairview (7-2), and Bear Creek (4-5) will face Arapahoe (9-0) in a 7 p.m. game Nov. 6 at Littleton Public Schools Stadium. In a Region D first-round game, ThunderRidge (4-5) will travel to play at Fountain-Fort Carson (7-2) in a 7 p.m. game on Nov. 6. Class 4A state pairings will be announced Nov. 8.

Highlands Ranch forfeits three football victories By Jim Benton jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com Highlands Ranch has forfeited its three wins this season after Falcons’ head coach Mark Robinson used an illegal communication device to talk with the quarterback. Robinson was suspended for the Oct. 30 game against Mountain Vista. The Falcons lost 10-7. All of this surfaced following a 21-19 win over ThunderRidge on Oct. 23.

Highlands Ranch self-reported the infraction to the Colorado High School Activities Association. The suspension was included in the national rules by-laws but not the forfeits. Highlands Ranch decided to forfeit its three wins and ended the regular season with a 0-9 record. Highlands Ranch will play Mountain Range in a 10th game Nov. 6, but Robinson will not be coaching the finale. “We have taken the steps according to the CHSAA,” said Highlands Ranch Athletic Director Bruce Wright. “This al-

lows us to go forward and not carry over to next year. We corrected the situation. It was not OK, but we are moving on.” Highlands Ranch’s forfeiture of games may have had an impact on the 5A playoff field — which the Falcons may have had an opportunity to make if not for the infraction and with a win against Mountain Vista. “The penalty was appropriate for the violation, and CHSAA accepted that response to the violations,” Bert Borgmann, CHSAA assistant commissioner

said, “but it did create the need to refigure wild card points that had a rippling effect on a number of other schools. “While there is no by-law that required the forfeiture of contests, Highlands Ranch did not want to have this on their record and determined they needed to forfeit the contests and not advance in the playoffs. The school wanted to share a lesson with everyone about teaching their players what is the right thing to do when something like this happens.”


November 5, 2015

Injured wrestler makes progress Joe Hunsaker, the Castle View wrestler who was paralyzed in a wrestling match on Feb. 1, 2014, is a student at Oregon State and living independently. Hunsaker has regained a lot of function in his legs, arms and hands, according to his father, Jim. He is still in a wheelchair, but once in a standing position, he is able to walk for short distances. “He is making good progress,” said Jim Hunsaker, who has moved with his wife to Canby, Oregon. Joe attended the 2014 fall term at Oregon State but needed a caretaker in the morning and evening. He then came back to Denver for 6 1/2 months of intensive walking therapy at Craig Medical Center. He is back in Oregon now, and recently shot a deer on a hunting trip with his uncle. He also passed a driver’s test, saying driving with hand controls can be hard to learn. Northglenn sophomore defies odds The softball season is over and Northglenn sophomore Jaide Bucher had another good showing. Good enough that she is featured on the Gatorade Spotlight Win From Within, which was tagged Defying Doubt. Bucher was born without a right hand because of amniotic band syndrome. It didn’t keep her from participating in athletics, and she excels in softball. She was the varsity catcher for Northglenn as a freshman. She played some in left field and hit .311 for the Norse this season. Gatorade arranged for her to meet and play catch with her hero, Jim Abbott, the former Major League Baseball pitcher who doesn’t have a right arm. Bucher, like Abbott, shifts the ball from her left, or glove, hand to her right limb, while dropping the glove, and rolls the ball back to her left hand for the throw. Northglenn softball coach Stacy

Jim Benton

OVERTIME

Leaving their mark Mountain Vista’s girls cross-country runners have a tradition of writing their names on their legs before races. It started more than three years ago when twin sisters Brooke and Brittany Mackay were athletes on the team but nobody could tell them apart. So the twins would write their names on their legs. Parker Mackay, the younger brother of the twins, is a sophomore at Vista and finished 11th in the Oct. 31 state championship. Touchdowns raise money Greg Zorobowski, coach of the Highlands Ranch Packers and Jaguars flag football teams in the i9sports league, pledged to donate $1 for every touchdown his teams scored. He also challenged parents to participate. These are players between 6 and 9 years old. The Packers and Jags raised more than $1,000, which will go to Susan G. Komen for breast cancer research. i9sports added a $250 contribution to increase the donation. Jim Benton is a sports writer for Colorado Community Media. He has been covering sports in the Denver area since 1968. He can be reached at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com or at 303-566-4083.

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Sterne was surprised when she saw how well Bucher could play. “I was shocked,” she said. “I was inspired. Everybody that sees her is completely inspired. She played mostly in left field for me this year and did a phenomenal job. She hit really well.”

Vista Continued from Page 22

in the top 10,” he pointed out. “The boys did pretty good up front. We’ve only had two boys ever do that before (two in the top 10), and we had three. I know the 50 points for the win is the second-lowest in the history of the meet behind Loveland’s 1996 team that scored 37. “Our philosophy is everybody matters whether it is the open race kids that are down here cheering, the alternates or the

Lone Tree Voice 23 junior varsity kids. They are just as important. There were seven that got to run in the state meet. Everybody wants to run in the state meet, but everybody played a part in it. We’ve been very fortunate that we had 100 kids out for the team that really bought into the philosophy that everybody’s contribution matters.” Other top individual finishers from schools in Highlands Ranch included Rock Canyon freshman Shannon Osboa, who was 25th in the 5A girls race; sophomore Megan Koch of Highlands Ranch was 28th; and junior Luke Dickinson was 35th and the leading Rock Canyon boys runner.

STATE CROSS-COUNTRY RESULTS South metro schools’ top 10 teams and individual finishers from the state cross-country championships held Oct. 31 at the Norris Penrose Events Center in Colorado Springs. Class 3A Girls Individual - 7. Cassie Unruh, Jr., SkyView Academy, 19:53.85. Team - 6. SkyView Academy (Cassie Unruh, Louis Wittenberg, Payton Grove, Erin Baker, Kaleigh Kinney) 175. Boys Individual - 1. Ben Butler, Sr., SkyView Academy, 15:50.50. Team - 4. SkyView Academy (Ben Butler, Jimmy Scavuzzo, Joseph Pippin, Jordan Wilson, Ryan Butler), 136. Class 4A Girls Individual - 4. Reagan Hausmann, Sr., Valor Christian, 18:53.95. Class 5A Girls Individual - 3. Catherine Liggett, Sr., Legend, 18:24.55; 4. Allie Chipman, Soph., Mountain Vista, 18:34.48; 6. Caroline Eck, Fr., Mountain Vista, 19:08.69; 8. Lillian Markusch, Sr., Cherry Creek, 19:15.95.

Team - 2. Cherry Creek (Lillian Markusch, Devon Peterson, Anne Raymond, Katie Plomondon, Hannah Mimmack) 120; 4. Mountain Vista (Allie Chipman, Caroline Eck, Mauren Fitzsimmons, Hannah Brown, Abby Suntken), 132. Boys Individual - 3. Steven Goldy, Sr., Arapahoe, 16:07.60; 5. Paxton Smith, Sr., Mountain Vista, 16:16.00; 6. Joshua Romine, Jr., Mountain Vista, 16:19.83; 7. Kyle Moran, Jr., Cherry Creek, 16:21.71; 8. Alex Fu, Sr., Mountain Vista, 16:23.84; 9. Mason Brevig, Sr., Arapahoe, 16:34.84. Team - 1. Mountain Vista (Paxton Smith, Joshua Romine, Alex Fu, Parker Mackay, Shayan Zarrin), 50; 3. Arapahoe (Steven Goldy, Mason Brevig, Nick Maddalone, Kyle Kennedy, James Logan), 147; 7. Chaparral (Alex Hebner, Austin Dennis, Cole Gerome, Jack DeWinter, Nick Sodnicar), 268; 10. Legend (Scott Johnson, Landon Rast, Luke Rast, Josh Miller, Austin Podhajsky) 281.

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When “OK” Just isn’t good enough

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November 5, 2015

PROFESSIONAL !

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Licensed / Insured

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Services

Lone Tree Voice 25

November 5, 2015

Services Misc. Services

Painting

Scrap Metal, Batteries, Appliances, Wiring, Scrap Plumbing/Heating, Cars/Parts, Clean out Garages/Yards, Rake, Yard work done w/chainsaw, Certified Auto Mechanical / Body Work available Also can do inside or outside cleaning 303-647-2475 / 720-323-2173

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26 Lone Tree Voice

SPORTS ROUNDUP

HIGHLANDS RANCH FALCONS FOOTBALL Mountain Vista 10, Highlands Ranch 7 The Highlands Ranch Falcons lost to Mountain Vista at a home conference game on Oct. 30. Key performers: No individual statistics were reported for this game. VOLLEYBALL Highlands Ranch 3, Valor Christian 1 Highlands Ranch took victory at an away nonconference game on Oct. 26 against Valor Christian. Key performers: Junior Melissa Evans had 18 kills and one serving ace. Senior Madi Ferguson had 29 digs. Highlands Ranch 3, Grand Junction 1 The Falcons beat Grand Junction in a Legend Tournament match on Oct. 30. Key performers: Sophomore K. Milkowski had 12 kills and five serving aces. Senior Jasmine Evans received 15 serves.

November 5, 2015

ROCK CANYON JAGUARS

Highlands Ranch 3, Cherry Creek 2 The Falcons beat Cherry Creek in a close neutral tournament match on Oct. 31 with all five sets played. Key performers: Senior Jasmine Evans had 23 kills and two serving aces. Senior Maddie Betz had 11 digs. Legend 3, Highlands Ranch 2 The Legend Titans beat Highlands Ranch in a neutral tournament match on Oct. 31. Key performers: Junior Melissa Evans had 23 kills and two serving aces. Junior C. Czerniakowski received 15 serves and had eight digs. Highlands Ranch 3, ThunderRidge 1 The Falcons took victory against ThunderRidge in a Legend Tournament match on Oct. 31. Key performers: Junior Lauren Closs had six kills and one block solo. Senior Madi Ferguson had 20 digs and five serving aces.

FOOTBALL Thunder Ridge 27, Rock Canyon 7 Josh Goldin there 10 completions for 100 yards and one touchdown pass in the Oct. 30 conference game. Key performers: Jacob Petterle had 14 carries for 83 yards. Eric Hommel had seven receptions for 90 yards and score one touchdown. Zane Van Matre had 27 total tackles. VOLLEYBALL Mountain Vista 2, Rock Canyon 1 Tori Macaluso had five total blocks in the Oct. 31 tournament game. Key performers: Keeley Davis had nine kills, Reven Bradbury had 13 digs and Skylar Lane had 17 assists. Rock Canyon 2, Boulder 0 Keeley Davis had six kills in the Oct. 31 tournament match. Key performs: Skylar Lane had three aces, nine kills and 17 assists. Rock Canyon 2, Dakota Ridge 0 Keeley Davis had seven kills in the Oct. 31 tournament match. Key performers: Reven Bradbury and Skylar

Lane had 10 digs each. Lane also had 16 assists. Rock Canyon 2, Denver West 0 Rock Canyon won the Oct. 30 tournament match. Key performers: Ashley Halpin had five kills and Skylar Lane had 16 assists. Rock Canyon 2, Mountain Range 0 Keeley Davis had eight kills and seven digs in the Oct. 30 tournament match. Key performers: Tori Macaluso had four total blocks and Skylar Lane had 21 assists. Ponderosa 3, Rock Canyon 1 Rock Canyon fell in the Oct. 28 match. Rock Canyon 3, Columbine 1 Keeley Davis had 18 kills in the Oct. 27 match. Key performers: Riley Bradbury had give aces, Reven Bradbury had 16 digs and Skylar Lane had 42 assists. BOYS SOCCER Arapahoe 2, Rock Canyon 1 Rock Canyon lost in the Oct. 29 playoff game. Key performers: Aaron Makikalli scored the goal. Goalkeeper Blake Titensor had five saves.

VALOR CHRISTIAN EAGLES FOOTBALL Valor Christian 31, Grandview 14 The Valor Christian Eagles beat Grandview at a home conference game on Oct. 30. Key performers: Junior Dylan McCaffrey had 164 passing yards and 88 rushing yards. Seniors Cole Baker and Ben Waters each had 65 receiving yards. VOLLEYBALL Valor Christian 3, Standley Lake 0 The Valor Christian Eagles beat Standley Lake at an away conference game on Oct. 27 with three sets of 25 points. Key performers: Freshman Ashley Larson was selected as player of the match. Junior K. Montgomery had 14 kills and junior Alli

Lane had two serving aces. Chaparral 3, Valor Christian 0 The Eagles lost to Chaparral at a Cheyenne Mountain Invitational tournament match on Oct. 30. Key performers: Junior Kelsey Montgomery was selected as player of the match. Senior Gigi Garramone had eight digs and two serving aces. Lakewood 3, Valor Christian 2 Valor Christian lost a close match to Lakewood at Cheyenne Mountain Invitational tournament on Oct. 30. All five sets were played. Key performers: Senior Paighton Miller was

selected as player of the match. Freshman Courtney Lane had 11 kills and one block assist. Valor Christian 3, Manitou Springs 1 Valor Christian beat Manitou Springs at a Cheyenne Mountain Invitational tournament match on Oct. 31. Key performers: Sophomore Makena Baldwin was selected as player of the match and had 14 kills. Junior Juliet Burke had two serving aces and three solo blocks. Valor Christian 3, Mesa Ridge 2 The Valor Christian Eagles took victory

against Mesa Ridge at a Cheyenne Mountain Invitational tournament match on Oct. 31 with three sets of 25 points and one set of 21. Key performers: Junior Juliet Burke was selected as player of the match and had eight kills. Junior Delaney Thome had four serving aces and four digs. BOYS SOCCER Valor Christian 3, Lewis-Palmer 1 The Eagles took victory against Lewis-Palmer at a 2015 CHSAA boys soccer championship game on Oct. 28 with one goal in the first half and two in the second. Key performers: Junior Robert Lanz scored two goals and senior Ian Thomas scored one.

Salomess Stars Salome FOR RELEASE WEEK OF Nov. 2, 2015 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Deciding to work out that pesky problem (even though you might have been bored, bored, bored with it) should be paying off right about now. Expect to hear some very welcome news very soon. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Unexpected news might cause you to rethink a previous conclusion. Don’t be bullheaded and try to bluff it out. Make the needed change, and then take a bow for your objectivity. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Money matters should be considered as you continue to work out your holiday plans. This is a good time to scout out discounts before demand for them outstrips their availability. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) A calm period early in the week helps you complete most, if not all, of your unfinished tasks. A new project appears by midweek, and this one could carry some big career potential. LEO (July 23 to August 22) Positive results from recent ventures continue to pump up those selfesteem levels, making you Fabulous Felines feel you can tackle any challenge anyone wants to throw at you. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Family and friends might feel neglected because of your almost total focus on a project. Try to rework your schedule so you can have time for both your loved ones and your work. LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Don’t be surprised if you suddenly hear from someone from your past who wants to contact you about the possibility of renewing a long-dormant (if not dead) relationship. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) This is a good time to check over what went right and what went wrong with recent efforts. This can provide valuable lessons for projects that will be coming up soon. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Dealing with people who feel they’re always right about everything might be a problem for some. But the savvy Archer should be able to deflate their oversize egos.

Super Crossword & Sudoku Answers

CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) This week favors a balance between the demands of your work and your need for fun timeouts. Taking breaks helps restore and keep your energy levels high. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) There could be an occasional setback in what you’re working on. But look at them as lessons on how to do better as you move along. More supporters turn up to cheer you on. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Although a more positive aspect influences this week’s course, you still need to be sure that those who will work with you have no reason to work against you. Good luck. BORN THIS WEEK: You believe in keeping your promises. It’s not always easy to do, but somehow you do it. © 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.


Lone Tree Voice 27

November 5, 2015

Jaguars hold their own against Arapahoe

Young Rock Canyon team loses to Warriors in soccer playoffs By Tom Munds tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com The faces of the Rock Canyon players reflected their disappointment, but they didn’t hang their heads after the 2-1 loss to Arapahoe in the first round of the Class 5A soccer playoffs. “I am really proud of our team,” Jaguars coach Matt Sassali said after the game. “One of the things we preach in our program is not only hard work, but perseverance. There were points in the season where things didn’t go our way, and we lost several weird games. It was that way tonight. But we kept pressing and, right down

to the buzzer, we had chances to score.” Key moments Rock Canyon came into the game with a 7-8 record and seeded 16th, but the Jaguars challenged the No. 4-seeded Arapahoe the entire game. The Warriors scored in the first half on a long, high kick, and the Jaguars tied the score about five minutes into the second half on a penalty kick by Aaron Makikalli. Arapahoe won the game on a goal scored with five minutes remaining. Makikalli said the coaches stressed that the players ignore the seeding and told them it was a game they could win if the team played their best soccer of the year. He said of course he was disappointed with the final score, but added it was by far the best game Rock Canyon played this season. “It was a physical game, and I like it that

way,” he said. “The officials let us play soccer, and while there were collisions and guys going down it wasn’t dirty play, it was just the result of both teams playing good, hard, competitive soccer.” Key players/statistics Makikalli scored the only goal for the Jaguars, and Rock Canyon goalie Blake Titensor made five saves. It won’t show up in the statistics, but the Jaguars repeatedly pushed the attack and frequently got the ball into Arapahoe’s end of the field. They pressed hard near the end of the game and had one line-drive shot hit the goal upright and carom away from the net. When the Warriors were on the attack, Rock Canyon’s defense worked together throughout the game to protect the goal and, on most occasions, they denied Arap-

ahoe the chance to put good shots on the net.

They said it Coach Sassali said Arapahoe is a great team with a great program, and he was pleased his team stood toe-to-toe with them and slugged it out right up until the final buzzer.

Going forward The game ended the season for the Jaguars. However, Rock Canyon is a young team with only two seniors on the roster, and the coach said the playoff experience is valuable to his team. “I am glad we got this experience, and I believe we will be a force to deal with next season,” Sassali said. “This is the starting point to build for a stronger team next season.”

HAVE A SPORTS STORY IDEA? Email Colorado Community Media Sports Reporter Jim Benton at jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com or call 303-566-4083. 11.5 in.

Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: ANNIKA NEWLAND, D.O.B.: 3/27/2004; and CHRISTIAN J. CORNWELL, D.O.B.: 5/30/2000, The Children,

Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: ANNIKA NEWLAND, D.O.B.: 3/27/2004; and CHRISTIAN J. CORNWELL, D.O.B.: 5/30/2000, The Children,

Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: ANNIKA NEWLAND, D.O.B.: 3/27/2004; and CHRISTIAN J. CORNWELL, D.O.B.: 5/30/2000, The Children,

Public Notice

Take time to

DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109

be a dad today.

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO

In the Interest of: ANNIKA NEWLAND, D.O.B.: 3/27/2004; and CHRISTIAN J. CORNWELL, D.O.B.: C a l l 8 7 7 - 4 D A D 4 1 1 o r v i s i t w w w . f a t h e r h o5/30/2000, o d . g o The v Children, And concerning: JULIA CORNWELL, Mother, (DECEASED); PETER BONARU, Father of Christian J. Public Notice Cornwell; and DONALD NEWLAND, Father of Annika DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT,0015_Full_NewsBW Newland Step-Father STATE OF COLORADO Bill to: Title: 09CVZ0015 Executive to CD: Christian — Tic Tac Toe and 09CVZ0015 Market: Creative Director: REQ 91654 Cornwell, and 4000 Justice Way Run/Disk Date: 08-21-09 Art Director: C. Marrero 08/26/09 15:27 CASSANDRA and ROBERT Castle Rock, CO CE: 3/0NELSON Color/Space: Writer: BW/Newspaper Production Artist: BK Live: 11.5 NELSON, Account Executive: C. Cecchetti 21 JR. Douglas County, CO 80109 Task: Fix and print Trim: Production Supervisor: K. Warmack Respondents. Bleed: Coordinator: E. Shaughnessy Ext. 8016 Spell checked Notes: Page 2 of 2 THE PEOPLE OF THE Attorney for Department: STATE OF COLORADO John Thirkell, #13865 4400 Castleton Ct. In the Interest of: Castle Rock, CO 80109 ANNIKA NEWLAND, D.O.B.: (303) 663-7726 3/27/2004; and FAX 877.285.8988 CHRISTIAN J. CORNWELL, D.O.B.: E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us 5/30/2000, The Children,

And concerning: JULIA CORNWELL, Mother, (DECEASED); PETER BONARU, Father of Christian J. Cornwell; and DONALD NEWLAND, Father of Annika Newland and Step-Father to Christian Cornwell, and CASSANDRA NELSON and ROBERT NELSON, JR. Respondents. Attorney for Department: John Thirkell, #13865 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726 FAX 877.285.8988 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us

Government Legals Public Notice DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: ANNIKA NEWLAND, D.O.B.: 3/27/2004; and CHRISTIAN J. CORNWELL, D.O.B.: 5/30/2000, The Children, And concerning: JULIA CORNWELL, Mother, (DECEASED); PETER BONARU, Father of Christian J. Cornwell; and DONALD NEWLAND, Father of Annika

Government Legals

And concerning: JULIA CORNWELL, Mother, (DECEASED); PETER BONARU, Father of Christian J. Cornwell; and DONALD NEWLAND, Father of Annika Newland and Step-Father to Christian Cornwell, and CASSANDRA NELSON and ROBERT NELSON, JR. Respondents. Attorney for Department: John Thirkell, #13865 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726 FAX 877.285.8988 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 15JV271 * DIVISION 7 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juven-

Government Legals

CASE NUMBER: 15JV271 * DIVISION 7 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2015. TO DONALD NEWLAND AND PETER BONARU: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the abovenamed children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address. A Hearing has been scheduled on November 16, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109.

Attorney for Department: John Thirkell, #13865 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726 FAX 877.285.8988 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 15JV271 * DIVISION 7 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2015. TO DONALD NEWLAND AND PETER BONARU: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the abovenamed children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address.

Attorney for Department: John Thirkell, #13865 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303) 663-7726 FAX 877.285.8988 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 15JV271 * DIVISION 7 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS

This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2015.

TO DONALD NEWLAND AND PETER BONARU: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the abovenamed children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address.

A Hearing has been scheduled on November 16, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109.

Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN.

You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by A Hearing has been scheduled on counsel of your own choosing, or if you November 16, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. in Diviare without sufficient financial means, apsion 7, Douglas County District Court, pointment of counsel by the Court. Ter4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colormination of your parent-child legal relaado, 80109. tionship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If Your presence before this court is rethat remedy is pursued, you are entitled to quired to defend against the claims in this a hearing before a Judge. You also have petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE the right, if you are indigent, to have the COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABCourt appoint, at no expense to you, one SENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, expert witness of your own choosing at TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY any hearing on the termination of your HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGparent-child relationship. If you are a MENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUminor, you have the right to the appointDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEToNEGLECTED advertiseCHILDREN. your publicment notices call 303-566-4100 of a Guardian ad litem to represent PENDENT OR your best interests. You have the right to request a trial by jury You have the right to have this matter at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. heard by a district court judge rather than You also have the right to legal representby the magistrate. You may waive that ation at every stage of the proceedings by right, and in doing so, you will be bound counsel of your own choosing, or if you by the findings and recommendations of are without sufficient financial means, apthe magistrate, subject to review as pointment of counsel by the Court. Terprovided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. mination of your parent-child legal rela2015, and subsequently, to the right of aptionship to free your children for adoption peal as provided by Colorado Appellate is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If Rule 3.4. that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have This summons is being initiated by the the right, if you are indigent, to have the Douglas County Department of Human Court appoint, at no expense to you, one Services through its counsel. expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your Dated: October 27, 2015 parent-child relationship. If you are a John Thirkell, #13865 minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent Legal Notice No.: 928004 your best interests. First Publication: November 5, 2015 Last Publication: November 5, 2015 You have the right to have this matter Publisher: Douglas County News-Press heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2015, and subsequently, to the right of ap-

Notices

12/1/15.

CASE NUMBER: 15JV271 * DIVISION 7 DEPENDENCY SUMMONS

Public Notices

And concerning: JULIA CORNWELL, Mother, (DECEASED); PETER BONARU, Father of Christian J. Cornwell; and DONALD NEWLAND, Father of Annika Newland and Step-Father to Christian Cornwell, and CASSANDRA NELSON and ROBERT NELSON, JR. Respondents.

And concerning: JULIA CORNWELL, Mother, (DECEASED); PETER BONARU, Father of Christian J. Cornwell; and DONALD NEWLAND, Father of Annika Newland and Step-Father to Christian Cornwell, and CASSANDRA NELSON and ROBERT NELSON, JR. Respondents.

This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2015.

TO DONALD NEWLAND AND PETER BONARU: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the abovenamed children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address.

Government Legals

A Hearing has been scheduled on November 16, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109. Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption

Lone Tree Voice * 1

Government Legals

Government Legals


28 Lone Tree Voice

November 5, 2015

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