DECEMBER 8, 2016
FREE
SINGULAR CELEBRATIONS:
A look at unique family holiday traditions P16 A publication of
DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO
TECHNICALLY SPEAKING:
In Douglas County, classrooms are using digital tools to stay ahead of the curve Pages 6, 7 STILL THE CHAMPIONS: Valor Christian’s slow start couldn’t prevent a seventh state title for the Eagles P25
SPIRIT OF THE SEASON: Park Meadows takes holiday decorating to the next level P4
12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Our lowest prices of the season.
303-945-2080 Laura Carlsen, RN
INSIDE
VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 16 | CALENDAR: PAGE 21 | SPORTS: PAGE 25
Go to page 5 for more information from Laura Carlsen, RN LoneTreeVoice.net
VOLUME 15 | ISSUE 47
2 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
MY NAME IS
AIDAN GANNON
Small business owner, family man, dog lover Finding love I’m Irish originally. I’ve been over here for 16 years. My wife is from Colorado, which is what has me over here. I came over for a restaurant job. I was a chef and she was a waitress — that was the end of that. I met her on the first day of the job. Colorado and family life I love Colorado. I like the climate and the amusements. I have four kids that range from 1 to 11 years. I have two girls and two boys so it is even, for now. We camp, ski and do all the typical Colorado things. The kids are always doing all kinds of stuff from choir to sports. That is what really makes us busy. They are not asking for a lot for Christmas. We trained them well in the beginning not to ask for much. Must love dogs My wife got into dog grooming
and that changed her schedule. I wanted to get out of the night shifts to be with her, so I went into butchering. After that, we had kids so we opened up a business from our home grooming dogs and pet sitting (PetzLove). I eventually got pulled into the business. I grew up on a small farm. We always had cows, sheep, dogs and cats. My wife was really the dog person. She got me interested in them. This is our latest adventure. I started getting into food and nutrition for dogs because of my food background and eventually that led to me opening up my own store. One big family We go back to Ireland about once every year. I have 11 brothers and sisters. That is pretty moderate for back home. Everyone has a big family. If you only have two in your family, you were abnormal. I miss a lot about home. If you have suggestions for My Name Is… contact Stephanie Mason at smason@coloradocommunitymedia.com
Aidan Gannon says he and his family “camp, ski and do all the typical Colorado things.”
CORRECTION In last week’s article “County program aims to prevent domestic homicides,” it should have been stated that
Douglas County — not the entire 18th Judicial District — saw 636 domestic violence cases in 2015.
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December 8, 2016
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4 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
Christmas Douglas County offices will close at noon Dec. 23 through Dec. 26 for the Christmas Holiday. Many county services are available online at www.douglas.co.us
Are you a veteran? The Douglas County Office of Veterans Affairs is here to serve veterans and their families. Assistance is available for vocational training, disability compensation, and benefits,. Visit www.douglasveterans.org for details.
LEPC meeting Dec. 15 The Douglas County Local Emergency Planning Committee will meet on Dec. 15, 2 p.m. at the Douglas County School District Offices, 701 Prairie Hawk Drive in Castle Rock. For more information visit www.dcsheriff.net/ LEPC
What’s happening with my County government? Our committment to open and transparent government includes online posting of information about all public meetings at which the business of government is conducted. To view agendas for various public meetings, please visit www.douglas.co.us and search for meetings and agendas.
Art Encounters calls for entries The Douglas County Art Encounters™ public art program invites sculptors to submit applications for participation in the May 2017 - June 2018 outdoor sculpture exhibit. The deadline for entries is Feb. 11, 2017. For details visit www.douglas.co.us/artencounters/program-information/
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Park Meadows is covered in $1 million worth of holiday decorations this year. The mall aimed for a classic look with a touch of color.
Park Meadows chooses classic touch for holiday season Mall prepares for yearly influx with $1 million decorating budget BY BY STEPHANIE MASON SMASON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
This holiday season, Park Meadows is decorating with the purpose of getting customers in the door of the retail resort in Lone Tree. “It is a very competitive market,” Park Meadows General Manager Pamela Schenck-Kelly said. “From an economic standpoint, you have to do everything to make sure the people choose you as a shopping destination.” During the holidays, Park Meadows generates about 35 percent of its total retail sales for the year, Schenck-Kelly said. The usual 55,000 visitors a day almost triples the Saturday before Christmas, she said. The mall invested more than a million dollars into decorating for the season. “This year, we went a little wild and put in all these colored lights in the trees,” Schenck-Kelly said. “We wanted to go along with a classic theme. When you walk in, you walk into an alpine Colorado village.” Complimentary gift wrap is made available to shoppers Thursday through Sunday, and every day after Dec. 15. Holiday events also serve as a form of decoration for the mall. Schenck-Kelly said performers from the Lone Tree Arts Center will present parts from
“It’s a Wonderful Life” during the weekends leading up to Christmas. Santa is another holiday perk as he waits to interact with children in a North Pole escape near Dillard’s. While waiting in line, a holiday fairy interacts with children to ease the wait. “I think it is all very classy,” Teavana employee Taylor Keivit said. “They did a nice job of decorating but not going overboard.” Nordstrom is the most popular store at the shopping resort during the holiday season, Schenck-Kelly said. Park Meadows’ addition of new e-commerce stores, including Nespresso, Amazon and Apple, are add-ons that SchenckKelly believes will be popular this year. Park Meadows recently added 14 new energy efficient solar panels in early November that will help with the extra electricity being used for the decorations. Schenck-Kelly said Park Meadows is reducing kilowatt usage in double digits every year. With employees parking off site and being shuttled to their jobs, more than 500 parking spaces will be freed up this season. The usual 6,600 spots get to 95 percent capacity 200 days a year, Schenck-Kelly said. The parking spaces are even closer to being filled to capacity during the holidays. “Our staff is trained to treat a visit like having your best friend over for dinner,” Schenck-Kelly said. “You don’t have to put a wreath on your front door or set the table nice, but when you love someone, or you love your customer, you want to make it demonstrative.”
Lone Tree Voice 5
December 8, 2016
‘Cody, we love you, we’re going to miss you’ State trooper described as family man, person of integrity BY JESSICA GIBBS JGIBBS@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
He was a man of high integrity. He had a booming voice, a strong presence and exuded joy. He was an entertainer, intentionally or not. That’s what the loved ones of Colorado State Patrol Trooper Cody Donahue said when they gathered for his memorial service Dec. 2. The 34-year-old husband and father of two was struck and killed by a passing vehicle while investigating a property damage accident on Interstate 25 south of Castle Rock on Nov. 25. Donahue’s funeral at the Denver First Church of the Nazarene drew a crowd of hundreds, with an overwhelming show of support from area emergency responders. Uniforms from the state patrol, Castle Rock police and many other departments blanketed the sanctuary. “Cody, we love you, we’re going to miss you,” said Capt. Jeff Goodwin, who works at the state patrol’s Castle Rock station, where Donahue was based. At the front of the room rested Donahue’s casket, draped in an American flag and attended by two guards at all times — their heads bowed, their arms crossed and standing motionless next to their fallen comrade. Before the service, men and women in uniform stood in stoic salute, both inside and outside of the church, near the intersection of Hampden Avenue and Colorado Boulevard. Donahue’s sister, Erin DonahuePaynter, opened the service. It was an honor to be his sister, she said, and she knew he wouldn’t like such sadness. “I want Velma and Leila and Maya to feel all the love in this place today,” she said of Donahue’s wife and two daughters. At her request, the crowd stood to its feet with applause, whistles and cheers for a minute straight. “You gave him the family he always wanted. You were his purpose in life,” she said to Donahue’s wife, Velma. “He loved every part of being a dad.” Colorado State Patrol Chief Scott Hernandez described Donahue, who lived in Parker, as a tenacious team member whose service saved lives. “I am so proud to have known Cody, and I am so proud to have worn this uniform with Cody,” he said. Goodwin said Donahue was a fixture in the Castle Rock office. His voice could be heard throughout the building. He spent time talking to his colleagues on any topic. His stories were special simply because of the way he told them. “He was our entertainer,” Goodwin said. And, they knew he loved his family immensely. When Donahue talked about weekend plans he didn’t speak
Police vehicles pass below a flag hung in tribute to Colorado State Patrol Trooper Cody Donahue at his Dec. 2 funeral. using “I,” Goodwin said. He used “we,” whether that meant taking the family to the mountains, to the movies or tool shopping, he joked. Goodwin noted the tough past 18 months experienced by the state patrol. Authorities say Donahue was struck by truck driver Noe Gamez-Ruiz, 41, of Denver, at about 1:50 p.m. the day after Thanksgiving. Gamez-Ruiz faces charges of careless driving resulting in death, a misdemeanor, and failure to yield right of way to an emergency vehicle, a traffic infraction. Donahue was the third state patrol trooper killed in the past year and a half. Trooper Jamie Jursevics was struck and killed by a drunken driver on I-25 Nov. 15, 2015, and Trooper Taylor Thyfault was struck and killed on Colorado 66 near Longmont by a fleeing suspect’s vehicle May 23, 2015. Longtime friend of Donahue’s, state patrol Trooper Jeff Gowin, recalled some of his favorite memories with Donahue before breaking down into tears. Recently, Gowin was hit by a Taser in their ongoing “torture agreement” in which the two agreed to play practical jokes on each other. “Because (Donahue) leaned over and said, ‘I’m not going to do this alone am I?’ “ Gowin said. It got the crowd laughing. In another instance, Donahue the entertainer had a video of him slipping and sliding down a hill and catching himself on a guardrail while on a call. He showed it to anyone who would watch. Donahue was the first to criticize and laugh at himself, Gowin said. “He did have his faults,” Gowin said. “He was clumsy. He was stubborn.” Again, to the crowd’s laughter, Gowin went on to describe his friend’s loyalty and giving spirit. Mostly in the past week, he heard Donahue described as genuine. “He really liked to share his light,” Gowin said in an emotional end to his speech. “I’m going to miss you, brother.”
JESSICA GIBBS
This photo of Colorado State Patrol Trooper Cody Donahue and family was featured in the program for his funeral services. Donahue was a husband and father of two daughters.
COURTESY PHOTO
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6 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
High-tech tools help students, lessons click DCSD classrooms incorporate computer science and coding as early as kindergarten BY MIKE DIFERDINANDO MDIFERDINANDO@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
R
obots scoot, stop, turn and reverse as they zip around the floor of a classroom at Redstone Elementary School in Highlands Ranch. The fourth-grade students use iPads to make small adjustments and refine the course and behavior of their robots. “We’re trying to make him go around in a circle and smash the cups,” Jack Christopherson said. “It’s fun because we get to decide what it is going to do. He can make noises. He can greet people. He can dance.” The robots can do all that because students are writing the algorithms — the step-by-step procedures used to accomplish a task — that program the machines. “I think we adults are intimidated by technology, (but) kids don’t have that fear,” computer science teacher Trish Dunbar said. “Kids can absorb the information at such a young age. The parents don’t even know what an algorithm is.” In Dunbar’s class, many of her students started learning about basic coding as early as kindergarten. But that’s not unusual these days. From working with basic robotics in the lower grades to understanding cyber security in high school, the Douglas County School District has worked to incorporate technology into its curriculum. DCSD students have tablets and computers available to use at every grade level and teachers have worked to make sure technology plays a role in their lesson plans. According to a 2013 study of K-12 teachers by PBS LearningMedia — an education-focused digital arm of the Public Broadcasting Service — three-quarters of teachers surveyed link educational technology to a growing list of benefits, saying technology enables them to reinforce and expand on content. A 2013 Pew Research study of 2,462 Advanced Placement and National Writing Project teachers found that 73 percent of teachers said they and/or their students use their mobile phones in the classroom or to complete assignments. The same study revealed that 45 percent report they or their students use e-readers and 43 percent use tablet computers in the classroom or to complete assignments. “I feel like it gives our students a huge advantage,” DCSD Superintendent Erin Kane said. “Programing is really big and it’s getting bigger every year. It is one of the industries that has the largest percentage of
Redstone Elementary students Jack Christopherson, Josh McMillan and Nash Leonard pose with their robot. PHOTOS BY MIKE DIFERDINANDO
BY THE NUMBERS
79 69 60
— Percentage of teachers in the U.S. who say they have students submit assignments online.
teachers.
— Percentage of teachers who say the internet has a “major impact” on their ability to share ideas with other
— Percentage of teachers who agree with the notion that “today’s digital technologies make it harder for students to find and use credible sources of information.”
45
— Percentage of teachers under age 35 who have their students develop or share work on a website or blog, compared with 34 percent of teachers 55 and older. Source: 2013 Pew Research study of 2,462 Advanced Placement and National Writing Project teachers
unfilled, highly paid positions. Why wouldn’t we prep our kids for that?” Blending curriculum, technology Mandie McQueen, a first-grade teacher at Prairie Crossing Elementary in Parker, said her students are using technology on a daily basis. “We are very fortunate to have an abundance of technology at our school,” Mcqueen said. “Grades first through sixth have a Chromebook for each student. Kindergarten has one iPad Mini for every two students. Teachers also have the ability to check out a class set of MacBook Pros and iPads for a variety of uses.” The school district is close to
Linda Conway is the head of DCSD’s Innovation and Design Center in Castle Rock.
achieving its goal of having a technological device for every one of its 67,000 students, Chief Technology Officer Gautam Sethi said. In the younger grades, students mostly use tablets, while in the upper grades laptops are more common. Devices are available to be checked out Sethi from the schools and students are encouraged to bring their own devices to school if they have them. Stephanie Duval, a second-grade teacher at Prairie Crossing, said she allows her students to choose
how they will write about new topics in class, whether it’s by using paper and pencil or by using online writing tools. “They can add pictures or graphics and show their understanding of new content,” Duval said. In recent years, the district also has expanded wireless internet access to nearly all of its buildings and has encouraged students to bring and use personal devices. DSCD has between 45,000 and 50,000 computers, tablets and other devices, with an additional 5,000 being added every year. Krisie Stovall, a second-grade SEE TECHNOLOGY, P7
Lone Tree Voice 7
6December 8, 2016
TECHNOLOGY: Younger grades are learning tech in hands-on environment FROM PAGE 6
teacher at Copper Mesa Elementary School in Highlands Ranch, has been teaching her students about geography and mapping skills. She brought in iPadcontrolled Bee Bots similar to the ones used at Redstone Elementary to teach about longitude, latitude and how to use a compass. Using a big map spread out on the floor, she had students find different points by programing the coordinates into the Bee Bots. “They not only had a great time but i really think it helped them understand,” Stovall said. Stovall said she uses technology in the classroom daily and can even find herself asking her students for help. “They are super comfortable with it,” Stovall said. “ Sometimes they know more than I do and they can help me out with it.” Stovall’s use of the Bee Bots is an example of how teachers are incorporating technology to go beyond the basics. “These kids are growing up with so much technology around them, having one more computer doesn’t really engage them as much anymore,” Sethi said. “The technology itself is so much simpler. It is not the way we used to learn programing on big computers with green screens. Now, it’s just drag and drop, but with that they learn the same intricacies. They learn to write the neatest amount of code in the least amount of lines.” Linda Conway is the head of DCSD’s Innovation and Design Center in Castle Rock. Over the past five years, she has been working to remake the district’s libraries into collaborative learning commons — the kind of large, open work areas one would expect to find at a tech company. “When we go and sit down with a principal or a librarian,” Conway said, “we listen and find out what their vision is, what the learning looks like in their school, and find out how we can transform the space to fit the learning, rather than vice versa.” With the younger grades, Conway said there is more hands-on learning in the library environment. Tactile objects for students to work with are important. As students move up, more and more advanced technology skills are being used. At the high school level, students are more concerned about the research tools, she said.
Adam Klein, a senior at Highlands Ranch Hight School, said he has been doing robotics since about eighth grade. PHOTOS BY MIKE DIFERDINANDO
This robot is used by students at Redstone Elementary in Highlands Ranch.
Sonja Coy is a senior at Highlands Ranch High School. She said she plans to study computer science in college.
Redstone Elementary computer science teacher Trish Dunbar sits with her class. In April, Colorado House Bill 16-1198 passed the Legislature, giving high school students in the state the opportunity to take computer science or coding classes for credit toward graduation in math and science. The bill will help make computer science a more integrated part of the curriculum, said Sethi, who expects schools will eventually want to expand coding and technology into the lower grade levels as cornerstones of the curriculum. “We need to find new pathways,” Sethi said. “We’re working with the middle and high schools to figure out where we go from here.” Preparing for future Teacher Nicky DeBolt runs the CyberPatriot program at Highlands Ranch High School. CyberPatriots is a national
program created by the Air Force Association — an independent nonprofit group focused on education and promoting public understanding of aerospace— seven years ago as an educational program to inspire high school students toward careers in cyber security or STEM fields. “I don’t want to say this is a hacking program — in fact, they really discourage using the word hacking,” DeBolt said. “It’s about defense. We defend against hackers and vulnerabilities.” In simulations, students are given a computer with an image. They are told what types of programs they have been allotted and which users are authorized. Their job is to configure and defend the system to withstand an attack from an outside group. Senior Adam Klein has been doing robotics since about eighth grade. But he said the
kind of coding in robotics is very different from the coding in CyberPatriots. “This is a lot of holistic technological understanding,” Klein said. “It was a steep leaning curve for me.” Klein plans to pursue a career in technology. “The cyber security field I find fascinating because the fear of being hacked and not having network security is so prevalent today that knowing how security works and what it means to not have it is valuable.” Sonja Coy, also a senior, had some experience in coding before joining CyberPtriots, but learned more from the hands-on work she has done in the class. “For example, password length is more important than having different numbers or characters,” Coy said. “If you have a 12-character password it is better than having a
four-character password that has dollar signs or something. The more possible combinations the better.” The district works with each school to determine what ways technology can be incorporated into learning, Sethi said. Each school commits to it at a different level. “It’s what works best for you,” Sethi said. “Do you want to integrate technology into your math class? Or do you want it to be a stand-alone? We’ll help you though it.” Superintendent Kane, who has a degree in applied mathematics and computer science from the University of Colorado and who spent 10 years in the tech industry, said DCSD schools are ahead of the curve. “Our schools are very wellequipped with technology,” Kane said. “I feel like it gives our students a huge advantage.”
8 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
2016 Holiday Season
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Featuring the Return of Denver Favorite Jamie Horton in the role of George Bailey
Featuring the return of beloved Denver actor Jamie Horton, this beloved American holiday classic comes to captivating life as a live 1940s radio broadcast, complete with an applause sign, commercial jingles, and on-stage sound effects. With the help of an ensemble that brings a few dozen characters to the stage, the story of idealistic George Bailey unfolds as he considers ending his life one fateful Christmas Eve. Theatrical Series Sponsor
A Kantorei Christmas Tuesday, December 20 at 7:30pm Join Kantorei, Denver’s favorite choral ensemble, for a special performance of holiday favorites. Led by Artistic Director Joel Rinsema, Kantorei celebrates their 20th season with holiday selections chosen by loyal fans, including “The First Noel,” “Still, Still, Still,” “I Saw Three Ships,” and others.
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Lone Tree Voice 9
December 8, 2016
SANTA’S FLIGHT ACADEMY Needs Heroes
Former Denver Broncos cornerback Frank Robinson signs a ball as he checks in for a free health screening at the Centura Health Meridian Neighborhood Health Center on Nov. 20. COURTESY PHOTOS
Football veterans come to Parker for preventive health screening Former Broncos quarterback Jake Plummer among the athletes to take part BY TOM SKELLEY TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Three dozen members of the National Football League Players Association came together on a recent Sunday in Parker, but ultrasounds and echocardiograms, not Xs and Os, were the priority on this given Sunday. The NFLPA, Centura Health and the Living Heart Foundation co-sponsored a preventive health screening for 37 of its members on Nov. 20, giving the participants a heads-up on their health and providing important data for research on problems like sleep apnea, cardiac issues, obesity and concussions. “I’m only 41,” said former Broncos quarterback Jake Plummer. “It’s never too early to take care of your health, right?” Cardiologist Dr. Archie Roberts, who had a brief career as an NFL quarterback with the Cleveland Browns and Miami Dolphins, began the Living Heart Foundation 14 years ago in New Jersey. “We went to the NFL and the NFLPA and shared why we thought it was important to track the health and the health outcomes of these players. Before that, there was no formal structure,” Dr. Roberts said. “We have seen over 4,000 players over 14 years.” Tests included echocardiograms, CT calcium scores and carotid artery ultrasounds, performed by Centura physicians. Roberts said the data collected has led to special obesity programs and peer-reviewed papers for his group, in addition to the information on ongoing health issues for former
Don’t miss this one-of-a-kind interactive Santa experience now through December 24. Former Denver Broncos linebacker Karl Mecklenburg gets some blood work done at the Centura Health Meridian Neighborhood Health Center on Nov. 20. Thirty-seven members of the National Football League Players’ Association met at the center for preventive healthcare screenings. players it provides to the NFL. “Football players are susceptible to heart disease because of their body mass, yet they feel invincible because of their strength,” said Scott Perryman, chief operating officer of the Living Heart Foundation. “They enjoy this team-oriented setting where they can reconnect with old buddies.” Former Broncos quarterback Shawn Moore said the invitation-only event was a chance to reconnect with teammates, but he made the long trip to put his health first. “I live in Virginia but I flew in for the benefits of the testing,” Moore said. “Seeing the buddies is a bonus.”
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10 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
Mother, sons died of gunshot wounds
Jennifer Laber purchased firearm, killed herself
Tree Police Department, said Dec. 1. A timeline of events released from the police department shows that Laber purchased a Glock 9mm semi-automatic handgun at about 12:30 p.m. Nov. 29. She then picked up her sons from school between 1:30 and 2 p.m. The three were found dead the morning of Laber Nov. 30. Police found the gun inside the vehicle. Officials aren’t calling the case a murder-suicide, but Beals said
BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITY
The Highlands Ranch mother and her two sons who were found in a van in Lone Tree died of gunshot wounds, authorities said. Jennifer Laber died from a single self-inflicted gunshot wound, and her two sons, Adam, 3, and Ethan, 5, died from a single gunshot wound each, Sgt. Tim Beals, of the Lone
police are not looking for any suspects. “We just aren’t ready to put that label on it yet,” Beals said. Laber was last seen picking up her two children from Bear Canyon Elementary School in Highlands Ranch at about 2 p.m. Nov. 29. She did not return home to her neighborhood in the area of North Hampton Court and Hibiscus Drive. Laber and her sons were reported missing at approximately 8 p.m. Nov. 29. At the time law enforcement was notified, there was no indication the lives of Laber and her sons
were in jeopardy, said Chief Deputy Steve Johnson, of the Douglas County Sheriff ’s Office. “We certainly did not see this horrific ending that this case has come to today,” Johnson said Nov. 30. A passerby found the vehicle in the parking lot of the vacant Sports Authority on County Line Road and called police at about 7:50 a.m. Nov. 30. The van was found near a loading dock-type area, officials said. Beals said officials won’t speculate on a motive. “Anything that possibly led up to this are things we are certainly looking into,” he said.
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Lone Tree Voice 11
December 8, 2016
Work begins on C-470 expansion; nighttime lane closures underway BY KYLE HARDING KHARDING@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Nighttime lane closures along C-470 have begun as work gets underway on an expansion of the freeway. Flatiron Construction is continuing earthwork for the expansion behind temporary barriers between Lucent Boulevard and Quebec Street, as well as realignment of Broadway under the freeway. Widening is set for the bridge over Big Dry Creek this month, with bridges over University and Erickson boulevards in January and February. The biggest change to C-470 will be the addition of toll lanes, with two of them westbound between I-25 and
Earthwork has begun along C-470 as part of the expansion of the highway, which will cost $318 million when debt service is factored in. KYLE HARDING Colorado Boulevard and one from Colorado to Wadsworth Boulevard,
and one eastbound toll lane from Platte Canyon Road to I-25.
Real Estate
Project manager Jerome Estes said that toll lanes were chosen over highoccupancy vehicle lanes in part to help pay for the project. The construction is mostly financed by loans that will be paid for using the collected tolls. The project’s cost is $215 million, or $318 million including debt service. In addition to the express lanes, upgrades will include pavement reconstruction, auxiliary lanes at certain locations, curve realignment, widening or replacement of bridges and grade separations for the C-470 multi-use trail that runs parallel to the freeway. Work is expected to be completed in 2019.
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12 Lone Tree Voice
LOCAL
December 8, 2016D
VOICES
Five things you need to keep in mind today and every day to make life better WINNING WORDS
Michael Norton
A
s family and friends will tell you, I am a news junkie. Although I have left most social media sites with the exception of just a couple, I have many news apps on my phone and probably far too many Google alerts set up. It’s just my way of staying on top of what is happening in the world and in our community. Couple that with reading the newspaper and watching some of the news channels on television, you may see where I get the reputation of being a news junkie. If I am in a rush, I actually like the new feature on most of the news apps such as “The Top 5 Things You Missed This Week,” or the “Top Things You Need to Know Today,” They are quick and summarize the news into a con-
cise format allowing me to click on the “More” link if I want to go deeper into a story. And when pressed for time, with a quick review of the front page of any newspaper I can get the news fix that I was looking for that day. So what are the Five Things You Need to Know Today? 1. You are loved more than you know. 2. You are forgiven for all mistakes; so stop being so hard on yourself. 3. You are appreciated even when others can’t find the right words or ways to say thank you. 4. You are beautiful and brilliant, and you are gifted and gorgeous. 5. You are stronger than you give yourself
credit for, and you can use that strength to endure any season of life or to encourage others to persevere through any battle they may be facing. How’s that for a short summarizing list of the Five Things You Need to Know Today? And by the way, the Five Things You Need to Know Today and Remember Every Day. Why are these so important? Because if I fall back on my addiction to the news and shared with you some of the very real and horrific things that I read or see in the news, and if I didn’t have the foundation above I could easily become depressed, stressed and SEE NORTON, P13
So it turns out they could, indeed, print it if it wasn’t true
Y
LETTER TO THE EDITOR Choice a good thing for students I was very disappointed to read the recent article “Douglas County School Board rescinds latest voucher program.” What a lost opportunity to be on the cutting edge. It would be interesting to discover just who the Taxpayers for Public Education (the main opposition) are. I have my suspicions. While I only encountered good teachers in the district, what about innercity areas where children are forced to attend the school near their home, rather than an excellent school where they could succeed? This actually happened in Washington, D.C., with Obama forcing the kids to return to their local ineffective school in
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spite of their great success at their charter school. I have taught in Douglas County schools, in a private school in this district, and my grandson attended a charter school in Parker. What I learned was that all children have different learning styles and some schools are better for them than others. Who better to make that choice than the parents? (Not the unions.) Competition only leads to improvement, and my hope is that changes will be made this year in the department of education so every parent can choose the school that best serves their child. Barbara Backlin Highlands Ranch
ou’ve seen them. Lurid headlines luring you at the register. “Atlanta woman has world’s smallest face!” “Tom Cruise QUIET spends weekDESPERATION end on Mars!” “Hillary headed to jail and looking forward to it!” These things don’t write themselves, any more than this column writes itself. Craig Marshall In my case, it took years Smith and years of home-alone introspection as a wellspring, and now it takes strong, black, mud-thick coffee to go along with it. I know exactly how I wound up here, in front of you, but how does someone become a writer for something like the National Enquirer? Was it a consolation prize? The Times won’t take you, so you try for something a bit lower, then a bit lower than that? Or is there some unrequited mischief in your marrow? Maybe you’re just a schlub who doesn’t care and simply
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needs a job. But now and then, you must have to disclose what you do for a living at social gatherings. And at the breakfast table. “Dad,” your 5-year-old asks, “what do you do for a living?” “Son, I’m a writer.” “Noble profession, Dad. For whom?” “National Enquirer.” “Let me get this straight. You write a story, knowing it’s untrue, and might hurt, offend and infuriate someone, like John Travolta, and it comes straight from the unplugged intestines of deceit and misinformation.” “That’s it.” There would be no National Enquirer, however, if there were no one reading it, buying it, and subscribing to it. I have been around these parts and other parts of parts for a long time, and I have never met anyone who openly admitted to reading publications like the National Enquirer. The headlines are always outrageous, and impossible to believe, like something out of a college humor magazine. I know. I worked on one. But don’t bother, I had them all confiscated. SEE SMITH, P14
Lone Tree Voice A legal newspaper of general circulation in Lone Tree, Colorado, the Voice is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media, 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129. Send address change to: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Lone Tree Voice 13
December 8, 2016
After election, America, not Europe, will be the one doing the schooling GUEST COLUMN
“We will need to teach the presidentelect what Europe is and how it works,” said European Union Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker about President-elect Donald Trump. Those are fighting words. If this was 15th-century Europe, Ken Buck an insult like that might result in war. But thankfully, our world has risen above the petty, internecine power struggles of the historical European continent, guided from those stormy waters largely by the ascendance of America and its great ideas: freedom, justice and democracy. Mr. Juncker must think his continent a paragon of Western virtue, a place too sophisticated for America’s new sophomoric president-elect. Mr. Juncker wants to teach Donald Trump how Europe works. The irony of Mr. Juncker’s statement is that Europe doesn’t work, and Europe doesn’t know what it is. When Mr. Juncker takes time to meet the incoming leader of the free world, it will be Mr. Trump revealing to him how Europe actually works. Europe doesn’t work well right now because freedom has slipped from its lexicon. The European Union slaps regulations across its many, diverse states, believing that what works in Brussels works just as well in Scandinavia, the Balkans or the Iberian Peninsula. In America, President Obama’s administration pursued the same philosophy. With enough red tape, they thought, all of America can look and act just like Washington, D.C.! President-elect Trump’s election was a repudiation of this excessive regula-
tory state. Europe also claims to be a land of justice, citing as evidence its refugee policies. To be sure, justice is indeed helping the world’s most vulnerable and innocent. But justice is also offering your citizenry the chance to live safe, fearless lives. As President-elect Trump and the nation rethink our approach to refugee resettlement, that might mean leaving some refugees in safe, no-fly zones in the Middle East, where aid can be delivered more cheaply. When the conflicts in their home nations subside, these refugees can return to their homeland and rebuild their countries. Finally, some Europeans may claim that America, in electing Mr. Trump, has taken a wrecking ball to the edifice of democracy. In reality, the election of Mr. Trump is a validation of the American democratic experiment. Our countrymen and women chose for president someone who will stand up to the special interests and lobbyists who own Washington, D.C. On Jan. 20, power in this nation will peacefully transfer to a new administration, and democracy will hold all elected officials accountable for their actions. Europeans should know something about democracy. It’s required of member states wishing to enter the union. And democracy matters just as much when a sovereign member state chooses, by popular vote, to disengage from the EU. Some members of the EU democracy have already signaled against Mr. Juncker’s haughtiness. England and France decided to forgo an emergency EU meeting to address the election of Donald Trump. Probably better for Europe to hold an emergency meeting to address the economic and security concerns besetting its own continent. SEE BUCK, P14
NORTON: Don’t let yourself get caught up in doubt, uncertainty FROM PAGE 12
angry. And none of those attitudes or perspectives I just listed would do anything to improve the situations, make my day any brighter, or place me in a better position to help others. However, if I can love and be loved; if I can forgive and be granted forgiveness; if I can show appreciation and gratitude for all of my blessings and bless others; if I can believe that someone can see the beauty of my heart and I can see the giftedness of theirs; and if I can be strong in the face of adversity and patiently strong while coming alongside someone else in their time of need, I do believe that I can make a difference. And I believe that you can too. We can all be difference makers if we choose to do so. So how about you? Do you get caught
up in the mayhem, fear, uncertainty, and doubt? And if you are already depressed, stressed, and angry, then I further encourage you to maybe save this column, even if you just take the Top Five list. Place it somewhere you can see it and use it as a helpful reminder that in a time of a divided culture and country, we can look internally and know that we are loved, forgiven, appreciated, beautiful, and strong. I would love to hear all about your thoughts on the Top Five at gotonorton@gmail.com, and when we can find the peace that comes from our Top Five list, 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.
CLUBS Editor’s note: To add or update a club listing, e-mail calendar@ coloradocommunitymedia.com. Political Douglas County Democrats executive committee meets at 7 p.m. the second Monday of every month at various sites. Contact Mike Jones at 720-509-9048 or email info@DouglasDemocrats. org. Social-discussion meetings take place in Highlands Ranch, Castle Rock, Parker, Lone Tree and Roxborough. Visit douglasdemocrats.org and click on calendar for more information. Douglas County Libertarian Development Group meets at 6 p.m. the first Thursday of each month at the Rio Grande Restaurant, 9535 Park Meadows Drive. Go to LPDG. org. The group also has a very active Facebook page. In addition, we are also recognized by the State Libertarian party. Contact Wayne Harlos at 303229-3435.
Douglas County Republican Women meets at 11 a.m. the third Wednesday each month at the Lone Tree Golf and Hotel. Call Marsha Haeflein at 303-841-4318 or visit www.dcgop.org or www.dcrw.org. Highlands Ranch, Roxborough, and Lone Tree Democrats meet at 7 p.m. the Thursday of every month for topical speakers and lively discussion at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Visit www.douglasdemocrats.org for more information. Lone Tree Democrats meet for First Friday Happy Hour the first Friday of every month at Los Arcos. Call Gordon at 303-790-8264. Parker Democrats meets at 7 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month for discussion of timely topics, led by knowledgeable speakers, at the South Metro Fire Station 45, 16801 Northgate Drive, Parker. Visit www. douglasdemocrats.org for information. SEE CLUBS, P14
In Loving Memory Place an Obituary for Your Loved One. Private 303-566-4100 Obituaries@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com
Funeral Homes Visit: www.memoriams.com
14 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
SMITH: Don’t believe everything you read at the register FROM PAGE 12
“Bigfoot kept lumberjack as love slave!” “Adam and Eve were astronauts!” “Chris Christie thinks he’s a manatee!” I’m guessing that anyone who reads them does it for recreational purposes only. Perhaps to counteract the realities of existence. And for laughs. But then what about the stories that have some truth mixed in? Like the “tanning mom” and the “balloon boy”? What happens to us when fact and fiction become a meatloaf ?
CLUBS FROM PAGE 13
Professional BNI Connections of Lone Tree (www.thebniconnections.com)
(I like meatloaf.) Falcon Heene, the actual balloon boy, is now 13, and is in a heavy metal band with his two brothers. Falcon has hair down to his umbilicus, by the way. I am in favor of creative thinking, but I am not in favor of slander, libel, or setting out to hurt feelings. Feelings get hurt anyhow. These are times of thin skins and hypersensitivities. I’m sure that offenses are taken by some of the things I write about. For example, I am in favor of a lengthy prison sentence for anyone who talks with their hands.
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 Raf-
BUCK: EU hysterical on Trump
But then we would have to have prisons the size of Montana. I can see how it might go in the wrong direction. I am tempted to make stuff up all the time. A long line of humorists preceded me and did the very same thing. That’s my excuse. Did you know that Taylor Swift is secretly married to an Eddie Fisher impersonator? It’s true. Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net.
ferty, 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 meet-
FROM PAGE 13
After all, Europe has known freedom, justice and democracy in the past and will know these values again. America might even be able to help, despite Mr. Juncker’s contention that “in general the Americans take no interest in Europe.” Again, the EU Commission president is wrong. In 1941, when fascism threatened the continent, Americans were very interested. American blood helped restore its
ings 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. Lone Tree Networking Profes-
freedom. Hopefully, when the hysteria around President Trump subsides, the continent will take a look across the pond to see a people free of government heavy-handedness, a society pursuing justice, and a government ruled by the people, for the people. U.S. Rep. Ken Buck, R-Windsor, represents Colorado’s 4th Congressional District, which includes Castle Rock, Parker, Lone Tree, Elbert County and much of the state’s eastern plains.
sionals 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.
Serving the southeast Denver area
Castle Rock/Franktown
First United Methodist Church 1200 South Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 303.688.3047 www.fumccr.org
Services:
Sunday 8:00am, 9:30am, and 11:00am Children’s Sunday School 9:30am
Little Blessings Day Care
www.littleblessingspdo.com
Centennial
Greenwood Village
Sunday Worship 8:00 & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School Bible Study 9:30am Trinity Lutheran School & ELC (Ages 3-5, Grades K-8)
Catholic Parish & School
Seven Sunday Masses Two Daily Masses Confessions Six Days a Week STM Catholic School Preschool – Grade 8
8035 South Quebec Street Centennial, CO 80112 303.770.1150
www.stthomasmore.org
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
Lone Tree Chabad Jewish Center South Metro Denver Synagogue, Preschool, Hebrew School & Much More! www.DenverJewishCenter.com
tapestry umc JOIN US FOR WORSHIP AT CU SOUTH DENVER
10035 Peoria Street Meeting every Sunday at 9:30
All are welcome! Tapestry United Methodist Church on Facebook
www.tapestryumc.org
Parker evangelical Presbyterian church Connect – Grow – Serve
Sunday Worship
8:45 am & 10:30 am 9030 MILLER ROAD PARKER, CO 80138 3038412125 www.pepc.org
303-792-7222
303-841-4660 www.tlcas.org
Parker
St. Thomas More
Trinity Lutheran Church & School
Parker
To advertise your place of worship in this section, call Karen at 303-566-4091 or email kearhart@ColoradoCommunityMedia.com
Sunday Services - 10 a.m. Ruth Memorial Chapel 19650 E. Mainstreet Parker, CO 80138 www.CSLParker.org
Joy Lutheran Church Sharing God’s Love
SAturdAy 5:30pm
SundAy 8am & 10:30am
9:15am Education hour
Pastor Rod Hank
Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 • ELCA • www.joylc.org
Pine Lane Elementary South 6475 E Ponderosa Dr. Parker, CO 80138 303-941-0668
Lone Tree Voice 15
December 8, 2016
SMWSA announces new executive director Aurora Water veteran to lead water supply authority STAFF REPORT
Lisa Darling, a longtime administrator with Aurora Water with 25 years of experience in Colorado water resources, is now the new executive director of the South Metro Water Supply Authority, according to a news release from the SMWSA. Darling will work with the SMWSA’s 13 members to maximize efficiency, manage Darling water quality, develop storage and guide the transition to renewable water sources. SMWSA members provide water to 80 percent of Douglas County and 10 percent of Arapahoe County. “Lisa is a highly respected leader
on Colorado water resources with a proven ability to advance our agenda for meeting the water needs of generations to come in the South Denver Metro area,” said Dave Kaunisto, president of the SMWSA board of directors. Darling worked for 18 years with Aurora Water, the state’s third-largest water utility. “I am honored and excited to work with South Metro Water Supply Authority’s members,” Darling said. “I look forward to continuing the organization’s collaboration and partnership with leaders across the region and state.” Darling replaces Eric Hecox, who served four years as executive director before taking a position as vice president of Shea Properties. The South Metro Water Supply Authority is a regional water authority comprising 13 members, serving Arapahoe and Douglas counties. A recent update to its master plan found the region is on track to meet projected demand up to 2065.
HAVE AN EVENT? To submit a calendar listing, send information to calendar@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.
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16 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
LOCAL
LIFE
Snowshoes, oatmeal and pickles Unique family traditions make the holidays memorable
E
Ornaments dazzle on a Christmas tree in Parker’s PACE Center on Nov. 22. TOM SKELLEY
BY TOM SKELLEY | TSKELLEY@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
ach year, the holiday season brings the usual customs of brightly lit yard displays and holiday hold music, but the things people anticipate most are the special traditions they celebrate with their families. Though customs like waiting for Santa Claus and lighting the menorah have storied and varied origins, the reasons
people cherish them have less to do with history than the way they modify the customs to fit their own family. Be it frying latkes in the snow, arguing over the perfect Christmas tree or leaving breakfast for a snow gnome, the things people in the region do to celebrate the holidays are as unique as the people who celebrate them.
Mark Lampert
Clara Kelley
Lily Yesayan
Unincorporated Arapahoe County
Westminster
Centennial
“We always try to do what others do to celebrate Hanukkah, giving a present each night, and usually the Sunday of Hanukkah the whole family gets together. “One thing I do every year is I will fry latkes outside on the patio on a little electric frying pan, whether it’s winter weather or warmer weather. Let me tell you, when you’re frying latkes and there’s snowflakes coming down and get-
ting into the oil, you do get burned a bit — but it makes it fun.”
“I have Icelandic heritage, so every year my daughter and I leave out a bowl of oatmeal for the Tomten. He’s like a guardian of the land who helps families look after their farms. It’s an Icelandic tradition to leave him a bowl of porridge on
the solstice, so every year since my daughter was about 2 we’ve done it. “I have a box of organic oatmeal that she wouldn’t eat when she was a baby that we use every year. Hopefully, the Tomten doesn’t mind that it’s reject oatmeal.”
“We’re Armenian, so the one thing we do that’s different is instead of doing Christmas presents on Christmas, we don’t give each other presents until New Year’s Day, and we leave the tree up until Jan. 6. “We have the entire family over, and we have a big family for Christmas dinner. It depends on the year, but the most we have had was between 30 and 40 people all in the house.”
Sarah Mills
Trey Hamsmith
Cynthia Studebaker
Highlands Ranch
Parker
Aurora
“Our tradition is that every year we go up to Bailey or Frasier and cut down a tree. We get a permit through the National Park Service. It depends on what the weather is like, but it’s always an adventure. The kids are grown up, but they still rotate who gets to
pick the tree out every year. “It’s just being family. We can’t ever agree on a tree — my husband always goes off in a different direction than us and sometimes we argue. But it’s all about being out there together, then we have hot chocolate after.”
“My mom is Swedish, but we do the ‘German pickle’ ornament thing every year. I have no idea why. It’s just a little ornament that looks like a pickle, and every year my mom hides it somewhere on the tree. I have two brothers, and whoever finds the ornament first gets to open the first gift of Christmas and ring the little bell from ‘The Polar Express.’ ”
“My kids are in Connecticut now and my parents have passed away, so my Christmas tradition now is snowshoeing. Every year I go up to Brainard Lake near Nederland, and I just go out there with a friend, just seeing moose and being out in nature. It’s a great way to get rid of all the old stuff and bring in the new.”
S
S w r C A m p R G p m D o r T 4
Lone Tree Voice 17
December 8, 2016
My glory day — meeting longtime music legend Bruce Springsteen LINER NOTES
What do you wear when you’re going to meet one of your heroes? You don’t want to overdress and look like you’re trying too hard, but you also don’t want to look sloppy. Wearing that person’s T-shirt can seem a little on the nose, but you still want them to know
Clarke Reader
you’re a fan. In the end, I decided on a green sweater and jeans when I met Bruce Springsteen at the Tattered Cover on Nov. 30. And in the moments after shaking hands and taking a photo with The Boss, I honestly couldn’t tell you what I wore. Springsteen was in town promoting his autobiography, the aptly titled “Born to Run,” and a little more than 1,000 fans had the opportunity to meet the man himself and get an autographed copy. The event sold out in 15 minutes or less. I honestly don’t know if the Tattered Cover has ever seen a crowd that size. It snaked through the entire store, right out the front door and around the building. And what a crowd it was. Seniors to 6-year-olds (mostly) happily stood in line, swapping stories about the first time they saw Springsteen, arguing
Bruce Springsteen visited the Tattered Cover in Denver on Nov. 30 as part of his “Born to Run” book tour. After several hours in line, columnist Clarke Reader spent a glorious 10 seconds with The Boss. about what his best album is, and the times in their lives his music has meant the most to them. One person talked about “Tunnel of Love” getting them through divorce, and my mother talked about “The Rising” helping her stay positive during her brother’s cancer diagnosis and treatment. That got me thinking about the times Springsteen’s music helped me over the years, as the line moved slowly but steadily forward. I thought about all the unrequited
loves I soundtracked in my head to “I’m On Fire.” Or how “Dancing in the Dark” is the best pop song ever written, and it never fails to cheer me up. And I thought about the hope I’ve always pulled from the lyrics to “Atlantic City,” or the last verse of “Darkness on the Edge of Town”: “Tonight I’ll be on that hill cause I can’t stop I’ll be on that hill with everything I got Lives on the line where dreams are found and lost I’ll be there on time and I’ll pay the cost For wanting things that can only be found In the darkness on the edge of town.” It occurred to me that I should say all of that to the man himself during the 10 seconds I had to meet and get a photo with him. But of course, when you’re five feet away from a man who has touched millions of lives, who’s been both a conscience and inspiration for more than a decade of my life, and is just flat-out cooler than all but maybe five people on the planet, all you really want to do is not trip. So I shook Bruce Springsteen’s hand, told him I was a big fan and his music has meant the world to me, got a photo and was guided out of the way to make room for the next person. And while I’m sure he’s heard both those things more times than he can count, he heard me and said
CLARKE’S ALBUM OF THE WEEK Selection: Childish Gambino’s “’Awaken, My Love!’” released on Glassnote records. Review: Who would have expected Donald Glover (aka Childish Gambino) to have the kind of 2016 he did? His television show “Atlanta” is the best new show of the year, and now he’s delivered this funky, atmospheric third album. If you’re looking for rap, go somewhere else — Glover dives deep into Funkadelic-style soul, jazz rhythms and a dense swirl of moods. The result is one of the most surprising and rewarding listens of the year. Favorite song: “Redbone” Most empowering lyrics: “Everyone just wants a better life They tried to kill us Love to say they feel us But they won’t take my pride.” thank you, and that’s more than I could’ve expected. The thrilled laughs, unstoppable smiles and joyous tears I saw that day were proof that while it’s hard describing what it means to meet one of your heroes, we all shared that feeling. Clarke Reader’s column on how music connects to our lives appears every other week. A community editor with Colorado Community Media, he blew up the Chicken Man in Philly last night. Check out his music blog at calmacil20. blogspot.com. And share your favorite Bruce Springsteen song at creader@ coloradocommunitymedia.com.
CURTAIN TIME Story time “Making Merry” is Stories on Stage’s annual holiday program, with actors reading holiday stories. “One Christmas” by Truman Capote, “The Demon Foiled” by Anne Roiphe and “The Christmas Bogey” by Pat Frank will be presented by GeRee Hinshaw, Josh Robinson and Erin Rollman with Gary Grundei. Performances: 2 p.m. on Dec. 10 at Chatauqua Community House, 301 Morning Glory Drive, Boulder; 1:30 and 6:30 p.m. on Dec. 11 at the King Center, Auraria Campus, downtown Denver. Tickets: storiesonstage.org, 303494-0523.
A different view “Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol” by Tom Mula tells the favorite Dickens story from the perspective of Scrooge’s curmudgeonly business partner. It plays through Dec. 23 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton St., Aurora. Tickets: $15-$30, vintagetheatre.com or 303856-7830. Reprising 2015 roles are Joey Wishnia (Scrooge), James O’Hagen Murphy (Marley), Darcy Kennedy (Record Keeper) and Gina Walker (The Bogle). Nostalgia “A Christmas Story,” based on the writings of Jean Shepherd and the popular film, plays through Dec. 31
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Arthur Miller “A View from the Bridge” plays through Dec. 31 at The Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Performances: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and Thursday, Dec. 22. (No shows Dec. 24/25). Special New Year’s Eve performance and party. Tickets: theedgetheater.com.
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Wow-wee! “Junie B. Jones: The Musical” plays through Dec. 30 at the Arvada Center, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada. Adapted from the book series by Barbara Park. Performances: 10 a.m. and noon, Mondays through Fridays through Dec. 20; 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturdays. Call for additional schedule and tickets, 720-898-7200.
Something for kids “The Story of the Nutcracker,” adapted by Rory Pierce from the original book by E.T.A. Hoffman, plays at 1 p.m. on Saturdays in December at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Call or see online for weekday performance dates. Tickets, $10, at 303935-3044, minersalley.com.
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18 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
‘Own an Original’ exhibition runs until early January BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Juror Sandra Clark chose “Artist and the Saint,” an intriguing two-sided bronze sculpture by Kim Kaminski of Littleton, as Best of Show in the 2016 “Own an Original” exhibit, which is at the Littleton Museum through Jan. 8, 2017. The faces and textured robes of the pair are different, but flow together in the sculpture, which is about 14 inches tall. Carefully applied patina distinguished the two different robes, with a detailed blue-green on the artist and a golden hue on the saint. The artist’s nose is hooked, beak-like and polished. The conical hat that tops both suggests Careers
an Asian temple spire. A tiny bird perches on a joint shoulder. Clark, who is a textile artist, combines fiber and metal in some works, including two in this exhibit. She chose 60 pieces by Colorado artists for this exhibit. They are carefully placed in the Littleton Fine Arts Gallery, facing the front door, inviting the visitor to explore. Her statement reflects her choices in award winners: “My work reflects my interest in what happens when our inherent needs for organization and control collide with physiological forces that are out of our control, such as optical and emotional responses to stimuli.” First Place was awarded to an oil painting by Austin Howlett of Denver for his “Desert Walkers,” depicting a
family of tall, thin African people walking away into a sandy landscape. You can almost hear the wind. “Infinitude” is by Sean Yarbrough of Boulder, whose website shows many swirling “abstracted astral energy” forms that draw a viewer closer — as does his Second Place painting in this exhibit. Littleton artist Stephan Begej created “Exuberance No. 19,” an exploded flute, mounted on a canvas, which won Third Place. It speaks of his background as an instrumentation and robotics engineer, featuring “found objects that are captured in a state of disintegration, fragmentation or dispersion …” While visiting this exhibit, walk into the adjoining gallery to visit, or revisit,
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OWN AN ORIGINAL is at the Littleton Museum, 6028 S. Gallup St., Littleton, through Jan. 8. Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays; 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays, except holidays. Admission is free. (Keep the Museum Shop in mind for holiday shopping.) 303-795-3950. the very inviting exhibit of rita derjue’s paintings from the past 10 years, “The Best Road Leads Uphill.” And sit for a minute to see the pleasing video portrait compiled by new exhibit curator Kevin Oehrle, based on derjue’s recent sketchbooks, which are also on display.
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6December 8, 2016
Gershwins’ classic work gets revised treatment
BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Lights go up on a sketchily-built Catfish Row, in Charleston, South Carolina, where Clara (Erica Papillion-Posey) cuddles her baby and bursts into song — in a beautiful rendition of “Summertime.” She is joined in duet by her man Jake (David Sweet), who is a fisherman, as are many other locals. And we know we are solidly into Gershwin territory. The Aurora Fox production, “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess” was first performed in 2011 by the American Repertory Theatre in Boston, directed by Diane Paulus. She described it as adapted from a three-hourlong opera (first performed in 1935, based on the novel “Porgy” by DuBose Heywood and a play by DuBose and Dorothy Heywood) to the musical theatre stage. It’s said that George Gershwin kept working on and revising the score until his death in 1937. His brother, Ira Gershwin, and DuBose Heywood wrote the original lyrics. The new version became a work of several years. Paulus hired Pulitzer Prize-
IF YOU GO “THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS” plays through Jan. 1, 2017 at the Aurora Fox Arts Center, 9900 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets range from $24 to $37. Aurorafox.org, 303-739-1970. Free parking. winning playwright SuzanLori Parks to write a script using words formerly sung, and musician/arranger Dierdre Murray to adapt the music. They worked on a new production, initiated by the Gershwin and Heyward estates, to bring this musical treasure into the 21st century. The Aurora Fox recruited a sterling cast of highly trained African-American actors and singers to work under the guidance of director donnie l. betts, bringing a regional premiere of this new version to Denver. It opened Nov. 25 and plays through Jan. 1, backed by a five-piece orchestra that fills the theater with George Gershwin’s familiar score. Bess is portrayed by Tracy
Camp, who comes to Colorado from San Francisco to play against Denver’s Leonard Barrett, as the disabled Porgy. Their voices blend well and each is a fine soloist — as are many other cast members. The familiar songs sound especially fine, which means El Armstrong’s sound design is doing what it should. Bess’ violent lover, Crown (Michael Peters), appears, joins a craps game and fights with and stabs Serena’s man, leaving her widowed and alone. Anna High appears as Serena. Tyrell Rae, a frequent actor on Littleton Town Hall’s stage, plays Crown’s sidekick and Bess’ drug dealer, Sportin’ Life — a different sort of role for him — cocky, swaggering and a bad influence as he waves drugs under Bess’ nose, luring her to follow him. The tragic love story twists and turns with Gershwin’s wonderful music ongoing and wraps with Porgy singing “O Lord, I’m on My Way” as he leaves Catfish Row to search for his Bess. This production is probably a “don’t miss” for area theater lovers.
Lone Tree Voice 19
Leonard Barrett as Porgy and Tracy Camp as Bess meet happily in “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess” at the Aurora Fox Arts Center. In the background is Shandra Duncan as Mariah. PHOTO BY CHRISTINE FISK
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20 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
It’s that time of year again — the ‘Nutcracker’ season
T
he refrain of Tchaikovsky’s beloved “Nutcracker” ballet surrounds us in December and the most elaborate local production is by Colorado Ballet, SONYA’S held at the Ellie SAMPLER Caulkins Opera House at the Denver Performing Arts Complex in downtown Denver through Dec. 24. Many area dance student children participate in the performance, making it part of their Sonya Ellingboe growing-up memories. Tickets range from $30 to $155, coloradoballet.org
or 303-837-8888, ext. 2. Also still to come is a version by Denver Ballet Theatre (David Taylor) on Dec. 22 and 23 (2 and 7 p.m.) at the Newman Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Denver. Tickets: newmantix.com/dbt or 303-871-7720. Break from winter Come in out of the cold and enjoy a “Tropical Trails Tour” in the Boettcher Memorial Tropical Conservatory at Denver Botanic Gardens, from 2 to 3 p.m. on Dec. 10 and 17. Lush vegetation, vibrant flowers, warmth of the rainforest. One hour tour. Visit botanicgardens.org for details. `Bach for the Holidays’ Englewood Arts Presents an
afternoon of solo masterpieces by J.S. Bach — offering a welcome escape from the holiday rush, at Hampden Hall, second floor of the Englewood Civic Center, 1000 Englewood Parkway. The program includes “Cello Suite No. 3 in C major” — Silver Ainome, cello; “Violin Partita No. 3 in E major” — Ben Ohdner, violin; “English Suite No. 3 in G minor,” — Mallory Bernstein, piano; “Chaconne from Solo Sonata in D minor” — Yi Zhao, violin. Concert time is 2 p.m. and tickets cost $20/$15, free under 18, englewoodarts.org. Holiday’s Evening The Friends of the Littleton Library/Museum group presents the annual “Holiday’s Evening at the Museum” on the museum grounds, 6028 S. Gallup St., from 5:30 to 8 p.m. on Dec. 11. Tickets: FOL/M members — $7 adults, $3 ages 2 to 16; general public — $10, $4 ages 2-16. Tickets available at Bemis Library, 6014 S. Datura St., and the Littleton Museum (cash or check only). Information: 303-795-3950. School showcase in the Ranch The Highlands Ranch High School Performing Arts Department (band, choir, orchestra and theater ensembles) will combine talents to perform holiday classics at 7 p.m. Dec. 9 and 2 and 7 p.m. Dec. 10 in the school auditorium. Tickets, $5,
at the door, if any remain. 303-2872749. Music and poetry “And on Earth, Peace” is a service with music and poetry at 7 p.m. on Dec. 11 at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St. Chancel Choir and Bell Ringers will be joined by guest musicians. Donations will support Littleton Charities.
Christmas Bird Count begins Count the birds visiting the Audubon Nature Center feeders on Dec. 17 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., shop in the Sweets ‘n Treats gift shop and make a holiday craft. Free for Audubon Society of Greater Denver members and families, at the Audubon Center at Chatfield, 11280 Waterton Road, Littleton. 303-973-9530, denveraudubon.org. Bring binoculars, field guides, water and a snack. Castle Rock Chorale “Go Tell it on the Mountain: Christmas in Castle Rock” is the title for a Dec. 16 concert by the Castle Rock Chorale. At 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 16, at St Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, 2746 Fifth Street in Castle Rock. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 students and seniors, free 12 and under. Bring a non-perishable food item to receive $1 off ticket price. Items will be donated to the Douglas/Elbert Task Force.
HOW TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE Send volunteer opportunities to hharden@ coloradocommunitymedia.com Gateway Battered Women’s Shelter Serves victims of family violence in Aurora and Arapahoe County Need: Volunteers help with crisis-line management, children’s services, legal advocacy, community education and other shelter services. Donations: Also accepts used cell phones (younger than 4 years) to give to victims. Mail to Gateway at P.O. Box 914, Aurora, CO 80040, or drop them off at Neighborly Thrift Store, 3360 S. Broadway, Englewood Requirements: Must attend a 26-hour training session; bilingual skills welcome Contact: Jeneen Klippel-Worden, 303-3431856 or jkworden@gatewayshelter.com Girl Scouts of Colorado Youth organization for girls Need: Troop leaders, office support, administrative help and more Age requirement: Men and women, 18 and older Contact: www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org, inquiry@gscolorado.org or 1-877-404-5708 Global Orphan Relief Develops and supports programs bringing light, comfort and security to orphans around the world Need: Super stars with website development, users of the abundant resources of social media. Those with great connection ability are needed to help with the development of the donor pool. Contact: Those interested serving this
faith-based Colorado nonprofit can contact Deitra Dupray, 303-895-7536 or dadupray@comcast.net. GraceFull Community Cafe Provides a place in Littleton where people of all backgrounds can gather, eat well and be inspired to give back. Cafe is open for breakfast and lunch, from 6:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday. A partner of the GraceFull Foundation. Need: Opportunities for food preparation, guest service, cleaning and dishwashing. Location: 5610 Curtice St., Littleton Contact: Sign up for volunteer opportunities at http://gracefullcafe.com/volunteer/ Habitat ReStore Nonprofit home improvement stores and donation centers Need: Volunteers for Wheat Ridge, Denver or Littleton Habitat ReStores, helping with the cash register, dock and warehouse floor Contact: 303-996-5468, email Alice Goble at Alice@habitatmetrodenver.org Highlands Ranch Community Association Works with Therapeutic Recreation Program and Special Olympics Need: Volunteers to help teach classes, coach Special Olympics, provide athletes support during Special Olympics practices, assist with special events, and help participats succeed in the therapeutic recreation program. Contact: Summer Aden, 303-471-7043 or www.hrcaonline.org/tr
December 8, 2016
THINGS to DO
MUSIC/CONCERTS
Reunited at Christmas Dinner Concert: 7:15 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9, at St. Andrew United Methodist Church, 9201 S. University Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Dinner served at 6 p.m. Tickets for sale at www.gostandrew. com. Contact Mark Zwilling at 303 794-2683 or mzwilling@ gostandrew.com Arapahoe Philharmonic ‘Miracle of the Season’: 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9, at South Suburban Christian Church, 7275 S. Broadway, Littleton. Maestro Devin Patrick Hughes will give a brief talk at 6:45 p.m. Tickets available at www. arapahoe-phil.org or by calling 303-781-1892. Christmas with the Young Voices of Colorado: 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9 at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St., Littleton. Presented by the Littleton Symphony Orchestra, along with Young Voices of Colorado. Tickets available at the Gorsett Violin Shop, 8100 S. Quebec St., and at www. littletonsymphony.org. Call 303-933-6824. Cherry Creek Chorale ‘Gloria!’: 7:30-9:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9 and Saturday, Dec. 10 at Bethany Lutheran Church, 500 E. Hampden Ave., Cherry Hills Village. Go to http://www. cherrycreekchorale.org. Tidings from Bethlehem Christmas Concert: 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9 and Saturday, Dec. 10, and 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11, at Cherry Creek Presbyterian Church, 10150 E. Belleview Ave., Englewood. Go to http://cherrycreekpres.org/christmas/. Santa Visit: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, in his little red house at the corner of Broadway and Plaza Drive. Santa visits are free and open to all.
Lone Tree Voice 21
to celebrate squash and its flavor profiles and health benefits. Call 303-471-9400.
this week’s TOP FIVE Snowball Dinner Dance Showcase, Am Jam: 4-8 pm. Sunday, Dec. 11, at Adventures in Dance, 1500 W. Littleton Blvd., Littleton. Enjoy professional show and dance ballroom, Latin, salsa, swing and tango to your favorite DJ tunes. Call 720-2760562 or go to https://www.adventuresindance. com/event/dancing-with-the-mon-stars-dinnerdance-showcase/. Family Love Letter: A Holiday Affair: 5-7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 13, at 333 Perry St., Castle Rock. Learn how to prepare for time of loss or incapacity. Workshop included. Contact http://conta. cc/2e01AzN. Steamworks: Physics in Motion: 4 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 14, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Drop in and learn karate stances, strikes, kicks and punches that demonstrate the principles of force, kinetic energy and momentum. Presented by Karate Denver. All ages. No registration required; information at 303-791-7323 or DCL.org.
Park at the Highlands Ranch Metro District parking lot at 62 Plaza Drive, and walk around the building to see Santa. For the safety of those attending and cars driving by, please do not park on Plaza Drive. Call 303-791-0430. Lone Tree Arts Center Guild Holiday Party: a celebration and thank you to guild members on Saturday, Dec. 10. To join the guild, or for information on the holiday party, contact Tonya at 303-489-5533 or info@lonetreeartscenterguild. org. Dan Navarro Performance: 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 17, at Tuft Theatre, 71 E. Yale Ave., Denver. Contact Swallow Hill Music, 303-777-1003 or www.swallowhillmusic.org. Go to http:// www.dannavarro.com/dannavarro/bio.html. Advent Recitals: noon Wednesdays at St. Andrew United Methodist Church, 9201 S. University Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Enjoy light soup lunch; $4 donation requested. Contact Mark
Sweet and Savory GrainFree Baking: 6-7 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 14, at Natural Grocers, 1265 Sgt. John Stiles Drive, Suite M, Littleton. Learn easy, sweet and savory grain-free recipes that will allow you to take gluten free to the next level. Go to https://www.naturalgrocers. com/store-location/highlands-ranch/. A Christmas Story, The Musical: through Friday, Dec. 30 at Town Hall Arts Center. Show times are 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays, with a 2 p.m. show on Saturday, Nov. 26 and 7:30 p.m. shows Wednesday, Dec. 12 ad Dec. 28. Tickets available at the Town Hall box office, online at townhallartscenter.org or by calling 303-794-2787 ext. 213.
and C-3PO. No registration required; information at 303-791-7323 or DCL.org.
Zwilling at 303 794-2683 or mzwilling@gostandrew.com. Recital schedule: Jubilee Handbell Choir, Dec. 14; Kay Coryell, Dec. 21.
EVENTS
Holiday Event: 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, Dec. 10, at Metrum Community Credit Union, 6980 S. Holly Circle, Centennial. Visit from Santa Claus. Staff bake sale proceeds benefit The Children’s Hospital. Contact Karen Padrevita at 303-770-4468 ext. 104 or kpadrevita@metrumcu. org. Practice Your English: 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, at the Parker Library, 20105 E. Mainstreet. Intermediate to advanced-level English learners participate in lively, informal conversation on everyday topics. No registration required; more information at 303-7917323 or DCL.org. Kids’ Zone, Star Wars Style: 4 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15, at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Grades 2-6; make mini light sabers and collages and take photos with R2-D2
Lego Club: 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15, at the Roxborough Library, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road, Ste. 200. Ages 5-12; put the pieces together and build with Legos. No registration required; information at 303791-7323 or DCL.org.
Community Blood Drives: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, Cabela’s, 10670 Cabela Drive, Lone Tree; 10-11:40 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, Whole Foods, 5155 S. Wadsworth Blvd., Littleton; 9-10:40 a.m. and noon to 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 14 at Envision Healthcare, 6200 S. Syracuse Way, Greenwood Village; 9-10:40 a.m. and noon to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 14, Land Title Guarantee Co., 5975 Greenwood Plaza Blvd., Greenwood Village; 10-11:40 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15, Greenwood Village City Hall, 6060 S. Quebec St., Greenwood Village; 9-10:40 a.m. and noon to 2:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 16, Craig Hospital, 3425 S. Clarkson St., Englewood; 9:30-11:40 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Friday, Dec. 16, PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker; 8 a.m. to noon Sunday, Dec. 18, St. Louis Parish, 3310 S. Sherman St., Englewood; 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 18, New Hope Presbyterian Church, 3737 New Hope Way, Castle Rock. Contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303363-2300, unless otherwise noted. Go to www.bonfils.org. Commitment Day 5k Run/ Festival: 10 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 1 around the neighborhoods of Life Time Fitness in Parker. All levels and abilities welcome. Go to http://www.commitmentday.com/colorado/parker-aurora/ for registration. Contact Heather Crosby at hcrosby@ lifetimefitness.com.
A Hudson Christmas: 5-8 p.m. select days through Saturday, Dec. 31 at Hudson Gardens and Event Center, 6115 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton. Go to www. hudsongardens.org. Tickets available at AltitudeTickets.com.
HEALTH
Winter Wonderland Holiday Open House: 3-6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9 at Arc Arapahoe & Douglas Counties, 6538 S. Racine Circle, Centennial. Dinner, music, games. Networking opportunity for service providers, teachers, parents. Meet new board members. Quick Class: Celebrate Squash: 3-3:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10 at Natural Grocers, 1265 Sgt. John Stiles Drive, Suite M, Highlands Ranch. Fall is the perfect time
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.
22 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
96-year-old Wind Crest resident fleet of foot Bob McAdam finishes Turkey Day 5K in what could be a world record time BY ALEX DEWIND ADEWIND@COLORADOCOMMUNITY
Bob McAdam has a lot to show for his 96 years of life. He served in World War II and the Korean War; he has a Ph.D. in health physical education and athletics; he’s written several books; he was married to his wife for 68 years and raised eight kids; and he’s in the International Master Racquetball Hall of Fame. McAdam has another accomplishment to add to his list: On Thanksgiving Day in Highlands Ranch, he apparently broke a world record, completing the Turkey Day 5K in 48 minutes and 19 seconds. The official world record for the 95 and older age category is 50 minutes, 10 seconds. McAdam’s time is awaiting certification. “The hardest part about doing this at 95 is getting to age 95,” said McAdam, who started training when he was 95 years old. “If you make it there, you can do anything.” McAdam, a resident of the Wind Crest retirement community in Highlands Ranch, started training for the annual Thanksgiving 5K, or 3.1 miles,
about three months ago. Fitness coordinator Gina Muaau first approached him about the race after seeing him jogging on the treadmill. McAdam said he would think it over. He was concerned about the racetrack — he has trouble seeing. “I said, ‘I’ll be your eyes. I’ll run next to you,’ ” said Muaau, a Highlands Ranch resident. So the two ran and walked side by side on Thanksgiving Day while Muaau pointed out curbs and shadows. Andrea LaRew, president of the Highlands Ranch Chamber of Commerce, said hundreds of people gathered to cheer for McAdams as he crossed the finish line. “It was so fun to watch, and such a heartwarming moment,” LaRew said. McAdam, a sharp and well-spoken man, said he’s not a runner. “I never was on a track team,” he said. “I used to run to get in shape for racquetball.” McAdam took up racquetball at the age of 53. He has 14 national, five international and four world titles under his belt. The sport, he said, challenges every motor skill. He has memories of playing with his daughter and grandson. “Racquetball is a family game,” he said. To train for the Turkey Day 5K, McAdam walked on the treadmill at an incline and ran on a simulated 5K track at Wind Crest. He credits his
Wind Crest retirement community resident Bob McAdam, 96, completes the Turkey Day 5K in 48 minutes and 19 seconds, apparently setting a new world record for the 95-plus age group. PHOTOS BY CHAR FESSENDEN/FOTOSBYFEZZ PHOTOGRAPHY achievement to his trainer, Muaau, and his active lifestyle. “If you work out regularly, you feel better,” he said. “You have to keep moving.” He plans to participate in another 5K in the future. “I want to run one at sea level,” McAdam said.
Bob McAdam, 96, finishes the Turkey Day 5K at Redstone Park. He is a veteran of World War II and the Korean War.
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Lone Tree Voice 23
December 8, 2016
Marketplace SELL YOUR STUFF HERE Email up to 140 characters of items totaling under $200 and we will run your ad at no charge for 2 weeks submit to- kearhart@coloradocommunitymedia.com Ads must be submitted by email
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24 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
‘Star Wars and the Power of Costume’ comes to Denver Museum exhibit shows amazing detail that went into movie garb BY SONYA ELLINGBOE SELLINGBOE@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
A concept drawing for Chewbacca is translated into a furry costume for a very tall man to wear in the film “A New Hope.” COURTESY PHOTOS
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Queen Amidala, Obi Wan Kenobi, Han Solo, Padme Amidela, Darth Vader, R2-D2, Chewbacca, Boba Fett, C-3PO and many more are there in “Star Wars and the Power of Costume,” a new exhibit at the Denver Art Museum. Even those fans who have watched all of the “Star Wars” films will be amazed by a close-up look at the costumes exhibited on the second floor at the Denver Art Museum through April 2. Every tiny detail is perfect in Queen Amidala’s elaborate gowns, for example. Lace, tiny tucks, embroidery and beads are part of many costumes, indicating multiple days of handwork on each one. Concept drawings for each character’s costumes are mounted at eye level, sometimes combined with bits of fabric, plastics and beads or braids. Headwear is equally impressive. Related videos are placed throughout the exhibit to explain the choices of materials and relevant lore. Consider Queen Amidala’s rich red “Throne Room gown” and curving metallic crown from “The Phantom Menace” — they are so well recognized, they have become part of our society’s mythology — and here they are! As is iconic villain Darth Vader’s flowing black cloak, helmet and light saber from “Return of the Jedi.” In this exhibit, the visitor stands right in front of each image — many are free-standing, not encased. We see a concept drawing, and a close-up pair of Wookie Chewbacca’s feet at the eye level of a 5-year-old, next to the whole furry costume on a tall mannequin. It was made for an actor who was 7’2’’ tall. And also at child height are R2-D2 and C-3PO up close and personal. More than 60 handcrafted costumes are presented in a joined series of galleries. Some have interactive details, such as a button one can push to make the light sabers glow. Even very young children visiting the large exhibit seemed totally engaged and excited — and so wellbehaved that it was a joy to watch their excitement — and to hear the conversations with parents, who were obviously well-informed fans, having grown up with these legendary characters. The exhibit was developed by the Smithsonian Institution’s Saul Sopici Drake, Myriam Springuel and E. Warren Perry Jr. Objects shown are loaned from the archives of the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. (The not-yet-built museum is in the design phase by architect Ma Yansong of MAD Architects.) Laela French, director of ar-
IF YOU GO THE DENVER ART MUSEUM is located on 13th Avenue between Broadway and Bannock Street in downtown Denver. Metered parking is available on nearby streets and the Cultural Parking Garage entrance is on 12th Avenue, just west of Broadway. Children are admitted free to the museum. Adults will need a timed ticket in advance. Plan ahead as the show is selling out on many days. Denverartmuseum.org or 720-9130130.
A life-sized, menacing Darth Vader from “Return of the Jedi” brandishes his light saber in the Denver Art Museum’s new exhibit: “Star Wars and the Power of Costume,” which runs through April 2. chives, Skywalker Ranch, Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, who has been overseeing the Star Wars collections of over 200,000 objects since 2001, was also heavily involved in choice of art to be displayed and worked with the DAM’s Stephanie Van Dyke, experience and interpretation specialist, who enjoyed several visit to Skywalker Ranch, north of San Francisco. “Narrative Art” is defined on the museum’s website as “art which illustrates or tells a story. It usually describes self-explanatory events from daily life or those drawn from a text, well-known folk tale or myth,” according to the “Dictionary of Art Terms.” Tom Fricker of Fricker Studio Graphic Design is credited with the exhibition design and Matt Rue of McGinty Co. is credited with the extensive and clear graphic design in this really exceptional exhibit. The body of myths will grow larger on Dec. 16 with the release of “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story,” said to be a standalone film.
December 8, 2016
Lone Tree Voice 25
LOCAL
SPORTS
Title games need more electricity
T
Valor Christian receiver Luke McCaffrey and teammates raise the trophy as the Eagles ended the day with the 30-14 victory in the 5A state final at Sports Authority Field. PHOTOS BY PAUL DISALVO
Valor keeps grip on state crown Eagles win seventh state football championship in the past eight years BY JIM BENTON JBENTON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
After a 1-3 start, which included a 23-16 setback to Pomona, Valor Christian picked up its share of doubters. But on Dec. 3 at Sports Authority Field at Mile High in Denver, the Eagles’ season concluded in the fashion Valor players, coaches and fans have become accustomed — with a state champhionship. Valor defeated Pomona 30-14 for the Class 5A crown. It was the seventh state football title in eight seasons in three different classifications for Valor and the second consecutive championship for the Eagles, who also beat Pomona in last season’s state-title contest. But this edition of the Eagles was distinct, according to Rod Sherman, who has been the Eagles’ head coach for the past four seasons and was the offensive coordinator for several previous campaigns. ”One thing as a coach that you want is to be better at the end of the year than you were at the beginning of the year,” Sherman said. ”If I was the athletic director, I’d probably ask myself why we can’t start playing better at the beginning of the year.
Pomona’s Billy Pospisil gets pulled to the ground by Valor Christian’s Noah Kuzma and Matthew Thibault. ”I felt we have come a long way, more than anything, physically. Every single position, we are a lot better now than we were at the beginning of the season. Pomona was a very, very good team. This title was special through the perseverance and diligence (that) we had to show this year.” The Eagles did not drop another game after their Sept. 23 loss to Pomona en route to finishing with an 11-3 record and securing the third seed in the state playoffs. Pomona, the top-seeded team, finished 12-2. ”It feels amazing to win another
state championship,” said Valor senior Christian Elliss, who plays offense and defense. Senior Will Rodgers, who like Elliss is part of Valor’s linebacking corps, said the Eagles wanted to prove their grit after talk centered on how tough Pomona was at a press conference days before the game. “Even though we are a Christian school, we’re pretty tough, too,” Rodgers said. “That was a chip on our shoulders.” SEE FOOTBALL, P26
here was something missing from the Class 4A and 5A state championship football games Dec. 3 at Sports Authority Field at Mile High in Denver. The Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in partnership with the Colorado High School Activities Association and the DenOVERTIME ver Broncos secured a great venue for these title games. Players and coaches love playing on the same field as the Denver Broncos and you don’t hear complaints. However, the atmosphere lacked Jim Benton the kind of buzz you might find at a smaller venue. With 9,502 fans combined for the two games in the 76,125-seat venue, it was hard to get a real sense of the zealous fans and students who were in attendance. There was an empty feeling looking at the vast surroundings and the estimated crowd of 4,500 that watched the second game between Valor Christian and Pomona. The answer might be to move the championship games to a high school stadium in the Denver area. But it would have to be to be a neutral site for the teams playing in the title contests. Echo Park Automotive Stadium in Parker, Jefferson County Stadium in Lakewood or Legacy Stadium in Aurora might be able to house a crowd of 10,000 with the addition of temporary end zone bleachers. All-City Stadium in Denver would be a great site, but it’s probably too small. Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City is a soccer venue, but it’s the right size for a state football site. It’s big enough (18,061) to handle an overflow gathering for both games but a crowd of 9,000 to 10,000 would not be lost. Cyclo-Cross champion Maurine Sweeney of Highlands Ranch won the UCI Masters CycloCross World Championships for the 6569 age group on Dec. 2 in Mol, Belgium. Cyclo-cross is the national sport of Belgium and the races always involve sections where the racers must dismount and carry their bikes over powder-sugar sand. Some races involve sections in which bikes must be carried up stairs or over obstacles. Vista Nation finishes 13th The Vista Nation girls cross country team — which represents Mountain Vista High School in Highlands Ranch — was 13th in the recent Nike Nationals cross country championship in Portland, Oregon. Freshman Jenna Fitzsimmons led the way, finishing 69th in the individual standings, with a time of 19 minutes, 1.2 seconds. Freshman Sarah O’Sullivan SEE BENTON, P31
26 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
FOOTBALL: Valor senior Will Rodgers had three of six sacks on Pomona FROM PAGE 25
Rodgers had three of the six Valor Christian sacks during the game as the Eagles held Pomona to 29 yards rushing. The Eagles’ defense, which intercepted three Pomona passes, also had three tackles for losses. On offense, Valor Christian senior quarterback Dylan McCaffrey completed 8-of-19 passes for 154 yards and two touchdowns. He led the team in rushing with 72 yards on 16 carries and one score. ”It wasn’t a perfect game — if there is such a thing as a perfect game,” McCaffrey said. ”There were things I could have done better, a couple throws I missed here and there. Our offensive line kept battling for running yards and did a good job throughout the whole game, and then defensively, they were amazing. I can’t describe how well our defensive line and secondary did.” The Eagles found themselves in an early deficit. Pomona grabbed a 7-0 lead, but then Valor scored twice in just over two minutes before the end of the first quarter and tallied 30 straight points to take a 30-7 lead in the final quarter. Elliss caught a 61-yard scoring pass for the Eagles’ first touchdown and McCaffrey’s younger brother Luke hauled in a 5-yard scoring pass for Valor’s second touchdown. Elliss, who rushed for 10 yards, caught two passes for 75 yards and was in on five tackles, had an interception to set up the McCaffreyto-McCaffrey touchdown. ”I’m not going to roll over, and our team is not going to roll over,” Ellis said. “If someone had to give our team momentum, I would do it.” Jack Walley intercepted a pass by Pomona’s Ryan Marquez, leading to the Eagles’ initial touchdown. Hayden Courier’s interception late in the game short circuted any Panther comeback hopes. Valor Christian gained 312 yards on offense, while holding Pomona to just 209. ”I though we showed really good grit and resolve,” Sherman said. ”Again, I cannot be more proud of my team for something like that. It was tough to come back, but we showed heart and then, frankly, we controlled the game from the second quarter on.”2015 - Valor Christian 29, Pomona 26 (5A) 2016 - Valor Christian 30, Pomona 14 (5A)
Valor Christian receiver Luke McCaffrey and Pomona defender Tyler Thimsen get tangled up on an incomplete pass. PAUL DISALVO
VALOR CHRISTIAN IN CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES 2009 — Valor Christian 41, Steamboat Springs 14 (3A) 2010 — Valor Christian 38, Wheat Ridge 8 (4A) 2011 — Valor Christian 66, Pine Creek 10 (4A) 2012 — Valor Christian 9, Cherokee Trail 0 (5A) 2013 — Valor Christian 56, Fairview 16 (5A) 2014 — Cherry Creek 25, Valor Christian 24 (5A) 2015 — Valor Christian 29, Pomona 26 (5A) 2016 — Valor Christian 30, Pomona 14 (5A)
Valor Christian coach Rod Sherman celebrates with his team following their 30-14 win over Pomona in the Class 5A state championship game Dec. 3.
Extra points
Lone Tree Voice 27
December 8, 2016
Valor athlete had stellar season Ali Kilponen named South Metro Pitcher of the Year BY JIM BENTON JBENTON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Valor Christian’s ace Alexandra (Ali) Kilponen is the Colorado Community Media South Metro Softball Pitcher of the Year. PAUL DISALVO
© 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.
TO SOLVE SUDOKU: Numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
Answers
Valor Christian junior pitcher Ali Kilponen worked harder than ever this season. She went 21-1, compiled a 0.47 earned run average, tossed five no-hitters, hurled 14 shutouts and struck out 283 batters in 149 innings pitched in leading the Eagles to their third consecutive Class 4A state championship. Kilponen led the state in ERA, strikeouts and wins, and tied for the lead with no-hitters and for the second year was picked as the South Metro Pitcher of the Year. “It goes without saying Ali is the best pitcher in the state,” said Valor coach Dave Atencio. “There’s nothing more you can say about Ali. She’s only a
junior and has three state titles.” In three seasons, Kilponen is 65-3 with 722 strikeouts in 403.1 innings pitched, and she worked overtime to become more crafty for the 2016 season. “I knew I had to work myself harder than I’ve SOUTH METRO ever worked,” said ATHLETE Kilponen. “I was OF THE YEAR: working myself practicing or workSOFTBALL ing out to be in PITCHER shape for the state tournament. Since I pitch so much I gave my off-speed curve time, I gave my changeup time and my rise ball to perfect every pitch. I just did everything I could to deceive the pitch.” “I just like to perfect the little things like my rise ball is my ace pitch,” she continued. “I just knew I had to have my changeup and it worked good.”
28 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
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Lone Tree Voice 29
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Lone Tree Voice 31
December 8, 2016
Rock Canyon catcher took big steps during softball season PUBLIC NOTICE
Sloane Stewartson chosen as South Metro Player of the Year
DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO BY JIM BENTON Douglas County, CO 80109
JBENTON@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO
Sloane Stewartson, Rock Canyon’s senior she called a
In the Interest of: TREAH MAE WOODS, D.O.B.: softball 12/03/2015; catcher, had what ERIAH NEVAEH D.O.B.: roughWOODS, season last8/31/2010; year. and ERIC LAMONT WOODS, JR., D.O.B.: 7/28/2009, Children, She fiThe nished with a
.545 batting And concerning:
average with a .997 slugging SARAH MICHELLE KNAPP, inandthe 2015 D.O.B.: percentage 1/08/1981, Mother, ERIC LAMONT WOODS, SR., campaign, which was D.O.B.: 9/19/1980, Father, Respondents; excellent for most SOUTH METRO and ERICA JACKSON, a/k/a ERICA WOODS players but not for and BRANDON JACKSON, ATHLETE Special Stewartson. Respondents. OF THE YEAR: Attorney forSo, Department: she recovered John Thirkell, #13865 SOFTBALL PLAYER in 2016 and led the R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 4400 Castleton Ct. Continental League Castle Rock, CO 80109 with a .644 batting average, 1.186 slugging (303) 663-7726 877.285.8988 percentage and a state-leading .731 on-base Rock Canyon senior Sloane Stewartson hit .644 during the 2016 season FAX jthirkel@douglas.co.us percentage. Stewartson belted eight home with a .731 on base percentage and was named the Colorado Communitylreigrut@douglas.co.us CASE NUMBER: 16JV298 DIVISION 7 runs and had 30 runs batted in. Media South Metro Player of the Year. JIM BENTON DEPENDENCY SUMMONS Stewartson is the Colorado Community PUBLIC NOTICE DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, STATE OF COLORADO 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO Douglas County, CO 80109
Media South Metro Player of the Year. “I was extremely happy with the way things went especially after last year when it was a rough year at least in my eyes I guess,” she said. “I was extremely happy with the way I performed this year. “I worked really hard. I practiced with my individual hitting coach sometimes twice a week to get prepared for games if I thought it was a super important game.” Stewartson, who has signed a letter of intent to play at Louisiana Tech, adapted when opposing teams pitched around her. She drew 17 walks and was hit by two pitches last season. “It was a little frustrating but I could take it as respect,” said Stewartson. “If I don’t get a hit, I’m just relying to someone on the team to hit. It used to really bother me but I’ve gotten a lot better saying at least I’m on base for other people on my team. “I worked a lot of basic fundamentals but I worked more on pitch selection because I knew they weren’t going to pitch me anything really good to hit. I worked on which pitches to hit and Public obviously if it’s a Notice low pitch I’m not going to be able to hit that INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) for a home run. I just wanted to make good #058-16 HVAC FILTERS and BELTS contact.”
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 19-3-503, C.R.S. 2016.
The Facilities, Fleet and Emergency Support Services Department of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests bids from responsible qualified firms for the provision of the purchase of HVAC Filters and Belts for use within Douglas County buildings, as specified.
BENTON: Goaltender honored for success in sports, class and community TO: SARAH MICHELLE KNAPP and ERIC LAMONT WOODS, SR
You are hereby notified that a petition has been The IFB documents may be reviewed and/or filed which alleges that the above-named chilprinted from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing dren are dependent or neglected as per the System website at www.rockymountainbidsysfacts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect tem.com. IFBsports documents are not available Jim Benton is a writer for for coach for the Lindenwood women’s women’s hockey goaltender Nicole FROM PAGE 25 Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the purchase from Douglas County Government and In the Interest of: TREAH MAE WOODS, Colorado hockey teamad-in Saint Charles, MisHensley is one of the 10 recipients of Reigrut, D.O.B.: 12/03/2015; office of R. LeeAnn at the above canCommunity only be accessedMedia. from the above-menNEVAEH WOODS, D.O.B.: 8/31/2010; dress. tioned website. While the IFB documents are He has been covering in the souri. She had a school-record 2.52 the NCAA was 97th in 19:26.5, with Mauren ERIAH and ERIC LAMONT WOODS,Top JR., 10 award that recognizavailable electronically,sports Douglas County cannot D.O.B.: 7/28/2009, The Children, Return of Service and goals-against Temporary Custodyaverage and a .922 saves accept electronic bid responses. Denver area since 1968. es former student athletesA for success Fitzsimmons right behind at 19:27.6. Hearing has been set for December 12, 2016 at He can be reached jbenton@ percentage during her senior season. in the field, classroom and8:30 community . 7, Douglas And concerning: a.m. in Division County District Three (3) copies at of your IFB response shall be Court, Moun4000 Justice Way,She Castle Rock, Colorsubmitted in a sealed envelope plainlyor marked coloradocommunitymedia.com at is the NCAA all-time saves leader Hensley , who went to Green Hensley honored SARAH MICHELLE KNAPP, ado, 80109. “IFB No. 058-16, HVAC Filters and Belts”. ElecD.O.B.: 1/08/1981, Mother, and tronic and/or faxed bid responses will not be ac303-566-4083. with 4,094. tain High School, is now an assistant Former Lindenwood University ERIC LAMONT WOODS, SR., Your presence before this court is required to cepted. Bids will be received until 11:00 a.m., D.O.B.: 9/19/1980, Father, defend against the claims in this petition. IF on Thursday, December 29, 2016 by the Respondents; YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL Douglas County Finance Department, Purchasand ERICA JACKSON, a/k/a ERICA WOODS PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT ing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle and BRANDON JACKSON, FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJURock, Colorado 80104. Bids will not be conSpecial Respondents. DICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A sidered which are received after the time stated, JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUand any bids so received will be returned Attorney for Department: DICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDunopened. John Thirkell, #13865 ENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 Douglas County Government reserves the right 4400 Castleton Ct. You have the right to request a trial by jury at to reject any and all bids, to waive formalities, inCastle Rock, CO 80109 the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also formalities, or irregularities contained in a said (303) 663-7726 have the right to legal representation at every bid and furthermore, to award a contract for To advertise youritems public notices 303-566-4100 stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own FAX 877.285.8988 herein, eithercall in whole or in part, if it is choosing, or if you are without sufficient finanjthirkel@douglas.co.us Public Notice deemed to be in the best interest of the County cial means, appointment of counsel by the lreigrut@douglas.co.us to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to Court. Termination of your parent-child legal renegotiate optional items/services with the sucCASE NUMBER: 16JV298 DIVISION 7 INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) lationship to free your children for adoption is a cessful bidder. #058-16 possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remDEPENDENCY SUMMONS HVAC FILTERS and BELTS edy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing bePlease direct any questions concerning this IFB fore a Judge. You also have the right, if you are to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor, 303This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 The Facilities, Fleet and Emergency Support indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no ex660-7434, criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to PUBLIC NOTICE of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Services Department of Douglas County Govpense to you, one expert witness of your own ernment, hereinafter referred to as the County, 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 19-3-503, C.R.S. 2016. choosing at any hearing on the termination of DOUGLAS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT, respectfully requests bids from responsible qualholidays. your parent-child relationship. If you are a STATE OF COLORADO ified firms for the provision of the purchase of TO: SARAH MICHELLE KNAPP minor, you have the right to the appointment of a 4000 Justice Way HVAC Filters and Belts for use within Douglas Legal Notice No.: 930329 County buildings, as specified. and ERIC LAMONT WOODS, SR Guardian ad litem to represent your best inCastle Rock, CO First Publication: December 8, 2016 terests. Douglas County, CO 80109 Last Publication: December 8, 2016 The IFB documents may be reviewed and/or You are hereby notified that a petition has been Publisher: Douglas County News-Press printed from the Rocky Mountain E-Purchasing filed which alleges that the above-named chilYou have the right to have this matter heard by THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE System website at www.rockymountainbidsysdren are dependent or neglected as per the a district court judge rather than by the magisOF COLORADO PUBLIC NOTICE tem.com. IFB documents are not available for facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect trate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, purchase from Douglas County Government and Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the you will be bound by the findings and recomIn the Interest of: TREAH MAE WOODS, NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING can only be accessed from the above-menD.O.B.: 12/03/2015; office of R. LeeAnn Reigrut, at the above admendations of the magistrate, subject to review tioned website. While the IFB documents are ERIAH NEVAEH WOODS, D.O.B.: 8/31/2010; dress. as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2016, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the proposed available electronically, Douglas County cannot and ERIC LAMONT WOODS, JR., and subsequently, to the right of appeal as budgets for the County of Douglas and all its accept electronic bid responses. D.O.B.: 7/28/2009, The Children, A Return of Service and Temporary Custody provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4. agencies, the Douglas County Law EnforceHearing has been set for December 12, 2016 at ment Authority, the Douglas County Woodmoor Three (3) copies of your IFB response shall be 8:30 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District And concerning: This summons is being initiated by the Douglas Mountain General Improvement District, the submitted in a sealed envelope plainly marked Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, ColorCounty Department of Human Services through Douglas County Local Improvement District No. “IFB No. 058-16, HVAC Filters and Belts”. ElecSARAH MICHELLE KNAPP, ado, 80109. its counsel. 07-01-Lincoln Station, and the Douglas County tronic and/or faxed bid responses will not be acD.O.B.: 1/08/1981, Mother, and Public Trustee have been submitted to the cepted. Bids will be received until 11:00 a.m., ERIC LAMONT WOODS, SR., Your presence before this court is required to Dated: November 28, 2016 Board of County Commissioners of Douglas on Thursday, December 29, 2016 by the D.O.B.: 9/19/1980, Father, defend against the claims in this petition. IF R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 County for the ensuing year 2017. The Board Douglas County Finance Department, PurchasYOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL Respondents; Assistant Douglas County Attorney of County Commissioners will hold a public ing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle and ERICA JACKSON, a/k/a ERICA WOODS PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT hearing to consider the adoption of the proLegal Notice No.: 930320 Rock, Colorado 80104. Bids will not be conand BRANDON JACKSON, FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUposed budgets on December 13, 2016 beginFirst Publication: December 8, 2016 sidered which are received after the time stated, DICAT ORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A Special Respondents. ning at 2:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as posLast Publication: December 8, 2016 and any bids so received will be returned JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUsible, in the Commissioner’s Hearing Room, Publisher: Douglas County News-Press unopened. Attorney for Department: DICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDPhillip S. Miller Building, 100 Third Street, Castle ENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. John Thirkell, #13865 Rock, Colorado. Any interested elector of Douglas County Government reserves the right R. LeeAnn Reigrut, #28833 Douglas County may file an objection to the proto reject any and all bids, to waive formalities, in4400 Castleton Ct. You have the right to request a trial by jury at posed adopted budget prior to its final adoption formalities, or irregularities contained in a said Castle Rock, CO 80109 the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also by the Board of County Commissioners. A copy bid and furthermore, to award a contract for have the right to legal representation at every (303) 663-7726 of said resolution may be obtained for inspecstage of the proceedings by counsel of your own items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is FAX 877.285.8988 tion at the offices of the County Commissioners choosing, or if you are without sufficient finandeemed to be in the best interest of the County jthirkel@douglas.co.us at the above address in Castle Rock, Colorado, Public Notice cial means, appointment of counsel by the to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to lreigrut@douglas.co.us or viewed on-line at www.douglas.co.us. negotiate optional items/services with the sucCourt. Termination of your parent-child legal reCASE NUMBER: 16JV298 DIVISION 7 INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) cessful bidder. lationship to free your children for adoption is a Legal Notice No: 930325 #058-16 possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remDEPENDENCY SUMMONS First Publication: December 8, 2016 HVAC FILTERS and BELTS Please direct any questions concerning this IFB edy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing beLast Publication: December 8, 2016 to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor, 303fore a Judge. You also have the right, if you are This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press The Facilities, Fleet and Emergency Support 660-7434, criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no exof the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Services Department of Douglas County Gov5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding pense to you, one expert witness of your own Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, ernment, hereinafter referred to as the County, and Section 19-3-503, C.R.S. 2016. holidays. choosing at any hearing on the termination of respectfully requests bids from responsible qualTHE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO
Public Notices
Misc. Private Legals
Misc. Private Legals
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Notices Government Legals
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Lone Tree * 1
32 Lone Tree Voice
December 8, 2016D
Challenges loom due to state’s increasing senior population Task force calls for new post in Colorado to address issue BY JAMES ANDERSON ASSOCIATED PRESS
Colorado needs to create a top executive-level position in state government to help public and private groups handle the needs of the state’s rapidly growing population of those 65 and older, a task force recently reported. The population of those 65 and older in Colorado is expected to double to 1.3 million by 2030 — representing about 20 percent of the state’s total projected population, according to the Strategic Action Planning Group on Aging report.
grow from $3.7 billion in 2015 to $6.6 billion in 2030. The challenges posed by generations living longer than ever before merit a top executive position to streamline overlaps in existing services, said Dale Elliott, director of senior and nutrition services for Volunteers of America in Colorado. Aging Millennial numbers will rival those of baby boomers in Colorado, and if these issues aren’t addressed, the state could face the same issues more than 40 years down road, he added. Baby boomers are those born between 1946 and 1964; Millennials, roughly between 1982 and 2004. “I think what we’re proposing is that the state recognize that we’re going to be spending more money, just under current law, as this population doubles,” Itin said. The task force recommended that
Colorado create the position to coordinate state, local, private and nonprofit efforts to address issues such as affordable housing and assisted living, encouraging retirement savings, covering projected shortfalls in caregivers, and preventing elder abuse and fraud. Budget-writers also should devise a way to track all state spending related to issues affecting the older population to help lawmakers plan in the near and the long term, according to the initial report, commissioned last year by the Legislature. A message seeking comment from Gov. John Hickenlooper about any new executive post wasn’t immediately returned. The group will continue to hold meetings throughout the state. It will issue updated reports in 2018 and 2020.
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One of the most pressing issues is finding ways to fund a growing Medicaid program that already totals $25 billion, panel members said. “The most expensive piece is Medicaid, and Medicaid is the fastestgrowing part of the state budget,” said task force member Christian Itin, chair of the Department of Social Work at Metropolitan State University of Denver. “If we ignore these issues, we are certain to be spending lots more money on this.” Panel members emphasized that helping Coloradans stay independent as long as they can — and not become dependent on state services until they must — is key. Their report notes that informal caregiving by family and friends is rising rapidly — as are costs in lost wages, benefits and other expenses to both workers and their employers. Those costs are expected to
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