Lone Tree Voice 1009

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October 9, 2014 VOLU M E 1 3 | I SS UE 38

LoneTreeVoice.net A publication of

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

Schwab site gets down to business Company celebrates grand opening of corporate campus By Jane Reuter

jreuter@colorado communitymedia.com

Schweiger Ranch visitors enjoy a wagon ride through the property as part of the annual Fall Festival Oct. 4. Photo by John Klassen

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emories of yesteryear and a touch of today highlighted the sunsplashed Oct. 4 Schweiger Ranch Fall Festival. There were wagon rides, a pumpkin patch, apple picking, a simulated cave through which children could crawl, Lego classes, crafts, a petting zoo and tours of the historic, recently renovated buildings on the property. The ranch south of RidgeGate Parkway on Havana Street was established in the late 1800s. The festival may be over, but the Schweiger Ranch is open for guided or self-guided tours every Saturday and Sunday. Call 303-790-0557.

The mood among the Denver metro employees of one of the world’s most esteemed financial institutions was decidedly light Oct. 1 as Charles Schwab celebrated the grand opening of its Lone Tree campus. The first of about 2,000 Denver-area employees will move into the massive buildings that have forever altered Lone Tree’s physical and financial horizon in early October. Men and women in dark suits and business attire, representing a who’s-who of south metro Denver, gathered at the stillunder-construction site for breakfast, tours and a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Schwab opened its Lone Tree retail branch building at the corner of Lincoln Avenue and Park Meadows Drive in May, and erected a 50-foot-tall “Schwab” sign along I-25. “If you didn’t notice the new branch, maybe you noticed the sign on I-25,” Schwab senior vice president Brian McDonald said during the grand opening event. “In fact, we got a complaint — IKEA called and said it was too big.” The towering yellow-and-blue IKEA sign marks the retail store in neighboring

Schwab continues on Page 9

Chase suspect heads for trial Judge finds probable cause in preliminary hearing

Baby chicks were among the natural wonders on display at the festival. Photo by Bruce Ryman

By Jane Reuter

jreuter@colorado communitymedia.com A judge found probable cause Oct. 3 to try Ryan Stone, the man facing 26 counts in a March 12 multi-county, high-speed chase that ended in Douglas County. Stone’s arraignment is set for Dec. 1 at the Douglas County Justice Center. Judge Susanna Lea Meissner-Cutler made her ruling at the end of a more than two-hour preliminary hearing during which a Longmont police officer and two Douglas Stone County Sheriff’s Department officers testified about their roles in the chaotic, morning rush-hour incident. Stone is suspected of carjacking three vehicles during the nearly two-hour pursuit. The first, containing a 4-year-old boy, was stolen from a Longmont gas station. Stone allegedly later abandoned the car, with the uninjured boy inside it, to hijack another. In all, he damaged a total of nine vehicles at an estimate of more than

Hailey and Avery Russer enjoy some sweet treats at the Schweiger Ranch Fall Festival. Photo by John Klassen

Brooklyn Palladino poses in her Halloween costume among the pumpkins at Schweiger Ranch. Photo by Bruce Ryman

Chase continues on Page 9


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2 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

Man hits road of life with hands off wheel The call for prayer from the nearby mosque woke him from a restless sleep about 4 that morning. He showered, dressed and checked his backpack. Water containers. Iodine tablets. Medical kit. Several notebooks and 24 pencils. Some Clif bars. One change of clothes. A credit card to be used only for emergencies. A palm-sized GPS tracker. Tent. Sleeping bag. Compass. No cell phone. He repacked, shut off the lights and knelt on the concrete floor. Let me be present, he prayed. Let me handle challenges with grace and humility. Then, Donovan DiLorenzo — an olive scarf wound around his head, a shadow of a beard on his face, Teva sandals on his feet — stepped from the hotel in Madaba, Jordan, his heart a mix of trepidation and hope, and began walking. “The first time you step out — that’s the scariest,” he said. “You’ve built up all these expectations … and you’re just not sure how they’re going to unfold.” Donovan’s Journey, as his family calls it, began Aug. 27, 2013. It unfolded step by step, without any sure plan. Donovan, then 42, trekked as pilgrims in days of old through Jordan, Israel, Palestine, Egypt and India, letting the day’s encounters chart his path and depending on unexpected kindnesses for food, shelter and companionship. By the time he returned home in May, he had walked more than 1,100 miles. Back home in Highlands Ranch where he grew up, his parents had anxiously followed his path through intermittent signals from a GPS tracker. They thought he was searching for self-discovery. His younger sister later told him she thought his choice to travel without resources or a way to communicate with home was selfish because of the worry it caused those who loved him. Donovan thought doing so was the only real way to live fully in the moment — to see and feel and understand a profoundness of life uncluttered by distractions. He wasn’t really searching for something; he just wanted to see what would happen if life directed him rather than the other way around.

“It was a kind of shedding or surrendering …,” Donovan said. “It was just about letting go and seeing how life would unfold being a little more present.” His life had already detoured from the main road. The tragedy of 9/11 caused him to rethink his course: He left a lucrative job as an account executive in New York to teach in New Orleans’ most challenging urban school district. He later helped with reconstruction and outreach following Hurricane Katrina’s devastation. From there, he joined the Peace Corps, working in Africa in Malawi, one of the world’s least-developed countries. He returned to New Orleans and taught there until last summer, when he decided to abandon life as he knew it. He chose to walk most of his journey to have “more time to think, write and connect with others.” When Donovan refused to take a cell phone, his parents, Neil and Michelle, persuaded him to pack a small GPS tracker. “You’re not really communicating,” Neil told him. “At least, as long as the coordinates are moving, we’ll know you’re alive.” Donovan agreed. Every three days, he activated the device and Neil plotted latitude and longitude on maps to follow his route. Even so, Neil and Michelle slept only a few hours each night those first few weeks. “I am very nervous …,” Michelle said then. “That has been really, really hard, not knowing where he’s at.” Donovan, at times, wasn’t sure exactly where he was, either. The trails seemed confusing, the heat unbearable. In those moments, anxiety would begin to seep into his thoughts — “that feeling,” he wrote later, “when you are unsure about the road ahead.” But then he would gather

courage, bring himself back into the moment, summon a sense of peace. At the start, his feet bled. The backpack rubbed raw a spot on his back. Hunger became a frequent companion — he thought often of his mother’s pasta and meatballs. But fortune continually crossed his path in the form of curious children, interested villagers or, simply, a patch of shade under a tree. Strangers gave him freshly baked warm pita bread. They invited him to share tea around campfires and offered space in their homes to sleep. They shared stories that bound them across cultures and beliefs. “I was really taken aback at how hospitable people were and how people would open up their homes,” Donovan said. “There were those moments when you kind of step back and think, `Wow, that was truly amazing.’” In those instants, he said, God gave him wonder. He prayed in mosques, saw the Dead Sea, visited Cana and other places of the Holy Land, navigated military checkpoints between Palestine and Israel. He walked about 650 miles, according to Neil’s map calculations, before flying from the Red Sea to Cairo at the end of October. After two weeks in Egypt, he flew to Mumbai and walked another 500 or so miles, visiting ashrams where he learned to meditate, and Buddhist temples where he prayed, and, finally, homes in Calcutta run by Mother Teresa’s Sisters of Charity, where he volunteered for two months. He massaged lotion into the withered arms of old men, bathed sick patients, prayed over the dead then carried them to crematoriums. “In Calcutta, there are moments when you have incredible suffering,” Donovan said, “but somehow people find a way to be joyous.” There was the blind man who always sang. There were the children who laughed and played amid the squalor. And the special kinship shared with others who helped. “… a lot of suffering,” Donovan repeated. “But a lot of people giving of themselves.”

From India, he traveled to Indonesia for a month. And then, life told Donovan it was time to return home to the much-missed embrace of family and friends. Near midnight on May 12, Neil and Michelle drove slowly into the arrival lane at DIA as a tall figure with a bushy beard and a backpack walked to the curb. “He had a scarf on,” Michelle said. But “I would know him anywhere.” At home, Donovan ate a big plate of pasta and meatballs, satiating the craving that hunger had instilled. He reveled in the warmth of family. “He’s very strong,” Michelle said, “but I’m just glad he’s home.” Neil agreed. “We don’t have to worry.” They listened to their son’s stories, marveling at the generosity of strangers who gave to the man who is always giving to others. Yet, Neil said, “his experience is probably hard to share because we can’t understand it — we didn’t live it.” Donovan is in California now, helping develop programs for the mostly Hispanic and disadvantaged teens served by the Boys and Girls Clubs of Sonoma. Life kept telling him, he said, this was his next chapter. He’s written 10 short stories about his pilgrimage and has ideas for about 10 more. He’s writing them, primarily, for family and friends so they can know how letting go propels life to unfold in wondrous, unexpected ways. He would like to return to the Denver area someday. But “you never know,” Donovan said. “The main thing is I’m present and have the courage to follow where life is taking me. We’ll see.” Perhaps, for Donovan, the journey hasn’t ended at all. Ann Macari Healey’s column about people, places and issues of everyday life appears every other week. Her column earned first place in the 2013 Colorado Press Association Better Newspaper contest. She can be reached at ahealey@ coloradocommunitymedia.com or 303566-4110.

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Lone Tree Voice 3

October 9, 2014

State, district differ on waiver Board of Ed says DCSD must comply with READ Act By Jane Reuter

jreuter@colorado communitymedia.com The Douglas County School District and the Colorado Department of Education have a legal “difference of opinion” over the district’s ability to use state legislation to opt out of a K-3 reading assessment. A department of education official said the district can’t use the Innovation School Act to waive its participation in a state test. The DCSD board adopted a resolution Sept. 2 to submit an innovation waiver to the Colorado Board of Education, noting specific concerns with a time-consuming series of state-mandated reading ability tests in the Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act. The resolution said several elementary schools instead will meet the goals of the READ Act “using locally developed and locally approved programs.” The board’s resolution authorized Superintendent Elizabeth Fagen to assist interested elementary schools in filing a waiver application. But the CDE, which must approve all such plans, said the act can’t be used that

SEND US YOUR NEWS Colorado Community Media welcomes event listings and other submissions. Please note our submissions emails. Events and club listings calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com School notes schoolnotes@ coloradocommunitymedia.com Military briefs militarynotes@ coloradocommunitymedia.com

way. “According to guidance from the attorney general’s office, the state board is not statutorily authorized to waive compliance with the READ Act,” education commissioner Robert Hammond wrote to Fagen in a Sept. 24 letter. Hammond wrote that the results of the READ Act tests are included in the formula the CDE uses to calculate school district performance ratings, “… and thus cannot be waived by the state board under the Innovation Act.” An emailed response from DCSD spokeswoman Paula Hans said DCSD offered schools the possible waiver option after “much due diligence, including consultation with legal counsel.” “DCSD understands that we have a difference of legal opinion/interpretation with the CDE regarding the authority and ability of the State Board of Education to provide relief to our students by waiving portions of the READ Act,” the email reads. “Our legal interpretations may vary, but we are committed to continuing our collaborative work with CDE in the best interest of our students.” Hammond’s letter was not released to Colorado Community Media by the CDE or DCSD, but through a community group. Voices for Public Education filed open re-

cords requests with CDE and DCSD. Several community members insist the district isn’t being upfront about its reasons for wanting to use the act. The 2008 legislation was designed to boost academic achievement, freeing schools from statutes and rules related to budgeting, curriculum, teacher contracts and other policies. Voices’ co-founder Amy DeValk is among several parents who believe DCSD wants to become an innovation district, and remove itself from many state requirements. They submitted a petition asking DCSD to hold community meetings and explain its intent, but such meetings haven’t been scheduled. “By putting innovation status on a school, I don’t think people realize it could open up a whole other can of worms,” DeValk said. “It gives the (DCSD) board of education the opportunity to have a lot more power than they already do. If this was a

school board that we had any confidence in or trusted, that would be one thing, but they’re not being upfront with what this means. “In my opinion, they’re starting out with the READ Act because it seems innocuous and like something everybody could support. Once that school has innovation status attached to it, we don’t know what could happen. “Everything they’ve done to this point with pay-for-performance, teacher evaluations, district turnover, public comment at BOE meetings, not holding public forums — if you line everything up, it all adds up to wanting to privatize the school district.” At least 37 schools in four Colorado school districts have been granted innovation status. Most of them are in Denver Public Schools and Falcon School District 49. District 49, east of Colorado Springs in El Paso County, serves 15,000 students over a 133-square-mile rural and urban area.

General press releases Submit through our website Obituaries obituaries@coloradocommunitymedia.com Letters to the editor letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com

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4 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

ELECTION 2014: THE RACE FOR GOVERNOR

Hickenlooper proud of record Beauprez: State needs leader Governor says unusual approach isn’t indecision

Challenger doubles down on tough approach

By Vic Vela

By Vic Vela

John Hickenlooper doesn’t worry about whether people “get” him. His “aw, shucks,” nerd-like personality and his imperfect — and sometimes meandering — way of speaking are a far cry from anything that resembles a polished, focusgroup-driven politician. Through three elections, the quirky Hickenlooper brand has resonated with voters, as evidenced by a landslide win for governor in 2010, and before that, two decisive victories in Denver mayoral races. But it is that same style that has left him wide open for political attacks. He has become fodder for Republican press releases that blast the governor as being a wishywashy failed leader who struggles while deciding over a breakfast menu, much less over areas of public policy. “Obviously, I’m a different kind of politician, but that’s what most people said they wanted,” said Hickenlooper during a recent one-on-one interview with Colorado Community Media from inside his re-election campaign office in Denver’s Lower Highland neighborhood. “They said they’re sick of the same old talking head who gets up in there in a robotic fashion and says the same platitudes that we’ve heard for a million years. That’s one of the reasons why people like me run for office. I think people deserve more.” Hickenlooper has heard the criticism before. But as he enters the final stretch of a tight re-election campaign against former Congressman Bob Beauprez, he prefers to talk about his economic record as governor. There is no question that the economy has gained steam and jobs have been created under his watch. And he largely received praised for his response to crises that made national headlines, such as the Aurora theater shooting, wildfires and last year’s statewide flooding. But Hickenlooper’s own words haven’t

It seems appropriate that a guy who likes to play in the dirt is involved in politics — a business where a lot of mud gets slung. Yes, Bob Beauprez is a former congressman and the Republican nominee for governor, but he is also a bison rancher and an avid gardener who likes getting his hands dirty. “I am obsessive about the condition of our yard and garden and all that,” Beauprez said during a recent one-on-one interview with Colorado Community Media. “I love playing in the dirt. I love plants and fussing with them and the beauty of them.” When Beauprez isn’t tending to his plants, he is on the campaign trail trying to plant the seed in the minds of voters that Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper is a failed leader who should be voted out of office. “He has this obsession with collaborating; wants to talk everything through, forever,” Beauprez said of Hickenlooper. “He can’t make a decision and he won’t make a decision.” While Beauprez hammers away at Hickenlooper on a number of issues — gun control, the death penalty and hydraulic fracturing, just to name a few — he is also out to prove the late F. Scott Fitzgerald wrong, that there are indeed second acts in American lives. Beauprez lost badly to Bill Ritter in a 2006 gubernatorial bid where he never recovered from the “Both Ways Bob” label that was pinned on him by a fellow Republican in the primary field. It would be a quite a comeback story if Beauprez unseats Hickenlooper, especially in a state that has been trending Democratic in recent elections and where voters rarely have an appetite to vote out an incumbent governor. Hickenlooper is also backed by an economy that has grown

vvela@coloradocommunitymedia.com

vvela@coloradocommunitymedia.com

‘I sit there and look back over the past four years (and) I think during all the significant issues, I think we made the right decisions.’ John Hickenlooper, Colorado governor

done him any favors this campaign. Sometimes when the governor speaks, the result is reminiscent of the Grateful Dead during an off night — the trademark style is there, but it will sometimes run off the rails, leaving those listening scratching their heads. His decision last year to grant a reprieve to death-row inmate Nathan Dunlap — who killed four people inside an Aurora Chuck E. Cheese’s restaurant in 1993 — was met with confusion and criticism. And in television interviews this year, the governor said that he has moved away from being a supporter of the death penalty (he told voters in 2010 that he was in favor of capital punishment). And he suggested during a CNN interview Hickenlooper continues on Page 13

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stronger and created jobs on his watch. But Beauprez believes voters now have the appetite to oust a governor who won his seat in a landslide in 2010 and whose quirky personality has both endeared him to supporters and irked his detractors. Beauprez spent the entire summer blasting Hickenlooper for “failing to lead” on the issue of the death penalty, having been highly critical of the governor’s decision to grant a reprieve to death-row inmate Nathan Dunlap, who killed four people at an Aurora Chuck E. Cheese’s restaurant in 1993. Beauprez said Hickenlooper should have either chosen to go forward with the execution or grant clemency, rather than Beauprez continues on Page 13

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Lone Tree Voice 5

October 9, 2014

State transportation leaders look ahead Creative financing, expanded transit needed to ensure economic future By Jane Reuter

jreuter@coloradocommunitymedia.com The state’s transportation leaders envision passenger rail systems statewide, an overall infrastructure that will change and improve with technology and more private investment used to fund vital future projects. Three of them spoke about the metro area’s transportation system during an Oct. 2 Denver South Economic Development Partnership breakfast at the Lone Tree Arts Center. They praised south metro Denver leaders for partnering in financing the recently begun I-25 lane-balancing project, future C-470 expansion and the southeast light rail extension. “This is the way transportation needs to work in Colorado and it doesn’t work that way everywhere,” said Colorado Department of Transportation executive director Don Hunt. As fuel-efficient cars and changing driving habits decrease gas tax revenues, the men said similar collaborations are the key to future improvements. Without them, Colorado’s economic future could dim. Hunt said Denver’s major thoroughfares likely will undergo one more reconstruction, but no more. “After that, we’d better look to technology for the solution,” he said. “We’re not going to be able to widen them (anymore). You could make the case after we finish the lane-balancing project, we have what we will have for the future. We need to learn to manage them better.” Technology will play a major role in doing so, Hunt said, enabling highway engineers to adjust ramp meters and toll lanes almost instantly based on shifting demand. “The long-term really has to do with better technology in vehicles and the entire smart highway system,” Hunt said. “We’re

not that far away from more automated vehicles that will travel more smoothly on the highway system and increase capacity.” The continued expansion of mass transit also is key to easing pressure on highways. “We want to find a way to accommodate growth for high-speed rail all over the state,” RTD general manager Phil Washington said. “I see high-speed rail coming.” While some large portions of the planned FasTracks light- and commuterrail line remain unfunded, 2016 will see the opening of several long-awaited projects. Among them: The 10-mile I-225 Line, the 6.5-mile Northwest Rail Line from Union Station to Westminster, and the 23-mile East Commuter Rail Line from Union Station to Denver International Airport. “In 2016, with all these openings, we are going to have tremendous momentum in this state to do bigger and better things,” Washington said. Groundbreaking on the $207-million southeast light rail extension, which will add three stops and 2.3 miles of track between Lone Tree’s Lincoln Station and the RidgeGate Parkway/I-25 interchange, is expected in 12 to 15 months. Lone Tree, Douglas County, RidgeGate and the Denver South Transportation Management Authority are contributing a total of nearly $40 million toward the line’s construction. Creative partnerships like those and other financing avenues have earned the state a reputation for being visionary and progressive, Washington said. He intends to build on that. “Everything that we talked about leading up to the FasTracks election is happening now,” he said, referring to the voterapproved 0.4-percent FasTracks tax passed in 2004. “We talked about creating 10,000 jobs at the height of construction; we’re at 10,300. We talked about injecting $2.7 billion into the local economy; we’re at $3.3 billion. We talked about transit-oriented communities popping up around our stations; there are two to three stories every week about some development happening around transit. Everything we thought would occur … is happening. And we’re

Colorado Department of Transportation executive director Don Hunt, left, and RTD general manager Phil Washington respond to questions during an Oct. 2 South Metro EDC transit presentation at the Lone Tree Arts Center. Photo by Jane Reuter going to see more of it.”

road.

Despite the success of FasTracks, Hunt said 85 percent of all trips still are made by

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“It’s hard to move that number,” he said.

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6 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

New plan for Lincoln Avenue roadwork By Chris Michlewicz

cmichlewicz@colorado communitymedia.com A major construction project on Lincoln Avenue was canceled because the contractors’ bids were much higher than county officials expected. A plan to rebuild the road for $4.3 million has been scrapped in favor of a concrete panel-replacement project that will extend the life of the road another 10-15 years and cost roughly one-quarter of the amount anticipated. The roadwork was scheduled to begin in mid-June immediately after the Parker Days Festival, but the construction bids came in “half a million to a million dollars over our estimates,” said Darrell Roberts, engineering permits, inspections and utilities manager for Douglas County’s public works department. The county was planning to completely remove the existing road, which was built 30 years ago when Stonegate was developed, and stabilize the subgrade between Chambers Road and Keystone Boulevard. The work was expected to last one year. The newest project will take only 4-6 weeks. The contractor is aiming for completion prior to Halloween, depending on weather, Roberts said. Motorists started to notice closures on the east-west arterial road in late September, when preliminary work was done in anticipation of “crossover detours” that began to

direct traffic to one side of the road Sept. 29, Roberts said. The westbound and eastbound lanes will each be closed for 2-3 weeks, narrowing traffic to one lane in each direction. Complaints from frustrated motorists have already started pouring in. County officials are directing Lincoln Avenue users to www.lincoln-ave-east.com, a website that provides detailed information on timing and detour maps. Electronic message boards are also informing drivers of what to expect and radio listeners can tune in 1620 AM for additional information. While the timeline is considerably shorter for the new project, the cool weather and rains could delay the final concrete grinding until next year. It would take about a week or two, Roberts said. The latest plan will have crews stabilizing the subgrade beneath the replaced panels with dowel bars, which act as load transfer mechanisms when vehicles pass over. Longitudinal tie bars will also be installed. “We want to get the road into better condition than it is now, so we decided to move forward with that,” Roberts said. Higher bids, along with a lower number of contractors making bids, impacted numerous projects in Douglas County over the summer. Moving soils, changing water tables and 300 days of sunshine have degraded the existing roadway, along with the 34,000 vehicles that use Lincoln Avenue daily. The original project had been discussed for 10 years.

BUSINESS, WITH A BITE

ReMax real estate agent Mark Thompson of Lone Tree surveys the buffet at the Cherokee Ranch Castle during a Sept. 30 event co-hosted by the Castle Pines and Lone Tree chambers of commerce. Photo by Jane Reuter

NEWS IN A HURRY Getting Ready to vote in the Nov. 4 General Election? ! General Election W NE Ballots issued by mail beginning Oct. 14

Ballots for the Nov. 4 General Election will be mailed to all Douglas County registered voters the week of Oct. 14. If you are registered to vote and do not receive your ballot by Oct. 21, contact the Douglas County Elections Division at 303-6607444. Your replacement ballot may be sent by mail until Oct. 28. To ensure that voters receive replacement ballots in time for the Nov. 4 General Election, all ballot requests after Oct. 28 must be made and delivered in person at one of the many convenient Voter Service and Polling Centers (VSPC). For VSPC locations and hours, as well as additional election information, please visit www.douglasvotes. com and Don’t Miss the Vote!

Visit the Registered Voter Search tool at www.douglasvotes.com for instructions and information including: • Voter registration • Voter status • Voting locations • Ballot information For additional information about the 2014 General Election please visit www.douglasvotes.com or contact the Douglas County Elections Division at 303-6607444 and Don’t Miss the Vote!

Winter Readiness Begins Now Please visit www.douglas.co.us/ publicworks/snow-and-iceremoval/ as a reference guide to frequently asked questions about snow and ice removal in Douglas County.

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October is “Adopta-Shelter Dog Month”

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Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC) Meeting Oct. 16 The Douglas County LEPC will meet October 16, 2:00 p.m., at the Douglas County School District offices, 701 Prairie Hawk Drive, in Castle Rock. For more information visit www.dcsheriff. net/LEPC/

The Dumb Friends League is offering 50% off the adoption fee for all adult dogs, 1 year and older, throughout the month of October. Visit adoptable pets in person at the Buddy Center, located at 4556 Castleton Court in Castle Rock, or view all pets in need of loving homes online at ddfl.org

www.douglas.co.us For more information or to register for CodeRED please visit www.DouglasCountyCodeRed.com

Martinis & Mammograms is Oct. 16

Park Meadows seasonal hiring fair set

Invision Sally Jobe and Sky Ridge Medical Center will co-host the annual Martinis and Mammograms from 6 to 8 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Invision Sally Jobe in Lincoln Medical Center, 11960 Lioness Way, Lone Tree. In addition to delicious treats, participants can take advantage of free breast and skin screenings and hear from noted physicians. The evening will include plenty of freebies and fun activities, including complimentary martinis, music and prizes. This popular event, which has featured bra fittings and lingerie presentations, provides breast education in an atmosphere of relaxation and camaraderie.

Lone Tree Library hosts practice tests, party Upcoming community events at the Lone Tree library include an SAT/ACT Combo Practice Test from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Oct. 11. Students will answer questions from all subjects tested on the ACT and SAT and will receive scores via email, with the opportunity to attend an informational session at a later date. A Heroes of Olympus Party is planned from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11. Registration is required for the event, which is a celebration of the Rick Riordan series and movie release that includes games, crafts and other activities. For more information, visit http://douglascountylibraries.org/Locations/LoneTreeLibrary

Park Meadows shopping center will host a hiring fair from noon to 1 p.m. Oct. 11 in the lower level Macy’s Court. Job seekers can connect with retailers hiring for seasonal, part-time, and full-time positions ranging from sales associates to assistant managers. More than 200 job opportunities will be available. The fair will be followed by a 1:30 to 2 p.m. presentation of interviewing tips, resume pointers, and other advice for job seekers.

A crash course in law enforcement

Douglas County residents will have an opportunity to get a crash course in police work during the sheriff’s office’s sixth annual one-day Citizen Academy from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Highlands Ranch Law Enforcement Training Facility, 9008 Santa Fe Drive. Topics of the course will include various aspects of law enforcement, and lectures will be accompanied with demonstrations. Students will also have an opportunity to experience the “Training Labs Use of Force Simulator,” a shooting-simulation machine. The idea behind the class is to provide the public with a better understanding of law enforcement in general, and what the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office does on a daily basis. The application deadline for the event is Oct. 13. Applications are available online at www. dcsheriff.net. A background check will be conducted on all applicants. Space is limited. For more information, contact Deputy Chad Teller at 303-660-7510.

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7

Lone Tree Voice 7

October 9, 2014

Real Estate

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All 64 county clerks in Colorado must begin issuing same-sex marriage licenses after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear all appeals on gay-marriage bans Oct. 6, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers said. Douglas County Clerk and Recorder Jack Arrowsmith said the county will follow the ruling, and according to county spokeswoman Wendy Holmes same-sex marriage licenses would begin being issued in the county on Oct. 7 “Our position in Douglas County is that we are committed to following the law in all matters governing the operation of the clerk and recorder’s office,” Arrowsmith said. The ruling effectively paves the way for marriage equality for all people in Colorado. “We have consistently maintained that we will abide by the Supreme Court’s determination on the constitutionality of marriage laws. By choosing not to take up the matter, the court has left the 10th Circuit ruling in place,” Suthers said in a statement. “We expect the 10th Circuit will issue a final order governing Colorado very shortly. Once the formalities are resolved, clerks across the state must begin issuing marriage licenses to all same-sex couples. We will file motions to expedite the lifting of the stays in the federal and state courts and will advise the clerks when to issue licenses.” Federal and state judges in Colorado have previously struck down the state’s ban on same-sex marriage but they also implemented stays in those cases pending U.S. Supreme Court action. Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) applauded

the ruling. “We are a stronger, better state when all couples are able to publically affirm their shared commitment and responsibilities to one another through marriage,” Udall said in a statement. “The U.S. Supreme Court’s move to let the Denver-based 10th Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision in favor of marriage equality stand is a win for all Coloradans. “We should celebrate what this will mean for so many of our friends, family members and neighbors. And while this is an important milestone for our state and for other states around the country impacted today, we still have work to do to ensure equality for Americans nationwide.” Andrew Romanoff, a Democratic candidate for the U.S. House (6th Congressional District), released a statement following the Supreme Court’s decision. “Today’s news represents a major victory for every American who values freedom and fairness. I’m glad that Colorado will now be able to join a majority of the union in extending a fundamental right to all of our citizens.” U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Denver, who serves the 1st Congressional District, spoke out in favor of the ruling as well. “Today marks another important step toward full equality: the Supreme Court declined to take up appeals from gay marriage opponents in five different states,” she said in a statement. “This means that those five states — and others including Colorado — should soon overturn marriage bans. The Colorado Supreme Court should promptly accept this decision and let all loving couples choose to marry freely. And the day is soon coming that everyone in the nation will enjoy this basic right.”

County eases document process By Mike DiFerdinando

mdiferdinando@colorado communitymedia.com Douglas County has become the first county in the state to offer electronically certified documents to its residents. “Douglas County was the first county in Colorado to receive an electronic document and now we’re the first to offer certified documents electronically,” Douglas County Clerk and Recorder Jack Arrowsmith said. “We want to be able to offer our residents and businesses the technological advantages that they need to run their lives and businesses.” Douglas County had its first official receipt of an electronic document on Sept.17, 2003. In the past, the only way for businesses and individuals to obtain certified copies of documents was travel to a county recording division office or request the paperwork be sent by the U.S. Postal Service — a time-consuming proposition. Now, Douglas County is set up so that

important and official documents are only a click away and can be requested and received by email. Requests can also be made over the phone. Documents can also be requested and received from out of state. According to county recording manager Nancy Sotomayor, upon request, documents will be selected from the county’s database and then be certified by marking with an official image of the certification stamp in Adobe Writer. The official copies will then be saved and either printed out or emailed to the recipient. “When you’re talking about certified documents, you’re talking about things that people usually need to get very quickly,” Arrowsmith said. “So, by being able to get those documents the same day in most cases, that saves time and energy on both ends.” Documents cost 25 cents per page and $1 for certification. Requests can be made in person, on the phone or online at douglas.co.us/recording.

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8-Opinion

8 Lone Tree Voice

Y O U R S

OPINION

October 9, 2014

&

O U R S

A publication of

9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 Phone: 303-566-4100 Fax: 303-566-4098 On the Web: LoneTreeVoice.net Get Social with us

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Maybe that wasn’t a wrong turn after all During a business trip this past week with my associates, we found ourselves in North Carolina and relying heavily upon our GPS system for directions. And with today’s technology it is really almost impossible to get lost, unless of course we are either honest about our own operator errors, or fall victim to that relentless and somewhat irritating message: “Recalculating route.” As we were returning to the hotel from our meeting, and admittedly only one exit away from our destination, we began a riveting discussion about golf. Well, truth be told, our golf games are anything but riveting, but I digress. However, we were distracted just enough to miss our exit, and you guessed it, the next sound we heard was: “Recalculating route.” Our instruction was to take the next left turn and make a U-turn onto the highway back towards the previous exit. As we made the transition into the left lane and waited for an opportunity to open up so that we could merge back into traffic, we all looked ahead at the same time and noticed a sign indicating that we were also at the entrance to the Billy Graham Library. My associate and great friend John, who happened to be driving at the time, looked around the car and asked if we should check it out. An instant and unanimous “yes” easily

rose above the “recalculating route” message as we drove straight across the highway and into the parking lot of the Billy Graham Library. Now I would venture a guess that 80 percent if not 90 percent of everyone reading this column knows who Billy Graham is. But just for those who are unaware, I encourage you to check out the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and the Billy Graham Library at www.billygrahamlibrary.org. Now here’s the real deal with this week’s column. We were scrambling, busy, running a frenetic pace, traveling from city to city, and in a rush to get back to the hotel in time to do more work. Our missed exit and wrong turn slowed us down just enough to take us on an unscheduled detour and spend time in one of the most peaceful and truly inspiring places any of us has ever experienced. And as I share this story with you, I am reminded of

the other similar situations and experiences where I found myself on the road less traveled that brought me to an ocean, a park, a river, or some place or location that was unintended but ended up being the absolute right destination at that moment in my life. You know what I mean, don’t you? We try to map or plan out our routes in life to keep up with the rush and crush of everything happening around us. And then just when we think we have it figured out or maybe just feel like we are finally catching up to where we think we need to be at this time of our life or where others think we need to be, we miss our exit, make a potentially wrong turn, and then magically and wonderfully find ourselves exactly where we need to be at that time. Is there a peaceful and inspiring place you need to find? Are you ready and open to missing your exit, taking a wrong turn that just may take you to that place? I would love to hear all about it at gotonorton@gmail.com, and when you miss that next exit, it just might 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.

A little something for those arriving late If you are worried about me because I am retreading themes, and that I might be losing my grip, well, don’t be worried. I hammer the same nails — like Smitty my dachshund, Jennifer my girlfriend, customer service representatives, lutefisk, hair loss, and constipation — partly because I don’t know when you came in. This column is hundreds of columns old by now, but it might be just your first or second one, and maybe you really haven’t figured me out yet. If you are new to “Quiet Desperation,” I can bring you up to speed. You will find a kindhearted man who is patient, generous, and tolerant. Who embraces life, and is outgoing. And who explores this beautiful world that God has created for us, and writes about it for readers like you. It just won’t be me. I am inert and cantankerous. Pessimism is my middle name. “Distrust is the foundation of a good relationship,” is my motto. I think man caves and bachelor parties are dumb. Politicians give me the creeps. I despise the ubiquity of cell phones. Motorists who tailgate should be pulled from their cars and hit repeatedly with a sock full of manure. If you want Hallmark, I am not your writer. I’m a little more like H.L. Mencken, and if you don’t know who he was, look him up. I can write about almost anything because if I don’t know what I am talking about, I can make stuff up, and it gets printed. Don’t tell. If you were to say “gophers,” for example, I

would start with the University of Minnesota. They are the Golden Gophers. It’s a Big Ten school. The Big Ten is made up of 14 schools, not 10, which should give you some idea about the league’s concept of mathematics. Whenever my school’s league expanded they changed the name. At one time it was the Pac-8, then the Pac-10, and now it’s the Pac-12. Those yahoos in the Midwest want to hang on to an inaccurate designation. I refuse to let my son attend a Big Ten university because of it. The school’s colors, maroon and gold, were chosen by a University of Minnesota English instructor named Mrs. Augusta Smith. The colors are nearly identical to USC’s colors, and therefore I always root for the team that Minnesota is playing. Unless it is USC. Bob Dylan was a University of Minnesota student for a little while, just before moving to New York, and turning everything around, including my life. His songs are poems that came at me with

shining, mismatched words. “He shot a fire on Main Street and filled it full of holes.” Dylan, 73, will be performing in Denver on Nov. 1. I won’t be there. Crowds make me uncomfortable, mostly because they consist of people. If you didn’t know much about me 450 words ago, you do now. I am not very interested in simple recitations or benign observations. That’s one of the reasons why Jennifer and I get along so well. Our conversations are usually full of non-sequiturs and word play. But not all of the time. We both experienced very negative marriages. Hers was to a man she met at Xavier, where she was a soccer star. Mine was to vodka. I was on the varsity at Smirnoff State. This is being written a month before our third anniversary, the evening we met, at the Curtis Arts & Humanities Center in Greenwood Village. I was giving an oil painting demonstration. Now we are a couple of disambiguous gophers. So that’s my introduction, if you are new to the column. Thanks for reading, hang by your thumbs, and write if you get work. (I stole that line. From whom?) Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net.

RON MITCHELL Local Sales Manager LISA HAVENS Marketing Consultant ERIN ADDENBROOKE Major Accounts and Classified Manager AUDREY BROOKS Business Manager SCOTT ANDREWS Production Manager SHARI MARTINEZ Circulation Manager

We welcome event listings and other submissions. News and Business Press Releases Please visit LoneTreeVoice.net, click on the Submit Your News tab and choose a category from the drop down menu. Calendar calendar@coloradocommunitymedia.com Military Notes militarynotes@coloradocommunitymedia.com School Accomplishments schoolnotes@coloradocommunitymedia.com Sports sports@coloradocommunitymedia.com Obituaries obituaries@coloradocommunitymedia.com To Subscribe call 303-566-4100 Columnists and Guest Commentaries The Voice features a limited number of regular columnists, found on these pages and elsewhere in the paper, depending on the typical subject the columnist covers. Their opinions are not necessarily those of the Voice. Want your own chance to bring an issue to our readers’ attention, to highlight something great in our community, or just to make people laugh? Why not write a letter of 300 words or fewer. Include your full name, address and the best number to reach you by telephone. Email letters to letters@coloradocommunitymedia.com

WE’RE IN THIS TOGETHER Our team of professional reporters, photographers and editors are out in the community to bring you the news each week, but we can’t do it alone. Send your news tips, your own photographs, event information, letters, commentaries... If it happens, it’s news to us. Please share by contacting us at news@coloradocommunitymedia.com, and we will take it from there. After all, the Voice is your paper.


9

Lone Tree Voice 9

October 9, 2014

Schwab Continued from Page 1

Centennial. McDonald’s tone turned more serious as he talked about the move to Lone Tree. Schwab’s metro-area workers now are scattered among three buildings around the Denver metro area. “I always like to say we’re moving out of an office park and into a neighborhood,” he said. “We feel like we’re an integral part of the community already.” McDonald said Schwab already has helped sponsor community events and worked with the city on cementing the future southeast light rail extension and the Lone Tree Link employee shuttle. “We’re thrilled to not only be in the community but of the community,” he said. At buildout, the 47-acre campus that features an outdoor amphitheater, rooftop garden, café and trails could house 4,000 employees. “These jobs mean a lot to us,” Lone Tree mayor Jim Gunning said. “What that means to our sales tax base, what that means to our property values, is immeasurable.” Schwab already has completed two, fivestory office buildings and is at work on its third, with completion expected in mid-2015. “I think that we can look forward to more and more Schwabbies coming and buying homes,” Gunning said. Douglas County Commissioner Jill Repella translated the impact of all those employees into dollars. “These 4,000 jobs … that’s $1.5 billion a year in economic stimulus through our community,” she said. “That’s staggering.” Employee Tammi Torgler, who now works in Schwab’s leased space in Englewood, will be among the first to move to Lone Tree. Each cubicle comes with a workstation that gives employees the option to sit or stand, a feature

Chase Continued from Page 1

$33,000 in damage, according to testimony. Attired in a red-and-white striped inmate’s uniform, Stone smiled at six adults sitting in the front row of the courtroom as he entered the chambers. He faced forward through the rest of the hearing, watching the proceedings. One of the women among the six repeatedly dabbed at her eyes with a tissue throughout the testimony. Across the aisle, Colorado State Patrol Trooper Bellamann Hee watched the preliminary hearing with one of his legs — encased in a plastic support from the knee down — extended and resting on a chair. Stone allegedly struck Hee with a car he had stolen on March 12 while the trooper attempted to deploy stop sticks on E-470. Hee suffered serious injuries, including a

From left, Lone Tree Arts Center director Lisa Rigsby Peterson, Lone Tree community development director Kelly First, Schwab’s Kaitlan Shanet, Metro Denver EDC’s Laura Brandt and Kaiser’s south area administrator Greg Mills admire the view from a Schwab conference room. she looks forward to using. “We’re excited about the building,” she said. “The amenity space is incredible. They really did a nice job.” Guests at the grand opening gave the facility positive reviews. “It is a very impressive space,” said Greg Mills, an administrator at Kaiser Permanente’s new Lone Tree building. “The outdoor space, the rooftop garden — it all shows very thoughtful planning.” “It’s absolutely fabulous,” said Laura Brandt, a director with the Metro Denver Economic Development Corporation, “and it’s a significant statement Charles Schwab has made to the community about the quality of our community and our work force.” Lone Tree community development director Kelly First surveyed the expanse of mountains visible from the building’s large, west-facing windows. “We’ve been looking at plans so long, it’s nice to see the real product,” she said. The financial securities firm has $2.4 trillion in assets and more than 9 million accounts. Headquartered in San Francisco, it employs more than 13,000 people nationwide. Schwab opened its first Denver branch office in 1978.

broken tibia. The 29-year-old Stone had several addresses in the Denver metro area, but an officer testified Oct. 3 that the driver’s license he carried with him on March 12 showed he lived in Highlands Ranch. A toxicology test showed Stone tested positive for methamphetamine, marijuana and Lorazepam. Lorazepam typically is used to treat anxiety. Douglas County Sheriff’s Deputy Brian Benns, who reportedly used his patrol car to block Stone’s final attempt to carjack a fourth car after crashing at the intersection of Lincoln Avenue and Peoria Street, also pursued Stone on foot. When deputies arrested Stone a few minutes later, Benns said Stone’s “eyes started to roll back in his head,” prompting Benns to call paramedics. “I didn’t know if he was on medication or (if it was) some drug issue,” Benns testified. Most of the chase was captured on a

From left, Metro Denver EDC’s economic development director Laura Brandt and Lone Tree Arts Center director Lisa Rigsby Peterson survey the Charles Schwab facilities during an Oct. 1 grand opening tour with Schwab’s Kaitlan Shanet. Photos by Jane Reuter

From left, Schwab’s senior vice president of real estate Glenn Cooper, Lone Tree Mayor Jim Gunning, Schwab senior vice president Brian McDonald and Douglas County Commissioner Jill Repella mark the official opening of the new Lone Tree Schwab campus Oct. 1.

news helicopter’s video camera. Douglas County Sheriff’s Detective Mike Duffy went through the video clip by clip during the hearing, explaining each sequence of events. Duffy also testified than an inmate housed with Stone told him Stone admitted he knew the 4-year-old was in the car while he was driving it. Stone’s 26 counts include attempted murder, kidnapping, assault, aggravated

motor vehicle theft, robbery, vehicular eluding, criminal mischief and leaving the scene of an accident. In addition to the March 12 incident, Stone had multiple outstanding warrants in various jurisdictions. Charges listed in those warrants included burglary, auto theft, and failure to appear on drug-related charges.

Cherry Creek trail gets link to park Bayou Gulch facility gains new connection By Mike DiFerdinando

mdiferdinando@colorado communitymedia.com A new trail will connect Bayou Gulch Regional Park to the Cherry Creek Regional Trail. Douglas County Open Space director Cheryl Matthews said the new connector trail will go from Bayou Gulch Regional Park, located at 4815 Fox Sparrow Road south of Parker, through Bayou Gulch Open Space on the south side of Bayou Gulch Road, under Highway 83 west to the Cherry Creek Regional Trail. Bayou Gulch Regional Park hosts a recreation area, an off-leash dog park, a newly constructed mountain-bike skills course, 1.48 miles of concrete trail and 4.68 miles of soft-surface multi-use trail. “We know from talking with some of the people living around the open space that they really wanted to be able to connect to Cherry Creek,” Matthews said. The connector trail extends from the west side of the park where it crosses Bayou Gulch Road at a self-activated stoplight. A soft-surface trail encircles the 276acre open space and is open to pedestrians and equestrians only. The connector trail running west from

where it crosses Bayou Gulch Road to the Cherry Creek Regional trail is open to pedestrians, bicyclists and equestrians. The peripheral trail and the connector trail provide four miles of public access for users. According to Matthews, the peripheral trail may be closed from time to time during the summer months to accommodate equestrian events at the Colorado Horse Park; the connector trail will remain open at all times. The horse jumps and the trails leading to the jumps are the private property of the Colorado Horse Park and are not open to the public. “I’m not sure too many people know about it yet, but the trail is open to the public,” Matthews said. “No one will get mad if they see you riding on it. It’s ready to be enjoyed.” The mountain-bike skills course is almost finished and should be officially open to the public in the next couple of weeks. Douglas County has protected 49,272 acres of open space through both purchase and conservation easements. There are 10 trailheads accessing nearly 77 miles of soft-surface trails that are available to the public for hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding. In addition, the county manages 13 active parks, the Cherry Creek Regional Trail, the East-West Regional Trail, and the High Line Canal Trail from Titan Road and Highway 85 to Waterton Road.

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10

10 Lone Tree Voice

Careers October 9, 2014

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11

Lone Tree Voice 11

October 9, 2014

Capitol dome reopens after long renovation Three-year project restores iconic structure By Vic Vela

vvela@coloradocommunitymedia.com Five words that do not normally go together when talking about a governmentbacked project are: On time and under budget. But that feat was what state officials were hailing on Oct. 2 as part of a ceremony to mark the reopening of the Capitol dome. A three-year, $17 million restoration project was needed to fix and renovate a 120-year-old dome that has seen weathercaused deterioration over the years. Gov. John Hickenlooper said the project’s success is “a symbol of the resilience of this state.” “This is a gift we’re giving for generations in the future,” he said. Colorado’s harsh freeze and thaw cycles made the repairs necessary. In 2006, corrosion to the dome caused a 10-pound piece of iron to fall, which led to the closing of the observation deck and the installation of a netting system. Repairs commenced after lawmakers created a package of bipartisan bills four years ago to fund the restoration. During much of the project, the dome was cloaked in scrim and scaffolding. It wasn’t until early this year that part of the dome was revealed from under the draping. Workers replaced the deteriorating metal fasteners with stainless steel. The

The Capitol dome underwent a three-year renovation project that cost $17 million. The ovservation deck of the 120-year-old buidling just re-opened to the public this past week. original copper panels were replaced and the lightning protection system was enhanced, according to state architect Larry Friedberg. The dome was re-gilded with 65 ounces of gold that came from parts of Colorado that included Cripple Creek and was later prepared in Florence, Italy. “Today, the sun shines bright on this beautiful October day,” said state Rep. Frank McNulty, R-Highlands Ranch. The dome observation deck — which offers spectacular views of Denver — was

Top district communications employee leaves position Watson also served as foundation interim director By Jane Reuter

jreuter@coloradocommunitymedia.com Cinamon Watson, the Douglas County School District’s lead communications employee, has left the district “to pursue new opportunities,” according to DCSD. Watson’s last day was Sept. 26. Watson was DCSD’s community relations officer. Her salary, as of July 2014, was just under $129,000 — the highest among the communications’ department’s employees. She also was interim executive director of the Douglas County Educational Foundation from late 2012 to 2014. Watson could not be reached for comment. DCSD did not say if it will hire a new communications department employee. “We thank her for her service and wish her well in her future endeavors,” reads an emailed statement from DCSD spokeswoman Paula Hans. “The community relations team is evaluating needs and will move forward in a way that best supports our students, staff, parents and community members.” Before coming to DCSD in 2012, Watson was a principal at Republican campaign

consulting firm Phase Line Strategies, deputy campaign manager for the successful re-election effort of former Colorado Governor Bill Owens, communications director for the Colorado Republican Party and Majority Communications Director for the Colorado State Senate. She started her career as the American Legislative Exchange Council’s (ALEC) legislative director for education and empowerment policy. ALEC’s model legislation created by state legislators and the private sector includes an Innovation Schools and School Districts Act, as well as a Parental Choice Scholarship Program Act. The district board Watson recently authorized submission of an innovation waiver for a state-required test under the Innovation Schools Act, and DCSD’s voucher program is more formally known as the choice scholarship program. Watson is married to former Republican House majority leader Chris Paulson, a lawyer who served in the state legislature with Owens. Jason Christensen is now executive director of the Douglas County Educational Foundation.

Man dies crossing Lincoln Avenue Englewood resident was walking against the traffic signal when struck Staff report A 52-year-old Englewood man was killed while crossing Lincoln Avenue at Oswego Street late Oct. 3. Thomas J. Wickham died of multiple blunt force injuries in the accident that occurred at about 10:11 p.m. in eastern Lone Tree. Police said Wickham was crossing northbound against the traffic signal when he was struck by westbound traffic. Though the case remains under investigation, no one has been charged in connec-

tion with the incident. Drivers who spoke with police said the light for westbound traffic was green at the time of the accident. Wickham was transported from the scene to Littleton Adventist Hospital, where he later died from his injuries. Several new businesses and an apartment complex have recently been constructed along the portion of Lincoln Avenue between Lone Tree and Parker, which means pedestrian traffic has increased, noted Lone Tree Police Sgt. Ryan Gallegos. “It was an unfortunate situation,” he said. “It was dark and those cars just didn’t see him.” Gallegos said victims’ advocates were on call and available for those who’d been involved in the accident.

Rick and Erma Kircheis of Belmont, Mich. look out on the city of Denver from the newly re-opened Capitol observation deck on Oct. 2. Photos by Vic Vela reopened to the public shortly after the ceremony. For visitors like Josiah and Hannah Goering of Chicago, the timing couldn’t have been more impeccable. The two were visiting Colorado and specifically had a trip to the Capitol on their to-do list because Hannah’s grandparents had taken a picture of themselves on the

Capitol steps during their honeymoon some 67 years ago. “We came here to recreate the photo,” she said. “We even brought black and white film.” Had their trip occurred a week earlier, they wouldn’t have been able to view Denver’s skyline from atop the Capitol. “It’s a happy coincidence,” she said.

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12

12 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

Secretary of state hopefuls target new path Williams, Neguse both hoping to avoid Gessler’s drama

right the vote, but empower more people to exercise that constitutional right because it is a right that we shouldn’t take for granted,” Neguse said. Williams said Neguse’s characterization of him just isn’t the case. “I’m the only one (in the race) who has run an office and run elections and I’ve done it well,” he said.

By Vic Vela

vvela@coloradocommunitymedia.com In the race to become Colorado’s next secretary of state, two candidates are touting their qualifications while distancing themselves from the man who currently holds the post. Republican El Paso County Clerk and Recorder Wayne Williams will take on Democrat Joe Neguse, a University of Colorado regent, in a race to become the state’s elections chief. The two are seeking to fill a seat that will be soon vacated by current Secretary of State Scott Gessler. The Republican opted against seeking a second term and instead launched an unsuccessful bid for governor earlier this year. Gessler has famously earned the nickname “honey badger,” born from a style of bare-knuckled politics that has rallied Republicans and roiled Democrats. Gessler has had several public battles with Gov. John Hickenlooper and legislative Democrats over election policy and his handling of the secre-

Backgrounds differ Williams

Neguse

tary of state’s office. That style is something that both Williams and Neguse say they want to avoid if elected as Gessler’s successor. “I think some of the ways he presented things were too polarizing,” said Williams. Williams said Gessler “has done a lot of good things,” but added: “We have different styles.” However, Neguse sees a lot of Gessler in Williams. Neguse believes Williams has a record of “focusing on efforts that make it harder for people to vote.” “For me, it is important to have a secretary of state who is not only going to protect the

Williams served for eight years as an El Paso County commissioner prior to being elected county clerk and recorder in 2010. Williams said he is proud of the customer service he has provided for four years and is especially proud of his work during the 2012 Waldo Canyon Fire, when many voters were being evacuated the same day of a primary election. “We counted every ballot, made sure they were all secure and made every statutory deadline despite being evacuated for the fire,” Williams said. Williams has also presided over three recall elections in as many counties. He was asked by officials in Teller and Saguache counties to handle local recall elections there, and he oversaw his own county’s highly publicized recall election, which led to the ouster of then-state Senate President John Morse. Neguse was elected to represent the state’s 2nd Congressional District on the CU Board of Regents. His public service record also includes having served as a commissioner on the Boulder Housing Authority and being a Capitol staffer for former state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff. Neguse is a first-generation American whose parents are from Africa. “The right to vote really is sacred and, as the son of immigrants, I can tell you in a very visceral way what it means to be able to have the right to vote and to exercise that right to vote,” he said. If elected, Neguse said he would work to create a “one-stop shop” business platform to make it easier for business owners to navigate service options. He also wants to dispatch office representatives across the state for greater service accessibility.

Divided on reforms

Neguse and Williams have different opinions on key voting issues that will shape their policies. Neguse is a supporter of a 2013 elections overhaul law that created same-day registration in Colorado and requires that all ballots be mailed to registered voters. Neguse believes the law will enable more people to participate in elections, but Williams has been an outspoken critic of the law. Williams said the law is costly to counties and is unfair to voters who don’t wish to receive ballots in the mail because of security issues. Williams — whose opposition to the elections reform law puts him among the minority of county clerks in the state — also is concerned that the law will lead to increased cases of voter fraud. “Colorado had the highest percentage turnout in the country in 2012,” Williams said. “The system was working very well as it was.” Neguse believes Williams’ opinion on the law misses the mark. He points to safeguards that are in place that allow clerks real-time information when votes are being cast, which is intended to root out fraud. “Same-day registration has existed in Wyoming for decades,” Neguse said. “It has existed in Idaho for decades. It’s worked well. Empirical evidence shows more people participate.” Williams supports voter identification laws and doesn’t think that showing a utility bill is a valid form of ID. He concedes that voter fraud is rare, but he cites two recent El Paso County elections that were decided by a single vote. “We don’t have bank robberies that often either,” he said. “But (if a bank) put all its money in a pile and put a note on the pile and said, `Hey customers, just sign an affidavit that you’ve taken no more money than you have deposited in this bank,’ that would be an absurd result.” But Neguse doesn’t think that voters want “a secretary of state who is going to be focused on dismantling those reforms.” “That should be something we should strive for — making it easier to vote for those people who are eligible to vote,” he said.

Help us bring you the news and help local charities Colorado Community Media is proud to bring your local community newspaper to your doorstep FREE each and every week. It takes a team of highly skilled journalists, editors, designers, marketing consultants, circulation experts and advertising support from local businesses to make this all possible. Next week, as part of National Newspaper Week, please look for a special enclosed payment envelope in your newspaper. If you enjoy receiving your newspaper as much as we enjoy bringing it to you, please use this envelope to make a voluntary contribution. In addition to supporting our efforts to bring you the best local news, sports and entertainment, this year you can also choose to help support one of three local charities serving the Colorado Front Range!

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13

Lone Tree Voice 13

October 9, 2014

Hickenlooper Continued from Page 4

that clemency for Dunlap may still end up being an option. The Hickenlooper campaign has said he was responding to a hypothetical question and maintains that Dunlap will die in prison. Also this year, the governor caused a stir over remarks on gun-control legislation that he gave to a group of sheriffs meeting in Aspen. There, he apologized to lawmen for not better including them in the legislative process that led to him signing measures into law that created universal background checks on gun sales and banned high-capacity ammunition magazines. Those measure were opposed by the majority of sheriffs in the state, many of whom were onetime plaintiffs in an unsuccessful lawsuit against the new laws. Those are a few examples of what has led to a lambasting of Hickenlooper over his “indecisiveness” and “failed leadership” on the part of Beauprez and the rest of the Repub-

Beauprez Continued from Page 4

taking a middle road. Beauprez has also hammered away at Hickenlooper for his handling of issues surrounding hydraulic fracturing. Beauprez has been critical of the governor’s creation of a fracking task force that is charged with providing lawmakers with recommendations on oil and gas drilling issues. Beauprez believes the oil and gas industry is already over-regulated and that Hickenlooper’s fielding of a commission is a yet another example of his “kicking the can down the road” approach to governing. “At some point he crossed a line of `I just want to get along and make everybody happy,’ to `Where do you want to take us and how do you want us to get there?’ Lead,” Beauprez said of Hickenlooper.

Image not cuddly

Beauprez is not afraid to attack, either through political ads or on the debate stage. But some in the media have recently wondered whether Beauprez risks coming across as being too rigid — or even mean.

Hickenlooper said his political opponents are “looking for anything they can get” to defeat him, while ignoring his accomplishments. The governor said he is proud of his work during the flooding that ravaged many parts of the state last year. While rain was wreaking havoc, the governor held a meeting with Colorado Department of Transportation administrators, during which he urged them to reopen roads around Lyons and Estes Park more than a month ahead of the time they believed was possible. Had those roads not reopened when they did, Hickenlooper believes businesses in

those small towns would have shut down. “We made that decision in 48 hours while the rain was still falling — and we did it,” he said. “That’s indecision?” In spite of a barrage of attack ads that target him, Hickenlooper sticks to the promise he made to voters years ago — that his campaign would never run a negative ad. “Sure it works,” Hickenlooper said of negative campaigning. “If all you care about is winning one short-term election, sure, go out and have a field day; load the cannons and fire off the missiles.” “But, at the end of the election, after all those negative ads, no one is satisfied ... Whoever the winner is, there’s so many negative ads against them, they are going to have a hard time leading.” Hickenlooper said he doesn’t regret any decision he’s made in office. And he points to an economy that has been among the best in the nation in many post-recession categories. The Business Insider website ranks Colorado’s economy tops in the nation. And Forbes magazine recently listed the state among the best states for businesses. However, other economic models show

the rest of the state lagging behind the strengthening Denver metro area’s economy with median household incomes decreasing over the last seven years. Still, Hickenlooper believes his stewardship has helped the state move in a stronger economic direction. “I sit there and look back over the past four years (and) I think during all the significant issues, I think we made the right decisions,” he said. Hickenlooper said this is “probably” his last political campaign and that he has “no intention” of running for national office. Hickenlooper said he never imagined that he would be running a re-election campaign for governor while he was opening the Wynkoop Brewery in lower downtown Denver in 1988, Colorado’s first brewpub and microbrewery. “If you would have talked to me even in 1998, I would have said, `No way. Why would I do that? Those guys get attacked,’” he said of running for political office. “Can you really make a difference? Is it really worth the sacrifice? Well, it turns out you really can make a difference. And in my opinion it was worth the sacrifice.”

A Denver Post article described Beauprez’s performance during a Sept. 30 debate the newspaper hosted as “practiced and polished — if sometimes stern in his conservative views ...” Left-leaning columnist Mike Littwin of the Colorado Independent said Beauprez came across as angry and bully-like during an Oct. 3 debate in Pueblo. “There’s a very thin line between being aggressive and, well, being a jerk,” Littwin wrote. During a tense moment of the debate, Beauprez was criticized by Hickenlooper for seeming to invoke the 2013 murder of Department of Corrections chief Tom Clements. Clements was murdered outside of his Black Forest home, allegedly by Evan Ebel, an inmate who had been in solitary confinement just days before he was paroled. Beauprez asked Hickenlooper: “What do you have to say to women who are widows who have orphans because of parolees that you have let out of state correction direct from solitary confinement?” Hickenlooper blasted Beauprez’s comments. “For you to make his murder part of a political gambit, I think is reprehensible,” the governor said. Beauprez — who did not specifically

mention Clements during the exhange — made no apologies about his comments when asked them during his interview with Colorado Community Media. “It’s true,” Beauprez said as he leaned over the table for emphasis. Beauprez cited a 2013 Denver Post article that reported that 110 parolees were let directly out of solitary confinement and onto the streets in a single year. As for whether people think he comes across as prickly, Beauprez said, “I take the job seriously.” “Most people that know me know that I’m a pretty good grandpa, that I’m a pretty good dad. I’ve been a very good husband, so I’ve got that side to me as well,” he said. “But this isn’t about who you want to go have a beer with or shoot a game of pool with. This is about who can lead this state.” Beauprez, who is pro-life, has also been on the defensive on women’s issues of late. Although abortion and contraception topics have played a big role in Colorado’s U.S. Senate race, they only became a focal point in the campaign when Beauprez said during a Denver Post debate that intrauterine devices (IUDs) are abortifacients, meaning a drug that causes abortions. Beauprez’s view is not backed by the Federal Drug Administration, which classifies the device as one that prevents pregnancies,

not ends them. Beauprez told Colorado Community Media that he believes women should use whatever birth control they want, “but I don’t think taxpayers ought to be funding that.” Beauprez said that when Hickenlooper and Democrats try to attack Republicans on issues like abortion and birth control, they are guilty of trying “to change the subject.” “People are so hungry for people to address the real issues in this campaign, but (Democrats) don’t want to talk about it,” he said. With voters set to receive mail ballots soon, it is hard for Beauprez or any other office-seeker to get away from politics. When he does, Beauprez likes to retreat to his bison ranch, time away that he said is “almost like therapy.” When asked if there are similarities between bison ranching and politics, Beauprez let out a hearty chuckle and said, “Good question.” “With bison you don’t change their minds much,” he said. “You kind of have to convince them, cajole them, but mostly you have to encourage them and wait it out and be patient. “And maybe that is a parallel (to politics), that you can’t always do it on your time, your schedule, your way. You’ve got to make sure and bring them along.”

lican Party. “Where have I been indecisive?” Hickenlooper said. “Nathan Dunlap? The (Colorado) Constitution gives you three choices: Execution, clemency or a reprieve. We chose reprieve two months before the decision was made.” “And background checks ... I did say I wish we had gone and allowed the other side a greater opportunity to discuss, but I never went back on the decision.”

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14 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

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15

Lone Tree Voice 15

October 9, 2014

Man in chase to spend Police arrest woman after high-speed pursuit rest of life in prison Judge sentences CJ Galley for endangering public, police By Chris Michlewicz

cmichlewicz@colorado communitymedia.com A Douglas County judge ordered CJ Galley to spend 169 years in prison for leading a high-speed chase that prosecutors said endangered the public and pursuing officers. Galley, 24, was convicted on 18 criminal counts stemming from a February 2013 chase that seriously injured an officer and wreaked havoc on roads in Parker and Castle Rock. The Northglenn man was found guilty in June of attempted first-degree murder of a police officer, among several other felony charges. Before handing down the sentence in a packed courtroom Oct. 2, Douglas County District Court Judge Richard Caschette said Galley “taunted law enforcement” in the months prior to the chase, which happened when the North Metro Drug Task Force attempted to execute a felony warrant on Galley for assaulting an officer. Caschette said he showed a long pattern of disregard and disrespect for laws, and openly doubted Galley’s potential to rehabilitate and contribute to society if given the chance.

The eight officers who addressed Caschette during the hearing asked him to impose the maximum sentence allowed by law. That included former Commerce City police officer Rob Feeney, whose injuries from the incident forced him to retire from law enforcement. Galley ran over Feeney with a stolen Ford F-350 when he made his initial escape. “My life changed forever in the matter of a few minutes,” Feeney said, adding that Galley cared more Galley about momentary freedom than Feeney’s life. Galley hung his head during the comments, then delivered a brief statement to the court, saying he was sorry for the harm he caused, including Feeney’s career-ending injuries. He became emotional when the judge read the sentence. Because his case involves violent crimes, Galley will have to serve at least 75 percent of his sentence. Emily Wickham, Galley’s defense attorney, said she plans to file an appeal. Galley has prior convictions for theft, burglary and probation violations, and has an active case in Adams County for racketeering.

Suspect faces long list of charges in Oct. 4 incident By Jane Reuter

jreuter@colorado communitymedia.com A 29-year-old Colorado Springs woman faces a long list of charges after authorities say she led Douglas County Sheriff’s deputies on a high-speed interstate chase at about 6 p.m. Oct. 4. Velia Rodriguez drove at speeds reaching 100 mph during the less-than15-minute chase, according to the sheriff’s office. Law officers first were alerted to a car traveling at a high rate of speed on northbound I-25 south of Castle Rock at about 5:50 p.m. Officers tried and failed to catch up with the 1999 Dodge Stratus as it sped through Castle Rock at about 6 p.m. It was spotted on Lincoln Avenue a few minutes later. But Rodriguez reportedly struck two sheriff’s deputies’ vehicles and two other

vehicles when officers attempted to contact her there. She then got back onto I-25, driving south with officers in pursuit. Sheriff’s deputies used their vehicles to box Rodriguez’s car in and stop her flight near the Founders Parkway exit in Castle Rock at about 6:10 p.m. Her charges include first-degree assault on a police officer, criminal mischief, first-degree menacing, suspicion of driving under the influence, reckless driving, Rodriguez reckless endangerment and driving with a suspended license. “Obviously, public safety was paramount” throughout the incident, said Douglas County Sheriff’s Sgt. Ron Hanavan. “But once she hit police and civilian cars, her driving was absolutely a danger to the community.” Rodriguez is being held in the Douglas County Jail on $51,000 bond.

WHAT'S HAPPENING THIS WEEK? Want to know what clubs, art exhibits, meetings and cultural events are happening in your area and the areas around you? Visit our website at www.coloradocommunitymedia.com/calendar.

  

Castle Rock/Franktown Castle Rock/Franktown 

 First United  Methodist Church

TRUST JESUS & WORSHIP! 10:30am at Castle  View HS



1200 South Street w/Kids & Castle Rock, CO 80104 Youth Min 303.688.3047  mysummitchurch.com www.fumccr.org



 Services:

Trinity

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

   

Lutheran Church & School

Little Blessings Day Care www.littleblessingspdo.com

     

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

  303-841-4660 Serving the southeast Denver www.tlcas.org WORSHIP area   SUNDAY SCHOOL Greenwood Village   PRESCHOOL Sunday · 8:00 am & 10:30 am

Highlands Ranch

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Open and Affirming

Sunday Worship

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

www.st-andrew-umc.com 303-794-2683 Preschool: 303-794-0510

Littleton

Cowboy Church

with Kevin Weatherby

Sundays 10 am

Calf’s Lowell Ranch • 2330 S. I-25 www.savethecowboy.com

Serving the Southeast Denver area

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

303-794-6643

Highlands Ranch

Alongside One Another On Life’s Journey

www.gracecolorado.com

You are invited to worship with us:

Sundays at 10:00 am

Grace is on the NE Corner of Santa Fe Dr. & Highlands Ranch Pkwy. (Across from Murdochs)

303-798-8485

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

Parker evangelical Presbyterian church Connect – Grow – Serve

Sunday Worship

8:45 am & 10:30 am 9030 MILLER ROAD PARKER, CO 80138 3038412125 www.pepc.org

Sunday Worship - 10:00am Bible Study immediately following Thursday Bible Study - 7:30pm Currently meeting at: Acres Green Elementary School 13524 Acres Green Drive 303-688-9506 www.LoneTreeCoC.com

Parker

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

303.805.9890 www.ParkerCCRS.org

Lone Tree Church of Christ

Weaving Truth and Relevance into Relationships and Life

Parker, CO • 10am Worship www.uccparkerhilltop.org 303-841-2808

GRACE PRESBYTERIAN

Lone Tree

Welcome Home!

  Congregation Beth Shalom

Parker

10926 E. Democrat Rd.

9203 S. University Blvd. Highlands Ranch, 80126

Serving the community ages 21/2 – 6 years “Love, Learn, Laugh”

303 N Ridge Rd. • Castle Rock • CO

Parker

United Church Of Christ Parker Hilltop

9:15 am · for children and adults

  www.faithcrco.org  303-688-3476

Littleton

Joy Lutheran Church Sharing God’s Love

SERVICES:

SATURDAY 5:30pm

SUNDAY 8:00 & 10:30am

Expository Teaching Through Books of the Bible Families worshipping together Iron Horse Elementary School 20151 Tallman Dr. Parker 80138 Sunday 10:00 TwentyMileBibleChurch.org

Education Hour: Sunday 9:15am Joyful Mission Preschool 303-841-3770 7051 East Parker Hills Ct. • Parker, CO 303-841-3739 www.joylutheran-parker.org

303 798 6387 www.gracepointcc.us

First Presbyterian Church of Littleton Sunday Services 8:00 a.m. & 10:30 a.m.

Christ’s Episcopal Church 615 4th Street Castle Rock, CO 80104 303.688.5185

www.ChristsEpiscopalChurch.org TWITTER: @CECCastleRock

Sunday

8:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m.

1609 W. Littleton Blvd. (303) 798-1389 • www.fpcl.org

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


16

16 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

Attack ads flood Colorado airwaves Big-money interests not always clear By Katie Kuntz

Rocky Mountain PBS I-News Campaign attack ads dominating television airwaves across the state depict Colorado’s senatorial candidates as extreme, harmful and woefully out of step with their fellow Coloradans. Crossroads GPS — a conservative political action committee headed by former George W. Bush administrator Karl Rove — and the National Republican Senatorial Committee portray U.S. Sen. Mark Udall as a hapless sycophant of President Obama’s. Their ads assert that Udall’s clueless support of the Affordable Care Act — known as Obamacare — has harmed Coloradans one and all. Liberal groups like the Senate Majority PAC and Next Generation Climate Action depict Udall’s opponent, Colorado Republican Congressman Cory Gardner, as a grim-faced misogynist, whose views on issues important to women are medieval, at best. The Udall-Gardner contest, not incidentally, is one of the races expected to determine which party controls the U.S. Senate after the Nov. 4 election. So far, the outside groups have spent almost three times as much as the candidates themselves. “If you run around the country there are maybe 10 states that have really competitive races and Republicans need to win six Senate seats to win the Senate — Colorado is very competitive,” said political analyst Floyd Ciruli. “It’s not quite a Super Bowl, that’d be the presidential race — but we’re in a very major, close playoff.” And it may come as no surprise that millions are being spent by outside organizations to paint the two Colorado candidates into very dark corners. But what might be surprising is comparing those funding the negative attacks with what their primary interests truly are.

Gardner

Udall

Tricks of the trade

A Rocky Mountain PBS I-News analysis of Federal Communications Commission and Federal Election Commission data, as well as reports collected by the Center for Responsive Politics, demonstrate how the playbook works. First, use polarizing issues to ignite voters. Thomas Steyer, a California billionaire who has drawn attention for his philanthropy and activism for environmental causes, has mastered this first play. Steyer is the lead financial backer for Next Generation Climate Action, which has so far spent more than $1 million in this state’s largest television markets, Denver and Colorado Springs. Two of the most widely aired ads from Streyer’s organization — named “Keep Out” and “Not Extreme?” — assail Gardner for his positions against birth control and abortion and same-sex marriage, all of which are highly polarizing issues. But Next Generation Climate Action does not, as an organization, list any interest in policies related to abortion, marriage equality or birth control. To be fair, the ads do briefly mention climate change, scoffing that Gardner “thinks he knows better than the scientists, NASA and the U.S. military on climate change.” “It is a straight-out brawling competition,” Ciruli said. “The people who play it may be personally idealistic, but in the way they play the game they are totally realists, and research shows them that climate change is not nearly as effective at moving

voters as things like reproductive rights.” Similarly, other groups whose primary interests are oil and gas development or the energy business attack Udall’s support of the Affordable Care Act. While their true concern might be approval for the Keystone pipeline, as an example, they’re betting that Obamacare is still such a negatively charged issue that it can help sink the environmentally minded Udall. Sometimes they might mention energy issues, but not as a primary focus. The second power play works by cloaking one’s self-interests in charitable or nonprofit political giving, as modern masters Sheldon Adelson and David and Charles Koch have demonstrated. Adelson and his wife, Miriam, donated $23 million during the 2012 presidential cycle to Crossroads GPS on behalf of the nonprofit Adelson Drug Clinic and Adelson’s corporation, Las Vegas Sands, according to files from the Federal Election Commission. Sheldon Adelson, listed as the world’s eighth wealthiest man by Forbes, with a net worth of more than $31 billion, has drawn wide attention to his heavy contributions to campaign finance. He has also been litigating a federal lawsuit aimed at his overseas casinos. Similarly, David and Charles Koch have been intimately linked with Americans for Prosperity, Freedom Partners and Crossroads GPS in the past, but their contributions this cycle are not known. “Nonprofit political groups do not have to disclose donors,” said Viveka Novak, editorial and communications director for the Center for Responsive Politics. “So we could only identify organizations that filed 990s (nonprofit tax forms) and that wouldn’t include individuals or corporations, so there are still a lot of donors or donations no one would know about.” Adelson, the Koch brothers and many other politically active billionaires and multimillionaires across the political spectrum are able to maintain privacy and give endless funds following the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision, which held that political spending is a form of protected speech under the First Amendment.

Donors work both sides

There’s still another trick in the play-

book, and that’s playing both sides. By contributing to competing candidates, it can be hard to lose, the reasoning goes. Hedge funds and international investment banks are among the leading campaign contributors in the United States — and they donate in almost equal amounts to both Democratic and Republican committees. Consider Renaissance Technologies, a New York hedge fund that in 2013 managed an estimated $25 billion. This year, founder and retired CEO James H. Simons was ranked by Forbes among the world’s wealthiest people at $12.5 billion. Of the millions of dollars Simons and the current CEO of Renaissance, Robert Mercer, have donated to campaign groups so far this year, about $3 million went to liberal organizations, and $3 million went to conservatives. “This firm, it’s got money everywhere, it’s invested in things that could benefit from both parties,” Ciruli said. “Some of it could just be personal, but often it is driven by a strategy that just makes sense.” This company’s lobbying records in 2014 show that its primary focus is to avoid higher tax rates for hedge funds — an issue almost totally ignored in the majority of Colorado’s campaign ads. In fact, of more than 30 ads reviewed by I-News and truthtested by 9News, only one ad even briefly mentioned “tax rates for companies overseas.” The Blackstone Group is also a top hedge fund contributor to both the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the National Republican Senatorial Committee. These committees have already spent $3.9 million and $1.7 million, respectively, on campaign ads in Denver, bashing either Gardner or Udall. “TV ads are number one, the overwhelming most important tool in winning one of these campaigns,” Ciruli said. “If Channel 9 has another minute (for advertising), you can bet it will get bought.” Colorado Community Media brings you this report in partnership with Rocky Mountain PBS I-News. Learn more at rmpbs.org/news. Contact Katie Kuntz at katiekuntz@rmpbs. org. I-News reporter Burt Hubbard contributed to this story.

SEPTEMBER

CARRIER of the MONTH CONGRATULATIONS NATE STICKLEY WE APPRECIATE ALL YOUR HARD WORK & DEDICATION ENJOY YOUR $50 GIFT CARD COURTESY OF


17-Life

October 9, 2014

S O U T H

LIFE

Lone Tree Voice 17

M E T R O

October is reminder of disease fight

“Castle Rock Feed and Supply,” watercolor by Cindy Welch will be exhibited at QRstorytelling Gallery in October. Courtesy photos

Artist makes splash with exhibit Watercolorist Cindy Welch shows wares at QRstorytelling Gallery By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe @coloradocommunitymedia.com Additions to the ongoing Cindy Welch Collection — watercolors of local iconic landmarks — will be exhibited starting Oct. 10 at the QRstorytelling Gallery in Castle Rock. They will remain on permanent display, according to gallery director, Lucia McConnell who also exhibits earlier releases by Welch. Cindy Welch is a Colorado native, who started creating art at an early age, winning awards in grade school and at Welch Thomas Jefferson High School in Denver, including a full tuition scholarship to Rocky Mountain College of Arts and Design. She won first place in the National Arts Program, Front Range Showcase in 2011 in Castle Rock, where she has lived for 25 years. She is a member of Greater Castle Rock Art Guild and is represented by the QRstorytelling Gallery. As per her medium, she said, “I love the exciting surprises of watercolor. Mingling colors, the mixing of water and paint, pouring, masking… There’s always something new. My passion is color and making an image more exciting to the viewer with great color while still maintaining a level of realism.” Note: What may look simple to the untrained eye actually takes a great deal of skill and control — watercolor is a tricky medium to master.

October reminds those of us who are breast cancer survivors how lucky we are for having lived through the journey. Ours is a sorority we never wanted to join. But we did unwillingly and lived to tell it. For me, a multi-year survivor (it’s funny that I no longer remember how many years), October is also a month to support breast cancer patients who are on the path to survival through donating to a charity. My wish in October, and the rest of the year, is for a cure in my lifetime that will annihilate this insidious disease.

Rich Grant bids adieu

Rich Grant, Denver’s biggest booster who’s worked at Visit Denver for nearly 35 years, has finally set a retirement date — Dec. 31, his 35th anniversary with the Convention and Visitors Bureau. “It’s been a wild and truly wonderful ride, and I had the great privilege of working with the best communications team ever assembled: Deborah Park, Sarah Welch, Katie Adamson Converse, Shannon Dexheimer, Meredith Mirrington, Jennifer Elving Asbury, Angela Berardino, Carrina Waneka, Jill McGranahan, Joy Long Meadows, Andrea Burns, Diane Bechamps, Kim Farin and Carolyn Livingston,” Grant posted on his Facebook page Tuesday. “And of course, it’s been great working with (CEO) Richard Scharf and the rest of the amazing Visit Denver team. I’ll still be around consulting. And I imagine there might be a retirement party in the future. Or two. Or three. Cheers!” Grant has been toying with his retirement date for months, but settled on his 35th work anniversary and his 65th birthday as the right time. “When I discovered there were 12 new breweries in Denver that I hadn’t been to, I realized — I don’t have enough free time!” he said. I have worked and cocktail-partied with Grant during my 21 years as a Denver-based journalist. Grant, indeed, is Denver’s biggest booster even when he’s trying to convince me that a story that really isn’t a story deserves front-page attention. He’s been a staunch supporter of our fair city, and will be sorely missed.

Dream home open for viewing

Oakwood Homes opened the fourth annual Denver St. Jude Dream Home Giveaway house to the public on Oct. 4 in Green Valley Ranch, and attendees can enter free for a chance to win a $10,000 shopping spree at Furniture Row. The house will be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and from noon to 5 p.m. Sundays through Nov. 9. The house, which was built and donated by Colorado-based Oakwood Homes, is valued at approximately $500,000. This house features four bedrooms, two and a half baths, a three-car garage and many upgrades including stainless steel appliances, a morning bar and fireplace in the master suite, hardwood floors and much more. Other prizes include a 2015 Lincoln MKC valued at more than $33,000, courtesy of Landmark Lincoln, Sill TerHar Lincoln and Lincoln Motor Company, as well as many other high-end prizes. “This project allows us to do what we do best — build great homes — while

FOR MORE INFORMATION If you go: Cindy Welch will be featured at a reception at QRstorytelling Gallery, 505 Second St., Castle Rock, from 5 to 8 p.m. Oct. 10. 303-947-6286. Her new works will be exhibited beginning that evening.

“A Moment In Time,” watercolor by Cindy Welch, will be exhibited at QRstorytelling Gallery in Castle Rock.

Parker continues on Page 19


18

18 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

Woman’s stage career blossoming ‘I Do! I Do!’ actress is Highlands Ranch mom By Sonya Ellingboe

sellingboe@colorado communitymedia.com Suzanne Nepi of Highlands Ranch happily opened to sold-out audiences in the first weekend of “I Do! I Do!” at the Vintage Theatre in Aurora. She hopes lots of young people see it, since it hasn’t been done in the area recently. She shares the stage with veteran actor/ director Brian Walker Smith in a chronicle of the 50-year marriage of Agnes and Michael Snow (1895-1945), based on Jan de Hartog’s play, “The Four Poster.” Tom Jones wrote the book and lyrics and Harvey Schmidt wrote the music for the popular piece, which Nepi calls “a play, with music.” Nepi speaks highly of Smith — “he’s lovely.” And she talks about her song,

“What is a Woman?’’ It is “my life as we speak — every woman from 40 to 80 will relate to that song.” The piece was original written for Mary Martin and Robert Preston, Nepi said. Nepi majored in theater at the University of Maryland, and met her husband Mark after graduation when he was in the pit band for a production she was performing in. The family moved to Colorado about 16 years ago. Mark had been at the Air Force Academy and liked Colorado, so they welcomed an opportunity. Like many in Colorado’s theater community, the family had connections with “Magic Moments” productions that benefit the handicapped. Nepi is getting increasingly active in both straight and musical theater now that her children are older. Mary, a ThunderRidge High School alumnae, graduated from Carnegie Mellon University in theater and is in Los Angeles launching a career,

Try Out a Class. Pre-register today for a free Culinary Arts or Baking & Pastry Arts Shadow on Saturday, October 18.

Bryan Walker Smith and Suzanne Nepi, of Highlands Ranch, play Michael and Agnes Snow through 50 years of a marriage in “I Do! I Do!” at Vintage Theatre. Courtesy photo while Peter is a senior at ThunderRidge and looking at colleges. He’s not an actor, but may be interested in film or television, she thinks. He is also active in sports. Nepi was cast in “Spring Awakening” last year with Ignite Theatre Company and sang in “The Drowsy Chaperone” in the Stapleton summer production. “I feel very blessed,” she said. “This city is amazing to me … Lots of great regional theater. I’m trying to branch out.” She has been auditioning and had a call-back recently. She will be in a new holiday play at the Edge Theater. She has also been taking voice lessons, since singing parts are often involved. Opportunities in straight and musical theater

IF YOU GO “I Do! I Do!’ plays through Nov. 1 at Vintage Theatre, 1468 Dayton Street, Aurora. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays and Thursday, Oct. 30; 2:30 p.m. Sundays and Saturday, Nov. 1. Tickets cost $31 ($26 advance), 303-856-7830, vintagetheatre.org. Free parking. cross over here. She studies with Laura High in Littleton. And she has developed a supportive network of moms and church friends in Highlands Ranch, as she lives “somewhere that’s green.” She tries to get them to attend theater in Denver … “to leave the bubble.”

• Participate in a lab from 9-11AM • Learn from one of JWU’s talented Chef Instructors • Meet with an Admissions Representative High School Juniors, Seniors and Transfer Students – bring your unofficial transcripts and start the application process for your AS or BS degree in the College of Culinary Arts. Continuing education students – learn more about JWU’s flexible weekend AS degree program.

Spaces are limited: pre-register by phone, email, or on our website

ce.den@admissions.jwu.edu www.jwu.edu/denver

303-256-9311 Johnson & Wales University admits students of any race, color, and national or ethnic origin, among other categories.

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19

Lone Tree Voice 19

October 9, 2014

Art exhibit offers best of the ‘beast’ When Henri Matisse and his contemporaries exhibited their expressive paintings, with looser brushwork and bold colors, many French art critics were horrified and called the artists “les fauves,” the beasts. Now, they are among the best-loved artworks in the world. A collection of these paintings from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., will be exhibited at the Denver Art Museum Oct. 12 through Feb. 8. Information: denverartmuseum.org, 720-865-5000.

Sunset fanatic to speak

Jim Chaput, a lifelong Colorado artist and photographer, will speak to the Englewood Camera Club at 7 p.m. Oct. 14 about how he combines photography and digital painting to create digital abstractions. He taught black-and-white film photography for 11 years at Englewood High School, plus digital photography for four years, and has a passion for shooting sunsets. The club meets at 7 p.m. Oct. 14 at Lutheran Church of the Holy Spirit, 6400 S. University Blvd., Centennial. Doors open at 6:30 and guests are welcome.

Song with dance

Voices West (formerly Littleton Chorale) will present two concerts called “Dances of Love,” in cooperation with Littleton-based Adventures in Dance. At 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 18, the chorus and dancers will perform at St. James Presbyterian Church, 3601 W. Belleview Ave., Littleton. At 3 p.m. Oct. 19, the performance will be at Heritage United Methodist Church, 7077 S. Simms St., Littleton. Dancers will interpret choral music from a variety of traditions. Tickets cost $18/$15; free under 12. Voiceswest.org or at the door.

renowned A m e r i can masterworks. Tickets: LittletonSy m p h o n y. org or at the door.

Free singing lessons

Sound of the Rockies, Colorado’s 100-man a capella chorus, known for its barbershop harmony, will offer free community singing lessons, “Ready, Set, Sing,” at 7 p.m. Thursdays from Oct. 16 to Nov. 6. The lessons will last about 45 minutes each and will be offered at Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, 7691 S University Blvd., Centennial. Information: soundoftherockies. com.

Writers group to meet

The Parker Writers Group will meet at 2-4 p.m. Oct. 12 in the Parker Library’s Meeting Room, 10851 Crossroads Dr. Blake Graham will talk about conducting historical research, source analysis, achieving authenticity in both fiction and non-fiction. The meeting is free and guests are welcome. Information: parkerwritersgroup@ gmail.com.

Charity brunch slated

“A Night in New Orleans” is the theme for the Colorado Jazz Repertory Orchestra’s first concert of the season. Famous trumpeter Byron Stripling will be featured. The concert is at 8 p.m. Oct. 10 at Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075 Commons St., Lone Tree. Tickets: lonetreeartscenter.org, 720-509-1000.

Alpha Xi Delta hosts its annual Sweet Charity Brunch to raise money for its philanthropic projects, such as Autism Speaks, Boys and Girls Club of Denver, FACES and Family Crisis Center. It will be held 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Oct. 18 at Calvary Baptist Church, 6500 E. Girard Ave., Denver. Bake sale, live and silent auctions, handcrafted gifts and clothing by area artisans, brunch catered by A Taste of the Season. Tickets: $20, from Barbara Vietti, 6245 W. Coal Mine Place, Littleton, 80128, 303-979-7561, bvietti@comcast.net. Order by mail or pick up at the door.

Pianist opens season

Flood-inspired art

Jazz in Lone Tree

Katie Mahan will perform Beethoven’s “Emperor Concerto” in the first Littleton Symphony concert of the season at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 17 at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St., Littleton. Each concert this season will feature a signature piano concerto plus

By Sonya Ellingboe

sellingboe@coloradocommunitymedia.com On Sept. 25, the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District board of directors approved distribution of nearly $6.5 million to 238 scientific and cultural organizations that qualified for Tier III grants. Funds will be distributed in public ceremonies in area counties, including Arapahoe ($1.4 million) on Oct. 16 and Douglas ($439,000) on Oct. 28. While many organizations perform across borders and receive multiple grants, these are the counties that

Parker Continued from Page 17

supporting a great cause,” said Pat Hamill, CEO and chairman of Oakwood Homes. Raffle winners will be announced live on Channels 31 and 2 on Nov. 13. A limited number of tickets are available and can be reserved for $100 at www.dreamhome.org or by calling 800-276-7695.

Chicken special is back

I cornered Denver restaurant mogul Frank Bonanno at one of his booths during Denver Food and Wine recently, and begged, pleaded and cajoled him into bringing back chicken Tuesdays at Lou’s Food Bar, 1851 W. 38th Ave. And although I can’t take total credit for the return of one of my favorite restaurant deals — a half fried chicken (naked, medium or Nashville hot) with two sides and a draft for $20 per person — I certainly added to the popular demand to bring back that

tern Shop Gallery, 3349 Blake St., Denver. The exhibit, “Rivers Alive,” will feature drawings, enhanced with metal leaf, by New York and Colorado-based artist Holup, whose drawings are about nature’s flow. The centerpiece will be a new work about the 2013 flood. The exhibit runs through Oct. 31. Gallery hours: noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays and Saturdays and by appointment, plus a reception on Oct. 31 from 6 to 9 p.m. Patternshopstudio.com.

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“Dialogue for an Exhibition” an informal talk about the recent flood event along the St. Vrain River, will include stories by Barbara Shark, Peter Hale Molnar and Wopo Holup, neighbors who live in the flooded area. They will speak from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Oct. 11 at Pat-

SCFD announces Tier III grants 238 scientific and cultural groups get OK for funding

The painting by Henri Matisse, “Woman Seated in an Armchair,” 1940 oil on canvas, 54”x 65” is included in the “Matisse and Friends” exhibit at the Denver Art Museum. Courtesy photo

serve our south suburban readers. Chairs for county cultural councils, appointed by county commissioners, are Barbara Duff for Arapahoe and Ann Speer for Douglas. Metro-area voters created the SCFD in 1988 and voted to approve a 1 cent on $10 sales and use tax to provide for the enlightenment, entertainment and education of the public. The SCFD administers the distribution of voter-approved funds to eligible organizations, and between 1989 and 2013, distributed more than $804 million for advancement or preservation of art, theater, dance, zoology, botany, natural history and cultural history. The program is recognized and admired nationally. Arapahoe County organizations include the Arapahoe Philharmonic,

Cherry Creek Chorale, City of Englewood, Christian Youth Theater, Greenwood Village Arts and Humanities Center, Littleton Symphony, Littleton Town Hall, South Suburban Parks and Recreation nature and cultural enrichment programs, Up Close and Musical, Young Voices of Colorado and many more. Douglas County grants include Cherokee Ranch and Castle, Christian Youth Theater, Hawkquest, Highlands Ranch Concert Band, Lone Tree Symphony Orchestra, Parker Arts Council, Performance Now Theatre Company, South Suburban Symphony Orchestra (now Parker Symphony) and more. For more information on check ceremonies, application process and complete listings of grants, visit scfd. org.

Tuesday tradition. Lou’s has also extended hours to welcome late-night diners and drinkers, and has expanded the tap selection to 17 drafts. Reservations: www. lousfoodbar.com; walk-ins welcome. Thanks, Frank!

only.); 9. Comida, in The Source, 3350 Brighton Blvd. (brunch only.); 10. Work and Class, 2500 Larimer St. (Sundays only). To read more about each eatery’s dish, go to www.denver.eater.com/ maps/best-fried-chicken-in-denverguide/.

Denver’s best fried chicken Yes, I am fried chicken obsessed. Hands down the best fried chicken I’ve ever had comes from a food stand at the annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. But Colorado’s Front Range is no slouch when it comes to cluck. Eater Denver, our edition of the national foodie website, has just released its updated Best Fried Chicken Guide. Here’s which restaurants stood out in the coop: 1. The Bside, 1336 E. 17th Ave.; 2. Steuben’s, 523 E. 17th Ave.; 3. The Squeaky Bean, 1500 Wynkoop St.; 4. Ace, 501 E. 17th Ave.; 5. Lou’s Food Bar, 1815 W. 38th Ave.; 6. Tom’s Home Cookin’, 800 E. 26th Ave.; 7. The Post Brewing Co., 105 W. Emma St., Lafayette; 8. Bones, 701 Grant St. (Siracha hot chicken bites Wednesday nights

Learn more online at:

www.clinicacolorado.org

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October 9, 2014

Whales are big deal at Denver museum New Zealand exhibit runs until February

IF YOU GO The Denver Museum of Nature & Science is located at 2001 Colorado Blvd., Denver. For information, visit dmns. org or call 303-370-6000.

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@colorado communitymedia.com Whales, the world’s mightiest animals, date back more than 50 million years and are the subject of legends, films and travel. These giants intrigue people of all ages who love to explore aspects of the underwater world. Living in a landlocked state, as we do in Colorado, doesn’t diminish the fascination with ocean life. “Whales: Giants of the Deep” opens Oct. 10 at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science and runs through Feb. 16. The exhibit is on tour from the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, which has the largest collection of marine mammals in the world. Readers may be aware of a long relationship between the Maori people of New Zealand and whales, and the custom of whale riding, made famous by the film “Whale Rider” some years ago. Changing attitudes have taken many people from hunting whales to protecting them. The exhibit includes interviews

about conservation efforts. Visitors will see life-sized models and more than 20 real specimens, including skulls, skeletons, teeth, rare artifacts and some hands-on objects, as well as digital interactives and immersive projections. Historic cultural objects include weapons made from whale bones and delicate ornaments fashioned from whale teeth. Whales range in size from the world’s largest animal, the blue whale, to a tiny Hector’s whale, and the family includes dolphins and porpoises. Visitors can crawl inside a life-sized replica of a blue whale’s heart and be awed by the 53-foot-long skeleton of a sperm whale. They can follow a sperm whale on a hunt for a giant squid. The exhibit also speaks about today’s scientists and new discoveries about the animal’s bodies, feeding methods and vast migration patterns through the Pacific Ocean. Perhaps a budding oceanographer will leave the museum inspired. Admission to the exhibit is included in the general admission ticket.

Two articulated Sperm Whale skeletons are a highlight of “Whales: Giants of the Deep” at Denver Museum of Nature and Science. Courtesy photos

Visitors can crawl through a replica of a blue whale heart in “Whales: Giants of the Deep” at Denver Museum of Nature and Science.

October crowded with fall events By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@colorado communitymedia.com It seems that Halloween

grows in popularity each year, with events ranging from pumpkin-carving and trick-or-treating for little ones to zombie crawls

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and theatrical thrillers for adults. Many events reward costumed attendees. A small sample of October celebrations: “Dracula” by the Colorado Ballet, Oct. 31-Nov. 2: The King of the Undead slithers under doors and into his Transylvanian castle. Choreography by Michael Pink makes this an audience favorite, with vampires, scary mental patients and more. Performances are on one weekend only, at the Ellie The Colorado Ballet will present its wonderfully creepy production of “Dracula,” choreographed by Michael Pink, Oct. Caulkins Opera House. For 31-Nov. 2 at the Ellie Caulkins Opera House. Photo by Terry Shapiro times and tickets: coloradoballet.org. Corn maze: The DenAlso at the on Oct. 25 is Poe’s haunting works. Free. test. (No masks due to safety ver Botanic Gardens at “Walking With the Dead,” an 303-797-1779. concerns.) Tickets: $12/10 Chatfield, 8500 W. Deer Spooktacular Hallow- resident, 303-754-0552. after-dark tour of the 1860s Creek Canyon Road (at farm. Timed tickets from 6 een Dance will be held at 7 Hoofin’ it through the Wadsworth) hosts its anto 9 p.m. are $2 in advance to 9 p.m. Oct. 24 for special- Hollows 5K run/walk, Oct. nual five-acre corn maze at the museum. Children needs teens ages 16 and 25 at 5:45 p.m. (Costume on weekends: Fridays 4-9 must be accompanied by an up at Highlands Ranch’s contest 5:30 p.m.) DeKop.m.; Saturdays 10 a.m. to 9 Southridge Recreation Cen- evend Park, 6301 S. Uniadult. 303-795-3950. p.m; Sundays noon to 6 p.m. Reinke Brothers Haunt- ter, 4800 McArthur Ranch versity Blvd., Centennial. Maze, mini-maze, food vened Mansion, 5663 S. Prince Road, by HRCA Therapeutic Costumes optional. All ages dors, hayrides (included in St. in downtown Littleton, Recreation. Advance tickets welcome. runningguru. ticket), pony and train rides. nightly through Nov. 2. $8 member/$9 guest. Cos- com. Tickets: $12/$10 members; Lights-on tours for children tumes optional. RSVP by Haunted Hayrides, Oct. $8/$6 members, free 2 and 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Satur- Oct. 18. 303-471-7043, sum24, 25 at Stockton’s Plum under. Botanicgardens.org. days, Sundays. Tickets: $15. mer.aden@hrcaonline.org. Creek Stables, 7479 W. Ti“Night of the Living ($1 off for can of food. CouSouth Suburban Parks tan Road, Roxborough. StoDead” onstage Fridays pons on the website.) and Recreation District rytellers, food concession, and Saturdays at the Bug Trick or Pete: Eric Lit- celebrates Halloween at its Theatre, 3654 Navajo St., win, musician and author many facilities. For more in- petting zoo. Check in 30 Denver Highlands. Sixth of the “Pete the Cat” series formation on these events, minutes prior to ride time. Dress for the weather — annual stage performance, of picture books, will be at a go to sspr.org: held rain or shine. Tickets: based on the film by George spooky evening at the DougSpooktacular, 5:30-8 Romero. Costumes encour- las County Fairgrounds at 6 p.m. Oct. 17 at Goodson $10/$12. Benefits 4-H club. aged, with reduced prices p.m. on Oct. 30 for a night Recreation Center, 6315 S. Register at sspr.org. Inforfor those dressed as zom- of songs and stories. Cos- University Blvd., Centen- mation: Phillipw@sspr.org. Haunted Trail: The bies. Directed by Kris Hipp. tumes are encouraged and nial. Safe trick-or-treating Airbrush zombie makeup there will be trick-or-treat- for children up to 11: face Woods of La Llarona, 6:45by Brittany Guzman Taylor. ing down Sweet Street, with painting, Haunted house, 9:30 p.m. Oct. 25, Carson Bugtheatre.org. candy, a haunted forest and arts and crafts, Spooktod- Nature Center, 3000 W. CarHarvest Festival at the eerie activities. Presented by dler, games. Tickets: $4 prior son Drive, Littleton. Walk La Littleton Museum, 6028 S. Douglas County Libraries. to Oct. 14; $6 after. 303-483- Llorona’s woods, storytelling, hayride, campfire and Gallup St., Littleton, 10 a.m. Tickets: $5 for anyone 2 and 7062. to 3 p.m. Oct. 11 at the 1860s older at library branches. Monster Mash Hallow- snacks. Reserve a spot on farm. Buy a pumpkin (bring A Spooky Night With Ed- een Bash, Oct. 25, 1-4 p.m. at the hour, $13/$11, sspr.org. Ha-Ha House Youth a wagon); enjoy hayrides, gar Allan Poe will be held at Family Sports Center, 6901 old-fashioned county fair 6:30 p.m. Oct. 29 and Oct. 30 S. Peoria St., Centennial. Theater Halloween producwith second annual chicken at Curtis Arts and Humani- Zombie laser tag, eXerGame tion, 7 p.m. Oct. 25; 3 p.m. exhibition. Admission free; ties Center, 2349 E. Orchard Zone, obstacle course, Oct. 26; at Buck Recreation some activities and refresh- Road, Greenwood Village. bumper cars, climbing wall. Center, 2004 W. Powers ments require purchase of Old-time movies feature From 1:30-2:30, Halloween Ave., Littleton. Funny play. dramatic performances of costume and ice skate con- $7/$4, sspr.org. tickets.


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October 9, 2014

“Chinese Garden Diptich” 22” x 60” is in the New “Nature as Subject” exhibit at Lone Tree Arts Center. Courtesy photos

Inside art center is great outdoors ‘Nature as Subject’ on display in Lone Tree

cording to curator Sally Perisho, who said “the exhibition represents the complexity of nature as interpreted through the eyes of three artists.” She continued: “Works in the exhibition range from (New Mexico artist Jane) Abrams’ pulsating canvases to standout woodcuts and monotypes of (Jean) Gumpper and (Betsy) Margolius. Represented by the William Havu Gallery, Denver, the three are recipients of numerous prestigious awards and are included in

By Sonya Ellingboe sellingboe@colorado communitymedia.com “Nature as Subject” will bring the beauty of the outdoors into the Lone Tree Arts Center’s galleries through Nov. 13, ac-

“Open Work” by printmaker Jean Gumper is in the new “Nature as Subject” exhibit at Lone Tree Arts Center.

private and public collections throughout the U.S.” Abrams lives and works in Los Ranchos Village near Albuquerque and is a regents’ professor emeritus at the University of New Mexico. Her career extends over 40 years. Jean Gumpper is a professor and artistin-residence in the art department of Colorado College in Colorado Springs. Her prints are in national and international collections.

Betsy Margolius studied at the Art Students League of New York, the University of New Mexico and the University of Denver, where she received her MFA. Her monoprints have been widely exhibited across the U.S. The gallery at Lone Tree Arts Center is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and prior to performances. The exhibit will run through Nov. 13. Artwork is available for purchase through the LTAC box office. Admission is free.

“Flood in Los Pablos Field” by Jane Abrams, 64” x 79” is also in the Lone Tree Arts Center exhibit.

CURTAIN TIME What’s the good word? “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” by William Finn and Rachel Sheinkin plays Oct. 10-19 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Alison Parkway, Lakewood. It’s presented by the Highlands Ranchbased Performance Now Theatre Company and is directed by Kelly Van Oosbree. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Special intern performances (high school interns) at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 and Oct. 12 and 19 ($20). Tickets $18-$35: performancenow.org or 303-987-7845.

Family comedy “Over the River and Through the Woods” by Joe Di Pietro plays through Oct. 26 at Cherry Creek Mpulse_10.2.14_CCM South Central.pdf Theatre, Shaver-Ramsey Showroom,

2414 E. Third Ave., Denver. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 6:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: $28, $25, cherrycreektheatre.org. (Advance reservations suggested.)

a 1979 Pulitzer Prize winner, plays Oct. 17 to Nov. 16 at the Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Rick Bernstein is director. Performances: 8 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 6 p.m. Sundays; 8 p.m. Nov. 3. (No performance Nov. 2.) Tickets: $22, $26 ($15 on industry night, Nov. 3.) theedgetheater.com, 303-232-0363.

Unreality TV “Good Television” by Rod Mac Lachen plays Oct. 10 to Nov. 1 at the Aurora Fox, 9900 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. Directed by John Ashton, presented by Ashton and Abster Productions. A TV production company descends on a South Carolina trailer park for an episode on a young meth addict and his family. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. Tickets: $26, $20, aurorafox.org or 303-739-1970.

Stories on Stage

“Brush Up Your Shakespeare” is the title for the Oct. 19 Stories on Stage performances at Su Teatro, 721 Santa Fe Drive, Denver. Included in the readings is a selection from “The Weird Sisters” by Eleanor Brown of Highlands Ranch. Also: “Hamlet” in 15 minutes and selections from other modern stories suggested by Shakespeare’s works. Performances: 1:30 and 6:30 p.m. Tickets: $28. 303494-0523, storiesonstage.org.

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October 9, 2014

County duo tops in zucchini races Local ladies make splash at California wine-country event By Chris Michlewicz

cmichlewicz@colorado communitymedia.com A one-of-a-kind pastime in California’s wine country is being dominated by a Douglas County duo. Deanna Urs and Pat Freytag took the top prize in August for creativity for their entry in a soapbox derby in Sonoma, Calif. But it’s a soapbox derby with a decidedly non-traditional spin; the participants are not kids, but rather dressed-up zucchinis. For 26 years, hundreds of residents have gathered in the town square for the annual zucchini races. Urs, whose friend lives in Sonoma, was introduced to the unique event five years ago when she visited the local farmer’s market and heard a laughterfilled commotion. When Urs saw the reason, she was hooked. She submitted her first entry during a visit one year later and took first place for creativity in the medium-size category. There are also awards for fastest zucchini in each category — small, medium and large — and a prize for most creative overall, which Urs and Freytag claimed this summer. Their winning entry was the “Sonoma Flyer,” a zucchini costumed in bright red glitter, balsa wings and landing gear that made it look a biplane. “It was impressive before it rotted,” Urs said. The Red Baron-like aircraft was piloted by a vintage Weeble (with aviator goggles) and carried two bottles of cabernet as cargo. Sonoma is situated among California’s vineyards, and wine was an inspiring force in the creation of the zucchini races. The “Sonoma Flyer” was the brainchild of Urs, a professional photographer who

Deanna Urs shows off her first-place entry in the “most creative” category at the annual zucchini races in Sonoma, Calif. Courtesy photo

has lived in Parker for 23 years. Freytag, a resident of Surrey Ridge, helps with the design and the many intricate components that make the entry stand out. The “Sonoma Flyer” was equipped with smoke effects, working lights on the wings and a button that, when pressed, played Frank Sinatra’s “Come Fly With Me.” It’s the crowd-pleasing touches that win the judges over. Urs and Freytag won for creativity in the

medium category three out of four years before taking the coveted prize of most creative overall this year. Because so many residents of Sonoma take the competition seriously, a win by an outsider is generally frowned upon. That’s why Urs purposely left her and Freytag’s last names and cities of residence off the entry form. They were known simply as Team 27. Last year, the team collaborated on “The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe,” an

entry complete with a hinged roof, moveable window shutters, lighted chandelier, and, of course, children. The moment it was released from the starting gates, the roof blew off, the children tumbled all over the track, and 17 hours of work was scattered in pieces, much to the delight of spectators. The laughter and expressions on their faces made it all worth it, Urs said. “It’s a good reason to have fun,” she said. “Once you do it, you’re addicted.”

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23

Lone Tree Voice 23

October 9, 2014

Prism TV replaces cable and satellite. ™

Highlands Ranch, the future of TV is here. CenturyLink Prism™ TV: Interactive TV you control – anywhere, any time, on any device. Prism™ TV replaces cable and satellite and is delivered to your neighborhood through CenturyLink’s fiber-optic† network. ®

Prism™ TV offers interactive features like: Wireless Set-Top Box

Whole Home DVR

Put your TV anywhere you want – even in the backyard.

Lets you watch and record multiple shows at once. Plus, pause live TV.

Requires subscription to a Prism™ TV package and Wireless Set-Top Box. Wireless Set-Top Box requires power and connection to TV; range of wireless signal is limited.

Requires subscription to a Prism™ TV package and Whole Home DVR, HD service.

Prism on the Go

Prism App Center

Watch TV anywhere on any device, set your DVR remotely and access Video On Demand, To-Go channels like HBO GO®, MAX GO®, and more!

The Prism App Center gives you access to social networks like Facebook, as well as Yahoo! Sports, Picasa and more.

Call 303.791.5033 Test-drive it in store: Highlands Ranch – 9370 South Colorado Blvd., NE corner of University and Colorado near Whole Foods

Fiber optics apply to all or a significant amount of the network, depending on your location.

Services and offer not available everywhere. CenturyLink may change or cancel services or substitute similar services at its sole discretion without notice. Offer, plans, and stated rates are subject to change and may vary by service area. Requires credit approval and deposit may be required. Additional restrictions apply. Terms and Conditions – All products and services listed are governed by tariffs, terms of service, or terms and conditions posted at www.centurylink.com. CenturyLink® Prism™ TV – Subscription to Prism service in certain Prism territories may require a separate local phone service and preclude customers from purchasing High-Speed Internet services from any third party. CenturyLink-provided set-top boxes are required to view TV. Local channel availability varies by market. Prism on the Go – Prism on the Go offers content through the centurylink.net portal, programmer-supplied apps (e.g., HBO GO ®), and an internal facilities-based app (Prism TV app). The content accessible to individual subscribers depends on their Prism package, device, location, and how they are accessing the content and will vary accordingly. Third-party terms and conditions apply to programmer-supplied apps. Prism™ TV app (Mobile App) – Certain content can be viewed within subscriber’s home only. Download and viewing ability requires subscription to a Prism TV package, qualifying device, and Wi-Fi connection when away from home. Terms and conditions apply. Prism app Center (Dashboard app) – Dashboard app requires subscription to a Prism TV package. Content applicable to social media and vendor apps can be viewed on your TV only. Third-party terms and conditions apply. HBO GO® and MAX GO® – HBO GO® and MAX GO® are only accessible in the U.S. and certain U.S. territories where a high-speed broadband connection is available. Minimum 3G connection is required for viewing on mobile devices. Requires subscription to HBO and Cinemax. Other restrictions may apply. ©2014 Home Box Office, Inc. All Rights Reserved. HBO® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. © 2014 CenturyLink. All Rights Reserved. The name CenturyLink and the pathways logo are the trademarks of CenturyLink. All other marks are property of their respective owners.


24-Calendar

24 Lone Tree Voice

October 9, 2014

THINGS DO GREAT PUMPKIN Haul

THEATER/FILM

BALLET ARIEL Free Performances

THE GREAT Pumpkin Haul, a 2-mile jaunt through forests, open fields, hay bales and other

BALLET ARIEL presents a free performance of excerpts from “Coppelia” and

other dances at 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12, at Hampden Hall, Englewood Civic Center, 1000 Englewood Parkway. Visit www.balletariel. org or call 303945-4388.

`ALADDIN’ AUDITIONS SPOTLIGHT PERFORMING Arts Center will have auditions for “Aladdin” at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 14, at 6328 E County Line Road, Unit 102, Highlands Ranch. Teens and children ages 6 and up are encouraged to audition. Rehearsals will be from 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesdays. Performances will occur in late February. Go to www.spotlightperformers.com or call 720-443-2623 for information.

A Night in New Orleans

INTERNATIONALLY RENOWNED trumpeter Byron Stripling

performs at 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 10, on the Main Stage at Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075 Commons St., Lone Tree. Stripling is the artistic director of the Columbus Jazz Orchestra, leader of his own quartet, and constantly in demand to play with pops orchestras around the world. Go to www.LoneTreeArtsCenter.org or call 720509-1007 for tickets and information.

MUSIC/CONCERTS

SANDI PATTY Concert

ST. ANDREW United Methodist Church presents Sandi Patty in concert at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, at 9203 S. University Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Sandi Patty was recently inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Advance tickets available at www.st-andrew-umc.com. COLORADO SYMPHONY: Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 THE COLORADO Symphony takes on one of the most well-known symphonic

works in history. This iconic symphony debuted in 1808 and has been played all over the world, audiences delighting in its unrelenting power and unity over all four movements. The first symphony to ever feature trombones, Beethoven’s Fifth will showcase the musicians of the CSO at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19, in the amazing acoustics of the Main Stage Theater at the Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075 Commons St. all 720-509-1000 or go to www.LoneTreeArtsCenter.org.

ART

SENIOR CENTER Craft Fair, Bake Sale THE PARKER Senior Center craft fair and bake sale is from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

FestiFall at Hudson Gardens

THE HUDSON Gardens & Event Center hosts the third annual FestiFall from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11. This all-day celebration celebrates all things fall, including live owl presentations, story times, a pumpkin patch and straw bale maze explorations, educational demonstrations, craft stations, music, food trucks and more. Pumpkins from the pumpkin patch will also be for sale while supplies last. Call 303-797-8565 ext. 306. Go to www.hudsongardens.org.

Roller Derby: Gunz and Hoses Bout

THE CASTLE Rock ‘n’ Rollers present the Gunz and Hoses Bout at 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12, at the Douglas County Event Center, 500 Fairgrounds Drive, Castle Rock. It’s cops versus firefighters. The winning team earns the proceeds to benefit either the fire department or police department. Come support our local heroes and cheer on the girls in red and blue. Douglas County-based firefighters and police officers are admitted free with their badge/I.D. An early special bout featuring the juniors team, The Runaways, will start at 2:30 p.m. Doors open at 1:30 p.m. Go to https://www. facebook.com/events/271072396423794/

Friday, Oct. 10, and Saturday, Oct. 11, at 10675 S. Longs Way, Parker. Among the beautiful handcrafted creations — home décor, knitwear, jewelry, Christmas decorations and much more - you will likely find a unique gift for that special person or something for yourself or your home. The bake sale will feature many kinds of fresh, homemade goodies. Lunch will be served both days.

THE PARKER Area Historical Society welcomes Dick Kreck, former

Denver Post reporter and columnist and author of “Hell on Wheels: Wicked Towns Along the Union Pacific Railroad,” at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 14, at Ruth Memorial Chapel, 19650 E. Mainstreet, Parker. Social and business meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. Kreck’s book is the epic story of Western expansion, from the great wagon trails to the track layers and those Hell on Wheels towns where the West was the wildest. Everyone is welcome.

Symphony Orchestra Season Opener

THE LITTLETON Symphony Orchestra presents the opening

concert of its 2014-15 season at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17 at Littleton United Methodist Church, 5894 S. Datura St. The season opens with Mahan and the Emperor, featuring local favorite pianist Katie Mahan. Tickets are available online at www.littletonsymphony. org; in the Gorsett Violin Shop, 8100 S. Quebec St., Suite B206, Centennial; or at the door. For group tickets or more information call 303-933-6824.

HEALTH/FITNESS

SOUTH METRO Community Blood Drives

A NUMBER of community blood drives are planned in the South Metro area. For information or to schedule an appointment, contact the Bonfils Appointment Center at 303-363-2300, unless otherwise noted. Upcoming blood drives are: Monday, Oct 13, at Lone Tree Civic Center, 8527 Lone Tree Parkway, 10-11:40 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m. (contact Kristin Knoll, 303-7081818); Wednesday, Oct. 15, at Douglas County Government, 301 Wilcox St., Castle Rock, 9:30-11:40 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m.; Friday, Oct. 17, at PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; Sunday, Oct, 19, at Southern Gables Church, 4001 S. Wadsworth Blvd., Littleton, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. FREE NUTRITION, Cooking Class FREE HEART Health nutrition classes and cooking demonstrations are offered from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct 22 (The DASH Diet); Wednesday, Oct. 29 (Jumpstart Your Metabolism) at the South Denver Heart Center, 1000 Southpark Drive, Littleton. Join Richard Collins, M.D., “The Cooking Cardiologist,” along with Susan Buckley, RD, CDE, as they share their expertise on Heart Healthy nutrition and cooking solutions. For more information or to register, call 303-744-1065, www.southdenver.com. LIVING AND Aging Well GENEALOGY RESOURCES and tips will be presented by Douglas County Libraries History Research Center at the next Living and Aging Well in Lone Tree speaker series at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 14. RSVP to LivingandAgingWellinLT@gmail.com or 303-225-4930 by Friday, Oct 10. The series will be at the Lone Tree Golf Club & Hotel, 9808 Sunnindale Blvd., Lone Tree. Cost is $10, which includes lunch (cash or check payable to SSPRD). FREE HEALTH Education SOUTH DENVER Heart Center, 1000 Southpark Drive, Littleton, presents free educational classes in October. Diabetes, Pre-diabetes and Insulin Resistance, from 11 a.m. to noon Monday, Oct. 20, led by Susan Buckley, RD, CDE, and Vicki Siegel, exercise physiologist. Learn the ins and outs of diabetes and how to control blood sugar. From 1:30-2:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 20, is Anticoagulation Basics: Through Thick & Thin. Learn to live with Warfarin/Coumadin, including an overview of warfarin therapy with an emphasis on safety. The class also will help patients make good decisions about what can affect medications and how to monitor it. Call 303-744-1065 or go to www.southdenver.com for information and to register. BALLET AND Swim Classes LITTLETON FAMILY YMCA offers Ballet and Gym n Swim classes at 11 W. Dry Creek Court, Littleton. The sessions are four weeks. Ballet is from 9-10 am. Thursdays; and Gym n Swim is from 9-10 a.m. Thursdays. Go to www.DenverYMCA.org for details and costs.

EVENTS

EDUCATION

SPECIAL NEEDS Sports Camp

SAT/ACT PRACTICE Test

LEARN THE skills necessary to play a variety of sports. Also learn the rules of

THERE ARE still a few seats left for this valuable free session at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, at the Lone Tree Library, 8827 Lone Tree Parkway. To register, call 303-791-7323 or visit DouglasCountyLibraries.org.

the games, focusing on good sportsmanship, and teamwork. Program is for ages 8 and up. Camp is from 9 a.m. to noon Monday, Oct. 13, and Wednesday, Oct. 15, at the Recreation Center at Southridge. Go to www.hrcaonline. org/tr.

COMING OUT, Going On

Hell on Wheels

obstacles, all while carrying a pumpkin, is at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 19, at Chatfield Botanic Gardens. Mini pumpkins are provided for the kiddos to haul (or a less inclined adult) and entire families participate in the event together. There will be awards for the fastest hauler, a “tough pumpkin” award to the hauler carrying the heaviest pumpkin, costume contest and also a “double hauler baler” category for those brave enough to take on 2 pumpkins solo. After the haul participants will enjoy hot apple cider, seasonal brews from local Colorado Microbreweries, music, and discounted tickets to the annual corn maze. The Great Pumpkin Haul benefits Camp Como, a charity that organizes outdoor adventures and camps to get kids outside and active. More information and registration is at www.thegreatpumpkinhaul.com

THE TUESDAY, Oct. 14, meeting of PFLAG features at 30-minute documentary called “Coming Out, Going On,” during which a son not only interviews his family, but others on their own experience of that of a friend or relative. The LGBT community is encouraged to attend along with their families and friends. Everything is confidential. You need not be a member to attend. The group meets from 7-8:45 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the James H. LaRue Library, 9292 Ridgeline Blvd., Highlands Ranch. Contact info@pflaghighlandsranch.org. HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL LITTLETON FAMILY YMCA will have a Halloween carnival from 6-8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17, at 11 W. Dry Creek Court, Littleton. The carnival will feature a haunted house, costume parade and carnival. It is free for the community. Go to www.DenverYMCA.org. 17 MILE House Fall Festival ENJOY THE Fall Festival at the historic 17 Mile House Farm Park from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 18, at 8181 S. Parker Road, just north of Cottonwood; turn west at the big red barn. There will be hayrides, a petting farm, live music and historic demonstrations. Admission is free. Pumpkins, food, beverages, and other items will be available for purchase. Contact www.arapahoegov.com or 720-874-6545. SANTA FE Quarry Tour IN CONJUNCTION with the Castle Rock Museum’s newest exhibit, the Castle Rock parks division and the museum plan a tour of the Santa Fe Quarry on Saturday, Oct. 18. The group will depart from the museum at 10 a.m. Seating is limited, and reservations are required. Call the museum at 303-814-3164 or email crmuseum@comcast.net.

PASSPORT TO Culture: Mad Science CHILDREN WILL be dazzled and entertained as they interact with our Mad Scientists in this Fire & Ice show! Foggy dry ice storms, giant beach balls floating in the air, and even a special Mad Science “burp” potion will amaze children as they learn about chemical reactions, air pressure and the states of matter. Before the performance there will be a Slippery Science workshop for kids that enjoy a hands-on experience. Program is at 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12, in the Event Hall at the Lone Tree Arts Center, 10075 Commons St. all 720-509-1000 or go to www. LoneTreeArtsCenter.org. SEASON’S EATINGS LEARN TO adapt your favorite holiday recipes to be free of gluten, dairy and other allergens with alternative cook Jean Duane. Program is at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 14, at the Philip S. Miller Library, 100 S. Wilcox St., Castle Rock. Program repeats at 6 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 16, in Castle Pines, 7437 Village Square Drive, Unit 110. To register, call 303-791-7323 or visit DouglasCountyLibraries.org. BOOK LOVERS GET THE scoop on fall’s hottest sci-fi and fantasy titles available from Douglas County Libraries. This book lovers program is at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 15, at Roxborough Library, 8357 N. Rampart Range Road, Unit 200. To register, call 303-791-7323 or visit DouglasCountyLibraries.org. VOTER GUIDANCE THE DOUGLAS County Election Commission will help registered voters fill out ballots for the upcoming midterm election at 10 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 16, at Castle Country Assisted Living’s Victorian House, 19600 Victorian Drive, Parker. The event is free, but space is limited. Call 303-482-5552. 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.


25

Lone Tree Voice 25

October 9, 2014

Marketplace

Advertise: 303-566-4100

Auctions Classic Car Auction October 18th Memorabilia 9am Open 8am

The Ranch, Loveland CO To buy or sell call

970-266-9561

Specialty Auto Auctions SAAASinc.com

Instruction IMPROV CLASSES!

Improv theater classes for ALL ages. Check out the website: www.improv-maven.com Or call Lucy: 303-808-9700 Unlock YOUR imagination! Kids, Adults & Seniors welcome. Spontaneity, Creativity, Success

Lost and Found Found

Musical Instrument September 21st intersection 120th & Huron Call to identify 970-580-2101

Misc. Notices Want To Purchase

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

Farm Products & Produce Grain Finished Buffalo

Arts & Crafts

Tools

Juried VENDORS

Large Old Craftsman old table saw and 1 1/2 HP 20 gallon Speedaire air compressor Both in working condition $40 each/obo 303-345-4046

Opportunity for holiday craft fair on November 14 – 15 at the Central Christian Church of Denver located just south of the Cherry Creek Mall. If you are interested in joining us as part of a special holiday craft fair, please call Lynda at 303-794-6136. We are an international non profit organization called PEO which raises money for women’s scholarships. Reasonable rates – free parkingfree admission.

Wanted Crafters / Vendors

November 22nd for Englewood High Schools' Annual Holiday Sale benefiting EHS special needs students Please call 303-806-2239 or email EHS_craftfair@engschools.net for reservation

Wanted Crafters/Vendors

Holly Jolly Christmas Boutique November 21-22 at the Grange in the Meadows in Castle Rock Call 303-814-2358 or complete Application to participate at

Garage Sales Arvada

Huge Garage Sale Great Prices 2 families Collectibles, Linens, Quilts and much more October 10th & 11th Friday & Saturday 8am-4pm 6863 Johnson Street, Arvada South from 72nd & Kipling

Arvada Make us an offer Garage Sale Friday & Saturday October 10th & 11th 10am-4pm 11889 West 74th Way, Arvada 80005 Furniture, Tools, Holiday, Yard & Household and much more Will accept any reasonable offer

DOWNSIZING FURNITURE AND MORE SALE!

Friday & Saturday October 10th & 11th from 10am-4pm 6542 Iris Street, Arvada All Reasonable Offers Considered Console Stereo w/am/fm radio 40 yrs old, still works, Bassett Oak Dining Set, Hutch/ table/ 2 leaves/ 6 chairs and table pads - seats 8-10 Hooker Oak Entertainment center length 5 1/2' 52" height & 20" depth Computer Desk, China Hutch, 2 queen size beds w/mattress and box springs, 2 wrought iron bar stools with padded seats, kitchen cabinets oak dark stain - set is not complete, 1 full size Croscill comforter set, Wall shelf w/writing desk, large Pfaltzgraff dish set, 2 area rugs 10x8 & 8x6, 2 floor lamps, artwork and more

Lakewood Multi Family Garage Sale Friday October 10 and Saturday October 11 9am-4pm 1829 S. Lee St., Lakewood (Kendrick Lake Quads) Furniture, Fisher Price toys, much more

Covenant Village Garage Sale Lots of Furniture to choose from Great Prices Friday October 10th 8am-4pm Saturday October 11th 8am-12 9153 Yarrow St. Westminster

Other Pets

www.Meadowslink.com YULETIDE BAZAAR Holiday Crafts, Homemade Food, Gift Boutique. November 8th 9am-4pm, PARKER FIELD HOUSE Dransfield & Plaza Drive Sponsored by Mountain Pine Woman's Club

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

quartered, halves and whole

719-775-8742

PETS

Bicycles

Electric Bicycles

electric3 Wheel Trikes electric Scooters - ebike conversion No license required No gas required No credit required Easy-Fun-Fitness Call the ebike experts

we are looking to sell our young ferret, Draco, for $100 including his cage, food, water and food bowls, hammock, bedding, toys,litter boxes and litter, as well as grooming supplies. we can no longer keep him as we are getting married and our apartment will not let us take him. he is very sweet and is great with kids young and old as well as cats and dogs. he will also come with his birth certificate. he is up to date on shots and is neutered and de-scented. please email us at candypuppy7@gmail.com for more information.

Autos for Sale 2009 Toyota 6 cyl LE Camrey Exc cond, less than 59,000 miles $11,500 (720)638-9770

303-257-0164

ELECTRIC BIKES

Adult 2-Wheel Bicycles & & 3 wheel Trikes No Drivers License, Registration or Gas needed

303-257-0164 Firewood

Pine/Fur & Aspen

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

FIREWOOD Dry, Split, Delivered Geiger Logging (303)688-0453

Miscellaneous John Deere 825D Snowblower Very Good condition $500 (818)516-0844

To give away. 1975 Rolls International 28 foot trailer. Needs work. Located in the big flats area. 608-697-8809

Classic/Antique Cars

By Sonya Ellingboe

sellingboe@colorado communitymedia.com As lights go up on Sully’s Bar in Greenwich Village, circa 1960s, one can immediately sense a warm, worn, brick-andwood, well-used, slightly musty place that is a home away from home for a number of locals, especially artists. “Dylan Went Electric” is described to us as “a snapshot” play of a moment in time by a fellow audience member, a retired English professor. This is a particularly well-designed set by Kyle Scoggins — and the bar will actually serve a limited menu of drinks at intermission. Norman (Damon Guerrasio) is at a table, strumming his guitar and singing bits of a song about gypsies that he’s writing. Phil, the politically opinionated bartender (Drew Horwitz), is behind the bar, and edgy Gina (Lindsey Pierce) enters and soon approaches Norman. “I used to write poems,” she says as an opener. Phil’s running commentary fills in bits of ‘60s thinking, by the liberal types who would have frequented this little part of the world at the time. At another table, a quiet Bartholomew sketches steadily in a black binder, occasionally interacting with the others, but comfortable in his private world. Petra, the Czech waitress (Karen Slack) stomps in, announcing that she was emotionally unable to be there yesterday … She is soon on the phone speaking in Czech. There is obviously a crisis. (The Soviets invaded in 1968). An older man and woman enter and resume an ongoing chess game. They are Morris, the bar owner (Leroy Leonard), and the aging and hard-drinking Bohemian type Edna (Erica Sarzin-Borillo), each

IF YOU GO “Dylan Went Electric” by Josh Hartwell plays through Oct. 19 at Miners Alley Playhouse, 1224 Washington Ave., Golden. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 6 p.m. Sundays, except 2 p.m. only on Oct. 19. Tickets: $23/$20/$12 under 12; 303-935-3044, minersalley.com. with their own stories of the ‘60s. Morris is gay and is beaten towards the end, perhaps in the 1969 Stonewall riots in Greenwich Village that signaled the start of a national gay movement. Playwright Josh Hartwell, 41, writes of his pleasure in researching the history for this play — more than any other he’s written: “Bob Dylan, Dylan Thomas, Gertrude Drick, Washington Square Park, Stonewall, the Beats, folk music. Greenwich is called a Village for a reason …” Director Jim Hunt, who was a 20-something in the ‘60s, speaks of Hartwell’s ability to “capture an iconic moment in time without hitting us over the head with it.” Assistant director Jamie Billings, in her 20s now, comments on the way “social activism can exist through the click of a button, or the tap of a finger, today,” contrasted to times when “people had to leave the comfort of their homes … sing provocative songs … march … The messages surpass all generational barriers.” And that is the appeal of this play for those of us who remember and those of us who learn about those exciting and difficult times. This is theater as storytelling, with interesting, if not always appealing, characters who lead us through a couple of days in a world that once was a center of attention. As a sidenote, the actual Bob Dylan is scheduled to perform in Denver at 8 p.m. on Nov. 1 in the Colorado Convention Center’s Bellco Theatre. Tickets are listed in a range of prices through bellcotheatre.com.

RV’s and Campers Divorce Must Sell: Beautiful Custom '03 Beaver' Contessa Class A motorcoach, 55k miles. Reduced $12,000. to $67,900. Decorator interior, real Cherry Cabinetry, Italian tile, full paint loaded with new upgrades, 370 hp Cummins Diesel. NO DEALERS 303-875-4209

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26-Sports

26 Lone Tree Voice

SPORTS

October 9, 2014

REACHING FOR VICTORY Valor Christian’s Eric Lee Jr. breaks up a pass to Eaglecrest wide receiver Anthony Karmayzn. Host Valor Christian extended its in-state win streak to 27 games Oct. 3 with a 23-21 Centennial League win over Eaglecrest. Brian Dawkins Jr. intercepted a pass in the final minute to seal the victory. Eagles quarterback Dylan McCaffrey passed for 184 yards and two touchdowns while Lee ran for 106 yards, including an 84-yard TD gallop. For more football scores and this week’s roundup, turn to page 27. Photo by Paul DiSalvo

Jaguars win battle of unbeatens Rock Canyon edges Mountain Vista in key league clash By Tom Munds

tmunds@coloradocommunitymedia.com Rock Canyon converted two free kicks into the game’s only goals as the Jaguars edged Mountain Vista, 2-0, in an Oct. 2 clash for undisputed possession of first place in the 5A/4A Continental League soccer standings. “This was a tough game as we knew it would be,” said Rock Canyon Coach Matt Sassali. “These are two teams undefeated in league play that have been on a collision course coming into this game. We got the win but now we need to focus on the remaining games because we play teams near the top of the league standings.” Mountain Vista Coach Theresa Echtermeyer said she knew playing Rock Canyon wouldn’t be an easy task. “They are a physical group and they played strong,” she said. “We lost to a good team, but maybe we’ll see them again in the playoffs.” The Oct. 2 win gives Rock Canyon a 101-1 overall record and gives them sole pos- A Mountain Vista defender, left, tries to no avail to stop a head shot on goal by Rock Canyon’s Cody Ross during the Oct. 2 league soccer game. The goal helped lift the Jaguars to a session of first place with a 7-0-0 league 2-0 win. Photos by Tom Munds record as the season heads into the home stretch. The Jaguars were at Ponderosa Oct. 7, at home against Heritage Oct. 9 and will the mouth of the goal, and this time it was close out the regular season Oct. 15 against senior Cody Ross who headed it in for Rock Canyon. Legend at Sports Authority Field. Mountain Vista came into the Oct. 2 “The guys overcame the distractions of game tied for the league lead with Rock the senior night celebration and the presCanyon. The loss puts the Golden Eagles sure of playing for first place to play good overall record at 8-2-2 and league mark at soccer,” Sassali said. “We are a strong, 6-1-0. The loss also dropped Mountain Vis- physical team but that isn’t the focus of ta into third place in the league standings our game because we are also a team with with Legend moving into second at 6-0-1. strong technical skills and good speed.” The Golden Eagles came out of the Oct. The technical skills came in handy on 2 game with three league games remaining on the schedule, at home Oct. 7 against both Rock Canyon goals in the victory. “The set plays are a point of pride for Legend, on the road Oct. 9 against Ponderus,” Sassali said. “We are a senior-domiosa and a finale Oct. 14 at ThunderRidge. One early attack after another by Moun- nated team with 16 seniors on the roster. tain Vista ended as Rock Canyon defenders That experience and skill puts us in good won the battle for the ball and immediate- position for the rest of the regular season ly pushed into Golden Eagles territory. The games and for the upcoming state playscoreless tie was broken about 13 minutes offs.” into the game when the Jaguars capitalized Echtermeyer said this is the first time on a free kick. this season her team has given up two Rock Canyon senior Oliver Larson took goals. the kick from about 20 yards out and lofted “Our defense is strong and giving up the ball near the mouth of the goal where two goals tonight is hard to take,” she said. sophomore teammate Aaron Makikalli “But, we’ll learn from this game as we get headed it into the net past a diving goalie. The Jaguars added a second goal about ready to close out the league season. No A trio of Mountain Vista defenders, including Brandon Barich (8) and Molan Gao (10) close in on Rock Canyon’s Brian halfway through the second half off a one likes to lose but we still are in position free kick from Lukas Larson. Like his twin to make the state playoffs so we’ll just see Olcott (9) during an Oct. 2 Continental League contest. The game was a tough defensive battle but the Jaguars converted two free kicks into goals to win, 2-0. brother, he lofted the ball to the area near what happens there.”


27

Lone Tree Voice 27

October 9, 2014

Sophomore leads Golden Eagles into state Ben Antonsen, a qualifier at No. 2 in 2013, will contend at No. 1 singles By Jim Benton

jbenton@colorado communitymedia.com Ben Antonsen knows what to expect this season. Last fall, that wasn’t the case. Antonsen was a freshman, playing at No. 2 singles, and was surprised by the atmosphere surrounding the state tournament. He still wound up as a state runner-up. “I thought I knew what it was going to be like going into the state tournament but I was a freshman and I didn’t think a whole lot of people would be coming to watch the state tournament,” recalled Antonsen.

“Then I got into the warm-ups and there were like 20 people watching that I didn’t know from my school. Well, then I knew this is pretty big.” Antonsen is playing No. 1 singles this season and won the Region 5 championship with a 6-2, 6-0 victory over Castle View’s Cody Carlton on Oct. 2 at the Redstone tennis facility in Highlands Ranch. The victory earned him a return trip and a good seed in the 2014 Class 5A state tournament to be held Oct. 9-11 at Gates Tennis Center in Denver. “I’m excited to get back again,” said Antonsen. “It’s the best time for tennis, the state championships. I’m feeling good about my game going in. I’ve had a very good season. I’ve got a lot of momentum to build on off of the region because I played some good matches. I’ve just been working the whole year toward state. It’s where you go to play your best. “I got a lot of familiarity with higher-

level players this season. Every school has at least one good kid. So when you are playing a good match every week, it’s good practice for state. It’s good to play that level of competition to get ready for state. You always go out trying to play the same way, your same style, playing aggressively and dictating play. So you go into every match and whatever happens, happens. Whatever is thrown at you in a match, you’ve got to be ready.” Antonsen is 13-1 this season with his only loss coming to Air Academy’s Keenan Kaltenbacher in a third-set tiebreaker in the Western Slope Open in Grand Junction. In the Region 5 finals Antonsen played sharp against Carlton and beat the Castle View senior for the second time in nine days. “I came out and played aggressively,” Antonsen said. “He started playing aggressively too because he was pumped up trying to win the finals of regionals. I felt like I

hung in there and served well, played well and I’m happy to get the No. 1 position for Mountain Vista into state.” Carlton couldn’t overcome Antonsen’s execution. “I felt like I played really good,” said Carlton. “(He) is very good. He’s a wellrounded player. He just wouldn’t miss. He had to beat me. He just got more shots than I did.” Mountain Vista, the Continental League champions and third at the 2013 state tournament, qualified eight of 11 players for state which hampers the Golden Eagles chances of contending for a state title against perennial powerhouse Cherry Creek and impressive Fairview. Vista’s No. 2 singles player Austin Gruszczynski added to his unbeaten season record with a 6-1, 6-3 win over Castle View’s Josh Hunt. The senior is now 13-0.

SPORTS ROUNDUP Softball regions set

Castle View, Legend and Valor Christian will be host girls softball regional tournaments Oct. 11. The Sabercats, the 2014 Continental League champions via their win over Legend, are the No. 5 seed in the Class 5A 32-team regional bracket and will play No. 28 Horizon in the first game of the Region 3 tournament to be held at Metzler Ranch Community Park, 4175 Trail Boss Road, Castle Rock. Legend tied for first place record-wise with Castle View, and received the No. 6 seed. The Titans will face No. 27 Westminster in the first game of the Region 6 tourney to be played at Salisbury Fields, 11920 N. Motsenbocker Road in Parker. Valor Christian defeated defending state champion Wheat Ridge 2-0 on Oct. 3 to claim the Jefferson County 4A title and earned the No. 2 seed in the Class 4A state playoffs. Valor will face No. 31 seed Canon City in the Region 8 Class 4A regional tournament that will be held at Valor and Highlands Ranch High Schools. The regionals tournaments are double

elimination with two teams from each region advancing to their respective state tournaments, which will be held Oct. 1718 at Aurora Sports Park. Regional games are set for 10 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. The following are the Class 5A and 4A Region brackets involving south metro teams. Class 5A Region 1 at Fossil Ridge: No. 1 Fossil Ridge (17-1) vs. No. 32 Heritage (7-12); No. 16 Eaglecrest (12-7) vs. No. 17 Chatfield (11-8) Region 3 at Metzler Ranch: No. 5 Castle View (16-3) vs. No. 28 Horizon (9-10); No. 12 Pomona (12-6-1) vs. No. 21 Greeley West (12-07). Region 4 at Brighton: No. 4 Brighton (18-1) vs. No. 29 Arvada West (6-13); No. 13 Rock Canyon (8-11) vs. No. 20 Prairie View (16-3). Region 5 at Dakota Ridge: No. 3 Dakota Ridge (16-3) vs. No. 30 Rampart (13-6); No. 14 Chaparral (13-5) vs. No. 19 Ralston Valley (11-8) Region 6 at Salisbury Fields: No. 6 Leg-

end (16-3) vs. No. 27 Westminster (11-7); No. 11 Rocky Mountain (12-7) vs. No. 22 Denver East (16-3). Region 7 at Grandview: No. 7 Grandview (13-6) vs. No. 20 Mountain Vista (910); No. 10 Grand Junction Central (16-3) vs. No. 23 Loveland (11-8). Region 8 at Legacy: No. 2 Legacy (154) vs. No. 31 Columbine (11-8); No. 15 Cherokee Trail (9-9-1) vs. Douglas County (13-6). Class 4A Region 5 at Pueblo: No. 3 Pueblo West (15-4) vs. No. 30 Englewood (11-7); No. 14 Niwot (14-4-1) vs. No. 19 Delta (15-3) Region 6 at Vista Ridge: No. 6 Vista Ridge (16-3) vs. No. 27 D’Eveyln (6-13); No. 11 Ponderosa (12-7) vs. No. 22 Evergreen (13-6). Region 8 at Valor Christian and Highlands Ranch: No. 2 Valor Christian (18-1) vs. No. 31 Canon City (11-8); No. 15 Woodland Park (17-2) vs. No. 18 Windsor (10-9).

Football highlights

Valor Christian, ranked No. 1 in the CHSAANow.com Class 5A poll, used an

crossword • sudoku

GALLERY OF GAMES & weekly horoscope

interception late to seal a 23-21 Centennial League win over Eaglecrest. Quarterback Dylan McCaffrey passed for 184 yards and two touchdowns for the Eagles and Eric Lee Jr. rushed for 106 yards, including an 84-yard scoring scamper as Valor won its 27th straight game against in-state competition. Mountain Vista remained unbeaten for the season and in the Continental North with a 34-7 triumph over Rock Canyon as Nick Schmalz rushed for 153 yards and three scores for the Golden Eagles. Trevor Howard was the top rusher for Rock Canyon with 107 yards and a TD. ThunderRidge thumped Fruita Monument, 43-7, and Regis Jesuit blanked Highlands Ranch, 43-0.

More from the softball circle

Freshman Ali Kilponen struck out 13 batters and pitched a no-hitter in Valor Christian’s 2-0 Jefferson County 4A League victory over defending state champion Wheat Ridge on Oct. 3 to help the Eagles clinch the league title with a 7-1 record.

SALOME’S STARS FOR THE WEEK OF OCT 6 2014

ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr 19) An upcoming trip could create some problems with your schedule unless you tie up as many loose ends as possible before you head out the door. Ask a friend or colleague to help you. TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Being eager to start a new project is fine. However, moving ahead without knowing what actually will be expected of you could cause a problem down the line. Ask some questions. GEMINI (May 21 to Jun 20) Getting through some recent challenges in good shape might give you a false sense of security. Don’t relax your guard. You need to be prepared for what else could happen.

crossword • sudoku & weekly horoscope

GALLERY OF GAMES

CANCER (Jun 21 to Jul 22) Caution is still advised, even though you think you’re as prepared as you need to be. Keep in mind that change is in your aspect, and you should expect the unexpected. LEO (Jul 23 to Aug 22) The Lion’s gift of persuasion helps you get your points across, even to some of your most negative naysayers. An old friend might seek you out for some advice. VIRGO (Aug 23 to Sept 22) Being sure of your convictions is fine. But leave some room for dissenting opinions. You might learn something that could help you avoid a possible problem later on. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) Getting good legal advice on what your rights actually are is the first step toward resolving that pesky problem so that it doesn’t re-emerge at a later date. Good luck. SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov 21) Longtime relationships work well this week, whether they’re personal or professional. It’s also a good time to invite new friends and colleagues into your life. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) This is a good week to do the research that will help you uncover those irrefutable facts that can back you up on your new venture when you most need it. CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 19) Change is an important factor in your aspect this week and could affect something you might have thought was immune to any sort of adjustment or “alteration.” AQUARIUS (Jan 20 to Feb 18) Being asked to share someone’s deeply personal confidence might be flattering, but accepting could be unwise. Decline gracefully but firmly. PISCES (Feb 19 to Mar 20) As wise as you are, you could still be misled by someone who seems to be sincere but might not be. Take more time to assess the situation before making any commitments. BORN THIS WEEK: You like to face challenges that others might try to avoid, and by so doing, you set an example of courage for all. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.


28

28 Lone Tree Voice

Valor holes fourth golf title in six years Falcons finish fourth in Class 5A with three sophomores, one freshman By Jim Benton

jbenton@coloradocommunitymedia.com There’s always chatter about Valor Christian’s football team which has captured five consecutive state championships, including the past two in Class 5A. The Eagles football team, however, might have to share a little of the limelight with the boys golf team, which captured the Class 4A state golf title for the fourth time in six years by finishing 23 strokes in front of second-place Pueblo South at the state tournament held Sept. 29-30 at Walking Stick in Pueblo. “We’ve won four in the last six years and lost in a playoff one other year,” said Valor boys golf coach Jason Preeo. “The football team is still a little bit ahead but that’s alright.” All four Valor golfers finished among the top six in the individual standings in Pueblo. Senior Jake Staiano was second with a 4-under par 140 total to finish two shots behind state champion Taylor Rodriguez of Pueblo South. Staiano tied for the first day lead with a 67 and shot a 73 on the final round. Ross Macdonald carded a 2-under par 70 during the final round and finished third at 2-under 142 while Coby Welch tied for fourth at 146 and Pierce Aichinger tied for sixth with a 147 36-hole total. “The kids played really well,” said Preeo. “On day two it was windy and certainly a lot more difficult than the first day. All the scores went up a little bit but they hung in there. Ross’ round of 70 was probably just about as good as shooting 67 the first day. The kids were really dealing with a little bit of pressure with the expectations but they came through and played well.” In the Class 5A tournament at the Colorado Springs Country Club, Highlands Ranch was four shots off the lead after a three-player total of 230 for the first round on Sept. 29. The Falcons faded during the final 18 holes and wound up tied for fourth in the team standings at 470, 24 shots behind state champion Coronado. Sophomore Tyler Zang paced Highlands Ranch with rounds of 74 and 78 and was tied for 17th in the individual standings at 152. “We have these babies so we’re lining up with a freshman and three sophomores,” said Highlands Ranch coach James Barker. “The first day we just played kind of mediocre. As a team we played maybe C golf. Coronado didn’t play very well the first day. But we were only four strokes behind after day one so we were in second place after not playing very well. “The second day we might have played our worst tournament of the year and slipped to fourth but we were only three shots out of second. We couldn’t quite pull it off. It’s experience. The more competitive golf you play, the smarter you get and the easier it is to hold it together. It would have surprised me a little bit if we had won the whole thing but we just kind of didn’t know how.’’ Barker was already playing it forward after the tournament. “This group of kids I have love to play and love to do the things you need to do to get better,” he said. “I look for us to be a contender next year and the year after that. We’ve got talent now, our work ethic needs to be better and our learning curve needs to be a little steeper. “I am proud of them. We would have rather won the thing but it’s more common for experienced players to hold it together and get it done. We just couldn’t quite get it done.”

STATE GOLF RESULTS

THE FOLLOWING individuals and schools from the south metro area and where

they landed on state tournament leaderboards:

October 9, 2014

Services Basements

Cleaning

Highlands Ranch, 74-78-152; T23-Ryan Zetwick, Rock Canyon, 80-74-154; T26Philip Nelson, Legend 78-77-155; T30-Nick Smith, Douglas County, 77-79-156; T35-Reese Leiker, Heritage, 75-82-157; T37-Jackson Crist, Highlands Ranch, 76-82-158; T43-Trevor Crockett, ThunderRidge, 79-80-159; T48-Trevor McCord, ThunderRidge, 81-80-161; T48-Cole Edwards, Cherry Creek, 79-82-161; T58-Kyle Pearson, Highlands Ranch, 83-80, 163; T58-Subin Lee, Cherry Creek, 80-83-163; T64-Nolan Cox, Mountain Vista, 83-82-165; T66- EJ Clark, Cherry Creek, 83-83166; T66-Brett Startz, Douglas County, 81-85-166; T66-Josh Pusar, Rock Canyon, 81-85-166; T70-Ryan Pearson, Highlands Ranch, 80-87-167; T74-Nick Leibold, Heritage, 88-80-168; T74-Jack Matchinsky, ThunderRidge, 83-85-168; 85-Nick Caldwell, Rock Canyon, 92-88-180.

TEAM: T4-Highlands Ranch, 470; 9-ThunderRidge, 488; T10-Cherry Creek, 490;

12- Mountain Vista, 493; 13 - Rock Canyon, 500.

CLASS 4A State Golf Tournament at the Walking Stick Golf Club in Pueblo (Par

72):

12 years experience. Great References

AJ Gale Builders Basements, Additions, Highlands Ranch/Lone Tree

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CLASS 3A State Golf Tournament at the Northeastern 18 in Sterling (Par 72):

Deck/Patio

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INDIVIDUAL: 2-Jake Staiano, Valor Christian, 67-73-140; 3-Ross Macdonald,

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Advertise: 303-566-4100

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CLASS 5A Golf State Tournament at the Colorado Springs Country Club (Par 71): INDIVIDUAL: T5-David Packer, Arapahoe, 70-78-148; T17-Tyler Zhang,

S

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Cal


29

Services Lone Tree Voice 29

October 9, 2014

Services Handyman

Hauling Service

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Advertise: 303-566-4100

Painting

Lawn/Garden Services

PROFESSIONAL

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OUTDOOR SERVICES

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Carpentry, Drywall Repair, Painting, Doors, Plumbing, Electrical, Decks, Gutter Cleaning Most Everything FREE Estimates 20 Years Experience Call Jim Myers (303)841-0361

HOME REPAIRS INSIDE: *Bath *Kitchen's *Plumbing *Electrical, *Drywall *Paint *Tile & Windows

TREES/ SHRUBS TRIMMED

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• Hauling off of unwanted items/junk • Minimum charge only $60 depending on load • Also offer roll-off dumpsters

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Home Improvement

RON‘S LANDSCAPING

Plumbing

Yard Clean-up, Raking, Weeding, Flower Bed Maintenance, Shrubbery Trimming Soil Prep - Sod Work Trees & Shrub Replacement also Small Tree & Bush Removal Bark, Rock Walls & Flagstone Work

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Tree Service

“Over 300 Houses painted in 2013” No Deposit Ever Satisfaction Guaranteed 5 year, 7 year and 9 year Exterior Warranties 2 Yr. Interior Warranty Licensed & Insured up to $2 Million Locally Owned and Operated since 1989

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Painting

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Lawn/Garden Services

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24-HOUR BALLOT DROP-OFF BOX LOCATIONS AND HOURS:

Democratic Party

Vote for One Pair

CASE NUMBER: 14JV189 DIVISION 7

Democratic Party

Harry Hempy / Scott Olson Green Party

Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Highlands Ranch Substation 9250 Zotos Drive, Highlands Ranch Park Meadows Center 9350 Heritage Hills Circle, Lone Tree Parker Town Hall 20120 E. Mainstreet, Parker Parker Police Department 18600 E. Lincoln Meadows Parkway, Parker VOTER SERVICE AND POLLING CENTER LOCATIONS AND HOURS: In addition to being a ballot drop-off site, the following six locations will be able to assist with all your election needs including: • Registering to vote • Replacing a ballot • Voting in person

Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Highlands Ranch Substation 9250 Zotos Drive, Highlands Ranch

State Representative - District 43 Vote for One

Democratic Party Republican Party

State Representative - District 44 Vote for One

Matthew Hess / Brandon Young

Kim Ransom

Libertarian Party

Republican Party

Mike Dunafon / Robin J. Roberts

Karen Jae Smith

Unaffiliated

Democratic Party

Paul Noel Fiorino / Charles George Whitley

Lily Williams

Vote for One

Write-in

Patrick Neville Republican Party

Secretary Of State

Brandon W. Wicks

Vote for One

James L. Jeansonne Libertarian Party

County Commissioner - District 1

SA M PL

Republican Party

Democratic Party

E

Democratic Party

Libertarian Party State Representative - District 45

Amanda Campbell

Sample Ballot

Bill Hammons Unity Party

Steve Shogan Unaffiliated

Write-in

District 4 - Representative To The 114th United States Congress Vote for One

Vic Meyers

Democratic Party

Ken Buck

Republican Party

Jess Loban

Libertarian Party

Grant Doherty Unaffiliated

District 6 - Representative To The 114th United States Congress Vote for One

Mike Coffman

000000000169

Republican Party

Andrew Romanoff Democratic Party

Gary Swing Green Party

Norm Olsen

Libertarian Party

DEPENDENCY AND SUMMONS Redstone NEGLECT Park Service Center 3280 Redstone Park Circle This Summons Highlands Ranch is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Park Meadows Center Rules of Civil Hills Procedure, 9350 Heritage Circle, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2013. Lone Tree

Douglas County Elections 125 Stephanie Place, Castle Rock

Kevin Van Winkle

Raul Acosta

no more than 2 terms)

303-663-7726 FAX 877- 285-8988 Atty. Reg. #: 13865 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us

Public Notice

John Hickenlooper / Joe Garcia

Wayne W. Williams

Unaffiliated

Attorney for Petitioner DCDHS

Thirkell, 4400 Castleton Ct. Dougals County John Sample Ballot Castle Rock, CO 80109

Henry M. Barlow

Republican Party

Gaylon Kent

(Signed declaration to limit service to

and Concerning: Wilma Marie Slensker, Mother, Jason Bowling, Father, and John Doe, Possible Father of Carliza Slensker Respondents, And Ryan Slensker and Christina Frazier, Special Respondents.

Legal Notice No.: 2014-0272 First Publication: 9/25/2014 Last Publication: 10/23/2014 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

Bob Beauprez / Jill Repella

Joe Neguse

Libertarian Party

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: Colton Slensker, D.O.B. 06/30/2000 and Carliza Slensker D.O.B. 12/04/1998;

Precinct Sample Governor/Lieutenant Governor

Cory Gardner

Republican Party

PUBLIC NOTICE District Court, Douglas County, Colorado Court Address: 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO 80109

Vote Both Sides

Vote for One

Mark Udall

Misc. Private Legals

Douglas County Elections 125 Stephanie Place, Castle Rock

Five 24-hour ballot drop boxes will be available, October 14 - November 4. These boxes will close at 7:00 p.m. on Election Day.

Unaffiliated United States Senator

Legal Notice No.: 2014-0272 First Publication: 9/25/2014 Last Publication: 10/23/2014 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

American Constitution Party

Dave Schambach Libertarian Party

State Treasurer Vote for One

Walker Stapleton Republican Party

Betsy Markey

Democratic Party

David Jurist

Libertarian Party

Attorney General Vote for One

Don Quick

Democratic Party

Cynthia Coffman Republican Party

David K. Williams Libertarian Party

Regent of The University Of Colorado Congressional District 6 Vote for One

Naquetta Ricks Democratic Party

John Carson

Republican Party State Senate - District 30 Vote for One

Chris Holbert

Republican Party

Bette Davis

Democratic Party

Eric Price

Libertarian Party State Representative - District 39 Vote for One

James Clark Huff Democratic Party

Vote for One

David A. Weaver Republican Party

County Clerk and Recorder Vote for One

Merlin Klotz

Republican Party

County Treasurer Vote for One

Diane Holbert

Republican Party

County Assessor Vote for One

Lisa Frizell

Republican Party

County Sheriff Vote for One

Tony Spurlock Republican Party

Brock McCoy

Libertarian Party

County Surveyor Vote for One

Robert D. Snodgrass Republican Party

William G. Buntrock Democratic Party County Coroner Vote for One

Jill Romann

Republican Party

TO TH E RESPONDENTS NAMED Parker Fieldhouse ABOVE: You Drive, are hereby 18700 E. Plaza Parkernotified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the above-named Parker Town Hall children are dependent or neglected as perParker the facts set forth in 20120 E. Mainstreet, the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the of• Monday – Friday, fice of John at the October 20 –Thirkell, November 3, above address. 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. A hearing has been set for October 20, • Saturday, October 25, 2014 at 10:30 a.m. in Division 7, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Douglas County District Court, 4000 •Justice Saturday, November Way, Castle1,Rock, Colorado, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. 80109. • Monday, November 3, 8:00 to 5:00 p.m. Youra.m. presence before this court is re•quired Tuesday, November 4, the claims in this to defend against Election petition. Day, IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, DAY VOTER SERVICE TOELECTION CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY ANDAND POLLING HEARING MAY CENTERS: ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUInDICATING addition to the locations listed above, YOUR CHILDREN AS DEthe followingOR locations will be available to PENDENT NEGLECTED CHILDREN. assist with your election needs on Election Day, 4, 2014 from 7:00 a.m. You November have the right to request a trial by to jury 7:00 p.m.: at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption Official Ballotremedy For in this proceeding. If is a possible that is pursued, 2014remedy General Election you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have Douglas County, Colorado the right, if you are indigent, to have the November 04, at 2014 Court appoint, no expense to you, one expert witness of Town your ofown choosing at For Councilmember, Parker Vote for Not More Than any hearing on Three the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a Mark Lane minor, you have the right to the appointment ofDustin a Guardian Jensenad litem to represent your best interests. Mark Malsam You have the right to have this matter Mark S. Schmitt heard by a district court judge rather than by the Josh magistrate. Martin You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the Amy findings and recommendations of Holland the magistrate, subject to review as Al Bollwerk provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2013, and subsequently, to the right of apWilliams peal asRenee provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4. This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Justice Brian D. Boatright Shall Justice Brian D. Boatright the Colorado Supreme Court Services through its ofcounsel. be retained in office?

or No Vote Yes September Dated: 29, 2014 John Thirkell, Yes #13865 Assistant Douglas County Attorney No Legal Notice No.: 926135 Justice Monica M. Marquez First Publication: October 9, 2014 Shall Justice Monica M. Marquez of the Last Publication: October 9,Colorado 2014 Supreme Court be retained in office? County News-Press Publisher: Douglas Vote Yes or No

District Court, Douglas County, Colorado Court Address: 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO 80109

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: Colton Slensker, D.O.B. 06/30/2000 and Carliza Slensker D.O.B. 12/04/1998;

October 9, 2014

DEPENDENCY AND NEGLECT SUMMONS

This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2013.

TO THE RESPONDENTS NAMED ABOVE: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that and Concerning: the above-named children are dependent advertise 303-566-4100 Wilma Marie To Slensker, Mother,your publicornotices neglectedcall as per the facts set forth in Jason Bowling, Father, and the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a John Doe, Possible Father of copy of which may be obtained at the ofCarliza Slensker fice of John Thirkell, at the above address. Respondents, And Ryan Slensker A hearing has been set for October 20, and Christina Frazier, 2014 at 10:30 a.m. in Division 7, Special Respondents. Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, Attorney for Petitioner DCDHS 80109. John Thirkell, 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 Your presence before this court is re303-663-7726 quired to defend against the claims in this FAX 877- 285-8988 petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE Atty. Reg. #: 13865 COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABE-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us SENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY CASE NUMBER: 14JV189 HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGDIVISION 7 MENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEDEPENDENCY AND PENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. NEGLECT SUMMONS You have the right to request a trial by jury This Summons is initiated pursuant to at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of JuvenYou also have the right to legal representile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado ation at every stage of the proceedings by Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 19counsel of your own choosing, or if you 3-503, C.R.S. 2013. are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. TerTO THE RESPONDENTS NAMED mination of your parent-child legal relaABOVE: You are hereby notified that a tionship to free your children for adoption petition has been filed which alleges that is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If the above-named children are dependent that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to or neglected as per the facts set forth in a hearing before a Judge. You also have the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a the right, if you are indigent, to have the copy of which may be obtained at the ofCourt appoint, at no expense to you, one fice of John Thirkell, at the above address. expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your A hearing has been set for October 20, parent-child relationship. If you are a 2014 at 10:30 a.m. in Division 7, minor, you have the right to the appointDouglas County District Court, 4000 ment of a Guardian ad litem to represent Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, your best interests. 80109. You have the right to have this matter Your presence before this court is reheard by a district court judge rather than quired to defend against the claims in this by the magistrate. You may waive that petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE right, and in doing so, you will be bound COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABby the findings and recommendations of SENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, the magistrate, subject to review as TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDG2013, and subsequently, to the right of apMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUpeal as provided by Colorado Appellate DICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DERule 3.4. PENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. This will summons is being initiated Castle View High School Voters be MAILED a ballot that by the YouN. have the right to request a trial by jury contains Douglas County Human 5254 Meadows Drive, only thoseDepartment candidate(s)ofand/ at theRock adjudicatory stage of this petition. or Services through Castle issue(s) on which its thecounsel. voter is eligible You also have the right to legal representto vote. ation at every stage of the proceedings by Dated: September 29, 2014 Douglas County High School counsel of your own choosing, or if you John 2842 Front St., Castle Rock of Thirkell, Colorado#13865 ) are without sufficient financial means, ap- State Assistant Douglas County Attorney ) SS pointment of counsel by the Court. TerHighlands Ranch High School County of Douglas ) mination of your parent-child legal relaLegal Notice No.: 926135 9375 Cresthill Lane, tionship to free your children for adoption First Arrowsmith, Publication: Clerk October 2014 Highlands Ranch and9,Recorder is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If I, Jack Last Publication: October 9, 2014 do County, State of Colorado, that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to of Douglas Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Statecertify of Colorado ) Mountain Vista High School hereby that the following is a true a hearing before a Judge. You also have ) SS 10585 Mountain the right, if youVista are Ridge, indigent, to have the and correct list of all persons to be voted County of Douglas ) Highlands Ranch on at the General Election, along with RefCourt appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at erendums and Amendments, as certified I, Jack Arrowsmith, Clerk and Recorder Rock School any Canyon hearing High on the termination of your to me and filed in my office, In Testimony of Douglas that theI following is a true list of all pers 5810 McArthur Ranch Road, If you are a Whereof, have hereunto setand mycorrect hand and parent-child relationship. Highlands Ranch seal October 9, and 2014. along withthis Referendums Amendments, as certi minor, you have the right to the appoint- official Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and official s ment of a Guardian ad litem to represent ThunderRidge High School your best interests. 1991 Wildcat Reserve Parkway, Highlands Ranch You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than Chaparral High School by the magistrate. You may waive that 15655 Drive, right,Brookstone and in doing so, Parker you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of Ponderosa High School the magistrate, subject to review as 7007 E. Bayou Road, Parker C.R.S. provided by Gulch sec. 19-1-108(5.5), 2013, and subsequently, to the right of apPlease contact the Douglas County peal as provided by Colorado Appellate __________________________ Rule 3.4.Office at 303-660-7444 if you Elections Jack Arrowsmith have any questions regarding mail Clerk and Recorder of Douglas County This voting summons is being initiated by the ballot or visit DouglasVotes. Douglas Department com whereCounty many questions canofbeHuman Services through its counsel. answered. Legal Notice No.: 926143 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Dated: September All voters MAY NOT29, be2014 eligible to vote Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Thirkell, onJohn every issue#13865 in this General Election. Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Assistant Douglas County Attorney

Misc. Private Legals

Misc. Private Legals

Vote Sides Legal Notice No.:Both 926135 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Precinct Sample Judge Charles M. Pratt

Shall Judge Charles M. Pratt of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes No Judge Gerald J. Rafferty

Shall Judge Gerald J. Rafferty of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes No Judge Theresa Michelle Slade

Shall Judge Theresa Michelle Slade of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office?

Ballot questions referred by the general assembly or any political subdivision are listed by letter, and ballot questions initiated by the people are listed numerically. A ballot question listed as an "amendment" proposes a change to the Colorado constitution, and a ballot question listed as a "proposition" proposes a change to the Colorado Revised Statutes. A "yes/for" vote on any ballot question is a vote in favor of changing current law or existing circumstances, and a "no/against" vote on any ballot question is a vote against changing current law or existing circumstances. Amendment 67 (CONSTITUTIONAL)

Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado constitution protecting pregnant women and unborn children by defining "person" and "child" in the Colorado criminal code and the Colorado wrongful death act to include unborn human beings?

Vote Yes or No

Yes No

Vote Yes/For or No/Against

Judge Elizabeth Beebe Volz

Shall Judge Elizabeth Beebe Volz of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes/For No/Against

Amendment 68 (CONSTITUTIONAL)

Yes No

Yes No

Judge John L. Wheeler

Shall Judge John L. Wheeler of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes

Judge Terry Fox

Shall Judge Terry Fox of the Colorado Court of Appeals be retained in office?

No

Vote Yes or No

Yes No

Judge Alan M. Loeb

Shall Judge Alan M. Loeb of the Colorado Court of Appeals be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes No

Judge Lawrence Bowling

Shall Judge Lawrence Bowling of the Douglas County Court be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes

SHALL STATE TAXES BE INCREASED $114,500,000 ANNUALLY IN THE FIRST FULL FISCAL YEAR, AND BY SUCH AMOUNTS THAT ARE RAISED THEREAFTER, BY IMPOSING A NEW TAX ON AUTHORIZED HORSE RACETRACKS' ADJUSTED GROSS PROCEEDS FROM LIMITED GAMING TO INCREASE STATEWIDE FUNDING FOR K-12 EDUCATION, AND, IN CONNECTION THEREWITH, AMENDING THE COLORADO CONSTITUTION TO PERMIT LIMITED GAMING IN ADDITION TO PRE-EXISTING PARI-MUTUEL WAGERING AT ONE QUALIFIED HORSE RACETRACK IN EACH OF THE COUNTIES OF ARAPAHOE, MESA, AND PUEBLO; AUTHORIZING HOST COMMUNITIES TO IMPOSE IMPACT FEES ON HORSE RACETRACKS AUTHORIZED TO CONDUCT LIMITED GAMING; ALLOWING ALL RESULTING REVENUE TO BE COLLECTED AND SPENT NOTWITHSTANDING ANY LIMITATIONS PROVIDED BY LAW; AND ALLOCATING THE RESULTING TAX REVENUES TO A FUND TO BE DISTRIBUTED TO SCHOOL DISTRICTS AND THE CHARTER SCHOOL INSTITUTE FOR K-12 EDUCATION? Vote Yes/For or No/Against

No

Yes/For

Judge Monica J. Gomez

Shall Judge Monica J. Gomez of the Douglas County Court be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Shall Judge Michelle Ann Amico of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes No

Judge F. Stephen Collins

Shall Judge F. Stephen Collins of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office?

No

Judge Susanna Meissner-Cutler

Shall Judge Susanna Meissner-Cutler of the Douglas County Court be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

No/Against

Proposition 104 (STATUTORY)

Shall there be a change to the Colorado Revised Statutes requiring any meeting of a board of education, or any meeting between any representative of a school district and any representative of employees, at which a collective bargaining agreement is discussed to be open to the public?

Yes

Judge Michelle Ann Amico

Vote Yes/For or No/Against

Yes/For No/Against

Yes

Proposition 105 (STATUTORY)

No

Shall there be a change to the Colorado Revised Statutes concerning labeling of genetically modified food; and, in connection therewith, requiring food that has been genetically modified or treated with genetically modified material to be labeled, "Produced With Genetic Engineering" starting on July 1, 2016; exempting some foods including but not limited to food from animals that are not genetically modified but have been fed or injected with genetically modified food or drugs, certain food that is not packaged for retail sale and is intended for immediate human consumption, alcoholic beverages, food for animals, and medically prescribed food; requiring the Colorado department of public health and environment to regulate the labeling of genetically modified food; and specifying that no private right of action is created for failure to conform to the labeling requirements?

Vote Yes or No

Yes No

Judge Paul A. King

Shall Judge Paul A. King of the 18th Judicial District be retained in office? Vote Yes or No

Yes No

Vote Yes/For or No/Against

Yes/For

Polly Lawrence Republican Party

Vote Both Sides

CASE NUMBER: 14JV189 DIVISION 7

PUBLIC NOTICE

SA M PL

12001610100073

Legal Notice No.: 2014-0272 First Publication: 9/25/2014 Last Publication: 10/23/2014 Publisher: Douglas County News Press

NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, November 19, 2014, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/25/2014 Last Publication: 10/23/2014 Publisher: Douglas County News Press BALLOT DROP-OFF Dated: 7/30/2014 LOCATIONS AND HOURS: ROBERT J. HUSSON DOUGLAS COUNTY City of Castle PinesPublic Trustee The telephone num7501name, Villageaddress Square and Drive, bers of the attorney(s) Suite 100, Castle Pines representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: DAVID SHORE CastleA. Rock Motor Vehicle Office Colorado Registration #: 19973 301 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock 5347 S VALENTIA WAY SUITE 100, GREENWOOD VILLAGE, COLORADO Town of Castle Rock 80111 100 N. Wilcox Street, Castle Rock Phone #: (303) 573-1080 Fax #: Highlands Ranch Motor Vehicle Office Attorney File #:Reserve 14-00194SH 2223 Wildcat Parkway, #G-1, *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE Highlands Ranch SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustCity of Lone Tree ee/ 9220 Kimmer Drive, Suite100, Lone Notice Tree No.: 2014-0272 Legal First Publication: 9/25/2014 Monday – Friday, Last Publication: 10/23/2014 October 14 – November Publisher: Douglas County 3, News Press Regular business hours of location Saturday, November 1, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 4, Election Day, 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Public Trustees

12001610200080

To Whom It May Concern: On 7/29/2014 the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: TODD T BATES Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR GREENPOINT MORTGAGE FUNDING, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: U.S. BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF THE DEUTSCHE ALT-A SECURITIES MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2007-2 MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 2/27/2007 Recording Date of DOT: 3/6/2007 Reception No. of DOT: 2007019288 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $1,190,250.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $1,190,202.20 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 9, HERITAGE HILLS FILING NO. 1E,NOTICE ACCORDING TO AFFIDAVIT OF GENERAL ELECTION OF CORRECTION RECORDED AUGUST 19, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2014 1998 IN BOOK 1588 AT PAGE 743, DOUGLAS COUNTY COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. JACK ARROWSMITH, Which hasAND the RECORDER address of: 9340 E. Star CLERK Hill Trl, Lone Tree, CO 80124 In compliance with the provisions of ColoNOTICE OF1-5-205(1), SALE rado Revised Statute notice is hereby given that a General Election will be The current holder of the of Debt held on Tuesday, the 4thEvidence day of November secured by the Trustp.m. described 2014, from 7:00Deed a.m. of to 7:00 This herein, has filed written election and deNovember 4, 2014 General Election mand forconducted sale as provided by law and in will be as a MAIL BALLOT said Deed of Trust. election. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless The ballots will be mailed to all “active the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wedregistered voters” beginning week of nesday, November 19, 2014, the at the Pub14. Ifoffice, you are an Wilcox eligible elector licOctober Trustee’s 402 Street, of a district and do not receive a ballot by Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public October you may request a ballot auction to 21, the 2014, highest and best bidder for from the Clerk and Recorder’s Election cash, the said real property and all inHeadquarters, located atGrantor(s)’ 125 Stephanie terest of said Grantor(s), heirs Place, Castle Rock, CO or by calland assigns therein, for 80109, the purpose of ing 303-660-7444. paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Completed ballots may be returned by Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses “handitems delivered” to a by Douglas ofU.S. saleMail andorother allowed law, County BALLOT DROP-OFF and will deliver to the purchaserLOCATION. a Certific- If you to return completed ballot by ate of choose Purchase, all as aprovided by law. mail, you must affix one first class postage First Publication: 9/25/2014 stamp ($0.49) to10/23/2014 the OFFICIAL BALLOT Last Publication: RETURN ENVELOPE before mailing. Publisher: Douglas County News Press Ballots7/30/2014 must be received by the Douglas Dated: County Clerk & Recorder, Election Division ROBERT J. HUSSON office or Ballot Drop-off Location no later DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee than 7:00 p.m. on November 4, 2014. The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: DAVID A. SHORE Colorado Registration #: 19973 5347 S VALENTIA WAY SUITE 100, Official Ballot VILLAGE, For GREENWOOD COLORADO 80111 2014 General Election Phone #: (303) 573-1080 County, Colorado FaxDouglas #: November 2014 Attorney File #:04, 14-00194SH *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Public Trustees

Sample Ballot Sample Ballot

Lone Tree NOTICE OF SALE Public Trustee Sale No. 2014-0272

NOTICE OF SALE

The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust described herein, has filed written election and demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that on the first possible sale date (unless the sale is continued*) at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, November 19, 2014, at the Public Trustee’s office, 402 Wilcox Street, Castle Rock, Colorado, I will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/25/2014 Last Publication: 10/23/2014 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 7/30/2014 ROBERT J. HUSSON DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: DAVID A. SHORE Colorado Registration #: 19973 5347 S VALENTIA WAY SUITE 100, GREENWOOD VILLAGE, COLORADO 80111 Phone #: (303) 573-1080 Fax #: Attorney File #: 14-00194SH *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

000000000272 1013031141

PUBLIC NOTICE

Public Trustees

E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us

Sample Ballot

and will deliver to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication: 9/25/2014 Last Publication: 10/23/2014 Publisher: Douglas County News Press Dated: 7/30/2014 ROBERT J. HUSSON DOUGLAS COUNTY Public Trustee The name, address and telephone numbers of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: DAVID A. SHORE Colorado Registration #: 19973 5347 S VALENTIA WAY SUITE 100, GREENWOOD VILLAGE, COLORADO 80111 Phone #: (303) 573-1080 Fax #: Attorney File #: 14-00194SH *YOU MAY TRACK FORECLOSURE SALE DATES on the Public Trustee website: http://www.douglas.co.us/publictrustee/

Public Notices Public Trustees

Notices

Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses

30of sale and other items allowed by law,

No/Against

Vote Both Sides

Third Page of Sample Ballot On Next Page

1013031141

A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 9, HERITAGE HILLS FILING NO. 1E, ACCORDING TO AFFIDAVIT OF CORRECTION RECORDED AUGUST 19, 1998 IN BOOK 1588 AT PAGE 743, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 9340 E. Star Hill Trl, Lone Tree, CO 80124

E

30 Lone Tree Voice

the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in Douglas County. Original Grantor: TODD T BATES Original Beneficiary: MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR GREENPOINT MORTGAGE FUNDING, INC. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt: U.S. BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF THE DEUTSCHE ALT-A SECURITIES MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2007-2 MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES Date of Deed of Trust (DOT): 2/27/2007 Recording Date of DOT: 3/6/2007 Reception No. of DOT: 2007019288 DOT Recorded in Douglas County. Original Principal Amount of Evidence of Debt: $1,190,250.00 Outstanding Principal Amount as of the date hereof: $1,190,202.20 Pursuant to C.R.S. §38-38-101 (4) (i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: Failure to pay principal and interest when due together with all other payments provided for in the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust and other violations of the terms thereof. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. The property described herein is all of the property encumbered by the lien of the deed of trust. Legal Description of Real Property: LOT 9, HERITAGE HILLS FILING NO. 1E, ACCORDING TO AFFIDAVIT OF CORRECTION RECORDED AUGUST 19, 1998 IN BOOK 1588 AT PAGE 743, COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO. Which has the address of: 9340 E. Star Hill Trl, Lone Tree, CO 80124


pointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have the right, if you are indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent your best interests.

October 9, 2014

Misc. Private Legals

You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2013, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4. This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel. Dated: September 29, 2014 John Thirkell, #13865 Assistant Douglas County Attorney

LOWS:

and said County Treasurer issued a certificate of purchase therefore to JD Ventures Ltd. That said tax lien sale was made to satisfy the delinquent taxes assessed against said real estate for the year 2010; That said real estate was taxed or specially assessed in the name(s) of Lynne M Supan for said year 2010.That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued for said real estate to the said JD Ventures Ltd at 1:00 o’clock P.M., on the 8th day of January 2015, unless the same has been redeemed. Said property may be redeemed from said sale at any time prior to the actual execution of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness my hand this 15th day of September 2014.

BASIS OF BEARINGS: THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 21 BEING CONSIDERED TO BEAR SOUTH 89°52’04” WEST.

Government Legals

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REAL ESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE AND OF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE OF TREASURER’S DEED To Every Person in Actual Possession or Occupancy of the hereinafter Described Land, Lot or Premises, and to the Person in Whose Name the Same was Taxed or Specially Assessed, and to all Persons having an Interest or Title of Record in or to the said Premises and To Whom It May Concern, and more especially to: OCCUPANT - Bellco Credit Union Corrine Morse - Lynne M Supan fka Lynne M Ferguson - Mark A Ferguson Mark A Ferguson and Lynne M Ferguson - Paul F Supan & Helen L Supan & Mark A Ferguson & Lynne M Ferguson - Paul F Supan and Helen L Supan aka Paul L Supan and Helen L Supan -The First National Bank of Bear Valley c/o Wells Fargo Bank, National Association - Vernon Ronysad, Mortgage Loan Officer, The First National Bank of Bear Valley c/o Wells Fargo Bank, National Association - JD Ventures Ltd. You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 20th day of October 2011 the then County Treasurer of the County of Douglas, in the State of Colorado, sold at public tax lien sale to JD Ventures Ltd the following described real estate situate in the County of Douglas, State of Colorado, to wit: LOT 4 BLK 5 THE PINERY 4 329-168 0.407 AM/L and said County Treasurer issued a certificate of purchase therefore to JD Ventures Ltd. That said tax lien sale was made to satisfy the delinquent taxes assessed against said real estate for the year 2010; That said real estate was taxed or specially assessed in the name(s) of Lynne M Supan for said year 2010.That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued for said real estate to the said JD Ventures Ltd at 1:00 o’clock P.M., on the 8th day of January 2015, unless the same has been redeemed. Said property may be redeemed from said sale at any time prior to the actual execution of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness my hand this 15th day of September 2014.

3) SOUTH 57°56’47” WEST A DISTANCE OF 372.14 FEET TO THE BEGINNING OF A NON-TANGENT CURVE CONCAVE SOUTHWESTERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 177.50 FEET, THE RADIUS POINT OF SAID CURVE BEARS SOUTH 65°02’10” WEST;

OCCUPANT - CB Capital Investments 311, LP - CB International Investments LLC - Clark Property Tax Investments LLC- Dianne Bailey, Public Trustee, Douglas County - Lonnie J Pebley c/o Lonnie's Excavating - Lonnie's Excavating, Inc - Neumann Homes of Colorado LLC - Public Trustee, Douglas County - Realnet Companies of America Inc You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 21st day of October 2010 the then County Treasurer of the County of Douglas, in the State of Colorado, sold at public tax lien sale to CB Capital Investments 311, LP the following described real estate situate in the County of Douglas, State of Colorado, to wit: TR IN NW1/4SW1/4 21-6-66 10.931 AM/L LSP 4128 ALSO KNOWN AS PER DOUGLAS COUNTY ASSESSOR: PARCEL DESCRIPTION (PARCEL 7 OF TITLE COMMITMENT) A PARCEL OF LAND BEING A PORTION OF THAT PARCEL OF LAND DESCRIBED IN WARRANTY DEED RECORDED MARCH 17, 2004 AT RECEPTION NO. 2004026975 IN THE RECORDS OF THE CLERK AND RECORDER OF THE COUNTY OF DOUGLAS, STATE OF COLORADO, LYING WITHIN THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 21, TOWNSHIP 6 SOUTH, RANGE 66 WEST OF THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, IN THE TOWN OF PARKER, SAID COUNTY AND STATE, MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BASIS OF BEARINGS: THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 21 BEING CONSIDERED TO BEAR SOUTH 89°52’04” WEST. BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF TRACT M, OLDE TOWN AT PARKER FILING NO. 1A, CORRECTED FINAL PLAT, AS RECORDED AT RECEPTION NO. 2004047176 IN SAID RECORDS; THENCE ALONG THE BOUNDARY OF SAID PLAT THE FOLLOWING EIGHT (8) COURSES: 1) SOUTH 73°07’30” WEST A DISTANCE OF 307.13 FEET;

6) NORTHWESTERLY ALONG SAID CURVE THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 44°08’40” AN ARC LENGTH OF 252.33 FEET; 7) NON-TANGENT TO SAID CURVE, NORTH 41°17’34” WEST A DISTANCE OF 19.32 FEET; 8) NORTH 01°56’52” EAST A DISTANCE OF 277.18 FEET TO THE NORTHERLY LINE OF SAID PARCEL OF LAND RECORDED AT RECEPTION NO. 2004026975; THENCE, ALONG SAID NORTHERLY LINE, SOUTH 89°59’17” EAST A DISTANCE OF 1,093.48 FEET TO THE WESTERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY OF SOUTH MOTSENBOCKER ROAD AS DESCRIBED IN DEEDS RECORDED AT RECEPTION NO.’S 2002116352 AND 2003084445 IN SAID RECORDS; THENCE ALONG SAID WESTERL Y RIGHT-OF-WAY THE FOLLOWING THREE (3) COURSES: 1) SOUTH 00°14’26” EAST A DISTANCE OF 116.92 FEET TO THE BEGINNING OF A TANGENT CURVE CONCAVE EASTERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 585.00 FEET; 2) SOUTHERLY ALONG SAID CURVE THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 15°13’35” AN ARC LENGTH OF 155.46 FEET; 3) TANGENT TO SAID CURVE, SOUTH 15°28’01” EAST A DISTANCE OF 6.20 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. CONTAINING AN AREA OF 10.931 ACRES (476,172 SQUARE FEET) , MORE OR LESS. and said County Treasurer issued a certificate of purchase therefore to CB Capital Investments 311, LP. That said tax lien sale was made to satisfy the delinquent* taxes assessed against said real estate for the year 2009. That said real estate was taxed or specially assessed in the name(s) of Realnet Companies of America Inc for said year 2009 That on the 17th day of July 2014 said CB Capital Investments 311, LP assigned said certificate of purchase to CB International Investments LLC.That said CB International Investments LLC on the 22nd day of July 2014 the present holder of said certificate, has made request upon the Treasurer of said County for a deed to said real estate; That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued for said real estate to the said CB International Investments LLC at 1:00 o’clock P.M., on the 8th day of January 2015 unless the same has been redeemed. Said property may be redeemed from said sale at any time prior to the actual execution of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness my hand this 15th day of September 2014.

2) SOUTH 57°27’40” WEST A DISTANCE OF 159.09 FEET;

SHALL AURORA'S TAXES BE INCREASED BY $2,400,000 ANNUALLY IN THE FIRST FULL FISCAL YEAR OF SUCH INCREASE AND BY WHATEVER ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS ARE RAISED ANNUALLY THEREAFTER FROM THE IMPOSITION OF A 5.0% EXCISE TAX ON THE AVERAGE MARKET RATE OF UNPROCESSED RETAIL MARIJUANA THAT IS SOLD OR TRANSFERRED FROM A RETAIL MARIJUANA CULTIVATION FACILITY AND AN ADDITIONAL 2.0% SALES AND USE TAX ON THE SALE AND USE OF RETAIL MARIJUANA AND RETAIL MARIJUANA PRODUCTS, WITH THE RATE OF SUCH SALES AND USE TAX BEING ALLOWED TO BE INCREASED OR DECREASED WITHOUT FURTHER VOTER APPROVAL SO LONG AS THE RATE OF TAXATION DOES NOT EXCEED 10%, AND SHALL THE REVENUES FROM SUCH TAXES BE COLLECTED, RETAINED, AND SPENT AS A VOTER-APPROVED REVENUE CHANGE AND AN EXCEPTION TO THE LIMITS WHICH WOULD OTHERWISE APPLY UNDER ARTICLE X, SECTION 20 OF THE COLORADO CONSTITUTION, SECTION 11-27 OF THE AURORA CHARTER, OR ANY OTHER LAW WHICH PURPORTS TO LIMIT AURORA'S REVENUES OR EXPENDITURES? Vote Yes or No

Yes

4) NORTHWESTERLY ALONG SAID /s/ Diane A. Holbert CURVE THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE Treasurer of Douglas County OF 11°02’57” AN ARC LENGTH OF 34.23 PrecinctCounty Sample FEET; Legal Notice No.: 926001 First Publication: September 25, 2014 5) TANGENT TO SAID CURVE, NORTH Last Publication: October 9, 2014 36°00’47” WEST A Issue DISTANCE OF 244.53 South Suburban Ballot 4C Publisher: Douglas County News-Press FEET TO THE BEGINNING OF A TANSOUTH SUBURBAN PARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT GENTISSUE CURVE CONCAVE SOUTHWESTBALLOT 4C: SHALL SOUTH SUBURBAN PARK AND ERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 327.50 RECREATION DISTRICT TAXES BE INCREASED $4,539,010 FEET; IN 2015, OR BY SUCH AN AMOUNT AS MAY BE RAISED ANNUALLY THEREAFTER FOR A TEN YEAR PERIOD ONLY, ENDING IN COLLECTION YEAR 2024SAID BY 6) NORTHWESTERLY ALONG THE IMPOSITION OF AN ADDITIONAL AD VALOREM CURVE THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE PROPERTY TAX RATE OF 2 MILLS, FOR GENERAL OF 44°08’40” AN ARC LENGTH OF OPERATING AND OTHER PURPOSES, INCLUDING: 252.33AND FEET; PROTECT ENHANCE THE HIGH LINE CANAL TRAIL, THE SOUTH PLATTE RIVER TRAIL (MARY CARTER 7) NON-TANGENT TO SAID CURVE, GREENWAY) AND OTHER LOCAL TRAILS; REPAIR, MAINTAIN AND IMPROVE EXISTING PARKS, RECREATION NORTH 41°17’34” WEST A DISTANCE FACILITIES ANDFEET; PLAYGROUNDS; REPLACE OUTDATED OF 19.32 MECHANICAL EQUIPMENT WITH NEW ENERGY SAVING SYSTEMS INCLUDING SOLAR ENERGY; AND SAVE 8) NORTH 01°56’52” EAST A DISTANCE WATER BY REPLACING AGING AND INEFFICIENT OF 277.18 FEET TO THE NORTHERLY IRRIGATION SYSTEMS IN PARKS AND USING LINE OF SAID PARCEL OF AND LAND RENON-TREATED WATER WHERE FEASIBLE; SHALL C O REVENUES R D E D BEACOLLECTED, T R E C RETAINED E P T I OAND N NO. SUCH SPENT 2 0 0 NOTWITHSTANDING 4 0 2 6 9 7 5 ; ANY OTHER REVENUE LIMITS PROVIDED BY LAW?

Aurora Ballot Issue 2B Additional Funding For Transportation Needs

THENCE ALONG SAID WESTERLY RIGHT- OF-WAY THE FOLLOWING THREE (3) COURSES:

1) SOUTH 00°14’26” EAST A DISTANCE OF 116.92 FEET TO THE BEGINNING OF A TANGENT CURVE CONCAVE EASTERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 585.00 FEET;

2) SOUTHERLY ALONG SAID CURVE THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 15°13’35” AN ARC LENGTH OF 155.46 FEET;

000000000169

Aurora Ballot Issue 2C Additional Funding For Public Safety Needs

SHALL AURORA'S TAXES BE INCREASED BY $5,924,000 ANNUALLY IN THE FIRST FULL FISCAL YEAR OF SUCH INCREASE, AND BY WHATEVER ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS ARE RAISED ANNUALLY THEREAFTER FROM A 2.00 MILL PROPERTY TAX TO HELP MEET THE CAPITAL AND OPERATIONAL NEEDS OF AURORA'S POLICE, FIRE, AND PUBLIC SAFETY COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENTS, MUNICIPAL COURT, AND DETENTION CENTER, AND SHALL THE REVENUES FROM SUCH TAX BE COLLECTED, RETAINED, AND SPENT AS A VOTER-APPROVED REVENUE CHANGE AND AN EXCEPTION TO THE LIMITS WHICH WOULD OTHERWISE APPLY UNDER ARTICLE X, SECTION 20 OF THE COLORADO CONSTITUTION, SECTION 11-27 OF THE AURORA CHARTER, OR ANY OTHER LAW WHICH PURPORTS TO LIMIT AURORA'S REVENUES OR EXPENDITURES? Vote Yes or No

Yes No Aurora Ballot Question 2D Keeping of Pit Bulls

Shall the people of Aurora adopt an ordinance allowing pit bulls back into their city? Vote Yes or No

Yes No

CONTAINING AN AREA OF 10.931 ACRES (476,172 S QUARE FEET), MORE OR LESS. and said County Treasurer issued a certificate of purchase therefore to CB Capital Investments 311, LP. That said tax lien sale was made to satisfy the delinquent* taxes assessed against said real estate for the year 2009. That said real estate was taxed or specially assessed in the name(s) of Realnet Companies of America Inc for said year 2009

That on the 17th day of July 2014 said CB Capital Investments 311, LP assigned said certificate of purchase to CB International Investments LLC.That said CB International Investments LLC on the 22nd day of July 2014 the present holder of said certificate, has made request upon the Treasurer of said County for a deed to said real estate; That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued for said real estate to the said CB International Investments LLC at 1:00 o’clock P.M., on the 8th day of January 2015 unless the same has been redeemed. Said property may be redeemed from said sale at any time prior to the actual execution of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness my hand this 15th day of September 2014. /s/ Diane A. Holbert County Treasurer of Douglas County Legal Notice No.: 926001 First Publication: September 25, 2014

/s/ Diane A. Holbert County Treasurer of Douglas County Legal Notice No.: 926001 First Publication: September 25, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press Public Notice PUBLIC NOTICE CONCERNING DOUGLAS COUNTY’S COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) 2013 CONSOLIDATED ANNUAL PERFORMANCE AND EVALUATION REPORT (CAPER) Douglas County has prepared a CAPER, which evaluates overall progress in addressing priorities and specific objectives identified in the 2009-2013 Douglas County Consolidated Plan and Annual Action Plan for the 2013 program year. This report summarizes CDBG project accomplishments and provides a financial summary of the 2013 CDBG programs. The County invites public review of this document beginning October 14, 2014 and ending October 28, 2014. The CAPER is submitted to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in accordance with program regulations. Persons interested in reviewing the report should contact Tina Dill, Resource Services Supervisor at 303-814-4380 in the Department of Community Development, 100 Third St., Castle Rock. Reasonable accommodations can be provided to individuals with disabilities or those who do not speak English to ensure meaningful review of this document. Arrangements for accommodations are to be made in advance, and may include TDD/TTY/Relay number, and use of interpreters as needed. Legal Notice No.: 926145 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Government Legals

Attorney for Petitioner DCDHS John Thirkell 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 303-663-7726 FAX 877- 285-8988 Atty. Reg. #: 13865 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us

District Court, Douglas County, Colorado Court Address: 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO 80109 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: Colton Mares, D.O.B. 04/18/2009 and Concerning: Natalie Leah Mares, Mother, Jeremy Shaffer, Father, Respondents, and Maternal Grandmother Gail Mares, Special Respondent.

Government Legals

Dated: September 30, 2014 John Thirkell, #13865 Assistant Douglas County Attorney

Legal Notice No.: 926141 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

PUBLIC NOTICE

CASE NUMBER: 14JV * DIVISION 2 SUMMONS IN DEPENDENCY OR NEGLECT This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2013. TO THE RESPONDENTS NAMED ABOVE: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the above-named children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address. A hearing has been set for December 8, 2014, at 11:30 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109. Your presence before this court is required to defend against the claims in this petition. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR, THE COURT WILL PROCEED IN YOUR ABSENCE, WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE, TO CONDUCT AN ADJUDICATORY HEARING AND MAY ENTER A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT THEREBY ADJUDICATING YOUR CHILDREN AS DEPENDENT OR NEGLECTED CHILDREN. You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have the right, if you are indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent your best interests. You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2013, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4.

PUBLIC NOTICE

This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel. Dated: September 30, 2014 John Thirkell, #13865 Assistant Douglas County Attorney

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) #037-14 INDOOR ARENA LIGHTING DESIGN The Department of Facilities, Fleet & Emergency Support Services of Douglas County Government, hereinafter referred to as the County, respectfully requests proposals from responsible, qualified electrical and/or lighting design companies to provide a lighting design plan for the Indoor Arena located at the Douglas County Fairgrounds in Castle Rock, Colorado. The Indoor Arena was built in 2003 and has hosted a variety of events to include equine competitions and shows, dog agility training and shows, youth athletic events and banquets. The County is looking to upgrade the existing lighting system to a more energy efficient system without sacrificing the current footcandle readings of 40 to 50 fc range. The County will entertain a plan that includes LED, LED retrofit kits, multi-lamp T5 / T8 or induction lights. The RFP documents may be reviewed and/or printed from the Rocky Mountain EPurchasing System website at www.rockymountainbidsystem.com. RFP documents are not available for purchase from Douglas County Governme nt and can only be accessed from the above-mentioned website. While the RFP documents are available electronically, Douglas County cannot accept electronic proposal responses. Proposal responses will be received until 4:00 p.m. on Friday, October 24, 2014 by Douglas County Government, Finance Department, Purchasing Division, 100 Third Street, Suite 130, Castle Rock, Colorado 80104. Four (4) hard-copies of your proposal response shall be submitted in a sealed envelope, plainly marked “Request for Proposal (RFP) #037-14, Indoor Arena Lighting Design”. Electronic/faxed proposals will not be accepted. Proposals will not be considered which are received after the time stated, and any proposals so received will be returned unopened. Douglas County Government reserves the right to reject any and all proposals, to waive formalities, informalities, or irregularities contained in a said proposal and furthermore, to award a contract for items herein, either in whole or in part, if it is deemed to be in the best interest of the County to do so. Additionally, we reserve the right to negotiate optional items and/or services with the successful firm. Please direct any questions concerning this RFP to Carolyn Riggs, Purchasing Supervisor at 303-660-7434 or criggs@douglas.co.us, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Legal Notice No.: 926172 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

BE Informed!

Attorney for Petitioner DCDHS John Thirkell 4400 Castleton Ct. Castle Rock, CO 80109 303-663-7726 FAX 877- 285-8988 Atty. Reg. #: 13865 E-mail: jthirkel@douglas.co.us

Legal Notice No.: 926141 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

CASE NUMBER: 14JV * DIVISION 2 SUMMONS IN DEPENDENCY OR NEGLECT

This Summons is initiated pursuant to Rule 2.2 of the Colorado Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rule 4 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, and Section 193-503, C.R.S. 2013.

You have the right to request a trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage of this petition. You also have the right to legal representation at every stage of the proceedings by counsel of your own choosing, or if you are without sufficient financial means, appointment of counsel by the Court. Termination of your parent-child legal relationship to free your children for adoption is a possible remedy in this proceeding. If that remedy is pursued, you are entitled to a hearing before a Judge. You also have the right, if you are indigent, to have the Court appoint, at no expense to you, one expert witness of your own choosing at any hearing on the termination of your parent-child relationship. If you are a minor, you have the right to the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent your best interests.

Adopt Me

You have the right to have this matter heard by a district court judge rather than by the magistrate. You may waive that right, and in doing so, you will be bound by the findings and recommendations of the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2013, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4.

3) TANGENT TO SAID CURVE, SOUTH 15°28’01” EAST A DISTANCE OF 6.20 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING.

This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel. Dated: September 30, 2014 John Thirkell, #13865 Assistant Douglas County Attorney

1013031141

No

That on the 17th day of July 2014 said CB Capital Investments 311, LP assigned said certificate of purchase to CB International Investments LLC.That said CB International Investments LLC on the 22nd day of July 2014 the present holder of said certificate, has made request upon the Treasurer of said County for a deed to said real estate; That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued for said real estate to the said CB International Investments LLC at 1:00 o’clock P.M., on the 8th day of January 2015 unless the same has been redeemed. Said property may be redeemed from said sale at any time prior to the actual execution of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness my hand this 15th day o f September 2014.

and Concerning: Natalie Leah Mares, Mother, Jeremy Shaffer, Father, Respondents, and Maternal Grandmother Gail Mares, Special Respondent.

Lone Tree Voice 31

This summons is being initiated by the Douglas County Department of Human Services through its counsel.

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

SA Yes

Government Legals

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO In the Interest of: Colton Mares, D.O.B. 04/18/2009

the magistrate, subject to review as provided by sec. 19-1-108(5.5), C.R.S. 2013, and subsequently, to the right of appeal as provided by Colorado Appellate Rule 3.4.

Read the Legal Notices!

M PL

SHALL AURORA'S TAXES BE INCREASED BY $4,991,000 ANNUALLY IN THE FIRST FULL FISCAL YEAR OF SUCH INCREASE, AND BY WHATEVER ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS ARE RAISED ANNUALLY THEREAFTER THROUGH AND INCLUDING THE YEAR 2029, FROM A 1.685 MILL PROPERTY TAX TO PAY FOR THE ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, INSTALLATION, REPAIR, AND MAINTENANCE OF TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE WITHIN AURORA, THE EXPENDITURE OF WHICH TAX SHALL BE DETERMINED USING A PRIORITY-SETTING PROCESS TO INCLUDE INPUT FROM CITY COUNCIL WARD MEETINGS, AURORA CITIZEN ADVISORY COMMITTEES, AND OTHER PUBLIC VENUES IN ADDITION TO THE REGULAR ANNUAL CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS PRIORITIZATION, AND SHALL THE REVENUES FROM SUCH TAX BE COLLECTED, RETAINED, AND SPENT AS A VOTER-APPROVED REVENUE CHANGE AND AN EXCEPTION TO THE LIMITS WHICH WOULD OTHERWISE APPLY UNDER ARTICLE X, SECTION 20 OF THE COLORADO CONSTITUTION, SECTION 11-27 OF THE AURORA CHARTER, OR ANY OTHER LAW WHICH PURPORTS TO LIMIT AURORA'S REVENUES OR EXPENDITURES?

and said County Treasurer issued a certificate of purchase therefore to CB Capital Investments 311, LP. That said tax lien sale was made to satisfy the delinquent* taxes assessed against said real estate for the year 2009. That said real estate was taxed or specially assessed in the name(s) of Realnet Companies of America Inc for said year 2009

Court Address: 4000 Justice Way Castle Rock, CO 80109

A hearing has been set for December 8, 2014, at 11:30 a.m. in Division 7, Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, Colorado, 80109.

THENCE, ALONG SAID NORTHERLY LINE, SOUTH 89°59’17” EAST A DISYesOF 1,093.48 FEET TO THE TANCE WESTERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY OF SOUTH No MOTS ENBOCKER ROAD AS DESCRIBED IN DEEDS RECORDED AT RECEPTION NO.’S 2002116352 AND 2003084445 IN SAID RECORDS;

Vote Yes or No

No

FEET),

TO THE RESPONDENTS NAMED ABOVE: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed which alleges that the above-named children are dependent or neglected as per the facts set forth in the Dependency and Neglect Petition, a copy of which may be obtained at the office of John Thirkell, at the above address.

Sample Ballot

Aurora Ballot Issue 2A Retail Marijuana Tax

22001610300072

5) TANGENT TO SAID CURVE, NORTH 36°00’47” WEST A DISTANCE OF 244.53 FEET TO THE BEGINNING OF A TANGENT CURVE CONCAVE SOUTHWESTERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 327.50 FEET;

E

2014 General Election Douglas County, Colorado November 04, 2014

Sample Ballot

4) NORTHWESTERLY ALONG SAID CURVE THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 11°02’57” AN ARC LENGTH OF 34.23 FEET;

Dougals County Sample Ballot

Legal Notice No.: 926000 3) SOUTH 57°56’47” WEST A DISFirst Publication: September 25, 2014 TANCE OF 372.14 FEET TO THE BELast Publication: October 9, 2014 GINNING OF A NON-TANGENT CURVE Publisher: Douglas County News-Press CONCAVE Third Page of Sample Ballot Continued From Last Page SOUTHWESTERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 177.50 FEET, THE RADIUS POINT OF SAID CURVE BEARS SOUTH 65°02’10” WEST; Official Ballot For

Vote Yes or No

THENCE ALONG THE BOUNDARY OF SAID PLAT THE FOLLOWING EIGHT (8) COURSES: 1) SOUTH 73°07’30” WEST A DISTANCE OF 307.13 FEET;

Legal Notice No.: 926000 First Publication: September 25, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

To Every Person in Actual Possession or Occupancy of the hereinafter Described Land, Lot or Premises, and to the Person in Whose Name the Same was Taxed or Specially Assessed, and to all Persons having an Interest or Title of Record in or to the said Premises and To Whom It May Concern, and more especially to:

Government Legals

Government Legals

2) SOUTH 57°27’40” WEST A DISTANCE OF 159.09 FEET;

Public Notice

(476,172 SQUARE 31 ACRES MORE OR LESS.

BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF TRACT M, OLDE TOWN AT PARKER FILING NO. 1A, CORRECTED FINAL PLAT, AS RECORDED AT RECEPTION NO. 2004047176 IN SAID RECORDS;

/s/ Diane A. Holbert County Treasurer of Douglas County

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REAL ESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE AND OF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE OF TREASURER’S DEED

Legal Notice No.: 926135 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

/s/ Diane A. Holbert County Treasurer of Douglas County

0.407 AM/L

Note: Actual Ballot contains a blank fourth page.

Legal Notice No.: 926141 First Publication: October 9, 2014 Last Publication: October 9, 2014 Publisher: Douglas County News-Press

Valerie here! I love to be petted and purr loudly to let you know how much. I'm also gentle, quiet and smart, picking up tricks like high five, sit and sit pretty quickly. While I might do better in a household with older kids, I do love being around people and have lived with other cats. Come visit me today--I can't wait to meet you! ID# 0429413

DENVER | CASTLE ROCK | 303.751.5772 | DDFL.ORG


32

32 Lone Tree Voice

0 72 !

October 9, 2014

% APR

for

months

On OVER 8

2014 RAM 1500

Different Dodge & RAM Models.

$199 4x4 Express

LEASE

W.A.C. See dealer for details.

D6081

MONTH + TAX

27 month lease, 10,000 miles per year, through Chrysler Capital with approved credit, Customer must qualify for standard Rebates and Returning Lessee, Ram Loyalty -or- Competitive Upgrade Bonus, Chrysler Capital Bonus Cash. MSRP $40,510 63% Residual Value, Payment does not include Tax

2015

Chrysler 200S

$219

LEASE MONTH + TAX D6436

39 month Lease, 10,000 miles per year with Approved Credit through Chrysler Capital. Customer must Qualify for Conquest Lease Program 39CFA1 & Chrysler Capital Cash. $2,499 Down at time of Delivery. Payment does not Include Tax STK # D6436 MSRP $28,860 Residual 51%

2014 Jeep Cherokee

Chevy Silverado 1500 4x4 STOCK #G3700 UP TO $9.500.00 OFF MSRP $43.400.00 WAC PLUS TAX AND FEE. MUST QUALIFY FOR ALL INCENTIVES.

$5,250 IN SAVING MUST QUALIFY FOR REBATES CONQUEST LEASE WAC MSRP $28,515

9,500

399

2014

Jeep Grand Cherokee

Dodge Durango

Laredo 4x4

$6,000 OVER

LEASE

MONTH + TAX D6413TT

27 month Lease, 10,000 miles per year, with Approved Credit with Chrysler Capital. Customer must Qualify for Conquest Lease Program 38CEA1. $1999 Down at time of Delivery. Payment does not Include Tax MSRP $34,090 Residual Value 65%

GUARANTEES the MAXIM PREOWNED SPECIALS UM trade allow ance for your trade ! 2011 Ford Escape $14,999 D6305A 2013 Nissan Altima $15,999 V0065 2011 BMW X3 $26,999 F3395A 2013 Ford F150 Raptor $49,999 F3402A

TOTAL SAVINGS

LEASE G4089

LEASE THIS WELL EQUIPPED GMC ACADIA FOR JUST $399.00 PLUS TAX. THIS IS A 39 MONTH LEASE 10K PER YEAR, WITH $1,999.00 DAS. FOR WELL QUALIFIED BUYERS.

10% OFF ANY REPAIR OR

MAINTENANCE (max savings of $150.00)

148 Quarterback for the Denver Broncos

$189.95

(up to 6 qts. of oil. diesel and synthetic extra. Shop supplies and disposal fees extra.)

Shop supplies and disposal fees extra.

• OIL CHANGE • ROTATE • INSPECTION

• DIESEL OIL CHANGE • FUEL FILTER

REPLACEMENT

$28,995 ! 100 2014 FORD F-150

OVER

F3357T

IN STOCK TO

CHOOSE FROM

$21,995

2014 FORD FUSION F3115T

LEASE

Peyton Manning

$32.95

See dealer for details.

MONTH + TAX

STOCK # G4188T LEASE THIS WELL EQUIPED BUICK FOR JUST $148.00 PER MONTH WITH JUST $1,499.00 DAS. 39 MONTH LEASE WITH 10K PER YEAR. PLUS TAX FOR WELL QUALIFIED BUYERS.

Expires 11/31/2014

NO Charge 5yr/100,000 Limited Powertrain Warranty w/purchase of any new F -150 thru month end!

2014 Buick Verano

$

MSRP

SERVICE SPECIALS! ALL MAKES / ALL MODELS

MSRP IS 37675-1500 VALUE PACKAGE-3000 REBATE AND -1500 TRADE REBATE-2680 MEDVED DISCOUNT YOUR PRICE $28,995 YOU ALSO GET A 5/100K POWERTRAIN WARRANTY ON THIS TRUCK VERY WELL EQUIPPED STX PACKAGE, 18” WHEELS, SYNC, TOW PACKAGE, FOG LAMPS....THE LIST JUST GOES ON, GREAT BUY ON A GREAT TRUCK!

MONTH + TAX

OFF

MSRP $47075 MUST QUALIFY FOR REBATES TOTALING $2000 + TAXES STK# D6499

$

Up to

2014 GMC Acadia

$

2014

$23,871 $299

Medved Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram 1520 S Wilcox Castle Rock, CO 80104 (720) 733-7156 www.MedvedSouth.com

2014

Sport

D6267

MSRP $26,925, $2,500 rebate, $500 Ford credit rebate $1,926 Medved discount, beautiful car alloy wheels, rear spoiler great MPG!

$20,777 2013 FORD C-MAX

F3115T

This is a beautiful C-MAX Hybrid SE, well equipped including 203a package, reverse sensing, nav, power liftgate, get over 40 MPG!

Medved Chevy Buick/GMC

1506 S Wilcox Castle Rock, CO 80104

(720) 733-7114 www.MedvedSouth.com

1404 S Wilcox Castle Rock, CO 80104

(720) 733-7119 www.MedvedSouth.com


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