HISTORY TOM BENTON’S PRO-POT POSTER 13
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A&E AN ELEPHANT REVIVAL AT BELLY UP 20
DECEMBER 13-19, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY
CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY
FIND IT INSIDE
GEAR | PAGE 14
SO, POT’S LEGAL? KINDA … SEE PAGE 23
BELLY UP ASPEN WHERE ASPEN GOES FOR LIVE MUSIC.
THU 12/13 SHOW 9:30 PM
ELEPHANT REVIVAL
This transcendental folk quintet has “a magical blend of melodies and rhythms with their roots in the past and their hearts in the future�. – Bill Nershi of The String Cheese Incident
SHOW 9 PM
THE SHINS 8 5&//*4
Grammy nominated indie rock band, ‘07’s “Wincing the Night Away� debuted at #2 on the Billboard charts. ‘12’s “Port of Morrow� is “one of the best-sounding records of 2012 thus far� - Pitchfork
SUN 12/16
SAT 12/15
SHOW 9:30 PM
FRI 12/14
MON 12/17
GAME 6:20 | SHOW 9:30
GAME 6:30 PM
ADVENTURE CLUB
ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS
ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS
Returning after their sold out show this summer, this dubstep duo’s remixes range from 1950’s classics to post-hardcore rock to the sweet electronic sounds of today.
49ERS VS. PATRIOTS NO COVER FOR GAME
JETS VS. TITANS
NFL FOOTBALL:
8 %003-:
CHERUB 8 % 7 4
Cherub is an avante garde, electro-pop duo that is the “dance love-child of 80’s funk, and pop-music�.- Hypetrak. They have coheadlined with Mansions on the Moon and opened for BoomBox at Belly Up.
NFL FOOTBALL:
CELEBRATE THE END OF THE OFF SEASON! ALL ENTREES + DRAFT OF YOUR CHOICE ONLY $10 all night long. 16ft HD screen, drink specials, giveaways!
NO COVER
JUST ANNOUNCED:
TUE 12/18
THE MALAH
SHOW 9:30 PM
Denver based live electronic trio, The Malah has a “robust, multi-instrumental sound with upbeat melodies and awless musicianshipâ€? - JamBase
WED 12/19
GRiZ
SHOW 9:30 PM
8 5*.&-*/&
The DJ/producer that sold out the Fox in Boulder in just 5-hours returns to the Belly Up after supporting Adventure Club & Big Gigantic.
www.bellyupaspen.com | BOX OFFICE: 970 544-9800
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D e c e m b e r 13 - 19 , 2 0 1 2
t /&8 :&"34 &7& $&&-0 (3&&/ '&"563*/( (00%*& .0# t X GAMES MUSIC PRESENTS: #-0$ 1"35: t X GAMES MUSIC PRESENTS: 5:-&3 5)& $3&"503 &"3-: 4)08 t X GAMES MUSIC PRESENTS: $"-7*/ )"33*4 -"5& 4)08 t 5)& */'".064 453*/(%645&34 t "/ &7&/*/( 8*5) :&4 t :0/%&3 .06/5"*/ 453*/( #"/% t 5)*4 .645 #& 5)& #"/% 1&3'03.4 4501 .",*/( 4&/4& t -04 -0/&-: #0:4
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GET READY! HIGHLANDS OPENS FRIDAY! BUTTERMILK OPENS SATURDAY!
FOUR-MOUNTAIN SPORTS PASSHOLDER DEMO PROGRAM Premier, Flex, Double Flex, Senior Escape or Mountain Collective passholders are eligible. Demo the latest freshly tuned skis & snowboards all season long.
25 demo days $49995 ($20 per day) 50 demo days $59999 ($12 per day) Available for purchase at any Four-Mountain Sports location or by calling 977-282-7736. Offer available until December 17.
SKI & SNOWBOARD SCHOOL ATTENTION PARENTS: Drop off your children at the Treehouse Kids’ Adventure Center while you enjoy a few hours on the slopes! 970.923.TREE
SNOWMASS & ASPEN MOUNTAIN ARE OPEN & SO ARE WE! Group and Private Lessons are available for all levels & ages. www.aspensnowmass.com/schools
Connect. Share. Check in: Keep up with the latest on-mountain conditions, activities, events, packages & specials in Aspen/Snowmass!
CELEBRATE 45 YEARS OF SNOWMASS! SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2012 The Base Village Plaza will host entertainment including DJ Ronnie, family activities, scavenger hunt, prize drawing and more!
THE LOUNGE AT THE LIMELIGHT
Après ski daily, 3-7 pm. Enjoy specials on pizzas, beer, wine and free live music! December 14, 4-7 pm De ance Stringband December 15, 4-7 pm Derek Brown Band December 16, 4-7 pm, Michael Jude and John Michel of the John Oates Band December 17, 4-7 pm, North Y Sur
SUNDECK
Free Yoga for Skiers and Snowboarders! Starting December 15, 9:30 - 10:30 pm, occuring every Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Mats provided.
ELEMENT 47 OPEN AT THE LITTLE NELL, ASPEN Come in for breakfast, lunch, bar menu, or dinner daily. AJAX TAVERN OPEN FOR LUNCH, APRÈS & DINNER, ASPEN Plats du Jour return December 15! ELK CAMP OPEN FOR LUNCH, SNOWMASS Come check out our newest on-mountain restaurant located at the top of the Elk Camp Gondola. SNEAKY’S TAVERN OPEN FOR LUNCH, APRÈS & DINNER, BASE VILLAGE, SNOWMASS Stop by Sneaky’s after spending the day on the slopes for après, specials, and live music!
Tell your friends & family about great deals! www.aspensnowmass.com/deals 4
A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY
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Aspen | 514 E. Hyman Avenue | 970.925.7000 Carbondale | 0290 Highway 133 | 970.963.3300 Redstone | 385 Redstone Boulevard | 970.963.1061 Glenwood Springs | 1614 Grand Avenue | 970.928.9000
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LN/Coldwell Banker Mason Morse
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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY
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WELCOME MAT
INSIDE this EDITION
DEPARTMENTS 08 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION 12
LEGENDS & LEGACIES
14 FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE 17
WINE INK
18
FOOD MATTERS
28 AROUND ASPEN 30 LOCAL CALENDAR 38 CROSSWORD
HISTORY TOM BENTON’S PRO-POT POSTER 13
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A&E AN ELEPHANT REVIVAL AT BELLY UP 20
DECEMBER 13-19, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY
CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY
FIND IT INSIDE
GEAR | PAGE 14
SO, POT’S LEGAL? KINDA …
23 COVER STORY
26 A&E
Writer Nelson Harvey asked around to see how police and medicinal marijuana dispensaries are adjusting to the legalization of pot.
Arts editor Stewart Oksenhorn finds inspiration as Colorado band Elephant Revival arrives at Belly Up.
SEE PAGE 23
ON THE COVER Created by Afton Groepper
EDITOR’S NOTE
legal questions | One morning on my way to work a few
years ago at the Summit Daily News, I sat on the back of the bus when a bunch of high school students a few minutes down the road jumped on and took the seats in front of me.
VOLUME 2 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 04
Editor-in-Chief Ryan Slabaugh Advertising Director Gunilla Asher
What happened next opened my eyes to the challenges parents have in pot-friendly areas such as our own. The conversation went something like this:
it was the first place I looked.”
Which brings me to a side note and a golden rule I must share with kids who ride public RYAN SLABAUGH Girl: “What’d you do transportation: Always this weekend?” assume the person Boy: “My folks were out of town, behind you is one of three so I went upstairs and got into things: 1) The editor of the local their stash and just smoked a paper. 2) Your principal’s best bunch of it and played friend. 3) A cop. Not only will video games.” these precautions help keep you Girl: “Cool. Why didn’t you from accidentally incriminating call me?” yourself — it also will ensure the Boy: “I didn’t know you partied.” conversation is not so mindGirl: “Whatever. I don’t because crushingly dumb that the other my parents are totally against people around you want to toss that stuff and swear they will you off the bus, Keanu Reeves kill me if I ever do it, but I style. Talk about the weather. Talk don’t have a problem with it. about your homework. Just don’t Where’d you find it?” talk about Frank-the-tanking a Boy: “In their sock drawer.” keg on Saturday night or stealing Girl: “That’s funny.” weed from your parents. Boy: “I’m pretty sure Seriously, though — our local
parents are talking about the legalization of pot with their kids, and rightfully so. While the details are plentiful, they don’t matter to most local parents I talked to. I ran into a group of them downtown on Monday, and all of them said they were drawing a firm, straightforward line with their kids — it’s not allowed. Just like how most parents treat alcohol, it’s a follow-the-law policy. Yet the discussion changed a bit, as I could tell none of them was really convinced a single strategy will work. Before we got too cold to continue, a few told me that they are realistic, that they know their kids probably have smoked pot. In response, I told them the story about the high schoolers and the bus ride. A few gave me a wry smile, but not one of them laughed. rslabaugh@aspentimes.com
Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott circulation Maria Wimmer Design Afton Groepper Arts Editor Stewart Oksenhorn Production Manager Evan Gibbard Contributing Editors Mary Eshbaugh Hayes Gunilla Asher Kelly Hayes John Colson Contributing Writers Paul Andersen Hilary Stunda Amanda Charles Aspen Times staff Frannie the dog Contributing Partners High Country News Aspen Historical Society The Ute Mountaineer Writers on the Range www.aspentimes.com Sales Ashton Hewitt Jeff Hoffman David Laughren Dan Frees Louise Walker Read the eEdition www.aspentimes.com/weekly Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937
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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY
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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION
VOX POP What plans do you have for the holiday season?
by JOHN COLSON
Gays, gauntlets and the Buffett Rule — will Obama run with it? THERE’S A GAUNTLET ON THE GROUND and the dueling parties are on their guard. The results of the recent national election, it seems to me, lend credence to the idea that the U.S. electorate is more liberal and more compassionate than the teabaggers and the GOP would like you to believe. Mitt Romney was as far out on the limb as he could get in his threats to dismantle “obamacare” and turn the nation’s health care management back over to the insurance industry, compliant doctors and grasping attorneys. He also kowtowed to the teabaggers, by ridiculing President Obama’s plans for getting our economy back on track. In retrospect, it seems Romney’s mealy-mouthed offense was, well, offensive to a majority of the voters who bothered to cast ballots on Nov. 6, so ol’ Mitt got the hook. And now we come to Obama’s final term. The gloves are off, some pundits are saying, as evidenced by Obama’s refusal to let the Republican Party bully him around. And a newly energized, leftleaning power base seems eager to move forward with their agenda on a number of fronts. Perhaps the most interesting outcome of the election is the advances made by the LGBT crowd — that’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender people, in case you’ve been living under a right-wing rock for a while. According to CNN, 118 openly gay and lesbian candidates won in national, state and local races this year, including the first lesbian ever elected to the U.S. Senate, Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin. It also includes, I am happy to note, the first gay Speaker of the House of the Colorado Assembly, former House Minority Leader Mark Ferrandino from Denver, thanks to the fact that the Dems now control the House by a margin of 37-28. I should say here that I am not gay, myself, but I’ve got plenty of friends who are, and I consider gay
and lesbian politicians, as a group, to be no more and no less capable, trustworthy and upstanding than your average heterosexual politician. Though, I must admit, I feel that gays, like women and blacks before them, have grown a certain kind of political steel in their spines by virtue of being a downtrodden minority for so long. Anyway, I was speaking of Tammy Baldwin and gauntlets, and specifically the one she tossed out at the end of November. That’s when she publicly called on Congress to take up debate on what’s known as the Buffett Rule — a minimum federal tax rate of 30 percent on all U.S. taxpayers who earn over 1 million a year. The Buffett Rule, I should note, does not come from the overheated imagination of pointy-headed liberals, but from one of the richest men in the world — billionaire Warren Buffett. Previous federal income tax rates on the most wealthy among us, as you may know already, topped out at 94 percent in 1945, to pay off debts piled up during WWII. That upper-income rate dropped to 70 percent in the 1960s and to around 35 percent now. So the Buffett Rule is actually something of a tax break, although there are enough loopholes in the tax code to allow billionaires to pay lower taxes than their secretaries. We know that since Buffett said so, about his own taxes. The Buffett Rule was rejected by the U.S. Senate earlier this year, after Republicans accused Obama of using taxes to wage “class warfare” on the rich, and Obama caved to the pressure and let it drop. Perhaps now, with the secondterm wind under his wings and something of a mandate from voters, Obama will stand a little taller and fight a little harder for things he believes in. We can only hope for this change.
HIT&RUN
CARRIE HOLDER DENVER
For Christmas we are staying home, and for New Year’s we are going to Copper Mountain.
JIM AND DEBBY RAHMAN S N O W M A SS V I L L AG E
We are going to Montréal.
MICHAEL BUYSSE H I G H L A N D S PA R K , C O LO .
Eat, drink and be married.
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jcolson@aspentimes.com
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$399,000 INDEPENDENCE SQUARE #310 Studio, 1 bath Great location Rooftop deck & Jacuzzi
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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION
SEEN, HEARD & DONE
edited by RYAN SLABAUGH
CHEERS&JEERS
FIVE THINGS TOP 5 REASONS WE’RE GLAD IT SNOWED
Area mountains got a 15 to 20 inches in the past week, much to the delight of the dogs around our newsroom.
CHEERS | To the new snow and the cooperative jet stream that is keeping temperatures cool and the white stuff falling in plentiful doses. We went skiing Tuesday morning, and while it was much better than the week before, we still need some more. And cheers to Aspen Highlands and Buttermilk opening this weekend.
CHEERS | To all the local service workers who are in for the long-haul this winter. Visitors are starting to fill up our towns, and the shifts are starting to get long. As they say, hang in there — and curse softly with a smile.
JEERS | To gas energy spokespeople who first defend current practices in the face of overwhelming evidence that the drilling methods they use could be improved, made cleaner and ultimately be less harmful to the residents who live around drilling pads.
fact, two local part-time Aspen residents were recently sentenced to pay millions in a settlement after the New York couple allegedly fleeced millions of dollars from Education Housing Services, which provides affordable housing for New York City students.
JEERS | To the scams that increase this time of year. In
BUZZ WORTHY BASALT
TIMES FILES SUIT OVER BASALT POLICE-CHIEF INVESTIGATION
The Aspen Times filed a lawsuit Dec. 8 to try to force the town of Basalt to release an investigation report on the professional conduct of former Police Chief Roderick O’Connor. Attorneys for Colorado Mountain News Media, which does business as The Aspen Times, and the newspaper’s managing editor, Rick Carroll, filed the lawsuit in Eagle County District Court against Basalt Town Manager Michael Scanlon. The lawsuit seeks a hearing as soon as possible to determine if the investigation should be released
under the Colorado Open Records Act. Carroll made a formal request for the report with town officials on Nov. 27. The request was denied by town attorney Tom Smith, who said it was protected as part of a personnel matter. Exceptions to the Colorado Open Records Act allow records to be kept closed from the public when they involve personnel issues, Smith said. He also contended that the town was contractually bound in a settlement with O’Connor to keep the investigation confidential. O’Connor resigned Nov. 23. — Scott Condon
BASALT
POLICE: MAN CRASHES PARTY, TAKES GOLF CART A Basalt man faces a felony
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Relatives will be worn out during holidays
O4
Dirt-covered car now just snowcovered
O3
Can eat the chili we made in October
O2
Airport back to normal with delays, cancellations
O1
Can wake up to soothing sounds of avalanche bombs
POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS rslabaugh@aspentimes.com
STAY IN THE KNOW — CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS charge and two misdemeanors after police say he crashed his car at the Roaring Fork Club earlier this month, crashed a wedding reception at the clubhouse and then fled on a golf cart after he was asked to leave. Basalt police arrested Weston Richard Schmidt, 28, at his home in Sagewood the day after the Dec. 1 incident. Sgt. Stu Curry said Schmidt was at the Roaring Fork Club on a Saturday night when he hit a sign with his car before parking. He entered the wedding reception and was eventually asked to leave, Curry said. It was unclear from the police report if Schmidt was unknown by the wedding party or known but unwanted. At any rate, he was escorted out of the reception, Curry said, and decided to travel by golf cart rather than by his car. Curry said Schmidt’s car wasn’t disabled, so Curry didn’t
“KIDS NEED TO REALIZE THAT NOT EVERYONE IS SMOKING WEED. THEY NEED TO UNDERSTAND THAT IT IS NOT OK FOR THEM TO SMOKE POT.”
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O5
know why Schmidt chose the golf cart. — Scott Condon
ASPEN
TEACHER FACES COCAINE, DUI CHARGES
An Aspen Middle School teacher is on administrative leave in the wake of a weekend arrest that led to charges of cocaine possession and driving under the influence, authorities said Dec. 10. Bruce Lee Johnson, 45, was booked into Pitkin County Jail after Aspen police arrested him around 12:46 a.m. Saturday. He was placed on administrative leave Monday pending an internal investigation of the incident, Aspen Superintendent John Maloy confirmed. — Rick Carroll and Jeanne McGovern
— BABETTE STEWART, PREVENTION SPECIALIST
P H OTO B Y RYA N S L A BA U G H
THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION
GUEST OPINION COLUMN
by JIM STILES with WRITERS ON THE RANGE
Recreation calls the shots in Moab LAST AUGUST, I READ THAT construction would soon begin on a proposed 9 million “Moab Transit Hub and Elevated River Bikeway.” I’d caught only a snippet of the plan a couple years ago. The news story called for a three-mile “bikeway” partially suspended over the Colorado River. There were references to piers and girders and cantilevers. Cantilevers? Impossible, I thought, and concluded it was yet another Utah-grown fantasy, such as highways over the Book Cliffs and toxic waste incinerators. Eventually, I forgot about it. Then I read the announcement in the local papers. It’s a done deal. Promoters have insisted that its main purpose is safety. Clashes between bicyclists and car drivers have been numerous over the years, but crashes have rarely if ever happened. A strictly enforced 25 mph speed limit seems like a cheaper option. More telling is Grand County Councilman Chris Baird’s recent presentation to Utah Gov. Gary Herbert. Baird said, “For a long time we were the mecca for mountain biking, but about five years ago, we started seeing newspaper and magazine articles about Moab going stale.” The Hub-Bikeway, meant to stimulate a declining tourist economy, is clearly one of the biggest recreation infrastructure projects ever initiated in Grand County. Kim Schappert of the Moab Trails Alliance –– which is the driving force behind the project –– said in 2010, “It’s all going to be a showpiece.” But I’d heard few Moabites talk about it. Katie Stevens at the Moab BLM explained that, “Two EAs (environmental assessments) were done on this project — one was completed in 1999 and the other in 2004. There were no public comments on either EA.” Now, eight years after the public comment period came and went, some will be surprised to see what’s coming and the scope of it. But it doesn’t matter. Construction began this fall, and as one local environmentalist explained, “We have bigger issues here than bike paths; we have fracking and nuke plants. These are the big battles.” Indeed, recent activism in Moab has been coming from a growing number of groups committed to stopping energy extraction on
THINKSTOCK PHOTO
public lands, including a proposed nuclear power plant at Green River, a proposed tar-sand test site north of the Book Cliffs, plus plans by the Bureau of Land Management to lease large tracts of public land south of Moab for oil and gas development. Opponents to all of this are increasingly vocal and organized.
to get the tourists to Moab, needs to understand how complicated this issue really is. Imagine some non-motorized recreationists as they make their way to Moab. They board a flight in London, or New York, or Los Angeles, or Atlanta, and then fly thousands of miles to Salt Lake City, or Denver, or
every remotely conceivable source of oil and gas? It’s called supply and demand. I don’t need to be convinced that fracking is bad. It can be a disaster. My point is that Moab has pursued a tourist-amenities economy for 20 years. The most powerful “green’ organization these days is the outdoor recreation industry, and
A mountain biker descends Slickrock Trail near Moab, Utah.
Yet these same activists fall silent when anyone raises the issue of consumption driving energy production. My favorite conservationist and writer, Wendell Berry, once wrote: “To the conservation movement, it is only production that causes environmental degradation; the consumption that supports the production is rarely acknowledged to be at fault. The ideal of the runof-the-mill conservationist is to impose restraints upon production without limiting consumption or burdening the consciences of consumers.” A community whose economy and existence demands the massive consumption of energy, just
Phoenix, or Las Vegas. They rent a car and drive hundreds of miles to stay in one of Moab’s many motels, so they can drive out to the Moab Transit Hub each day and ride their bicycles for 10 or 20 miles. So this is not “non-motorized recreation,” as proponents of the Hub/Bikeway like to claim. The energy to build and fuel the plane and the rental car, to build and power the motel, to build the bike and fabricate the plastic parts contained in every one of these conveyances and structures comes from the extraction of oil. It comes by whatever means necessary to produce petroleum-based products and make a profit. Why are oil companies fracking
Utah’s enviros have gone along with it. If we’re sincere about reducing carbon emissions and want to stop the onslaught of energy production, we have to acknowledge these hard truths. We can embrace alternative energy sources in part, but it’s no real solution. Yet in Moab, where the encouragement of a consumptive amenities economy is presumed by many to be the town’s best economic option, hard truths are getting harder to come by. Jim Stiles is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). He publishes the Canyon Country Zephyr in southeast Utah.
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LEGENDS & LEGACIES
CLASSIC ASPEN
by TIM WILLOUGHBY
No display of early ski equipment is complete without a pair of bamboo poles.
BAMBOO POLES bamboo products from flooring to furniture pass the
sustainability test, and those of us who skied before 1960 remember a different application — ski poles. Ski lodges create vintage ambiance by hanging those ski poles on their walls, a reminder of a different time and a different technology. Older skiers may feel surprised to hear that bamboo ski poles are making a comeback. Bamboo poles dominated the market for three decades. Lightweight, flexible, strong and inexpensive, Tomkin bamboo (a product of a region in China) was the perfect pole component. American manufacturers added a leather loop on top, so skiers wouldn’t lose their poles if they let go, and a long-lasting metal tip on the bottom. Bamboo was especially good for children’s poles, where their light weight was valuable — holding onto a heavy pole with slippery mittens just didn’t work for tiny tots. The most noticeable difference between vintage polls and today’s design is the basket. Modern baskets are so tiny you can barely spot them as a skier slides by. Old-style baskets spread a half-foot in diameter. Early ones connected with a metal ring fastened to the pole shaft with
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leather; later ones connected with rubber — either way the larger size had a practical function. The decades of bamboo poles were also the decades of un-groomed slopes. Large baskets kept your pole from disappearing into deep snow when
every-weekend skier needed a new pair every year. A pole plant with a rough combination of speed, angle, and substrate; a car door closing on a protruding pole; a heavy person leaning too hard on their pole: each situation resulted in a loud
EVERY ASPEN CHILD OF THE 1950S HAD A COLLECTION OF BAMBOO PARTS, DISCARDED BASKETS AND SINGLE POLES. you executed pole plants; however, baskets sometimes outweighed the poles, contributing mass to the ends. More mass meant more sore wrists at the end of the day. You could buy a pair of bamboo poles in the late 1930s for as little as 1.95, which was a good thing because bamboo broke easily. An
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snap. Of greater concern was the manner in which bamboo breaks, shattering into sharp-tipped spears. Every Aspen child of the 1950s had a collection of bamboo parts, discarded baskets and single poles. By the early 1940s, ski manufacturers offered a metal alternative. Although steel poles
solved the splintering problem, they substituted a weight problem. The Kroydon golf club company provided a temporary solution; tapered steel golf club shafts were light enough for skiers and strong enough to best bamboo, but they sported a higher price tag. It wasn’t until 1960 when Ed Scott experimented with tapered aluminum that the modern ski pole came on the market. The new poles, light as bamboo, strong as steel, and balanced with small baskets made bamboo — even for children — a discarded technology. For those of you who feel a nostalgic need to ski with wood, the Komperdell Company has brought back bamboo. Its carbon fiber pole features a bamboo veneer that strengthens the pole and decreases the weight. Even Salomon offers a bamboo option now. Bamboo is back — except for the price. Tim Willoughby’s family story parallels Aspen’s. He began sharing folklore while teaching for Aspen Country Day School and Colorado Mountain College. Now a tourist in his native town, he views it with historical perspective. Reach him at redmtn@schat.net.
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE WILLOUGHBY COLLECTION
LEGENDS & LEGACIES
FROM the VAULT
compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY
HOMEGROWN POSTER
1980 T OM BE N T ON
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY
AN ARTICLE IN the Oct. 30, 1980 Aspen Times focused on Aspen artist Tom Benton and his many political posters. According to the paper, “Benton translates his political opinions into signed, limited edition silkscreened posters.” As an advocate of marijuana reform (noted by Benton as a “good cause”), Benton created a poster “in support of NORML’s (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) efforts to ease pot laws” in addition to the poster above.
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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE
GEAR of the WEEK
edited by RYAN SLABAUGH
NEED TO KNOW
399
• 12 MP • 1080p60/720p120/ 1440p48 • Wi-Fi built-in with remote • GoPro app compatible
GOPRO HD HERO 3 ADVENTURE, BLACK EDITION We just saw the latest commercial for the GoPro HD Hero 3, the latest in the line of innovative cameras we see used in extreme sports more and more, but this ad focused on indoor cats — specifically, the cats chasing a red laser. Now, while we find the cats a bit cute, the ad was annoying, as we knew there had to be better video the company could show off. Yet, GoPro made its point — the indoor cats shows the range and versatility of these cameras, whose competition is usually stuck in outdoor-only capacities. The GoPro’s pics, high quality video and Wi-Fi compatible remotes are the new upgrades on this version — which like the sports they more famously capture, keeps progressing, much to our delight.
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— Ute Mountaineer staff
PHOTO COURTESY GOPRO
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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE
GUNNER’S LIBATIONS
by RYAN SLABAUGH & GUNILLA ASHER
NEED TO KNOW 1/2 shot Absolut® Citron vodka 1/2 shot Frangelico® hazelnut liqueur 1 lemon wedge Mix equal parts Absolut Citron and Frangelico into a shot glass. Drink the shot, and follow it immediately by sucking on a sugar-coated lemon wedge.
CHOCOLATE CAKE MEZZALUNA BARTENDER Amy G. makes this shot called Chocolate Cake and how it tastes like chocolate with the ingredients is beyond me. There must be some chemical reaction when the lemon hits your mouth that makes it taste the way it does, but either way it is really good. Nothing like drinking your dessert rather than eating it. Gunilla Asher is the co-managers of the Aspen Times. She writes about libations without any real training other than in the spirit of “She is not connoisseurs, but she is heavily practiced.”
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PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK
WINEINK
WORDS to DRINK BY
by KELLY J. HAYES
BURGUNDY OR BORDEAUX? RECENTLY I HAD dinner with some friends here in Aspen. The wine list came when somebody at the table sheepishly asked, “What’s the difference between a Burgundy and a Bordeaux?” It was a breath of fresh air. I was out of the rarified “inside baseball” world of people who are consumed by wine and its deep details and back with those who had simple questions that called for simple answers. “Well,” I replied, “Burgundy comes from a region in central France where they make wines from either 100 percent Pinot Noir grapes, the red wines, or 100 percent Chardonnay grapes, KELLY J. the white wines. They HAYES are traditionally lighter in style and clear in the glass. Made well, they are among the most delicate of all the world’s wines.” “Bordeaux, on the other hand. is made in a region in southwestern France, not far from the Atlantic Ocean,” I continued. “There are six different grapes used in red wines from Bordeaux, but the ones you may know best are Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. The wines of Bordeaux tend to be much bigger, darker, higher in alcohol, and tannic, which means they make your lips pucker.” I was just getting started. I wanted to talk about blending and how the Burgundians use horses to till their vineyards, and the classifications of 1855 and the difference between the Left and Right Bank, and, and, and … But alas, I could see glaze coming over the eyes of my table mates and clearly it was time to shut ‘er down. It got me thinking, though, about how wine can be enjoyed by someone who is not the least bit interested in all the “inside baseball” stuff. To me, the more I know about a wine the more interested I am in drinking it. I like to know the grapes, the vintage, the blend, the alcohol level, the region the wine came from, the winemaker. Much of that
PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK
information can be found on the label. (Though seemingly the trend in labels is to have less and less information, but that is for another story too.) And beyond that, if there is something unique I know about the wine, perhaps who owns the winery, or if vineyard is close to another great vineyard, or that the wine was made with the consultation of a famed consultant, or, or, or … any of that sort of stuff, I am even more intrigued by the process of tasting and drinking it. One need not be an expert on dotage to get a thrill at the racetrack when the ponies sprint for the
a habit of making those who don’t share their passion feel somewhat “outside baseball,” if you will. If this column has played that game, I apologize and will endeavor not to do so again. My goal is to make wine, and the opportunity to enjoy it just a little easier for everyone who reads the column. Sometimes, particularly after a week in wine country, it takes a simple question to re-ground a wine scribe. While the differences between Burgundy and Bordeaux are so vast that tomes have been written on
wire, have avalanche training and backcountry prowess to get a good workout on the nordic ski track, or know an oboe from an elbow to listen to the Kronos Quintet. But those who are in the world of wine, wine writers chief among the culprits, have a tendency to turn the tasting of a glass of wine into a competition. Wine people have
each, perhaps the best way to learn the difference for your self is to simply have a glass of each. Now, won’t that be fun.
A SOM SELECTS… THE UNVELING of the new Element 47 took place this past week and Jonathan Pullis Master Somelier and all around good guy, made this selection from the list for us. Seeking out small lot Burgundy is an arduous task but the crew at The Nell always seems to get the job done. — K.J.H. 2008 BENJAMIN LEROUX SAVIGNY LES BEAUNE, $104. A fantastic red burgundy from a gifted young winemaker. Benjamin made his mark at Domaine Comte Armand but started his own label in 2007. The wine has beautiful raspberry, strawberry and pomegranate fruit notes with lovely red floral qualities. The wine is medium-bodied with well balanced acidity and is fantastic with wild salmon, venison and duck. — JONATHAN PULLIS, WINE DIRECTOR AT ELEMENT 47
Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soon-tobe-designated appellation of Old Snowmass with his wife, Linda, and a black Lab named Vino. He can be reached at malibukj@aol.com.
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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE
FOOD MATTERS
THE WESTIN AND WILDWOOD GIVE NEW LIFE TO SNOWMASS I’M GONNA COME right out and say it: I was skeptical of the much talked about, highly anticipated transformation of The Silvertree Hotel to The Westin. A few months back I had visited the property just as the remodel just began, and to be honest, I didn’t get it. I couldn’t grasp the vision and see past the 1970s low ceilings, crazy, zigzag AMIEE WHITE hallways and dark BEAZLEY rooms. I was one of those people who said, “They should just scrap it, and start from scratch.” Today, I’m eating crow. After only seven months, the 55 million renovation has reimagined the once dingy and beyond dated resort into a fresh, hip and exciting new place for visitors, conference attendees and après ski devotees. It took but a second upon being welcomed through the front doors to see and feel the transformation. Inside The Vue Lobby Lounge is beautiful contemporary décor in warm earth tones, accented by touches of maroon and green, with a distinctive, long rectangular fireplace where small groups had gathered with cocktails. Out with the old and in with the new. The new Westin Snowmass Resort features 254 luxurious rooms including 18 suites with slopeside views and fully-renovated lobby, lounge and public spaces. The Westin also includes two new restaurants, a slope-side pool, hot tub and sun deck, private ski valet, Westin Kid’s Club, new function spaces for meetings, groups and special events including a 60-seat theater space, spa facility and fitness center overlooking Snowmass Village. The rooms are certainly affordable for slopeside accommodations, and much roomier than standard hotel rooms in this price range. The suites are enormous with living rooms, two bathrooms, two TVs and great storage areas. An amazing collection
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of art by Wayne White, Marabel Wasserman and Tom Sachs is found in the rooms and common spaces. And, of course the Heavenly Bed, which The Westin is famous for, was no disappointment either. Downstairs, slopeside, is the new 237-seat restaurant, Snowmass Kitchen. A longtime Aspen chef, Jami Flatt, returns to the valley to take the helm as chef de cuisine there. The menu is a mix of worldly influences, lacking a bit of focus and excitement but executed well. Having been a fan of Flatt’s work at both the Ritz
interdisciplinary group of designers, art-directors and artists from New York City — including one talented principal who helped design the Ace and The Standard hotels in Manhattan, both of which have been critically acclaimed for their interior design work. For the Wildwood Snowmass, Reunion incorporated design cues from a classic mountain lodge with the hip, contemporary, vibrant colors, artwork and vibe of an urban hotel.
at Highlands and Silver Queen in downtown Aspen, I have faith that after a few months, getting his footing, Flatt’s point of view will find its way with diners. In addition to dinner, Snowmass Kitchen also serves lunch to the public, which serves as a great option for skiers looking for a fullservice experience. But the Westin is not the only story on the mall this season. Next door, the Westin has a sister property, the Wildwood. This too was a major remodel story. While I haven’t stayed there yet, I can already tell you I am in love with the concept. Wildwood Snowmass marks the first project for the design firm Reunion, an
wonder and fun. Even American fashion designer Steven Alan designed key elements of the Wildwood’s soft goods, including hotel accessories, staff uniforms and retail merchandise. Together these properties provide a much needed shot in the arm for the Snowmass Mall. There is life on the mall not seen in years, and a fresh perspective on what might be possible in years to come.
EVERY ELEMENT has been considered here to create a sense of
Amiee White Beazley writes about food-related travel for the Aspen Times Weekly. Follow her on Twitter @ awbeazley1, or email awb@awbeazley.com.
by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY
SUPERFOODSRX THE WESTIN IS the first hotel to embrace the SuperFoods concept and introduce these good-for-you choices on breakfast and in-room dining menus. SuperFoods include fruits, vegetables, grains and proteins that are known to improve well-being and longevity, and these dishes powerfully pair whole foods to boost their flavors and their benefits. Antioxidantrich and naturally low in calories, these tempting selections make healthful meals impossible to resist.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
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New Listing
Location! Location! Location! s BEDROOM DEN BATH PENTHOUSE s 0RIVATE ACCESS ONLY VIA ELEVATOR s 'REAT SPACE PRIVACY AND EXCEPTIONAL VIEWS OF THE 3NOWMASS 3KI !REA s %LEVATOR ALSO CONNECTS TO POOL AREA SKI ROOM WITH PRIVATE SKI LOCKERS WITH DIRECT SKI ACCESS TO !SSAY (ILL AND 3NOWMASS 'ONDOLA s #OVERED ASSIGNED GARAGE SPACE s 4HERE ARE ONLY A HANDFUL OF CONDOS LIKE THIS IN 3NOWMASS 6ILLAGE 4ERRY 2OGERS \
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A 20
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rtfully uniting extraordinary homes with extraordinary lives.
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New Listing
100 Yards to Fanny Hill s BEDROOMS BATHS SQ FT s 'ROUND mOOR WITH SKI ACCESS s 3OUTH FACING LIGHT AND BRIGHT LIVING SPACES s 'AS lREPLACE FOR APRÏS SKI RELAXING s #LOSE TO "ASE 6ILLAGE AND -ALL SHOPPING AND DINING ON SITE RESTAURANT s &REE 6ILLAGE 3HUTTLE SERVICE s #OMPLEX FEATURES A POOL AND HOT TUB s 7ITH EXCELLENT ON SITE MANAGEMENT THE 4IMBERLINE HAS ALWAYS BEEN A GREAT PROPERTY TO OWN #HRIS ,EWIS \
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Absolutely Gorgeous Gant BEDROOM BATH SQ FT &INE lNISHES FOR THE DISCRIMINATING BUYER 3PACIOUS WELL THOUGHT CORNER UNIT (EATED POOL SAUNA HOT TUB 4URN +EY &URNISHED -ARGI #RAWFORD \
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New Listing
Imagine Breathtaking Views!
Location! Location! Location! 2ARE TOP mOOR CORNER UNIT IN THE CORE BEDROOM BATH SQ FT 3KI IN SKI OUT TO ,ITTLE .ELL -AGNIlCENT PANORAMIC VIEWS "RENT 7ALDRON \
BEDROOMS BATHS SQ FT "REATHTAKING -T $ALY VIEWS )NTERIORS AND EXTERIOR NEWLY RENOVATED /NLY STEPS FROM 3NOWMASS #LUB AMENITIES 4URN +EY &URNISHED 2OBERT 0 h#HETv 7INCHESTER \
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AspenSnowmassSIR.com Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080 Carbondale | 970.963.4536
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IN THE WEEDS
POLICE, POT PROFESSIONALS SORT THROUGH MARIJUANA’S ROLE IN ASPEN’S FUTURE by NELSON HARVEY
THINKSTOCK PHOTO
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it feels strange to tell Sheriff Joe DiSalvo that I smoked a bit of pot in high school, almost like admitting impure thoughts to a priest. AND YET, as I sit talking with Pitkin County’s top cop in his Aspen office, it dawns on me that DiSalvo is hardly offended or surprised. The recent passage of Amendment 64 by a whopping 75 percent of Pitkin County voters (and nearly 55 percent of voters statewide) made possession of an ounce or less — and cultivation of as many as six marijuana plants — legal in Colorado. For DiSalvo, the vote was the final step in pot’s long, slow transition from a police matter to what he calls a
“lifestyle choice.” And lately, DiSalvo has been fond of pointing out that enforcement of a particular “lifestyle” is not his department. On Monday, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper signed Amendment 64 into law. Yet, even before that, DiSalvo had said after the vote, “I think now it would be pointless to arrest someone for a half ounce of weed.” As Coloradans wait to hear whether the federal government will
let the amendment stand (marijuana remains illegal under federal law), and as state legislators gear up to make rules governing the sale of recreational marijuana next year, law enforcement officials in Pitkin County are recalibrating their approach to the drug, as well. Their focus, according to interviews with DiSalvo and Aspen Police Chief Richard Pryor, will shift from private consumption to the public sphere. Smoking in public, for instance, remains illegal, a fact that Pryor believes might surprise some eager users. “If people start wandering the streets of Aspen and smoking, I suspect our initial contact may be to educate people about what Sheriff Joe DiSalvo
DISPENSARY OWNERS ON EDGE OVER AMENDMENT’S UNCERTAINTY NO ONE IS better equipped to begin selling pot to the masses than those in the medical marijuana industry, whose knowledge and experience give them a huge leg up over other entrepreneurs. Indeed, many in the Roaring Fork Valley’s medical marijuana trade say they are eager to supply the recreational market. And yet, for now, too many uncertainties remain about what that market will look like and whether the federal government will allow it to exist. “The key issue for me at the moment is figuring out how the Obama administration will respond to the new developments,” wrote Jordan Lewis, a partner in the Silverpeak Apothecary dispensary in Aspen, in an email. With marijuana still illegal under federal law and the U.S. Justice Department keeping mum about whether it will intervene in Colorado, Lewis said it’s
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impossible to make an informed business decision about whether to enter the recreational market. That’s particularly true because under Amendment 64, dispensary owners can’t supply that market out of their medical facilities but would have to start new businesses to do so. “The capital investment required to provide the production capacity capable of supporting the recreational market is significant, and without some clarity going into this, the investment might not make sense,” he wrote. In addition, the Colorado Legislature isn’t expected to finalize rules governing the sale of recreational pot until July 1. The content of those rules could mean the difference between an attractive investment and a money drain: Will sales be taxed by as much as 15 percent, as permitted by Amendment 64? Will pot shops be
required to stay 1,000 feet away from schools, as medical shops are now? “Once they get in those rooms and start negotiating, a lot of things can happen,” said James Leonard, manager of the Doctor’s Garden dispensary in Carbondale. “Until it’s black and white, it’s too early to think about selling recreational.” For now, medical marijuana professionals are staying focused on their core business while keeping a close eye on the news coming out of the state Capitol and the Justice Department. “The medical industry right now is what’s going to stay in place,” said John Rogan, manager of the Aspen L.E.A.F. dispensary in Aspen. “(Recreational) is going to impact the dispensaries for sure, but we just have to do business as usual for now.”
WHAT’S CHANGED Amendment 64 actually says,” he said. And stoned driving is another area where police will continue to crack down. “This is about personal choice, but when you take it out on the road, it’s not just personal anymore,” DiSalvo said. In 2011, the state toxicology lab detected tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the mind-altering compound in marijuana, in 1,266 DUI-related blood samples. The 2012 number is on track to equal or exceed that total. Other than alcohol, marijuana was the most common drug detected by far: It was found in 66 percent of all samples where drugs were present. But Richard Nedlin, an Aspenbased deputy district attorney for the 9th Judicial District who handles many marijuana cases, says he’s never seen someone arrested for a DUI with marijuana alone in their system. “It’s usually marijuana mixed with alcohol,” he said. In all of Pitkin County, including the city of Aspen, there is only one sheriff ’s deputy —Levi Borst — certified as a “drug recognition expert.” DiSalvo said he is planning to send more deputies for training, but for now, police sometimes must wait for Borst to arrive before fully evaluating a suspect. Borst is trained to detect signs of marijuana use — a driver drifting and swerving is an initial red flag, followed by an inability to pass basic performance tests, such as walking a straight line or standing on one foot. Failing those tests would likely lead to an arrest, DiSalvo said, followed by a blood test once the suspect is in custody. Yet Colorado has no official standard for what THC blood level constitutes “intoxication,” and the science on that question remains contentious. A bill proposing a legal limit of 5 nanograms of THC per milliliter of blood for drivers has been defeated three times in the Colorado Legislature. Its main opponents were medical marijuana patients who use the drug frequently and who claim their THC blood levels can exceed the 5-nanogram threshold even if they haven’t smoked that day. THC is stored in fat cells in the body, meaning it can remain in the system for weeks or months after use. Jordan Lewis is a partner in the Silverpeak Apothecary, a medical marijuana dispensary based in
CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS
Aspen. He said he’s optimistic that lawmakers can identify a THC level that doesn’t discriminate against people such as his patients. “I am confident that a fair standard for driving under the influence can be established in order to prevent impaired motorists from driving,” he wrote in an email, “while still protecting the rights of those who chose to use marijuana responsibly.” Lawmakers will take up the issue when they convene in January. In the meantime, neither Pryor nor DiSalvo expects the passage of Amendment 64 to greatly lighten their enforcement loads because marijuana hasn’t been a major police focus in the county for years. In the city of Aspen and Pitkin County combined, there have been 11 arrests for marijuana possession so far in 2012, according to city and county records. In 2011, there were just four possession arrests, and in 2010 there were 12. And Nedlin, the deputy district attorney, said he rarely prosecutes people for pot possession because pot is typically found incidentally when officers are investigating other crimes. Pot’s low profile on the law enforcement scene recently is probably due in part to the rise of the medical marijuana industry since its legalization in the year 2000 — there are 723 card-carrying medical marijuana patients in Pitkin County, according to state figures. “For all intents and purposes, this product has been legal in the state for 12 years,” DiSalvo said. “It hasn’t punched a hole in our moral fiber.”
⋅ Possession: Before the passage of Amendment 64, getting caught with an ounce or less of marijuana was a petty offense, typically punishable by a ticket of between $200 and $300. First offenses typically did not affect one’s criminal record. Once Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper signed Amendment 64 into law, it became legal to possess or give away as much as an ounce of pot. ⋅ Cultivation: Before the election, growing six or fewer plants could carry a stiff penalty: As much as six months in prison and a fine of as much as $5,000. Now, however, it is legal to grow as many as six plants, three of which may be flowering at once. (A grower may possess the full harvest from those three plants even if it exceeds 1 ounce.)
WHAT HASN’T CHANGED ⋅ Driving stoned: Under Colorado statutes, it’s illegal to drive while impaired by alcohol or drugs. Although no objective standard for marijuana intoxication exists in Colorado, driving while impaired by pot could draw the same penalties as an alcohol-related DUI, including fines and a license suspension. ⋅ Public consumption: Smoking pot on the street corner remains a petty offense and could draw a fine of as much as $100 along with a maximum of 15 days in jail. ⋅ Underage possession: Amendment 64 establishes 21 as the minimum legal age for possession of marijuana. Minors caught with pot could be subject to fines, community service and even temporary revocation of their driver’s licenses. ⋅ Selling pot (for now): Retail sale is prohibited until rules are drafted to govern the industry — those are due by July. The first applications for retail pot operations will be processed no sooner than Oct. 1.
SOURCES: COLORADO SECRETARY OF STATE’S OFFICE, NORML, SENSIBLE COLORADO
Silverpeak Apothecary in Aspen is one of the many marijuana dispensaries that are monitoring the federal government’s reaction before making changes to their business.
Nelson Harvey is a freelance writer living in Carbondale. He can be reached at nelson@nelsonharvey.com.
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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT
MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE
PUTTING A STAMP ON ACOUSTIC MUSIC ELEPHANT REVIVAL PLAYS BELLY UP
Elephant Revival released the EP, “It’s Alive,” last month.
Dango Rose who has been a musician since his teens, wavers on whether those moments, those times when you hear something touching and powerful, that wakes up your ears, are rare or plentiful.
NEED TO KNOW ELEPHANT REVIVAL THURSDAY, DEC. 13 AT 9:30 BELLY UP
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“THAT POTENTIAL exists in all moments,” Rose said from his home in Nederland. “There’s always music out there, instrumentalists and vocalists. It just depends on how you’re listening.” But then Rose, a 31-year-old bassist, brings up the moment that was both the most profound listening experience of his life, and the most seminal to his career. It was at the 2003 Walnut Valley Bluegrass Festival in Winfield, Kansas, when he first heard Bonnie Paine play, and even is the universe offers countless opportunities to be moved by sound, this was a singular experience. “There’s only a select number of moments when that spark ignites,” Rose said. “There’s so much going on in Winfield. But what really cut through it all was, first, the sound of Bonnie’s washboard. And then the sound of her voice. Some things
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happen only once in a lifetime.” Rose was in attendance at Winfield with members of his band at the time, the Colorado-based High on the Hog. Also in his company was Bridget Law, a Denver-born violinist whom Rose had met a few weeks earlier, at a bluegrass festival in Keystone. As Rose and Law traipsed around Winfield, a massive gathering that includes high-profile instrumental competitions, they were on the hunt for something. “We were looking for something unique. Listening to sounds, what you hear in the campground,” Rose said. After hearing Paine, the three assembled for a picking session in the Comfortable Shoes campsite. Over the next few years, Rose, Law and Paine traveled more or less on their own, picking up musical partners along the way, and occasionally finding opportunities to
play together, in Colorado, Kentucky. Among the pickers was guitarist Daniel Rodriguez, whom Paine had met on the rooftop of a club in Mystic, Conn. One of their favorite gathering spots was Talequah, Okla. — the capital of the Cherokee Nation; the endpoint of the Trail of Tears, where American Indians were forced to relocate; Paine’s hometown; and a place where Rose lived from 2005-’06. In 2006 came the pivotal step that turned the loose affiliation into a band. In his native Chicago, Rose was busking outside the elephant cage of the Lincoln Park Zoo. The cage was empty; both of its former occupants were deceased. It had been decided that the two animals should be separated, and the two died on the same day — one in transport, the other back in the cage, alone. “Dango reflected upon the nature of elephants, their compassion, their
P H OTO B Y A N N E S TAV E L E Y
by STEWART OKSENHORN
desire to travel as a tribe,” Bridget Law told The Aspen Times two years ago. “He called up a whole bunch of us and said, ‘I booked all these gigs in Colorado. Come play them.” When that round of shows was done, five musicians were left standing: Rose, Law, Paine and Rodriguez, and Sage Cook, an Oklahoma-born banjoist who had also been at Winfield in 2003. Vince Herman, a founder of the Colorado band Leftover Salmon, found a house for Paine and Rodriguez in Nederland, and the new quintet settled in the hills outside Boulder. They gave their band the name Elephant Revival. Elephant Revival has left a sizable footprint on the acoustic music scene. Playing a style that’s been called transcendental folk, they have appeared at the High Sierra and All Good festivals, headlined at
ROSE BEGAN PLAYING music in his native Evanston, Ill., starting out on electric bass. But he quickly found himself gravitating toward acoustic music, influenced in part by the Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago, and also by the people who moved into his neighborhood when he was in high school, who went on to form the progressive string band, Cornmeal. “I went from electric bass to upright bass very quickly,” Rose, who also plays some banjo in Elephant Revival, said. At 18, Rose hit the road in a Isuzu Trooper with his bass and his dog, playing on the streets in Colorado, Oregon and Louisiana. A formative episode came in New Orleans, during the Jazz & Heritage Festival. While playing with a trio on a corner, he was approached by one of the city’s notable musicians, David Batiste, who invited Rose to play a demonstration
long-term goals. When he made the trip to Winfield in 2003 and heard Bonnie Paine, his ears were keen to pick up something that would lead his forward. “It had a lot to do with the time in my life,” he said. “I knew I wasn’t going to play in an old-time band forever. I was looking for something else.” It was the sound of Paine, and the music that Paine, Law and Rose made together in the campground that night, that hooked Rose. “We all heard each other. It was this auditory thing, listening. Whatever those forces are,” Rose explained of their coming together. But as Elephant Revival has continued on, the band has described itself not only in sonic terms, but in spiritual ones as well, emphasizing the relationships between the band members, and the broad power of music-making. “How much respect and appreciation I have for my bandmates, their intention and vision — I couldn’t ask for anything more meaningful,” Rose said. “The intention is to bring honest, true, heartfelt music to our fans, while fostering the dedication to help bring healing to people and the planet. It’s time for connection with ourselves, the environment, with each other, with animals. Dango Rose, on his bandmate, Bonnie Paine, above: “She’s one of the greatest singers I’ve heard.” Putting that into music, we hope Carbondale Mountain Fair in 2011, at St. Augustine High School. The to create an atmosphere for evolution and released two albums, and one school was renowned for its music and grace to occur.” EP, “It’s Alive,” which came out last program, and Rose considered Along with the positive intentions month. Next month, the band will go himself at the time a far from and respect among the musicians, into Bear Creek Studio, near Seattle, accomplished player. Elephant Revival has the sound to record their next album; producing “It was really not because I was any that first captured Rose. Paine is an will be Ryan Hadlock, fresh off his good. He just wanted to show the kids extraordinary singer, whose solo a success with the self-titled album by I could do it,” Rose recalled. “It was an cappella tunes are often the highlights the Lumineers. honor. And it sparked the confidence of the band’s shows. The last time Elephant Revival I could do it for life.” “Bonnie’s one of the greatest singers headlined Belly Up, it was a free show Rose moved to Colorado in I’ve heard in my lifetime. Handsin the spring offseason; this time, it’s September of 2001 and soon joined down,” Rose said. “I’m a friend and a mid-December date — Thursday, High on the Hog. Within a year or a bandmate — but it’s true. And her Dec. 13 — and tickets are 20. I’d so, Rose recognized that playing the rhythmic sensibility — playing with expect a big crowd. band’s old-time style didn’t match his that is a treat.”
PHOTOS BY STEWART OKSENHORN
UPCOMING CEE LO RETURNS WITH GOODIE MOB
Goodie Mob, with rapper Big Gipp, appears with singer Cee Lo Green on New Year’s Eve at Belly Up. The big news on the Belly Up’s Christmas/New Years lineup is New Year’s Eve itself, with r&b singer Cee Lo Green taking honors. But while Green has done the nearly impossible trick of making hit songs (”Crazy,” “Fuck You”) that have entered the broad public consciousness, Cee Lo might be upstaged by one of his own. Sharing the stage on Dec. 31 is Goodie Mob, the Southern hip-hop group from which Green emerged. And when Goodie Mob made a Belly Up appearance early in 2010, the best rapper onstage wasn’t Green, but his bandmate, Big Gipp. The rest of Christmas week features mostly returning acts: Third Eye Blind on Dec. 26 (but keep your eye on the opening act, Colorado’s You Me & Apollo); Rufus Wainwright (Dec. 27); Thievery Corporation (Dec. 29-30); Steve Angello (late show on Dec. 30). More interesting are the newcomers to Belly Up: modern rockers the Shins (Friday, Dec. 14); Father John Misty (Jan. 4), led by former Fleet Foxes member Josh Tillman; female singer ZZ Ward (Jan. 30); British hard rock band the Darkness (Feb. 2); America (March 15, and yes, that America — “A Horse With No Name,” “Sister Golden Hair” — celebrating their 40th anniversary); and a two-night stand by Colorado’s Yonder Mountain String Band (March 16-17), who have played the Wheeler Opera House, Jazz Aspen’s Labor Day Festival and the old Double Diamond, but never Belly Up.
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AROUNDASPEN
The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN
MORE FLAMINGO-A-GO-GO THERE WERE SO MANY YOUNG parents and teachers and board members at the Aspen Education Foundation FlamingoA-Go-Go party that I am running more photos this week from their party at the St Regis Hotel. Many wore pink clothing or pink boas in honor of the fundraising MARY event for the Aspen ESHBAUGH HAYES Public Schools. The foundation, AEF, raises money for programs that are not covered by the school budget. These are the young residents who, if not already, will soon be taking over the town. Received my copy of Jason Binn’s new magazine titled DuJour based in New York City. If you think our local magazines are slick and filled with luxury items and advertisements ... you have to look at Jason’s latest. He formerly was founder and former CEO of Niche Media, which included Aspen Peak, Ocean Drive and Hamptons magazines. Undercurrent ... The internet is causing all kinds of problems for photographers ... our photographs appear in all kinds of places ... without photo credit and of course, without pay.
A-GO-GO From the left at the Aspen Educational Foundation party at the St. Regis are Rick Taylor, Kim Martin, Stephanie Nixon, Tanmel Tojan and Craig Carlson.
A-GO-GO
From the left are Charla Belinski, school board member; Melissa Long, AEF executive director; Robin Hamill, AEF president; and Kris Ferguson, AEF board member.
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Vince Lahey and Diana Duffey.
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Pip and Richard Pryor.
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From the left are Jim Aresty, Kar Kiker and Lori Berman.
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A-GO-GO
From the left are David and Terri Junquist and Lisa and Alan Bush.
P H OTO S B Y M A RY E S H BA U G H H AY E S
by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES
A-GO-GO
Ginny and Pete Yang.
A-GO-GO From the left are Rick and Emily Simeone and Valerie and Michael Pearce.
A-GO-GO Aspen Times people at the AEF party are, from left, Jeff Hoffman, Gunilla Israel Asher and Ashton Hewitt.
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Tana Rinaldi and Stacey Green.
A-GO-GO Katie Thomas and Hugh Marsh.
A-GO-GO Vance and Eva Lemley.
A-GO-GO Greer Bescroft, left, with Linda Soderberg.
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From the left are Sarah Shaw and Virginia and Rick Newton.
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Chris Wheatley and Rosina Allen.
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From the left are Lori and Michael Gurtman and Steven and Juliette Ferrell.
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CURRENTEVENTS
DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2012
HEAR Rock band the Shins makes their Aspen debut Friday, Dec. 14, at Belly Up.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 Elephant Revival 9:30 p.m. - 11 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. Nederland, Colo., quintet features Sage Cook (banjo, guitar, mandolin, tenor banjo, bass and fiddle); Bridget Law (fiddle, octave fiddle); Bonnie Paine (washboard, djembe, musical saw, stompbox); Daniel Rodriguez (guitar, banjo, bass); and Dango Rose (double-bass, mandolin, banjo). All share vocals and write songs, offering elements of gypsy, rock, Celtic, alt-country and folk. Call 970-544-9800. Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. Thunder River Theatre Company presents “Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol.” Chained and shackled, Marley is condemned to a hellish eternity. He’s even given his own private tormentor — a malicious little hell-sprite who thoroughly enjoys his work. Desperate, Marley accepts his one chance to free himself: To escape his own chains, he must first redeem Scrooge. So begins a journey of laughter and terror, redemption and renewal, during which Scrooge’s heart, indeed, is opened; but not before Marley discovers his own. The production is directed by Mike Monroney and features Kent Hudson Reed, Richard Lyon, Lee Sullivan and Chris Wheatley. Call 970-963-8200. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14 Dark Mountain Party Winter 2012 7:10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Norm Gershman’s Retreat, 0529 Emma Road, Basalt. Free party featuring community project, with music, food, body work, drumming circle and more. For all ages. Call 970-927-0308. Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Base Camp Bar & Grill, Snowmass Base Village. Plaza Aprés ski live music. Call 970-923-6000. Daystar Handbell Choir 7:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., The Gathering Center, 110 Snowmass Drive, Carbondale. The Daystar Handbell Choir hails from Salt Lake City and features 20-25 bells, instruments and voices. The program is free to the public; donations gratefully accepted. Call 970-963-8773 (ext. 105). Haden Gregg and Tom Hills 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Sneaky’s Tavern, Snowmass Base Village. Acoustic favorites with a beat. Call 970-923-8080.
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Rocky Mountain Rob: No Strings Attached 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., The Edge, Timberline Condominiums, Snowmass Village. Early acoustic harmonica blues and folk solos. Call 970-923-4000. The Natural Disasters 9 p.m., The Black Nugget, 403 Main St., Carbondale. Aspen band will have you dancing to classic rock covers and originals. No cover charge. Call 970-618-1156. The Shins with Tennis 9 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. With their melodic indie-pop, the Shins helped bring the pop traditions of 1960s groups like the Beatles, the Zombies and the Beach Boys to a new generation of music fans. Call 970-544-9800. Charlie Brown Christmas and The Little Star 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Carbondale Middle School. SoL Theatre presents a Christmas classic for all ages, featuring a cast of local children. Tickets are $10 for children under 12 and $15 for adults; available at www.carbondalearts.com. Call 720-936-9732. Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. Thunder River Theatre Company presents “Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol.” Call 970-963-8200. The Spirit of Aspen Spectacular 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. A song-anddance extravaganza about finding the meaning of Christmas here in Aspen, starring two of Aspen’s most well-known professional actors, Nina Gabianelli and Peggy Wilkie, as well as the JGP young people’s troupe. The story: Becca, who comes on vacation for the holidays with her family, is taken by the Spirit of Christmas on a journey through time in downtown Aspen. She learns that giving of oneself and being together mark the true meaning of Christmas. The show is filled with holiday music. Special “Celebrate Being A Local” opening night discount on Dec. 14; bring proof of valley residency and take $5 off the ticket price. On Dec. 15, bring at least two cans of food for LIFT-UP and take $5 off the ticket price. Call 970-920-5770. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15 Adventure Club with Doorly 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Adventure Club is a dubstep duo hailing from Montreal, birthed by musicians Christian Srigley and Leighton James, whose remixes range from 1950s classics and post-hardcore rock to the sweet electronic sounds of today. Call 970-544-9800.
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Backcountry Film Festival 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Colorado Rocky Mountain School Barn, Carbondale. Come celebrate the transition to winter with the Winter Wildlands Alliance Backcountry Film Festival, created eight years ago to highlight the alliance’s efforts to preserve and promote winter landscapes for humanpowered users. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for students. All proceeds support the Rios to Rivers Chilean kayaking exchange program, which aims to connect a group of youth kayakers and students from Chile with a group of CRMS students, via the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River and the threatened Rio Baker in Chile. Call 503-939-0441. Charlie Brown Christmas and The Little Star 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Carbondale Middle School. SoL Theatre presents a Christmas classic for all ages, featuring a cast of local children. Tickets are $10 for children under 12 and $15 for adults; available at www.carbondalearts.com. Call 720-936-9732. Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. Thunder River Theatre Company presents “Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol.” Call 970-963-8200. The Spirit of Aspen Spectacular 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. A song-anddance extravaganza about finding the meaning of Christmas here in Aspen, starring two of Aspen’s most well-known professional actors, Nina Gabianelli and Peggy Wilkie, as well as the JGP young people’s troupe. The show is filled with holiday music. Special “Celebrate Being A Local” opening night discount on Dec. 14; bring proof of valley residency and take $5 off the ticket price. On Dec. 15, bring at least two cans of food for LIFT-UP and take $5 off the ticket price. Call 970-920-5770. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16 Live Poetry Night 6:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Victoria’s Espresso & Wine Bar, 510 E. Durant Ave., Aspen. Winter celebration sponsored by the Aspen Poets’ Society. Evening features live music with singer-songwriter Dave Taylor and an open mic for poets (read an original poem and/or a favorite poem of the season or holidays). Open to all poets and listeners; no fee. Refreshments. Call 970-379-2136.
Open Mic Night 7:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. Bring your tap shoes, penny whistle, nose flute, poetry or guitar. No embarrassment allowed; all comers welcome. Call 970-704-1216. Sunday Fun Day 5 p.m. - 8 p.m., The Black Nugget, 403 Main St., Carbondale. Open mic, comedy and poetry. Share your talents and enjoy the fun. Call 970-963-4498. Veza String Quartet Concert 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Aspen Community Church, 200 E. Bleeker St. The Veza String Quartet, comprised of students from the Aspen Music Festival who study at Rice University in Houston, presents an afternoon of chamber music including Mendelssohn’s String Quartet No. 1 in E-flat Major, Op. 12 and Hindemith String Quartet No. 2 in F minor, Op. 10. Free admission; donations are welcome. Call 970-925-1571. Charlie Brown Christmas and The Little Star 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Carbondale Middle School. SoL Theatre presents a Christmas classic for all ages, featuring a cast of local children. Tickets are $10 for children under 12 and $15 for adults; available at www.carbondalearts.com. Call 720-936-9732. Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol 2 p.m. - 4 p.m., Thunder River Theatre, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. The production is directed by Mike Monroney and features Kent Hudson Reed, Richard Lyon, Lee Sullivan and Chris Wheatley. Call 970-963-8200. The Spirit of Aspen Spectacular 3 p.m. - 5 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. The show is filled with holiday music and this performance is a chance to meet with Santa. Call 970-920-5770. MONDAY, DECEMBER 17 Dana Wilson and The Old Time Jam Session 7 p.m. - 10 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. All musicians welcome, experienced and beginners; bring your banjo, guitar, mandolin, fiddle, spoons, washboard or whatever and join in the fun of early American music. Call 970-704-1216. Open Mic Night 9:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., The Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Check out what Aspen’s songwriters and musicians have to offer. Call 970-925-9955.
COURTESY BY ANNIE BEEDY
edited by RYAN SLABAUGH
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18 Takah Tuesday 9 p.m. - 9 p.m., Takah Sushi, 320 S. Mill St., Aspen. Live music featuring local bands, starting around 9 p.m. Call 970-925-8588. The Malah 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. This Greenville, S.C.-based trio has been captivating ears with “malahdic” electro grooves since December 2003. In an over-saturated “jam” market, the band is making its mark with finely structured tunes that remain fluid and open to interpretation. “Light Forms,” its third fulllength studio album, was released in August. Call 970-544-9800.
THE ARTS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 En Plein Air 7 a.m. - 9 p.m., Villas at Snowmass Club Welcome Center. Featuring the works of seven artists. All works, in assorted sizes, are available for purchase at moderate prices. Runs through April 15. Call 970-274-2478. Opening Reception: Members-Only Gallery Walk-through 5 p.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. A membersonly gallery conversation with artist Morgan Fisher, led by museum curator Jacob Proctor, and gallery walk-through of the exhibition BLOCK, PILLAR, SLAB, BEAM with adjunct curator Matthew Thompson and participating artists. Call 970-925-8050.
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16 WC3 Bizarre Bazaar & Wrap It Up 9 a.m. - 2 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. WC3 opens its doors to local artists and craftsmen who will bring their handmade gifts to sell. A team of gift-wrappers will be on site for Wrap it Up; proceeds benefit the free programs at WC3. Call 970-922-2342. MONDAY, DECEMBER 17 Opening Reception: En Plein Air 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Villas at Snowmass Club Welcome Center. Meet the artists whose works are on exhibit. Many of their landscapes are from the Roaring Fork Valley. All works are available for purchase at moderate prices. Refreshments. Exhibit continues through April 15. Call 970-274-2478.
YOGA & EXERCISE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 Vinyasa Flow Yoga 6:15 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Class for all levels, taught by certified instructor Anthony Jerkunica. Call 970-379-8108.
decision-making skills. The focus will be to advance understanding of avalanche terrain, particularly from the perspective of stability analysis, improve companion rescue skills including multiple burials, advance understanding of avalanche release and triggering mechanisms, and introduce a snowstability analysis and forecasting framework. Student prerequisites: The ability to travel in avalanche terrain. An AIARE Level 1 course (recommended) or equivalent training/ experience is required. Call 970-925-7625. Fireside Chat: The Legacy of Rome 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Koch Building, The Aspen Institute, 1000 N. Third St., Aspen. Join Renaissance experts Bill Cook, Jeremy Hartnett and Ross King as they explore the aspects of Rome that have endured: architecture, religion, sculpture, politics, painting, commerce and law. Call 970-544-7914. The Business of Photography 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. Photographer Ken Toy discusses the requirements for building a profitable photography business. Class continues Jan. 10 and Feb. 7, and will cover credentialing, selecting and acquiring
AIARE Avalanche Course-Level 1 5 p.m., Aspen Expeditions, 0115 Boomerang Road, Aspen Highlands. This three-day AIARE-certified course emphasizes awareness and avoidance of avalanche terrain and basic decision-making and rescue strategies. The course includes travel techniques, basic rescue procedures and information for traveling in the backcountry. Students will learn how to prepare for and carry out a trip, to understand the basic decision making process, and learn to rescue a buried person. This course includes both classroom and field work. Call 970-925-7625. All-School Meeting and Behind the Classrooms Tour 8:15 a.m. - 10 a.m., Aspen Community School, 1199 Woody Creek Road, Woody Creek. Come find out what’s planned for the new campus of this K-8 public charter school with a Behind the Classroom tour and the chance to experience a weekly all-school meeting. Go to www.IBelieveACS.org for more information. Call 970-923-4080. Get In “Touch” With Your IPad 1 p.m. - 3 p.m., Basalt Regional Library community room. Call 970-927-4311.
Opening Reception: Morgan Fisher 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St. Los Angeles-based artist and filmmaker Morgan Fisher first achieved widespread recognition in the early 1970s for a body of experimental films that deconstructed the language of cinema both as physical material and as a set of production methods and technical procedures. Call 970-925-8050. Adult Beginning Ballet Class 9 a.m. - 10 am, Coredination, 520 South Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Adult and teen beginning ballet class for those who wish to learn this movement art form in a relaxed and enjoyable environment. Taught by Alexandra Jerkunica, professional ballet dancer and certified pilates instructor. Call 970-379-2187. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14 BLOCK, PILLAR, SLAB, BEAM 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St. This exhibit brings together four artists from across Latin America who explore the evocative potential of found objects and the basic elements of the built environment. The exhibition takes its title from a game devised by philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein that examines the language of building to explore the nature of language itself. The artists included in this exhibition — Jorge Méndez Blake, Alexandre da Cunha, Amalia Pica, and Gabriel Sierra — share a playful approach to both physical and cultural materials, building works that recall the improvised objects of everyday life, objects that derive their meaning from the practical use to which they are put. Call 970-925-8050. Bill Gruenberg: Art is Easy 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. An exhibition of contemporary sculptures and paintings by one of Aspen’s favorite artists, continuing through Dec. 20. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free and open to the public. Call 970-927-4123. WC3 Ornament Exhibition and Store 9 a.m. - 2 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Featuring ornaments submitted by community members. Proceeds from their sale benefit the free programs of the center, a nonprofit. The sale continues through Jan. 5. Call 970-922-2342. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15 Fresh Holiday Centerpiece Class 12 p.m. - 2 p.m., Connie Hendrix Gallery, Marble. Taught by Daniela Standley, previous owner of Floral Boutique for 15 years. Take home your creation. RSVPs due by Dec. 12. Another class offered on Dec. 16. Call 970-963-2991. Winter Welcome! 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Ann Korologos Gallery, 211 Midland Ave., Basalt. A celebration of the season with an all-gallery show, with unique and artful gifting possibilities, as well as carolers and holiday refreshments. Works showing Dec. 10 through Jan. 10. Call 970-927-9668.
COURTESY WARNER BROS. PICTURES
See Martin Freeman stars in “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” opening on Friday, Dec. 14 in valley theaters. Adult Drop-In Basketball 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen High School Skier Dome. Play pick-up basketball for $5 per person. Get in a workout and prepare for the adult basketball league that runs January through March. Call 970-948-2192. Hatha Yoga 12 p.m. - 1 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Level 1-2 class focuses on connecting fluid movement to the mind and heart exploring what is going on in this connection. Call 970-379-8108. Ski Conditioning Class 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Call 970-920-5140. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14 Aspen Skating Club 4 p.m. - 4 p.m., Aspen Ice Garden. Learn to skate with Aspen Skating Club, which is enrolling participants now for the 2012-13 season. Sessions offered every Tuesday and Friday at 4 p.m. and Sundays at 5:15 p.m. All ages and all ability levels are welcome. Private and group instruction are available. Call 970-379-5900. Yoga For Lunch 12:30 p.m. - 1:30 p.m., Aspen Health & Harmony, El Jebel. Community yoga class. Call 970-704-9642. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15 CrossFit Trial Workout 9 a.m. - 10 am, Roaring Fork CrossFit, 402 Park Ave., Basalt. Free trial session. Everyone is welcome. Workouts scaled to individual ability level. Call 970-379-6309.
THE COMMUNITY
equipment, and finding and keeping customers. Participants should bring camera and one photo. Sign up is required. Call or come to main library desk. Call 970-429-1900. Booster Club Bazaar 3 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Alpine Bank, second floor, 600 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. Aspen High School Booster Club event offers holiday cheer and an opportunity to buy Skierlogo gear. Call 970-948-9541. WC3 Ornaments Exhibition, Auction and Store 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Proceeds from the sale of ornaments will benefit the free programs of the Woody Creek Community Center. Submitted ornament entries have been juried; winners will be announced at the party. The ornament sale runs from through Jan. 5. Call 970-922-2342. Sven the Elf Visits Rock Botton Ranch 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., ACES at Rock Bottom Ranch, 2001 Hooks Spur Road, Basalt. Sven invites all children to help feed the ranch animals and make holiday crafts. Free event. Call 970-927-6760. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14 Middle School Night: Clue Party 6 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., 0861 Maroon Creek Road, upstairs in the Aspen Recreation Center. Come to the Youth Center for a real life game of Clue (based on the board game). Someone has been stealing the AYC dodgeballs and it’s up to participants to find out who. The program is free; open to all Youth Center members in middle school. Call 970-544-4130.
Jill Sheeley: Special Display of Fraser the Dog Books 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. The Wyly presents Jill Sheeley: Special Display of Fraser the Dog Books, Merchandise and Original Illustrations by Tammie Lane through Dec. 20. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free and open to the public. Call 970-927-4123. Coat Drive 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Snowmass Chapel, Snowmass Village. The Salvation Army holds its annual drive to help those in need. Please bring coats, hats, gloves, etc. in adult and kid sizes. Snowmass Chapel. Nov. 23-Dec. 23. Call 970-945-6976. After-School Holiday Ornament Decorating 3 p.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Nicole Nagel-Gogolak leads a drop-in session; participants will use Wyly art supplies to create an ornament. The cost is $5 for two ornaments. Call 970-927-4123. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15 WC3 Bizarre Bazaar & Wrap It Up 9 a.m. - 4 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. WC3 opens its doors to local artists and craftsmen who will bring their handmade gifts to sell. A team of gift-wrappers will be on site for Wrap it Up; proceeds benefit the free programs at WC3. Call 970-922-2342.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 AIARE Avalanche Course-Level 2 9 a.m. - 9 am, Aspen Expeditions, 0115 Boomerang Road, Aspen Highlands. This four-day program provides backcountry leaders the opportunity to advance their avalanche knowledge and A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY
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Free Feel-Good, Exercise Program!
Ring The Bells For Our Holiday Red Kettle Program Join Aspen Rotary and Other Volunteers. Help Raise Funds For Our Community’s Neediest Residents.
Call Dot (970) 379-2306 To sign up for short, invigorating stints outside Aspen’s City Market or Clark’s Market during this holiday season. Serving our neighbors in need in Pitkin County THANK YOU
THANK YOU
THANK YOU
Thank you so much to everyone who came to our YAPPY HOUR event and made it a success! A huge debt of gratitude to
FINBARR’S and their staff for being such wonderful hosts. We would also like to thank our sponsors:
A SPEN R EAL E STATE C a m e l o t C OMPANY West
69 HERRON HOLLOW ON PITKIN GREEN Stunning five bedroom, five and one half bath home that is situated on Pitkin Green near the base of Red Mountain, capturing amazing views of Aspen, Highlands and Buttermilk mountains; a truly idyllic setting. This newly renovated home is great for enjoying on your own as well as for entertaining, with its beautifully manicured lawn, wrap around decks and a one of a kind gentlemen’s billiard room. Co-listed with Wendalin Whitman
$8,499,000 MLS #125852
Shlomo Ben-Hamoo & Peggy Scharlin - - • - - Shlo@gmail.com |peggy@scharlin.com
620 East Hyman Ave. 9709202006 www.AspenExperts.com
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A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY
✦
D e c e m b e r 13 - 19 , 2 0 1 2
LOCAL
MARKETPLACE
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PLACE AN AD >> ASPENTIMES.COM/PLACEAD | (970) 925-9937 | FAX (970) 925-5647 | CLASSIFIEDS@ASPENTIMES.COM | MORE AT ASPENTIMES.COM
Ford Dualy Flatbed Pickup 1959
$MBTTJD 0OF UPO 4JY DZMJOEFS TUSBJHIU HBT FOHJOF XJUI NPVOUBCMF MJGU DSBOF GPS FBTZ QJDLT /P CPEZ EBNBHF OFFET TPNF FOHJOF XPSL (SFBU QSPKFDU MPUT PG QPUFOUJBM GPS XPSL PS DPMMFDUPS $2,845. 970.379.1280
Honda CRB EXL 2008
"8% -FBUIFS TFBUT .PPOSPPG )FBUFE TFBUT "MMPZ XIFFMT $SVJTF $POUSPM EJTL $% DIBOHFS 1PXFS XJOEPXT BOE MPDL
Audi A5 convertible 2010
Audi Q5 2010
Chevrolet Tahoe LT 1997
Dodge Durango 1999
"VEJ " DPOWFSUJCMF L NJ QSFNJVN QMVT QLH )FBUFE TFBUT 3FBS QBSLJOH BTTJTU "8% /BW BOE # 0 TPVOE BSVN CFJHF NFUBMMJD -JLF OFX $38,500 970-948-5150
)FBUFE MFBUIFS TFBUT /BWJHBUJPO 1SFTUJHF QBDLBHF -PUT PG FYUSBT
- 7 )1 NJMFT MFBUIFS TFBUT 5IVMF SPPG SBDL XFMM NBJOUBJOFE
5000 126,000 Auto transmission. 7 "MMPZ XIFFMT $% QMBZFS -VHHBHF SBDL -FBUIFS TFBUT #MBDL
$3100 970-309-1410
$2500 770-866-4867
Ford F-350 2003
Ford Mustang Coupe 1968
GMC Denali XL 2005
Harley Davidson Sportster 1999
'PSE ' -BSJBU EPPS &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO NJ "VUP -JUSF %JFTFM 4VOSPPG #FEMJOFS -FBUIFS TFBUT )FBUFE TFBUT #SVTI HVBSE (PPTFOFDL IJUDI (SFBU 5SVDL $18,500 970-948-2156
3FCVJMU )0 FOHJOF DPNQVUFSJ[FE GVFM JOGFDUJPO IJHI QFSGPSNBODF FMFD USPOJDT 3FXJSFE TQFFE BVUPNBUJD MJNJUFE TMJQ SFBS FOE $VTUPN TUFSFP
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DD 4VQFS TQPSU *U IBT NJMFT UXP TFBUT BOE SVOT HSFBU (BSBHF TUPSFE BMM JUT MJGF
$15,000 Please call Bob 970-390-4651 Gypsum
$12,500 CTS ASPEN 970-925-8842
$5,000 970-948-9889 in Aspen
HONDA CRV 2009
Infiniti G35 2003
Jeep Grand Cherokee Orvis 1997
Jeep Wranger Unlimited 2005
NJ FYDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO BVUP USBOT Q XJOE BMMPZ XIFFMT TJMWFS DPMPS
EPPS (PPE DPOEJUJPO L NJMFT "VUP USBOTNJTTJPO "MMPZ XIFFMT 1PXFS TFBUT 4VOSPPG )FBUFE TFBUT 1PXFS XJOEPXT 8IJUF
Great Condition, Miles 21,500, /FX 5JSFT 3JNT TFBU DPWFST JODI MJGU IBSE UPQ UJOUFE XJOEPXT TJSJVT SBEJP MJGF UJNF TVCTDSJQUJPO JO "TQFO
Realistic Seller. Offering Price: $32,000 OBO Vail 970-376-6570
Christina or Kyle 970-319-1022
$5900 OBO Wayland 252-945-7588
+FFQ (SBOE $IFSPLFF 0SWJT (PPE DPOEJUJPO NJMFT CVSOT OP PJM "VUP USBOTNJTTJPO 7 /FX UJSFT CBUUFSZ . 0MTFO NPMTFO!SVOCPY DPN $3,500 970-925-3628
Jeep Wrangler X 2008
KAWASAKI 80 & SUZUKI 80
Nissan Pathfinder LE 3.5 2001
NISSAN TITAN V8 2005
Porsche 911 4S 2008
(SFBU DPOEJUJPO NJ "VUP 7 (SFBU PGG SPBE BOE JO TOPX *ODMVEFT GSPOU UPX CSBDLFU TLJ SBDL $% (FUT NQH #PVHIU OFX 1BSLFS PS 5JMMZ QNBEEVY!HNBJM DPN $20,000 970-927-3682
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$9,500 970-319-0193 Basalt
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Subaru Legacy Wagon 2001 AWD
Three Wheelers - Various
Toyota RAV4 2004
Toyota Tundra 2008
Triumph America 865cc - 2009
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"8% i-w &EJUJPO &YDFMMFOU TOPX DBS (SFBU (BT .JMF BHF (PPE $POEJUJPO DMFBO XFMM DBSFE GPS NJMFT $9000 970-618-8048
&YUFOEFE DBC &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO NJMFT X , XBSSBOUZ , JO NPEJGJDBUJPOT XJMM GPSXBSE MJTU VQPO SFRVFTU $29,000 Mike O'Connor 970-471-9616 mike@oconnorconsult.com
&'* MVHHBHF SBDL MH QBOOJFST ,/ JOUBLF 5SJVNQI TUSBJU QJQFT /FWFS ESPQQFE BMXBZT HBSBHFE QFSGFDU NJMFT UIJT CJLF SJQT $6560 Jon 970-319-8764 Carbondale
$17,300 970-618-7417
Volvo S60 R 2004
$20,900
$900 for one, $1600 for both. Mike 970-379-1141
$3900 for all Can be sold separately Call for details 970-379-9878 in Aspen
Price $18,500, Blue Book $19,000 Call Mike, (970)-948-4976
Volvo XC 90 T6 2003
Why are there so many auto photo ads listed each day?
Because auto photo ads WORK! - $ZM 5VSCP NQH , NJMFT -FBUIFS 1PXFS &WFSZUIJOH 4VOSPPG .BOVBM "8% IQ WFSZ GBTU BOE GVO UP ESJWF /FX CSBLFT BOE SPUPST $12,500 970-389-8301
5XJO UVSCP (SFBU DPOEJUJPO , "8% )FBUFE TFBUT 4VOSPPG TFUT PG UJSFT PO SJNT 6MUJNBUF NPVOUBJO DBS 4DPUU Price Lowered! $8900 970-379-8416
Call or go online to sell your wheels!
925-9937 • www.aspentimes.com/placead A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY
33
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STANSAUTOSALESLLC.COM
WHAT A DEAL!
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Multiple Positions
Fischer amc73, All mountain, 170. Rail flex 2 bindings. Brand New!
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RON"THE GOLD GUY "
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$250 970-379-9879
Pickup bed cover; CSBOE OFX OFBSMZ OFX 5POFBV IBSE DPWFS MPDLJOH " 3 & CSBOE CMBDL FBTZ PO FBTZ PGG 'JUT $IFWZ PS (.$ EVBMMZ 970-625-2505
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Please call 970-524-0657. Leave a message.
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NEVER BEEN USED!!!! $250 OBO Jared 970-379-3233
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6 pc Home Theater
4VSSPVOE TPVOE TZTUFN XJUI %7% QMBZFS 4QFBLFS XJSFT JODMVEFE 0#0 Call 970-471-1649
&TUBUF 4BMF 98 Subaru Forester, 8IJUF "VUP , $BMM GPS PUIFS DBST BWBJMBCMF 8F GJOBODF XJUI BQQSPWFE DSFEJU #6: )&3& 1": )&3& )XZ JO .JOUVSO Avalancheautosales.com
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D e c e m b e r 13 - 19 , 2 0 1 2
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$1500 970.306.9544
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Hoarders be gone. Advertise your cleaning business in the Service Directory. Always in print and online. ClassiямБeds@ cmnm.org.
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Aspen
5PUUFSEPXO /PSUI #FESPPN CBUI TR GU
DBS EFUBDIFE HBSBHF 'MFYJCMF GMPPS QMBO (SFBU BDUJWF MPDBM GBNJMZ OFJHI CPSIPPE "TQFO 4DIPPM %JTDUSJDU XXX 3BJGJF DPN PS 3BJGJF!3BJGJF DPN 1,130,000 Raifie Bass 970-948-7424 Aspen Sothebys I'ntl Realty
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RV sites for rent at River Meadows Mobile Home Park. 970-945-8925
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First Month 1/2 Off!
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Commercial Condos for Sale 0OMZ 5ISFF 3FNBJOJOH *O UIF SFOPWBUFE $SBOEBMM #VJMEJOH CMPDLT GSPN UIF (POEPMB TG TU BOE TU UP TG DPOUJHVPVT (SFBU WJFXT HSFBU MPDBUJPO
970-948-0001 Bob Langley Joshua & Co. bob@joshuaco.com
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Aviation
Hangar Space Available Rifle Airport 4UJMM MPPLJOH GPS MJHIU UXJO TNBMM KFU XJUI QPTTJCMF QBSUOFSTIJQ -POH UFSN FDPOPNJD MPDBM SBUFT $BMM GPS RVPUF
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Please Recycle #% #" %61-&9 6/'63/ '1 8% -0/( 5&3. /4 %0( ' - 4
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ASPEN
3BD/2.5BA, Townhome, 1 car gar, MH GFODFE ZBSE /1 $1025/month 970-618-6237
3FOUBMT $PNNFSDJBM 3FUBJM
3FOUBMT $PNNFSDJBM 3FUBJM 40' x 72' Metal Building. hY h 0WFSIFBE EPPS 3FTUSPPNT 0 ) )FBU BOE *OTVMBUFE Silt Trade Center ,FMMZ -ZPO -FBWF NFTTBHF
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Try a border for just ямБve bucks!
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$300/month. 970-250-2582.
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TIBSFE SFDFQUJPO 135 W. Main Aspen Victorian. 970-379-3715 /JDF 4' 0GGJDF #MEH JO $BSCPOEBMF NP (SPTT -FBTF 1BSLJOH ' - 4 1SPQFSUZ JT BMTP GPS TBMF $POUBDU
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ASPEN
ASPEN
Basalt
i*O 5PXO (&. XJUI BMM UIF DPNGPSUT PG B MBSHFS TQBDF 4UZMJTIMZ SFNPEFMFE (SFBU GVSOJTIJOHT 1FU GSJFOEMZ
Top-floor, corner 2 bed/2 bath condo 4QFDUBDVMBS TPVUI GBDJOH WJFXT PG )JHIMBOET BOE #VUUFSNJML 3FNPEFM JODMVEFT HSBOJUF DPVOUFST OFX DBCJOFUSZ BQQMJBODFT DBS HBSBHF 1SJWBUF EFDL (SFBU PQUJPO GPS UIPTF MPPLJOH GPS "TQFO 4DIPPM %JTUSJDU PS JEFBM HFU BXBZ GPS OE IPNFPXOFS $750,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN
BDSF SBODIFUUF JO &NNB GJWF NJO VUFT GSPN 8JMMJUT #BTBMU (SBOJUF LJUDI FO HSBOJUF CBUI UISFF CFESPPNT PGGJDF TUBMM CBSO X UBDL SPPN EPH SVO CFESPPN HVFTUIPVTF UXP QBTUVSFT PGG CBDL ZBSE QPOE GVMMZ GFODFE BOE JSSJ HBUFE CBDLT VQ UP PQFO TQBDF $BMM GPS BQQPJOUNFOU #SPLFST QSPUFDUFE $1,100,000 or BO (970) 510-5131
The perfect Aspen Pied-a-Terre. $314,000 Tory Thomas 970-948-1341 Aspen Snowmass Sotheby's International Realty 5PSZ!UPSZUIPNBT OFU
BASALT
CARBONDALE/ MISSOURI HEIGHTS
CARBONDALE
COMMERCIAL - BASALT
SNOWMASS
Aspen Junction- Mountain Views (SFBU WBMVF GPS NJE WBMMFZ CFESPPN TJOHMF GBNJMZ IPNF .BHOJGJDFOU QBO PSBNJD WJFXT PWFSMPPLJOH UIF &NNB WBMMFZ 3FNPEFMFE LJUDIFO OFX DPVOUFS UPQT DBCJOFUT BOE NPSF 4PVUI GBDJOH XJUI QMFOUZ PG TVO BOE MJHIU $449,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN
TRADE POSSIBILITY %P ZPV IBWF B DPOEP JO 4OPXNBTT ZFU ESFBN PG CVJMEJOH B IPNF 5IJT DPVME CF B HSFBU USBEF QPTTJCJMJUZ 5IJT BDSF MPU JT UIF CFTU BU 4UJSMJOH 3BODI JO .JT TPVSJ )FJHIUT #FBVUJGVM QBOPSBNJD WJFXT. $397,000 Doug Leibinger 970.379.9045 Doug.Leibinger@SothebysRealty.com
Must Close by December 31, 2012 All Offers Considered! -BSHF MFWFM IPNFTJUFT CBDLJOH VQ UP PQFO TQBDF BOE #MVF $SFFL TVJUBCMF GPS DVTUPN DPOTUSVDUJPO &OKPZ QSJWBUF DMVC BNFOJUJFT JODMVEJOH QPPM UFOOJT QMBZHSPVOE BOE DMVCIPVTF Asking $100,000 each Nancy Emerson 970.704.3220 1.800.388.8655 Ext. 044 Coldwell Banker Mason Morse XXX NBTPONPSTF DPN
Downtown Ground Floor Office Space %PXOUPXO HSPVOE MFWFM DPNNFSDJBM PGGJDF TQBDF TR GU OFYU UP 4BYZhT $BGF PO .JEMBOE "WFOVF /FBSCZ TUSFFU QBSLJOH GPPU DFJMJOHT TFBMFE DPODSFUF GMPPST 1SJWBUF SFTUSPPN
Top of the World - Old Snowmass %JTDPWFS B IJEEFO HFN BUPQ B TQFDUBDV MBS NFTB &OKPZ FYQBOTJWF NPVOUBJO WJFXT 5IJT QSJWBUF BDSF DPNQPVOE GFB UVSFT B MPH BOE TUPOF NBJO SFTJEFODF B EFUBDIFE CFESPPN BQBSUNFOU B DBS HBSBHF BOE B TFQBSBUF BSUJTU TUVEJP $1,345,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN
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Aspen Snowmass SothebyтАЩs International Realty
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$2,000 per month (triple net lease) TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN
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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY
35
$0.#*/&% /05*$& 16#-*$"5*0/ $34 f '03&$-0463& 4"-& /0 5P 8IPN *U .BZ $PODFSO 5IJT /PUJDF JT HJWFO XJUI SFHBSE UP UIF GPMMPXJOH EFTDSJCFE %FFE PG 5SVTU 0O 4FQUFNCFS UIF VOEFSTJHOFE 1VCMJD 5SVTUFF DBVTFE UIF /PUJDF PG &MFDUJPO BOE %F NBOE SFMBUJOH UP UIF %FFE PG 5SVTU EFTDSJCFE CF MPX UP CF SFDPSEFE JO UIF $PVOUZ PG 1JULJO SFDPSET 0SJHJOBM (SBOUPS T
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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY
37
WORDPLAY
INTELLIGENT EXERCISE
by TRACI J. MACNAMARA/HIGH COUNTRY NEWS
AUTHOR REVIEW
‘TRUTH LIKE THE SUN’ IN “TRUTH Like the Sun,” Washington novelist Jim Lynch straddles two Seattles: the littleknown Western town in the 1960s, on the brink of exploding into a world-class city, and the modern Seattle of four decades later, at the height of the dot-com boom. He braids these incarnations of the city into an intricate narrative of politics and place, revolving around two characters brought together by their ambitions. Roger Morgan, the mastermind behind Seattle’s 1962 World’s Fair, is young and stubbornly determined to make his town “the capital of the world.” Nearly 40 years later, Morgan meets Helen Gulanos, an equally driven journalist, who is working on a dull assignment writing World’s Fair retrospectives. But when Roger, at the age of 70, announces he’s running for
by STEVEN E. ATWOOD
| edited by WILL SHORTZ
NOTEWORTHY
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[It’s gone!] A pop group might have one on Facebook Pouch 64 or 1,000 Head of a family Woodcutter of legend Rings Consideration in choosing a deli? Without rhyme or reason Baby pig, e.g. Name part meaning “from” Part of a butcher’s stand-up routine? Camouflage Sharpness French wave Pallid Laundry basket of just colors or just whites? ___-Pei (dog breed) Reqmt. for certain graduate studies Get an ___ effort Actress Sommer Wise lawmaker most likely to be re-elected? Miniature Protestant denom. Anthony Eden, Earl of ___ Red-berried tree French spouse Rock’s ___ Fighters Seeks, as office Artistic expression on the slopes?
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Levels Thrust upward Causing Election Day delays? Car category Skin growth Negatives Time ___ Mideast capital Dallas player, for short Jungle critter Chart indicating the progression of darkness after sunset? Disturb Sched. listing Eve preceders Boy: Lat. Power in Hollywood? “Don’t be ___” Caught in ___ Thick skin Prop for Mr. Monopoly or Mr. Peanut Paintball weapons? Voluminous ref. Comes by Salsa specification When there might be a two-for-one special on ice cream drinks? Beat in a price war Props for Mr. Monopoly and Mr. Peanut Make Building support Some printers Curse Mil. awards
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Loan figs. Nuuanu Pali Lookout locale Grp. that has held summit meetings in Caracas and Riyadh Paul Bunyan, e.g. Used a FedEx Office service Actress Woodard Actress Vardalos Source of northern exposure? Belarus neighbor Old minelayers Critic Clive Quarantine Composer Salieri 1957 #1 R&B hit for Chuck Willis Or or nor: Abbr. “Let ___ good unto all men”: Galatians 6:10 Suffice Salinger girl Like superhighways Actress Lena Counter orders To the same extent SeaWorld attraction Offshore bank, e.g., for tax purposes Normandy campaign city Writer Fleming Writer Wallace 11th-century king of Denmark City on the Little Cuyahoga Clear, in a way Italian port on the
D e c e m b e r 13 - 19 , 2 0 1 2
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Tyrrhenian Sea Attic’s purpose Sport involving paddles Olive ___ Grazing area “Wise” one Patronized, as a restaurant Fr. title Unyielding Lunatics’ outbursts Denver-toAlbuquerque dir. ___ Paulo Quaker cereal Contents of jewel cases Ones going through channels? Fencing unit? “Vive ___!” Kind of personality Up to, briefly Brian of ambient music Big maker of 65Down Permeate Jewelry chain Turn inside out Separate out Braves’ div. High-performance cars Bond girl Adams Given enough to be happy Out around midday, say Emphasize Some car radio buttons B-baller Small rented farms, in Britain
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This book review originally appeared in the High Country News (hcn.org).
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readers around the next plot turn. But he makes them work hard, much as Helen does, to keep the facts straight. In the end, the reader is likely to find the effort rewarding, even if the full truth about the past — as it concerns both Roger and his city — remains elusive, never fully exposed to the bright light of a blazing sun. The truth Lynch crafts in “Truth Like the Sun” is beautiful in its murkiness, like the sun you’d expect to see through clouds on a misty Seattle morning.
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‘Truth Like the Sun’ Jim Lynch Knopf; 2012 272 pages; $25.95
mayor, Helen starts digging deep in search of his past and of Seattle’s own seedy beginnings. “Truth Like the Sun” comes together in alternating chapters that bridge the decades, connecting the past and present in ways that become clearer after Helen finds Roger Morgan’s name linked to a younger, rowdier Seattle fraught with real estate scandals, gambling and corrupt law enforcement. Journalistic ambition and newsroom pressure spur Helen on, but Roger warns that her quest for the truth will, in the end, prove futile, telling her, “You could line up a whole bunch of truths about anyone and still miss the ones that really matter.” The key question facing Helen is an old and haunting one: What is truth? Lynch leaves just enough of it unexplained in his novel to tease
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— Last week’s puzzle answers — 96 97 98 101 102
Keep out of sight High, in a way Pay for a hand Terra ___ “Aristotle Contemplating ___ of Homer” 103 Certain bra specification 104 Legal scholar Guinier
105 Quaintly antique 106 German quaff 109 Actress Lupino and others 110 Undercover agent 111 Bits and pieces, e.g.: Abbr. 114 “That’s it!” 115 Roofing material
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Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!
DO YOU KNOW THIS PAIR?
They were found wandering loose at the Maroon Bells. We named them Bonnie and Clyde. BONNIE is a beautiful, friendly, twoyear-old Lab/Pitbull mix. Her sidekick, CLYDE, is an adorable, happy, friendly, twoyear-old Chihuahua/Dachshund mix. They both seem to get along well with people + other dogs even though Clyde is a bit shy while Bonnie is more outgoing.
2013 Pet Calendars available NOW at the shelter!
JIM
Find it on line at:
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Outgoing, energetic, 11-yearold American Foxhound/Husky mix male. Gets along well with people and other dogs. A retired sled dog who came to the shelter with his brother, Buck, and his sister, Jackie.
CHICO
Chico is a feisty, handsome, energetic, 1.5-yearold Chihuahua mix male who requires a knowledgeable, responsible, active home. Best with adults.
If you are interested in having copies delivered to your business, please call 429-9123.
this handsome, friendly, three-yearold Pitbull mix male found wandering the streets of Aspen? We named him WOODY. Very friendly and energetic. Seems good with people and other dogs.
STANLEY
Friendly 2-year-old Affinpinscher mix male. Absolutely adorable with a cute underbite. Gets along well with other dogs and kids. Lots of good energy.
WALLY
Wally is a handsome, friendly, two-year-old Australian Cattledog mix male. We are still getting to know him. Turned in because of housing. He needs a knowledgable, responsible owner.
CLEO
Beautiful, friendly, soft-spoken 9-year-old Husky mix female. She is a retired sled dog looking for a loving home. Outgoing with people.
1 PUP LEFT
Approximately 9 weeks old Dec 4. Her mom is a gorgeous Cattle Dog mix with a very sweet personality. Highly socialized. Come visit.
SARGE
7-year-old male Rottweiler. Friendly + sweet. Loves people. Perfect except for severe separation anxiety. Would do best in a home with constant companionship. Ask staff for info.
Lots of great new cats. See the CATS page at dogsaspen.com FREDDY
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Handsome 6-yearold Pomeranian. He can be a bit cranky around his food, so he will do best in an adult household with a responsible owner.
OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206
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BUCK
Mellow, friendly 11-year-old American Foxhound/Husky mix who gets along well with people and other dogs. Buck is a retired sled dog who came to the shelter with his brother, Jim, and his sister, Jackie.
LUCY
Gentle, friendly, affectionate, 3-year-old Pit Bull female found wandering the streets of LA. Brought to Aspen to start a new life. She is the hardest dog to photograph to show how sweet she really is. Give her a chance, please.
SAM
Large, friendly, 8-year-old Mastiff male. Gets along well with everybody, but occasionally picks fights with other dogs possibly due to fading eyesight. All in all, a very cool dog.
Strong, energetic, black/white 5-yearold female Boston Terrier mix with a splash of Pit Bull— larger than a typical Boston. Outgoing and very friendly. Loves people. Best as only pet.
Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter 101 Animal Shelter Road
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