Aspen Times Weekly: Dec. 6 edition

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WINEINK

HOLIDAY GIFT IDEAS 17

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A&E JAZZ GHOSTS IN SNOWMASS 27

DECEMBER 6-13, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

A SCHOOL LEARNING HOW TO GROW SEE PAGE 23


BELLY UP ASPEN WHERE ASPEN GOES FOR LIVE MUSIC.

THU 12/6

GAME 6:20 | SHOW 9:30

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

NFL FOOTBALL:

BRONCOS VS. RAIDERS NO COVER FOR GAME

DUBSKIN 8 .*,&: 5)6/%&3

NO COVER

Fort Collins reggae band known for their “authentic Caribbean sound replete with soulful vocals, newfangled ska and soaring guitar undertones.� (JamBase).Opened for SOJA at BUA last February.

SAT 12/8

SHOW 10 PM DEBUTING THEIR NEW LINEUP!

JES GREW

'&"5 5)& #30$$0-* #304 )03/4 Check out the band’s new line-up featuring Randolph Turner, Viddy, Paul Valentine, Chris Harrison, Jai Vatuk, Galen Gatzke, Mark Yeager, and Ben Yeager.

NO COVER

FRI 12/7 SHOW 9:30

SUPER DIAMOND

This Neil Diamond tribute has sold out NYC’s Irving Plaza, DC’s 930 Club & House of Blues in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Diego, Cleveland & Dallas. “I’ve met them and I have been to their shows, they’re wonderful!� - Neil Diamond. An uncanny imitation of Diamond’s voice – SPIN Magazine

SUN 12/9

GAME 6:20 | SHOW 9:30

MON 12/10

GAME 6:30 | SHOW 9:30

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

LIONS VS. PACKERS

TEXAS VS. PATRIOTS

NFL FOOTBALL: NO COVER FOR GAME

AN EVENING WITH

PERPETUAL GROOVE

This “staple on the jam circuit� (Relix) has played at Bonnaroo, Wakarusa, Jam Cruise and is one of the headliners at the 2013 Aura Music and Arts Festival. “Heroes of organic sonic swirls� – Jambands

NFL FOOTBALL: NO COVER FOR GAME

PUBLIC ENEMY HIP HOP GODS TOUR

8 9 $-"/ .0/*& -07& %3&4 -&"%&34 0' 5)& /&8 4$)00- "8&40.& %3& %"7: %.9 40/ 0' #";&3, /0 4&-' $0/530-

JUST ANNOUNCED: t 36'64 8"*/83*()5 t '&&% .& %+ 4&5

WED 12/12

DIVINE FITS

SHOW 9 PM

8 01&/*/( "$5 5#" SPOON’s frontman, Britt Daniel is at it again with his new indie rock act Divine Fits. Their hit “Would That Not Be Nice� is #22 on Paste Magazine’s Best 50 Songs of 2012 list. Group consists of Britt Daniel (Spoon), Dan Boeckner (Wolf Parade and Handsome Furs), Sam Brown (New Bomb Turks) & Alex Fischel.

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

t 1"1&3 %*".0/% t 30#&35 3"/%0-1) 5)& '".*-: #"/% t ,6/( '6 t 8*-% #&--& t ;; 8"3% t %&-5" 3"& t &- 5&/ &-&7&/ t 5&" -&"' (3&&/

www.bellyupaspen.com | BOX OFFICE: 970 544-9800

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A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

âœŚ

December 6-12, 2012


CRAIG RANCH AT WOODY CREEK, LOT 4

WOODY CREEK CONTEMPORARY COMPOUND

WOODY CREEK A turn-key equestrian operation, this 43.73 acre parcel with excellent water rights, features the historic ranch house built and homesteaded in the late 1800’s. Additional building site with 5,750 sf allowable of FAR with stunning views. And, charming 1000 sf caretaker’s cabin nestled at the edge of Woody Creek with its world class fly-fishing. Organic gardens, apple orchards, barns and corrals. $4,900,000 Web Id#: AN125840

WOODY CREEK This contemporary compound built in late 2009, consists of a 6,260 sq. ft. main house with a three-car garage, a 1425 sq. ft. barn and a 859 sq. ft. artist studio all on 2.75 acres. An inviting living room with views towards Aspen Mountain extends to a covered outdoor living area with a large stone fireplace, water feature, landscaped yard and three horse pastures beyond. Additional development rights. $6,900,000 Web Id#: AN126476

Bob Starodoj 970.920.7367 | star@masonmorse.com

Carrie Wells 970.920.7375 | carrie@carriewells.com

CONTEMPORARY BLUE CREEK RANCH HOME

FRONT ROW MISSOURI HEIGHTS

CARBONDALE Nestled among the Ponderosa, there is nothing but open space between you and the Roaring Fork River. Enjoy the sun from this 3 bedroom + office, 3.5 bath, contemporary ENERGY STAR certified home. $1,415,000 Web Id#: AN125730

MISSOURI HEIGHTS High up on the ridge to capture panoramic views from Aspen to Glenwood. Recently built 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath home with wrap around entertaining deck. Main level master suite. Steps to the HOA pool & Tennis Court. 4,299 square ft. $1,495,000 Web Id#: AN126807

Stephanie Lewis 970.920.7392 | stephanie@masonmorse.com

Renee Bowden 970.920.7390 | renee@masonmorse.com

thesource

Aspen | 514 E. Hyman Avenue | 970.925.7000 Carbondale | 0290 Highway 133 | 970.963.3300 Redstone | 385 Redstone Boulevard | 970.963.1061 Glenwood | 1614 Grand Avenue | 970.928.9000

Find more at www.masonmorse.com FB/ColdwellBankerMasonMorse

TW/masonmorse

LN/Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

YT/MasonMorse1

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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FOUR-MOUNTAIN SPORTS

SUMMIT FOR LIFE

PASSHOLDER DEMO PROGRAM

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 2012

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.

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 now available for all levels & ages. www.aspensnowmass.com/schools

Wine and Dine for Life | 6:30 pm at Paci ca Restaurant Party for Life | 10:30 pm at 39 Degrees Lounge

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2012 Summit for Life: 5 pm Recreation Start | 6 pm Competitive Start Aspen Mountain Summit for Life Uphill Race invites local enthusiasts and regional sports junkies to charge up over 3,000 vertical feet to the top of Aspen Mountain using their preferred choice of lighting and non-motorized equipment – snowshoes, skins and other creative means in the dead of night | www.summitforlife.org

SAGE APRÈS, SNOWMASS CLUB From 3-5 pm Sunday through Thursday, the entire bar menu is half off, as are draft beers, wines by the glass, and winter warmer cocktails.

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

Connect. Share. Check in: Keep up with the latest on-mountain conditions, activities, events, packages & specials in Aspen/Snowmass!

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

December 6-12, 2012


STARWOOD ESTATE ON 30 ACRES ASPEN A very private 30 acres and one of the best view properties in Aspen encompassing the Elk Mountain Range from Aspen to Sopris, a large pond and plenty of water rights. The home was designed by Robert Couturier with a thoughtful oor plan that takes advantage of the amazing setting. Master suite, gym, theater and a pool cabana room are on the

same level as the living areas and open to a large stone terrace, swimming pool, spa and 2 different grill areas. Upstairs one will ďŹ nd 4 guest suites.

$25,995,000 Web ID#: AN126014

Carrie Wells

Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

970.920.7375 carrie@carriewells.com

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

Find more at www.masonmorse.com FB/ColdwellBankerMasonMorse

TW/masonmorse

LN/Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

YT/MasonMorse1

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 LEGENDS & LEGACIES

12

14 FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE FOOD MATTERS

18

27 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 28 AROUND ASPEN 30 LOCAL CALENDAR 38 CROSSWORD

WINEINK

HOLIDAY GIFT IDEAS 17

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A&E JAZZ GHOSTS IN SNOWMASS 27

DECEMBER 6-13, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

17 WINEINK

23 COVER STORY

Contributing editor Kelly Hayes gives you his list of wines to buy for loved ones and co-workers this holiday season.

Editor Ryan Slabaugh hung out at the Aspen Community School recently to learn why it is asking for $11.6 million and some new facilities.

FIND IT INSIDE

A SCHOOL LEARNING HOW TO GROW SEE PAGE 23

ON THE COVER

Photo by Daniel Bayer

EDITOR’S NOTE

diving in | Not sure what is at stake with this fiscal cliff? Neither

was I until I spent a morning reading everything I could find about it. I read the New York Times series on subsidies, parties’ summary sheets about their arguments and half a book before my eyes glazed over and watched several online segments exploring the issue: I learned the gave up millions in arguments about how local taxes to attract to cut spending and Home Depot and increase taxes aren’t so move the Walmart far away. I also learned: less than a decade ago. • It’s a tug-of-war Now, the city is suing with a very long rope: developers to recover The main arguments lost sales taxes and to are whether we should help trigger growth RYAN SLABAUGH increase taxes or in an area that used decrease spending. Both sides to be its profit center. It’s more have acknowledged we need to do than awkward. They look like a both, but you wouldn’t know that town trying to tuck in its shirt in if you listen to the party leaders public. who get handed microphones. • Taxes and regulation must Which brings me to a question: find a balance: It’s not exactly a Whoever you are, can you stop secret that Aspen’s building codes handing them microphones? are tough — the public spankings • The real question we are are free if you break them — and debating is where wealth comes along with moderate taxes, they from: Republicans say tax cuts have helped keep our quality of drive wealth. Democrats say life at a high level. In fact, in a government subsidies drive national study, we were the most wealth. This is why politics is so expensive ski-resort community in maddening. Both are right, while the country in which to build, and both are wrong. our council is still debating more • Cutting taxes in favor of jobs limitations to the codes. Truly, if doesn’t guarantee a better life: there’s a good problem to have … Over in Avon just a few miles • … there’s Garfield County: Yes, away, the town government that county to the north is rolling

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December 6-12, 2012

in more money than at any time in its history. This is an example of corporations fueling government — gas-drilling companies and their fleet of out-of-state workers included — without much regulation. The result? The county government has built a reserve worth more than 110 million. To be fair, I’m not criticizing. Good for them. • Avon or Garfield County? Avon shrank after accepting promises of jobs in lieu of taxes, and Garfield inflated after accepting promises of taxes in lieu of regulation and local jobs. Yet nobody knows where the long-term trajectory is heading, which is why moderation and compromise is the only possible outcome at the national level. • Expect a compromise on Dec. 31, even though news reports say they are “ahead of schedule.” Everybody looks like a hero on deadline day. Until then, politics mandate, you’re just giving in. rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

VOLUME 2 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 03

Editor-in-Chief Ryan Slabaugh Advertising Director Gunilla Asher 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


BRIAN HAZEN PRESENTS...

ÌÌÌÌ:AÎkÀyÀ ÎÌ ÄÎAÎkÄÌrÌ Ä«k Ì/Îå k

EAST ASPEN COUNTRY ESTATE

• Just minutes East of downtown Aspen towards Independence Pass—the ideal setting for the outdoor enthusiast. •  bed/. bath country home. • Built with hand-hewn logs from Aspen Mountain with Extensive water rights out of Warren Creek • On  private fenced acres and overlooks a stocked trout pond, large manicured lawn, the Roaring Fork River and lush elk meadows.

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SNOWMASS CANYON RANCH…ON THE ROARING FORK

•  acre property with two  acre tracts of land, each with a building right of  square feet (with purchase of a TDR) • The historic Wheatley Ranch was homesteaded in  • Almost  mile of “Gold Medal” Roaring Fork River frontage,  spring-fed ponds, senior water rights • historic log cabins, farm house and outbuilding.

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TW/@BrianHazenAspen

Coldwell Banker Mason Morse Real Estate www.masonmorse.com LN/Brian Hazen

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 was your favorite memory from school when you were young?

by JOHN COLSON

Is it a cliff, or is it a slippery slope? One man’s view OK, WHAT is the “fiscal cliff ” we keep hearing about? I’ve listened and read about it until the very phrase makes me want to dive into a cave and hide there until next June, then to emerge and learn something approximating the truth of the matter. I listened to a National Public Radio interview the other day with a stay-at-home mom from Texas who had concluded that it’s a bunch of hogwash. There is no cliff, she maintained, but rather a “slope” down which our economy could slide for a while before getting to its feet and trudging off in a new direction. Or something like that. The pundits (called “muffinheads” by one online wag), as usual, spout a lot of words without saying much at all. This has the unfortunate result that we never get a satisfying explanation of the cliff itself or of what will happen if we get to it and topple over. But in the interest of clarity in the midst of confusion, I’ll give you my own take on all this. It started last year, as Congress and the White House each dropped into a battle crouch over the federal debt ceiling, which is the cap that Congress has placed on the amount of money our government can owe. You might remember that, when President Bill Clinton left office, the U.S. budget was operating in the black and our debt was shrinking. Then came George W. Bush, who cut taxes at the same time as he waged two wars on credit, and the deficits and the debt began reaching skyward. In early 2011, the government owed somewhere around 14 trillion in what is aptly named the “gross debt,” which was the number everyone was freaking over. It got to 15 trillion before the end of 2011, by the way. Long story made short, after a nasty game of brinkmanship that many economists say was little more than a lot of hot air, Congress in late 2011 agreed to raise the debt ceiling by 400 billion, the stock market breathed again, and all seemed well. But the debt deal called for Congress and the administration to work on a more meaningful debt-anddeficit fix over the course of 2012, which of course never happened.

Instead of finding an answer to the debt-anddeficit problem in 2012, you might remember, we’ve had the dirtiest, most expensive quadrennial election season this country has ever seen, and everybody was too busy yelling at one another to get anything done. Now, a series of automatic spending cuts and tax hikes enmeshed in the debt deal are about to take effect on Jan. 1, and once again, everybody’s freaking out. As for what will happen after Jan. 1, well, it depends on whom you ask. Ed O’Keefe, a writer for The Washington Post, wrote recently that the cuts will come to nearly 10 percent of the Pentagon’s budget (excepting salaries and benefits for military personnel) and about 8 percent for nondefense domestic programs, excluding Medicaid and food stamps. When the cuts take place, and Americans see their paychecks shrink due to tax hikes, according to the Congressional Budget Office, we could find ourselves in another recession as people stop spending money. So, all politics aside, that’s where we now stand, as Congress and the president face off once again over everything from the national debt ceiling (déjà vu, anyone?) to the fiscal cliff, and nobody wants to blink. Republicans, still smarting from the presidential election, see this as their opening to cut President Obama down to size and give them a running start on the 2014 midterm elections and, ultimately, the general election of 2016. They want to end some tax loopholes but not raise taxes on the rich, which is where their political war chests come from. Democrats, believing that their significant wins on Nov. 6 were evidence of popular support, say that the wealthy need to pay a greater share of the tax burden to help pull us out of this economic hole, and they’re sticking to that position. Whew! There’s a lot more to this debate, and perhaps we’ll get into it a little deeper some day. For now, though, that’s what it looks like to me.

HIT&RUN

ANDREA CARGILL ASPEN

Throwing food at the popular kids during lunch.

JOAN SPALDING ASPEN

School itself.

HUGH BURROWS S E E K O N K , M A SS .

Being able to take ski days.

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December 6-12, 2012

jcolson@aspentimes.com

VOX POP COMPILED BY MAX VADNAIS


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ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET

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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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SEEN, HEARD & DONE

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

CHEERS&JEERS

THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

Ted Ligety reacts after winning a men’s World Cup giant slalom in Beaver Creek on Dec. 2. It’s been a great start for the U.S. team this year. Now, can it conquer Europe?

TOP 5 CLASSES WE WISH OUR EDITOR COULD TAKE

O5 O4

CHEERS | To positive movement to help fill the void in our detox treatment. A new detox facility at Pitkin County’s Health and Human Services Building, operated in conjunction with services provided by the Aspen Counseling Center, has emerged as the most feasible alternative to provide local care to those with drug and alcohol addictions. This will help the gap left when The Right Door closes at the end of the year.

JEERS | To continuing increases in health care costs. Soon, this will overtake payroll taxes as the biggest debit off your paycheck, and for many, it already has. While we respect the idea that costs continue to increase,

something has to give.

CHEERS | To the bell ringers and other volunteers who pick it up this time of year. We encourage everyone to pitch in and help or, if you don’t have the time or money, then to simply encourage those who are out there braving the elements in the name of community-building.

JEERS | To the BCS bowl system. Yep, this is an annual entry. It’s a little bit early this year, but man are we tired of college football messing up its own showcase of schools and talent.

BUZZ WORTHY B A S A LT

ASPEN

PURCHASE PROPOSED FOR LAST OF RUEDI WATER

ATTEMPTED-MURDER CASE RESULTS IN PLEA DEAL

A plan has been hatched to buy the remaining uncontracted water from Ruedi Reservoir to keep it on the Western Slope and pay off 34 million in debt remaining on the construction of the dam and reservoir. The Colorado River District is coordinating a purchase agreement that involves 18 entities. They range from an oil and gas company to the city of Aspen. They will purchase 19,585 acrefeet of water annually. That is about 19 percent of the capacity of the reservoir when full. — Scott Condon

An Aspen drifter won’t be charged with attempted seconddegree murder if a plea deal goes through. Marc Altman, 49, has tentatively accepted prosecutor Arnold Mordkin’s offer that calls for him pleading guilty to one misdemeanor count of third-degree assault and one charge of felony menacing. A deferred judgment of four years comes with the menacing plea, said Glenwood Springs attorney Peter Rachesky, who represents Altman. A preliminary hearing had been set for Altman on Dec. 3 in Pitkin County District Court. Altman waived it because of the pending

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

December 6-12, 2012

Going Bald With Class 101 Your Upstairs Neighbor Who Does Jumping Jacks, and How to Deal

O3

Baking for Bachelors

O2

Cleaning Your Office and Why

O1

How to Poach Your Neighbor’s Cable

POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

STAY IN THE KNOW — CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS plea deal. Altman will be given credit for the time he has served in Pitkin County Jail since Aspen police arrested him Aug. 6. Nichols must approve the plea deal, which she is scheduled to review at Altman’s sentencing hearing Dec. 17. — Rick Carroll ASPEN

COUNCIL APPROVES NEW DEVELOPMENT

The Aspen City Council voted 3-1 Dec. 3 to accept the Historic Preservation Commission’s approval of a development proposal that calls for demolishing part of a one-story building in the East Cooper Avenue pedestrian mall to make way for a three-story structure. The building, at 422 E. Cooper

“WE’RE TRYING TO FIGURE OUT WHERE TO PUT THE SKI RACKS. IT’S A YURT — IT’S ROUND.” 10

FIVE THINGS

Ave., is located next door to the historic Red Onion restaurant building. Currently, it houses a poster shop. The project applicant, represented by Stan Clauson Associates Inc., is proposing a mixed-use development with a single residential unit on the second and third floors and commercial uses on the first floor and the basement. The commission voted 4-1 on Oct. 24 to approve the project’s design. Commissioner Nora Berko provided the lone “no” vote, saying that the third story wasn’t necessary and that it would reduce the prominence of the iconic Red Onion building. Others at the meeting voiced concern that the new structure would conflict with the viewplane from the Wheeler Opera House.

ASHCROFT SKI TOURING OWNER JOHN WILCOX ON HIS NEW YURT

PHOTO BY MAMMUT/RAINER EDE


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by SARAH GILMAN of WRITERS ON THE RANGE

If not here, where? A FEW WEEKS ago, a Texas concentration of organic farms oilman cornered me at a brewery in in the Rocky Mountains. … The the high-mountain town of Ouray, valley produces 77 percent of the in western Colorado. Some state’s apples, 71 percent young women from Moab of its peaches.” The had just taken the table BLM received nearly next to my friend and me 3,000 comments on when the fellow wandered the proposal, mostly in over to buy us a round. opposition. Eventually, he revealed “None of that he worked for (those) issues … ConocoPhillips. This are incompatible didn’t go over well with with oil and gas SARAH GILMAN the Utah ladies, and development,” Steven Mr. ConocoPhillips Hall, BLM’s Colorado grew defensive: Did they think the communications director, told vehicle they had driven here ran Heller. Even so, in its latest proposal, on rainbows? When he found out I covered the industry as a reporter, he leaned in tipsily and asked, “Can we have a conversation? A real conversation?” The answer was apparently “no” because what ensued felt like an energy-focused version of writer Rebecca Solnit’s essay “Men explain things to me.” But if he had gotten past his assumption that I was an airy naïf, he would have realized that I mostly agreed with him: As drilling impinges on more communities, those communities need to have “real,” critical conversations about energy development, conversations in which the locals recognize their role as consumers. Paonia, where I live and work, recently became such a town. In December, nearly 30,000 acres in the surrounding North Fork Valley were nominated for oil and gas leasing. Though the proposal was deferred this summer for further study, in November, the Bureau of Land Management announced its intent to auction about 20,000 of those acres Feb. 14. the agency removed a couple of Given the habitat fragmentation the more controversial parcels, and pollution that energy including the one closest to Paonia’s development can bring, many here water supply and another containing have fought the proposal. Some of a popular trail network. the earlier leases sprawled across Most of the parcels remain, mountain-biking areas or sat next though. Worse, the sale would to schools. Others encompassed occur under the terms of the springs that feed the town water outdated Resource Management system or surrounded irrigation Plan, a 23-year-old document that ditches for ranches, organic farms governs development on hundreds and vineyards. As Peter Heller of thousands of acres. If the agency reported in an essay for Bloomberg waited, it could re-examine the BusinessWeek in July, the North proposal under the updated version Fork Valley “is home to the largest — due in draft this spring — which,

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

in theory, would allow it to account for advances in drilling technology and changes to the area’s economy, demographics and environment. That might help the agency strike a clearer balance between energy development and other interests. At an environmental film festival in Paonia soon after the BLM’s decision, the audience booed throughout a Google Earth tour of the parcels still up for lease. When a staffer from the conservation group who hosted the event noted that the mountainbiking parcel had been withdrawn, discontent only grew. Many refused

somebody. And what patch of earth isn’t habitat for at least a few wonderful somethings? As Bobby Reedy, who runs a local auto shop in Paonia, told Heller, “I want to flick the light switch and know the lights are going to come on. If it’s not in my backyard, whose is it going to be in?” If we continue to insist on living as we do now, maybe we need to see drill rigs from our kitchen windows and hiking trails, even our school playgrounds. How else can we truly understand the costs of something we use unless we’re confronted with

to accept any leasing whatsoever. Opponents believe, as do their counterparts in many communities facing oil and gas development, that some places are too special to drill. It’s a valid view; I often share it. But that raises an uncomfortable question: Are there any places so unspecial that they should be drilled? Mr. ConocoPhillips knows well that few of us in Paonia or elsewhere can say we don’t rely on these fuels — for heat, for transport, for electricity, for the fertilization of food. Every place matters to

them daily? This isn’t just the machinery of corporate greed; it’s the machinery of our vast collective energy appetite. And if we can’t look directly at it, and can’t accept what it does to our water and air, then it’s time to do more than just fight drilling. It’s time to go on an energy diet. Sarah Gilman is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News in Paonia, where she is the magazine’s associate editor (www.hcn.org).

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

Bowling surpassed skiing in popularity for locals in 1950s Aspen.

BOWLING: A BREAK FROM BAUHAUS visionary walter paepcke encouraged an Aspen aesthetic, one

influenced by Bauhaus designer Herbert Bayer. Contemporary houses, boxes with lots of glass and flat roofs, and cinderblock structures with hexagonal themes like the Aspen Institute buildings comingled with colorfully painted Victorians. But in the 1950s, not everyone could afford the vision. Practicality competed with architecture and culminated in its antithesis, a steel structure that housed a bowling alley. EVENTUALLY, three steel structures surrounded the corner of Cooper and Hunter: an autoparts store, a Texaco gas station and a large structure (on the lot now occupied by Boogie’s) occupied by a bowling alley and a café/soda fountain. A concrete slab, few windows, rippling sidewalls and a metal roof became the standard for commercial buildings, providing the least cost per square foot that could meet commercial fire codes. Who would support a bowling alley in a ski resort? Bill Tenney, the owner, did not aim to mine the pockets of ski tourists. Après-ski bowling competed with food, drink, other entertainment and sleep. But loyal locals attested that bowling had become the largest participant sport in America. The development of automatic pin setters in 1952

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enabled alley owners to drop their prices, thereby doubling the 20 million wartime patrons. Bowling leagues formed, women took up the sport, and television broadcast competitions as working-class

formed, families packed the lanes Friday and Saturday nights, and soon summer tourists added to the numbers. The bowling alley provided a location to gather for fun — perhaps the last of a dying

WHO WOULD SUPPORT A BOWLING ALLEY IN A SKI RESORT? BILL TENNEY, THE OWNER, DID NOT AIM TO MINE THE POCKETS OF SKI TOURISTS. APRÈS-SKI BOWLING COMPETED WITH FOOD, DRINK, OTHER ENTERTAINMENT AND SLEEP.

Americans took to the lanes. Aspen’s residents mirrored the national trend. Soon after Tenney’s alley opened, weekday leagues

December 6-12, 2012

destination type. What I remember most about bowling was my mother’s adoption of the sport. By the time the alley

opened, my mother had long since stopped skiing — a sport she participated in before lifts were built but did not enjoy. Climbing peaks to ski down can be a social activity, but there is not much conversation while going uphill. Bowling suited my mother’s social needs, and she was good at it, once obtaining the highest average in league play. At a time when sports were a man’s world, bowling evened the score. My bowling record consisted of gutter balls and an occasional pin fall. On the few occasions when I missed the gutters, my weak 10year-old roll did not knock over many pins. However, I was more interested in the automatic pinsetting machines. My home was just a few hundred feet away from those contraptions, so I often hung out at the back end of the building. When they opened the rear door, I could watch the machines, and sometimes I was invited in for a closer look. I scrounged the broken pins discarded in a pile at the back door, thinking I could create my own bowling alley at home. Mom nixed that plan. The bowling alley was short-lived. After a decade the building was converted into the Mad Dog, a 3.2 beer nightclub with plenty of space for bands and dancing. When the bowling alley that is under construction in the ski town of Mammoth Lakes, Calif., is completed, the sense of community historically associated with alleys as social centers could catch on in other ski resorts — maybe in Aspen, as well. 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

A CHEAPER R IDE UP

1958 L I F T T IC K E T S

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

IN ANTICIPATION of Aspen Highlands’ first season of operation, an ad detailing ticket rates and hours was included in the Nov. 27, 1958, issue of The Aspen Times. Rates for an annual ticket for an Aspen resident were as follows: “Individual, annual rate….55 “Husband and wife, annual rate….100 “Each school child (with above), annual rate….5” The Aspen resident tickets were available to “1. Residents of Pitkin County; 2. Landowners in Pitkin County, who are members of the Aspen Ski Club; and 3. Lessees of living accommodations in Pitkin County for 60 days or more, or persons gainfully employed in Aspen, who are members of the Aspen Ski Club.”

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

NEED TO KNOW

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D: 115/77/102 Weight: 5.7 pounds Touring/Randonee

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December 6-12, 2012

— Ute Mountaineer staff

PHOTO COURTESY KASTLE


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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by GUNILLA ASHER

NEED TO KNOW 2 parts Rum Chata 1 part Dr. McGillicuddy’s Apple Pie Shaken over ice and serve up in a shot glass

APPLE PIE A LA MODE I HAD A GREAT drink the other day with my friend Jefferson — the Apple Pie a la mode. The drink was smooth and tasty and very easy to make — it’s just a mixture of Rum Chata and Dr. McGillicuddy’s Apple Pie. Yet, this column comes with a warning: it tastes so good you could definitely have too many. I promise, after a sip, if you close your eyes you will think you just ate a piece of cake. Gunilla Asher is the the co-manager of the Aspen Times. She writes bout libations without any real training other than in the spirit of “She is not a connoisseurs, but she is heavily practiced.”

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December 6-12, 2012

PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK


WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

by KELLY J. HAYES

ROUNDING OUT THE BEST WINES TO GIVE FIRST, LET ME thank you, my reader, for your indulgence as I round out my perfect gift box this week, including six more bottles that have both substance and meaning for me. If you read last week’s column you know the genesis for this project was a friend who was putting together a gift box for a client and wanted to select wines that would resonate with the recipient. It inspired me to think about wines I love from people I like. Thus far, we have a pair of sparkling Rosé, two Chardonnays, a Shiraz from Australia and a Syrah from France. So let’s get to it. Any great box would have to include great Pinot KELLY J. Noir. While I have run HAYES the vineyards of the Côte d’Or and Côte de Nuits before and, after fantastic tastings, sought out gems on the Mornington Peninsula east of Melbourne, and sat with the great Merry Edwards drinking Russian River Pinot Noir, I‘m going with one of Josh Jensen’s Calera Pinot Noirs. Actually any of his wines would do. But it was a 2004 Calera Mills Vineyard Pinot Noir that I drank with him atop Vail Mountain that finds it way into my case. A tribute to the man and the moment as much as the wine. Napa Valley Cab is another musthave and, while there are a jillion choices, I’m going with a pair of great wines from great people. Spring Mountain Vineyards was kind enough to sponsor my participation in the Napa Valley 2008 Professional Wine Writers Symposium. The relationship resulted in my following a vintage at Spring Mountain for a year, speaking monthly with Vineyard Manager Ron Rosenbrand and winemaker Jac Cole. It was an education that will last a lifetime and, as a result, I would be remiss if I did not include a bottle of the 2008 Spring Mountain Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon in my case. I include the next bottle because I love both Napa “flats,” or valley floor Cabernet, and also because I admire the courage of the winery’s general manager, John Conover, who wanted to try screw caps in a cork-filled world. The 1997 Plumpjack Winery

PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK

Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon became a great experiment when the vintage was bottled with half of the wine under cork and half the wine under Stelvin closures, or screw caps. I have a bottle under cap that I am waiting to open. I would love to have one finished with cork to taste side by side. That’s nine fine wines and I’m running out of space in both this column and in my case. Recent travels have been special as well and for my next two selections I need only look back as far as this summer. In August, I took a trip to my favorite “quiet” wine region, the Okanagan in British Columbia. A spectacular region that is making topnotch wines that rarely get out of Canada, its flagship is Anthony von Mandl, Mission Hill. This is a winery that will one day rank among the world’s elite as the vines get some age and the wines evolve. I would want to include a bottle of the Mission Hill Quatrain 2008, a blend of Merlot, Syrah, Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon, hence the name. Then, at the beginning of the 2012 harvest, one that is surely destined to be among the best on the West Coast in recent memory, I had an amazing trip with my dear friend Randy Ullom, the man who runs all of Kendall Jackson’s winemaking operations. Randy showed me California wine from the ground up. Literally. And the highlight may have been a tasting in an incredible hillside

PERFECT GIFT BOX vineyard in the Alexander Valley. I will write more about this tasting but in the interim let me include a bottle of the 2006 Highland Estates Hawkeye Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon, Alexander Valley. Finally, I need a little something sweet, a little something for after dinner. And to me, Ice Wine is one of God’s gifts to man. And the man to whom that gift was bestowed is one Donald Ziraldo who, with his partner, Karl Kaiser, founded the exquisite

1993 MOET & CHANDON DOM PÉRIGNON ROSE 2004 MOVIA “PURO” ROSE 1992 TREFETHEN FAMILY VINEYARDS LIBRARY SELECTION CHARDONNAY 2009 LEEUWIN ESTATE ART SERIES CHARDONNAY. 2005 PENFOLDS “GRANGE” 1990 “ERMITAGE” CUVEE CATHELIN 2004 CALERA MILLS VINEYARD PINOT NOIR 2008 SPRING MOUNTAIN VINEYARD CABERNET SAUVIGNON 1997 PLUMPJACK WINERY RESERVE CABERNET SAUVIGNON 2008 MISSION HILL QUATRAIN 2006 HIGHLAND ESTATES HAWKEYE MOUNTAIN CABERNET SAUVIGNON, ALEXANDER VALLEY 2005 INNISKILIN ICEWINE GOLD RESERVE VIDAL

Inniskillin on the Niagara Peninsula in Ontario. So many vintages of the years in which the two were together are worthy but I’ll go with a bottle of the 2005 Inniskilin Icewine Gold Reserve Vidal. There you have it. A modest case by many standards but one that reflects the joys and memories I have had in writing this column the past 280 weeks. I could have named perhaps a hundred, perhaps a thousand, wines

that I would be content to receive. But if anyone wishes to find these wines, any of them, for their own enjoyment, I guarantee they will not be disappointed. Thanks for the indulgence. 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 SEBASTIAN HOTEL TRANSFORMS VAIL RESTAURANT LENORA WILL OFFER BISTRO FARE AND TAPAS, WHILE COMMITTING TO ITS WINE BAR

I’VE ALWAYS HAD an enduring interest in what’s happening at The Sebastian, the boutique hotel in Vail, run by Carbondale-based Timber’s Resorts. I visited the newly opened hotel in 2011 and enjoyed the restaurant that debuted at the same time, Block 16, even if it was, at the time, a bit too focused on an ultra-fine-dining scene during a time AMIEE WHITE when fine-dining was BEAZLEY ebbing in popularity. But just as the hotel celebrates its second anniversary, Block 16 reinvents itself as Lenora and opened its doors on Dec. 1. With a more casual atmosphere, Lenora now offers simply prepared tapas, crudo and Alpine dishes utilizing local and organic ingredients for a buffet breakfast, a la carte lunch and dinner, and the newly-conceptualized tapas bar. Signature dishes at Leonora will include Serrano ham and cheese croquetas; Lava Lake Lamb loin with sweet peppers and rosemary jus; Wood-roasted mussels; and Lobster Pot Pie with heirloom vegetables. “Leonora represents the evolution of The Sebastian’s culinary scene, and the concept will cater to every individual from the après ski crowd to foodies,” says Executive Chef Sergio Howland, formerly chef at Esperanza in Los Cabos, another resort in The Timbers resort portfolio. “We have meticulously sourced the finest ingredients and designed an intriguing menu that is different from anything else in Vail.” The evolution of Block 16 to Leonora is reflective of the progressive food and beverage programming at The Sebastian and the added influence of recently appointed director of rood and

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December 6-12, 2012

beverage Paul Wade. Wade’s creative and unpretentious approach to restaurant design and love of niche food styles such as hand-crafted organic, sustainable and small farm food sources, lead the transformation of the hotel’s culinary program to an exciting social atmosphere with modern-style comfort food that is true to the region. “Leonora is an exciting high-energy social atmosphere that will use the finest local ingredients, an impressive wine list and beers from Colorado’s top breweries,” says Wade. “We thrive on fresh and innovative culinary programming and look forward to opening the doors to Leonora in the coming days.” The vision for Lenora, says Wade, is to be energetic and upscale, yet unpretentious. Fortunately, Lenora will inherit

the 1,000-bottle strong Wine Silo central to the dining room, which dramatically sets the stage for the wine-centric experience at the restaurant. Featuring approximately 300 to 500 labels and roughly 10,000 total bottles, the extensive wine list will focus heavily on varietals from California and France, with depth in White Burgundy and Bordeaux. New World wines from Spanish and Italian regions will also be featured, along with esoteric selections from South America and Colorado, largely in the form of small vineyard and vineyarddesignate wines. Amiee White Beazley writes about dining, restaurants and food-related travel for the Aspen Times Weekly. Follow Amiee on Twitter @awbeazley1 or email awb@awbeazley.com.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO


by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

THE SEBASTIAN THE SEBASTIAN – VAIL is a boutique hotel with 100 guestrooms with 8,000square-feet of conference and meeting facilities and Private Residence Club with 36 residences. A Resort Membership starts at $225,000 and a Club Membership starts at $395,000. Both offerings include membership in the Timbers Collection, which is comprised of a host of perks and privileges from travel partners to reciprocity among resorts in the Timbers Resorts portfolio. www.thesebastianvail.com

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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âœŚ

December 6-12, 2012


‘THE CRAZY SCHOOL ON THE HILL’

ASPEN COMMUNITY SCHOOL HOPES AN $11.6 MILLION EXPANSION CAN PROVIDE MORE SPACE FOR STUDENTS AND TEACHERS WITHOUT TAKING AWAY ITS UNIQUE CHARM by RYAN SLABAUGH

to walk into the Aspen Community School, the charter school high on the ridgeline above Woody Creek, you must first drive up a winding gravel road, turn a sharp corner without a guardrail, pull into a modest parking lot, step out of your car and get distracted by a huge panoramic view filled with the Elk Mountains.

P H OTO B Y DA N I E L BAY E R

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Parent-volunteer Kate McBride leads the school in Simon Says, in Spanish, on a Friday morning.

ONCE THE DUST an clouds clear, there is plenty of evidence to show you have taken a machine back in time back to the day when 80,000 gets you a school, back to 1970, to be exact, when Harry Teague was a master’s student at Yale and came up with the design as part of his thesis, and philanthropist George Stranahan donated the money to get this school off the ground. Just standing there, far from the valley, adds confidence to ask the lingering question in your head: “Wait — kids come all the way up here every day?” Then you step into the school. You see the small classes. You hear and smell the school’s focus on the arts. Kids politely listen to one another. Books are piled from ceiling to floor. Within minutes, you start to believe the students and teachers have a real hunger for learning, whether it is through practicing the standard times-tables or, as luck would have it, you’re a science teacher and an elk walked onto the playground and died, giving everyone a chance to learn from that, too.

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The school’s antiquated bathrooms are squeezed between cubbies in a hallway that maximizes every square inch of space.

.

“IF YOU WANT SOMEONE TO FEEL BAD, YOU PUT THEM IN A PRISON. YOU WANT SOMEONE TO LEARN, YOU BRING THEM INTO THIS SCHOOL.” — PRINCIPAL JIM GILCHRIST

December 6-12, 2012

Either way, you quickly learn that this is not a school defined by the common headlines, by dropped programs, poor student performance, dropouts, teacher strikes, violence, sex, drugs or anything like that. No, this school is clearly different. ENTER PRINCIPAL Jim Gilchrist. It’s a Friday morning, a special occasion since day one of the school, when the faculty began gathering all the students together for a bit of show-and-tell. On a morning in


MORE INFORMATION BY THE NUMBERS: 127: Students in kindergarten through eighth grade 80: Families on the wait list 11.6: Millions of dollars the school plans to raise 4.2: Millions of dollars the BEST grant will pay for 7.4: Millions of dollars needed in private giving

HISTORY OF ASPEN COMMUNITY SCHOOL 1970: Founded by parents who wanted an alternative to traditional public education. Built by Harry Teague as his Yale master’s thesis in architecture. 1995: Became a public charter school of the Aspen School District. 2010: Celebrated 40th anniversary. 2011: Rated in bottom 1 percent in state facilities for public schools.

Principal Jim Gilchrist claps to get everyone settled down before a Friday morning meeting at Aspen Community School.

2012: Announced $11.6 million giving campaign to renovate facilities.

WHAT THE MONEY WILL GIVE THE SCHOOL • 25 percent more classroom space

November, the agenda reads like a talent show, and on many levels, it is. Gilchrist snaps his fingers. He has to grumble a bit to get the audience settled down — and not just the kids. Generations of parents and volunteers are buzzing as they find space on a small group of steps leading to a small stage. Among the crowd are that original architect, Teague, and his wife, Annie, who has taught there nearly since the beginning. One of her former students, Stuart LaCroix, is now the school’s music teacher. He wanted to return so badly that he spent years as the school’s bus driver — a slick-road duty he called “exhilarating” — before finally earning the music position. With Teague as his teacher, LaCroix only spent kindergarten and first grade there before he transitioned back to the more standard programs. But he never forgot that feeling. “When I was here, Annie Teague and another teacher had organized a trip up to the Flying Dog Ranch, and we got a call early on that we had to hurry up because one of the cows was giving birth,” LaCroix recalled. “I don’t know if you’ve ever witnessed a cow giving birth, but that sticks with you.” Soon, the buzz quiets, and Gilchrist does not have to snap

P H OTO S B Y DA N I E L BAY E R A N D RYA N S L A BA U G H

anymore. All the little and big eyes are staring back at him. He asks the crowd, “How do you show respect to one another?” A hand shoots in the air. A little boy no older than 5 or 6 speaks just as he’s called. “Don’t play tag in the school,” he says, generating a few chuckles. “Yes,” Gilchrist responds. “We shouldn’t do that.” He spins the joke into a short lesson on manners and common courtesy. A few snaps and claps later, he lets the show begin. He introduces the first act, a group of students who had recently finished a segment on the history of slavery. That preceded a poetry presentation, which was followed by a watercolor demonstration and then capped by a Spanish version of Simon Says. Then came the final act, when four students who had just started playing music took the stage dressed like rock legends and performed morethan-respectable versions of “Let It Be” and “Wild Thing.” After it’s over and the classroom work quietly begins, Gilchrist hums the tunes as he walks back to his office. He’s been principal for 12 years and has worked at the school for 27. “On any given day, I could be teaching a class or unplugging

toilets,” he says. “It’s leadership. It’s fun. Everyone here knows everything. We’re all threedimensional human beings, and from what we can tell, people just want to be a part of it.” THEREIN LIES THE CATCH. How many times have we heard this story: You build a good thing, it grows in popularity, you expand it, and then you look back and it has lost its uniqueness. It’s the fine balance Gilchrist and a loyal group of alumni are trying to keep as they ask for an 11.6 million expansion for the school. While the school was built for 80 to 90 students, it now has 120. It started with 10 teachers, and now it has 18. The need for a renovation becomes all too clear as you walk through the hallways and discover the special language teaching area is literally a desk pushed up close to the bathroom doors. “It’s amazing, but architecture matters,” Gilchrist says. “If you want someone to feel bad, you put them in a prison. You want someone to learn, you bring them into this school. But we need a building that’s going to match a kid’s dreams and aspirations.” In case you’re wondering, this is really how Gilchrist talks. He’s half preacher, half teacher and a full believer in the small-classroom,

• 50 percent increase in visual and performing arts • Energy-efficient spaces • Accessibility for those with physical disabilities • A community hall that converts to a gym or theater • Pedestrian-friendly campus • Improved water and septic systems

each-student-learns-in-their-ownway methodology. For example, there’s that dead elk out back. That wasn’t a joke. In the science room, there is a sheet hanging up that allows the students to track the decomposition of the animal in different stages. • Oct. 10, 2011: Tongue, no antlers, no smell. • Oct. 23: Giant hole in gut. • Nov. 1.: Ribs, more jawbone. “I wasn’t sure what to do when I saw a classroom running out to see the dead elk,” Gilchrist said, “but I went with it. As long as it is in the spirit of learning, I figured it wouldn’t be too gross.” THIS IS WORTH NOTING: Gilchrist does not have a door in his office, which is located nearly smack-

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Music teacher Stuart LaCroix displays a student-made guitar, crafted from a cigar box, during the all-school meeting, where pupils, teachers, staff and parents gather each Friday to celebrate student achievements and challenges.

dab in the middle of the school. This ensures two things: 1) When you’re called to the principal’s office, everyone knows about it, and 2) There is no way he can escape even the smallest details passing between his students and teachers. Yet he does it without an iron fist. Contrarily, he built an iron expectation that the students take all this learning very seriously, and the built-in accountabilities not only keep the students on track but create a sense that the students actually want to be there. “You’re born, you learn, and then you’re dead,” Gilchrist says. “We’re not dead yet, so we have to be learning.” Case in point: After the Friday morning meeting, he walks into a language arts class and asks a student what she was doing. He’s so consistent at this approach, the student calmly answers and never even looks up from her work. “Good,” Gilchrist says before moving on. He hovers like a hummingbird hovers — in one place but never still. But doesn’t this drive the teachers nuts? “It’s not threatening,” LaCroix said. “The feedback he always gives — ‘This is great, this is great, this is great, but have you ever thought of doing this?’ What he has to say is always positive and is always worth trying.” Gilchrist shies away from thinking

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all this is really that different from real life. As he explains, there are no classroom bells in life. There are no mandates or genetics that force us to be nice to one another. To understand life, he says, you have to be social, knowledgeable and confident — and someone has to teach you these things. “We are the crazy school on the hill but only crazy because we believe small people and small groups can make a big difference,” he says. “But is that so hard to believe?

December 6-12, 2012

The culmination of a Friday morning meeting: the rock band playing “Wild Thing.”

P H OTO S B Y DA N I E L BAY E R A N D RYA N S L A BA U G H


ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

by STEWART OKSENHORN

REQUIEM FOR THE CABARET ROOM (AND WELCOME THE WESTIN SNOWMASS) beneath a door in the floor of the main kitchen at the new

Westin Snowmass Resort is an oddly large space. Jami Flatt, the chef de cuisine at the eatery, the Snowmass Kitchen, says the space is big enough to use as a threat for goofing-off cooks: “Prep better or down the hole you go!” Flatt was kidding about that, but he seemed more serious about surprising visitors to the Kitchen’s kitchen with a cook popping up out of the floor. FLATT IS AWARE of the provenance of that below-decks space. The Snowmass Kitchen occupies the area where the Cabaret Room once stood, and the Cabaret Room, part of the defunct Silvertree Hotel, was specifically designed for one purpose: performance. The room had a stage and three tiers of raked seating, making it an excellent concert venue, but not so ideal for a designer trying to transform the area into a contemporary restaurant. A few decades from now when the history is not so fresh, Flatt’s successors are going to scratch their heads, wondering about the ample space below their chef ’s clogs. It’s a history well worth remembering. At its height as a performance venue, when the Silvertree Hotel was ground zero for Jazz Aspen Snowmass’ jazz program, one of the Denver newspapers called the Cabaret Room the finest jazz club in Colorado. The room was not designed for jazz; apparently it was built for dinner theater. But it ended up being suited for jazz, with perfect sightlines, a large stage, excellent acoustics, and a nearly 300-person capacity, ideal for acoustic jazz. “The Cabaret Room was completely unique,” Jim Horowitz, Jazz Aspen’s founder and CEO, said, noting that the organization also staged jazz shows in bars and restaurants, the Wheeler Opera House, the Hotel Jerome Ballroom and Belly Up. “None of the other places had the slope of that room. It was triangular, a semi-circle, like a real theater. And a fantastic size.” Taking away that configuration, and the room was still notable for the people who appeared there. Herbie Hancock, Jazz Aspen’s former distinguished artist in residence, played there several times, including a memorable duo concert with

PHOTO BY STEVE MUNDINGER

saxophonist Wayne Shorter. Diana Krall played the room soon before graduating to far bigger venues. Horowitz cites Krall’s show as one of his two favorites, along with one by Cuban pianist Chucho Valdés. Steve Mundinger, whose black-andwhite photographs of Jazz Aspen artists were a perfect touch on the Cabaret Room walls, recalled exceptional concerts by trumpeter Arturo Sandoval and pianist Monty Alexander. Drummer Grady Tate, the late organist Jimmy Smith, and the late Ray Brown, the first man of jazz bass, were among the oldschool legends to appear on the Cabaret Stage; the new guard was represented by bassist Christian McBride, pianist Benny Green and saxophonist James Carter. The Cabaret Room afforded me one of my top bragging rights episodes. The Headhunters, Hancock’s legendary but short-lived funk combo, scheduled a reunion tour for the summer of 1998. The tour was to kick off at Jazz Aspen’s June Festival, and the band assembled a few days before the concert to rehearse. I arrived in Snowmass Village for my interview with the band early, and was treated to 45 minutes watching Hancock lead the quintet through the tunes, including “Chameleon,” probably the best-known jazzfunk number ever. It was me, the musicians, and a Silvertree Hotel maintenance man who paid zero attention to the music. “It was a unique place,” said Horowitz, who has found a new home for Jazz Aspen’s intimate shows downstairs at the Little Nell — a less perfect room, but one that has the advantage of a downtown Aspen location. “There was nothing like it and there probably never will be.” THE NEW WESTIN Snowmass bears as much resemblance to the old

Silvertree Hotel as Dixieland does to John Coltrane. The makeover is radical to the point that, every time I looked for even the faintest hints of the old Silvertree, I

became disoriented. Continuing the music theme: If the new Westin Snowmass aspires to any kind of jazz vibe, it is smooth jazz, with an emphasis on comfort, nothing dark or aggressive. The colors are smartly neutral — delicate creams and soft greens; the ample

served as an announcement of how clean and soft they were. If the Cabaret Room had to be replaced, the Snowmass Kitchen is a worthy successor. Like the Cabaret Room, the design is ideal, balanced between openness and coziness. The menu, by executive chef Ronnie Sanchez, is familiar but contemporary and creative. Standout dishes were the creamy sunchoke and leek soup, and a spectacular apple cobbler; a tiny step down were a crispy sea bass and a generous pile of fries in truffle oil. A tour of the rest of the hotel revealed an impressive workout room, a small but distinguished spa facility,

Pianist Monty Alexander was among the top jazz musicians to perform at the defunct Cabaret Room at the Silvertree Hotel in Snowmass Village.

use of reclaimed lumber fits in not only with the color scheme but the intention of sustainability. The art on the walls stands out as art rather than decoration, but it doesn’t stand out too much. My recent one-night stay in the 254-room hotel was pleasant in all respects. The staff had the quality of professional friendliness. The room featured a small balcony that overlooked the ski slopes, the swimming pool and hot tub; a big, flat-screen TV; and a far-betterthan-average shower. But the easy highlights of the room were the two queen beds whose white-white linens

a ski concierge service that should make it a breeze to get from bed to the slopes, and the space where a Starbucks is coming later this season. It is a whole different look and feel at the Westin’s sister property, the 151-room Wildwood, whose transformation is even more radical. Aiming at a modern, twee take on the old, communal ski lodge, the Wildwood is pure, catchy pop. My first reaction to the lobby was to laugh — followed by an overwhelming desire to lay down on the sofa, the one right in front of the TV, to watch vintage ski movies. So I happily did.

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

FLAMINGO A-GO-GO WELL, EVERYONE SAW those pink flamingos around town in November and so a huge crowd attended the Flamingo A-Go-Go party given by the Aspen Education Foundation (AEF), which raises funds for the Aspen Public Schools for things not covered in the school budget. Things like art MARY and music programs ESHBAUGH HAYES are so necessary for a well-rounded education. Chairperson for the event held at the St. Regis Aspen was Ginna Francis and in attendance were soooo many beautiful young parents as well as school officials and teachers. It’s wonderful to see such support of the Aspen Public School System (which also received a vote of confidence in the November election). Undercurrent ... In the early morning, clouds billow from the snowmaking guns on the mountains.

FUNDRAISER On the left is Melissa Long, AEF executive director, with Ginna Francis, who was Flamingo event chairperson.

FUNDRAISER

Penny Straka, left, is Ginna’s mother, and she is with Jamil Ferraro.

FUNDRAISER

FUNDRAISER Jay and Holly DeWine.

Doreen Goldyn, left, is principal of Aspen Elementary School while Betsy Ann Anastas is assistant principal.

FUNDRAISER Linda and Dan Soderberg.

FUNDRAISER

Mary Ryerson, Senior VP at Aspen Alpine Bank and Jeff Kraunz, assistant principal. Alpine Bank was also a sponsor for Flamingo.

FUNDRAISER FUNDRAISER Paula Canning, left, with Susan Woolley.

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December 6-12, 2012

From the left are Erlinda and Ron Morehead and Stephanie Heinecken.

P H OTO S B Y M A RY E S H BA U G H H AY E S


by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

FUNDRAISER Robin and John Galambos.

FUNDRAISER John Fisher is the longtime shop and drafting teacher at Aspen High School. He is with his wife, Pam Fisher.

FUNDRAISER From the left are Ali Phillips, Alexis Diaz, Steve and Charlotte Marolt.

FUNDRAISER Stasha and Stefan Kaelin.

FUNDRAISER Millie Hamner, left, is a Colorado State Representive, and she is with Gail Schwartz, Colorado State Senator.

FUNDRAISER From the left are Laurie Laing, Ripley Thomas and Mary Cherry.

FUNDRAISER Lisa and George Baker.

FUNDRAISER Nancy Mayer is publisher of Aspen Sojourner Magazine, which was one of the major sponsors for Flamingo.

FUNDRAISER From the left are Kate Fuentes, Karin Nostdahl Wehse and Tod Wehse. A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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CURRENTEVENTS LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6 Dubskin with Mikey Thunder 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. Originating in Ft. Collins, Colo., DubSkin has become a fixture on the American reggae scene. Its latest release, “Release from Fear,” runs the gamut from roots and steppers to rockers and dancehall. It also shows DubSkin’s love for other styles of music, including hip-hop, rock, funk and more. No cover charge. Call 970-544-9800. Memphis Linzy Unplugged 9 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., Kenichi, 533 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. Live acoustic music in the lounge. Call 970-920-2212. Winter Band Concert 6:30 p.m. - 8 p.m., Basalt Middle School auditorium. The Basalt Middle and High School bands perform a Winter Concert. A fundraising dinner of chili, hot dogs and desserts takes place before and after 6:30 p.m. concert. Free admission. Call 970-927-3833. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7 Tony Rosario 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. A solo musician with a big sound for Americana and folk-infused rock. No cover charge. Call 970-704-1216. Dwight F. Ferren 7 p.m. - 10 p.m., Two Rivers Bar and Cafe, Midland Avenue, Basalt.

DECEMBER 6-12, 2012

$15 for adults with dinner and $10 without; for students, it’s $8 with dinner and $5 without. Call 970-384-6192. 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. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8 Dwight F. Ferren 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., El Jebel Winter Market, Eagle-Crest Nursery, El Jebel. Solo acoustic guitar instrumentals and Christmas music for market patrons. Call 970-927-1076. Jes Grew featuring The Broccoli Bros. Horns 10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Jes Grew, an eclectic rock ‘n’ roll band out of Aspen, now features the line-up of Randolph Turner, Viddy, Paul Valentine, Chris Harrison, Jai Vatuk, Galen Gatzke, Mark Yeager and Ben Yeager. Call 970-544-9800. Punch Brothers 8 p.m. - 10 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Punch Brothers are the New York City-based quintet of mandolinist Chris Thile, guitarist Chris Eldridge, bassist Paul Kowert, banjoist Noam Pikelny and violinist Gabe Witcher. Their new album “Who’s Feeling Young Now?,” was hailed by Vanity Fair as “their most expressive work yet as an ensemble — sophisticated, pop-y,

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9 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. Christmas Eve Choir Rehearsal 10:30 a.m. - 12 p.m., Snowmass Chapel, 5307 Owl Creek Road, Snowmass Village. Snowmass Chapel is seeking volunteers to sing in its annual Christmas Eve “Lessons and Carols” services. Contact Paul Dankers for more information. Call 970-300-1330. 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. Perpetual Groove 9 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Perpetual Groove’s music has evolved into a genre-bending, original sound that touches upon jazz-rock, neo-psychedelia, R&B, trance electronica, progressive rock, and anthemic arena rock. Call 970-544-9800. MONDAY, DECEMBER 10 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

Dre, Davy DMX, Son of Bazerk and NO Self Control. Call 970-544-9800 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11 Music and Dancing 9 p.m. - 11:59 p.m., Syzygy Restaurant, 308 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. Music and dancing to the hits of the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. Admission is $5 for the first 20 people, then $10. Call 310-606-1305. Haden Gregg and Friends 7 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., L’Hostaria, 620 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Live music every Tuesday. Call 970-925-9022. 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 970925-8588. Divine Fits 9 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S Galena St., Aspen. The band’s debut release, “A Thing Called Divine Fits,” features tracks ranging from the uptempo “Would That Not Be Nice?” and “Like Ice Cream” to the Motorik pulse of “Baby Get Worse” and “The Salton Sea,” to the tender acoustic guitar strains of “Civilian Stripes” and a sublime take on Roland S. Howard’s “Shivers.” Call 970-544-9800. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12 Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., The New Belgium Ranger Station, slopeside, Snowmass Village Mall. Live Music for aprés ski. Call 970-309-9789.

THE ARTS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6 Artists in Residence Show 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Red Brick Center for the Arts, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Meet the 15 new resident artists and become acquainted with their work. Call 970-429-2777. Arts Club 3:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., Aspen Youth Center, 0861 Maroon Creek Road. In collaboration with Aspen Youth Center, the Aspen Art Museum offers a program of six in-center art classes after school. Activities include drawing, graffiti, collage, illustration, sculpture, pottery, painting, printing and more. The classes conclude with a studenthung installation and family-and-friends gallery reception at the Youth Center. Sign up for each class separately. Sign-ups close on Tuesday before the Thursday class. Priority will be given to kids who have not participated in prior classes. Kids can sign themselves up in person or by phone. Admission to the class; it’s open to 4th through 8th graders. Call 970-544-4130. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7 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.

WATCH Hip-hop group Public Enemy, led by rappers Flavor Flav, left, and Chuck D, play Monday, Dec. 10, at Belly Up. Solo acoustic instrumentals, then electric karaoke guitar. Call 970-927-1076. Rocky Mountain Rob: No Strings Attached 6:30 a.m. - 8:30 p.m., The Edge, Timberline Condominiums, Snowmass Village. Early acoustic harmonica blues and folk solos. Call 970-923-4000. Super Diamond 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. This San Francisco outfit has transcended the label of tribute band by passionately immersing themselves in Neil Diamond’s huge repertoire and delivering a high-octane show of unforgettable Diamond classics. Call 970-544-9800. Basalt High School Play 6 p.m. - 9 p.m., Basalt High School, 600 South Side Drive. Featuring the comedy “Super Freaks” written by Scott Haan. Dinner theater and show. Dinner is at 6 p.m. followed by show at 7 p.m. Admission is

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kinetic and profound, all at once.” The New Yorker calls it “a mystical alchemy of oldtime music and contemporary sensibilities.” Call 970-920-5770. Basalt High School Play 6 p.m. - 9 p.m., Basalt High School, 600 South Side Drive. Featuring the comedy “Super Freaks” written by Scott Haan. Dinner theater and show. Dinner is at 6 p.m. followed by show at 7 p.m. Admission is $15 for adults with dinner and $10 without; for students, it’s $8 with dinner and $5 without. Call 970-384-6192. 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.

December 6-12, 2012

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. Public Enemy - Hip Hop Gods Tour 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. Hip-hop activists Public Enemy celebrate their 25th anniversary with “The Evil Empire Of Everything,” their newest release and one that singer Chuck D hopes will complement “Most Of My Heroes Still Don’t Appear On No Stamp.” With longevity and resolve unseen before in the world of hip-hop, the genre’s ambassadors mark their milestone with two new records that undeniably reaffirm their political conviction and dedication to positive change. Plus: X Clan, Monie Love, Dres, Leaders of the New School, Awesome

Holiday Gallery Show 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., CCAH Center for Arts, Carbondale. Hand to Heart is a traditional showcase of handcrafted wares (perfect for holiday gifts) in a variety of media from 11 local artists. Includes ceramics, jewelry, glass, wood, paper, mixed media, painting, wearable art and even homemade chocolates and organic lotions. The First Friday artists’ reception in the R2 Gallery at the CCAH Center for the Arts takes place Dec. 7. from 6-8 p.m. The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturdays from noon to 5 p.m. through Dec. 28. Call 970-963-1680. WC3 Ornaments: Submission deadline 5 p.m. - 5 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Design and build your notion of a holiday ornament. All ornaments submitted will be juried (by an illustrious panel of jurors), displayed and sold at the annual WC3 Ornament Exhibition and Store. Proceeds will benefit the free programs of the Woody Creek Community Center — a member nonprofit organization. The submission deadline is Dec. 7. Winners announced at the Exhibition Party and Auction on Dec. 13 at 6 p.m. The sale runs from Dec. 13-Jan. 5. More at www.woodyc3.org. Call 970-922-2342.

PHOTOS BY STEWART OKSENHORN


edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8 Holiday Crafts 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., ACES at Rock Bottom Ranch, Basalt. Make candy and festive print-block cards for loved ones, plus other creative gifts. While the adult elves are busy at work, little elves are in invited to the kids’ table for cookie decorating, ornament glittering, and storytelling. Materials provided. $40 for members; $50 for nonmembers. Call 970-927-6760. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11 Beginning Adult Ballet 10 a.m. - 11 a.m., Coredination 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. A class for those who wish to learn this movement form in a professional and enjoyable learning environment. Call 970-379-2187.

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 8 Restorative Yoga 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Health & Harmony, El Jebel. An afternoon of deep release led by Faith Lipori. All levels are welcome. Pre-registration is required for this workshop. Call 970-704-9642. MONDAY, DECEMBER 10 Aikido at CMC 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Colorado Mountain College, Aspen campus. Aikido is an effective self-defense as well as a fun and dynamic work out. Class offered Mondays and Wednesdays. Beginners welcome. Try

Vinyasa Flow and Pilates Mat Classes 5:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m., Coredination 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Vinyasa flow yoga class for all levels at 10 a.m. Synthesizing dynamic postures (asanas) designed to increase core strength and range of motion. Pilates mat class, intermediate level, offered at noon. Increase internal core strength for joint support, mobility,spine alignment and muscle elasticity. Call 970-379-2187. Youth Karate 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Advanced class (orange belts and up) from 3:30-4:30 p.m. and beginners (white and yellow belts) from 4:30-5:30 p.m. Call 970-920-5140.

THE COMMUNITY THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6 Cloud 9 Aspen Toastmasters 12 p.m. - 1:30 p.m., Colorado Mountain College room 220, Aspen campus, 255 Sage Way. First and third Thursdays of the month. Cloud 9 Aspen Toastmasters invites residents to its regular club meeting to meet members and learn about the importance of communication skills for today’s professional. Call 303-763-0141. Colorado Workforce Center 10 a.m. - 3 p.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. Drop in to the library every first Thursday of the month and get help with resume writing and job training. Employers: list your job openings with the Workforce Center. Call 970-429-1900. Waldorf School Tour of the Grades 8:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., Waldorf School, 16543 Highway 82, Carbondale. The Waldorf School on the Roaring Fork offers an opportunity to observe and inquire about its kindergarten, lower and middle schools. Please call. Call 970-963-1960.

HEAR Mandolinist Chris Thile leads the string quintet Punch Brothers to a show on Saturday, Dec. 8, at the Wheeler Opera House. the first class for free. Call 970-379-4676. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12 Pottery Club Show and Sale 5 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., Colorado Mountain College, 0255 Sage Way, Aspen. The Pottery Club at CMC in Aspen hosts a holiday show and sale featuring handmade pottery and sculpture by local artists. The Dec. 12 opening reception offers wine and cheese. The sale continues Dec. 13 and 14 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. each day. Call 970-925-7740.

YOGA & EXERCISE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6 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. Aspen Yoga Society Book Club 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Victoria’s Cafe, Aspen. Join yogis valleywide in reading one of the most insightful books ever written and join together as a community to discuss. All are welcome. Call 970-618-5101. Adult Beginning Ballet Class 9 a.m. - 10 a.m., 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. Adult Drop-In Basketball 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen High School. Skier Dome Play pickup 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. Ski Conditioning Class 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center Call 970-920-5140. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7 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

Beginning/Intermediate Ballet 10 a.m. - 11:30 a.m., Third Street Center, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Beginning to intermediate ballet class taught by faculty of Aspen Santa Fe Ballet. Call 970-925-7175. Intermediate Teen/Adult Ballet Class 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Coredination 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Intermediate classical ballet technique class for enthusiastic and experienced dancers who wish to advance their ballet technique in an enjoyable learning environment. Call 970-379-2187. Slackline 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Aspen Recreation Department, Red Brick School, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Indoor slackline for all ability levels. No experience needed. Call 970-920-5140. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11 Adult Drop-In Basketball 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen High School. Skier Dome Play pickup 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. Aspen Skating Club 4 p.m. - 4 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Learn to skate with Aspen Skating Club on Tuesdays and Fridays at 4 p.m. and Sundays at 5:15 p.m. All ages ability levels are welcome. Private and group instruction available. For additional information, contact Teri Hooper at hoopertk@comcast.net call. Call 970-379-5900. Chicks Rock the Red Brick 6 p.m. - 7 p.m., Aspen Recreation Department, Red Brick School, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Climbing class; no experience needed. Come learn the basics of rock climbing. Call 970-920-5140. Pilates Mat and Yoga Classes 12 p.m. - 1 p.m., Coredination 520 S. Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Pilates mat class for experienced students looking to advance their practice and understanding of the classical pilates method and its concepts, offered from noon to 1 p.m. Vinyasa flow yoga class for all levels offered from 5:30-6:45 p.m., taught by certified instructor Anthony Jerkunica. Call 970-379-2187.

Meet the author: I,Win 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Aspen Club and Spa. Book Signing of “I,Win.” Call 970-925-3938. Christmas Eve Choir Rehearsal 6 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., Snowmass Chapel, 5307 Owl Creek Road, Snowmass Village. Snowmass Chapel is seeking volunteers to sing in its annual Christmas Eve “Lessons and Carols” services. Contact Paul Dankers for details. Call 970-300-1330. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7 Light Up Carbondale 3 p.m. - 8 p.m., Downtown Carbondale. December’s First Friday celebration features Santa, holiday tree lightings, elementary school choir carolers and the cast of the Sol Theatre Company’s “A Charlie Brown Christmas and the Little Star,” and an illuminating Parade of Bike Lights. As always, First Friday festivities include complimentary horse-drawn sleigh rides. Call 970-963-1890.

AIARE Avalanche Course-Level 1 5 p.m. - 6 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. Offered again Dec. 14. Go to www.IBelieveACS.org for more information. Call 970-923-4080. 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 Chapel8 a.m. 9 ohrs. Nov. 23-dec 23 Call 970-945-6976. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8 Willits Holiday Fun 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Willits Town Center, Basalt. Featuring visits with Santa Claus, school choir performances and wagon rides, plus a cookie contest at Kitchen Collage (entries welcome — drop off a dozen of your best by 4:30 p.m. Amateur bakers only). The Willits Holiday Tree will be lit in Pocket Park at dark, with music from guitarist Dwight F. Ferren. Call 970-927-4031. Gingerbread House Decorating 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., El Jebel Community Center, next to Crown Mountain Park. Cornerstone Classical School fundraiser. Gingerbread house decorating, pictures with Santa and kids craft workshop. Lunch is offered, plus drawings each hour and more. Call 970-309-7757. Pow Party 2012 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Eagles Club, 700 E. Bleeker St., Aspen. Local nonprofit Powder to the People’s annual Pow Party FUNdraiser includes appetizers, drinks, live music and a silent auction. The Pow Party funds Powder to the People’s backcountry speaker series, the free-to-the-public beacon park at Aspen Highlands, and continuing educational and collaborative efforts toward equal public access to public lands, backcountry safety and etiquette. Recommended donation is $15 and includes a complimentary beer, wine or soda (followed by an affordable cash bar). RSVP to rsvp@powdertothepeople.org or 970ERA-2SKI (372-2754). Credit card payments are accepted via Paypal to donate@ powdertothepeople.org. Call 970-372-2754.

G DO WEEK

Jake

THE

Jake is a very handsome 6 year old male boxer. He loves affection and gets along well with everyone, even kids! He is mellow and quite the snuggler. He has wonderful manners indoors and eagerly greets you upon your arrival. He LOVES to go for walks and enjoys daily exercise. He listens very well to sit and stay commands...very intelligent! Jake is up-to-date on vaccinations, neutered and micro-chipped. If you are interested in the fella, please visit our website at www.luckydayrescue.org and complete and application. For questions, feel free to contact Stephanie at 303-478-0662. LUCKY DAY ANIMAL RESCUE OF COLORADO

www.luckydayrescue.org A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

31


LOCAL

MARKETPLACE

PLACE AN AD >> ASPENTIMES.COM/PLACEAD | (970) 925-9937 | FAX (970) 925-5647 | CLASSIFIEDS@ASPENTIMES.COM | MORE AT ASPENTIMES.COM 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 Dualy Flatbed Pickup 1959

Ford Explorer XLT 4WD 2002

Ford F-350 2003

Ford Mustang Coupe 1968

$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

"VUPNBUJD , SE SPX TFBU CSBOE OFX UJSFT BOE GSPOU CSBLFT WFSZ HPPE DPOE FYDFMMFOU JO TOPX BOE MPOH USJQT EFBMFS NBJOUBJOFE $5300. obo 970-404-2783

'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

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Harley Davidson Sportster 1999

Honda CRB EXL 2008

HONDA CRV 2009

Infiniti G35 2003

DD 4VQFS TQPSU *U IBT NJMFT UXP TFBUT BOE SVOT HSFBU (BSBHF TUPSFE BMM JUT MJGF

"8% -FBUIFS TFBUT .PPOSPPG )FBUFE TFBUT "MMPZ XIFFMT $SVJTF $POUSPM EJTL $% DIBOHFS 1PXFS XJOEPXT BOE MPDL

NJ FYDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO BVUP USBOT Q XJOE BMMPZ XIFFMT TJMWFS DPMPS

$12,500 CTS ASPEN 970-925-8842

$5,000 970-948-9889

$17,300 970-618-7417

Christina or Kyle 970-319-1022

EPPS (PPE DPOEJUJPO L NJMFT "VUP USBOTNJTTJPO "MMPZ XIFFMT 1PXFS TFBUT 4VOSPPG )FBUFE TFBUT 1PXFS XJOEPXT 8IJUF 8BZMBOE $5900 OBO 252-945-7588

Jeep Grand Cherokee Orvis 1997

Jeep Wranger Unlimited 2005

KAWASAKI 80 & SUZUKI 80

Nissan Pathfinder 1991

NISSAN TITAN V8 2005

+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

Great Condition, Miles 21,500, /FX 5JSFT 3JNT TFBU DPWFST JODI MJGU IBSE UPQ UJOUFE XJOEPXT TJSJVT SBEJP MJGF UJNF TVCTDSJQUJPO JO "TQFO

"XFTPNF TUSPLF NBDIJOFT Great Christmas gift!

Price $18,500, Blue Book $19,000 Call Mike, (970)-948-4976

Mike 970-379-1141

/JTTBO 1BUIGJOEFS EPPS (PPE DPOEJUJPO L 3FBEZ GPS 8JOUFS 4IBOOPO 4XFFOFZ TQTXFFOFZ !HNBJM DPN $3950.00 970-618-6325

%BSL HSFFO TJY TFBUFS 5*5"/ 8% X & MPDL "MM QPXFS XJOEPXT DE JQPE BDDFTTPSZ JODMVEFE 5PX 1LH (SFBU DPOEJUJPO /FX )BOLPPL "MM 5FSSBJO UJSFT NJMFT 3FBS TPGU UPQ DPWFS GPS USVDL CFE $12,740. 303-656-8708.

Subaru Legacy Wagon 2001 AWD

Three Wheelers - Various

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2010

Toyota RAV4 2004

Toyota Tundra 2002

L NJMFT 1PXFS MPDLT XJOEPXT BVUP DE DSVJTF HPPE DPOE TPNF EFOUT SVTU /FX XJOETIJFME UJSFT ,## WBMVF .PSF QIPUPT POMJOF (MFOXPPE Asking $2950/OBO PS DISJTUJOFT!TPQSJT OFU

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"VUP 1IPUP "ET

Audi A5 convertible 2010

DODGE Power Ram Truck 1986

SOLD! GMC Denali XL 2005

#MBDL (.$ %FOBMJ 9M L NJMFT (SFZ MFBUIFS JOUFSJPS OE SPX CVDL FUT $% J1PE %7% 5PX QLH 3FDPSET

$3900 for all Can be sold separately Call for details 970-379-9878

Realistic Seller. Offering Price: $32,000 OBO Vail 970-376-6570

$900 for one, $1600 for both.

Triumph America 865cc - 2009

Volvo S60 R 2004

Volvo XC 90 T6 2003

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- $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

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32

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

✦

December 6-12, 2012

$20,900

Auto Photo Ads Work! 4 Sale

Thousands of others have proven this by selling their vehicle in this section.

925-9937 • www.aspentimes.com/placead


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Subaru Legacy Wagon 2001 AWD

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Journeyman Auto Glass 'SFF &TUJNBUFT 2VBMJ UZ 4FSWJDF *OTVSBODF $MBJNT "DDFQUFE $POWFOJFOUMZ MPDBUFE JO UIF .JE 7BMMFZ #VTJOFTT $FOUFS BU %VSPVY -BOF #BTBMU KPVSOFZNBOBVUPHMBTT! DPNDBTU OFU

NEED WHEELS FOR WINTER TIRES?

$PPQFS %JTDPWFSFS

4UVEEFE TOPXT - 3

$250 970-379-9879

Did you know more people read a newspaper on a typical Sunday than watched the 2011 Super Bowl? 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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RON"THE GOLD GUY "

#MBDL TUFFM CFE GSBNF RVFFO GSPN 3PPN #PBSE XJUI 4JNNPOT CPY TQSJOH NBUUSFTT GSPN 5IF 4MFFQ 4IPQ JO (MFO XPPE 4QSJOHT 3FUBJM WBMVF 'PS TBMF

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SUBARUS, AUDI 2VBUUSPT 78 NPUJPOT 5%* T 1SJDF 3BOHF Y T STANSAUTOSALESLLC.COM

OR CALL 303-650-1011

+ $ 'JTDIFS "OUJRVF $BCJOFU (SBOE 6QSJHIU 1JBOP 4FSJBM NBOVGBDUVSFE 6TFE DPOEJUJPO POF CSPLFO LFZ POF XIFFM NJTTJOH 1MBZT XFMM OFFET UVOF 1JDL VQ POMZ "TQFO 5FSTJB UFSTJBCSVUTBFSU!HNBJM D PN

$250

SOLD!!

$1500 970.306.9544

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“SOLD”

$PNQVUFS 4VQQMJFT

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Fischer amc73, All mountain, 170. Rail flex 2 bindings. Brand New!

NEVER BEEN USED!!!! $250 OBO Jared 970-379-3233

Diversity in the workplace. Add your job listing to the national network, Diversity. Our Classified Advertising staff is ready to help. Call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classifieds@ cmnm.org.

2007 S-Works Enduro

4DIXJOO CJDZDMF GPS TBMF MJLF OFX CBSFMZ VTFE

1FUT %PHT

$150 970 390 0998

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Avalancheautosales.com

#JDZDMFT .PQFET

Simmons Beautyrest $MBTTJD #BSEXFMM QJMMPX UPQ NBUUSFTT BOE CPY TQSJOHT ,JOH 4J[F (SFBU DPOEJUJPO.

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AVALANCHE AUTOMOTIVE LLC

98 Subaru Forester, 8IJUF "VUP , $BMM GPS PUIFS DBST BWBJMBCMF 8F GJOBODF XJUI BQQSPWFE DSFEJU #6: )&3& 1": )&3& )XZ JO .JOUVSO

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Please call 970-524-0657. Leave a message.

3&165"#-& (0-% 4.*5) QBZJOH $"4) GPS HPME TJMWFS QMBUJ OVN KFXFMSZ HPME PS TJMWFS DPJOT OVHHFUT TUFSMJOH TJMWFS TFUT .BOZ MPZBM DVTUPN FST UIBOL NF GPS #&45 3&563/4 #&45 4&3 7*$& BOE DPOWFOJFOU BQQPJOUNFOUT * 3FDZDMF 3FNBLF BOE 3FQBJS 'PS UPEBZhT TQPU TFF ronthegoldguy.com $BMM 3PO

“SOLD” Feel the power. 80 percent of adults in households earning $100,000 or more read a newspaper in print or online each week.

8BOU 5P #VZ .FSDIBOEJTF 8BOU UP QVSDIBTF NJO FSBMT BOE PUIFS PJM HBT JOUFSFTUT 4FOE EFUBJMT UP 1 0 #PY %FO WFS $0

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6 pc Home Theater

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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

33


SOLD... GUARANTEED! Auto Photo Ads work. 4BMFT "TTPDJBUF 8PNFOhT EFTJHOFS CPV UJRVF TFFLT TBMFT BTTPD ZST FYQ SFR 3FTVNFT apply@maxclothing.com 4UPDL "TTPDJBUF

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.PUIFShT )FMQFS .PUIFShT IFMQFS &OHMJTI TQFBLJOH 4BU 4VO BN QN IPVS DBMM #BTBMU OP CVT TUPQ

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4LJ UFDI TBMFT 4LJ 4FS WJDF $FOUFS #PBSE 8FSLT "TQFO $0

Realtors: Do you have a тАЬretreatтАЭ for sale? 84 percent of vacation-home buyers said the primary reason for buying a second home was to use the property for vacations or as a family retreat. To place a Real Estate Photo Ad in print and online -

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Can you ямБx just about anything? Advertise your handyman business in the Service Directory. ClassiямБeds@ cmnm.org. Painters &YQFSJFODFE 0XO 5PPMT 5SBOTQPSUBUJPO $BMM 5JN ZFBS QMVT MPDBM DSBGUTNBO BWBJMBCMF GPS GJOJTI BOE HFOFSBM DBS QFOUSZ IPNF NBJOUF OBODF BOE SFQBJST )PMJEBZ 4FU 6Q UPP 1BVM

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RENTED! Please Recycle

34

&VSPQFBO .PVOUJOH BOE 4IPVMEFS .PVOUJOH $PNQFUJUJWF 1SJDJOH $BMM +PTI GPS EFUBJMT

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A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

тЬж

3FOUBMT #BTBMU "SFB

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3PPNNBUFT "TQFO

December 6-12, 2012

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BASALT

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1 V C M J T I F E J O U I F " T Q F O 5 J N F T 8 F F L M Z P O /PWFNCFS %FDFNCFS < >

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Are you being solicited from an annoying тАЬtoll freeтАЭ business that wants YOU to place your ad with THEM?

1. Write down the # and the time you got the call (these are usually recorded calls). 2. Go to complaints.donotcall.gov or www.donotcall.gov. 3. Follow the steps on the web form. If you arenтАЩt sure if your phone number is registered you can ямБnd out on this same site. As long as your phone number has been registered for at least a month you can ямБle a complaint. A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

37


WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by JASMINE LISTOU BIBLE Special to the Weekly

BOOK REVIEW

“RHAPSODY” IF YOU HAVE HAD the opportunity to sip exotic vodka cocktails at Nest — the luscious cove of white onyx and minty leather located in the Viceroy Snowmass — then you’ve caught a glimpse of the design powerhouse that is Kelly Wearstler. The release of her fourth book, “Rhapsody,” allows us to delve deeper into the mind of one of the most acclaimed interior designers of our time. Referred to as a “maximalist,” Wearstler’s design style is bold, graphic, layered and drenched in well thought-out complexity. Mountain homeowners and urban dwellers alike appreciate her style and have been incorporating its dynamic, sometimes shocking, style elements for more than a decade. Your chance to completely immerse yourself in Wearstler luxe is only a

by JEFF CHEN

| edited by WILL SHORTZ

NOTEWORTHY short plane ride away to Palm Springs, Calif., where you can visit the Viceroy Palm Springs, the property that catapulted K.W. to the forefront of the design community. Once the Estrella hotel, the Viceroy now stands as a respite for Hollywood royalty and international travelers alike. A discreet entrance and incredibly welcoming staff create an instant feeling of warmth and intimacy. Classic glamour feels fresh and modern without being stuffy or pretentious. Perched on four acres that nestle against the San Jacinto Mountains, the property is sprinkled with citrus trees and swaying palms. The classic K.W. style isn’t reserved for the decadent villas, each and every exquisitely appointed guest room is swathed in her signature style. Graphic patterns and bold lines deliver maximum

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A LITTLE EXTRA

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ACROSS 1 6 10 14 19 20 21

22 23 25 27 28 29 30 31 33 34 35 36 38 39 40 41 44 45 46 49

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It might appear on a spine In the thick of The “C” of FDIC: Abbr. Muslim moguls “The Wrestler” actress Trio on camels The brother in “Am I my brother’s keeper?” Monosyllabic state Bialys Fussy about rules Wrestling achievement Cup holder Rain-forest flora Contrail source, once: Abbr. Jurassic suffix Novel writing, e.g. Key in a chain, maybe Two of them make a sawbuck Having everything one needs Victoria’s Secret purchase Walk, e.g. Whiz Tormentors of a sort Goat’s cry Carrier letters? Je ne sais quoi His tomb is a

pilgrimage site for both Muslims and Jews 51 Occupy, as a booth 53 To whom it is said “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark” 54 Danish, e.g. 56 Grave letters 57 Big Red Machine hustler 58 Four-time role for Patrick Stewart 60 Almost every man in the world has one 62 Myrna of “Cheaper by the Dozen” 64 Indeed 65 Followers of a boom? 72 More precise alternative to scissors 80 Largest moon in the solar system 81 Bottom line, maybe 83 “You try!” 84 Decrees 85 Neighbor of Niger 87 One of a pair of drums 88 Lunar mission commanded by Thomas P. Stafford 89 Ad ___ 90 Frat.’s counterpart 92 Cousins of honey badgers 93 Morgan le ___ (Arthurian sorceress) 94 “The Labors of Hercules” painter Guido 95 Marquee name 97 Kauaian ring 98 Mmes. of España 100 Wipe out, in

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

101 103 106 107 108 110 111 113

115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122

surfing lingo Converted into bundles for a loft Thwarter of HAL Spank but good Allure 1970s-’80s F.B.I. sting Xanthippe, e.g. A spy will often cross them Widely used term declared “undignified” by John Paul II Liquefy Part of N.B. Squared up Nutcases Centuries, e.g. Grab, with “onto” “What ___?” Wield, as influence

15 16 17 18 24 26 32 35 37 40 41 42 43 46 47 48 50 52 53 55 57

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3 4 5 6 7

8 9 10 11 12 13

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Features of some sports cars Area conquered by Alexander the Great Liftoff point Excommunicator of Martin Luther German one Dangerous liaisons, often 1992 Denzel Washington title role Spanish churches Sorry state Script writer’s study? Like a good butler King’s things Quest of the astronomer Percival Lowell Athos, Porthos and Aramis, e.g.

December 6-12, 2012

59 61 63 65

66 67 68

69 70 71 73 74 75 76

Beano competitor Reaches a nadir Ouzo herb Quakers and Shakers Snoop Lion’s genre Muscle below a delt Smell like Triple Crown jockey Eddie Rubbish Cuts back on Dickens schemer Shade of bleu Dates Pic Seine tributary Sushi bar topping Part of U.N.L.V. One of the X’s in X-X-X Hesitate in speech Nick of “Cape Fear” Hunt in the wrong place? Révolution target Actor Stephen Mustachioed cartoon character Fictional writer in a John Irving best seller Historical transition point South African antelopes Simon & Garfunkel’s “For ___, Whenever I May Find Her” City near Virginia City YouTube video lead-ins Hebrew N Bit of ink, slangily Sheep’s genus Turkey’s Atatürk Caught

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32 37

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58

69

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89 93

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111

78

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104

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46 53

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86

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97 102

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39 44

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68

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25

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impact at the hotel bar where dreamy bartenders will serve you freshsqueezed grapefruit mojitos while Fido is welcome to rest at your feet. Many of these same design sensibilities and nuances can also be experienced at the Viceroy Snowmass. And until you can whisk away to the azure sky and rusty red mountains that await you at the Viceroy Palm Springs, indulging in each sumptuous page of Rhapsody will have to suffice. Follow Wearstler on a journey of beautiful spaces and places where most can only dream of inhabiting. Devour each glossy page of vibrant images, each page saturated with more eye candy than the next.

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98

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DOWN 1

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Note: Fourteen symmetrically placed answers in this puzzle are each missing a part … which can be found elsewhere in the grid.

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‘Rhapsody’ Kelly Wearstler Rizzoli; 2012 256 pages; $55

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— Last week’s puzzle answers —

77 78 79 80 82 85 86 89 91 94 96

Summer cooler Clichéd prison contraband item Verb with “vous” Indian tourist haven Malformed Pamper, say Willing to consider Vitamin A Novelty glasses G’s opposite Fresh

98 99 100 102 104 105 107 109 112 114

Measures Accumulated Print option: Abbr. Part of a horse’s pedigree Knight’s attribute Discharge Observes Plant, maybe Comic book mutants Wii alternative

L A R A A N D Y M E N U O M A R B I B I B R O O A K E S T O L S E V E C G E T T S C A R P O C O O L I N T I T S S I T A R S

J A N E R O E

U M B R I A N

I E R R A E E D S C E C T E R S P A A I P O N D G A B R H U I L S I D I N A C A V O I L O A V I L H I S L E T T N E T N Y S L

I R R S S M A R T A S S A B L E

B L O T S

A B A T E S N O O D

K E I R A T A R N I S H F E D O N

A R R A S G O M A D

C L A R K

H E R A

A M I N

S E E D P H O O U I D M S P E D H O R I C E L O Y E C K B C A R E T E R H E T L E S

D R A K E S

O R A

P A S X K I H A T T R S S T O N A U T S

C R I B S H E E T

M A M B O

A G A I N

J A M E S

G E S T R A O P S O E A C N O D T J E A R C I K E

O C E A N I A

S H A T T E R

T R E N D E D

S E N I O R


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LOCALS EXPERIENCE IT FIRST The “All–New” Westin Snowmass Resort & Wildwood Snowmass Now Open Come explore our many venues, including The Bar at Wildwood, Vue, The Westin Lobby Lounge & Snowmass Kitchen *Ask about our special locals program “The Wild Bunch”

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39


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