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Category: Upcoming Events

  • TODAY’S EVENTS – WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4

    TODAY’S EVENTS – WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4

    EASTERN COLORADO

    — DAILY EVENTS —

    • I-70 Corridor Chamber of Commerce Afterhours event

      Kelver Library, 404 E. Front St., Byers. @ 5-7 p.m.

    Every Wednesday

    • Baby Bounce

      Anythink Bennett library @ 10-10:30 a.m. Songs, stories and rhyme times for babies up to age 2 and their caregivers.

    • Music & Movement

      Anythink Bennett library @ 10:30-11:30 a.m. Ages 2-6 can sing, dance and learn to play basic instruments.

    • Bennett Young At Heart seniors potluck

      Bennett Community Center @ 12 p.m. Shirley Kuzara, (303)644-4768.

    • Byers Silver & Gold senior citizens game day

      Byers American Legion Hall @ 12:30 p.m.

    • Recovery in Christ

      Valley Bank, Strasburg @ 7-9 p.m.

    LIBRARY NEWS

    • Teen Tech

      Anythink Bennett library @ 4:15-5:15 p.m. Students ages 11 and up will use a DSLR camera to create light painting photos.

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  • TODAY’S EVENTS – TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3

    TODAY’S EVENTS – TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3

    EASTERN COLORADO

    — DAILY EVENTS —

    • Bennett VFW Post No. 8449

      Bennett VFW Hall @ 6:30 p.m.

    • Byers Community Cemetery Association semi-annual meeting

      May Farms, Byers. @ 7 p.m. For information, call (303)915-4900.

    • Byers American Legion Auxiliary

      Byers Legion Hall @ 7 p.m.

    • Deer Trail Town Board

      Town Hall, 255 Second Ave. @ 7 p.m.

    EVERY TUESDAY

    • Storytime

      Anythink Bennett library @ 10:30-11:30 a.m. Children can enjoy stories, puppets, songs and other fun activities to promote early literacy for preschoolers. Stories will focus on classic and newly published books. (No session Oct. 24).

    Schoolhouse News

    • Bennett School Forum for Board Candidates

      BENNETT — The Bennett School District 29J will host Meet the School Board Candidates Night from 6:30-7:30 p.m.,  Tuesday, Oct. 3, at the Bennett High School library. Candidates for the two seats up for election on Tuesday, Nov. 7, for the Bennett School Board are Zebulen A. Petre, James Dubois and Kyle Meyer. For further information, call Debra Matis, designated election official, at (303)644-3234, ext. 8202. The Bennett High School library is located at 610 Seventh St. 

    LIBRARY NEWS

    • Terrific Tuesdays

      Anythink Bennett library @  4:15-5 p.m. Patrons of all ages can paint rocks, give them away, and make someone’s day as part of a Kindness Rocks Project at Crafternoon.

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  • DAM Announces New Exhibits OCT. 2017: HER PARIS AND GANESHA OPEN; LAST CALL FOR MI TIERRA AND LA MUSIDORA; AND OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

    DAM Announces New Exhibits OCT. 2017: HER PARIS AND GANESHA OPEN; LAST CALL FOR MI TIERRA AND LA MUSIDORA; AND OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

    The Denver Art Museum bids adiós to Mi Tierra

    and

    Welcomes Three New Exhibitions


    October 1: Ganesha

    The Playful Protector, which opens Oct. 1, will display statues and other depictions of the popular Hindu deity known for removing obstacles. This was developed in collaboration with the National Museum of Cambodia in Phnom Penh. Widely worshiped since the 400s, Ganesha originated in India as a Hindu god who removes obstacles and is known for granting wealth and success. Imagery of Ganesha has crossed both geographic and religious boundaries, inspiring numerous representations throughout the Asian subcontinent over time—all of which will be surveyed in the exhibition to showcase the iconographic changes of this popular Hindu deity. Sculptures, paintings and textiles will provide a spectrum of ancient to modern representations of Ganesha. Included with general admission, which is free for youth 18 and younger.

     

    Opening Oct. 15, Past the Tangled Present

    Denver artist Jaime Molina’s interactive and immersive installation, was inspired by imagination and the joy of discovery.A special Teen Day with Jaime Molina, Oct. 21 from 11 a.m.-3 p.m., will include a question-and-answer session and a hands-on workshop with the artist and an Insta/Snapmeet. Both the installation and Teen Day are included in general admission, which is free for youth 18 and younger.

     

    Oct. 22 Her Paris: Women Artists in the Age of Impressionism

    The DAM is proud to present this special ticketed exhibition will feature more than 80 paintings by 37 women artists from across Europe and America, who migrated to this epicenter of art to further their careers. They range from well-known artists such as Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt and Rosa Bonheur, to painters who are lesser-known in the United States, including Anna Ancher and Paula Modersohn-Becker. Advance ticket purchase recommended; tickets for youth 18 and younger only $5.

     

    CLOSING SOON

    Time is running out to see Mi Tierra: Contemporary Artists Explore PlaceThirteen Latinx artists created site-specific installations expressing experiences of contemporary life in the American West. These vibrant works, incorporating mixed-media, performance-based video art, digital animation, fiber constructions, painting, sculpture and ceramics, will be on view through Oct. 22. Guided tours of Mi Tierra are available Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 2 p.m. through October 21.

    Common Ground: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh, 1989-2013, featuring more than 170 portrait and landscape photographs by critically acclaimed photographer Fazal Sheikh, continues on view through Nov. 12. Guided tours of Common Ground are available Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays at 2 p.m.

    Other Highlights

    A variety of lectures and programs are offered in October, including screenings of a film on Windshield, a groundbreaking modernist summer home built in the 1930s (Oct. 3), and a documentary on artist Daniel Sprick’s career (Oct. 4). Artist Jordan Wolfson will discuss the context of contemporary art over the past decades (Oct. 10) and former DAM curator of Spanish Colonial art Dr. Donna Pierce will analyze the development and historical implications of casta paintings on Oct. 13.

    The Untitled Final-Friday 2017 series wraps up Oct. 27 with Untitled: Homewrecker, when we will question house rules and shake things up for the mother of all season finales!

    Stop by Tuesday mornings 10 a.m.-noon or Thursday afternoons 1-3 p.m. in October and November to visit with our new Creative-in-Residence. Thomas Evans, aka Detour, is a Denver-based creative whose projects have included murals, sensor-embedded painting and sculpture, DNA-based cultural mapping projects and even touch-activated musical fruit!

    There’s always plenty for families to do at the DAM, with Free First Saturday, Create Playdate  and Fall Break (Oct. 26-29)

      

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  • Cannabis Industry Experts —Attend Public Discussion @ Anythink— Sept 27

    Cannabis Industry Experts —Attend Public Discussion @ Anythink— Sept 27

    Anythink Libraries Hosts

    Careers in Cannabis Event

    for Anythink Startup Month

    WHAT:      A panel of experts and leaders in the cannabis field will discuss entrepreneurial opportunities created by the industry during the Careers in Cannabis panel, part of Anythink Startup Month. The speakers will discuss trends and ways that the cannabis industry intersects with everything from agriculture and chemistry to marketing and entrepreneurship.

                 The event is appropriate for adults ages 21 and up. It is free and open to the public. 

    WHO:        This panel includes Jesse Burns of Sweet Grass Kitchen, Alex Levine of Green Dragon and Ricardo Baca, the country’s first marijuana editor for a major newspaper and current founder of Grassands, a cannabis content agency. Baca was listed by Fortune Magazine as one of the most powerful people in the marijuana industry. 

          To arrange interviews with the panelists, please contact Stacie Ledden at 303-405-3286

    WHEN:     Wednesday, Sept. 27, 6:30-8 pm

    WHERE:  Anythink Wright Farms, 5877 E. 120th Ave., Thornton, CO 80602, 303-405-3200

    About Anythink

    Anythink is a new style of library – a place of unlimited imagination, where play inspires creativity and lifelong learning. Rangeview Library District serves the residents of Adams County with seven Anythink libraries and Anythink in Motion – the district’s mobile library – and is one of the recipients of the 2010 National Medal of Museum and Library Service from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. For more information, go to anythinklibraries.org.
     

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  • It’s National Voter Registration Day

    REGISTER NOW

    —Make a Difference Today—

    DENVER, Sept. 26, 2017 — Today is National Voter Registration Day, and Colorado is proud to have the highest percentage of registered voters in America among its eligible population.

    In addition, the turnout among registered voters in Colorado in the 2016 presidential election was 74.5 percent, the fourth highest in the nation, with 2.9 million voters casting ballots.

    Although national elections garner plenty of attention, Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams said the Nov. 7 ballot should catch voters’ attention because it involves school board races, tax measures and other local issues.

    These can directly affect your property values. Whether you think your neighborhood has too many potholes or the schools need more funding — or you’re happy with the way your local government is being run and want to see your leaders reelected — you only get a say if you register and cast a ballot. — Williams

    Easy Ways to Register

    • TEXT TO VOTE: Eligible Coloradans can simply text the word “Colorado” or “CO” to “2Vote” (28683) on their smartphones, and then open the link to the SOS online voter registration and election information site.

    • ONLINE REGISTRATION: Colorado in 2010 became the fourth state to allow online voter registration and www.govotecolorado.com has processed more than 1.9 million transactions.

    • SENIOR CLASS REGISTRATION: The office hands out the Eliza Pickrell Routt award to high schools where at least 85 percent of eligible seniors have registered or preregistered to vote.

    • Colorado also allows for same-day voter registration.

    Although some Coloradans canceled their voter registration over the summer, the number of registered voters in Colorado actually increased and is at an all-time high, with 3,756,923 million voters.

    Military and overseas ballots for the Nov. 7 coordinated election have already been sent, and beginning Oct. 16 the remaining ballots will be mailed. Coloradans also can vote in person at polling centers in their counties. Six county clerks don’t need to send any ballots at all, because every community in their jurisdiction canceled their elections.

    More information on the conduct of elections in Colorado is outlined in a letter from Secretary Williams.

    The National Association of Secretaries of State in 2012 designated September as National Voter Registration Month with the fourth Tuesday in September set as National Voter Registration Day to encourage voter participation and increase awareness about state requirements and deadlines for voting.

     

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  • DENVER NUGGET KENNETH FARIED & LUPUS RESEARCH ALLIANCE HOSTED A SLAM DUNK EVENT — SEPT 23

    DENVER NUGGET KENNETH FARIED & LUPUS RESEARCH ALLIANCE HOSTED A SLAM DUNK EVENT — SEPT 23

    DENVER— The Lupus Research Alliance, the world’s largest private funder of innovative lupus research, partnered with Denver Nuggets forward Kenneth Faried for the inaugural Slam Dunk Against Lupus (SDAL) event held on Saturday, Sept. 23,  at the University of Denver’s Magness Arena inside the Ritchie Center.

    Faried, whose mother is afflicted with lupus, will host the event with 100% of the proceeds going directly to the Lupus Research Alliance to help fund scientific discoveries to better treat, prevent and cure lupus. Lupus is a challenging autoimmune disease in which the immune system mistakenly attacks instead of protects the body’s own tissues and organs.

    Ticket holders joined Faried, other professional athletes, and celebrities for an afternoon filled with sports, entertainment, prizes, philanthropy, and fun, with 100% of proceeds going to Lupus research.

    The event raised $49,550.00, almost half of its $125,000 goal

    The events included Kids slam dunk contest with NBA players serving as judges, a Performance by Denver Nuggets Elevation Dunk Squad & Drumline, Half-court shooting contest for a grand prize, Nuggets mascot Rocky and other interactive entertainment, Drawings throughout the day for special prizes and unique, fun activities, and Three-point shooting contests with students.

    Because the Lupus Research Alliance’s Board of Directors fund all administrative and fundraising costs, 100% of all donations goes to support lupus research programs.

    JOIN THE CAUSE — DONATE NOW

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  • Join Colorado Parks and Wildlife — Sept. 26 — A Public Meeting On Its Future

    Join Colorado Parks and Wildlife — Sept. 26 — A Public Meeting On Its Future

    Hunting, Fishing, and Outdoor Rec… Cut Off?

    Attend a Public Meeting — Sept. 26 — To discuss the uncertain future of Management Agency Colorado Parks & Wildlife…

    DENVER – Michelle Zimmerman, the Parks and Wildlife Commissioner, will be hosting a public forum meeting in Denver to discuss the uncertain future of wildlife and outdoor recreation management. CPW’s Northeast Regional Manager, Mark Leslie, will join Michelle for a presentation on the financial challenges facing the agency. 

    With our recent and expected population growth, we recognize that Colorado’s future is highly connected to the sustainability of parks and natural resources, the availability of open spaces and trails, the conservation of wildlife, and ultimately, to the health of the agency responsible for their management. — Michelle Zimmerman, Parks and Wildlife Commissioner

    Earlier this year, a CPW financial sustainability bill passed the Colorado House but failed in a Senate committee. While CPW is an enterprise agency that relies on sportsmen and park users to provide funding for core programs, it still requires an act of the legislature to increase CPW’s prices. In order to avoid anticipated budget shortfalls, CPW is looking at multiple revenue generating concepts. Since 2009, CPW has lost 50 wildlife related positions and cut $40 million from its wildlife operating budget. Permanent park employees have been cut by 5%, and the temporary parks workforce by 10%. Parks and wildlife managers caution that additional cuts are inevitable without an increase in revenue.

    Colorado’s natural resources and wildlife are under increasing pressure from a growing human population. This agency has done its best to manage resources, but now we need to find effective ways to increase revenue to meet future challenges and opportunities. This is an important discussion we must have with our constituents. — Mark Leslie, Northeast Regional Manager for CPW

    WHAT: Public Meeting on Colorado’s uncertain future for hunting, fishing, and outdoor recreation management 

    WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 26, 6:00 to 7:30 PM (doors open at 5:30 PM)

    WHERE:  La Alma Recreation Center, 1325 W. 11th Avenue, Denver

    INFORMATION: Call 303-291-7234 or visit website here 
     

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  • New York Times Bestselling Author — Jim Butcher — scheduled for CSU

    New York Times Bestselling Author — Jim Butcher — scheduled for CSU

    Free Evening with an Author at CSU

    Sept. 28

    featuring

    Best Seller Jim Butcher

    Jim Butcher, the New York Times bestselling author of The Dresden Files and The Codex Alera, will be speaking on the Colorado State University campus Sept. 28 at 7 p.m. as a part of the Evening with an Author Series.

    This event is free and open to the public, in the Lory Student Center Ballroom, with seating on a first-come, first-serve basis. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.

    The Aeronaut’s Windlass is the first book in Butcher’s new steampunk series, The Cinder Spires, set in a world of magic, warriors, heroes, alliances, airships and intelligent cats. The Dresden Files, Butcher’s first published fiction, follows the adventures of Chicago’s only professional wizard, Harry Dresden. A TV series based on the books lasted one season on the Syfy channel; fans eagerly await the 16th book in the series.

    Butcher will also speak at the Denver Public Library Park Hill Branch on Tuesday, Nov.  21, at 6:30 p.m.

    Evening with an Author is sponsored by the Morgan Library, Friends of the Morgan Library, Poudre River Public Library, Poudre River Friends of the Library, The Liggett Family, KUNC, Hilton Fort Collins, and Barnes & Noble.

    For more information, go to lib.colostate.edu.

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  • Electric Grid’s Future — CSU Joins Effort

    Electric Grid’s Future — CSU Joins Effort

    A team of researchers in the U.S. and Europe, including key contributors from Colorado State University, is poised to globally integrate electrical grids in a way that resonates with the creation of the internet more than 50 years ago.

    On Sept. 26, the researchers will convene at Idaho National Laboratory for a live demonstration of the Real-Time Super Lab concept, which shows how electricity can be rerouted across vast distances to address disruptions. The team envisions that large-scale blackouts can be prevented by moving electricity intercontinentally, the same way utilities currently do regionally, but at a much larger scale.

    Joining the Real-Time Super Lab effort is a CSU team led by Siddharth “Sid” Suryanarayanan, associate professor and Rhoden Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. His team includes Fathalla Eldali, a Ph.D. student who commands the CSU-based linkup to Idaho National Lab, and software engineer Jerry Duggan, who critically helped the team establish the high-speed connection between the two campuses.

    Involved since the project’s inception in 2015, the CSU team has modeled the electrical grid’s distribution side, which is the portion closest to the end user. Their contribution is the development of sophisticated models on a digital simulator that perform real-time computations to mimic the actual U.S. power system.

    “The goal of this demonstration is to find methods and techniques for creating the next-generation electric power system that’s resilient against cyber and physical attacks, whether manmade or natural,” Suryanarayanan said. “The driving principle is that we are pooling our resources, whether that be computers or human capital, in solving this problem, rather than establishing ourselves in just one location.”

    Global interactions, reduced costs

    Such global interaction can prepare America for future power system challenges, reduce the cost of outages, and make electrical power grids more resilient.

    The efforts build on work by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Idaho National Lab and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Researchers at Sandia National Laboratory and five universities, two of them in Europe, have joined Idaho National Lab to explore the idea that electrons can be sent around the world in the same manner as digital packets of 0s and 1s over the internet.

    “This is more than computers talking to each other,” said Rob Hovsapian, Idaho National Laboratory’s Power and Energy Systems department manager. “We are developing capabilities for geographically distributed real-time grid simulation with shared assets at [Idaho National Laboratory], other national labs, universities and utilities.”

    In 2015, Idaho National Laboratory and National Renewable Energy Laboratory successfully demonstrated the capability to connect grid simulations at their two labs for real-time interaction over the internet. Both the Idaho lab’s Power and Energy Real-Time Laboratory and National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s Energy Systems Integration Facility can merge computer-based simulations of the power grid with actual hardware, including wind turbines, solar inverters, batteries and electric vehicles. This is a capability called “power hardware in the loop.”

    The two national laboratories were able to connect their Digital Real-Time Simulators and achieve grid simulation. This allowed hardware or software at one lab to directly interact with hardware or software at the other lab.

    Eight partners

    Leveraging assets and expertise at other national labs and academic institutions, the Real-Time Super Lab concept brings more assets into the mix, with the following participants contributing specific capabilities:

    • Sandia National Laboratory’s photovoltaic test bed
    • Colorado State University’s high-performance computer-based energy management system (Suryanarayanan’s team)
    • Washington State University’s Microgrid Laboratory
    • University of South Carolina’s power electronics and distribution research
    • RWTH Aachen University’s co-simulation framework
    • Polytechnic University of Turin’s high-performance computer-based Energy Management System
    • National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s Energy Systems Integration Facility
    • Idaho National Laboratory’s Power and Energy Real-Time Laboratory

    [Idaho National Laboratory] and [National Renewable Energy Laboratory] research made the project possible by addressing data latency issues and improving available bandwidth. — CSU Ph.D. graduate Manish Mohanpurkar, the Idaho lab’s Power and Energy Systems group lead, who began working on concepts related to the Real-Time Super Lab as a student in Suryanarayanan’s lab several years ago.

    The Wide Area Network demonstrations that took place between the two national labs showed that most data packets took less than 17 milliseconds to travel from point to point. To mitigate data latency issues – like those that create cell phone echoes and delays – researchers used advanced methods from the fields of signal processing, filtering theory and data compression.

    Along with rapid strides in interconnecting grid laboratories globally, another active research approach will enable additional significant measurements to be exchanged between two connected real-time simulators. The preliminary results are promising, and the method will be used for geographically distributed real-time simulations connecting laboratories across the world.

    Power systems around the world are undergoing fundamental transitions to achieve long-term sustainability, reliability and affordability. The Real-Time Super Lab allows simulation of large-scale systems, simultaneous development across different domains and a flexible collaboration that preserves the confidential details of individual groups.

    The ability to move electricity around the globe rather than only within isolated networks holds the possibility of vast savings on infrastructure and energy consumption.

    It’s always easier and cheaper to transfer electrons than coal— Hovsapian

    Idaho National Laboratory is part of the Department of Energy’s complex of national laboratories. The laboratory performs work in each of the department’s strategic goal areas: energy, national security, science and environment. Day-to-day management and operation of the laboratory is the responsibility of Battelle Energy Alliance.

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