Colorado
Colorado Springs-area Optum locations to permanently close
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KKTV) – Multiple Optum locations in the Colorado Springs area have stopped offering urgent care services as of this weekend, and will stop offering x-ray services as of August 1, according to signs posted to the front of these locations.
11 News visited 3 locations Tuesday night–Union and Fillmore, Monument and Old Colorado City–and all three had similar notices posted in the windows:
11 News learned of the closures when several viewers reached out to our newsroom asking for more information, claiming there was little to no notice to patients or employees that the clinics would be closing.
11 News has reached out to Optum to learn more about their plans to close these locations. This article will be updated once they respond.
Copyright 2024 KKTV. All rights reserved.
Colorado
Celebrated composer comes to Colorado to premiere new symphony
Colorado Music Festival brings some of the best classical music to Boulder throughout the summer. The Festival has also become a place to debut new classical works. One premiere this summer brings together one of the most significant current composers with a world renown quartet based in Boulder.
Gabriela Lena Frank traveled to Boulder for final rehearsals of her new work. It’s the first time she heard it played.
“It’s super addictive the process of finally getting to hear this music that you’ve been living with sometimes for years,” she told CBS News Colorado.
Lena Frank is one of the few women composing classical music and she brings her Latin heritage to her work, including the new piece.
“‘Kachkaniraqmi’ means ‘I still exist’ which is a celebratory way of saying that in spite of all the hardships the cultures of Peru have gone through, they still thrive. They still survive,” Lena Frank explained.
The piece is four movements and features the Takács String Quartet embedded within a larger string orchestra. The Takács is a grammy award winning string quartet based in Boulder at the University of Colorado. This is the 50th anniversary for the quartet.
“I think it’s particularly exciting that we’re premiering a new work, and we’re commissioning new composers, and embracing how a string quartet can be meaningful in our world,” said Harumi Rhodes, Second Violinist with the Takács.
Rhodes is long time friends with Lena Frank, so collaborating on a symphony seemed like a natural project. The Takács world is usually limited to four musicians. They are very used to working together.
“So bringing our little village of four into a larger community, into the orchestral context is a very exciting opportunity and an opportunity for us to expand our voices and the range of colors and characters we can make,” Rhodes explained.
It’s also fairly rare. There aren’t many concertos composed for this combination. One of the challenges that Lena Frank faced was not allowing the quartet to get lost in the bigger sound of the orchestra.
“Yea, it’s complex, but that’s my job,” she said matter-of-factly.
A job well done in music that shows deep emotion and celebrates each voice of the string quartet. While the piece is inspired by Peru, Lena Frank hopes that audiences will be transported to someplace meaningful to them.
LINK: For Tickets to Colorado Music Festival
The Colorado Music Festival runs through August 4, 2024 at the Chautauqua Auditorium in Boulder, Colorado.
Colorado
Colorado Gov.: If They Need a 'Balding, Gay Jew,' I'm the Guy
As speculation swirls around who Kamala Harris might choose as a running mate should she become the Democratic presidential nominee, a couple potential picks are weighing in. Asked by CNN if he’d consider running with Harris, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said he’d give the idea “a serious look” if he was asked, KKTV reports. “My phone hasn’t rung yet. Look, If they, if they do the polling and it turns out that they need a 49-year-old, balding, gay Jew from Boulder, Colorado, they got my number.”
Another rumored possibility, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, said Monday on MSNBC’s Morning Joe that he and Harris spoke Sunday, Politico reports. “It went great,” he said of the call. “We talked about winning this race.” Asked repeatedly whether he’d consider running alongside her, he steadfastly refused to answer. “I appreciate people talking about me, but I think the focus right now needs to be on her this week,” he said. Also on Morning Joe, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (who, per media reports, may also have spoken with Harris Sunday) similarly deflected the same questions. “I love my job. I love serving the people of Kentucky,” he said. The only way I would consider something other than this current job is if I believed I could further help my people and to help this country.”
Sources tell CNN that Cooper is one of about 10 people, most of them elected officials, who have been asked by Harris’ campaign to submit information including financial details and family histories. Others reportedly include Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly. See CNN’s shortlist here. (More Election 2024 stories.)
Colorado
After second cockfighting arrest in Colorado this year, lawmakers want to crack down on the practice
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