Colorado
How to Watch Arizona State at Colorado in Women’s College Lacrosse

After taking down Pac-12 rival Oregon in an additional time thriller on Friday night time, No. 23 Arizona State hits the highway to tackle Colorado at Kittredge Area in Boulder on Sunday afternoon.
Methods to Watch Arizona State at Colorado In the present day
Sport Date: April 17, 2022
Sport Time: 2:00 p.m. ET
TV: Pac-12 Arizona
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The Solar Devils and Geese went back-and-forth for four-plus quarters on Friday night time, however Carley Adams’ seven-point efficiency, together with the game-winner on a free-position try. Arizona State now has six convention wins this season, probably the most at school historical past.
For the Solar Devils, Carley Adams is having a profession season and is on a tear of late. Adams now has 35 objectives and a career-best 21 assists because the reigning Pac-12 Offensive Participant of the Week.
As for the Buffs, they dropped to 9-4 on the season with a 15-8 loss to No. 17 USC on Friday afternoon. Regardless of 4 objectives for Colorado’s Sadie Grozier, Southern California led the sport wire-to-wire.
Colorado seems to avenge a 20-6 loss to the Solar Devils final month when it hosts Arizona State on Sunday afternoon.
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Colorado
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Colorado
Colorado weather: Two waves of snow headed for mountains, metro Denver

Two waves of snow will blow through Colorado this week, according to the National Weather Service.
The first wave is forecast to start Thursday afternoon in Colorado’s mountains and continue overnight, spreading into the Front Range, Eastern Plains and metro area. A second wave of mountain snow will begin Friday afternoon, forecasters said.
Multiple Winter Weather Advisories will be in effect from 3 p.m. Thursday to 11 p.m. Friday, according to NWS forecasters. The advisories cover Rocky Mountain National Park, the Medicine Bow Mountain Range, the Mosquito Range, the Indian Peaks and the mountains of Summit County.
As of Thursday morning, snow forecasts include:
- Up to 1 inch of snow in Denver and at Denver International Airport
- Between 2 and 8 inches of snow in Winter Park, Vail and Nederland
- Between 2 and 7 inches of snow on U.S. 40’s Rabbit Ears Pass
- Between 3 and 7 inches of snow on Interstate 70 at the Eisenhower-Johnson Memorial Tunnel
- Between 2 and 6 inches of snow in Estes Park, Evergreen, Fairplay and Frisco
- Up to 2 inches of snow on the northeast corner of the Eastern Plains
If snow does hit the metro area, NWS forecasters said it will start as rain around 4 p.m. Thursday and turn to snow after 11 p.m., continuing through Friday morning.
Rain and snow are forecast to start at about 2 p.m. Thursday in the mountains and continue through 8 a.m. Friday, forecasters said. Snow will then restart Friday afternoon and last through 11 p.m.
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Colorado
Colorado bill would make financial literacy course a requirement for high school graduation across state

Some Colorado lawmakers want financial literacy to be a requirement for high school graduation. Only about 25% of Colorado school districts require a personal finance course to graduate, according to the Colorado Department of Education. Denver Public Schools is one of the districts.
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West High School in Denver is one of the schools that has offered the course for the past five years, in English and Spanish. At Denver West High School, more than 80% of students identify as Latinx.
House Bill 25-1192, which has bipartisan support from state lawmakers including Reps. Don Wilson, Lorena Garcia, and Sens. James Coleman and Barbara Kirkmeyer, would make financial literacy a graduation requirement statewide.
Statewide, only 13% of students are guaranteed access to a high school personal finance course before graduation.
Alejandro Palma is a senior at West High School who is taking a financial literacy course as an elective.
“You learn a lot from it, you learn about investments,” said Palma.
As a second generation Latinx student, he feels the pressure to build on generational wealth.
“You learn how to make a resume and how to keep a job,” said Palma.
It may seem like basic life skills, but they are necessary to learn.
The course teaches students to manage finances, understand credit and invest while tailoring to the needs of bilingual students.
Chris Velasquez, a teacher at Denver West, teaches the course in Spanish.
“A lot of kids that we have here because it is a huge immigrant population, start growing businesses, whether its concrete and painting, and they ask us ‘How can I network?’” said Velasquez.
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For the past five years, Velasquez says the course has been extremely helpful for many students and is the first school in the district to offer the course in Spanish.
“They get to understand what a co-signer is, what does credit mean, especially since some of our populations, they don’t even use credit — they grew up thinking credit was the devil,” said Velasquez.
Meanwhile, inside Daniel Walter’s classroom students are learning how to manage their finances using apps.
“When I talk to other people about what I do and what I teach every time their jaws hit the floor and say ‘I wish I would have taken that class,’” said Walter.
He says regardless of one’s race or socioeconomic status, the lessons learned in this class can be used for life.
“There’s just a great need to learn the tools of our system and to be financially stable,” said Walter.
The organization Ednium is in support of a bill at the Colorado State Capitol. It would make this course a requirement statewide. In 2021, the organization helped make the course a requirement in Denver Public Schools. Now the 2024-2025 year the course would be required for graduation.
Elijah Huff with the Ednium says the push for this course would be extremely beneficial to educating young people to save money.
“I think its also a huge culture boost for certain communities as well to learn how to manage money and how to work with money when we know there has been a huge gap in some of our communities in Denver,” said Huff.
The bill would also make it a requirement for students to apply for state aid.
Although the state board strongly encourages local school districts to require personal finance education, most do not. Colorado ranks 46th in FAFSA completion nationwide, and it’s estimated that students in the state leave more than $30 million in federal aid on the table annually.
“Across time I just think it’s the community that has been really big on trying to tear down the barriers and being vocal about it,” said Huff.
As for Palma, he plans to join the military, but first he’ll use what he learned in class to land his first job.
The hearing for the bill, which has bipartisan support, is scheduled for March 6.
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