SUBAREA NEARS CERTAINTY
LEBANESE LAUGHTER
NO DISGUISING THIS BENEFIT
NEWS | PG16
ENTERTAINMENT | PG 19
FLAIR | PG 24
Publisher Bob Sweeney finds council moving ahead
Beirut’s Nemr has the Middle East—and Midwest—in stitches
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Mask Project benefits Denver Hospice
VOLUME 34 • NUMBER 46 • OCTOBER 6, 2016
TheVillagerNewspaper
@VillagerDenver
Serving Arapahoe County & Surrounding Communities
Physical demands! Male competitors like Tony Scott from Anchor CrossFit, were required to clean-lift the weights on their respective teams and weight class for this intense and physically challenging fundraiser.
Do More Charity Challenge at Front Range Cross Fit
Photos by Stefan Kruse.
Rising to the challenge with beyond-Herculean strength while maintaining the aesthetic of Adonis and Aphrodite was the focus of Community Banks Do More Charity Challenge at Front Range Cross Fit in Denver Oct. 12. Don’t be fooled, the physical activity of this fundraising event would exhaust any world-class athlete and even meet the requirements for the beyond-highlydemanding British Special Air Service—this was no walk in the park. The event raised over $215,000 for local charities
A gymnastics-based move called “muscle up” requires many repetitions and tremendous strength and endurance.
Centennial’s fiber-optic network comes true Canada’s Ting plans ‘crazy fast internet’ next year
Centennial has its first fiberoptic customer. Three years after voters approved a measure allowing the city to lease its 48 miles of publicly owned fiber-optic lines, Canada-based Ting has plans to bring its high-speed internet services—or “crazy fast internet,” as the company says—to town next year. “We chose Centennial because we believe it’s a good market and a market that would be into fiber internet,” said Adam Eisner, Ting’s vice president of networks. “Our suspicions there have been confirmed thus far.” Ting, an internet and wireless
Canada-based Ting has plans to tap into Centennial’s fiberoptic network, providing the city with “crazy fast internet” by mid-2017. Photo courtesy of Ting service provider, plans to begin hooking up to Centennial’s system by the end of the year and provide service by mid-2017. It would be the first firm to do so since voters allowed the city to create a nonexclusive broadband network from fiber-optic lines that have so far been used only for traffic-signal operations
and connecting public facilities. The arguably underused city asset has been valued at $5 million. Mayor Cathy Noon said it was an honor that Ting chose Centennial as its first Colorado market, after Centennial became among the first cities in the state to allow such deals.
“The critical infrastructure has been in place throughout the city. We just needed the opportunity to partner with an organization such as Ting to provide service to our residents and businesses,” she said. Because the deal is nonexclusive, it is still possible for other companies to lease into Centennial’s fiber-optic network. Ting is expected to provide faster and comparably priced Internet service at multiple tiers to residents and businesses in Centennial, offering what Ting says will be an improved alternative to internet sources currently available. “If you’re getting internet from your phone company or your cable company, you are getting it based on those technologies, which are not purpose-built to deliver internet, unlike fiber
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