Slate Gray, more living room than art gallery
Transcription
Slate Gray, more living room than art gallery
MONEY WHY IS 1ST U.S. TREASURY CHIEF LEAVING $10 BILL? By CARA ANNA N Associated Press EW YORK (AP) — Immigrant. Founding Father. The architect of the U.S. financial system, who envisioned the way a struggling young democracy could survive. The star of a new hit Broadway musical. Why is Alexander Hamilton now being removed from America’s $10 bill? ALL ABOUT THE HAMILTONS The announcement in June that a woman would appear on U.S. paper money for the first time in more than a century was welcomed. But booting Hamilton drew widespread criticism, including from former Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke, who wrote that he was “appalled.” Some, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, have asked why slave owner and central bankhater President Andrew Jackson couldn’t be kicked off the $20 bill instead. The issue even came up during this week’s Republican presidential debate. U.S. officials say the $10 bill is the most counterfeited one — thus the redesign. Officials plan to make a decision on the bill’s new portrait in the coming months. OBAMA IN THE HOUSE The hip-hop musical “Hamilton” has been a huge hit on Broadway, with its AfricanAmerican and Latino cast playing the roles of the white Founding Fathers and big names like President Barack Obama in the audience. The musical’s young creator, Lin-Manuel Miranda, says he was inspired by a biography of Hamilton by Ron Chernow. The book portrays Hamilton as perhaps the most intriguing of the cast of the characters who brought the United States into existence. An orphan from the Caribbean, he came to New York as a teen, studied and soon became a key military aide See BILL, Page 29 Birthdays Sept. 20: Katherine Ahern, Susan Altman, Joseph Bidwell, Leo Van Der Bosch, Casey Conner, Norika Cope, Ann Darnell, James Favier, Todd Fruen, Paula Gonzales, Greg Kowalsky, Megan Mahoney, Edward McCashion, Annette Prack, Bea Reichel, Antoine Savelli, Joe Schuler, Michael Volk; Sept. 21: Nancy Anderson, Geoffrey Beck, Dan Curtin, Michael Feldstein, Deb Gesmundo, Kelli Grennell, Randy Kennan, Mark Kennefick, Pamela Lien, Christine McGinley, Dana Miller, Dorleen Ohlson, Nichole Ortiz, James Pendelton, George Rehm, Pat Siger, Judith Smith, Lara Solomon, Saunders Staley, Gary Strehl; Sept. 22: Doug Allee, Christopher Allen, Clint Henderson, Christine McGinley Hooper, Nancy Kelly, Moiz Kohari, Bill Mason, Karen Oldmixon, Sandra Richardson, Karen Wilson. If you’d like any additions, deletions or corrections to the birthday list, please contact Bobbie at [email protected]. Ages 18 and over please. Sunday Focus: Business & Real Estate ORBIT 1. 2. 3. Finish the weekend on a high note with a visit to Fais Do-do, the closing ceremony for Blues & Brews, scheduled for 10 p.m. at the Sheridan Opera House. Big Easy rockers The Revivalists will headline the show. Looking for something with a little more local flavor? Take a stroll to Fly Me to the Moon Saloon, where Colorado’s own Frogs Gone Fishin’ will play at 10 p.m. Learn how to make posole — a hearty, meaty Mexican stew — Monday at 3:30 p.m. at the Wilkinson Public Library Kids Cook event. THE SECOND FRONT PAGE SEPTEMBER 20, 2015 CARS EPA SAYS VW INTENTIONALLY VIOLATES CLEAN AIR STANDARDS By MATTHEW DALY W Associated Press so much art that we’re scrambling to fill the walls, which is a great problem,” McLaughlin said. Slate Gray has jewelry, paintings, home furnishings and other art. There is another location of the gallery in Kerrville, Texas, where McLaughlin is from, and the two locations are constantly sharing artwork with each other to keep their selections fresh. McLaughlin has owned the building on main street for five years, and for most of that time the basement space now occupied by Slate Gray has served as temporary office or storage space for various festivals and for Quentin Tarantino’s production of “The Hateful Eight” this winter. McLaughlin met Nelson in ASHINGTON (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency on Friday ordered Volkswagen to fix nearly 500,000 VW and Audi diesel cars that the agency said are intentionally violating clean air laws by using software that evades EPA emissions standards. VW, which owns Audi, faces billions of dollars in fines, although exact amounts were not determined. The cars, all built in the last seven years, are the VW Jetta, Beetle, Golf and Passat models, as well as the Audi A3. The vehicles all contain a device programmed to detect when they are undergoing official emissions testing, the EPA said, adding that the cars only turn on full emissions control systems during that testing. The controls are turned off during normal driving situations, the EPA said. The EPA called the company’s use of the so-called “defeat device” illegal and a threat to public health. “EPA is committed to making sure that all automakers play by the same rules,” said Cynthia Giles, assistant EPA administrator for enforcement and compliance assurance. The EPA called on VW to fix the cars’ emissions systems, but said car owners do not need to take any immediate action. The violations do not present a safety hazard and the cars remain legal to drive and sell, the EPA said. The German automaker said in a statement it is cooperating See GALLERY, Page 29 See VW , Page 29 Beth McLaughlin, left, the owner of Slate Gray Gallery sits with gallery manager Denee Nelson atop Gray the Great Dane. [Photo by Stephen Elliott] BUSINESS Slate Gray, more living room than art gallery Downstairs space offers fine art, jewelry and good company By STEPHEN ELLIOTT W Staff Reporter alking down Colorado Avenue in the summer, you’re bound to see some Bernese Mountain Dogs in front of a café, or a lab tied up outside Brown Dog, or unleashed dogs of unknown breeds chasing after balls in a pocket park. This summer, there’s been a larger, less mobile addition to the Telluride dog pack. You’ve probably already met Gray the Great Dane, or at least sat on him or wondered why a large dog sculpture is sitting on the sidewalk. He serves as a sort of mascot for Slate Gray Gallery, an art gallery that opened at 209 E. Colorado Ave. in July. “We were worried that we’re in this basement space, and how were we going to draw people in,” Beth McLaughlin, the owner of the new gallery, said. “Telluride is such a dog-friendly town, so we thought, let’s put something really attention-getting up there and hopefully it will draw people down.” “It really has turned into a kind of iconic photo op in town,” McLaughlin added, a few minutes before herself mounting Gray, alongside the gallery’s manager Denee Nelson, to pose for a photo to accompany this story. According to McLaughlin and Nelson, the dog has done his duty, and the gallery has seen a successful first few months. It has flown through inventory, which they say is priced so that anyone could afford an item. “We really have been selling Views! /FX-VYVSZ5FMMVSJEF5PXOIPNFTt&YDFQUJPOBM%FTJHOBOE-PDBUJPO THE IDEA IS EXCELLENCE Contact Sally Field#SPLFSGPSJOGPSNBUJPOBUtXXXZPVSUFMMVSJEFCSPLFSDPN ORBIT SEPTEMBER 20, 2015 TELLURIDE DAILY PLANET Slate Gray Gallery GALLERY, from page 36 Texas; one thing led to another and the two decided to open the gallery in Telluride. “When the right people come together you start thinking what are your strengths, what are your weaknesses, how do we balance all that out,” McLaughlin said. “The benefit has been meeting so many wonderful visitors and members of the community.” The gallery staff has strived to make the space comfortable, and the plush couch and other home furnishings there are evidence of that. They say this helps them meet two goals: to create a space where customers can realistically imagine how the artwork would look in their own homes, and to create a place where people can gather or just sit and chat. “We want this to be a comfortable, beautiful space that people can come in and enjoy,” McLaughlin said, and, as if on cue, a regular customer walked down the stairs and started talking with the two women, trading info on local hairdressers and laughing while sharing friendly banter. $10 bill BILL, from page 36 to George Washington in the American Revolution. Later with James Madison and John Jay, Hamilton argued passionately in a famous series of essays known as the Federalist Papers that the young United States would need a strong central government and banking system and a constitution to bind the new nation to- gether. FOLLOWING, AND MINTING, THE MONEY Hamilton became the young country’s first treasury secretary, and the story of the modern U.S. economy begins with him. He essentially crafted the U.S. monetary system — a feat that perhaps has not received enough credit because Hamilton never became president. Before the Constitution passed, many feared the U.S. was too feeble to last, with a weak national government and individual states burdened by war debts. Hamilton’s solution: a stronger economic union, which would lead to a stronger political union. A federal tax system, a national debt, a central bank, a mint with the dollar as currency: Hamilton was behind them all. Clean air violation VW, from page 36 with the investigation, but declined further comment. The EPA said VW faces fines of up to $37,500 per vehicle for the violations — a total of more than $18 billion. No final total was announced. California is- sued a separate compliance order to VW, and officials announced an investigation by the California Air Resources Board. Despite the seriousness of the violation, the EPA said VW will be given “a reasonable amount of time to develop a plan to com- plete the repairs,” including both the repair procedure and manufacture of any needed parts. It could take up to a year to identify corrective actions, develop a recall plan and issue recall notices, the EPA said. BREAKFAST – LUNCH –DINNER SUNDAY BRUNCH Our eggs are organic, free range and come from local farms; our milk and yogurt is organic and from a small local dairy; our breakfast sausage is made from local free range pork; or pastries and breads are made with organic flour. Good food made with loving hands from scratch. Full Bar featuring 6 local beers on tap, Colorado spirits, and organic wines. WEEKLY $6 CRAFT COCKTAIL Outdoor patio seating. Sun Brunch 8am - 2pm Mon 7am - 4pm Tues-Sat 7am - 10:30pm 201 E. Colorado Ave. Telluride, Colorado (970)728-2899 29