The Mosleys left a lasting legacy in Aurora and beyond. Edna was Aurora's first Black council member, and her husband, John, was a Tuskegee airman, and those are just two of their many accomplishments. We pay tribute to the Mosleys in honor of Black History Month. Plus, Stanley Marketplace celebrates a major milestone; a new ad campaign for the CU Anschutz Medical Campus makes a showing in the Super Bowl; the City Council's Red Tape Reduction Committee wants to hear from you; an Aurora 90-something newlywed couple shares advice for lasting love; and a Smoky Hill High School graduate is one of the NFL's newest head coaches. Those stories, and so much more, this week on Aurora Now.
Story Links:
Black History Month Profile: Aurora's John & Edna Mosley
Aurora VA Clinic to Be Named after Lt. Colonel John W. Mosley
New CU Anschutz Ad to Appear in Super Bowl and Olympics
Stanley Marketplace Is Celebrating its 5th Anniversary
Churrerira de Madrid Opens at Stanley Marketplace
Jade Mountain Brewery's Chinese New Year Celebrations Featured in the"Washington Post"
Sign Up to Speak at the City Council's Red Tape Reduction Committee's Public Hearings
City Council Approves Safety and Security Grants for Businesses in the Colfax Corridor and Beyond
Aurora Teams up with Denver and RTD on a Bus Rapid Transit Project on Colfax
Tired of Speeders in Your Neighborhood? Check Out Aurora's Neighborhood Traffic Calming Program
APD & the State Patrol Are Asking All of Us to Mind Our Manners on the Road
APD's K-9 Unit Welcomes, Cooper, to the Team
PSA #1: Sign Up for CodeRED, Aurora's Emergency Alert Program
PSA #2: Volunteer for a City Board or Commission
90-Something Newlyweds Share Advice for Lasting Love
"Shakespeare in Love" Coming to the Vintage Theatre
"Dontrell, Who Kissed the Sea" Playing at the Aurora Fox; "Hurricane Diane" Is Up Next
"Aurora's Historic Photos" Exhibit Opens at the Aurora History Museum
"Lindita's Kitchen" Makes Mexican Lasagna This Month
A Smoky Hill High School Graduate is Now an NFL Head Coach
Show Closer/"My Sisters' Keeper" Pays Tribute to Black History Month