Customize or create new styles You can change the formatting (such as font size, color, and text indentation) in styles applied to titles, headings, paragraphs, lists, and so on. You can also select formatted text in your document to create a new style in the Styles gallery. 11/15/2024 - 8:26 am | View Website
Make your Word documents accessible to people with ... Best practices for making Word documents accessible. Check accessibility while you work in Word. Avoid using tables. Use built-in title, subtitle, and heading styles. Create paragraph banners. Add alt text to visuals. Add accessible hyperlink text and ScreenTips. Use accessible font format and color. Create accessible lists. 11/15/2024 - 6:10 am | View Website
Create a form in Word that users can complete or print Applies To. Windows macOS Web. In Word, you can create a form that others can fill out and save or print. To do this, you will start with baseline content in a document, potentially via a form template. Then you can add content controls for elements such as check boxes, text boxes, date pickers, and drop-down lists. 11/15/2024 - 4:23 am | View Website
Modify or create headings and other styles To modify existing styles to suit your needs: In your Word document, format text to look the way you want for the style, then select it. In the Home tab, expand the text styles list. In the styles list, right-click the style you want to update, then select Modify. 11/15/2024 - 4:16 am | View Website
Configure headers and footers for different sections of a ... Double click the header or footer in each section and choose styles or add content. Select Close Header and Footer or press Esc to exit. For more on headers and footers, see Headers and footers in Word. Set up headers and footers to provide different content for different sections of a document. 11/15/2024 - 3:25 am | View Website
An apparent selfie posted to James and Angela Craig’s joint Facebook profile. (Photo via Facebook)
The 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office wants to file a new charge of solicitation to commit murder against an Aurora dentist accused of fatally poisoning his wife, officials announced Friday, one day after the man’s murder trial was delayed because his attorney abruptly quit.
James Craig, 46, was charged with first-degree murder in the poisoning death of his wife, 43-year-old Angela Craig, after she died on March 18, 2023, from lethal doses of cyanide and tetrahydrozoline, a decongestant found in over-the-counter eyedrops.
The district attorney’s office filed a motion Friday requesting to add charges of solicitation to commit first-degree murder and solicitation to commit perjury to the criminal case against him, the agency said in a post on X.
Related Articles
Crime and Public Safety |
Attorney dumps Aurora dentist just before jury selection, delaying trial in high-profile poisoning case
Crime and Public Safety |
Lakewood mom, boyfriend arrested on suspicion of murder in 2-month-old baby’s meth exposure death
Crime and Public Safety |
Gun violence drops 12% in Denver as number of shootings plunges
Crime and Public Safety |
Man convicted of first-degree murder in woman’s shooting death in Lakewood
Crime and Public Safety |
Man identified as suspect in fatal Hampden shooting
The motion detailing the new charges was not immediately available Friday afternoon.
James Craig is also charged with tampering with evidence and soliciting perjury after allegedly asking two different people, including his daughter, to cover up evidence in the case after his arrest.
This is a developing story and may be updated.
Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.
Aurora City Council member Danielle Jurinsky says the Trump transition team has spoken to her about Operation Aurora, but the details of President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to deport an unknown number of undocumented immigrants remain scarce.
Last week, Jurinsky took the opportunity of a monthly meeting of the council’s public safety policy committee, which she chairs, to remind city leaders that “Operation Aurora is coming.”
“This is the real thing,” she said.
One of the greatest skiers of all time, a Rocktober hero, and a coach who helped put the Nuggets on the map headline the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame class of 2025.
The trio consists of Mikaela Shiffrin, who is on the cusp of surpassing 100 alpine skiing victories on the World Cup circuit before she turns 30 in March; former Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki, a five-time major league all-star; and Larry Brown, who coached the Nuggets for five seasons, including their first three in the NBA, and earned ABA coach of the year honors in 1975 and ’76 while leading the team to prominence.
The other three members of the Class of ’25 are Simon Fletcher, who owns the second-most sacks in Broncos history; Denver-born Negro Leagues player and World War II veteran Theodore “Bubbles” Anderson; and Lisa Van Goor, who totaled more than 2,000 points and 1,000 rebounds in her University of Colorado basketball career.
The 60th annual banquet is scheduled for April 9 at the Hilton Denver City Center.
Shiffrin, who was born and raised in the Vail Valley, has won 98 World Cup gold medals, a record for any skier, man or woman.
WASHINGTON — Parker Kelly’s initiation as a center in the NHL was a bit like taking a first swimming lesson in the middle of an ocean.
He felt it most when he settled into his position for a faceoff during his first exhibition game for the Avalanche and was nose-to-nose with Matt Duchene.
The NFL flexed, and once again fans were muscled out.
For the first time in league history, the league moved a Sunday game into Thursday prime time, pitting the Broncos at the Chargers on Dec. 19. The NFL wanting viewers to watch the Broncos is a welcome change, indicating they have finally been forgiven for burning retinas with the Nathaniel Hackett-Russell Wilson pairing in 2022.
But it stinks for fans with plans.
Colorado has been supplying the NWSL with top-end talent for years.
Soon, the league could be paying it back with an expansion franchise in the Mile High City.
National Women’s Soccer League Commissioner Jessica Berman named Denver as one of three finalists for an expansion team in a news conference on Friday.
Speaking to media members ahead of Saturday night’s championship match in Kansas City, Berman confirmed three ownership groups are vying for one slot: Denver, Cincinnati and Cleveland.