Losers No More

It was the year of Hurricane Mitch and Typhoon Monica, of Governor Ventura and King Viagra. It was the year they finally played college football at Mile High Stadium (Colorado 42, Colorado State 14), the year Harry Caray and his “Holy Cow!” died. It was the year that boxer Bobby…

Letters

Green Acres I loved Stuart Steers’s December 17 article, “The Village People,” on the Greenwood Village annexation. Having taught at Cherry Creek High School for over 25 years, I have some experience with what Greenwood Village considers “solutions” to the constantly growing traffic problems. For instance, a favorite solution is…

An Honest Living

The examiner tells you to sit down in an old, creaky chair with high, worn-down armrests. If the chair had straps to secure your legs, it would look like the one they use to fry people at the pen. Even though the examiner has gone over the questions with you…

On Solid Grounds

As the singing Christmas tree next to the cash register slogs through its third rendition of “Jingle Bells,” Robbin O’Donley stops pouring coffee long enough to gleefully pull the plug. “That thing’s starting to drive me crazy,” she says, then pauses. “Oops, too late,” the 34-year-old cackles. “I’m already crazy!”…

A Dunn Deal

Maverick Elbert County commissioner’s concern over thousands of tons of waste from Denver’s sewer system being used as fertilizer has spawned an unprecedented $1.4 million agreement to monitor soil and water on an eastern Colorado farm. Since taking office in 1996, John Dunn has butted heads with oil companies, developers…

Adios AOL, Hola Problema

No one can deny that America Online is the cheapest slut on the Internet. The company hands out start-up CDs faster than a hooker spreads the clap (so far, it’s managed to infect 14 million subscribers with its unique brand of easy Net access). But as Denver Web developer Kenton…

Tree Wise Man

This time of year, you’d think a truckload of Christmas trees would be a welcome sight, a Hallmark moment to lift the holiday spirit. But that’s not the case if that truck is rolling through Boulder County with Tony Smith at the wheel and a load of local trees in…

Off Limits

Bear hug: Impeachment-happy Republicans thought the timing was a mite suspicious, but the air strikes on Iraq proved an unexpected boon for Dave Liniger, the Re/Max International founder who’s planning to sail around the world in a balloon shortly after Christmas, circumnavigating the southern hemisphere at an altitude of 130,000…

Sweet Home

The people in the picture on this page are all Denver musicians with at least twenty years’ seniority. Every one of them played with guitarist Tom Butters, who died of an overdose last week at age 46. And they are just a handful of the players who show up for…

Letters

Mary Christmas Thank you for Harrison Fletcher’s “Virgin Rebirth,” in the December 10 issue. What a pleasure to read–and what a nice story this holiday season! Joy Friedel Denver The statue described and pictured in the article appears to be Our Lady of St. John of the Lake. Auraria library…

The Birth of a Notion

Giving birth to a new town is exciting, but running one can be far more challenging than city fathers and mothers ever imagined. Just ask the folks of Foxfield, a 1.3-square-mile town at the corner of Parker and Arapahoe roads. Foxfield is only four years old, created after 700 residents…

The Village People

The weekly meeting of the Arapahoe County Republican Men’s Club is the ultimate power breakfast. Over scrambled eggs and ham, influential business and political leaders gossip and scheme in a usually well-behaved manner. The opulent Metropolitan Club setting on Orchard Road reflects the comfort and good fortune of the south…

Court and Spark

Debbie Black goes flying over a bank of chairs. A whistle blows; time stands still while she’s airborne and then buried under a tangle of spectators. Her teammates are frozen, sweaty on the hardwood, their chests heaving as they catch their breath, waiting to see if she’s all right. Black…

Hands Out

The company that Velma Gilbert worked for was called Caring Hands, but it didn’t seem to care much about one very important thing. Last summer, Gilbert, a licensed practical nurse, quit her job with the Littleton home health-care company after her employers continually refused to pay her wages. When Gilbert…

The Waiting Game

Death is different,” fellow jurists told District Judge Frank Plaut as he prepared for his first capital murder case, the trial of Robert Riggan Jr. on charges of first-degree murder in Jefferson County. But how different, even they couldn’t have predicted. In mid-October, Riggan went on trial for the murder…

A Matter of Principal

When two South High School journalism students attempted to cover a fight in a school parking lot last month, only to have their film seized by Denver police officers, the incident touched off a vigorous debate about the rights of student journalists. But many parents and students were less upset…

Off Limits

The rust is history: Currigan Hall doesn’t get much respect these days–not since Denver Metro Convention & Visitors Bureau bigwig Eugene “Big Is Better” Dilbeck became obsessed with tearing down the 1970 structure (which played the cloning lab in Woody Allen’s Sleeper) and expanding the Colorado Convention Center (also known…

Resurrection

Somewhere over Denver, moments after the fire, Cindy Andrews’s heart stopped for two minutes and thirty-two seconds. As she faded from consciousness, she could hear the whump, whump of a rescue helicopter and the frantic shouts of paramedics, and she said to herself, “I’m not ready to die. I have…

Letters

Rage Before Duty Regarding T.R. Witcher’s “Hell on Wheels,” in the December 3 issue: The failure to properly define the term “road rage,” and its all-encompassing use to define every conceivable traffic infraction, has led to even greater misunderstandings. Its misuse has diminished drunk driving by making it a version…

Virgin Rebirth

He isn’t saying it was a miracle, that an angel of God guided him to a particular place at a particular time and said, “Here she is.” He’s not saying that at all. But he’s not saying it was entirely coincidental, either. After one coincidence leads to another, and then…

The Killing Floor

Michael Garcia must have known he would die in prison. But no one expected that his death would come so soon, in front of so many people. When he was seventeen, Garcia did something so terrible that a Denver judge gave him two life sentences without hope of parole. Although…

Mall Rats

This weekend the kids will head to the mall–where else? But when several dozen members of Students for Justice drop by the new Denver Pavilions at noon Saturday, it won’t be to do any Christmas shopping. Instead, they plan to protest the $24 million in “corporate welfare” sucked from taxpayers…