DON’T ASK, DON’T TELL

In any discussion of Colorado’s child-welfare system, getting even the most basic information about children in state care is nearly impossible. That’s not because of statute but because of individual county policies about what gets said to whom. State law merely instructs professionals in the system to keep the identity…

OFF LIMITS

Higher and higher education: Under host Howard Higman, the University of Colorado’s Conference on World Affairs was one hell of a party. When he founded the annual event in 1948, Higman’s goal was to bring the world to Boulder, throwing international notables from all sorts of disciplines–they eventually included Cold…

THE APPELLATIONS OF OUR EYE

Not many baseball fans have heard of George Bone, but that’s no surprise. In 1901 George played twelve games at shortstop for last-place Milwaukee, hit a very respectable .302 and promptly dropped off the face of the earth–or went back to New Haven. So there’s not much reason to remember…

LIFE OF THE PARTY

If I had it to do over again, I would use dry ice,” Shaun Gothwaite says. “Louie began to turn a little purple without it.” Other than that, it was the perfect wake. No one who knew Louie Aran could imagine him filled with embalming fluid or laid out among…

THE BREAKS OF THE GAME

Sooner or later, just about every politician vows to “close loopholes.” This is important so “the rich don’t get richer” and people “pay their fair share.” But ever wonder how such holes become looped in the first place? A visit to the state legislature last week helped explain it. In…

LETTERS

Double Indemnity I was amazed by Eric Dexheimer’s January 31 story, “Double Trouble,” on Douglas Pichon. I knew him as Doug, a classmate and friend of mine in high school in Colorado Springs 25-plus years ago. I have not seen him since. In high school, Doug was bright, well-liked, respected…

SAY IT AIN’T SO, JOE

Don’t listen to what I say. Watch what I do,” Joe Rogers said last November when he announced his candidacy for the retiring Pat Schroeder’s congressional seat. But if you had been watching Rogers in 1991, when he wasn’t a Republican candidate but merely a member of the Denver law…

DRY COUNTY

part 1 of 2 Driving into Douglas County on Interstate 25, the metro area’s future unfolds before your eyes. Thousands of new homes march up the hillsides, their pastel shades glinting in the Colorado sun. “Douglas County: Where Quality of Life Comes First” says the sign that greets motorists at…

DRY COUNTY

part 2 of 2 Douglas County officials believe they’ve come up with a solution to the water problem. But their reliance on Denver to help them out of their dilemma may lead to the county’s biggest battle yet. The county commissioners want to spend as much as $600 million to…

ADDICTED TO LOVE

Megan Ross shifted uncomfortably in her seat. She was growing impatient and leaned over to peek into the basket on the floor by her side. Someone was droning on about the status of anonymous AIDS testing. More of the same old, same old…as the agenda of these meetings of the…

OFF LIMITS

Of human bondage: “No airport bonds are paid by these taxes”–that’s the word (offered in capital letters and underlined to make sure you get the point) from the Denver Department of Revenue in its form letter that accompanied tax bills sent to property owners last month. But the city’s butt-covering…

A MAGIC BULLET FOR AIDS

He looked like a beer truck rumbling down the floor at the Fabulous Forum, and by the fourth quarter he was out of gas. But Magic Johnson returned gloriously last week to the game that once cast him out, and the effects are bound to be wide-ranging. At least they…

LETTERS

The Meter’s Running Regarding Patricia Calhoun’s “Call Me a Cab,” in the January 31 issue: What’s next for the publicity wizards in our fair city? Monitoring playground talk to make sure that no kids criticize Denver Public Schools? Spying on fans at Coors Field so that no one boos when…

IT CAN’T BE HIS DELIVERY

Jim Deden could be a composite character invented by the U.S. Postal Service as part of a public-relations blitz. Now age 53, he has worked for the agency for 28 years as a window clerk, happily selling stamps, handling packages and generally serving the mailing public. For the past ten…

HEIGHT MAKES RIGHT

A simmering dispute between lower-downtown residents and developers may soon become a full-fledged battle. With LoDo poised for a wave of development not seen since the days steam engines huffed into Union Station, the stakes couldn’t be higher for the place where Denver was born. The controversy is over a…

UP AGAINST THE WALL

When artist Barbara Jo Revelle won a $200,000 commission in 1989 to create a two-block-long mosaic mural at the Colorado Convention Center, she learned that dealing with politicians was itself an art. Revelle, head of the photography program at the University of Colorado-Boulder, spent more than a year collecting stories…

DAHL PARTS

part 1 of 3 What was left of forty-year-old Jeff Dahl was placed in an incinerator, reduced to ash and poured into a modest urn. That didn’t bother Gary Watson, Jeff’s best friend. He believed that Jeff would have okayed the cremation of his remains. But Gary didn’t like Jeff’s…

DAHL PARTS TWO

part 2 of 3 Jonathan had spent most of 1990 talking about Jeff, and his conversation with Mrs. Watson convinced him that he was closer to finding his brother than he’d been all year. He thanked her, then drove to Kitty’s, where Gary was working that day. As Jonathan remembers…

DAHL PARTS THREE

part 3 of 3 At first, Michelle says, everything was perfect. Jeff displayed his sensitivity, his humor, his good-heartedness. But he was keeping a lot of secrets. She didn’t learn much about the horrors of his homeless period until months later, and she discovered only after he died that Jeff…

DOUBLE TROUBLEWILL THE REAL DOUGLAS PICHON PLEASE SHOW UP?

“I’m not very good at making a long story short,” begins Douglas Pichon. “I am, however, really good at making a long story longer.” This quickly becomes clear. The first thing you notice about Douglas Pichon, though, are his startling lettuce-green eyes, which makes it understandable why the police picked…

OFF LIMITS

Making book: Anyone want to bet on the outcome of the current Menendez brothers trial out in L.A.? It could all ride on what older brother Lyle is reading. According to The Private Diary of Lyle Menendez: In His Own Words, a new tome by Norma Novelli, a court reporter…

A GRAND SLAM AGAINST WOMEN

While all American eyes were on Tempe, Arizona, and the Super Bowl last weekend, Monica Seles swept through the field at the Australian Open tennis tournament to win her ninth career Grand Slam title. In beating Anke Huber 6-4, 6-1, Seles extended her Australian Open match record to a perfect…