SUNNYSIDE DOWN

The Denver Housing Authority is planning an ambitious $26.4 million renovation of Quigg Newton Homes, the city’s largest housing project, but northwest Denver community leaders say the DHA has been secretive and has left them in the dark. Leaders of Sunnyside United Neighbors angrily accuse the housing authority of excluding…

BEATING THE RAP

On Thursday, September 7, following fourteen hours of deliberations, a Fort Morgan jury acquitted Charles “Butch” Allee of second-degree murder, first-degree assault and three other charges related to the February 19 beating death of Wiggins farmer Jeffrey Lousberg. Allee’s teenaged son, Charles Allee III, is scheduled to stand trial September…

STILL GETTING AWAY WITH IT

Denver’s halfway houses are supposed to help state prisoners ease their way back into society. But for an ever-increasing number of inmates, “community corrections” facilities are simply an easy ticket to freedom. Inmates have escaped or walked away from Denver halfway houses at a record pace this year. According to…

THE BEAR NECESSITIES

Pronghorn Gifts, the Denver Zoo Number of polar bear items on display: 18 Overall theme: Noble, endangered, anonymous adult polar bears meet personality-laden juveniles Klondike and Snow in a fluffy yet environmentally aware display. T-shirt situation: Too many to count, ranging in price from $13.95 to $18.95, with a choice…

OFF LIMITS

Fried couch potatoes: Judging by all the ridiculous hype and hoopla that preceded, and coincided with, and followed the network affiliation switch Sunday morning, we have indeed become a nation of vidiots. Not entirely, of course. Some folks at the daily papers were smart enough to figure out that the…

MONDO CANINE

If you don’t watch where you walk–well, you know. Any time 400 dog lovers and their pets get together in one place, the footing can get hazardous. But that’s not the only thing. Confused Labrador retrievers sometimes leap over the rail and scamper up the backstretch in the wrong direction…

MAIL ANATOMY

In case you missed it, Lewis and Floorwax, the morning DJs on KRFX/103.5 The Fox, held a contest on July 28. It was called “Denver’s Biggest Butt.” Coming in third was Jackie. Despite the disappointing finish, Jackie had no reason to be ashamed. She was prodigious. She was the first…

A SOARING PAYROLL

Bill Loeffler first stepped into an airport information booth in 1986. He’s stayed there for one reason: public contact. “I see everybody I’ve ever known in my life at least once a year,” Loeffler says. “I’m 65 years old, and I still see people I knew in high school. There…

LETTERS

LoDo Lowdown Regarding Patricia Calhoun’s September 6 column, “It’s Not Over Till It’s Over,” I submit the following comments: It’s not over, Patricia…it’s just under way. Your depiction of LoDo development is unbalanced and over-emotional, because it details symptoms rather than true, underlying problems caused by LoDo development. Consider the…

TRICKY BRICKS

Last year thousands of baseball fans paid for the privilege of having their names inscribed on bricks placed along the Wynkoop Plaza leading to Coors Field. But for the same $75 fee paid by the masses, some of the most powerful people in Colorado got a little something extra. The…

TRANSCENDENTAL DESECRATION

The new-age movement has invaded Rocky Mountain National Park–and knowingly or not, modern-day mystics are destroying sites of historical significance to American Indian tribes. The damage is being done by people who move rocks and other artifacts in places where Indians once lived or conducted religious ceremonies, says Kenny Frost,…

CLEAR THINKING

From “The Top Ten Signs Your U.S. Senator Is Nuts.” Number 9: Breakfast, lunch and dinner? Zima. When David Letterman jokes about an alcoholic beverage night after night, something’s going on. Just what, exactly, isn’t clear–unlike the drink itself. Coors Brewing Company, the nation’s number-three brewer, devoted one and a…

BY THE BOOK

part 1 of 2 Thin and frail, Pauline Robinson lay down on her couch. She would have liked to read a book to pass the time, but her cataracts made that all but impossible. The difficulty was irritating; there was still so much she wanted to read, and at her…

BY THE BOOK

part 2 of 2 In the last quarter of her junior year Pauline was ready to quit, this time for good. It wasn’t just the prejudices of a few misguided people that wore her down. Working and studying was a drain; there was never enough money, and she was ashamed…

ON BEYOND ZIMA

Meet Duncan, the techno-savvy Generation X-er who is your personal guide through the Zima site–the Zimaverse–on the World Wide Web (http://www.zima.com). Your first stop is the fridge, the storage bin for Zima and the place Duncan calls home. From here nine links take you to different areas; Duncan suggests you…

OFF LIMITS

Room at the top: Dateline NBC caught Colorado congressman Scott McInnis (see story, left) napping last month, when the TV news magazine checked out which representatives were calling the House Office Building home. Although McInnis, who represents the state’s third congressional district, had told reporters that he was giving up…

NEU ERA

The canned crowd noise roaring through empty Folsom Field last Wednesday had a surreal ring to it. With the volume pumped way up to approximate the beer-fueled frenzy the team would face three days later in Wisconsin’s Camp Randall Stadium, it’s a wonder CU center Bryan Stoltenberg could hear the…

DUE FOR A CHECKUP

Students expecting to graduate in October from the licensed practical nursing program at Denver’s Concorde Career Institute have been told they must wait until January. Greater than their disappointment, say some nursing students, is their fear that the education that cost them $12,000–many times the price of LPN programs at…

LETTERS

Suffer the Children Regarding Michelle Dally Johnston’s “The Clients,” in the August 23 issue: The timing of your article regarding the GAL program in Denver was eerie, since I had started to look into the availability of such a program just last week. I moved here approximately eight months ago…

SEOUL BROTHER

Republican congressman Scott McInnis of Glenwood Springs is fond of criticizing his Washington colleagues–especially Denver’s Pat Schroeder–for their taxpayer-supported travel. So last year, after running a re-election campaign based on reforming Washington, McInnis took a trip to South Korea and found a private interest to pick up the tab: the…

COPIES AND ROBBERS

Colorado residents have a right to look at the state’s public records. But more and more often, that right comes with a stiff price tag attached. Eager to raise revenue in an era of belt-tightening, state agencies are charging citizens up to $1.25 per page for copies of everything from…