WESTWORD, HO!

After almost three years as publisher of Westword, Jim Rizzi has moved on to become publisher of SF Weekly, a recent acquisition of New Times Inc., Westword’s parent company. Replacing Rizzi as Westword publisher is Amy Cobb. After graduating from the University of Colorado in 1988, she started at the…

LETTERS

No Kidding Around Regarding Karen Bowers’s “A Wealth of Trouble,” in the March 15 issue: 1. Parents have no choice but to believe their children with regard to claims of sexual abuse. Parents would be negligent if they did not believe their children. 2. A child can have childish fantasies…

LOST WEEKEND

When his brother’s body got back to Los Angeles last summer, Carlos Yarbrough examined it carefully, counting the bullet holes one by one. There were, he discovered, a total of ten, in the head, back and chest. It had only been a few weeks since Bobby Yarbrough, 21, had left…

OFF LIMITS

Queen for a day: All that congressional talk of welfare cuts so concerned Denver resident Clarissa Pinkola Estes that she contacted Congress herself, offering to testify before the House Ways and Means Committee as a living, breathing example of a welfare recipient. “Either I’m a welfare queen, in which case…

FOLLOW THE BOUNCING BALL

In the original, which goes back to 1941, Robert Montgomery played a prizefighter who’s accidentally spirited off to heaven before his time, then forced to return to Earth in a different, far less efficient body. When they remade the thing in 1978, complete with a new title, Warren Beatty was…

CANDIDATE BY DEFAULT

Denver school-board candidate Wazir-Ali Muhammad, who told the Denver Post last week that the school district’s $14 million budget deficit “almost boggles the mind,” apparently knows what he’s talking about when it comes to educational funding shortfalls. Two years ago Muhammad defaulted on more than $20,000 in taxpayer-backed student loans…

OUT TO LUNCH

The 150 people gathered at a local church last Saturday were irked by the thought of liberal journalists putting their clammy secular fingers on America’s pulse. But judging by the performance of Rocky Mountain News deputy editorial-page editor Dave Shiflett, they would be lucky to encounter a journalist who even…

HEP TO THE PROBLEM

Ann Jessie felt fine when she reported to her doctor’s office for the results of a routine physical. A few minutes later the 58-year-old Denver woman emerged, shaken by the diagnosis that she had an incurable–and potentially fatal–disease. That was a year ago. Now, Jessie is preparing to launch a…

WHAT GOES AROUND…

It’s been four months since the Aronsons of Evergreen charged in a civil lawsuit that their neighbors, the Quigleys, tried to drive them out of town because the Quigleys hated Jews. Since that time, lawyers for each side have been busy gathering evidence showing numerous alleged low-level infractions of neighborly…

FLIGHT RISK

City of Denver officials continue to hold out hope that debt-ridden airline MarkAir can bail them out of a jam at Denver International Airport–even though the Alaska company’s own attorney says it’s on the verge of financial collapse. The city, which backed away from handing MarkAir a $30 million tax-funded…

LETTERS

A Touching Story Regarding Karen Bowers’s “A Wealth of Trouble,” in the March 15 issue: Barbara Huttner’s story was extremely poignant to me. I know her pain, her anger and frustration, because I endured the same. For four years I suffered through the supervised visits with my every move being…

A WEALTH OF TROUBLE

part 1 of 2 Barbara Huttner pulls a thick wedding album from a shelf in her family room and flips through it, looking for a picture of her daughter. The volume contains dozens of photos that have been ripped into pieces and defaced with a black marking pen, the faces…

GLOWING REPORTS

It has been four and a half years since Colorado’s state health department began a study of the health risks posed to Denver area residents over the past four decades by the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons factory. In that time the study has consumed $8.7 million in federal funds and…

A WEALTH OF TROUBLE

part 2 of 2 In the weeks following the original confrontation with her daughter in the therapist’s office, Barbara Huttner succumbed to serious depression. For the first month, she says, “I’d sit around the house in dirty sweats, watching TV and drinking coffee all day long.” Her face broke out…

OFF LIMITS

Hi-ho, Silverado! If you’ve got a great big new airport and no business around it, who’re you gonna call? Paging Bill Pauls. Recent media accounts of Pauls’s planned purchase of a huge chunk of land around I-70 and Pena Boulevard hailed him as a captain of industry. Those stories neglected…

DRIBBLE AND DROOL

Don’t let this get around, but any foreign power still interested in invading the United States would do well to try it, say, this Saturday. Half the nation is already catatonic from watching the O.J. Simpson trial, and by Saturday night the other half will be in college-basketball-induced shell shock…

BARRELS OF FUN

A few blocks west of I-25, along 46th Avenue in an industrial area of northwest Denver, four boys from the nearby Quigg Newton housing project finish stoning a discarded TV and scurry up a stack of pallets to point out the scene of some of their recent exploits. “We play…

LETTERS

The Art of the Deal Regarding Michael Paglia’s “A Site for Sore Eyes,” in the March 8 issue: Bravo to Westword–Michael Paglia unmuzzled! To those of us who stopped reading Westword three articles into your former art reviewer’s mush, it is the honest, stinging, insightful prose of Paglia that marks…

A DRIVING ISSUE

An Aurora waitress was on a Rocky Mountain high last September 5, five days before her marriage, until a minor fender-bender resulted in her losing her driver’s license for drunken driving–despite having had drunken-driving charges against her dismissed in court. Terry Faust’s situation isn’t quite the same as singer John…

PLAYING THE PERCENTAGES

Has Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Colorado secretly been nickeling-and-diming its clients so it can earn extra millions of dollars in profits? The company denies it, and in a lawsuit settlement reached last week it admitted no wrongdoing despite shelling out $3 million to consumers. Yet officials in states…

THE PROMISED LAND

The brochure showed a lake surrounded by snow-capped peaks, with horses gamboling about in the meadow. It looked like the place Elena and Larry Crossgrove dreamed of: a little ranch of their own. They were sold before they ever stepped foot on the land. Four years later, the Crossgroves’ bank…