The Message

Plenty of info consumers believe that the press regularly slants the news in one direction or the other, but definitively proving this thesis isn’t easy. Left-wing readers of the Bernard Goldberg tome Bias, which contends that most outlets are liberal, may find the author’s arguments to be merely anecdotal. Likewise,…

Holey Man

Dreamers live in a fantasy world. So what do you call a person who dreams of impossible things and then does them? Tom “Chico” Chicovsky. When Chico and his twin brother were nineteen, they and a friend decided to sail across the ocean after their freshman year of college –…

Letters to the Editor

Town Without Pretty Code read: Westword used to be the newspaper for those of us who didn’t necessarily take on the values of mainstream society — who have chosen to live life “in the slower lane.” Then I see Kenny Be’s September 9 Worst-Case Scenario, “Erie, But True,” depicting Old…

Collision Course

Death came for Sonja DeVries with a red blur in her rearview mirror. At 7:20 p.m. on Sunday, July 18, nineteen-year-old Sonja was driving eastbound on Alameda Avenue in her 1983 Toyota Corolla. The light at Holly Street turned red, and DeVries came to a full stop. The speed limit…

Pranks for the Memories

When Marvin Heemeyer and his D9 dozer blazed through Granby on a mission from God, he ignited the passions of a nation — or at least a lot of how-many-crazies-are-there-living-in-Colorado questions. Websites such as www.killdozer.us celebrated the man with a plan, and entrepreneurial types duped the unsuspecting public into buying…

Off Limits

Boulder high school teacher Ramsey Brookhart remembers the night Michael Jackson unveiled the moonwalk for a television audience in 1983. “I was at my grandma’s house in Littleton,” he says. Jackson’s stunt held the then-seven-year-old spellbound. “It’s the perfect attention-grabber,” he explains. “That’s why Michael Jackson did it.” And that’s…

The Message

In 2002, Steve Cyphers, who’d spent the previous dozen years as a high-profile correspondent for ESPN, left broadcasting in favor of a teaching job at Holy Family Catholic School in Grand Junction that paid 13 percent of his former salary (“Trading Places,” November 14, 2002). This month, Cyphers returns as…

D-Lirious

Since going dark-blue-with-white-horse from the neck up, the Denver Broncos no longer sport that big orange “D” on their helmets. But if Mike Shanahan wins big in the biggest gamble of his coaching career, it is “D” that will be inside his players’ heads this year. It will be “D”…

Letters to the Editor

An Unhealthy Interest Physician, heal thyself: Bravo! Alan Prendergast’s “dissection” of the finances of the new University of Colorado Health Sciences Center at Fitzsimons (“Throwing Fitz,” September 2) was exactly the sort of story I rely on Westword and, in particular, Mr. Prendergast, to deliver. While everyone else is wringing…

Throwing Fitz

When Robert “Chip” Schooley arrived in Denver from Harvard fourteen years ago, the rate of survival among Colorado’s AIDS patients was grim. The people in his waiting room had a one-in-six chance of dying within a year. “At the time, there wasn’t much of an AIDS program anywhere between St…

Reality Check

In early September 2001, Don Goede made an absent-minded choice that brought tragedy into his small Brooklyn apartment: He left his windows open before leaving town. As he sat with relatives in Colorado Springs a few days later and watched the World Trade Center implode, the debris of the disaster…

Off Limits

If you see Lynne Bruning, founder of local fashion label The Girl’s Gotta Have It, at the Burning Man festival in Nevada this week, be sure to tell her how fabulous her clothes are — and they just might become yours. “I’m going to use the clothes for barter,” says…

The Message

Last week, Boulder community radio station KGNU announced the purchase of Denver’s KJME/1390-AM for $4.1 million, plus an extra $100,000 fee for an operating agreement that allowed the new signal to begin broadcasting on August 29, just in time for the opening of the Republican National Convention. KGNU only had…

The Truck Stops Here

On a recent afternoon that threatens rain, Thomas and Anthony are already waiting when the black and yellow Compass truck rolls up to Argo Park. The two boys race their BMX-style bikes along 47th Street parallel to the truck, skidding to an impressive, rubber-laying halt as the big vehicle noses…

Letters to the Editor

CU in September Fighting mad: Regarding Bill Gallo’s “Tough for Buffs,” in the August 26 issue: No surprise that Westword would hit a program when it’s already down. The big question is, will Gallo eat his words when the CU Buffs have a winning season? I’ll be out supporting our…

Tough for Buffs

Back in the day, University of Colorado football players bonded with each other at pep rallies. They matched appetites at the training table. For awhile there, they went on raft trips and listened to their coach strum his guitar. Always, they exchanged fellow-feeling by kicking serious ass in the grim…

Roller-Rama

Like most girls born in the ’70s, Amanda Gagliardi grew up on roller skates, enraptured by Xanadu and the Amazonian Roller Derby girls. So when a friend from Seattle called her earlier this year with an “awful” story about local girls recruiting for a new skate league, Gagliardi was incredulous…

Off Limits

During my long, murky and still uncompleted career as a University of Colorado student, I worked and quit (i.e., my supervisor told me to quit before I was fired) many jobs on campus. The most memorable? Orientation leader. The two-day orientation program run by CU’s Office of Orientation is designed…

The Message

Visitors to the Denver Tech Center headquarters of Altitude Sports & Entertainment, a new network owned by millionaire investor Stan Kroenke, might expect it to resemble Athens a couple of weeks prior to the start of this year’s Summer Olympics. After all, Greek organizers were still desperately trying to complete…

Letters to the Editor

A Rocky Road Raiders of the lost art: All those debating who was on the swift boat when it did what should look at Patricia Calhoun’s column about Jon Lipsky, the FBI agent who led the raid on Rocky Flats (“True Lies,” August 19). He is a true American hero…

Young Blood

Within minutes of my getting together with Jared Polis, he almost kills me. Twice. My near-death experiences take place toward the end of April, after Polis, an idiosyncratic Boulder businessman, politician and philanthropist just shy of his 29th birthday, picks me up at Westword’s offices on the way to Coors…

They Are the Voice

In Brazil, this skateboard is famous. Here, it’s locked up in a Denver Police Department evidence room. The board is chipped and dented and scuffed. On its underside is a hand-painted fire ant struggling beneath the weight of a pink rose petal twenty times its size, plus Bible verse Matthew…