WIN ONE FOR THE ARCHBISHOP

As Bill McCartney can tell you, if you’ve ever been to a football game in Texas–any football game–it’s like full immersion at the river bend. Texans take their football as seriously as their cattle, or their oil wells, or their ancient dislike of Oklahoma. If you don’t walk the walk…

LETTERS

Bully Button This letter is in response to the November 16 column by Patricia Calhoun, “Benson’s Bully Pulpit,” about the media and Bruce Benson’s loss. I think the media is just too damn nosey, not just about Bruce Benson but about the entire public. The media went on and on…

FIGHTING IT OUT IN BOULDER

Conflicts between Boulder street people and police on the Pearl Street Mall are sparking attempts to set up a watchdog panel to review allegations of police misconduct. The Boulder chapter of the ACLU and the Colorado Legal Eagles, a Nederland group affiliated with the modern-day-hippie Rainbow Family, plan to bring…

BILL ALL THE LAWYERS

Earlier this year, when Boulder attorney Peter Rogers lost a routine child-support case for client Richard Kosnar, he appeared to go out of his way to make amends. Not only did Rogers write Kosnar a profuse letter of apology, according to court records, but he even offered to make Kosnar’s…

RISKY BUSINESS

Park Hill businessman and his wife have received a six-figure, low-interest loan from the City of Denver even though they have a long history of financial problems and until recently owed the city treasury almost $60,000 in delinquent real estate taxes. Johnny and Bernice Copeland, owners of the Holly Shopping…

GREEN GROSSERS

Richard Iannacito sells nothing but tomatoes at his family business on Cook Street. After years in the trade, he still answers his own phone and scrambles to stay competitive in the volatile produce industry. So when he learned in the spring of 1989 that one of his largest customers was…

BUYING TIME PART II

part 2 of 2 The Clinic, Politics, and Wes Kennedy By the late Eighties it was clear that the AIDS epidemic could not be dealt with as other epidemics had been in the past. Polio and tuberculosis, for example, affected people in specific ways that could be addressed by a…

BUYING TIME PART II

part 1 of 2 Dr. Adam Myers arrived at Denver General Hospital in 1974, following a residency program at the University of Colorado in which he specialized in hematology, the study of blood diseases such as anemia and leukemia. He was soon appointed DGH’s director of ambulatory services. But he…

OFF LIMITS

Local boy makes bad: Since former Denverite JT Colfax assumed the name of his favorite strip and hit the road for New York City three years ago, he’s been painting the town red–and now it’s seeing red over his efforts. The street artist’s preferred medium is the photocopier, which he…

VOLLEY OF THE DOLLS

Last week the only news trickling out of the moribund women’s tennis tour concerned the return of Jennifer Capriati, the eighteen-year-old burnout who is justifiably more famous for her adolescent misdeeds than for any real prowess on the court. Before her mug shots were plastered all over the front pages…

SHOOTING STAR

Denver filmmaker Ronnie Cramer is worried. “I’m not going to wind up looking like Ed Wood, am I?” he asks. Comparisons to the late Wood, a cross-dresser and anti-auteur who’s the subject of a new biopic called, appropriately, Ed Wood, are a real concern for Cramer (“Framed!” October 27, 1993)…

LETTERS

The Straight and Marrow Regarding “Courting Disaster,” in the November 2 issue: I read with interest Eric Dexheimer’s feature on the biopolitical plight of women with advanced-stage breast cancer struggling to get insurance coverage for bone marrow transplants. Dexheimer explored not just the issues but their history, and he gave…

GEORGIA ON THEIR MINDS

A popular nurse at the Denver General Hospital AIDS clinic was forced to resign last week–under the threat of being fired–for bending the city’s residency rule. The rule requires that city employees, including those at the hospital, live within the city and county of Denver. However, nurse Georgia Caven contends…

HUNTING SEASON

Crime is on the rise these days, although not necessarily on the streets. Television programs such as Cops show real-life alleged perpetrators (their faces tastefully obscured) being busted by real-life cops. Others, such as America’s Most Wanted, reenact crimes and ask viewers with information to call the appropriate law enforcement…

INK-STAINED KVETCHES

One thing’s certain about reporter Steve Paulson’s recent news stories about Denver International Airport for the Associated Press: They could hardly be getting better play. One of them–charging that expansive soils are causing the widespread cracking of runways at the new airport–went out on the AP’s national wire in August…

BUYING TIME

part 2 of 2 There’s not much sense lecturing someone in an HIV clinic about the long-term hazards of smoking, although Myers suspects a link between smoking and Kaposi’s ability to attack the lungs of people with AIDS. Sam has a more immediate concern. At first, the Daunoxome reduced the…

BUYING TIME

part 1 of 2 September 15, 1994–Denver General Hospital Dr. Adam Myers picks a surgical mask off the wall outside an isolation room on the ninth floor. Placing it over his mouth and nose and smoothing his short, silver-gray hair, he knocks on the door and enters. The mask is…

OFF LIMITS

A woman’s work is never done: In anointing Sandy Martin its 1994 Businesswoman of the Year, the Northwest Business and Professional Woman’s Organization cited Martin’s fifteen years of service and “unselfish commitment” to the city of Arvada, as manifested in her work as director of human services for the city…

EJECTION DAY

By the time you see this, the dogcatcher in Resume Speed, Idaho, has probably been voted out of office, and Teddy Kennedy may be driving a cab in Boston. The American electorate is clearly in a sour, surly mood for the long haul, the political pundits say. After Tuesday’s midterm…

INFLUENCE BACKPEDDLING

The roller coaster and Ferris wheel for the relocated Elitch Gardens amusement park in downtown Denver are going up quickly–but the lobbying firm that helped grease the skids for the company’s move appears to be sinking fast. Late last month Denver City Clerk Arie Taylor banned White & Cole Associates,…