LETTERS

Georgia on My Mind Regarding Steve Jackson’s “Denver or Busted,” in the September 14 issue: Georgia Caven makes you feel special at a time when you really know you’re all alone. With all the people she sees and all the complex cases she deals with, it’s like you’re just one…

CAN’T WE ALL GET ALONG?

The way Denver city councilman Ted Hackworth sees it, there were lots of good, sound ways the parks and recreation department could have found to spend $73,500. For instance, the financially strapped city department might have used the money to buy new equipment like basketballs and volleyball nets. Or it…

DENVER OR BUSTED

part 1 of 2 The red light on her answering machine was blinking frantically when Georgia Caven walked into the living room of her Lakewood home. She pressed the button. “Georgia, this is Adam. I need to speak to you. Call me when you get in.” It was the voice…

DENVER OR BUSTED

part 2 of 2 For all Georgia’s boundless patience and energy, there was one type of patient she couldn’t warm up to. In the early Eighties DGH had begun seeing its first people with what the medical communities on the East and West coasts were calling the “gay disease.” By…

OFF LIMITS

No population bomb: Governor Roy Romer says he had no idea that challenger Bruce Benson would drop the bomb during their first debate last week about his two DUI arrests. If so, the shirt-sleeved Romer–whose jacket was off, if not his gloves–was sure quick with a comeback. After Benson concluded…

THROWN FOR A LOSS

Remember the Six Blocks of Granite? How about the Purple People Eaters? And the No-Name Defense. Care to go against the Fearsome Foursome? Hey, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet. This season the Denver Broncos have (take your pick): A. The Eleven Slices of Toast B. The Chenille Curtain C. The…

LETTERS

We’ll Drink to That Wow! Your August 31 edition should have carried a warning, something like: Read only while sitting down, preferably with something to soothe the nerves at, or even better, in hand. First, the story on MarkAir (Andy Van De Voorde’s “By the Seat of Their Pants”), which…

CHILE DAYS AHEAD

Florence Nixon moved from Aurora to Sequim, Washington, eight years ago. Her husband, a retired Air Force major, was ready for adventure. The new house was beautiful, and they also owned a state-of-the-art motor home. Children and friends visited often. Yet Florence was desperate. “Some friends were leaving to go…

CLOTHED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE

The tiny city of Glendale, just off Colorado Boulevard, has long been known for skin clubs Shotgun Willie’s and Mile High Saloon. But last week it came down hard on a rock club where a performing musician did a three-song set wearing nothing but his bass. Alibi’s, a bar and…

IT’S 11 P.M. DO YOU KNOW WHERE YOUR FUNDING IS?

Denver mayor Wellington Webb has defended his decision to locate a detention center for juvenile curfew violators in upscale Washington Park by saying federal funding could be jeopardized if his SafeNite After Curfew program doesn’t run “city-wide.” But the federal community development block grant that so far is the program’s…

CENSURING THE CENSOR

Nearly two years after Denver Community Television (DCTV) refused to air one of his gay-themed programs, videographer Tony Palange has won a major court victory. In late August district court judge Richard Spriggs ruled that DCTV and the City and County of Denver improperly engaged in censorship. To David Miller,…

STRAIGHT TIME

part 2 of 2 It’s the noon hour at a nearby restaurant, and Bob Sylvester is trying to nab a bite or two of his chicken sandwich while offering an ex-con’s appraisal of Bruce Benson’s crime plan. The sandwich can’t compete; it sits there, cold and forlorn, while Sylvester expounds…

STRAIGHT TIME

part 1 of 2 Are tattoos a problem? Maybe not for Drew Barrymore or some teenage goof scooping frozen yogurt down at the mall. But they haven’t spent nine and a half years in the joint, in a sea of tattoos, like Roy has. “It’s hard not to feel funny…

5…4…3…2…1…HEADS UP

part 2 of 2 As anyone familiar with rocketry knows, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. This week in Argonia, that particular law of physics appears in the shape of Rick Wills. Wills, who designs airplane cockpits for the Air Force, is the owner of Midwest…

OFF LIMITS

Things to do in Denver when you’re read: If you’re Ken Hamblin, try the decaf. The normally mellow Sunday segment of the Today Show was quite an eye-opener September 4 when Hamblin, live from KCNC in Denver, took aim at three guests in the New York studio who were discussing…

THE GAMES BEHIND THE GAME

If major-league baseball players and owners want to know what’s good for them–they remain stubbornly in the dark about that–both sides would do well to lay down their golf clubs and set aside their disputes this month to finish school. The professor will be Ken Burns, the ground-breaking documentary filmmaker…

LETTERS

Here’s Muddy’s in Your Eye I recently wrote to thank Westword for Patricia Calhoun’s July 13 column “Feel the Burn,” which alerted us that the city was going to use the Washington Park Recreation Center for the curfew program. Now I must thank you again, this time for the August…

THIS LITTLE CITY WENT TO MARKET

King Soopers, the grocery chain Denver city officials touted last summer as the anchor tenant for a redeveloped Stapleton International Airport, may end up checking out of that major role. At a press conference in July 1993 in Mayor Wellington Webb’s office, it was reported that the grocery chain would…

EVERGREEN’S EVERGREENWHO DESTROYED THE TOWN’S FAVORITE FIR?

It really wasn’t much of a tree. The little conifer that grew next to a roadside cutoff on Highway 74 outside of Evergreen was only four feet tall and, compared with the impressive specimens on the hillside above it, the tree’s misshapen branches and crooked trunk were hardly worth a…

UNECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

The money and effort government spends in the name of economic development is supposed to bring a community new companies and additional jobs. But did economic development actually cause Fort Collins to lose $300 million worth of new investments? Last week AT&T announced that it was putting its NCR Microelectronic…

BOOK ‘EM

part 2 of 2 But it was a certain group of sixth-grade boys who gave Trost the most trouble. On January 12, a week after the West Side Story incident, Trost was once again having a hard time making himself heard. One of the loudest kids was a boy he’d…