God Is in the Details

In the New Testament, Saul of Tarsus journeyed to Damascus to persecute Christians. On his way, he was blinded by the image of a risen Christ and underwent a dramatic conversion, becoming the Apostle Paul. What happened to local artist Lawrence Childress on the road to tiny Mt. Carmel Baptist…

Sister Act

They’re the good girls, the inseparable sisters who separate only to sit quietly in their middle school classrooms, completing assignments without complaint, smiling shyly, working diligently while others chatter and tease. Esperanza and Estephania Chavez: the quiet ones. Until you get to know them. Then they bubble up like a…

Off Limits

The Beat goes on and on: Back in the spring of 1951, Jack Kerouac sat down in a New York apartment and in twenty days typed out the manuscript of On the Road, which stretched 120 feet on a single scroll of paper, and fifty years (and counting) in literary…

Stripped Down

The Gold Club trial taking place right now in Atlanta features what Rocky Mountain News sports columnist Dave Krieger wittily describes as “the sacred troika of modern news: the mob, sex and celebrities.” Furthermore, one of the luminaries linked to the yarn — Denver Broncos running back Terrell Davis –…

Letters to the Editor

Another Opportunity Blown The plane truth: Regarding Patricia Calhoun’s “Blowing Boeing,” in the May 17 issue: Everyone in town was blowing Boeing, all right. It just never came! Jay Brown via the Internet The Kreme rises: In the May 17 issue, Calhoun’s column and Kenny Be’s Worst-Case Scenario did a…

Mind Games

Lauren Murray’s easy smile and trim figure give no hint of the years of life-threatening turmoil she’s endured. The 41-year-old Denver woman has built a successful career in marketing, and her colleagues rarely suspect that anything might be seriously wrong with her. But Murray has struggled with severe mental illness…

Language Barrier

For a casino in Colorado to demand that its housekeepers stop speaking Spanish on the job would seem as plausible a management decision as requiring poker dealers to wear mirrored cufflinks. Even so, the management of Colorado Central Station Casino stands accused of enforcing an illegal “English-only” policy in the…

Unhappy Returns

Judging from the Denver dailies, the Governor’s Columbine Review Commission completed a masterful bit of finger-pointing last week. Following the long-awaited release of the commission’s final report at a Statehouse press conference on May 17, both newspapers featured front-page photos of Governor Bill Owens stabbing a forefinger at the cameras…

Food Fight

Beef. It’s what the West University neighborhood doesn’t want for dinner right next to their homes in the now-empty lot at the corner of South Franklin Street and Evans Avenue. The space, which had been a gas station for 44 years, was leased in the fall by the Galardi Company,…

Prize Patrol

On Wednesday, May 16, Westword was honored by the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless at its fourteenth annual statewide conference, receiving the Coalition’s media service award for its coverage of the state’s homeless. Among the specific pieces cited by the judges were Patricia Calhoun’s “The Bum’s Rush,” her April 27,…

Off Limits

What do President Dubya, Hustler magazine, the Securities and Exchange Commission, AT&T, the North American Man-Boy Love Association, Boulder and women’s sex organs all have in common? They’re each part of a delightful letter just penned by the Reverend Louis P. Sheldon, chairman of the Traditional Values Coalition, criticizing Bush’s…

Dogged by Fame

I became a writer because I like to write. But I also did it for the attention. At one point, I wanted to be just like J.D. Salinger — but when it turned out he was a recluse, I dropped him. I would make a terrible recluse. On the off…

Parents Beware

An unsigned news short in the May 9 Rocky Mountain News reported that Jamie White and Danny Bonaduce, co-stars of the aptly named morning-radio program The Jamie & Danny Show, were slated to debut July 9 on KISS-FM, 95.7 on your dial, “after months of speculation that they’d end up…

Downhill to Disneyland

Every year, the Colorado ski industry looks forward to the three-day Martin Luther King Jr. weekend in January as one of the busiest times of the year. But this past winter, on the Sunday of that holiday-enhanced weekend, the number of skiers on Vail Mountain exceeded even those eager expectations…

Letters to the Editor

Boeing, Going, Gone Snow job: There’s nothing wrong with progress, despite what Patricia Calhoun says in her May 17 “Blowing Boeing.” There’s nothing wrong with smart growth. Calhoun apparently wants to freeze Denver in time, like a giant snowglobe where there’s no traffic and always plenty of fresh powder for…

The Hit Man Nobody Knows

This much is certain: On the morning of November 27, 1989, Avianca Airlines Flight 203 took off from Bogotá, Colombia, headed for the city of Cali. The Cali run is a journey of a few hundred miles over mountainous terrain, requiring less than an hour in the air. Flight 203…

Avenging Angel

In the late 1970s, when June Turner’s son, Ron Mays, first told her that he wanted to dedicate his life to art, two words flashed through this loving mother’s brain: “Starving artist,” she says. If Mays’s subsequent career hasn’t quite lived up to Turner’s darkest fears, neither has it obliterated…

The Middle of Somewhere

For more than fifty years, the Plains Conservation Center has been trying to preserve a remnant of the eastern Colorado high plains. Unfortunately, the organization succeeded — and now a remnant is all that’s left. The center, which once owned more than 1,600 acres of shortgrass prairie near Hampden Avenue…

On with the Showcase!

For the past month, Westword Music Showcase ballots have been pouring into our offices. Like Cabbage Patch Kids and good mullet haircuts, each is unique in its own special way: Some are neatly written out with a careful hand, others are scribbled in a doctor-like scrawl. All, however, convey strong…

Off Limits

Back in 1972, when Louisville and Broomfield were just sleepy little burgs that broke up the empty space between Denver and Fort Collins, no one much cared how a local business drew attention to itself. Why, an enterprising entrepreneur could fasten a life-sized fiberglass giraffe to his roof if he…

Let’s Make a Deal

It’s been over a month since the official deployment of the Denver dailies’ joint-operating agreement, and the chaos has hardly calmed, particularly in a business sense. Publicly, the Denver Newspaper Agency, which handles all non-editorial functions of the Rocky Mountain News and the Denver Post, insists that plummeting circulation and…

Underdogs Outclass Fat Cats

Someone must be tinkering with the human genome up in permafrost country. A professional wrestler with the brain of a hummingbird continues to serve as governor of Minnesota. The other day, a wheat farmer in neighboring North Dakota stood up on a chair in his local post office and announced…