Who’s on First?

In cyberspace, no one can hear you scream. But that’s not stopping Robert Lewis. The Web publisher has been howling bloody murder since Monday, when he learned that the Colorado Rockies have gone to court seeking a preliminary injunction that would essentially throw him out at home. Home page, that…

Grave Reservations

On his deathbed in 1880, the great Ute chief Ouray instructed a protege named Buckskin Charlie to stay with the Utes and help lead the tribe through the difficult times ahead. It was a lousy last request. The Utes, seeking a permanent place to call their own in Colorado, were…

Sister Sludge

A maverick member of the board that oversees the metro sewage system has managed to shake up that once-sleepy body with charges of a conspiracy to run radioactive waste through Denver-area sewers. Some say boardmember Adrienne Anderson is a paranoid nut, while others cast her as an environmental crusader. The…

Off Limits

What’s their beef? Even though he’s head of the Denver Water Department, Chips Barry has a reputation for being far from your average boring bureaucrat. And now he’s added to the legend–and gained a new nickname, “Cow” Chips Barry–by buying his agency a cow. Not just any cow, mind you…

Blood Brothers

Sal Martinez wants the homeboys to know that he isn’t talkin’ to 5-0. Never has. Never will. His talkin’ to 5-0–a gang-slang reference to the television police drama Hawaii 5-0–was just a vicious rumor put out on the streets by his enemies. The same enemies who tried to silence him…

Uncivil Tongue

Chuck Corry is an ex-Marine and a Buddhist, which means he doesn’t want people telling him not to swear and he doesn’t want people telling him to act like a Christian. Nor does he appreciate people firing him. And two years ago, he claims, he lost his consulting job with…

Beating the Train

Shortly before six on a Wednesday evening, the first wave of derailers arrives at the charmless offices of the Independence Institute, the conservative think tank in Golden (sign in the window: “Will do public policy for food”). Stragglers come in over the next half-hour. There are eleven of them in…

Breaking Up Rox

That rumble of discontentment down in the Rockies clubhouse can now be heard in the cheap (and not so cheap) seats up above. Last Tuesday, for instance, midway through the club’s disheartening and premature fiftieth loss of the year (to the Dodgers, 6-5), you could, for the first time, hear…

Letters

Child’s Prey Bravo, Patricia Calhoun. Your column about Colorado’s children (“Raised From the Dead,” July 17) was right on the mark and had a very important message. If Renee Polreis is not convicted in the death of her son, it will be an outrage. And if no one is ever…

The Gang’s All Here

We can sit out here,” Becky Estrada says from her front porch. She shrugs and shakes a cigarette out of its pack, pausing a moment to stare down the street as though looking for someone. Then she lights up. “The house is a mess.” Small wonder. An endless parade of…

Just for Kicks

The line of tap dancers stretches out in front of the mirror in the basement studio. There is some sort of confusion over the rehearsal hats–a motley assortment of battered New Year’s Eve party bowlers. You’re supposed to take them off and put them back on–on the beat. This is…

No Return, No Deposit

Eighty-year-old Jane Spence of Denver didn’t plan on dying. But when she caught a fatal case of pneumonia this past March, her lack of foresight resulted in her estate losing a $3,500 damage deposit she had put down at the Golden Orchard assisted-living home in Littleton. Golden Orchard, which offers…

Courthouse for Rent

The future looks bleak for what is perhaps the most unloved courthouse in Colorado. Empty for a decade now, the ninety-year-old Arapahoe County Courthouse sits on the east side of downtown Littleton, hemmed in by a jail and a decrepit office building and partially hidden by an asbestos-tainted addition. Aside…

Off Limits

Rocky Mountain guy: A hung jury left John Denver hanging Saturday night, when six Pitkin County residents couldn’t agree on the fate of the singer–charged with driving under the influence after he wrapped his car around a tree in Aspen’s Starwood subdivision three years ago. In defending his celebrity client,…

A Very Brady Plea

When Richard Brady pleaded guilty to second-degree murder last month in the death of security guard John Adamo, he was playing the odds: He could accept the plea bargain from the Denver District Attorney’s office or take the chance of losing his first-degree-murder trial and ending up with an automatic…

Counting Stars

The hardened baseball fan’s devotion to statistics–most home runs hit, most hot dogs eaten–has long since taken on the unearthly glow of religion. A thirsty man can no longer enter his corner saloon without being accosted by some bright-eyed wonder stuffed full of minutiae from The Baseball Encyclopedia–a glut of…

Raised From the Dead

It wasn’t so very long ago that Governor Roy Romer wanted to promote Colorado as the “best place to raise a child.” Just a few murders ago, in fact. The state couldn’t buy the attention that’s been focused on Colorado children lately–but it’s hardly the promotional coup that Romer envisioned…

Letters

Lust Horizons The only thing more horrifying than reading Scott Yates’s article about the Ava Owens case (“Little Boy Lust,” July 3) was reading John Lombardi’s letter about the article last week. I am appalled that anyone could think the Tran family looks at the situation as a “lottery win.”…

Con Heir

James Carey is in the hole again. He moves slowly into the visitors’ room, hands cuffed and tethered to his waist, his stride reduced to a shuffle by the shackles around his ankles. He sports a full head of hair, whiter than a new pair of Keds. A grin flashes…

Dripped Dry

When the Colorado Convention Center was dedicated on a spring day in 1990, the promises flew as fast and furious as a March snowstorm. Politicians who had spent years campaigning for the new center didn’t disguise their delight with the opening of the tenth largest convention center in the United…

Singing Like a Canary: The Birdman’s Caged Book

Charles Dudley Martin was just starting his law career when he came across the Thomas Gaddis book Birdman of Alcatraz. The Springfield, Missouri, attorney was so impressed by the story of Robert Stroud, convicted murderer turned bird researcher, that he wrote to a committee of Stroud’s associates that was campaigning…

Up the Creek

Get ready for a cutthroat battle. The Winter Park ski area wants to build a road on public land along a creek, saying it’s needed to evacuate injured skiers. Environmentalists say the unpaved road would be nothing less than a ski trail to some thrilling backcountry runs on the area…