Below the Belt

Former Durango mayor Jeff Morrissey is accused of striking a low blow in the fight for a controversial southern Colorado water project that he supports. As a result, he faces two counts of disorderly conduct for allegedly making lewd comments to two women who oppose the Animas-La Plata water project…

A Crush on Orange

It ain’t no bandwagon. Ralph and Jimmy Garcia remember the day the Broncos got rid of their vertical striped socks in a public burning at training camp. They recall Lionel Taylor’s 100 pass receptions in 1961 and the moment when Jeremiah Castille fell on The Fumble at the three-yard line…

Political Animals

Enough. By the time he was on the homestretch of his 1,200-mile tour of the Fourth Congressional District, independent candidate Wes McKinley had had enough of Marvin the mule. Especially since the Greeley Tribune had passed over both the name-party candidates–Democrat Guy Kelley and Republican victor Bob Schaefer–in order to…

Letters

The Die’s Typecast Steve Jackson’s Bobby Hornbuckle profile (“Last Call,” October 31) was probably the worst article ever written in the very galaxy. Why? Because Bobby’s always been a monster bluesman, the baddest for miles around, but you slimebags wait until he’s dying to give him some press! Why weren’t…

Last Call

It’s been eighteen months since Bobby Hornbuckle sat in the same muted yellow light that now filters through the windows of Ziggie’s Saloon, talking about his battle with hepatitis and the lifestyle that had given him the disease. Heroin. Needles. Cocaine. Playing and living the blues. “If you want to…

Unfinished Business

In past years, the Regional Transportation District board elections have had all the political excitement and heart-pounding suspense of a Ross Perot infomercial. But this fall’s slate offers more drama than most congressional races; candidates have squared off over the future of Denver’s light-rail system, swapped insults over the accomplishments…

The Club Gets Drubbed

Tammara Keisler didn’t mind picking up after the members of the Colorado Arlberg Club. But the self-described “surfer girl” from Southern California thought it was totally bogus when the wealthy ski society fired her from an $11-an-hour housekeeper’s job to keep her from collecting a $500 bonus. So the 27-year-old…

Off Limits

Air today, gone tomorrow: Republicans aren’t the only ones who’ve been converging on San Diego recently. A bevy of nine Denver public servants had a grand old party of their own in the California sun last week, jetting southwest for a four-day regional conference of the Airports Council International trade…

The Vision Thing

Organizers are touting the upcoming Rocky Mountain Marian Conference, a three-day paean to visions of the Virgin Mary, as a chance for Catholics to strengthen their love for the Virgin and reaffirm their faith in God. But some Catholics are up in arms because one of the keynote speakers, Ivan…

Antlers of a Dilemma

In April 1994 rancher John Avery of southwestern Colorado noticed that one of his elk herd was ill. Now, more than two years later, Avery himself is feeling both sick and angry. His herd’s been quarantined, several elk have had their throats cut or have been shot to death, an…

Cowboys and Quarterbacks

Ex-altar boys built like beer trucks still go to Notre Dame. The future Nobel laureates are at Stanford, absorbing Plato. Those who crave ice cream and river rafting are bonding with Kid Rick up in Boulder–and calling home on the free telephones. Condominium-sized sprinters who live for the scent of…

Letters

Dis Honor Alan Prendergast’s October 24 article, “Motion to Dismiss,” made reference to the divorce action involving a local attorney whose estranged wife was dying of cancer. I performed a great deal of the research for the respondent in that case. Never in all the courtrooms where I have assisted…

The Rogue of Five Points

The Count of Five Points is playing a tape of himself reading Edgar Allan Poe in a sonorous voice: “From childhood’s hour I have not been As others were–I have not seen As others saw–I could not bring My passions from a common spring– From the same source I have…

Motion to Dismiss

Attorney Tom Handley remembers the case: a hand-to-hand drug deal behind Argonaut Liquors on East Colfax. Another lawyer in his office had worked out a routine plea bargain with the prosecutor that would have given their client a low-level felony conviction and probation. But before the deal could be sealed,…

Off Limits

Harass is on the line: A lawsuit filed last week in federal district court won’t be the October surprise of this year’s Senate campaign, but it does target Democratic candidate Tom Strickland’s vulnerable flank: the powerful law firm of Brownstein, Hyatt, Farber & Strickland. If there’s an important issue in…

Fete Unknown

Perry Ayers, founder of the Denver Black Arts Festival, says he’s “the ultimate optimist,” and why not? In the past ten years he’s built the DBAF into one of the largest black-arts events in the nation–and sometimes he’s had to stage it on little more than a wing and a…

She Fired, They Fired

It’s been five years, one federal trial and at least $30,000 since the Denver Sheriff’s Department fired deputy Trina Burks-Richardson for allegedly going trigger-happy in a Texas town. But the tortuous legal proceedings–including a federal judge’s surprising backtracking–may end soon, if not necessarily happily, for the city and its taxpayers…

Horse of Another Color

Think Ross Perot is a long shot to win the White House a week from Tuesday? How about the Green Party candidate for president? Or the Libertarian? How about Mrs. Grundy of the Civic Purity League? Well, to tell the truth, they’ve all got a lot better chance in their…

Letters

Witness for the Prosecution Andy Van De Voorde’s October 17 story about the Denver DA’s race, “Trial by Ire,” was excellent but may have missed a couple of the real issues. First, the financial necessities and politics of Denver and Colorado predicate a plea-bargain rate that is at a rock-bottom…

The Unknown Sailors

Three men pause on a path that winds through Fort Logan National Cemetery. On the fresh-mowed lawn before them, row after row of uniform headstones rise like bone-white exclamation points, marching up and over the hill. All three men have friends and former comrades-in-arms buried on these grounds. Someday two…

Trial by Ire

Every politician loves a parade, but Bill Ritter and Craig Silverman were marching to a different tune last month in Montbello. Incumbent Denver DA Ritter and his challenger both showed up with throngs of supporters at the northside community’s thirtieth-anniversary parade. It was a feel-good event that provided an unlikely…

The Boston Chicken Party

For the past year, a Minneapolis housepainter has been using his weapon of choice, the fax machine, to bombard the public and media with thousands of fliers decrying Boston Chicken’s lack of environmental awareness. But don’t mistake Frank Erickson for just an environmentalist. He considers himself a modern-day crusader. Erickson’s…