MAMA’S BOY

part 1 of 2 Teresa Schoepflin used to dream of returning triumphant, college diploma in hand, to teach at the rural consolidated school she’d attended in tiny Mulhall, Oklahoma. That dream seemed about to come true in 1983, when she was awarded a basketball scholarship to Oklahoma State University in…

OFF LIMITS

You be the judge: Mayor Wellington Webb’s appointment of Claudia Jordan to the Denver County Court bench won universal raves–except, perhaps, from a handful of prosecutorial types who’d come up against Jordan during her five years as a deputy state public defender. But the course of Jordan’s swearing in was…

THE CRUCIAL FOURTH WEEK

That little punch-up the other night in Barcelona meant nothing, of course. Still, there were a few surprises: No one poisoned Al Davis’s paella. Denver’s defensive backs failed to plant a bomb on the Raiders’ team plane. The Raiders didn’t burn Denver deep on the second play of the game…

RAZING HELL

Fighting through a wave of protest in 1987, the owners of Deep Rock Water Company demolished two century-old homes in the nationally registered Curtis Park Historic District. So when Deep Rock purchased a three-home piece of land in that same neighborhood two months ago, some residents experienced deja vu. Several…

TROUBLE IN THE ‘HOOD

Last year, in the midst of Denver’s “Summer of Violence,” Mayor Wellington Webb took several steps to help stem the flow of blood on city streets. One was beefing up the “Neighborhood Watch” program with civilian employees, who could overcome mistrust of the police in high-crime areas and help organize…

LETTERS

Jock in the Pulpit Who needs Bill McCartney when you can worship Kenny Be? His July 27 Worst-Case Scenario, “Promise Keepers’ Male Order Merchandise,” was brilliant! We are not worthy! Terry Keating Denver Kenny Be, you’ve done it again! Many kudos for the comical and well-deserved stick-beating you’ve administered to…

THE NURSE WAS SCRUBBED

Accountants do it when they crunch numbers on their relatives’ tax returns at no cost. Lawyers do it when they handle a friend’s legal advice for free. Car mechanics do it when they perform a valve job on a girlfriend’s car, no charge. When it comes to doctors and nurses…

BAD MEDICINE

part 1 of 2 Kayla Moonwatcher remembers putting the finishing touches on the sweat-lodge altar. It’s perfect, she thought, as she looked around the field outside Lyons. Just right for the most important day of my life. In three days she would be adopted there by her spiritual mentor, Oscar…

THE $1 MILLION MAN

Denver Mayor Wellington Webb’s Safe City Summit began last fall with a simple goal: to keep youth violence in check during the summer of 1994 by giving nonprofit agencies a cool $1 million in taxpayer-funded grants. But the summer of 1994 is more than half over. And after a series…

BAD MEDICINE

part 2 of 2 Avis Little Eagle joined Indian Country Today fresh out of journalism school. She is Hunkpapa Lakota, the people of medicine man Sitting Bull, from the Standing Rock reservation near Little Eagle, South Dakota. At first Little Eagle did the usual small stories handed to young reporters…

OFF LIMITS

Ardor in the court: This month’s sexual harassment suit against cowboy-booted lawyer Phil Lowery put that dull stuff in L.A. to shame. One of the most delicious moments came when a former lawyer with Lowery’s firm, John Giduck, accused one of the plaintiffs of “unprofessional” behavior. Veteran court-watchers may recall…

THE HEROES OF ’69

Amid the current outpouring of nostalgia about those American footprints in the lunar dust, the observations of former Apollo astronaut Alan Bean seem particularly apt. Bean recently told a magazine interviewer that whenever he looks at Norman Rockwell’s painting of Neil Armstrong’s small step/giant leap, it strikes him as a…

GETTING TESTY

To AIDS activists in Denver, the reaction from Colorado Springs was typical: The only county health director in the state to object to a particular policy on AIDS testing that they support was the guy down in–where else?–conservative El Paso County. Coming from the home of Colorado for Family Values…

FRIENDLY SKIES

When it comes to dealing with the city government and Denver International Airport, businessman King Harris has always had a Midas touch. A company Harris controls has been given almost $20 million worth of work at DIA under a single inspection contract over the past few years. It’s reaped millions…

LETTERS

Jock Bitch Regarding Michael Roberts’s “Jocks of All Tirades” in the July 13 issue: Westword’s gentle treatment of Lewis and Floorwax is pathetic. Come on, theirs is the most misogynistic “show” anytime, anywhere, anyplace. Have you noticed that they play the version of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Gimme Three Steps” that features…

WITH A SONG IN HIS HEART

In the editorial offices of the Ranchland News in Simla, Monty Gaddy, whose CB radio is going wild with news of grass fires in the surrounding country, thinks instead of the fabulous hook that came to him in the shower this morning. “I get great lines in the shower,” he…

KEES TO THE KINGDOM

I take up a station near Romance and Mystery in the Denver Public Library, Central Branch. It is only eight feet from a water fountain and a stone’s throw from the elevators. I sit at a round table scored with the pocketknife blades of the ages, thinking about Weldon Kees,…

FALLING DOWN

When Jeff North first arrived at the Denver law offices of Baker & Hostetler in July 1992, he must have seemed like quite a catch. Barely 43, North had been wooed away from the upper echelons of the Resolution Trust Corporation, the federal agency charged with cleaning up the nation’s…

WELDON, WELL DONE

Even as you read this, a very librarian process is going on. Under the leadership of the Denver Public Library’s director of marketing, Pat Hodapp, a corps of assistants is transcribing the entries to the “Words for All Time” contest. “Each will be the same,” explains Hodapp. “Typed, so that…

OFF LIMITS

The wrecking crew: Coors Field continues to go up, but a 108-year-old building a stone’s throw from the new ballpark apparently is about to go down–to make room for a parking garage. The North Denver Transfer and Storage Building at 2125 Market Street, the first building in the ballpark neighborhood…

ONE MORE STRIKE AND YOU’RE OUT

If the beach volleyball season gets wiped out, you won’t hear a peep out of me. If the monster-truck drivers decide to walk, so be it. Even if ice dancing melts down tomorrow morning, the pro bowlers pack up ball, bag and shoes at noon, and they cancel the rest…

LETTERS

Secret Ceremonies Thank you, Patricia Calhoun, for reporting the hush-hush national antigay conference hosted by Colorado for Family Values this past May in Colorado Springs (“This Means War,” July 6). Shame on the major daily papers for not covering this important meeting. Regardless of one’s sexual orientation or religion, we…