Ladies of the Brown: The semi-secret history of a great hotel

Evalyn Walsh McLean was famous for the blowouts she threw on short notice at the Brown Palace for Denver’s society swells — ice elephants filled with caviar, Bollinger ’26, dance bands, the works. But in the depths of the Depression she took the Hope diamond to pawnshops to try to…

Bill Ritter’s commutations draw praise, bitter rebukes

Only days after I posted a few remarks about Bill Ritter’s play-it-safe approach to pardons and his reluctance to commute excessive sentences, the departing governor delivered a slew of bolder pardons and even a few commutations, stunning some grateful convicts and raising hackles elsewhere. Ritter won’t have to worry about…

Beaver Lady Sherri Tippie explains how to give a dam, save a river

Twenty-five years ago, hairdresser Sherri Tippie persuaded Aurora officials to let her trap beaver that were gnawing trees on a golf course and relocate rather than kill them. Since that first trapping session, ecologists and water authorities have increasingly come to see beaver as something other than annoying rodents who…

Crocs blocked: How one wrong word cost the company $230,000

Crocs, the Niwot-based maker of brightly hued, comfy-ugly clown shoes, has had more than its share of PR disasters, from the hysterical reports of Crocs-shod kids getting toes nipped in escalators to the savage reviews from fashionistas to a wacky endorsement from Donald Trump. But all of that’s nothing, compared…

Tom Tancredo to start yakking on “Tea Party Radio”

The gin-soaked novelist who declared that there are no second acts in American lives never caught the many acts of Tom Tancredo — former U.S. Representative, presidential hopeful, gubernatorial spoiler…and now late-night talk show host. Starting Monday at 10 p.m., the Tom Tancredo Show will offer a nightly serving of…

Douglas Bruce, fined and MIA

An administrative law judge has slapped an $11,300 fine on a charity set up by anti-tax crusader Douglas Bruce–the latest chapter in the murky maneuvering behind three tax-slashing amendments that opponents spent millions to defeat this fall. Bruce, of course, didn’t bother to attend the hearing on the matter two…

Bill Ritter plays it safe on pardons

In their last days in office, some governors have been known to make bold moves in the criminal justice arena, denouncing ruinous policies and commuting long sentences as a way of highlighting unfair biases in the system. As demonstrated by the modest set of pardons he doled out last week,…

LEGO my library: Imagine Rigney’s cool homage to Michael Graves

Kids do the darnedest things with LEGO bricks and games, as Joel Warner pointed out in this feature last January. But few projects are quite the labor of love involved in one fifteen-year-old devotee’s astonishing replica of the Denver Public Library on Broadway: 7,000 bricks, two solid weeks of full-time…

Earl Reum: Remembering the funniest guy in town

You could groan at all his time-tested jokes and silly props — the red nose, the garish ties, the tiny kazoo and corny sight gags — and still end up howling with laughter and holding your aching sides. Any way you look at it, Earl Reum, the dynamic Denver educator…

Rescue dogs now top grads with jobs in service industry

In these dark economic times, it’s a relief to learn that at least some hard-working students are moving straight from graduation to immediate and steady employment in a booming industry. Qualifications: Four legs, good communication skills, familiarity with the demands of the service sector, dogged determination — and a big…