Twilight Thursdays starting tonight in Forest Park
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
ST. LOUIS - There's another 'Twilight Thursday' concert Thursday night.The shows are at the Missouri History Museum. The free concerts are every Thursday night this month from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Goat senior prank ends Missouri athlete's competition Thursday night's show is called 'Funkology 101' including the songs of George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, the Ohio Players, and more.Organizers said the best way to get there is to take MetroLink.Ted’s Montana Grill closes Larimer Square location after 20 years
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
After 20 years in Larimer Square, Ted’s Montana Grill has closed its saloon doors.Kristie Mansur, the director of operations at Ted’s Montana Grill in Larimer Square, said the Ohio-based chain was not able to reach an extended lease agreement with its landlord, North Carolina-based Asana Partners, which purchased the Denver landmark property for $92.49 million in 2020.“We were looking for a long-term lease at a rent that we felt was fair, and they were not able to offer that to us,” Mansur said. “That was a flagship location for us, so it was with very heavy hearts that we had to make this decision.”Ted’s Montana Grill, which opened at 1401 Larimer St. in 2003, had its last day of service on May 15.“The building was very authentic to our brand. It actually was a turn-of-the-century saloon, and our restaurants are fashioned out of Montana, turn-of-the-century saloons,” Mansur said. We would have loved to continue to operate on Larimer Square.”Related ArticlesRestaurants, Food and Dri...Editorial: Denver needs “killer instinct” to keep the Broncos on historic Mile High land
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
The anecdote goes that Stan Kroenke visited the 289-acre future home of the SOFI stadium in California, fell in love with the Hollywood Park setting, and set in motion a $5 billion investment to create a modern marvel of a stadium serving two NFL football teams and a money-making redevelopment of surrounding land he scooped up.As the Los Angeles Times reported in a detailed retrospective of how SOFI came to be, the competitors for the stadium – a proposal in Carson and one in downtown Los Angeles – lacked the “killer instinct” and lost out to Kroenke’s vision in Inglewood.Perhaps that same killer instinct was missing in Oakland when the city lost the Raiders to a heavily taxpayer-funded stadium in Las Vegas, the Oakland A’s to Las Vegas where lawmakers could vote this week on a $400 million gift for a stadium on the Strip, and the Warriors to the $1 billion Chase Center in San Francisco.Denverites must dig deep — from the new mayor and city council all the way to the bar...Mountainfilm in Telluride wants Denverites to join 45th annual documentary festival
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
Telluride’s Mountainfilm festival will celebrate a milestone 45th anniversary this Memorial Day weekend, showcasing more than 100 documentary features and short films alongside talks and workshops led by their creators and stars.According to festival director Suzan Beraza, programming has finally rebounded after transitioning to a virtual festival experience in 2020 and managing a limited capacity due to COVID-19 restrictions in 2021. But even as the festival’s offerings have returned to pre-pandemic levels, ticket sales so far have not.“We’ve been sold out in recent years prior to COVID, but not this year,” she said. “I’ve been so curious about that.”This trend is hardly unique to the festival. Movie-going tanked in 2020 due the COVID-19 pandemic and is recently on the rise, but box office revenues are still well below 2019, according to Variety.Beraza suspects the cost of travel to and lodging in Telluride may be deterring some regulars from flying in, but she hopes folks fr...After success at Camp Hale, Colorado lawmakers push for more federal land designations
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
When President Joe Biden arrived in Colorado last fall to designate Camp Hale a national monument, it marked a peak for a decade-long effort to expand Colorado’s public lands.Seven months later and some of Colorado’s top Democrats are hoping it was more like a false summit.Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper and Rep. Joe Neguse, all Democrats, are set to re-introduce the Colorado Outdoor Recreation and Economy, or CORE, Act this Congressional session. The bill has passed the House of Representatives multiple times, but always stalled in the Senate. The lawmakers announced the renewed effort Wednesday.Previous versions included the Camp Hale-Continental Divide protections. Even with the national monument designation, which protects about 54,000 acres of high country, the CORE Act seeks to add about 400,000 acres of protected lands.“President Biden’s actions on Camp Hale and the Thompson Divide are a victory for Colorado’s environment, for our $10 ...Why Crystal Dam in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison is releasing billions of gallons of water
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
Billions of gallons of water are rushing this week out of the Blue Mesa Reservoir on Colorado’s Western Slope, through the Black Canyon of the Gunnison and ultimately into the Colorado River.For the first time in a few years, Colorado has had enough water to spare. Officials at the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation have turned up the faucet at Blue Mesa for an eight-day release that began last week and will gradually increase in volume until Thursday when it ends.At any given moment, thousands of cubic feet are flowing through the series of three dams that make up the Blue Mesa Reservoir system. At the release’s peak, the dams will release about 7,200 cubic feet of water – nearly 54,000 gallons – per second.“That’s what’s going by every single second,” Grant Watson, plant supervisor at the Crystal Dam and Power Plant, said. “Not a day, not an hour, but every second.”That much water could fill nearly five Olympic swimming pools within a minute.Colorado received so much snow this winter that...Fashion illustrator and artist James “Jim” Howard dies at 92
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
James B. “Jim” Howard, a fashion illustrator for more than four decades whose work was showcased in a Denver Art Museum exhibit, died April 21 in Lakewood. He was 92.“Drawn to Glamour: Fashion Illustrations by Jim Howard,” was displayed at the art museum’s Hamilton Building from March 25 through July 22, 2018.“Jim was in the gallery (of his DAM show) regularly, always impeccably dressed in bow and bowler hat, engaging with visitors and enthusiastically sharing the stories behind his masterful illustrations, which were iconic to the fashion world and department store industry throughout the 1950s, 60s, 70s and 80s,” said Christoph Heinrich, director DAM, in a written statement. “His show was a fresh and innovative approach to a genre that disappeared when photography was taking over in the magazines and newspapers. Jim’s skill for observation and attention to details and aesthetics was amazing; his show was a delightful walk down memory lane, which...Kafer: Colorado’s education leaders take a wrong turn on capitalism and religion
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
Some public school leaders deserve detention.Earlier this month in the city of tolerance, the vice president of the Boulder Valley School District, Lisa Sweeney-Miran, lambasted a local business on social media for allowing the Well Church to meet at its food truck park –The Rayback Collective. She equated the church’s Biblically-based beliefs on sexuality with violence and condemned the business for allowing this “hate group” on the property. Since early April, Sweeney-Miran has used the bully pulpit to promote her boycott of the food truck park until it severs ties with the church.“You’re a hateful (fill in the blank) ist” is the new “you’re a witch” in the crucible of public discourse. Targets can expect to have their reputation torched as accusers seek to drive away business. While the target burns other would-be heretics are dissuaded from saying anything contrary to the prevailing orthodoxy.We can expect this inquisitional behavior from the cynical and the demented but we sho...Man wanted in connection with teen girl’s fentanyl death in Riverside County
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
Authorities are searching for a man wanted in connection to the fentanyl-related death of a teenage girl in Riverside County.On Aug. 21, 2022, Palm Desert deputies responded to reports of an unresponsive female in the 15000 block of Via Quedo in Desert Hot Springs.Despite lifesaving measures, the 17-year-old girl was pronounced dead at the scene, said the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office.Investigators discovered the teen had overdosed on fentanyl. The case was taken over by the Riverside County Sheriff's Overdose Death Investigations and Narcotics Unit.Over the next few months, authorities identified the suspect as Michael Garcia, 22, a Desert Hot Springs resident.Authorities have not been able to locate Garcia and have issued a warrant for his arrest. Charges have also been filed in his case. Body discovered in San Bernardino County “Additional suspects have been identified and further arrests are anticipated,” officials said.Anyone who may have seen Garcia or knows of his where...Demand has surged for California’s free school meals. But with a drop in extra federal funding, can Bay Area kitchens keep up?
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:30:22 GMT
When the flood of students rushing into the cafeteria eased to a trickle, Maria Darnell — the kitchen manager at Alameda’s Lincoln Middle School — texted her boss.“524 lunches today!” Darnell wrote, along with a smiling, but sweating, emoji.It had been nine months since California began providing free meals for its public school students, no matter families’ income level. Even so, Darnell was still shocked by how much the program had changed demand. That day, her staff had served 230% more meals than their average before the pandemic, on top of a 530% jump in the number of daily breakfasts.Alameda Unified School District Food and Nutrition Services kitchen manager, Maria Darnell, left, and cafeteria staff Maria Carter, right, work in the Lincoln Middle School kitchen to prepare lunch service on Monday, May 1 in Alameda. The staff has served 230% more meals than their average before the pandemic, on top of a 530% jump in the number of daily breakfasts. (Aric Crabb/Bay Are...Latest news
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