
Sister Pact: ‘When You Develop Alzheimer’s, I’ll Take Care of You’
Robin McIntyre has an inherited genetic mutation that means she’ll almost certainly develop early onset Alzheimer’s. Her sister does not.

At Colorado’s Largest Online School, Students Weren’t Logging In
An Education Week investigation found that on any given day only one in four students at GOAL Academy used the school’s learning software.

Pioneering Colorado School Among First To Address Learning Differences
Havern School, which celebrates its 50th anniversary this year, was founded by nuns who studied interventions for kids with academic challenges.

Three Coloradans On Trump’s List For Supreme Court
They are Timothy Tymkovich, Chief Judge of the U.S. Court Appeals for the 10th Circuit, Neil Gorsuch, from that same Court and Allison Eid of the Colorado Supreme Court.

Fired Professor Says Community College Lowered Academic Standards
An adjunct professor at the Community College of Aurora claims he was fired this fall because he criticized new curriculum guidelines.

Got Your iPhone Wet? A Colorado Entrepreneur Has A Solution
A new company called TekDry has commercialized a technology which relies on metallic beads to rescue wet electronics.

A Bath Of Purple Bacteria May Save Colorado Toad
Scientists have found that bacteria from the toad’s own skin can protect them against a deadly fungal infection and say the same approach could protect other species as well.

Did Colorado’s 3rd Party Candidates Live Up To The Hype?
While the 3rd presidential candidates won more votes this year than in years past, they didn’t garner as many votes as earlier polls predicted.

VA Will Help Injured Veterans With Fertility Treatment
A Colorado veteran and his wife say the government’s decision to provide medical assistance for injured veterans who can’t have children means couples will have the chance to start families.

Meet “TrotBot,” A Denver Student’s SUV-Sized Robot
High school student Ben Vagle built TrotBot, which recently won three awards at the World Makers Faire, a national gathering for inventors in New York.

After Denver Writer’s Death, Friends Rally To Publish His 25 Novels
Gary Reilly wrote more than two dozen novels during his lifetime but none were published until after his death in 2011.

State’s Human Services Chief Answers Critics Of Juvenile Corrections Audit
Reggie Bicha responds to concerns about his handling of juvenile corrections and a home for people with intellectual disabilities.

Should What Happens In The Jury Room Stay In The Jury Room? The U.S. Supreme Court Considers A Colorado Case
The case of Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado calls into question the legal premise that juror secrecy is more important than racial bias.

Boulder Students’ Facebook Group Illustrates Growing Concern About Hate Crimes
Racist and anti-semitic rhetoric has been growing in Colorado and across the country, including a recent incident involving high school students in Boulder who formed a chat group on Facebook.

Debate: Should Voters Make It Harder To Amend Colorado’s Constitution?
Backers of Amendment 71 say it’s too easy to change Colorado’s constitution; opponents say amendments are the only way for citizens to make changes lawmakers won’t.

Our Poet Muses On The State Of Presidential Debates
Resident poet David Rothman has been thinking a lot about the 2016 presidential debates and about debates of years past. It prompted his latest composition “Let’s Have Real Debates Again.”