
Former U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords Backs New Colorado Gun Owners For Safety Coalition
Giffords became an advocate for stricter gun laws after she was shot 8 years ago at a political event in Tucson.

Complaints Over Rowdy Partiers Could Revoke The Airbnb License Of This Denver Manor
Communities across Colorado are grappling with how to manage short-term rentals like Airbnbs.

Tribute for Mason Lowe, Bull Rider Who Died, To Be Held Wednesday At National Western Stock Show
Lowe collapsed at a competition at the stock show after he was thrown from a bull that then stepped on his chest. He was 25 and ranked 18th in the world in bull riding.

JeffCO, Home Of The Federal Center, Leads The State In Shutdown Unemployment Claims
Since the shutdown began, federal workers in Colorado have filed more than 2,000 claims. They make up more than 20 percent of unemployment claims filed since the shutdown began.

How This Park Ranger Survived Being Injured And Trapped In A Blizzard On Mount Whitney
Rocky Mountain National Park ranger Jean Muenchrath chronicled her ordeal and recovery in a memoir, “If I Live Until Morning.”

After An Emergency Landing, This Air Force Academy-Alum Astronaut Will Soon Blast Off Again
NASA astronaut Nick Hague is a graduate of and former instructor at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs.

Struggling With Vertigo? Try This Colorado Doctor’s ‘Half Somersault Maneuver’
Dr. Carol Foster studies vertigo at the University of Colorado’s School of Medicine and recently wrote “Overcoming Positional Vertigo.”

Advocates Petition For 30-Year-Old Rocky Flats Investigation Records To Be Unsealed
The documents may have evidence of residual plutonium contamination and other ongoing environmental dangers.

Why More Than 250,000 Acres Of Public Lands In Colorado Aren’t Actually Public
The answer lies in how railroads were built across the American West.

Blood Tests Show Elevated Chemical Levels For El Paso Residents Living With Contaminated Water
Preliminary results from the Colorado School of Mines and the Colorado School of Public Health research were shared with residents Thursday night.

A New Tattoo Prototype From A CU Engineer Goes More Than Skin Deep
Carson Bruns is developing a UV- and heat-sensitive tattoo ink that can detect a fever and potentially other health conditions in the future.

What’s Happening To That Fleet Of Volkswagen Cars On I-25?
Hundreds of cars have been neatly parked in rows next to the Pikes Peak International Raceway for years. But now the lot is a third empty.

In An Age Of Tiny Homes, A Denver Author Writes About Growing Up In ‘Trailer Trash’
Angie Cavallari grew up in mobile home parks her parents owned in Florida.

Archaeologists Are Studying Colorado Springs’ Founding Father By Digging Through His Trash
General William Jackson Palmer’s trash has become researchers’ treasure as they sift through a Garden of the Gods dig site.

Why People Are Honoring This Colorado Lynching Victim With A Soil Ceremony
Preston Porter, Jr., a 16-year-old African American boy, was gruesomely murdered 118 years ago.

What It Takes To Be A Ralphie Runner At CU’s Folsom Field
Not just anyone can race down a football field alongside a real-life buffalo, at 20 miles per hour, after all.