
Pacific coral may predict next spike in global temperatures
The coral reveals when Pacific trade winds slow, and when that happens next, the Earth may see a sudden rise in temperatures, according to a researcher in Boulder.

Denver police guidelines leave door open for racial profiling, ACLU says
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder recently announced new federal policing guidelines intended to end racial profiling. So far, the Denver police department hasn’t adopted them.

Is Anschutz’s Rocky Mountain News revival a ‘stalking horse’ for The Denver Post?
Could Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz resurrect the Rocky Mountain News? Or does he really want to buy The Denver Post?

Loud & Clear: Listeners react to coverage of ‘death with dignity’ legislation
“Colorado Matters” listeners chimed in to share their thoughts about whether those with terminal illnesses have a right to get help ending their lives.

Celebrities and Colorado: The next step in the mainstreaming of marijuana?
From Seth Rogen to Tommy Chong to Whoopi Goldberg, more celebrity names are going to pot.

Charlie Burrell, pioneer black musician in Colorado, releases memoir
When Charlie Burrell, one of the nation’s first African-American classical musicians, left the concert hall in Denver, his white colleagues went one way, he went another.

Colorado physician-assisted death bill supporters, opponents sound off
Some Colorado lawmakers want to give people like Charles Selsberg more options, but opponents say legalizing suicide is dangerous.

Rock’s icons, through the lens of a Denver photographer
From Mick Jagger to Keith Moon, Denver’s Dan Fong captured rock icons in their prime — even when he wasn’t supposed to be shooting. A gallery of his work is showing in Denver.

CU-Denver instructors get serious about having fun
Two university instructors say fun in our society is often suppressed because westerners are too obsessed with work.

Election to dissolve Bonanza, pop. 1, saves it instead
Bonanza has avoided the fate of the 43 other Colorado towns that went extinct in the past 10 years.


Colorado center helps Native American war veterans heal ‘wounded hearts’
Native American troops who faced combat get help from a CU public health center via teleconferences, and from their traditional ceremonies.

Federal lands employees across the West harassed, shot at, on the job
High Country News compiled records of rangers being harassed and assaulted, and found some suspects despise the federal government.

People with developmental disabilities pose as famous icons
Posing as icons from Babe Ruth to Marilyn Monroe, people with intellectual disabilities aim to break image stereotypes.

Traveling band of ‘snow farmers’ prepares Colorado ski slopes
Snowmaker Mark Eldring loves his work, though it often means he’s sitting alone at night on cold mountainsides around the world

To fix child poverty, Utah looks at the entire family
An intergenerational approach to ending child poverty is just beginning in Colorado, but Utah has working at it for two years.

Colorado’s veterans memorials inspires journalist’s road trip
From locations on a popular ski mountain to a stretch of prairie east of Denver, the state’s veterans memorials are meant to inspire visitors and remember those who served.