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Sat, 09/26/2015 - 3:00am
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Lindsey Vonn will make her return to professional skiing at age 40 this weekend in the FIS Fall Festival at Copper Mountain, Colorado. She’ll compete in Downhills and Super-G on Saturday and Sunday, respectively, according to U. S. Ski Team head coach Paul Kristofic. Vonn’s last race was in 2019 — when she claimed bronze at the World Championships in Sweden — but her goal seems to be to return to the sport’s top level: the World Cup.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareCourtland Sutton stood at his locker Monday night and lavished praise on his former teammate. Cleveland receiver Jerry Jeudy had just gone nuclear on the Broncos to the tune of 235 yards and a touchdown, though Sutton got the last laugh in a 41-32 Denver win. “He shined really bright when the lights were the brightest,” Sutton said of Jeudy.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareA stabbing at the Salvation Army Crossroads Center in Denver’s RiNo district left one person wounded Thursday night, according to police. Related Articles Crime and Public Safety | Can Denver solve homelessness? Mayor says progress — despite hiccups — shows that “the formula is quite clear.” Crime and Public Safety | Jury awards $1 million to Denver homeless man beaten, dragged from lobby of luxury apartments Crime and Public Safety | Single moms find stability and then a way forward with Sacred Heart House Crime and Public Safety | Denver isn’t keeping homeless shelters safe or tracking city’s spending on program, audit finds Crime and Public Safety | Key Aurora homeless shelter to pivot from serving single adults to sheltering families Officers responded to the stabbing shortly after 7 p.m.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareA Denver man opened fire on a vehicle and its five occupants while speeding on Interstate 25 near Lone Tree earlier this week, according to police. Related Articles Crime and Public Safety | Opinion: The rage and glee that followed a CEO’s killing should ring all alarms Crime and Public Safety | The Latest: Hunt for the gunman who killed UnitedHealthcare’s CEO heads into its third day Crime and Public Safety | Man arrested for attempted murder after shooting behind Denver’s Coors Field, police say Crime and Public Safety | Tren de Aragua members wanted by Aurora police arrested in New York, feds say Crime and Public Safety | Broncos waive WR Josh Reynolds, ending Denver tenure after five games played The driver of the other vehicle told Lone Tree police dispatchers that the suspect — Oscar Lozoya-Borrego, 27, of Denver — was driving aggressively and flashed a handgun before firing one shot into their front passenger-side bumper. The shooting happened Tuesday morning on southbound I-25 near County Line Road, and Loyoza-Borrego was traveling about 80 mph when he shot at the vehicle, police said in a news release. Officers used cellphone video captured by occupants of the vehicle and nearby surveillance cameras to track down the suspect’s vehicle, which was found in west Parker with a handgun. Lozoya-Borrego was booked into the Douglas County jail Tuesday night on suspicion of five counts of attempted first-degree murder.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareAfter a decade of pouring some of the most innovative beers on Denver’s east side, Fiction Beer Company said Friday that it will close at the end of the year. The books and literature-themed brewery was founded in September 2014 by Ryan and Christa Kilpatrick, whose love of reading gave name to the business and its beers, including Old Bums & Beat Cowboys, a pale ale inspired by Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road,” and Madame Psychosis, a hazy, New England-style IPA named for David Foster Wallace’s “Infinite Jest.” The bar at Fiction, 7101 E.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareWELLINGTON, New Zealand — Three mountain climbers — a guide from Colorado, another American and a Canadian — missing for five days on Aoraki, New Zealand’s tallest peak, are believed to have died in a fall, the authorities said Friday. The men’s bodies were not found. But based on footprints glimpsed in the snow during an aerial survey, and items believed to belong to them retrieved from the slopes this week, the search for them has ended, Police Area Commander Inspector Vicki Walker told reporters. The Americans — Kurt Blair, 56, from Durango and Carlos Romero, 50, of California — were certified alpine guides, according to the website of the nonprofit American Mountain Guides Association.
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