Broadway Beach House opens in Des Moines. What to know about the city's new pool club When you think of Iowa, beaches might not be the first thing you imagine. But the Broadway Beach House is bringing a bit of Florida to Des Moines. 07/3/2024 - 3:41 am | View Link
You can now drink up with brunch in W. Des Moines: City OKs bottomless booze, with strings Although some restaurants and bars in West Des Moines already offered bottomless drink specials, they weren't legal until Monday. Brunch responsibly. 07/3/2024 - 12:04 am | View Link
The 12 biggest restaurant openings coming to the Des Moines metro this spring Big restaurant openings such as Table 128, Hugo's, Prime & Providence and Wilson's Orchard come to the Des Moines metro this spring. 07/2/2024 - 2:29 am | View Link
New docuseries highlighting Des Moines' oldest gay bar airs next month The show explores what it was like for the bar's founder and other LGBTQ+ community members to grow up in a predominantly conservative state, serve in Vietnam and survive the AIDS epidemic while ... 06/18/2024 - 1:40 pm | View Link
What a new docuseries about The Blazing Saddle reveals about Des Moines' LGBTQ history OutTV is set to air a six-episode docuseries on The Blazing Saddle, Des Moines' oldest gay bar and a community fixture for LGBTQ Iowans. 06/18/2024 - 12:02 am | View Link
World War II Air Force veteran Major Richard Olson never discussed his military service with his son, Dick Olson.
“I didn’t have all that much time to be asking these questions while he was at home,” Dick, a Westminster resident, told the Denver Post in an interview. “He was a distant father, and I imagine a lot of that came from what happened to him during the war and in service.”
After Richard died, Dick turned to military archives, old photos and interviews with the surviving members of his father’s B-24 Liberator airplane crew to learn about the veteran’s journey.
How’s your knowledge of U. S. history? Take the quiz below to find out.
Source: InsideSources.com
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A Denver judge has thrown out a lawsuit that state regulators filed against an investment broker and signaled she will do the same to their case against an Indian restaurant.
In a setback for the agency, Judge Sarah Wallace determined the Colorado Division of Securities can sue only people and companies who committed investment fraud within the past five years, rejecting the division’s argument that it is immune from statutes of limitations.
In mid-April, the Division of Securities sued the securities broker Michael Bissonnette as well as Bombay Group, which operates Saucy Bombay on East Colfax Avenue.
Five Lone Tree residents are suing the city over the noise from a nearby recreation center’s pickleball courts.
The residents — Mark Goodman, Richard Campbell, Donna Campbell, William Fornia and Matthew Troyer — filed a lawsuit Thursday, saying the courts at the Lone Tree Recreation Center disrupt neighbors’ “quiet enjoyment of their homes and outdoor spaces.”
The residents are asking the Douglas County District Court to order the city and district to shut down the courts until they construct a “soundproof structure” around them.
“(The filing residents) bring this suit to protect a public good, namely, the ability of Plaintiffs and other residents of the Community to enjoy the quiet use of their homes and avoid negative health impacts caused by unreasonable exposure to noise,” the suit reads.
A life-sized version of Monopoly is kicking off its “Travel Edition” tour from Denver this fall, marking its U. S. debut after a popular run in London. The escape room-like experience substitutes actual people for the Scottie dogs, tiny cars and thimbles industrialists that usually populate the board in the real estate fortune game, which was first introduced in 1935.
They roll dice and play aspects of the game while wandering through immersive rooms and activities.