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A large, soft pretzel with a small packet of salt and baking instructions. A set of personalized flashcards. A signed letter from a mayor. A beanie. A bucket hat. Some socks. These are all things ...
1.Elon’s Dusk: Dark Money loses, mostly, in low-turnout, wildcard Council race. With one possible exception, dark money lost big in the April 1 City Council election — despite what was at ...
The open-air craze reached its height when the Nordrach Ranch sanatorium opened in 1901 at the base of Austin Bluffs. Patients were housed in 72 Gardiner tents constructed on a series of nine ...
EXPANDED OFFERINGS Other downtown creative businesses are using the state grant funds to help bolster their collections and, in turn, more deeply enrich the arts community in the city. Auric ...
On March 7, a nine-member panel from the Urban Land Institute’s Advisory Services Program presented suggestions that centered around turning the North Nevada Avenue Corridor into a community ...
The Colorado Springs City Clerk’s office said that ballot counting was completed on April 2 but will allow for military and overseas ballots to be received by 5 p.m. on April 9 as well as for ...
Colorado Springs has some of these. Indeed, The American Planning Association of Colorado named Tejon Street as the “Great Streets” 2020 winner of the Great Places Colorado program. But we ...
Dave Donelson did the city a favor voting “no on Amara”. A flagpole annexation almost two miles away from City limits. Fountain wasn’t able to annex due to water supplies. The developers ...
Now in its fifth or sixth iteration, The Odd Show is a variety show for the weird held every few years. The idea came to Yves Sturdevant when she learned that her friend Alicia Cover-Vanlandingham ...
March 18, 2020, was my 18th birthday and the day Gov. Jared Polis closed schools in Colorado. I don’t remember much about the day itself, beyond a cake of chocolate, strawberries and cream.
Shane Lory, local singer-songwriter of the ever-evolving band Patchwork Jack, looks the part — working behind the bar at Lulu’s, a shaggy-haired, talented troubadour with a honey-eyed gaze.
Editor’s note: This is the second installment of a column from John Harner, professor of geography at University of Colorado Colorado Springs and the author of “Profiting from the Peak ...
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