Editorial: Gov. Stitt should renew the mutually beneficial Cherokee Nation tag compacts A welcomed change to the contentious tribal-state relationship that has developed would be extending the existing Cherokee Nation tag compacts, which have been working since 2002, the editorial states ... 03/28/2024 - 10:44 pm | View Link
Editorial, 3/29: York facility gets needed money, now needs plan The Legislature has set aside $2.5 million for repairs of the water system at the Nebraska Correctional Center for Women in York, addressing, at last, concerns over the appearance, taste, ... 03/28/2024 - 5:55 pm | View Link
Transcript: Future of Work: A New Innovation Playbook When it comes to complicated tasks, things that I would call "long-running chains" or sequences of tasks that need to be done, oftentimes what's best is to use the tool in its form today to help you ... 03/28/2024 - 6:32 am | View Link
Tony Heard — a journalist’s journalist, and one of the bravest men I have known Tony Heard, who died on Wednesday 27 March 2024 at the age of 86, was one of the bravest people I have known. His quiet and fearless opposition to the apartheid regime brought him many accolades, and ... 03/27/2024 - 10:43 pm | View Link
Karonga By-Election MCP’s victory, a wake up call for DPP The resurgence the party experienced in 2014 after the passing of Bingu wa Mutharika seems to have fostered a sense of complacency among a faction of DPP politicians centered around Arthur Peter ... 03/27/2024 - 9:45 pm | View Link
While most ski areas in Colorado have colorful pasts as mining towns, logging sites, ranches, farms or homesteads, none can boast a prehistory like that of Snowmass.
Tens of thousands of years ago, mastodons, camels and giant sloths roamed what is now the ski resort’s base area. How do we know this?
Loose bricks falling from the three-story façade of Leadville’s Tabor Opera House on Saturday closed the sidewalk and parking spots in front of the historic building, which has been the subject of extensive renovations in recent years.
The venue, which opened in 1879 and lords over the town’s main drag, Harrison Avenue (a.k.a.
If you haven’t already booked your travel to see the solar eclipse on April 8, it could be too late to get decent reservations for flights, hotels, and rental cars — or it could cost an exorbitant amount.
The total solar eclipse will pass over North America — including parts of Mexico, the United States, and Canada — with varying degrees of darkness on April 8.
This weekend, Mountain Pride will be bringing the rainbow to the slopes as it celebrates its first Queer Ski Weekend at Vail Mountain.
If you go
Mountain Pride Queer Ski Weekend at Vail
When: Friday, March 22 to Sunday, March 24
Where: Across Vail Village, Vail Mountain and Lionshead Village
“I’m particularly thrilled about the opportunity for fellow community members to connect with the queer community on the slopes,” said Madison Partridge, the executive director of Mountain Pride.
Sure, you can hit up a Dunkin Donuts, a Starbucks or a McDonald’s at Denver International Airport — and sometimes it’s traveling that gives us license to be bad like that — but a better option is to try some of Denver’s homegrown food and beverages from local businesses.
RELATED: Why your favorite DIA restaurant’s food is different from its local, brick-and-mortar location
While these restaurants, coffee shops and breweries don’t actually own or run their airport branches — that is done by large concessionaires — many of them do take an active role in maintaining the quality and consistency of their offerings.
Earlier this year, I dreamed up a few 2024 trips. I’d celebrate a hike through the Swiss Alps with chocolate, enjoy therapeutic soaks in Tokyo’s storied onsen and end the year on Tasmania’s wild beaches. Why not consume contemporary art and paella in Valencia, Spain, too?
Then I woke up to find plane tickets soaring higher than most Boeing 777s.