El Chapultepec Legacy Project pays homage to late, legendary jazz club
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
Anna Diaz simply ran out of room for tributes.As the co-owner of El Chapultepec, Denver’s legendary jazz club that closed its doors in 2020 after 87 years in business, Diaz and co-owner/sister Angela Guerrero in April began soliciting memories for a legacy project. Besides photos, postcards, flyers and audio recordings, they wanted video interviews that could act as archives of El Chapultepec’s musical culture.“We made a list of about 100 people, but it easily could have been 10,000,” Diaz said. “We only narrowed down the people (to record) by who was available on the day.”And there’s more to do. The sisters’ El Chapultepec Legacy Project officially debuted last week at thepeclegacy.com featuring a 20-minute YouTube video with dozens of fans and musicians, branded merchandise, and donation appeals. Its goal is to keep the past from slipping away — to preserve the unique culture, which for decades anchored what’s now called ...The crawfish you’ve been eating in Colorado could be illegal
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
Seafood distributors and restaurants for years have imported thousands of pounds of live Louisiana crawfish into Colorado for spring celebrations and boils.But unbeknownst to many of those cooking up the Southern staple, importation and possession of live red swamp crayfish has been illegal for decades in the state because the species is invasive.Colorado Parks and Wildlife started investigating the importation of crayfish in March after receiving a tip from Louisiana about someone importing the species into the state. The agency issued one ticket in that case, but the tip opened a can of crawdads. Wildlife officials are now taking a new look at the regulations around the species and could potentially change the law.“We discovered quite a large market,” he said. “They’ve been imported for quite a while now before it came onto our radar.”Wildlife officials issued cease-and-desist orders to distributors and embarked on a statewide education campaign to st...The next time Denver asks for help during street protests, Aurora police might not come
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
If the city of Denver doesn’t agree to accept full legal liability for Aurora police officers’ actions and pay for all lawsuits that stemmed from the 2020 racial justice protests in Denver, Aurora could end its partnership agreement with its neighboring city.That’s what a resolution would do, if approved, that Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman plans to introduce at the July 17 City Council meeting. The agreement would not apply to regular police operations or task force participation, Coffman noted. But it would apply to future protests or civil unrest in which Denver asks for assistance and Aurora officers could act under Denver police’s direction.“We do a lot of great cooperation with Denver in terms of issues relative to crime because criminals don’t quite understand the boundaries between Aurora and Denver,” Coffman told The Post. “And so we certainly will continue to work at that level. That’s just kind of standard operating procedu...“Amache,” “Reading Colorado” and other Denver book reviews of local interest this month
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
“Amache,” by Robert Harvey (Hawes & Jenkins)Some 30 years ago, Douglas County teacher Robert Harvey wrote “Amache,” an extraordinary book about the World War II relocation camp near Granada. At the time Harvey did his research, few Coloradans had heard of Amache or, indeed, knew anything about the federal government’s policy to incarcerate West Coast Japanese-Americans in prison camps.Amache, by Robert Harvey (Hawes & Jenkins)“Amache” helped to inform them. And thanks to interest in the book and the Colorado camp itself, the site was recently designated a national monument. It’s about time, then, that “Amache,” out of print for some years, is once again available.On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which allowed the government to round up more than 100,000 West Coast Japanese and send them to holding pens, such as the Santa Anita race track. Eventually, they were transported to relocation camps across the West and South,...Man uses T-shirt to fight wildfire in Sylmar area
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
A man tried using his T-shirt to stop a wildfire from spreading in the Sylmar area Tuesday night.The fire was burning near the 210 Freeway around 11:30 p.m. when the Good Samaritan jumped into action. A man is seen using his T-shirt to fight a wildfire in the Sylmar area on July 11, 2023. (RMG News)Video shows him frantically waving his shirt in an effort to stop the fire from spreading. Los Angles Fire Department crews arrived on the scene and asked the man to stop as they took over the situation. Evacuated homes continue sinking in L.A. County Crews were seen giving the man what appeared to be a bottle of water after he left the firefight.The flames were out shortly before midnight.Baby stars seen in close-up revealed by Webb Space Telescope
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
See a high-resolution satellite view of Earth in the video above. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The Webb Space Telescope is marking one year of cosmic photographs with one of its best yet: the dramatic close-up of dozens of stars at the moment of birth.NASA unveiled the latest snapshot Wednesday, revealing 50 baby stars in a cloud complex 390 light-years away. The region is relatively quiet yet full of illuminated gases, jets of hydrogen and even cocoons of dust with the delicate beginnings of even more stars.The first anniversary image released Wednesday, July 12, 2023, by Space Telescope Science Institute Office of Public Outreach, shows NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope displaying a star birth like it’s never been seen before, full of detailed, impressionistic texture. The subject is the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, the closest star-forming region to Earth. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Klaus Pon via AP)All of the young stars appear to be no bigger than our sun. Scientists said ...See it while you can: After MOMA run, historic Diego Rivera headed to storage until 2027
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
Five days a week, Will Maynez makes a pilgrimage from his Mission District home to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art to view a massive Diego Rivera mural.The piece by the famed Mexican artist, commonly known as Pan American Unity, lived in relative obscurity in a community college theater lobby for nearly 60 years before making its heralded debut two years ago at the museum.“This is the best that this mural has ever been presented,” said Maynez, a retired lab manager who has made it his mission to protect the painting — the only one of three Rivera murals in San Francisco that is currently on public display. “It’s available 24/7 and you can look right in from the (gallery’s) windows. I’d come back from Giants home games at night and I can stop by and take a peek.”But that won’t last. As part of an agreement between SFMOMA and the City College of San Francisco, the precious fresco, created by Rivera during the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1940, is on loan ...Tax prep companies shared private taxpayer data with Google and Meta for years, congressional probe finds
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
By Brian Fung | CNNSome of America’s largest tax-prep companies have spent years sharing Americans’ sensitive financial data with tech titans including Meta and Google in a potential violation of federal law — data that in some cases was misused for targeted advertising, according to a seven-month congressional investigation.The report highlights what legal experts described to CNN as a “five-alarm fire” for taxpayer privacy that could lead to government and private lawsuits, criminal penalties or perhaps even a “mortal blow” for some industry giants involved in the probe including TaxSlayer, H&R Block and TaxAct.Using visitor tracking technology embedded on their websites, the three tax-prep companies allegedly sent tens of millions of Americans’ personal information to the tech industry without consent or appropriate disclosures, according to the congressional report reviewed by CNN.Beyond ordinary personal data such as people’s names, phone numbers and email addresses, the li...These 7 California metro areas have the lowest young adult homeownership rates in the country
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
So you’re in your late 20’s or early 30’s, and you’re thinking about buying your first home somewhere in California. You scroll through housing websites and realize that you can’t afford a single listing.Sound familiar? Well, you’re not alone. All seven of the country’s major metro areas with the lowest homeownership rates for 25-to-34 year-olds are in California, a Bay Area News Group analysis of Census Bureau data from 2017 to 2021 has found. And the ripple effect is having a profound impact on more than just young people.The Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim metro area, where only 2 out of 10 young adults ages 25-34 own their home, scored lowest in the country.Santa Maria-Santa Barbara was just a fraction better with a young adult home ownership rate of 21%, followed by Santa Cruz-Watsonville (22.5%), San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara (22.8%), Salinas (23.3%), San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward (23.4%) and San Diego-Carlsbad (23.8%). Our analysis fi...Federal bill to make online platforms pay for news they use advances while California bill slows
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:21:30 GMT
While California lawmakers have put the brakes on a bill that would make the likes of Facebook and Google pay news publishers for using their stories, a similar federal bill has once again advanced in Congress.But it remains to be seen whether this year’s version of the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act advances beyond the U.S. Senate, where an earlier version quietly died last winter.Once again co-authored by Senators Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, and John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican, S.1094, the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, sailed out of the Senate Judiciary Committee last month on a 14-7 vote with broad bipartisan backing.Klobuchar, the daughter of a former newspaperman, told the committee that since 2005, some 2,200 local newspapers across America have closed and a third of U.S. newspapers that existed two decades ago are expected be gone by 2025.“This isn’t because of a lack of talent or a lack of things to cover or a lack ...Latest news
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