tubular

daily dos

thu 11/5/2009

 

Voters in the ski and snowboarding resort city of Breckenridge, Colorado overwhelmingly voted in favor of legalizing the possession of one ounce of marijuana for adults over 21 years old. Rocky Mountain High, indeed.

 
 

breast behavior

daily dos

mon 10/19/2009

 

Larimer County, Colorado sheriff Jim Alderden says the "Balloon Boy" chase that captivated America was a hoax: "We have evidence to indicate it was a publicity stunt done with the hope of marketing themselves to a reality television show sometime in the future." Alderden previously announced that criminal charges would be filed in the incident.

 
 

Ken Salazar

whodat

thu 1/29/2009

 
whodat-ken-salazar

Former Colorado Senator Ken Salazar is President Obama's man on the inside. As the Secretary of the Interior, Salazar is expected to help preserve the country's natural resources while steering the U.S to energy independence.

Born in small-town Alamosa, Colorado, the 53-year-old Salazar was raised in a family with deep roots in the Southwest. A fifth generation Coloradan, Salazar's ancestors came from Spain and helped found the city of Santa Fe, New Mexico before the U.S. or México became countries. Despite his Spanish roots, Salazar sometimes refers to himself as Mexican-American, perhaps in part because his last name has made him a target for discrimination: "I've been taunted, called names – from 'dirty Mexican' to lots of other names – as I was growing up, and even now as a United States senator."

Salazar grew up in a modest ranch without electricity or telephones. He and his seven siblings learned to farm on the family ranch while attending school. After graduating from Centauri High School in 1973, Salazar went on to earn a bachelor's in political science from Colorado College and then a law degree from the University of Michigan in 1981.

The Stetson hat-wearing Salazar worked as a water rights and environmental lawyer before accepting a position as chief legal counsel to then-Colorado Governor Roy Romer in 1986. He later served as both the executive director of Colorado's Department of Natural Resources and as the state's attorney general. In 2004, Salazar announced his bid for the U.S. Senate, promising he would "[fight] for Colorado's land, water, and people." Despite mixed support from the Democratic party, Salazar scored a narrow victory over Republican Pete Coors, the chairman of the Coors Brewing Company who spent over one million dollars of his own money to run.

Over the years, Salazar has built a reputation as a centrist who doesn't lean too closely towards either party. He has championed the rights of ranchers and farms, supported renewable energy efforts and has openly criticized President Bush's plan to drill for oil in the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. As the head of the Department of the Interior, Salazar will oversee America's national parks, water, fish, wildlife and other natural resources as well as the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

But before Salazar can turn to the nation's outdoors, he's got some housekeeping to do, conducting an internal investigation of a department he says has been "tarnished by ethical lapses and criminal behavior that has extended to the very highest levels of government."

 
 

covert oops

daily dos

mon 9/29/2008

 

The latest NPR poll of 1,400 Latino voters showed 49 percent supporting Obama and 45 percent for McCain. Remember to vote 4 your future!

 
 

Melissa Lujan

as seen on myspace

thu 10/25/2007

 
Melissa Lujan sits inside a car.

R&B singer Melissa Lujan is bringing a bit of West Coast heat to the Rockies. The 22-year-old is making a name for herself with the steamy single Falling In Love, a tear-jerker that borrows from the Lowrider classic Computer Love.

Lujan began singing at age six, inspired by the early '90s R&B of girl group En Vogue and the "new jack swing" of BLACKstreet. The five-foot tall Denver-native has built a loyal fan base in the same Chicano rap scene that has nurtured Amanda Perez and Houston's Natalie. Lujan's collaboration with Golden State rapper Brown Boy, Please Don't Go, is tailor-made for Sunday night dedications.

Cute and curvy, she's already turned heads playing shows in Texas and Southern California and has even opened for Omarion, Frankie J and Baby Bash. Her second single, the '80s throwback "I Know What You Want," should tide over her growing fan base while she preps her solo debut slated for a 2008 release.

see: myspace.com/melissalujan