Police investigating south St. Louis beauty store break-in

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Police investigating south St. Louis beauty store break-in ST. LOUIS - Someone broke into a beauty store in south St. Louis early Monday morning.Police were called to 'Nu Fashion Beauty' on South Broadway in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood around 2:00 a.m. Our Nissan Rogue Runner reporter, Nic Lopez, captured footage of the scene as police searched for evidence and spoke with the store's owner. Another death reported at St. Louis City Justice Center No word on if anything was taken. FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.

3 hospitalized in overnight Aurora shooting on Colfax

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

3 hospitalized in overnight Aurora shooting on Colfax Three people were hospitalized in Aurora Monday after an early-morning shooting on East Colfax Avenue, according to the Aurora Police Department.Around 12:15 a.m. Monday, Aurora officers responded to reports of a shooting in the 9500 block of East Colfax Avenue, near Clinton Street, according to a post on social media from the police department.When officers arrived on scene, they found two people suffering from gunshot wounds and a third person who had been physically assaulted, the department stated online.All three victims were transported to a local hospital by paramedics, and one of the gunshot victims was in critical condition, according to the Aurora Police Department.. As of 6 a.m. Monday, the unidentified victim was in stable condition.A large perimeter was set up after the shooting as police searched for the suspects involved.Around 1:30 a.m., police said online that the suspects were last seen running near East 13th Avenue and Dayton Street. In a 6 a.m. update, they annou...

Photography center’s latest home makes for a pretty picture

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Photography center’s latest home makes for a pretty picture The Colorado Photographic Arts Center has changed locations with considerable frequency over its 60-year history, and no one knows that better than its current executive director, Samantha Johnston. During her tenure — just eight years now — CPAC has had four different headquarters in various parts of Denver.Each move was more than packing and unpacking. It also required adjusting to new gallery spaces, setting up classrooms for its students, transporting the organization’s substantial in-house holdings and launching a fresh campaign to tell the public exactly where they could find CPAC’s popular exhibitions of work by photographers from Colorado and beyond.Is it real or staged? Jason McKinsey’s archival pigment print “The Commuter.” (Provided by the Colorado Photographic Arts Center)But CPAC’s latest change of place, to the first floor of a high-rise at 1200 Lincoln St., might serve it for the long haul. Everything feels right about it, particularly its physical l...

How modern-day skiers and Native American spirituality can connect on the slopes

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

How modern-day skiers and Native American spirituality can connect on the slopes For big-mountain skier Connor Ryan, skiing is a deeply spiritual experience. As a Hunkpapa Lakota Native American, he believes the mountains themselves are alive with spirits, along with the spirits of Indigenous Utes who inhabited them for centuries before miners came to Colorado in the 18th century.When Ryan climbs and skis big peaks blanketed in backcountry powder, he sings prayers in his Native language while hoping non-Native skiers and snowboarders understand the need to respect the mountains even as they use them for recreation.“The ski industry, and the outdoor industry, they need to reconcile with the fact that this whole industry happens on Native land,” Ryan said in a ski film he made in 2022 called Spirit of the Peaks. “They are places that have been deeply related to Indigenous people for so long, and there’s not blame in that statement, but there is responsibility that’s needed on the other side.”Ryan’s film was produced in conjunction wit...

Here’s how Colorado Ballet’s “Nutcracker” ticket prices have changed since 2000

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Here’s how Colorado Ballet’s “Nutcracker” ticket prices have changed since 2000 “The Nutcracker” is back, baby.It was a surreal, unprecedented moment when Colorado Ballet canceled its entire 2020-21 season, given the COVID shutdowns and complications. But when the refreshed production debuted during the 2021 holiday season — it typically runs for a month, or about 25 performances — a Denver tradition was reborn.This year’s 63rd installment is, as in the past, a boon for the state’s marquee ballet, as sales made up more than half of its annual revenue, which totaled $15.5 million last year. That’s one of the main reasons the pandemic was so devastating to arts nonprofits, and why “Nutcracker” and other holiday performances are so vital to nonprofit arts companies.But with ticket prices rising for all kinds of entertainment options, how are they faring for this Christmas tradition?The Denver Post took a look at tickets for the Colorado Ballet’s “Nutcracker” going back to 2000, and what we fou...

Camping will cost 25% more at Colorado national park in 2024

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Camping will cost 25% more at Colorado national park in 2024 Federal officials said last week that camping and boating fees will rise in two popular Colorado parks: Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park and Curecanti National Recreation Area.“Campground fees have remained unchanged since before 2016, while boat launch fees have not changed since at least 2003,” according to a statement from the National Park Service. Fee  money is used to pay for new projects and ongoing maintenance of park facilities; recent projects included trail rehabilitation, marina improvements and an amphitheater upgrade.“The new pricing structure will bring the parks into closer alignment with nearby and comparable campground and boating services. The increased fees will provide additional revenue to fund operations and deferred maintenance projects,” the agency added.Related ArticlesOutdoors | As REI’s arrival nears in a southwestern Colorado mountain town, some local outdoor rec stores worry Outdoors | D...

Colorado dodged a recession this year. Can it do it again in 2024?

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Colorado dodged a recession this year. Can it do it again in 2024? Colorado’s economy next year won’t be a bed of roses, with job gains running at their slowest pace since 2011 and commercial real estate under extreme stress. But neither will it be a bed of thorns, as inflation eases and a recession doesn’t set in, according to the 2024 Colorado Business Economic Outlook.“It is a slower-growth story. There are positive nuggets in there. We aren’t forecasting a recession and we expect a continued abundance of job opportunities for people,” said Brian Lewandowski, executive director of the Business Research Division at the University of Colorado Boulder Leeds School of Business, which puts the Outlook together each year.The Outlook, based on input from 130 individuals across a variety of industries, as well as a sophisticated computer model, forecasts employers in the state will add 42,000 nonfarm jobs. The state’s unemployment rate will average 3.4%, not far off the 3.3% rate reached in October.Adding 42,000 jobs ...

Two new mysteries from Colorado authors

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Two new mysteries from Colorado authors “Play of Shadows,” by Barbara Nickless (Thomas & Mercer)“Play of Shadows,” by Barbara Nickless (Thomas & Mercer)When the body of a Chicago murder victim is found — nearly sliced in half by a sword with a strange symbol drawn on its forehead — who do the police call? If you’re a fan of Colorado Springs mystery author Barbara Nickless, the answer, of course, is Dr. Evan Wilding.The Chicago cryptologist, a dwarf, is brilliant, urbane and secretly in love with detective Addie Bisset.  And he is already ahead of this deadly murder. Only that night, shortly before he was killed, the victim left an ancient Cretan coin on Wilding’s doorstep, along with a note: “Let the game begin.”And so it does. Addie and Wilding, with the help of Wilding’s assistant, Diana, and his brother, River, discover they’ve been challenged to play out a murderous myth by a man who claims to be the deadly Minotaur. If they don’t solve the Cretan monster’s puzzl...

Is your house plant psychedelic? Coloradans buy San Pedro cacti, but not for their hallucinogens.

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Is your house plant psychedelic? Coloradans buy San Pedro cacti, but not for their hallucinogens. At Nick’s Garden Center and Farm Market in Aurora, it takes some searching to find the few San Pedro cacti for sale inside of the sprawling greenhouse.On Tuesday afternoon, fresh Christmas wreathes and holiday decorations garnered more attention from customers of the nursery at 2001 S. Chambers Road than the shelves of cacti displayed farther back. Even as two women paused to peer at eye-catching varieties like golden barrel cactus, the spiky, green San Pedro cacti sat largely unnoticed among more than 200 other plants.“I think it’s beautiful, but it doesn’t have any shocking features,” horticulturist Colette Haskell, 49, said. Still, when the garden center stocks up on San Pedro cacti, or Trichocereus, “they definitely do sell out pretty quickly,” she added.An enthusiastic following of both professional and amateur horticulturists is growing around the cactus, as they largely prize it for its appearance. But with the recent decriminalizatio...

Colorado researchers find it can be safe to transplant stem cells into brains as multiple sclerosis treatment

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:40:24 GMT

Colorado researchers find it can be safe to transplant stem cells into brains as multiple sclerosis treatment A trial involving researchers at the University of Colorado found it can be safe to transplant stem cells into the brains of people with at least one disabling illness, but the science has a long way to go before people heal with cells from embryos or their own bodies.The trial, involving scientists in Colorado, the United Kingdom and Italy, infused stem cells taken from the brain of a fetus that had died in a miscarriage into 15 Italian patients who already had significant disabilities caused by multiple sclerosis. In the year after the infusions, the patients’ multiple sclerosis didn’t get worse, and they didn’t have severe side effects from the stem cells.It will take a bigger trial with a comparison group that didn’t receive the treatment to know whether the stem cells truly slowed down the disease’s progression, though, said Angelo D’Alessandro, a professor at CU’s Anschutz Medical Campus.“The disease was overall stable,” he...