Personal Archives


Fritz: “To the banqueting house”

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Marshall Fritz of the Alliance for the Separation of School and State is one of the most effective freedom advocates and brilliantly buoyant human beings I’ve ever known. (more…)

Reviving the art of conversation

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

I’ve found that when a thread of conversation has developed, some patients have surprised themselves by realizing they’ve actually had a good time at the dental office. (more…)

Easter 2008: That’s My King!

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Sunday on Backbone Radio, again as in years past, we observed Easter by playing five minutes from a classic sermon (more…)

Russ Oberlin, 1929-2008

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

“Be who you are, use what you have, do what you can.” Russ Oberlin stopped me at a recent political meeting to pass along (more…)

Backbone Bivouac: A true tall tale

Monday, January 21st, 2008

Have you ever spent the night outside in the Colorado mountains, in the heart of winter, at 12,000 feet, in a furious blizzard? (more…)

From our family to yours

Friday, December 21st, 2007

President Ronald Reagan’s first Christmas message, dated Dec. 24, 1981, said in part: “The Nativity story of twenty centuries ago is known by all faiths as a hymn to the brotherhood of man. Through a generous heavenly Father’s (more…)

Woman of the Century

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

In our family, Patricia Gordon was exactly that, through
more than nine decades until her passing last month.

Memorial services for my wife’s mother were held on April 19 at St. James Presbyterian Church in Littleton, Colorado. Rev. Wayne Darbonne officiated. Here are my eulogy and several tributes by other family members. Scroll down to read the contributions of Christina Andrews, Jennifer Andrews, Melanie D’Evelyn, and Tom D’Evelyn, or enter their names in the search block, above right. (more…)

The day a piece of my past blew away

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

By Matt Dunn (matt.dunn@codydental.com)

When I’d heard that a tornado had passed through Holly, Colorado last week, cutting a 300-yard wide swath through the center of town, I wondered if my grandfather’s former home might have been spared. The next day’s photos in the Rocky Mountain News, sitting in the reception area of my dental office, showed that it had not been. (more…)

Not too late, say Easter believers

Friday, April 6th, 2007

By John Andrews (andrewsjk@aol.com)

Too late? No, it’s still early. The story is far from over. That’s the good news for a weary world, as Jesus’ followers once again commemorate his crucifixion and resurrection at Passover time two millenia ago. Time and again in this greatest of all dramas, the early returns were overturned. Think about it: (more…)

Lincoln & me, experiencing DC

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

By Melanie Harmon (harmon.melanie@gmail.com)

    Editor’s Note: Melanie Harmon, a new contributor, submitted this piece Monday on Lincoln’s birthday. I met her as a DU undergrad when she testified in the Senate about radical faculty infringing academic freedom at Metro State, her former school. She later founded DU’s conservative student paper, Common Sense, and worked on the Holtzman for Governor campaign, before graduating in spring 2006. Welcome, Melanie – JA

Like most recent college graduates, I busted out of my cap and gown ready to conquer my next life experience: the real world. Four days after graduation, I moved to Washington, D.C. with two suitcases and lofty visions of what my life would be, post-University of Denver.

I chose our nation’s capital because I wanted to continue the conservative activism of my previous four years. I would be serving my country and the state of Colorado while sticking to the principles I knew to be good and right: personal and fiscal responsibility, little government interference, faith in God and faith in the American people.

Five months into my cross-country, real world experience, those lofty visions were promptly pulled back down to earth. The November elections taught me Lesson No. 1 of living in the real world: that life is chock-full of disappointments. (more…)

Postcard from Turkey

Saturday, August 19th, 2006

By Krista Kafer (krista555@msn.com)

Oppressive heat and lack of sleep soften the edges of consciousness and blur the colors of memory. I have dreamy impressions of the four days I spent in Turkey this month, bordered on either side by the hard lines of travel. Together with four other Americans – one international expert and his wife, a retired educator; an education expert; and a representative from a higher education council – I arrived in Istanbul after four flights and little sleep. (more…)

Brian’s midwinter reflections

Sunday, January 1st, 2006

By Brian Ochsner baochsner@aol.com

Well, what do you know. I just talked to a guy, my uncle’s brother, who went to the World’s Fair held in Chicago back in 1933 and got to see a prototype of a television set – about 20 years before they were mass produced. You learn that kind of thing over the holidays, and this recent Christmas was one of the best ever. Gifts and food were in abundance, and it was good to spend time reconnecting with family and friends. Along with the witness to prehistoric TV, I also discovered a cousin of mine has been on an outdoors program on ESPN. Ryan’s an avid fly fisherman and conservationist (not an environmental wacko). He’s also a skilled talker, and likes to argue his point to anyone who will debate him. The folks at Senator Conrad Burns’ office (R-MT) thought he argued a little too forcefully, and threw him out. (more…)