Stories for October 18, 2007

Subscribe

Lead stories
Stories

City tennis championships begin

The 2007 Steamboat City Tennis Championships begin at 6 p.m. today at the Tennis Center at Steamboat Springs with singles play in the first eight round-robin matches in the men's and women's Masters Division.

Steamboat triathlete qualifies for Ironman World Championships

Triathlons have kept Steamboat Springs resident Joy Rasmussen busy this fall.

Steamboat mountain bikers make mark at 24 Hours of Moab

Steamboat Springs mountain bike racer Nate Bird didn't think competing in a 24-hour race outside of Moab, Utah, would be that big of a deal. After all, he completed nine, 11-mile laps on Mount Werner during this summer's Rio 24 Hours of Steamboat mountain bike race.

The Record for Oct. 18

Tuesday, Oct. 16 8:08 a.m. Steamboat Springs police assisted the All Crimes Enforcement Team with a "marijuana production" investigation in the 1300 block of Hilltop Parkway. The incident is under investigation.

Steamboat briefs for Oct. 18

Man arrested in pot operation

Tease photo

Daylight at night

Howelsen crews squeezing in major projects before Dec. 1

Jeff Nelson said that when the installation of new lighting is completed at Howelsen Hill Ski Area, the outcome will be "the difference between night and day."

Sailors finish season

Girls volleyball ready for districts

With two league games remaining, the Steamboat Springs High School volleyball team has entrenched itself as the No. 3 seed in the Western Slope League.

Tease photo

Global, green and Gore

Church sponsors screening of 'An Inconvenient Truth'

Freshly minted Nobel Peace Prize winner and environmental activist Al Gore's "city by city, person by person" message about the effects and potential dangers of global warming reached a new audience Wednesday night in Craig.

MCHS speech and debate nets good start at competition

The Moffat County High School speech and debate team continued its persuasive ways this past weekend in Denver at its first competition of the year.

Julia Baker: Hospital or doctor?

If doctors want to come here just for a new hospital, I would rather have a good doctor than a hospital. We want a good doctor to know what he's doing, not looking at the beautiful interior and exterior. It's what our town as a whole can offer.