Internet Archive and Partners Select Local Newsrooms from Across the US to Participate in the Today’s News for Tomorrow Program
By Anna Trammel
Internet Archive
Internet Archive, Poynter Institute, and Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) are pleased to announce the first cohort of newsrooms to join the Today’s News for Tomorrow program. With support from Press Forward, Today’s News for Tomorrow will bring together news organizations and memory institutions to address the urgent challenge of local news preservation and perpetual access. The project will create a national framework for digital preservation that serves newsrooms’ “immediate internal needs and communities’ future information needs,” according to Press Forward... Read more...
Colorado School of Mines Operations Noise Alert
Hello Neighbors,
Mines is conducting an outdoor rocket engine demonstration on Tuesday, February 10th between 2:30 and 3:00 PM in Lot Q on campus. (Please see the site map below for location details.) The rocket engine demonstration will emit a loud sound for approximately 5 - 10 seconds between 2:30 and 3:00 PM. The rocket engine will not leave the ground, nor will it be launched. This is a noise notification only.
Questions? Contact Traci Case (tcase@mines.edu)

Goldens in Golden draws thousands of people and pets
By Christopher Koeberl
Golden Transcript
It may have been the near-perfect weather or just Colorado’s love for Golden Retrievers, but downtown Golden was packed with people and puppies on Saturday, Feb. 7, for the seventh annual event, ‘Goldens in Golden.’Court
Organizers of this year’s event estimate at least 16,000 people and nearly as many canine companions attended on a sunny day with temperatures around 60 degrees... Read more...
Here are the top 5 most popular golden retriever names at Colorado gathering
By Alexander Kirk
9News
GOLDEN, Colo. — The 8th annual "Goldens in Golden" further cemented itself as the world’s largest unofficial gathering of golden retrievers... Read more...
Denver’s affordable-housing vacancy rate is at a 10-year high. Experts say the city still needs more units.
By Elliott Wenzler
Denver Post
Despite a decade-high vacancy rate in Denver’s affordable-housing market, local experts are warning that the city’s overall supply is on track to “fall off a cliff” in the next few years.
About 8.8% of the city’s affordable apartments — also known as subsidized or income-restricted units — were vacant as of January... Read more...
Golden goes pink to kick off annual Wish Week fundraiser
By Sara Hertwig
Golden Transcript
Golden High School was almost entirely devoted to Make-A-Wish Colorado kid Margaret last week... Read more...