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HEARD AROUND THE WEST - December 6, 1999 Heard around the West by Betsy Marston
Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura isn’t a bit afraid of inconsistency. He bragged about visiting a Nevada brothel as a young man
in his autobiography, I Ain’t Got Time to Bleed, yet a few decades later, his lawyer
hints
at legal action unless the brothel, the Moonlight BunnyRanch, stops
using the governor’s name in its advertising. BunnyRanch owner Dennis
Hof thinks there’s a hint of hypocrisy in the request. "He used our
name in his book to sensationalize it," Hof told the Minneapolis St.
Paul Star Tribune. "He’s made a big mistake. I’m not going to say, "Oh,
I’m sorry, Jesse." "’’’’In brochures for the Mound House, Nev., house
of prostitution, Hof shows a bedroom suite named in honor of the former
professional wrestler and also adds a quote he admits Ventura didn’t
make: "I had sex at the Moonlight." The governor’s attorney says that
while the brothel owner’s "support" is appreciated, he’d rather it
ended.
Reminder to bank robbers: Clean out your
pockets. Two bank robbers and their helper were nabbed in western
Colorado thanks to a dry cleaner who read a note left in a pair of
pants. It read, "Put the money in the bag and don’t say a word or I
will kill you," reports the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel.
Could
you handle living in your car? On a public street? If the answers are
yes, you qualify as a potential "car liver," a term for people who
don’t mind extremely confined spaces for a while. A.J. (Jane) Archer
just wrote a book about the phenomenon, Car Living: How to Make It a
Successful, Sane, Safe Experience, after overhearing a conversation in
Trader Joe’s, an upscale market in Lake Oswego, Ore., the author’s
hometown. While chatting, a shopper and store employee discovered they
had "virtually the same address - their cars," reports the Des Moines
Register. Archer says job hunters, the recently divorced, students and
others undergoing dislocations sometimes feel they have no choice but
to live in their cars. Her 72-page book of tips and anecdotes says it
helps to divide the house-vehicle into "rooms’ - a sleeping area,
"kitchen" and office. Archer has been trying out car-sleeping while
promoting her book. Her husband at home says "the day he sleeps in his
car is the day he goes to the morgue."
In a
bittersweet talk to a packed audience at the Wort Hotel in Jackson,
Wyo., range cowboy Terry Schramm reminisced about the changes he’d seen
in Jackson Hole over the last 25 years. A shared community of ranching
has been shattered, he said, as public-land grazing has come under
attack, and growth has transformed ranches into ranchettes. Schramm
told the Jackson Hole News that he continues to admire ranchers because
they work hard, need little and stay humble. He talked of one rancher
who won’t make millions by selling out to developers. When Schramm
asked him why he stays with it, the friend replied, "When I wake up in
the morning, I know what to do with the ranch, what to do with the
cows, but I don’t know what to do with all that money."
Stop
that bike! In Jackson, Wyo., a man whose fancy GT Dyno BM bike was
stolen was walking down the street bikeless, when a two-wheeler just
like his whizzed past. "It looked so much like his that he hailed a
cop, and together they found that it was his bike," reports the often
entertaining "Blotter" in the Jackson Hole News. The culprit was a
15-year-old boy.
Justice was also sweet for Denver
resident Jerry Sullivan. After a drunk driver smashed into his car in
Taos, N.M., a year ago, he endured operations for a crushed hip joint,
a splayed nose, a nearly severed ear and a detached retina. But a Taos
magistrate had let the driver - an uninsured man with expired Florida
license plates - leave Taos without putting up bail. After no law
enforcement agency could be roused to pursue the case, Sullivan decided
to track down the driver himself. Along the way he confronted the judge
for allowing the driver, Daryl S. Hicks, to skip town, and then he went
public with his story, both in the Albuquerque Tribune and Denver Post.
Thanks to a private investigator in Albuquerque who volunteered his
help, Hicks was found living in Denver less than a mile from Sullivan’s
house. He will now face trial for allegedly causing an accident that
resulted in great bodily harm.
The Halloween Bash
at the Snow King Center in Jackson, Wyo., will be a lot different next
year. The Jackson Hole News says this year’s party became so rowdy and
drunken that the famed costume contest had to be cancelled, and that’s
a shame since creativity ruled at the 21st annual bash. Costumes
included a man dressed as a head of broccoli and a group dressed as
highway flaggers from the Wyoming Department of Transportation. The
flaggers, wearing hardhats and reflective vests, spent the party
rotating stop/slow signs. They were not effective.
At
the University of Colorado in Boulder, staffer Evan Cantor has become a
magnet for compilations of cleverness on the net. The following sums up
the history of medicine, as seen by a skeptic: "2000 B.C.: Here, eat
this root. 1000 A.D.: That root is heathen. Here, say this prayer.
1850: That prayer is superstition. Here, drink this potion. 1940: That
potion is snake oil. Here, swallow this pill. 1985: That pill doesn’t
work. Here, take this antibiotic. 2000: That antibiotic no longer
works. Here, eat this root."
Two Navy airmen
don’t seem to know why they did what they did; nonetheless, they
bragged they’d "shot some moos’ in western Nevada. The bragging was
overheard, and the men confessed to killing seven pregnant cows. When
Churchill County Sheriff Bill Lawry asked the men, who were training at
Fallon Naval Air Station, why they’d selected cows for target practice,
they answered, "Because," reports Associated Press. Pressed to answer,
- ’Because why?" they really couldn’t answer," the sheriff said. Joshua
Osinski, 23, of Scottsdale, Ariz., and Alan Peters, 21, of Coos Bay,
Ore., face seven felony counts of grand larceny.
*Betsy Marston
Heard
around the West invites readers to get involved in the column. Send any
tidbits that merit sharing - small-town newspaper clips, personal
anecdotes, relevant bumper sticker slogans. The definition remains
loose. Heard, HCN, Box 1090, Paonia, CO 81428 or [email protected].