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Because eyewitness accounts indicate that Button was in control of the plane for most of its journey, his disappearance has sparked some wild theories. Among them: that he was planning to drop the 500-lb. bombs he was carrying (which the Air Force believes were not armed) on the Denver courthouse where the Timothy McVeigh trial is under way; or that the rugged Warthog would be a perfect plane to sell to a militia unit. There were reports, on CNN and elsewhere, that Button may have been suicidal because he was upset over the recent conversion of his mother...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DESTINATION UNKNOWN | 4/21/1997 | See Source »

...Denver Broncos: Trevor Pryce, DE, Clemson. He's very big at 6'5", 280. He's risk because of inconsistency, but can be dominating...

Author: By Bryan Lee, | Title: Picking Up the Pace: The 1997 NFL Draft | 4/19/1997 | See Source »

...DENVER: Jury selection continues under tight security in the Oklahoma City bombing case as the government braces for possible trouble Saturday, the anniversary of both Waco and the Murrah building bombing. "There's a U.S. Marshal on every corner, for 2-3 blocks in every direction," reports TIME's Pat Cole from the federal courthouse in Denver. "Air space over the court house is off limits, and if you stop to talk on the corner outside the courthouse, police tell you to keep moving." Jury selection is expected to conclude Tuesday, with opening statements to begin on Thursday. Despite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nervous in Denver | 4/18/1997 | See Source »

...brought prosperity to the group. Two members inherited about $300,000, allowing the cult to rent houses, called "crafts," in Denver and later the Dallas-Fort Worth region. (In the Rancho Santa Fe area, the group appears to have rented two different crafts.) Thus Applewhite had enough assets to initiate the cult's last great recruitment drive, on New Year's Day 1994. An estate sale was held at the Escondido mansion, raising money to buy four vans and gear to tour the country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE FAITHFUL AMONG US | 4/14/1997 | See Source »

Meanwhile, managed-care companies are squeezing payments to doctors so tightly that in late December 485 Denver-area physicians scrapped their HMO provider, Antero Healthplans, rather than accept a 15% cut. Their 3,000 patients had to scramble over the holidays to find somebody to treat them. Most wound up back with their old doctors, but after enough anxiety to underscore a remark by Peter Van Etten, president of Stanford Health Services: "In this insanity of economics in health care, the patient always loses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BACKLASH AGAINST HMOS | 4/14/1997 | See Source »

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