FORT COLLINS (AP).- A Montana woman accused of taking a crowbar to controversial artwork for religious reasons pleaded not guilty Friday in Colorado. Kathleen Folden, 56, a truck driver and grandmother from Kalispell, Mont., declined to comment during a court appearance, where she learned she would stand trial in January. She is charged with one count of criminal mischief, a felony which carries a penalty of between two and six years. Folden was arrested Oct. 6 in the Loveland Museum/Gallery after witnesses said she used a crowbar to smash glass shielding a print by Stanford University professor Enrique Chagoya. The print at issue, one of several copies of the work, includes figures cut out from a comic book, including a head resembling Christ and a skeleton with a pope’s hat. Critics said the work depicted Jesus engaged in a sex act, but Chagoya said the work has been mischaracterized and doesn’t show Christ. He said the work is a collage, and the controversial panel was aimed