Mobile Savages

Back in 1946, when Duncan Clark built his Trailer Haven Mobile Home Park, East Colfax Avenue could be a pretty lonely place. Fitzsimons Army Hospital, which sat practically across the street, was one of his only neighbors. Even Aurora didn’t make it past Peoria Street until 1955, when the city…

Off Limits

Denver will get its chance to make a lasting impression on Boeing executives next week when the aerospace company makes a second visit to the Mile High City. Boeing, which announced last month that it plans to move out of its Seattle headquarters — taking 500 jobs and lots of…

Paper Trail

“Please let me introduce myself. I’m Randy Miller, owner of the Colorado Daily…” So began a letter, headlined “Dear Reader,” that appeared on the front page of the March 5 Daily, a newspaper in its 109th year of serving the residents of Boulder — and while Miller sustained a friendly…

Avs and Av-Nots

The furies of the National Hockey League — 130-mile-an-hour slapshots, player salaries that would numb Bill Gates’s checkbook, blood-streaked goons exchanging insults in French and Russian — have once more drawn all of Denver under their spell. Since the Avs swept Vancouver, Cup craziness has spilled out of the sports…

Letters to the Editor

Native Truths Best intentions: Just about my favorite part of your Best of Denver issue is reading all the letters of response from people complaining about how lame Denver is. What a bunch of whiners and babies and people whose self-esteem is way too high: “Denver is still a backwater…

A Matter of Trust

When former state patrolman Bill Wilson arrived for his interview with the Environmental Protection Agency in 1988, nearly thirty years had elapsed since he’d cruised the lonesome roads that traversed the Lowry Bombing Range. A weird Cold War paranoia lay across that land in the early 1960s. Scarred dirt roads…

Collision Course

Denise Dixon was dreaming. In her dream, she woke up from a deep sleep, cold and sweating at the same time, and looked around to find her bedroom walls covered with blood. There was a face in the room, but she couldn’t make it out. She screamed. Then the phone…

Poetic Justice

Seth Brigham fits right in at the Penny Lane coffeehouse. A longtime Boulder resident, he produces an off-color program for the city’s public-access CATV Channel 54, during which he makes political statements against corporate greed and government censorship. And although Brigham is bipolar and suffers from anxiety, he handles his…

Chronology of a Big Fat Lie

The last two weeks have not been the best of times for the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office. The agency has been in serious damage-control mode since the court-ordered release of hundreds of pages of police records that indicated the JCSO was telling something less than the whole truth about its…

Surprise Ending

Last November, after the board of directors for the Eulipions theater group sold the historic El Jebel Shrine Temple for $3.9 million, board chairman Darrell Nulan said that whatever proceeds weren’t directed toward the group’s debt would be used to establish an endowment that would ensure the future of the…

Off Limits

It’s not easy working for the state prison system. You spend the majority of your waking hours dealing with the criminal element — or at least thinking about the criminal element — and when you get home, you have to selectively edit out details of the workday for your kids’…

Tilting at Windmills

The fight against the Denver dailies’ joint operating agreement ended not with a bang, but with a snicker. Or maybe two. The second such bit of mirth took place on April 12, day two of a hearing before U.S. District Judge John Kane, who had been asked to issue a…

Calling All Turkeys

On a recent evening at Archery Adventures, a bow-hunting store in an Aurora strip mall, Bob Cook was setting up his slide projector for a seminar on turkey calling. It was still a couple of weeks before the start of the spring turkey- hunting season, but that didn’t matter: Bob…

Letters to the Editor

The Bust of Denver Fossil fuel: Congratulations, Westword! With your new Best of Denver 2001 edition, you’ve confirmed, once again, what a tacky rag you’ve become. Like that ’70s dinosaur, Patricia Calhoun, Westword is one more reason to think Denver is still a backwater cowtown. Best of Denver 2001 was…

The Lowdown on Lowry

One hot morning last summer, a small valve was turned on at the Lowry Superfund Site, and groundwater from the old landfill began flowing through a newly constructed sewer line. The water had no color, no odor, and had already undergone several procedures at the landfill site to remove certain…

Lights, Camera…No Comment

David Gelber adjusts his tie. He tugs it left, then right again. It’s as if he’s trying to get more oxygen without disrobing, as if what’s needed right now is a little fresh air, something to cleanse his lungs of the bad odor wafting through the halls of the Jefferson…

How the West Was One

In 1995, Ken Swinehart realized that US West’s neglect of the San Luis Valley had given him a good business opportunity. Although the gigantic phone company was busy installing fiber-optic lines to provide high-speed Internet access and other services along the Front Range, it couldn’t be bothered to do the…

A Bad Rap

Kim Benson doesn’t know why Teller Elementary has such a bad reputation. She just knows that many parents who live around Congress Park won’t even consider enrolling their children there. “I’ve heard from families that have moved into the neighborhood that they’ve been told they shouldn’t even look at Teller,”…

Off Limits

Andy Warhol quipped that in the future everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes — but he didn’t explain how to make it happen. The following makes a good first lesson. On April 1, the Boulder Daily Camera ran a story previewing an April 3 Boulder City Council meeting at…

Fill ‘er Up

Jerry Wiggins lights a Pall Mall, fits a screwdriver attachment into a drill, and eyes the hinges of a door that’s been scuffed, dented, riddled with bullets. “People stop by for free coffee sometimes,” he says, sliding a stepladder over the threshold. “But this is a working station. It’s not…

What We’ve Lost

At its best, the rapport between area readers and their hometown daily newspapers, the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News, is wonderfully personal. Subscribers may love them on some days and hate them on others, but their mere existence is reassuring, and what fills them matters in unexpected ways…

Squash’s New Crop

National Basketball Association players visiting town to abuse the Nuggets prefer to stay at the Westin Hotel downtown, from which they can easily walk to dinner at clubby restaurants such as Morton’s and the Denver ChopHouse & Brewery. Professional golfers on tour through Colorado usually pass time between rounds lounging…