THE LUCIEN SHOW

One day five years ago, Lucien Wulsin was walking down the hallway at the Naropa Institute. By then his white hair had grown out into a ponytail, and he’d abandoned the suits that had seen him through several distinguished roles: attorney, CEO of Baldwin United Corporation, chairman of the board…

OFF LIMITS

Fool’s gold: Colorado author Clive Cussler keeps raking in the bucks–if not the Pulitzers–with his Dirk Pitt thrillers. The most recent, Inca Gold, is the usual yawn of a yarn, noteworthy primarily for three distinctly Cusslerian conceits. One is the author’s inclusion of himself in the action, in this case…

THE RACE ISSUE

If you’d like a startling new insight into America’s strange love affair with the automobile, try standing beneath one of the underpasses at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway while 230-mile-per-hour race cars scream over the pavement above your head. The sensation is not unlike cozying up to a roomful of tornadoes…

DIALING FOR DOLORS

If Jamey O’Donnell builds it, they will come. And that’s what worries political consultant Rick Reiter. “They” are the homeless, whom Reiter envisions flocking to a new Capitol Hill food bank proposed by O’Donnell, a 37-year-old former drug addict who founded the National Organization Against Homelessness less than two months…

HATE SPRINGS ETERNAL

In the 1981 cult movie The Gods Must Be Crazy, a Kalahari Desert bushman stumbles onto a Coca-Cola bottle tossed from an airplane. As the bottle passes from person to person, each interprets it as something different and finds a way to use it for his purposes. In Colorado Springs,…

WESTWORD WINS

Westword won nine awards at the Colorado Society of Professional Journalists’ 1993 Excellence in Journalism ceremony Friday night, competing for the first time in the big-newspaper class for publications with a circulation of more than 100,000. The only other papers in the class are the Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph, which…

LETTERS

The Name Is Bond Once again, good work by Westword on the airport. I’m referring to Arthur Hodges’s May 18 story about the bond lawyers, “Gentlemen Prefer Bonds.” The article was very well researched and written. Thank you for taking the time to do it right. Just remember, a million…

A FACADE IN THE CROWD

Joe from Crest has always been too busy to talk to me. Whenever I am swept into the cyclone of stuff that is Crest Distributing, browsing obsessively, Joe fixes me with his my-hearing-aid-ain’t-turned-off-YET look and says, “I know what you’re up to, don’t think I don’t.” But I keep right…

LAWS OF CHANCE

part 1 of 2 Cripple Creek police chief Ed Stauffer pushes back from the table at Creekers restaurant, leaving his plate of fries untouched and bringing on a lecture from the matronly waitress. He listens politely to her discourse on diet and health, then lights up a cigarette as she…

GENTLEMEN PREFER BONDS

Last week’s decision by the New York rating company Standard & Poor’s to downgrade Denver International Airport bonds to “junk” status was bad news pretty much all the way around. Mayor Wellington Webb, already reeling from a steady fusillade of embarrassing headlines, suffered yet another blow to his reputation as…

TOWN HAUL

part 2 of 2 The Central City Police Department sits just a half-mile from the site of Black Hawk’s police headquarters. Compared to Black Hawk’s new digs, Central City officers have a modest home. But they’re pleased nonetheless. The officers moved into their headquarters building–a defunct casino–in January, after making…

OFF LIMITS

Their daily bread: The hits just keep on coming, but we’ll wager that Denver’s dailies, which dutifully logged recent national coverage of DIA (and, in the Rocky Mountain News’s case, helpfully corrected inaccuracies), ignore the latest flak. That’s because the current Newsweek takes aim at a particularly sensitive target with…

WORKING OVERTIME

For a time this month, your Denver Nuggets became America’s Denver Nuggets–the fulfillment of underdog dreams, the hope of every factory worker who ever fantasized about playing in the bigs, wowing the Grand Ole Opry or sailing a yacht in Monte Carlo. Hey, nice piece in Sports Illustrated. Ain’t that…

GOTHAM REVIVAL

Bad things are happening to old ladies,” Batman explains. “They’re getting jumped. Their purses are being snatched. You know how it makes me feel? Ticked off.” His eyes narrow like Clint Eastwood’s. “Real ticked off. So I says, `Don’t worry, ladies, I’ll walk the streets.'” Tonight, those streets have led…

FAILING GRADE

In Jefferson County School District, where outcome-based education has been denounced as too radical, you’d expect administrators to be patted on the back for reviving elements of the fondly remembered one-room schoolhouse. But the move to “multi-age” classes has some parents in the state’s largest district angry. Because multi-aging combines…

ONE OF OUR AIRPORTS IS MISSING!

This just in: Stapleton International Airport has disappeared. That’s the official verdict of the American Automobile Association, and it’s perfectly timed for the start of the summer tourist season. The 1994 AAA map of Denver, produced by H.M. Gousha, shows only blank, white space where Stapleton should be. Denver International…

LETTERS

The Doctor Is In…and Out Thanks for Eric Dexheimer’s well-researched and well-written article on Dr. Medenica and Charles Stevinson’s role in promoting him, “Trick or Treatment,” in the April 27 issue. I know nothing of Medenica but feel strongly that we must allow alternative medicine to flourish or die according…

THERE GO THE NEIGHBORHOODS

If she feels at all beleaguered, Jennifer Moulton isn’t showing it. Standing behind a podium in the auditorium of Carson Elementary School, Moulton looks decidedly calm despite the anger and the heat. It is after 8 p.m., and more than 200 east Denver homeowners are in the audience, peppering the…

THE CASTLE ON THE HILL

The beautiful Victorian castle above Colorado Springs where blue-collar bluebloods live out their final days proves that highly skilled manual labor can produce stunning results. But as the people inside the castle can testify, even the finest craftwork doesn’t last forever. Since 1892 the Union Printers Home has been a…

OFF LIMITS

Hose job: If KCNC is “Working 4 Women,” as a current mailing announces, why is the station trying to get a leg up on the competition by suggesting that pantyhose is a crucial issue to female viewers? News 4 hyped its Monday night pantyhose “expose” with a glitzy four-color brochure…

THE ART OF FACILITATION

A woman on Mayor Wellington Webb’s Black Advisory Council has received more than $47,000 in no-bid city contracts over the past fifteen months–including a controversial $16,500 award to provide “outreach” to minority artists that the city is paying for with money from the 23rd Street Viaduct project. The contracts signed…

SECOND-CLASS HANDLING

Postal worker Terry O’Neill says he thought he was doing the right thing back in 1989 when the U.S. Justice Department first asked him to provide information about allegations of discriminatory practices against other U.S. Postal Service employees. Until he got that sick feeling in the pit of his stomach…