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Letters to the Editor

Letters from the week of 2/14/2008

"Scourge of the Underworld," Alan Prendergast, February 7

Going Gangbusters!

Kudos to Alan Prendergast for a marvelous story of crime and corruption in Denver in the early 1900s. Special applause for his use of the vernacular of the times.
Joe Gallegos
Denver

I just wanted to let you know how much I enjoyed "Scourge of the Underworld." As soon as I finished it, I went online and purchased a copy of Philip Van Cise's Fighting the Underworld. Thank you for your excellent work and for shining some light on an important figure in Denver's history.
Seth Nelson
Brighton

Denver is a great place to raise a family because it is one of the safer cities to live in. Denver could have easily become a Los Angeles or Chicago, but it didn't, because of incorruptable crimefighters such as Philip Van Cise.
Michael Cryer
Denver

Thank you for Alan Prendergast's fine article. He mentioned Philip Van Cise's part in investigating the Ludlow massacre but did not go into his service as a peacekeeper before the massacre. In 1913 he commanded a company of National Guardsmen that was sent to Ludlow to maintain order.

In complete contrast to Lieutenant Karl Linderfelt's Company B, Captain Van Cise's Company K carried out its mission impartially and fairly. Van Cise and his men treated the strikers with respect, and in return, the strikers cooperated with him fully. He is favorably mentioned in several books about the Coalfield War, including Buried Unsung: Louis Tikas and the Ludlow Massacre, by Zeese Papanikolas, The Great Coalfield War, by Senator George McGovern, and Out of the Depths, by Barron Beshoar.

An example of Van Cise's character occurred on November 30, 1913, when a train arrived at Ludlow carrying strikebreakers. When hundreds of strikers and their wives rushed to the train station intending to murder the strikebreakers, Van Cise risked his life to keep the two sides apart and prevent violence. In the end, he ordered the strikers to return to their tents, and he ordered the strikebreakers to continue to Trinidad in accordance with the governor's orders.

I also wish to point out that Van Cise warned his superiors that Linderfelt's Company B was the biggest threat to peace at Ludlow months before Company B committed the Ludlow Massacre — when Van Cise was almost 200 miles away in Denver.
Frank Manning
Denver


"Four Questions," Noah Van Sciver

No Strip Tease

I would like to commend you on the new comic strip in the past two issues of Westword. I am so glad you've hired a music cartoonist again! Keep the strips coming!
Robin Edwards
Denver

I miss Derf! It's the first thing I look at!
Mike Pokorny
Denver 

Editor's note: Derf's The City was displaced by a recent redesign of this page. But we've added a new, and local, cartoon; find Four Questions on page 70 of this issue.


"The Candidate," Naomi Zeveloff, January 17

Servant to the Truth

The only thing more amusing than the profile of Ali Hasan was the letter from his mother in the January 31 issue!
Jody Miles
Denver

It is sad that the only impression most of your readers will have of the Hasan family is from Naomi Zeveloff's recent article. She paints a picture of them that is simply misleading at best and malicious at worst.

I have known the Hasans for more than two decades and have always found them to be gracious. Their children have been raised and challenged to be the best they can possibly be and to make a contribution to the world. You never mentioned the eldest daughter, who is a respected and brilliant physician in Colorado, and only glossed over Asma, who is a bright and thoughtful attorney and author. These are children who could have chosen to do nothing in life and simply live off their parents' accomplishments. They did not; and honestly, Seeme and Malik would never have allowed that.

It's simply too bad that your readers were given a very different image.
Linda Backstein Kirscht
Greenwood Village

 
  • Rachael Pollard 02/19/2008 1:17:00 AM

    When I saw Noah Van Sciver's comic on page 70 I felt that at that moment I could die a happy woman. To be forever immortalized in this amazing form AND in this prestigious music mag, struck me as the apex of achievement in my creative field. But now that the huzzah has begun to fade, I realize that I am still just riding on the donkey-back of the crap-shoot called dumb-as-a-rock luck. What exactly am I saying here???? Thank you. Thank you. If you knew me ever, you would know that this is CRAYze. And you would know that I love it. You would be like, "is this girl getting sarcastic now? what's wrong with her here?". Those are the kinds of things which you would wonder, if you saw how much I gushed about this thrilling coup. And so I must cut to the high-speed car chase, grab the jar by the handle, and tell all of you what I would invariably have to explain to my nearest and dearies. This: I am truly thrilled and honored. What else was I saying? Oh, yes. oh, yes, it is about the music. Thing is, friends and fans and family (= framnies)I still have yet to finish my official full-length album. My shout-out to you, then, is this: WAit! Wait! It will be just a wee mite longer. Then may you hear it for yourself, then may you -gasp!- find out that this much-adored hype is possibly unwarranted. or not. Or not. Please wait!" When I was asked to play one song at BornInTheFlood's Bluebird party late December, I made the kind of choice that could have been detrimental to my music career. I played the shortest song I have; a song that takes up less than 17 seconds; because I was scared...plum scared, having never been upon the stage of that fine establishment, just plum scared. It went okay, I guess, but I did upset my friends, who wanted more than that for their troubles and it got me thinking, 'oh, this isn't just about me is it?'. I started kicking big words like 'responsibility' around and that got me scared again. What is it to entertain? I do this at home and everywhere else it is kind of just a horrific embarrassment. My friend Doo Crowder, of the large and in charge ensemble PeePee, has the same feelings on this, and has yet to share this strange spotlight - though he and they are some of the neatest and the sweetest in Denver right now. Doo covered one of my songs for my benefit show and I swear, that was the greatest compliment and I felt the same floating, smiling, belovedness as this. He did it better than me. And I wrote it. It gave me the nicest kind of validation. Was it just that the song was mine? Or was it his rendition? I wish you guys would shine your big spotlight on Crowder and the gang. When Noah Van Sciver approached me for the Four Questions interview, I felt a chill surge through me in giddy lightheadedness. To reiterate: Thank You. Heads up, PeePee. and, wait!

  • Rachael Pollard 02/19/2008 1:15:00 AM

    When I saw Noah Van Sciver's comic on page 70 I felt that at that moment I could die a happy woman. To be forever immortalized in this amazing form AND in this prestigious music mag, struck me as the apex of achievement in my creative field. But now that the huzzah has begun to fade, I realize that I am still just riding on the donkey-back of the crap-shoot called dumb-as-a-rock luck. What exactly am I saying here???? Thank you. Thank you. If you knew me ever, you would know that this is CRAYze. And you would know that I love it. You would be like, "is this girl getting sarcastic now? what's wrong with her here?". Those are the kinds of things which you would wonder, if you saw how much I gushed about this thrilling coup. And so I must cut to the high-speed car chase, grab the jar by the handle, and tell all of you what I would invariably have to explain to my nearest and dearies. This: I am truly thrilled and honored. What else was I saying? Oh, yes. oh, yes, it is about the music. Thing is, friends and fans and family (= framnies)I still have yet to finish my official full-length album. My shout-out to you, then, is this: WAit! Wait! It will be just a wee mite longer. Then may you hear it for yourself, then may you -gasp!- find out that this much-adored hype is possibly unwarranted. or not. Or not. Please wait!" When I was asked to play one song at BornInTheFlood's Bluebird party late December, I made the kind of choice that could have been detrimental to my music career. I played the shortest song I have; a song that takes up less than 17 seconds; because I was scared...plum scared, having never been upon the stage of that fine establishment, just plum scared. It went okay, I guess, but I did upset my friends, who wanted more than that for their troubles and it got me thinking, 'oh, this isn't just about me is it?'. I started kicking big words like 'responsibility' around and that got me scared again. What is it to entertain? I do this at home and everywhere else it is kind of just a horrific embarrassment. My friend Doo Crowder, of the large and in charge ensemble PeePee, has the same feelings on this, and has yet to share this strange spotlight - though he and they are some of the neatest and the sweetest in Denver right now. Doo covered one of my songs for my benefit show and I swear, that was the greatest compliment and I felt the same floating, smiling, belovedness as this. He did it better than me. And I wrote it. It gave me the nicest kind of validation. Was it just that the song was mine? Or was it his rendition? I wish you guys would shine your big spotlight on Crowder and the gang. When Noah Van Sciver approached me for the Four Questions interview, I felt a chill surge through me in giddy lightheadedness. To reiterate: Thank You. Heads up, PeePee. and, wait!

 
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