5280 Magazine – May 2018

(avery) #1

20 |^5280 |^ MAY 2^018


A LIBRARY
Assistant editor Mary Clare
Fischer’s first job as a teen-
ager was at a Michigan
library. So it was particular-
ly fitting that she examined
the changing role of local
libraries in “Shelf Life”
(page 40), a piece com-
memorating the centennial
anniversaries of the Denver
Public Library’s Byers and
Smiley branches.

Behind The Stories


JASON HATFIELD
Photographer

Jason Hatield wasn’t
assigned to shoot
photos for this issue’s
“Iconic Places” fea-
ture (page 76), which
highlights some of the
most stunning loca-
tions in the Mountain
West region. Yet the
Highlands Ranch
photographer’s skills
still proved useful:
He’d already captured
mesmerizing shots
of three of the 10
featured sites. One
such image depicts
the brilliant north-
ern lights above
a pitch-black Hid-
den Lake Trail in
Montana’s Glacier
National Park. From
a distance, Hatield
thought the glowing
cloud was light pol-
lution—but he was
delighted to ind out
he was witnessing
the aurora borealis.
As this issue went to
press, the lensman had
just returned from a
trip to Alaska where
he chased the polar
lights even farther
north. Hatield’s work
has also been featured
in Men’s Journal.

NATASHA GARDNER
Articles Editor

Covering politics often
entails side-by-side
comparisons of two
candidates. But as Col-
oradan after Coloradan
iled to run for this
year’s crowded guber-
natorial race, articles
editor Natasha Gard-
ner saw a chance to
look beyond the names
to better understand
how elections work in
the Centennial State.
In “43: Inside he
2018 Gubernatorial
Election” (page 88),
she focuses on what it
took to win the state’s
highest post in the
past—and what it will
take this year and go-
ing forward. “Colorado
was already a politi-
cally dynamic place,”
Gardner says. “But this
year, we have a new
primary system that is
forcing campaigns to
strategize diferently.”
he result? The race
to pick the next gov-
ernor is going to
be contentious.

KASEY CORDELL
Features Editor

As a journalist who
regularly covers vet-
erans and as the wife
of a space weather
forecaster (seriously),
features editor Kasey
Cordell is intimately
familiar with both
boots on the ground
and the celestial bod-
ies above us. Until
she began reporting
“Space Games” (page
106), though, she
hadn’t realized those
interests collided in
the form of two Colo-
rado Springs–based
Air Force units. The
Space Aggressor
squadrons train the
U.S. military on how
to determine if GPS
signals and other
satellite communi-
cations are being
disrupted—and on
how to continue
operating with-
out them. “What
surprised me most,”
Cordell says, “was just
how much the civilian
world relies on these
technologies too.”

“ONE LOOK


AROUND THE


DOME THAT


NIGHT MADE


IT CLEAR THAT


THIS IS WHERE


YOU CAN FIND


MANY OF GRAND


COUNTY’S


MOSTLY INVIS


IBLE LATINOS.”


—Writer
Martin J. Smith on
the Grand County
soccer field that
has served as a
community builder
for the region
(“The Big Tent,”
page 62)

3


52


80


Dave Buresh/the

Denver Post

via Getty Images; Illustrations by Dierdra Olin

Childhood Haunts
We (Metaphorically)
Returned To In This
Month’s Issue

A PLAYGROUND
When editorial assistant
Shane Monaghan was
about 10, he often left his
southeast Denver home
for the refuge of Hampden
Heights Park. There, he’d
while away the hours on
the basketball court and
playground. Like him, play-
grounds have since grown
up, a trend he chronicles
in “Play A Different Way”
(page 24).

AN AMUSEMENT PARK
One of associate food edi-
tor Callie Sumlin’s favorite
places to go as a child was
Lakeside Amusement Park.
Decades later, she writes
about being thankful that
the dilapidated park still
exists in a vastly different
Denver (“Along For The
Ride,” page 28).
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