A Long Day’s Journey

One night in March 1987, Mary and Manny Carbajal and several members of their family gathered around a kitchen table at their home in downtown Phoenix. It would be more than a year before their 19-year-old son Michael would become world famous, and his inspirational story had yet to be…

“I’ve Been Had”

Phoenix City Councilwoman Frances Emma Barwood says her first instinct was to call a press conference in Mayor Skip Rimsza’s office and, in front of the Valley’s media, slug him. She only changed her mind, she says, because it wouldn’t be smart to commit an assault on camera. Barwood says…

Flashes

Howl He Explain All This? Last week was a busy time for former KTVK-TV Channel 3 weather forecaster Jim Howl. On Friday, news of his gubernatorial aspirations leaked. Then on Saturday, it was reported that Howl had admitted the reason he was fired from Channel 3 after 24 years: alleged…

Republic Scoops Self

With jury selection for Governor J. Fife Symington III’s criminal trial only weeks away, Symington’s bankruptcy attorney last week manufactured a bombshell that the Arizona Republic obligingly splashed on its front page. The story contained numerous inaccuracies. After New Times brought the errors to the Republic’s attention on Monday, the…

Letters

How Sweet It Was Thanks a ton for the column partially about Brian Connolly (Coda, March 27)! I’m a big Sweet fan from way back. I was maybe 8 or 10 when I first admired them on television with my older cousin, something that has definitely shaped my musical taste…

Feline in the Sky

For all intents and purposes, Chimpy is a normal feline. Some of you may remember him from my 1995 personal “Best of Phoenix” column, in which I selected him as “Best Cat.” You may recall the photograph that accompanied the story; he was a furry, gray kitten with large eyes,…

The Hills Are Alive

I was kneeling over a stack of 10-cent records in the Salvation Army thrift store on South Central Avenue a few months ago, thumbing through the usual dog-eared copies of Herb Alpert albums that every American seems to have owned at one point and then given away–the scratched Christmas LPs,…

“The Market Is Ripe for the Taking”

KNXV Channel 15 station manager Michael Kronley wrote this “Competitive Profile” of the television news market for his general manager, Brad Nilsen, in October. New Times obtained the memo, which is excerpted here. KTVK Channel 3: This station is backing off its marketing line of “Arizona’s Family Station,” but continues…

Chit Happens

The parking lot at KNXV-TV Channel 15 contains a vestige of the station’s earlier, quirkier incarnation. The rusting “Al’s World” convertible, which once carried reporter Al Feinberg around the state for a series of offbeat stories, now rests under a tarp. One tire is flat. Like many trademark elements of…

Pouring Fuel on a Fire

Contaminated soil and groundwater beneath the site of a proposed seven-story parking garage are driving up costs of a project already over budget and embroiled in controversy. The structure would cover nearly five acres across Jefferson Street from the $351 million Bank One Ballpark. The stadium is scheduled to be…

On the Virg

Two New Times writers are finalists for the state’s top journalism prize Two New Times staff writers–John Dougherty and Tony Ortega–are among three nominees for Arizona’s top journalism prize, Arizona Press Club officials announced Monday. Arizona Republic reporter Bill Muller joins Dougherty and Ortega as a finalist for the title…

Reporter Captures Two National Awards

New Times staff writer Paul Rubin has won a national Unity Media Award from Lincoln University of Missouri. Rubin won the contest’s Investigative Reporting category for his series “A System Gone Mad,” about a mentally ill Vietnam veteran who died of heat prostration after he was released onto the streets…

Flashes

Logan’s Run? On the morning of Wednesday, March 26–just as the first copies of the March 27 issue of New Times were hitting the streets–Kim Boyden received a voice mail message from a representative with the City of Scottsdale’s Victim Assistance Program. Boyden, whose photo was on the cover of…

Not Victim Enough

Logan struck up a conversation with Kim Boyden, over her Stoli on the rocks and his Black Russian. The two had a lot in common. They’d both grown up in Michigan. They’d both had a rotten morning. And, that day, August 12, 1996, both had stopped at Eli’s Bar and…

Water Over the Dam

A year ago this week, on March 26, 1996, Dave Wegner and Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt were standing at the base of Glen Canyon Dam, giving simultaneous interviews with competing national morning TV news shows, shouting over the roar of the torrent that rocketed 100 yards out of…

Flashes

Open Yer Mouse and Shay Aah If you are an alcohol- or drug-addicted doctor, Sue Gerard is your salvation. State Representative Gerard wants to ensure that derelict doctors and other health-care professionals are protected from public scrutiny. That’s why she sponsored House Bill 2028, the “Drunk Doctor Bill.” Gerard’s pet…

Mane of Steel

Whenever someone tells Joe Aylward he’s got holes in his head, he doesn’t argue the point. “Many people look at me and the first thing they say is ‘stupid kid!'” concedes Aylward, a 33-year-old apprentice body-piercer in Tempe. “It’s always like, ‘This guy has got to be the biggest moron…

Escaped Crusader

Bob’s scrapbook sits on his living-room table. It contains many pictures from Bob’s teen years, which were spent in the small, idyllic town of Springfield, Illinois. Bob, 33, flips proudly through the pages. There he is hanging out with his buddies. There he is smiling with a girl. There he…

The Truth About Cats & Dogs

When I was a kid, a cat lady lived near my grandparents. The cat lady’s cheeks were rouged in perfect round circles and she muttered to herself. Everyone said she was crazy, and that she smelled funny because she had hundreds of cats in her house. Sometimes, I would sneak…

Letters

Murder, He Wrote I was delighted to read Paul Rubin’s series about the Jeanne Tovrea case as I lived in Phoenix at the time of her murder (“Tovrea Murder–a Series,” February 27, March 6 and 13). While no one has been tried or convicted, I am glad to see that…

Symington Family Partner Under Suspicion

Governor J. Fife Symington III’s family has extensive personal and financial ties to a Mexican businessman who cannot enter the United States because of persistent drug-trafficking allegations, New Times has learned. The U.S. Customs Service has compiled intelligence that Alejandro Canelos Rodriguez, a Sinaloa produce farmer, shipper and distributor, may…

Inspectors Can Do Little to Stem Tide of Smuggling

U.S. law enforcers face an overwhelming task in staunching the flow of illicit drugs from Mexico into the United States. At border towns such as Nogales, a handful of officers is confronted with a huge volume of cross-border pedestrian, automobile and truck traffic each day. And this doesn’t include the…