WHEN SOMEONE DIGS YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

Tara McCabe, a thin and thirtysomething woman with a world-weary grin, thought she had found a slice of paradise three years ago when she moved to Walker, a Bradshaw Mountain hideaway that started out last century as a booming gold camp. In a world of encroaching concrete, Walker is a…

MEDICAL MALPRACTICE

Seated at the conference table in his windowless office last week, Ted Williams looked like a man with a $40 million headache. For almost a year, Williams has been in charge of Maricopa County’s Health Care Agency, which runs the county hospital, neighborhood clinics and various other programs that tend…

THE SUNS AND PHOENIX’S SPINELESS DAILY PRESS

The comparisons stick in the back of your mind. The O.J. Simpson story is merely the opposite side of the coin to the now-infamous Phoenix Suns sex party. The difference is that in Los Angeles, two people died and it caused an immediate media explosion. In Phoenix, a woman may…

THE SHANE OF IT ALL

Shane Stant spent the last weeks of his freedom literally shoveling shit. He’d taken a construction job in rural Oregon while he was waiting to be sentenced to prison. He was working for meals and not a paycheck, and one of his tasks was to dig the excrement out of…

IT’S MY PARTY, I CAN SPLURGE IF I WANT TO

For her ride, the quinceaera has chosen the bed of a 1978 Chevy El Camino with a lipstick-colored, scooped-out interior. She floats in her velvety hot tub on wheels like a cloud, swaddled in sequins as the driver pilots the car toward the aging church on 17th Avenue just south…

A PROFILE IN COURAGE

We go along thinking there are no surprises left. We think we have seen it all. And then a baseball coach like Jim Brock comes along. Without sermonizing, he teaches us a whole new definition of courage. Jim Brock was an uncommon man. He was not, however, a private man–and…

CASTLE HOT SPRINGS

Ena McGuire remembers the morning after the main building at Castle Hot Springs burned to the ground. The fire took place in December 1976, only days before the resort was to open for the season. Ena McGuire delivered the mail up and down the road the hotel was located on…

THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULDN’T

Operating problems continue to mount at the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station. It seems Arizona Public Service Company engineers have had a difficult time keeping a diesel electric generator running, let alone all three nuclear reactors at the power plant. APS manages the plant for a consortium of utilities. The…

MONITOR LAGGARDS

When it comes to collecting samples of airborne radioactive dust, more is not merrier for the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station. Internal documents discarded at an abandoned workers’ dormitory in Tonopah (Secrets of the Palo Verde Inn,” June 1) indicate that Arizona Public Service Company concluded in 1985 that a…

THE LIFE BEHIND A RACIAL MISTAKE

Nothing like it has ever occurred in Arizona. Last Thursday, Judge Stanley Goodfarb stood in a courtroom, stripped of the familiar comfort he usually takes from his black robes. Ushered before the Arizona Supreme Court in the civilian clothes of the accused, Goodfarb stood charged with making racist comments and…

CHICAGO, ROSTY’S KIND OF TOWN

It’s the waiting, you keep thinking. That’s what will wear on Congressman Danny Rostenkowski, at least until the cell door finally closes. But I find it hard to understand all the frenzy. Sure, the government lawyers, all decked out in their nice, conservative suits, are bent on destroying him. But…

SECRETS OF THE PALO VERDE INN

Early last Wednesday morning, a determined caravan of workers from Arizona Public Service Company trundled into the dusty, decrepit desert town of Tonopah on a special mission. The crew, led by the utility’s cellular-phone-toting public relations chief, had been urgently dispatched to retrieve thousands of internal APS documents that the…