BEDTIME FOR BONZO V

Yet Another Compelling True-Life Sci-Fi Docu-Drama in One Act The curtain rises. The time: 9 p.m. The place: the spectacularly messy bedroom of a five-year-old boy who is being tucked into bed. BOY: Dad, I’m gonna tell you a bedtime story tonight. Okay? MAN: Ooooh, good! What’s the name of…

THE UNSOPHISTICATESUE LAYBE’S RICHES-TO-RAGS SAGA

The day before she resigned from the Arizona State Legislature last week, just an hour before she showed up at the Capitol for the second day of her ethics evidentiary hearings, Representative Sue Laybe was picking at a peach cobbler at the Golden Rule Cafe and recalling the afternoon when…

SCOUNDREL TIME

The terrible truth is that there can be no statute of limitations on moral crimes. Watch the final scene of the new film Guilty by Suspicion and you will understand. Robert De Niro strides from the hearing room of the House Un-American Activities Committee. He has refused to name friends…

SCHOOL FOR SCANDALASU STUDENT COMEDY GROUP EXAMINES THE FARCE SIDE OF LIFE

These two guys sit down at a table in the basement of the Memorial Union at Arizona State University. They’re young, kind of geeky, probably freshmen. They pull McDonald’s hamburgers from paper sacks. It’s 12:30, lunchtime, Friday afternoon: Showtime for the Farce Side, ASU’s student-run comedy troupe. Loud rock music…

THE FACE OF WAR

The haunted face of Bob Simon, once a self-assured and cocky CBS correspondent, tells us all we need to know about the senseless cruelty of war. Simon and the members of his television crew appeared on 60 Minutes this past Sunday. They had just been released by the Iraqi army,…

THE FANS’ MAN

They finally elected Bill Veeck to baseball’s Hall of Fame. I don’t pretend to know how that honor would sit with him, though. Even though he was an owner most of his years in the game, Veeck was always considered an iconoclast. While most owners have always thought a baseball…

Forget About It

People keep asking me if I think Arizona’s two senators will get away with it. I tell them I don’t think so. Everyone tells me I’m wrong because by the time elections come around everyone will forget. But this time, I don’t think people will forget the strange alliance that…

WHO WILL BLINK? NEIGHBORHOODS OR DEVELOPERS?

The competition over who shall rule east Phoenix–its developers or its neighborhoods–is shifting into overdrive as the City Council prepares to vote this month on a hard-fought plan guiding future growth around the area’s commercial core at 24th Street and Camelback Road. As the council’s March 20 vote approaches, the…

WHO’S THE BOSS?

Since there are more people outside the world’s prisons than within them, I guess it’s safe to assume that most child-rearing methods work, no matter how nutty they seem. But sometimes you wonder–like when you spend three days playing host to house guests from the What, Me Worry? School of…

CLASS STRUGGLE

It is midafternoon. As a shrill electric bell signals the end of another day of classes, a tall, middle-aged man in a dark blue suit and a red tie leans down to talk to the young woman walking by his side. Dr. Roger Romero, superintendent of the Wilson Elementary School…

ARIZONA’S DONKENNEY, THAT IS, NOT CORLEONE

Representative Don Kenney, the public servant best known for his ability to fit $55,000 in cash into a gym bag, was a very noticeable defendant at the group arraignment last week. For one thing, he came alone, unlike some of the accused, who were accompanied by friends and spouses. For…

FIFEAND HIS PAPERBOYS

It never ends. You’d think the breach of public trust would bottom out in this state. You’d think the tales of political corruption at the Arizona State Legislature would inspire the other players in the public arena to show some integrity. What with our first gubernatorial run-off election only days…

CEREAL KILLER

It’s the most important decision you have to make whenever you enter a grocery store: Which brand of sugar-frosted, honey-coated, chemically colored, artificially flavored breakfast cereal should you purchase for your kids today? Once again, let’s join hands, gaze skyward, and thank God I’m here to help. Originally, I planned…

THE ONG DYNASTYGROWING UP CHINESE-AMERICAN

Among the stubby commercial buildings that surged northward along 16th Street when Phoenix started booming after World War II, there is one in the 2600 block that catches the eye again and again. It is part of a cinderblock row of storefronts patterned, like much of the street, by odd…

UNDER SIEGE

The elderly woman in the TV-show audience pleads with the shadows on the screen to give up the gang life and stop terrorizing her neighborhood. Sitting in a studio with a hundred other people, the woman describes to them how her fourteen-year-old grandson was shot down in a gang incident…

IF PHOENIX WERE BAGHDADWOULD YOUR HOUSE BE COLLATERAL DAMAGE?

After four weeks of Operation Desert Storm, American airplanes have made more than 50,000 sorties over Kuwait and Iraq and have dropped more ordnance than was used against Japan in all of World War II. Although Pentagon spokespersons say “smart bombs” can make surgical strikes against military targets–with sufficient accuracy…

THE TOWN TEES OFFCAREFREE HAULS THREE THIRSTY GOLF COURSES TO COURT

Dressed in his pale yellow golf sweater and jogging shoes, Bob Anderson, a seventy-year-old retiree from Chicago, fits right in with the other retirees in Carefree. Like his neighbors, he has golf on his mind. But there’s a difference. In the world of Arizona water politics, the retired real-estate lawyer…

WHAT SYMINGTON IS HIDING

These days it takes a blood lust to run for public office. In time, the candidate must forsake time-honored virtues. He must lie. He must cheat. Sometimes he must do both. Three weeks ago New Times ran an investigation of Fife Symington’s real estate empire. Like many others, we wondered…