Flashes

Early and Often The Flash was button-poppin’ proud to do patriotic duty in the polling booth on Tuesday. Actually, it wasn’t a polling booth; it was more like a polling kiosk. This Burst of Light developed writers’ cramp while once again voting to turn out all the judges–and also found…

Arroz con Polling Place

There are millions of Mexican nationals living in the United States–legally or illegally–a fact that has not escaped some Mexican politicians who will begin debating later this month whether to let that sizable expatriate community vote in Mexican national elections. Mexican politicos on the stump in Arizona? Mexican voting booths…

How Grand Was My Canyon

How does a mile-deep hole in the desert become a cultural icon, a mystic symbol and the world’s biggest tourist attraction? That’s what Arizona State University professor Stephen J. Pyne set out to explain in his new book, How the Canyon Became Grand. “The simple view is that here’s this…

The Continuing Adventures of Big Red

The long cookie bake-off is finally over for Granny Hull. Here is what she’s been camera-mugging, sweet-talking and publicly patting small school children on the head for throughout the past year. In this, her moment of truth and reconciliation with the people of Arizona, Governor Jane Dee Hull finally can…

Insatiable

This week, let’s talk about adultery. About illicit blowjobs. And about perjury. Better yet, let’s talk about a guy who does all of those things. Let’s pick a guy who not only cheated on his wife by getting multiple blowjobs (so he could say he hadn’t “had sex” with the…

Letters

Squat’s Up I totally disagree with Tempe’s proposed ordinance to prevent homeless kids from sitting on sidewalks (“Crusty Crackdown,” David Holthouse, October 22). I think it is wrong and should not be accepted. I am an upper-class white male, and feel sorry for the bums on the street. They have…

A Proposition 200 Close-Up

Proposition 200, the Citizens Clean Elections Act, would give candidates for statewide and legislative offices the opportunity to opt for nearly complete public financing. They’d be allowed to raise a small amount of private cash for exploratory committees. The rules would not apply to candidates for federal or local elections,…

Flashes

Giving Moods While Arizonans debate the idea of getting big money out of state political campaigns, four Arizonans have been giving big money to federal campaigns. The quartet made the new list of political fat cats put out by Mother Jones magazine–the MoJo 400. Altogether, the foursome accounted for $172,109…

Rematch Game ’98

Two years ago, television sportscaster-turned-congressman J.D. Hayworth was just one more name on Arizona’s list of political embarrassments. The Gingrich-ite made headlines for overnighting in his office and picking fights with seasoned House members like Maryland’s Steny Hoyer and Wisconsin’s Dave Obey. The Progressive called him one of the 10…

No, No, Janet

Like a bowl of granola laced with prune bits, I know I am supposed to like Janet Napolitano. But, damn, it’s a dry chew. Here in Arizona, amongst a certain crowd that came of age during the civil rights and Vietnam protests, it is gospel that Napolitano must be our…

The Tony and John Show

I’ve known Tony West for years, and privately, West can be a very charming and nice guy. But if West is elected to the Arizona Corporation Commission, the agency that regulates securities and utilities could suffer an ethical meltdown. Here’s why: Tony West, Arizona’s current state treasurer, is impressed by…

Near-Death Experience

Midnight. A blues song plays, scratching the air with the romance of desolation. A few people are still here. My feet rest on the table. I’m drinking Jack Daniel’s from a glass. On the other side of the table, Dale Baich has a glass of his own. Baich is a…

The Serene Clean Elections Machine

None of this happens in Arizona. An unassuming health-food salesman from Scottsdale does not craft a law designed to separate elected officials from the campaign contributions they glean from the lobbyists who wield influence at the state Capitol. A grandmother from Sun City West certainly does not organize and nurture…

The Bench Warmer and the Straggler

The morning’s newspapers have nuked him, and Paul Johnson is dealing with the fallout. On a warm morning in early October, Johnson’s tall, lanky body is folded into the passenger seat of a speeding red Honda Passport. He juggles two different cellular phones and a pager with his driver, who…

Tom and Janet’s Excellent AG Venture

Janet Napolitano plays it straight. While her opponent, Republican Tom McGovern, is chasing down the soccer moms and dads with boomer-ready buzz words, the Democratic candidate for attorney general stumps on her legal and managerial experience as a U.S. attorney and a private lawyer, and on her vision for the…

Why Growing Smarter Will Grow Old Fast

Each day, a squadron of earthmoving machines tears through rolling Sonoran desert 30 miles north of downtown Phoenix, ripping out native plants, destroying wildlife habitat and preparing open space for development. The planned residential community dubbed the Villages at Desert Hills is bisected by Interstate 17 and is being reshaped…

This Just In

The Secret Files of BOMEX The Arizona State Board of Medical Examiners (BOMEX) voted last month to cut off public access to thousands of complaints filed against doctors. Until now, citizens could call BOMEX and find out how many complaints had been filed against a doctor, what the complaints were…

Flashes

The Joke’s on Katie Sheriff Joke Arpaio made another stellar showing in his ongoing campaign to promote all-that-is-backward about the great state of Arizona. On Columbus Day, NBC’s Today show pitted the Crime Avenger against Amnesty International U.S. director William Schulz on the occasion of Amnesty’s first report in its…

Under Fire

Arizona Veterans Service Commission executive director Norman Gallion retired last week–hours after a New Times story reported on continuing problems in the troubled state agency. AVSC board chairman Carroll Fyffe says Gallion announced his surprise retirement–which is effective November 1–in a faxed letter sent to Fyffe’s home in Sierra Vista…

Crusty Crackdown

The City of Tempe is about to serve notice on the “crusties,” or homeless youths, who flock to Mill Avenue for the winter: “Watch your butts. Literally.” The Tempe City Council, in conjunction with the business district’s management company, Downtown Tempe Community Inc., is preparing to pass a municipal “sidewalk…

The Dead-and-Gone Salon

“Live by the mascara wand, die by the mascara wand.” If that’s not the official motto of a new Valley business catering to the cosmetology needs of the dead, it’s probably because the founders haven’t thought of it already. “Whether you’re alive or whether you’re gone, you have to wear…

Letters

Fowl Play As the No. 1 ranked Scrabble player in Arizona, I feel forced to respond to Jamie Massey’s flip comments dismissing Scrabble as a genteel alternative to cockfighting (“Out, Out, Damn Sport!” David Holthouse, October 8). At least on this end, there is no vicarious avian schadenfreude. The emotional…