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LettersByPublished on March 06, 1997Buffaloed Bills With 23 felony counts to frost his cake, how can Fife Symington remain competent in paving Arizona's roads when he's too busy keeping his own pile of "asphalt" out of jail? Regardless, Arizonans will surely take comfort that such a plea for fashion was placed via his brand-new cell phone. Denny Noel Farmer Clothing Arguments Readers cannot really tell what Lebow is referring to with his confusing explanations of what is being exhibited and the opening evening's performances, including the photograph of the "performance artist" which was not one of the performers that evening. Lebow's categorization of "new feminism," "whiny" and "crummy lot of women, homosexuals and other fashionable outcasts" are prime examples of the writer's fears that are no longer acceptable. This type of labeling is unnecessary and unprofessional for any writer. This vocabulary runs all the way to Capitol Hill and is continually used to "unsupport" the arts with Senator Jesse Helms and others raging at the front of the pack. I hope that people go to this exhibition to experience it for themselves and to understand that art is not all about whether one likes the work or not. Take into consideration what the artwork makes you think about, how you react to the pieces and how many times you approach everyday objects in a different way after experiencing the exhibition. It is okay not to like art, but to be so bitter as to discount and eliminate things from one's life because it makes one think differently can be frightening. Allow some new experiences to be one's conscience and not a tired, neurotic, preoccupied writer/artist who has lost his passion and manners. Sherrie Medina Law Law Land Tony La Spina Editor's note: The American Legion invited Arpaio. I just saw Sheriff Joke on Politically Incorrect With Bill Maher discussing the role of incarceration in rehabilitation (Flashes, February 20). Lenny Bruce said it best: "Good nuts, the ones who blow up trains with 300 people or repeatedly try to kill themselves, should be sent to Bellevue or other institutions equipped with mental-health programs; but bad nuts, who try to kill themselves with heroin or other narcotics, should be sent to jail. "After all, what's the sense of sending a heroin addict to a hospital for intensified therapy and perhaps curing him in three years, when you can have him in and out of jail three times over a period of 10 years? Then, the last time, you've got him for good! "I don't know about you, but I rather enjoy the way tax money is spent to arrest, indict, convict, imprison, parole, and then reimprison these people. I'd just piss it away on beer, anyway." When I read letters from people who attack Sheriff Joe Arpaio, I know I am living in the right place in the 1990s (Letters, January 30). Dan Koal stated that "the sheriff's supporters appear to have never read a book involving basic human kindness or visited any church, since all the major religions seek to inspire compassion, love, understanding and concern for the rest of humanity." He also stated that "Jesus Christ loved the bad guys as much or more than the good guys." I can assure Koal that I am a supporter of Sheriff Joe, and I have read the good book from cover to cover. I attend a Christ-loving church weekly, and I agree that we are taught by Christ to love and forgive everyone. Does Jesus teach that love and forgiveness negate the consequences in society for criminal behavior? I think not. Koal complains that the prisoners are not receiving three hot meals a day and that they don't all have a cot to sleep on. What about the victims? Where is their basic justice? Many victims are in hospital beds in severe pain, or close to death. Many are in a cold grave--God would that they had a cot at night!
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