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LettersFrom the week of December 24, 1998ByPublished on December 24, 1998Greene Giant New Times was added to my "must see every week" list as the result of your "first with the story" reporting of the Fife Symington house of cards and his fraudulent activities. You were dead right on that topic and were years ahead of everyone else in figuring it out. I am a CPA, and I spotted Terry Greene Sterling's articles about the Baptist Foundation of Arizona and started reading with interest. Also, I brought the articles to the attention of dozens of individuals I know who have strong connections with various Baptist "causes" (Conservative as well as Southern Baptist). At first, their reaction was, "Ah, it is just New Times . . ."; they discounted the accuracy of the reporting. Now, however, dozens of these doubting Thomases have a newfound respect for your magazine, respect for its details and accuracy (many decided to check out a few of the facts for themselves and have found them to be true). They, like me, now view New Times as free of the good-old-boys club that seems to dominate the local daily newspapers. Few magazines have cutting-edge research going on. The public needs such research; please keep it up! I know at least 50 individuals are new weekly readers of New Times as the direct result of your "first with the news" investigative reporting. They now trust you. Thanks for the great work! Name withheld by request I read the first expose on the Baptist Foundation with awe and chagrin, then waited for the legal explosion. Well, now we have it, and rest assured that if New Times were prosecuting, those suckers would be gone. New Times also perspicaciously highlighted an Arizona trend the local media outlets often ignore: the huge number of people and organizations tempted by the real estate jackpot in Arizona who got burned and who burned others. That is a story that continues even now. The Baptist investigation is on a par with any Pulitzer stuff I have read. Class Act Kelly Meakin Ruben It In Wendy Goodman Editor's note: Navarrette's December 13 column in the Republic again touched on bilingual education; this time, "in the interest of disclosure," he reported that he once worked for Unz and the California "English for the Children" campaign. Helter Smelter It is interesting that ADEQ presented information to New Times that had been withheld from our researchers, despite our threatening litigation to access public records related to the ASARCO smelter. It is interesting also that there are people in Hayden who actually believe that a lawsuit against ASARCO to compensate for the arsenic and lead poisoning would close down the smelter, when the multibillion-dollar ASARCO would have to pay for the damages either way. These same folks probably refuse to examine why the smelter has to smoke so much at night, or why people who just live in the town, like the children, are somehow required to be exposed to these toxins and carcinogens. Years ago, the federal and state governments cooperated to move the town of Ray to make way for ASARCO's enormous copper strip mine now of the same name. This was all done to secure profits for an extractive industry. Let's see if these same government entities can cooperate to save hundreds of citizens' lives by moving Hayden away from the very foot of the smelter activities.
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