Curtains for Ceja

This is what Jose Jesus Ceja did to Linda and Randy Leon. I wasn’t there. On June 30, 1974, 18-year-old Ceja went to the Leons’ home, planning to steal 70 pounds of pot. He didn’t think they’d be at home. When he got there, he found Linda, 22, alone. They…

Garbage In, Garbage Art

Ever since the first Neanderthal scrawled on a cave wall and the second Neanderthal cribbed his style, artists have been “borrowing” from one another. But when it comes to literally lifting a fellow visionary’s work, Valley artist Erastes Cinaedi is the man to beat. For the past eight months, the…

Symington Gets Slammer

In the center of attention, as he has been for years, Fife Symington takes stock of the situation. To his side stands his shell-shocked wife, Ann. Dressed in a red blazer and black skirt, she dutifully assumes her role as the loyal, supportive companion of the fallen leader. On the…

Letters

Say “Win” I find it curious how the lady who finally got her jackpot from Harrah’s thanked God for it (as quoted in the Arizona Republic) as opposed to thanking, oh, say . . . Paul Rubin and New Times for bringing the problem to public attention (“Winner Takes All,”…

Inside the Jury Box

Harold Thompson: Addressing a difficult subject Harold Thompson’s mind reeled on August 15, a hot Friday afternoon, as he sat on a bus, heading west on Interstate 10. For the previous three months, the bus ride to 79th Avenue, where his motor home was parked, had served as a decompression…

Writing a Sentence

Former Arizona governor J. Fife Symington III has just escaped a crush of reporters at the federal courthouse and is moving toward his car when he spies three of the jurors who found him guilty. It is January 20, and Symington is leaving a daylong presentencing hearing. The jurors happen…

Out with the old

A robust, superannuated woman with the stern countenance of the righteous guides her electric tricycle to within hailing distance of two relaxed-looking men who have filled patio chairs for a leisurely smoke. The three exchange brief pleasantries. “Did you go to church today?” the sober matron asks the men. “Was…

Flashes

Saving Arizona’s Unemployed During his final days in management at the Arizona Republic, Steve Knickmeyer confided that he had been ordered to improve abysmal newsroom morale. He finally accomplished that goal, by “resigning.” “Short of finding out he was torn apart by rabid jackals, this is about the best news…

Sick Willie

When Bill Clinton first ran for president, I was still living in Scotland. When an American friend came to visit me, I asked her, “So what do you think of Clinton?” “Clinton’s probably okay,” my friend said. “It’s just too bad she’s married to Bill.” My friend still voted for…

Letters

Ring Down the Curtain Robrt L. Pela’s review of The Wedding Present (“Between a Frock and a Hard Place,” January 22), a play by Marilyn H. Allen which has been four years in development at PlayWright’s Theatre, gives us ample reason that life is so difficult for new playwrights. Pela…

Goin’ Fishin’

One of the first times I saw Big Pete Pearson and the Blues Sevilles was at Char’s Has the Blues, the club on North Seventh Avenue. I was chasing shots of Jack Daniel’s with ice-cold Rolling Rocks. At one point during the performance, Big Pete disappeared from view. But the…

Meth Mess

Editor’s note: Paul Rubin and David Holthouse reported extensively on crystal methamphetamine in the December 18 issue in a 16-page special section, “Methology.” Valley drug cops busted 11 crystal methamphetamine labs during the first three weeks of January. One of them was a three-bedroom apartment in the 1700 block of…

Flashes

Giant Sucking Trees Three national forests in Arizona are among the nation’s top 10 money losers when it comes to logging, according to a study conducted by the Wilderness Society. The study, which covers fiscal 1996, states that Tonto (ranked second), Kaibab (fifth) and Coconino (ninth) national forests generated little…

Dialogue-Rolling

The press release looks pretty good. “One America in the 21st Century,” it reads. It’s the President’s Initiative on Race, and it’s happening in Phoenix. The president won’t show up, of course. But U.S. Labor Secretary Alexis Herman will (freshly accused of accepting bribes when she was a White House…

Letters

Ill at Ease The overall tone of Chris Farnsworth’s article suggests that Dr. Ken Fisher’s reputation as a pillar of the community is long-standing, while his reputation for sexual impropriety in the workplace is more recent (“Dr. Fisher and Mr. Hyde,” January 8). It is true that the first actual…

Gulag-Rolling

We’ve said it all along, and now it’s official: Sheriff Joe Arpaio is a liar. And not much better can be said about his simpering cheerleader, former U.S. attorney Janet Napolitano, who hopes to be Arizona’s next attorney general. Can there be any other interpretation of the content of a…

Child Con Carny

“So, come in and meet the kids!” Ushering visitors into the dimly lighted family room of his Phoenix home, proud papa Shad Kvetko points toward the apples of his eye–an instant family he acquired from an out-of-state side-show operator. Clustered together atop a glass display are Kvetko’s five little monsters,…

Good Year for Bad Days

It’s an archetypical Western story. Four earnest young cowpunks pile onto a bus and set out on the hardest road they can find, looking for life and adventure and irony. Along the way, they make people laugh and dance. They find unexpected success, then return home with an empty gas…

Reservation Politics

A petition citing numerous allegations including gambling irregularities is circulating to recall the leader of the Gila River Indian Community. The petition surfaced earlier this week, although it is unclear who is organizing the recall effort. The petition, which had not been filed with the tribal secretary for legal approval…

Winner Takes All

Herminia Rodriguez looks out the passenger window of her attorney’s car and sees Harrah’s Ak-Chin in the distance. “Oh, my God,” she says. “I just have this feeling they’re going to say no again. God have mercy.” Chico Rodriguez tries to put his wife of 36 years at ease. “Hey,…

Hog-Tied by the Truth

On March 1, 1994, while awaiting trial on burglary, county jail inmate Matthew Creamer was beaten so badly there were blood blisters in his ears. Creamer filed numerous grievances, saying that he had been the victim of an unprovoked attack. But his attackers, two Maricopa County detention officers, swore that…

Letters

Slot Machinations Herminia Rodriguez doesn’t need a lawyer to go after her $330,000 winnings from Ak-Chin casino (“Lost Harrah’s,” Paul Rubin, January 8)! What she needs is a good PR person to contact every Indian casino in the country to explain that the perception of being mistreated at an Indian…