A LIFE AMONG THE DEAD

Portia Erickson, the assistant county manager who oversees the ME’s Office, notes that the economy is picking up and there may be funds available soon. I’m sorry, but I’m afraid given the workload and the facility, that’s not good enough,” says Keen. You can’t just put the bodies in plastic…

JUVENILE GAMESARE PROSECUTORS CLOGGING THE COURT SYSTEM TO MAKE A POINT?

Like an errant child, the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office has been playing political games for the past two months in which young defendants have become pawns, Juvenile Court officials contend. At issue is whether prosecutors are filing unwarranted transfer requests seeking to move youths into the adult Superior Court system…

A HOUSE, BUT NOT A HOME

Four years ago, in an effort to fix up the neighborhood, the City of Phoenix tore down Steven Clark’s modest house and built him a brand-new one. He is not inclined to forgive the favor. The two-story brick and stucco home on 13th Way, just south of East Indian School…

THE MYSTERY OF NOVELISTS

I’ve always been curious about talented novelists. What personality traits does the job require? Certainly, there’s more to it than just the ability to put words on paper. Over the years, I’ve met quite a few of them. Some really good. Some ordinary. But the skill remains a mystery to…

JERRY’S SECRET BATTLE PLAN

Memo: To our Phoenix Suns From: Chairman Jerry I thought I would leave a copy of this note in each of your lockers. It will give you some insights into the business side of professional basketball. I want you to think about these things while awaiting your next season. As…

BIG WHEEL

IF MARIA TORREGROSSA knows anything, she says, she knows this: That man saw me standing right in front of him, and he came at me with his car like I was a piece of nothing. I jumped out of the way, but he got me good.” Torregrossa narrowly escaped death…

FOUL BALL

When the Brophy Broncos ripped out five runs in the first inning of a recent regional high school baseball game, their opponents and longtime rivals from St. Mary’s knew they were in for a long night. Both teams were already assured spots in the state 5A championship tournament when they…

THEY WRITE REAL GOOD

For the second time in three years, the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism at Arizona State University has finished first in the Hearst Foundation Intercollegiate Writing Competition, winning $10,000 for the school. ASU journalism students beat out entries from Northwestern University and the University of Missouri for first place in…

ONE BRUTAL NIGHT IN WEST PHOENIX

A Phoenix cop since 1983, Hardin had been a sergeant for only three months when Rodriquez stole the Chevy and presented him with one of his first major tests as a supervisor. Hardin interviewed Rodriquez a few hours after the clash. He focused on the guy who smashed into the…

MARCHING TO A DIFFICULT DRUM

ARCHITECTS WOULD always rather start with a clean slate-a nice, bare patch of dirt with no other buildings crowded around it, and no architectural masterpieces in the neighborhood that a new kid would either have to bow to or fight with. When the lot isn’t vacant and the architect has…

ONE BRUTAL NIGHT IN WEST PHOENIX

MAURICIO RODRIQUEZ celebrated his 20th birthday a few days after Christmas 1990 by hot-wiring a late-model Chevy pickup. He and two friends then careened through the streets of west Phoenix in the stolen vehicle. ²Along the way, the Phoenix man slowed long enough for his pals to hop out, then…

DOG DAY AFTERNOON

A few months ago, a Shar-Pei escaped from his north Phoenix backyard and wandered to a nearby apartment complex on Shangri-La Road. The friendly dog trotted up to a woman named Vickie Back, and she fed him a snack and a bowl of water. No dummy, he stuck around Back’s…

TOWER OUTAGE

To the state Land Department, it seemed like a good way to make money. A group of civic boosters touted it as an economic shot in the arm.” But to many of the people who live north of Carefree Highway, the very idea of three 200-foot-high radio towers in the…

ROOTING FOR THE NEWS

The romantic mirage of small-town life is bucolic contentment. This is one of life’s sadder delusions. In remote Arizona, the disputes are loud, frequent and messy. Worse, the intimate potholes of your life fascinate your neighbors. Your debts, your love interests, your spouse’s shingles-it’s all grist at the local coffee…

ROOTING FOR THE NEWS

That’s certainly one viewpoint. But it ignores entirely the faculty’s feeling that its members had no say in campus matters. And Dr. Walker was widely viewed as ruling the campus like Idi Amin Dada. Walker enforced a gag order that forbade all faculty and staff from making any public statements…

MOTOROLA

Jeanine herself got cancer in her late 40s. Before she died in 1989, she told her daughter Lisa that she suspected that living near the plant had a lot to do with the family’s illnesses. Then Jeanine’s husband, Tom, got cancer. Next, Lisa got cancer. Now 31, Lisa thinks a…

WHERE IS ARAZI?

Of course Lee Vance has heard of Arazi. Lee Vance is an air-traffic controller at Yuma International Airport, from which 250,000 airplanes land and take off every year. He helps make sure they don’t crash while they’re doing it. It’s an `initial approach fix,'” he says of Arazi. No, Lee…

PLEADING POVERTY

The ax fell with scant warning at Community Legal Services last week. The nonprofit law center that serves as a last resort for poor clients fired one-fourth of its staff, including four attorneys, in the face of a hefty drop in funding. Long in precarious financial straits, CLS decided that…