ROCKING THE BOATFOUR BLACK WOMEN CHALLENGE WHAT THEY SAY IS RACISM AND SEXISM AT DES WHEN GLORIA MITCHELL came to Arizona in 1961, the young mother figured she’d finally escaped the poison in her hometown of Goldsboro, North Carolina. In Arizona, no one

Still, as the years went by and civil rights laws were passed and enforced, Mitchell sensed that racism was dying down in Arizona. After her kids grew up, Mitchell got a high school diploma and earned a social sciences degree from Phoenix College. In 1987, she landed what she thought…

THOSE “UNPROFITABLE” CANCER VICTIMS

For four years, Wilda Heil has been battling ovarian cancer, and at the same time battling to hold on to her medical insurance. Guess which fight she’s winning. Heil is one of an estimated 35,000 “medically uninsurable” Arizonans-those who either have been canceled or who can’t find an insurer. (That…

THE NAKED DESERT

Poet, painter, actress, gangland den mother-perpetual publicity hound LIZ RENAY may well be the most colorful character ever to emerge from Mesa. In and out of the Valley since she won a 1949 beauty pageant sponsored by a national bra manufacturer, Renay began piling up headlines when she was grilled…

THE NAKED DESERT

IT IS 1975. Sixteen years after it first appeared in France, the legendary book Hollywood Babylon rolls off the presses in its first authorized U.S. edition. While the rest of the nation gasps over Kenneth Anger’s juicy compendium of Tinseltown tattle, Phoenix yawns. For starters, we’d seen it all in…

OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES

MARTY GIFFIN SMILES over at her 11-year-old daughter Samantha, who is working on her homework at the kitchen counter. “I’m responsible for her, just me,” Marty says. “I haven’t gotten much help. The judge told my ex-husband when we got divorced in ’84 that he had to pay child support…

BOLLES FIGURE TAKES FIFTH—-AGAIN AND AGAIN

Remembered for his still-murky link to the 1976 murder of Arizona Republic reporter Don Bolles, Phoenix attorney Neal Roberts has long negotiated around legal-system land mines with stunning success. But now he’s in a pickle that should keep him behind bars for at least a short time. Phoenix police arrested…

THE BUS STOPS HERE

Abraham Cox, a precocious 7-year-old, attends a progressive school in Tempe. On this particular Friday evening, inside Tanner Chapel A.M.E., Abraham’s parents watch civil rights heroine Rosa Parks sign copies of her autobiography. Their son is devoting considerable energy to slipping artfully within range of the television cameras taping the…

HORSE CENTS

“My wife is down at the stables, seeing to the horses. Call her there.” The crisp note of annoyance was obvious in the voice of John C. Pritzlaff, the former United States ambassador to Malta. Pritzlaff, now retired to his home and stables in Montecito, California, is the father-in-law of…

OUR OWN OLIVER STONE

I take nobody’s word these days. I don’t believe the Warren Commission. I also don’t believe the conspiracy theories of his being killed by the mob and Fidel Castro. I don’t even believe County Attorney Richard Romley when he says he has solved the murder of actor Bob Crane of…

THREE STOOGES

The big crowd oozes slowly into Arizona State University’s Gammage Auditorium. It’s early morning, and in a few minutes Vice President Dan Quayle will speak. An appearance by Quayle on a politically active campus would spark dozens of protests. There are few dissidents at ASU. It is a student body…

NORTHERN ARIZONA EXPOSURE

“NOT THIS WEEKEND,” J.D. said. It was February 14, 1991, the Thursday before Presidents Day. Something was up his sleeve that he wasn’t telling. “Loose lips sink ships,” he said. He didn’t answer his telephone that Saturday. Sunday night he finally answered. He was jubilant, but a little tired from…

NORTHERN ARIZONA EXPOSURE

Could J.D. have established a pattern of “arbitrary and capricious enforcement” by the Park Service if he’d had a good lawyer connecting the dots? Could a lawyer have proved that J.D. had been singled out for prosecution? The federal magistrate took the case under advisement. APRIL 14: J.D.’s GI Bill…

OUT WITH MARMIE, IN WITH RICHARD NIXON

Head football coaches live in a terrifying dream world. In that world, tumultuous laughter and happiness can instantly turn into a nightmare. Great victories are the other side of the coin to heartbreaking defeats. These coaches are very much like politicians. They are addicted to adulation. They distrust and dislike…

TAKE A MEMO—THEN WAIT SIX MONTHS

Here is a fascinating peek behind the scenes as the Resolution Trust Corporation’s $140 million civil suit against Governor J. Fife Symington III grinds slowly forward. When you look closely at the background of the cast of characters, the picture begins to clear. After a report was issued June 12,…

THERE GOES THE NEIGHBOR

LIKE A CHILD hiding a caramel from a playmate, Jim Cryer conceals the plastic key chain with puckish delight. He is about to tell what he calls a nasty joke.” ²In his native Tennessean twang, he begins with what seems like a well-rehearsed question: Have you ever been on Mission…

A HOUSE DIVIDED

NOW THAT THE holidays are over and the reporters and TV crews aren’t hanging around anymore, things are back to normal at Central Arizona Shelter Services. But normal at CASS isn’t exactly quiet. Property owners near CASS, located at 1209 West Madison, have always complained about how the state’s largest…

THE SELLING OF ANNIE LEIBOVITZ

There, up on the stage, was Annie Leibovitz. At the very sight of the celebrity photographer, the standing-room-only audience in the theatre at Phoenix Art Museum burst into applause. Leibovitz is a tall, angular woman with a nose as prominent as the one that gave the late writer Lillian Hellman…