Letters

Lorion: I Was Slimed I was flattered that esteemed New Times writer Jake Bernstein and your exceptional publication found my resignation from the formal environmental movement newsworthy enough for an article (“Resignation Indignation,” December 31). But I was sad to read that unnamed former peers question whether my opposition to…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *In December a deer hunter in upscale Nantucket, Massachusetts stumbled across the hatch that leads to the eight-by-eight-by-seven-foot-deep underground squatter’s apartment of Thomas Johnson, age 38. Johnson said he built the place ten years ago when he was on the lam from drug charges in Italy. His apartment…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *In November to improve lagging sales, the Liko-L tourism company in Kiev, Ukraine, announced a new attraction: a daylong visit to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, which has been closed to the public since the catastrophic accident there in 1986. Liko-L said the government, in need of tax…

Letters

Attorneys R Us In her cover story, “Street Sweepers” (December 24), Kathy Glasgow did an excellent job portraying the difficult choices faced by homeless people, their advocates, and the police. We felt, however, that your readers should be informed of another important service available to homeless people living anywhere in…

Letters

If It Works for Tupperware, It’ll Work for Crack Cocaine Kirk Nielsen’s article “Drug Bizarre” (December 24) was excellent, and Robert Dowd’s arguments against the war on drugs seem so logical. The reason drug dealers are harder to control is that, unlike illegal vendors of cigarettes and alcohol, a drug…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *The November Canadian Finals Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, featured the very popular “Cowboy Poker,” in which four men sit at a table in the middle of the arena “playing cards,” while a particularly aggressive bull is turned loose. As the bull rushes them, the last cowboy to stay…

The Junket Queen

As Gov.-elect Jeb Bush ponders whether Miami-Dade County Commissioner Natacha Millan merits a position in his administration, he may first want to make sure the state’s travel budget can afford her. Millan loves to visit faraway places, especially when somebody else is paying. In the past two years she’s taken…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *A November Associated Press dispatch described the work of commercial leech and maggot suppliers who sell to hospitals for medical treatments. A Welsh firm, Biopharm Ltd., moves about 20,000 three-inch-long leeches a year at seventeen dollars each to suck blood through delicate, clogged veins to restore circulation. A…

On the Road with Natacha Millan

Place Date Cost Madrid, Spain October 20-27, 1996 $2000 Secaucus, NJ March 15-16, 1997 $566 Tampa, FL April 3, 1997 $134 Madrid, Seville, Spain April 11-22, 1997 $4300 Cascais, Portugal April 26-29, 1997 $600 Philadelphia, PA May 27, 1997 $150 Key West, FL May 28-29, 1997 $480 New York, NY…

Letters

Go Ahead Willy, Sell Out the City! Regarding Kirk Nielsen’s “Cloistering the Commodore” (December 17), perhaps the cash-strapped city commission and Commissioner Willy Gort are so short-sighted that they only consider tax dollars these days. Maybe Willy doesn’t get out anymore for fear of being harangued by his long-suffering constituents…

Airport Sleaze Aplenty

Call it trickle-down corruption. After years of watching politicians and senior county officials line their pockets — a few getting caught, most not — a group of low-level, rank-and-file county employees apparently decided it was their turn. New Times has learned that a ring of eight employees at Miami International…

Letters

Obviously a Stranger in Paradise Jay Cheshes’s “The Scary Side of Paradise” (December 3) was a great story. I was born in the Bahamas, so I found it very interesting, probably one of the best articles I’ve seen that describes the situation in Nassau. At the same time, it disturbed…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (Alberta, Canada) announced in November that this year’s single permit to hunt an Alberta big-horn sheep was won by Sherwin Scott of Phoenix, Arizona with a high bid of $405,000 (U.S.). The foundation will use the money for conservation. Scott said he was…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *Calgary, Alberta, construction worker Michael Pearse, age 22, an admitted hothead, pleaded guilty to making threats in 1996 while trying to find a friend’s ex-girlfriend, but at his sentencing hearing in November 1998 he claimed to be a gentle man and had the report of a government neuropsychologist…

A Day of Reckoning

Less than ten minutes after the county commission voted to pass the gay rights ordinance, a stunned Miriam Alonso rose from the dais, walked solemnly to her office, closed the door, and threw an old-fashioned, wall-rattling temper tantrum. She screamed. She ranted. She raved. According to several bystanders who walked…

Letters

Michael Band: When the Clouds Clear, He’ll Shine Brightly In his article “Prosecution Complex” (November 26), Tristram Korten referred to former Assistant State Attorney Michael Band as a “ruined prosecutor.” He is anything but. I have had the privilege of knowing Michael Band for nearly ten years, since my days…

Letters

Resnick: Excellent! With reference to Ted B. Kissell’s excellent article on Ed Resnick (“A Taste for Trouble,” November 19), I’d like to note for the record that although Ed and I parted ways over the Portofino issue, we are friends today. Over the years Ed provided intelligent, logical, and articulate…

Grigsby in Defense of Grigsby

No one may be happier to see this year come to a close than Calvin Grigsby. In January the San Francisco-based bond dealer and businessman was indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly offering bribes to former county Commissioner James Burke for a piece of Miami-Dade’s lucrative bond business…

Principles vs. Politics

She’s crying now. Halfway through the story of how the principal and assistant principal at the school where she teaches threatened and harassed her after learning she was a lesbian, her voice cracks and she begins to sob. She tells me she has taught in the county’s public school system…

News of the Weird

Lead Stories *According to an October Wall Street Journal profile, Randall C. Hutchens is one jailbird making a comfortable living behind bars as he serves out a two-year sentence for tax evasion. He files $5000 stockholder-fraud lawsuits in California small-claims courts and so far has received settlement checks in various…

Letters

Hiaasen? He’s Outta Here. Dave Barry is History. The City Desk Can Take a Hike. The Investigative Team is Toast. New York Times Subscription 1-800-631-2500 Anyone know if the Miami Herald employs the same accountants Wayne Huizenga used for the Marlins’ books when they were “losing” all that money? According…

Letters

When the Subject Is Castro, Bid Farewell to Rationality As usual it is New Times that provides us with two excellent pieces about how the Cuban issue is treated: Jacob Bernstein’s article describing how Bernardo Benes’s life was destroyed by so-called Cuban patriots (“Twice Exiled,” November 12) and Jim DeFede’s…