Buzz

Java jive: It was a small protest–one 19-year-old girl standing outside a Dallas Starbucks on Tuesday to object to the coffeehouse corporation’s sale of milk products from cows treated with a bioengineered hormone and food and beverages containing genetically modified ingredients. Who says kids today aren’t politically active? The girl,…

Letters

On the Money Whose community of interest?: Jim, I agree on one of your points in “Crocodile Tears” (March 8). Increased pay for the city council is a must. We are still probably the largest municipality in the country with a weak mayor/strong city manager form of government. What I…

The A-Team

PORT CHARLOTTE, Florida–It’s early morning in Charlotte County. A brilliant Florida sun peaks from atop the stadium’s right-field grandstand, causing rows of empty, metal bleachers to glisten. The temperature creeps toward 70 degrees. The Executive Office, which lies adjacent to the Texas bullpen, and the team’s indoor batting cages, which…

A Jolt to the System

Everything was dark. Her eyes. Her clothes. The very core of her being. The psychiatrist asked how she felt. “That’s the thing,” said Lauri Sandoval, scrunching her face. “I don’t feel.” That numbness. Sandoval knew its source: the depression that had been her life’s shadow and had led to two…

Rising STAR

When the state of Texas in July 1999 unveiled NorthSTAR, an experimental project in which two managed-care companies were hired to deliver health care to indigent mentally ill and chemically dependent people living in Dallas and six surrounding counties, its critics feared the worst: Because of a historical lack of…

Lee’s Library

Jeanette Lee points to the pepper spray on her key chain lying on the table at St. Luke’s Love Field United Methodist Church. “I have one on each key chain, and I have an authentic police whistle,” she says. “Once I found a bullet in here, but I don’t know…

Buzz

He wears short shorts: Look, you gearheads can have your Palm Pilot VII, your Franklin Planners, and all the other fancy-pants scheduling systems you can find. Buzz keeps track of appointments the old-fashioned way–by writing them down on a calendar featuring a half-naked Dallas County court commissioner. What? You’ve never…

Letters

Tip Sharks No bad meals, only bad waiters: After spending quite a few years in the hospitality business, I found your article (“Tip Gyp,” March 8) interesting. Several of the people interviewed displayed, in my opinion, a less than professional attitude. I took particular exception to Rule 2: “So they…

Dr. Cop

MOUNT VERNON–At first blush, they sound like scenes concocted by a struggling writer trying to sell a television series, one that combines the two most time-honored story lines available: lifesaving doctors and crime-busting cops. For instance: It is in the pre-dawn hours of a quiet East Texas morning, and the…

Tale of the Tapes

What passes for “reality” under the great video eye of network television is pretty lame these days. Personally, we’re not going to take that prefab national phenom known as Survivor seriously until someone dies of exposure, snakebite, or hunger during the show. Similarly, we’ll consider Temptation Island “reality-based programming” only…

Two Soldiers

A friend of Justin Rice’s mentioned something about Look Back, Don’t Look Back nearly a year ago–about how it was about to become tied up in litigation, because Rice and filmmaking partner Randy Bell had lifted Bob Dylan’s music and likeness without first receiving permission from Sony Music and The…

Retreat

Before I put in context for you the just-announced “scale-back” of the Arlington Morning News–the bastard child of The Dallas Morning News will now be published only five days a week instead of the previous seven and will be just a section within the DMN itself–I want to make clear…

Buzz

Thumbing through our copy of this past Sunday’s Dallas Morning News–a.k.a., “All the news we’ve already read online at CNN.com, ap.org, and espn.com”–we came upon a revelation: Once a decade, the DMN shows some balls. This discovery was made by reading every word of Section E, a special project titled…

Letters

Deathly Silence Nary a word: I am so glad that at least some of these stories are surfacing; however, it seems to me the biggest change from then to now is that now a murder would be investigated (“Forget Me Not,” March 1). I am willing to bet that you…

Stalking Texas Ranger

“You guys are going home,” says Chuck Norris, in Missing in Action, as Col. Braddock, sent to rescue missing American soldiers in Southeast Asia. Where’s Norris when you need him? That’s what John Brotherton says he asked during eight days in a Moscow hotel, where he claims that he and…

Forget Me Not

“The scriptures have said, ‘The things that have been done in the dark will be known from the house tops.'”–Civil rights leader Fanny Lou Hamer Up a dirt road about a mile south of the small North Texas town of Ladonia, the men came. It was past midnight, but a…

Love & Rockets

These days, the front door of Beal Aerospace is locked, and knocks go unanswered. Three vehicles dot the otherwise empty parking lot, testifying that there is still life at the headquarters of the defunct satellite launch company. All but a handful of the 200-plus engineers, rocket scientists, and assorted staff…

The Lady Vanishes

The afternoon service at Sparkman Hillcrest Funeral Home started off subdued and solemn, appropriate for anyone recently deceased–except the woman being buried this day. The folks at this public gathering on February 22 to mourn the premature passing of Priscilla Davis were pretty much what one would expect: women with…

Buzz

Try the fricassee: The Dallas Zoo is letting children pet baby chicks before the birdies are gassed and used for their intended purpose–food for bigger animals. (See “Chick Fillet,” February 15.) This is widely regarded as reprehensible. Now PETCO, the national pet-supply retailer, is selling rabbits at some of its…

Letters

Downright Mean Surviving boot camp: I read your article about the juvenile boot camp and the food situation there (“More, Please,” February 22). I was also in a boot camp years ago where I did not get enough to eat, people weren’t very nice to me, and they got me…

Planet Mold

Restaurateur-turned-journalist Joanna Windham, a stringer for National Enquirer and its sister tabloids, makes a living by unearthing sensational stories. But Windham fears that this mess, the one spreading in her Dallas apartment, is turning into the kind of story that alien-touting competitor the Weekly World News could publish. “Killer Molds…

For God and Country

The boys and girls stretch out, trying to get comfortable on the hardwood floor between the hoops in D.A. Hulcy Middle School’s gym. Some two dozen of them have been called here to hear the good words and advice of a group of church ministers who have adopted the school…