One angry man

He walks with a slight limp, as though the floor were tilted. He cannot sit his 6-feet-5-inch, 255-pound frame for more than 30 minutes in one stretch; anything more, and the pain sometimes becomes too much to bear. Sometime in the near future, the 33-year-old will have to have his…

Hunter or prey?

Just a few weeks ago, Matthew Harden, Jr. conducted his business in virtual anonymity. As DISD’s chief bean counter, Harden toiled in the shadows–as far from notoriety as he could possibly get. But that was before a brash, go-get-’em superintendent named Yvonne Gonzalez came on the scene. Now he’s become…

City of ignorance

As soon as I arrived at DISD headquarters, I knew that something unusual, even historic, was taking place. Outside, next to the tiny visitors’ parking lot, some 150 Latinos were gathered around a man whose strained voice could barely be heard above shouts and loud talking. I couldn’t see him…

Letters

Defending Cat Eyes I’ve read Miriam Rozen’s breathless expose of Dr. Yvonne Gonzalez [“See Yvonne run,” September 11], and I can’t hold back my thunderous, righteous reaction: So what? C’mon, Observer! Consider what you’ve revealed: 1. Dr. Gonzalez has an ego and an instinct for self-preservation. 2. She is clever…

Never cry wolf

Tamara Hughes is insulted that she should be sitting here in her parents’ living room defending herself. She shouldn’t have to be second-guessed or mocked. What happened to her was traumatic, almost deadly, but to police it may as well be fiction.M MX”I just want to know from them why…

Rest in peace

A year-long clash over the fate of a patch of land in Dallas’ historic Greenwood Cemetery is apparently about to end, with both sides in the dispute hammering out a compromise. The feuding parties–Columbus Realty Trust and Friends of Greenwood Cemetery–agreed to a tentative compromise over the development of 2.7…

Buzz

See no evil City Attorney Sam Lindsay never met a conflict of interest he couldn’t rationalize, especially if it involves Mayor Ron Kirk. The latest issue involves Kirk’s vocal opposition to nascent Legend Airlines, which is trying to get its 56 first-class seat planes off the ground at Love Field…

Road warriors

Four years ago, David Chandler thought himself one of the rarest of breeds–an urban pioneer committed to rebuilding a crumbling Dallas neighborhood. He was the proud owner of the old Southwest Telegraph & Telephone building on the northwest corner of Main Street and Haskell Avenue in Old East Dallas. The…

Cat Eyes’ last meow

A teacher put it best in The Dallas Morning News: There’s the real Dallas Independent School District–where kids go to school and learn how to read, write, and do arithmetic–and there’s the surreal district. No doubt about which one has gotten the most media coverage during the last several days…

Letters

Gentle musers Great article. I think you nailed exactly what goes on at The Ticket [“Aural sex,” September 4]. I think all the boys do a great job, but I wish The Ticket would fess up about [Chuck] Cooperstein and why he was fired out of the blue for a…

Soul food & crackers

Jasper Baccus couldn’t help thinking to himself how sweet life was beginning to look as the pencil-nosed, chartered Lear 35 lifted from Dallas’ Love Field and headed west. It was early last November, and the 68-year-old owner of Baccus 50-Minute Cleaners in South Dallas was thinking about his future. He…

Zen in the den

Last week my husband had an important business meeting. I wanted to make sure it went well, so before leaving for work, I walked through our house and closed the lids to all the toilets. This wasn’t some family tradition handed down through the generations. Nor was I indulging some…

See Yvonne. See Yvonne run. See Yvonne run from the truth.

It was arguably the strangest school-year kickoff Dallas had ever seen.Forget all those bright-eyed, backpack-toting first graders bouncing onto their buses–that time-honored, Rockwellian image so dutifully trotted out by thousands of school districts nationwide was not quite what DISD superintendent Yvonne Gonzalez had in mind for the momentous launching of…

Rumors of war

Susan Allen came home recently to find city procedures for recalling a city councilman stuffed in her mailbox. As president of the Moss Farm Alliance and Concerned Homeowners Association, Allen saw this as a sign that her neighbors in this northeast Dallas community were very close to declaring war on…

Buzz

It’s come to this The way Buzz sees it, this running contest between Dallas and its suburbs to decide which will build a new sports arena for the Stars and Mavericks is starting to look like a bunch of drunken sailors chasing the town whore. Who cares that sports arenas…

Letters

Legal Upchucking This is in reference to Christine Biederman’s article on the Michael Irvin-Erik Williams-Nina Shahravan-Marty Griffin imbroglio [“Payback time,” August 21]. Excellent article, well-researched with solid background work. This is much better than anything from the fluffy one-size-fits-all approach of your crosstown behemoth rival, The Dallas Morning News. The…

Too Smart For Their Own Good

Eight-year-old Veronica Martinez is calculating the cube root of 474,552 in her head. At the same time, she is attempting to devour a cheese sandwich–between gulps of water from a tan-rimmed coffee cup. It takes less than eight seconds to consume the mathematical problem, slightly longer for the sandwich. She…

Aural Sex

A hazy orange sun is inching above the Dallas skyline as I dodge through early-morning traffic on Interstate 30. It’s 6:35 a.m. on a Monday, I have a date, and I am miserably late. So I weave between lanes, pushing 80, hoping those stealthy Grand Prairie cops are lingering somewhere…

Return to sender

Problems continue to multiply for management of the Dallas County Community Action Committee, the anti-poverty agency that is big on hiring relatives and even better at making tax money disappear. When allegations of mismanagement, waste, and nepotism first surfaced [“Family first,” July 31], the agency’s director, Cleo Sims, and board…

McKinney doctor suspended

The McKinney doctor who slashed a man’s throat during a 1996 barroom brawl has escaped a felony conviction, but he is no longer allowed to practice medicine in Texas. The Texas State Board of Medical Examiners indefinitely suspended Dr. John Hargett’s medical license because of Hargett’s “intemperate use of alcohol…

Digging in

When last we checked with the Friends of Greenwood Cemetery, they were furiously writing letters, making phone calls, and gathering photos, faxes, maps, and traffic studies. Their mission? To convince Dallas City Council that a powerful Uptown neighborhood developer has no business building a tony apartment complex on top of,…

Buzz

Beguile, bedazzle, be gone Buzz usually gets depressed when some other newspaper or magazine goes belly up. It’s sort of like losing a member of the family. But the demise of Dallas/Fort Worth’s Life Style magazine brings more of a sense of relief, like a merciful death for a long-suffering,…