Prosecutor under fire

It’s barely daybreak on the 1996 political horizon, but maverick Wise County Attorney Stephen Hale is already facing opponents who want to assure his political sunset. Since shortly after taking office in January 1993, Hale, who prosecutes misdemeanor crimes in this rural county of 36,000, about 40 miles north of…

Buzz

Cowed Town daily The Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s embarrassing and shameful overreaction to a right-wing Christian group went national this week in a lengthy article in the The New York Times. S-T Executive Editor Debbie Price, as you’ll recall from the Observer’s January 25 story, booted openly gay editor Todd Camp…

Politics makes strange enemies

It was the night of Domingo Garcia’s annual Christmas party, but not every guest was in a festive mood. In fact, Sylvana Alonzo couldn’t stand the idea of attending her third holiday party in three nights. “Roberto, do we have to go tonight?” she said tiredly as she was getting…

BeloWatch

News: graceless under pressure Talk about lack of class. No, not “Da Boys,” as The Dallas Morning News’ intensely unhip editorial page habitually–and ludicrously–refers to them. BeloWatch is speaking, of course, about Dallas’ Only Daily. In a January 26 pre-Super Bowl editorial headlined “Da Boys–It’s time to show class as…

Blue-collar blue bloods

I was walkin’ along, mindin’ my own bidness the other day, when Our Man Phil Gramm popped up and announced to the world that he’s a “blue-collar Republican.” So now I know how Jessica-who-fell-in-the-well felt. I went home to lie down from the shock, and then class warfare broke out…

Letters

Winners and whiners Julie Lyons, get real! You’re just another whining Green Bay Packer fan [“Evil’s triumph at Texas Stadium,” January 18]. Sounds to me like you’re also another one of those people that is jealous of the Dallas Cowboys, “America’s team.” Thought you might like to know who named…

A great spirit

Barbara Jordan, whose name was so often preceded by the words “the first black woman to…” that they seemed like a permanent title, died Wednesday in Austin. A great spirit is gone. Jordan was the first black woman to serve in the Texas Senate, the first black woman in Congress…

The week of living dangerously

In the early-morning hours of July 8, 1995, Sky Callahan staggered through the dark and unfamiliar streets of Guatemala City, his mind and body reeling from a brutal beating. Two men whom he believed to be government agents had kidnapped the Dallas documentary filmmaker, forced him into their car at…

Just don’t bite

It began with the battle of the big men–a bloody scrap they’d still be talking about months later. In one corner was David “Tank” Abbott. A 280-pound 6-footer, Abbott looked the part of the classic barroom brawler–big, with an enormous beer belly, buzz-cut hair, and no discernible neck. His martial…

Buzz

D and Bartlett to make match? Hot publishing buzz has unprofitable D magazine, just out with its (yawn) “How to marry a millionaire” issue, about to hook up with a new set of monied mates. The word is that owner Glen Solomon, who restarted the moribund monthly, will step down…

Classless act

A campaign targeting gay journalists launched last month by the Christian, conservative American Family Association has chalked up its first victory. Responding to a complaint from an AFA member, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram has transferred a gay editor out of a job that occasionally required him to work with schoolchildren…

Letters

Go ahead, touch that dial I feel like I have just lost a very good friend. I feel like I should be in the middle of some kind of “identity crisis,” because I don’t know where I fit in at KERA radio [“Stop the music,” January 11]. I am a…

What I did on jury duty

Sitting in one of those hard seats in the cavernous central jury room of the George L. Allen Sr. courts building in downtown Dallas, I knew only two things for certain: That my day was shot to hell; and that I was bored out of my mind. Well, things change…

BeloWatch

News’ child-custody saga probes Wright and wrong The January 21 edition of The Dallas Morning News contained an extraordinary story: the saga of Channel 5 anchor Brad Wright’s messy, messy divorce and custody battle. The Sunday piece, by Tim Wyatt and Howard Swindle, began at the bottom of the front…

It’s the stock price, stupid!

Danny Wettreich, a 44-year-old native of London, England, personifies precisely what many find repugnant about American capitalism. In the 13 years since he moved to Dallas, Wettreich has bought and shut down businesses, shuffled millions of dollars in securities, drawn suspicion from two federal agencies, and thrown people out of…

Buzz

Between a Boulder and a hard place More than a year ago, feminist Karen Ashmore said goodbye and good riddance to Dallas. Ashmore, who co-founded the Dallas Rainbow Chapter of the National Organization for Women, said she was burned out on Big D’s provincialism–especially when it came to race relations…

Gold diggers

Gold Rush! Yee-haw! Look at them settlers lashin’ their teams and bouncin’ their wagons in an all-out scramble to stake a claim in Electronville. The telecommunications bill is the Gold Rush of 1996, an industry free-for-all, a wild, pell-mell greed-stampede. All the settlers have pretty fair grubstakes to start with;…

Evil’s triumph at Texas Stadium

On the eve of Armageddon, my grandma sat on the living-room sofa and considered this theological conundrum: Was it right to pray for the Green Bay Packers to win? Was it right to beg divine intervention on behalf of the more virtuous, if less talented, team? If Jesus were here…

Virtual realty

Any real-estate agent worth his listings knows staying ahead in the business these days means getting a piece of the hottest property around, cyberspace. But just how to go about getting a presence on the Internet has caused a schism among Realtors. Nationwide, agents are bickering and even competing among…

Letters

Granbury’s jewel on the square During the summer of 1989, I was fortunate enough to direct a production of Kander and Ebb’s musical Chicago at the Granbury Opera House. I had met Jo Ann Miller on a previous visit, and was enthusiastic about working with her and my old friend…

The making of an activist

Julie Mote–whose name, I assure you, would not ring any bells at Dallas City Hall–was sitting in her North Dallas home with her husband two Wednesdays ago, eating baked chicken and asparagus, when something unusual happened. The couple began discussing city politics. “We don’t usually talk politics in this house…

Buzz

Daisy Duke dreams Is it some kind of colossal I.Q. test? Buzz learned last week that Texas Motor Speedway officials have been “overwhelmed” by interest in the condominiums they plan to build at the stock-car racetrack under construction north of Fort Worth. If the interest turns into deals, the condos,…