Parting Ways

She laughs often, a big whooping holler that makes you feel stupid for taking this interview and this story and your life so damn seriously. It’s what makes her well-known, what makes her special. That in a 10-minute conversation, by sheer force of personality, she can make you forget about…

Let the Chips Fall

Bumping along rutted caliche roads used nightly by prowling U.S. Border Patrol agents near the South Texas town of Eagle Pass, Isidro Garza sketches in the contours of the brave new world of the Kickapoo Indians. Below, on the brushy bank of the Rio Grande, an 18-hole golf course is…

On Her Case

She stood by the bailiff, arms folded, nostrils in full flair, obviously incensed that she essentially had been arrested and forced to appear in court. But her detention last Friday was not for complicity in the murder that put her husband behind bars for life. It was not for her…

Bad Breakup

He looks as confident as ever striding into the room, and for a moment you think he might peel back his suit jacket and patterned, blue necktie to reveal a hidden No. 8 jersey. Could be that it’s all some sick ruse, a poorly played joke for the media and…

Buzz

Letters…We’ve Got Letters: It looked like an April Fools’ joke, except that it was announced on April 3, and the organization that announced it, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, isn’t–how should we say this?–a big fan of the yuk-yuk. According to the DFW chapter of CAIR, it had reached an…

Letters

Same Old Bigotry Turn the tables: Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price is at his bullying best when he’s dealing with women and children (Buzz, April 5. Also see this week’s Jim Schutze column.) Dallas City Councilwoman Laura Miller criticized police Chief Terrell Bolton because of accusations that he reduced…

O.J. Confidential

It was a Friday in June 1994, and Dallas private investigator Bill Dear, dapper as ever in his three-piece suit, monogrammed shirt and alligator boots, had completed his speech to the National Conference of Investigative Reporters and Editors and remained in the St. Louis Convention Center to answer questions. On…

With Friends Like These…

Lawrence McBride had reason to celebrate when he met James Halpin for dinner that spring night. With help from his pal Halpin, then chief executive of Dallas-based CompUSA Inc., McBride had just pitched a deal to expand the retail chain south of the border, a project he hoped would one…

Belo Bashing

Belo Corp. delivered historic preservationists a fait accomplis this week, quietly securing a permit to demolish a historic 10-story building in the West End and then announcing its intentions as the wrecking ball was being hoisted into place. “There’s nothing wrong with the building,” said Ron Emrich, a member of…

Asphalt Jungle

Welcome to Monday morning at the corner of Hermosa and Peavy. It’s a mess. Approach the ravaged intersection like a crime scene: There’s one deep wound along the southwest corner, a 3-foot-long, 18-inch-deep pothole half filled with water. There’s a collapsed square of temporary asphalt in the center of the…

Buzz

Humorless: It’s not that Buzz is getting a big head or wishes to take credit–or blame–where none is due, but we can’t help but feel a little responsible for some of the foulmouthed picketers who gathered outside City Councilwoman Laura Miller’s house twice this week. Last week, writing about how…

Letters

A Word From Our Sponsor Right from wrong: The article (“Homefryin’ with Fred Baron”) published last week has so many false statements that I can’t respond to them all in 300 words or less. But an example is illustrative. The Observer trusted information delivered by Ken Treuter. Yet, only six…

War Torn

“…Persons of humanitarian and reformist disposition often go…to the Balkan peninsula to see who was in fact ill-treating whom…all came back with a pet Balkan people established in their hearts as suffering and innocent, eternally the massacre and never the massacrer.” –Rebecca West in “Black Lamb and Grey Falcon” (1938)…

Buzz

Sticks and stones: Give ol’ Al Lipscomb credit. The former city councilman may have been on the take, but at least he was always polite, a gentleman, even on his way to the pokey. Apparently he didn’t pass his good manners on to his progeny. Testifying before the Dallas City…

Houses Divided

Alex Ramos wants to stop the “shafting” of his community. The long-time resident of Old East Dallas’ Fitzhugh-Capitol neighborhood, who grew up and now lives here with his wife and 6-year-old son, is incensed over 212 public housing units being built near his home by the Dallas Housing Authority (DHA)…

Walk the Walk

Paul Kerr knows how to assemble a big crowd. As a longtime activist and director of the Center for Human Rights, a Dallas-based immigration advocacy group, he’s credited with organizing the largest street demonstration in Dallas history–a fact he admits has received little circulation outside Spanish-language media. With help from…

Brave New World

Give Texas Monthly editor Evan Smith credit for being honest. “In some quarters, we’ve become a coaster for the leisure class,” he says. Issues of TM, Smith rightly fears, were being bought because of the magazine’s reputation within an aging demographic, not because the publication was working its hardest to…

Homefryin’ with Fred Baron

Perhaps you remember this cheating scandal. Three and half years ago, a junior lawyer from Dallas-based Baron & Budd accidentally handed an opposing lawyer an internal memo that appeared to coach clients to lie about central facts in asbestos liability cases. “With this document, you could almost go down the…

Letters

Um, Thanks? Wine and roses: Please give Christine Biederman a dozen roses, a gold star, a bottle of champagne and any other praise we can think of. Her March 15 column “Still Wannabe” was perhaps the most courageous, individualistic, intelligent, perceptive and commendable column on today’s Dallas art scene that…

Joint Effort

The winds are changing, and George McMahon can feel it in his bones. His ashen face takes on a pained expression as he peers out the window of his Lake Palestine home, watching the tops of the tall pines bend to the bluster of an approaching rainstorm. It’s not as…

Road Rage

For Cheryl Bass, it all started when she and her husband, Robert, sat down to sign papers for their new house. They were first-time homebuyers, and they had patiently waited about six months for construction on their nearly $200,000 dwelling to be done. The house was beautiful, and they were…

Twice Told Tale

Far from changing his tune suddenly in the last two weeks to accuse the Dallas police chief of wrongdoing, the main witness against the chief has steadfastly told authorities the same story in detail and under oath for more than a year, a legal deposition shows. Dallas police Lt. William…