Chokehold

On a moonlit July night three years ago, as Godwin Omokaro headed out to celebrate his 37th birthday, his life seemed full of possibilities. After all, he had come so far already. Of the 11 children in his family, only Omokaro had managed to escape the political and economic repression…

Manhattan transfer

The Lower East Side of Manhattan is not exactly a slice of New York known for its cinematic beauty, what with its crowded tenement buildings, grime-baked streets, and indigenous odors of vomit and urine. Yet for a handful of years, it has been the last bastion of downtown bohemia for…

Old business

The sudden, unexpected death of Maurice Levy’s Knox Street antiques business came early July 8, while he was on a roof, repairing an air conditioner. Marcie Williams, the manager of Knox Street Antique Mall, delivered the news with a phone call. “She told me that Keith Cecil came early in…

Buzz

Spanish flyways You’ve probably seen them: those sneaky ads disguised as articles that appear in newspapers. “Scientific breakthrough: Miracle drug melts pounds away,” the headline says, and there above it in tiny type is the word “advertisement.” Well, we looked in the August D magazine for the word “advertisement” on…

Flunking Out

No bell rang to mark the beginning of class. It was just one of many things missing from this high school. For two months, as winter segued into spring, about 40 students who had either dropped out or been kicked out of Arlington public high schools attended class inside a…

Love’s Labor Lost

Crusty, cootish, a legendary ass-chewer, W.A. “Tex” Moncrief Jr. is — to put it lightly — blunt. So when the multimillionaire Fort Worth oilman spoke to the Dallas Observer last summer about the particularly embarrassing defense his ex-secretary used against charges she embezzled from him, Tex put it like this:…

Innocence Lost

S E C O N D   O F   T W O   P A R T S When Kerry Max Cook arrived on death row on July 18, 1978, he was given a haircut, doused with disinfectant, tagged with an execution number, and branded a punk, a fag,…

Closing death’s door

It’s hard to get on Texas’ death row these days — if you want to interview an inmate there. According to regulations that cover death row visitations — including those by news media — almost any news organization that isn’t considered mainstream is barred from getting face-to-face with inmates at…

Let them play golf

citizens group trying to keep Tenison Park in Old East Dallas from becoming a semi-private high-end golf club suffered a defeat recently when an appeals court tossed out their suit. Justice Michael J. O’Neill of the 5th District Texas Court of Appeals said in an opinion July 8 that individuals,…

Observer awarded

Two Dallas Observer staff writers and Editor Julie Lyons were winners in two national writing and reporting competitions among alternative newspapers. Reporters Christine Biederman and Thomas Korosec were awarded first place for investigative reporting among newspapers with circulation greater than 54,000 by the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. They won for…

Buzz

Judge not Your mother always warned you, girls. Once you get a bad reputation, you’ll never shake it. Just ask visiting District Judge Candace Tyson, who once again came in dead last in the Dallas Bar Association’s judicial evaluation poll. Every two years, the association quizzes local lawyers about their…

Innocence lost

For this kind of decision, Kerry Max Cook needed room to pace, but 5 feet was all he would allow himself: Two steps forward, turn, two steps back, turn. The distance was set in his bones. Pacing that same 5-foot span for hours at a time had been his way…

Careless

Just how 2-month-old Eric Hernandez’s femur was broken remains a mystery. Only his 19-year-old mother knows how it happened. But every time she explains herself, her story changes. When Juana Olalde arrived at Children’s Medical Center of Dallas on February 27 with her injured son, she told Donna Mendez, a…

Flying Right

It must have seemed to Robert Crews like that old joke by mystery novelist Kinky Friedman: Whether you’re going to heaven or hell, you always have to change planes at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Crews knows of the special purgatory that is DFW. For years, he always wanted one thing:…

Buzz

Hold these balls Guess it could have been worse. In the NBA draft last week, Dallas Mavericks head coach-general manager Don Nelson picked an 18-year-old kid and a 7-foot-1 Chinese player named Wang Zhi-Zhi. So much for the saying, “He has a [politically incorrect term for Asian’s] chance of playing…

Cruel and Unusual

His face is pasty and pale, a sharp contrast to his greasy coal-black hair. His dark eyes are sunken under a low forehead and thick eyebrows; he frequently jabs, mashes, and grinds his eyes with the balls of his thumbs. When he speaks, he rarely makes eye contact. Even while…

Unsettled

He had heard his whole family was dead — slaughtered by Serbs. A few days later, in late April, he heard a radio report from Fort Dix, New Jersey, where the first planeloads of Kosovar refugees were waiting to be resettled. Driving back to his Carrollton home after a day…

Bugged Club

Charlott Norman waves her hand over Lower Greenville Avenue from her perch atop the Dragonfly Bar & Restaurant’s roof patio. “The new Dragonfly will be totally different from the old one,” she says to a Channel 5 reporter on a segment that aired June 18. “The management team is going…

By the way…

Imagine the surprise the people opposed to the Trinity River plan felt recently when they opened their June 27 copies of The Dallas Morning News and saw a story boldly confirming a fact the News had refused to report for more than a year: Dallas’ massive $1 billion-plus flood-control scheme…

Southern fried

The campaign to rename Jefferson Davis Elementary School in Oak Cliff seemed to reach a decisive conclusion when the school board voted 7-1 recently in favor of changing the name. But partisans in the Confederate camp hint the Jeff Davis fight was but a skirmish in what could become a…

Buzz

Hallelujah Even Buzz isn’t averse to a little prayer when our back is against the wall. This usually happens on Tuesday, long after deadline, when our editor asks us whether this column is ready yet. “Just a minute,” we lie, then dash off a quick prayer, hoping for something –…

$ucker$

In the recent election for mayor and city council, all of the rhetoric was about streets, potholes, and basic repairs for neighborhoods. But hold on to your wallets. Our shop-till-you-drop city council has just seen something shiny it wants to buy. The Dallas City Council is about to commit the…