Buzz

In his dreams I turned to my dinner partner–beautiful, bright, smartly dressed. She bent close and whispered…and winked. Her wink made me smile. Whew! Point Buzz in the direction of a cold shower! A scene out of a Danielle Steel potboiler? Not hardly. This is a pitch letter crafted by…

Letters

Return to Camelot I am writing in response to the article that appeared in the January 18-24 issue of the Dallas Observer (“It’s the stock price, stupid!”), written by Miriam Rozen. The article is, in my opinion, full of lies, distortions, half-truths, and unfounded insinuations. The article commences with a…

BeloWatch

News plans new Arlington daily; suburban newspaper war looms The Dallas Morning News has declared war on the Fort Worth Star-Telegram by announcing a blitzkrieg invasion of Arlington. After learning that BeloWatch and others were onto the story, the News on Tuesday ran a page-one article to unveil its closely…

Just don’t call them nelly guys

Not long ago, Cheer Dallas, the country’s first serious gymnastics-oriented, pompon-eschewing, non-drag-wearing gay cheerleading squad, had the opportunity for statewide exposure. This Week in Texas, a magazine with a huge circulation that lists events in the gay community across the Lone Star State, wanted to put a couple of the…

Alicia Comes Home (Part II)

On November 3, 1993, both the letter and the tape were introduced as further evidence for terminating forever Pat Hope-Hall’s parental rights. Court-appointed social worker Paula Everett and Carol Bowdry, a retired CPS administrative reviewer, both urged this harsh remedy. Bowdry described Pat’s relationship with Alicia as “toxic.” She testified…

Buzz

Phil who? When U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm dropped out of the presidential race, he left a couple of high-profile Texas Republicans with a hard decision: To whom should they shift allegiance? Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison stood shoulder to shoulder with Governor George W. Bush to publicly announce they wouldn’t decide–just…

BeloWatch

Journalistic charity begins at home Obviously it’s a little much for BeloWatch to expect The Dallas Morning News–whose editors talk so much about objectivity, accuracy, and even-handedness–to describe the world as it really is. But it’s quite astonishing how sharply the paper skews reality when it’s reporting on itself. On…

Lost in loonyland

Setting aside that Pat Buchanan is a racist, sexist, xenophobic, homophobic anti-Semite, what wonderful news from New Hampshire! It’s the nuts! It’s the berries! Yes, well, that is rather a large mound of manure there connected with his name, much of it justified, I’m afraid. There’s even more: He defends…

Alicia Comes Home (Part I)

The cloyingly heartfelt sound of new-age music swells in the background as the credits brashly announce the topic for the day’s show: “Help! My Daughter’s Been Kidnapped.” Sally Jessy Raphael’s nasal voice rises over the music as images of girls playing with their fathers flood the screen. “Today,” says the…

Somebody say amen!

Is the black man worth loving?” The question hung over the crowd gathered in the pews of Jubilee United Methodist Church on a recent Friday night, a promise and a paradox. To each of the 125 African-American men and women, the answer was obvious. Yet here was Robert Ashley, well-known…

Letters

Gazing into the abyss There are at least two errors in the statements made by Ed Zabel in the Observer article about him [“Dealing with the Devil,” February 15]. The first concerns gargoyles, which were designed to be waterspouts, and nothing else. The second concerns Zabel’s bizarre theory that the…

Bo? Hell no!

The March night promised to be chilly. An unusually large crowd turned out for the Sulphur Springs City Council meeting, more than could fit within the warm confines of City Hall, so the meeting was moved to the much larger civic center. When the doors opened, citizens of the small…

The rise and fall of Phil Gramm

Would a bleeding-heart liberal kick a guy while he’s down? Should a girl like me, in whom the milk of human kindness flows copiously for everyone, from protein-shy Hottentots to the glandular obese, actually aim a few swift boots at the prone form of Sen. Phil Gramm? Nah. But it’s…

Peavy sues Observer

Former Dallas Independent School District trustee Dan Peavy has filed suit against the Dallas Observer for reprinting a transcript of the profanity-peppered tape recording that led to his resignation. In its October 5, 1995 issue, the Observer printed a transcript of racist, sexist, and homophobic comments that Peavy admits he…

Buzz

Just another politician Though it’s nothing new for a candidate to stump as “not another political insider,” Buzz had to stop and look twice at a campaign sign planted in the Midcities. Bob Stewart, a Republican running for the District 42 state House seat representing parts of Hurst, Euless, and…

Letters

Pee-pee? No, GOP I was somewhat appalled at your suggestion that Dallas Morning News editorial-page editor Rena Pederson should take a “G.O.P. urine test” simply because you were not in agreement with the News’ editorial assessment of President Bill Clinton’s State of the Union address [BeloWatch, “Marching in Lockstep,” February…

BeloWatch

The good, gray Dallas Morning News has ended its search for a new managing editor by elevating a veteran of 16 years at the paper, and–though he and the News are loath to admit it–a stint chasing UFOs at the National Enquirer. The elevation of Deputy Managing Editor Stuart Wilk,…

Single with children

Matthew, 12, recently traveled to downtown Dallas with members of Park Cities Baptist Church to deliver sandwiches to the homeless. While there, he spotted his mother, who didn’t see him. Eager to avoid her, he jumped back into the delivery van. A homeless man, seeing him run, walked over to…

‘A little bit of revenge’

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, apparently responding to recent Dallas Observer stories about its newsroom turmoil, is forcing the syndicator of nationally known columnist Molly Ivins to pull her column from the pages of the Observer. Observer Editor Peter Elkind characterizes the decision as a “blatant case of retaliation,” but says…

Dealing with the Devil

Back in 1986, Ed Zabel was always watching himself do things he said he wasn’t going to do. It happened too many times to count, this exercise, and the photographer marvels at it to this day. “I’d tell my wife, ‘hey, I’m going up to 7-Eleven to get a six-pack…

Surplus labor

We usually think of the effects of downsizing on those who get laid off. The blizzard of pink slips hits not because the company is in trouble or even because its profits are down, but because downsizing is the corporate vogue. The company’s stock goes up, the shareholders are happy,…

Project X

Doug Hamilton, a 43-year-old Southwestern Bell manager, left work early on a wet, stormy October day in 1994 to attend a conference with his daughter’s kindergarten teacher. When the meeting ended, Hamilton began driving his wife and three young children home to Mesquite, but decided, two blocks from the house,…