Seeing yellow

Robert Dorrell, a part-time state-licensed massage therapist, says he has grown tired of fielding telephone calls from misguided–not to mention overexcited–prospective customers, who mistake his service for a massage parlor. Typically, Dorrell says, the errant callers “ask me if I’m going to give them a hand job.” Dorrell is blaming…

Fouled nest

For more than a year, chicken tycoon Bo Pilgrim has been casting about East Texas for a place to build his next processing plant. But the reputation of Pilgrim’s Pride as one of the state’s worst polluters has doggedly pursued his company, causing doors to slam in communities that do…

Letters

Reading, writing, research I’m writing to commend you on the truly comprehensive article written by Laura Miller [“The truth about Townview,” March 14]. I am a graduate of the TAG Magnet here in Dallas, and I am also African-American. I attended TAG from 1988 to 1992 while living with my…

Quarterback sneak

Steve Hatchell answered the telephone in his hotel room last Thursday evening full of good cheer. And, hey, why not? The 49-year-old commissioner of the new Big 12 athletic conference was in New York City for an extended weekend. He was staying at the Marriott Marquis, a big, glitzy hotel…

BeloWatch

What, me pander? It’s hard to say what’s more ludicrous: the Morning News’ slobbering coverage of the Nordstrom department store’s arrival in Dallas or managing editor Stu Wilk’s dismissal of the suggestion that the paper was sucking up to a major advertiser. The News’ treatment of the store’s opening was…

Cutting class

Vernon Johnson is leaving his $125,000-a-year gig as superintendent of the Richardson Independent School District at the end of March to become the chief executive officer at Voyager Expanded Learning Inc. To hear him describe it, leaving the school district to take a job in the public sector–working for a…

Who the Hell is Wild Willie?

On his birth certificate, Dwight Martinek uses his legal name, the one that reflects his grandparents’ Czech roots. But on the streets of the East Texas town of Canton, Martinek–a large, ponytailed, sculptor-turned-theme-park promoter–introduces himself as “Wild Willie.” Sure, the handle’s hokey. Martinek borrowed it from a now-defunct Western-style department…

The Unbearable Lightness of Victor

Driving west on Highway 67, Victor Morales has the sun at his back and a St. Patrick’s Day parade on the horizon. Early this Saturday morning, the grandson of Mexican immigrants stuck a shamrock in his lapel, slipped a toothbrush in his pocket and set out in a 4-year-old Nissan…

History in the making

Four years ago, Greg Vaughn’s 13-year-old daughter, Holley, came to him with an age-old problem: the-night- before-the-term-paper’s-due blues. “You’ve got to help me,” a panicked Holley said to her dad, after apologizing for waiting until the last minute. Her assignment was to write about Sam Houston, the colorful, controversial president…

Letters

School for scandal As a guest-substitute language-arts and college-prep teacher at Townview Magnet Center [“The truth about Townview,” March 14] for an extended assignment shortly after the school opened last September, I got a bird’s-eye view of the excitement, concerns, and challenges the students and teachers experienced as they embarked…

A tragic trip

Looking at him, standing in front of a roomful of college kids, there is absolutely no question that this is the Pied Piper of local higher education. “Everyone with us?” he says, eyeing his students as he rocks back and forth on his brown loafers, shirt sleeves rolled up in…

Buzz

Short fuse Columbia Pictures publicists for Dallas’ hometown-to-Tinseltown success story, Bottle Rocket, recently ran afoul of People magazine critic Leah Rozen. Rozen called Rocket a movie of “raffish charm,” and compared its feel to that of The Brothers McMullen. She added, in print, “There’s a note at the bottom of…

White Like Me

While I sat through a four-hour, Friday-night meeting of the Christian Coalition earlier this month, I searched hard for the sinister folks who have infiltrated Texas’ Republican Party. I scanned the fellowship hall of Northwest Bible Church, eyeing the faces in each row of those $20 padded “stacker” chairs that…

The House of Cottrell (Part I)

The jerry curl is dead. Once the royal crown of black hair styles, coveted by men and women alike, the curl is now a dinosaur, found mostly in rural outposts of the South. A combination of chemicals in a clear gel base, the curl was an innovative perm that transformed…

Against all odds

Scrappy, self-assured, and quick with a quip, Dallas defense attorney Tom Mills has spent the better part of his 23-year career defending people charged with wire fraud, money laundering, bankruptcy and insurance fraud, and other white-collar federal crimes. Generally, the guy likes the thrill of a good courtroom fight. On…

Memo of the Week

Bill Palen, a local P.R. executive with Fleishman Hillard, offered this counsel to Southwestern Bell Telephone general manager Tom Morgan, on the date of the Observer’s publication of a cover story by Miriam Rozen about “Project X”–a set of billing practices that former company employees allege were racist. Those making…

BeloWatch

Dailies brace for Arlington war The Fort Worth Star-Telegram has made its first major move to meet The Dallas Morning News’ impending invasion of Arlington. Gary Hardee, the well-regarded deputy executive editor of the Star-Telegram, will replace Mike Blackman, who took over the large Arlington bureau less than a year…

Letters

The enigma of John Wiley Price Re: your notice on the Rev. Zan Holmes’ appearance at St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal church [“Buzz,” March 14]. in which you implied an Anglo fixation with the enigma of John Wiley Price. In fact, the prominent clergyman, who happens to be African-American,…

The House of Cottrell (Part II)

So has the illusion of a big, prosperous, and happy family. The jurors who assembled in U.S. Magistrate Judge Jeff Kaplan’s federal court in Dallas on January 9, 1996, were in for a bizarre spectacle. Before them sat well-known Dallas businessman Comer Cottrell and his wife Isabell, defendants in a…

The Truth About Townview (Part I)

It was a cold, bleak 7:45 in the morning–the second Monday in January, the first day of school after the winter break–and Townview Center, the most expensive, most eagerly awaited school ever built in Dallas, was being picketed for allegedly grave racial injustices being perpetrated inside. Newspaper, TV, and radio…

The Truth About Townview (Part II)

By the beginning of December, with pressure on Watson mounting, a new and much more formidable ally stepped onto center stage on her behalf: County Commissioner John Wiley Price. It is no accident that Price’s two biggest racial battles this past year have involved Ora Lee Watson–at Parkland Memorial Hospital,…

Buzz

Don’t even think about it, mayor Sometimes Buzz marvels at what life in Dallas has done to its citizens. Last week, a seemingly bright, articulate woman called with a question. “I’ve called everywhere–city and county–and no one seems to be able to give me an answer,” she said. “So, I…