Letters

Just as rotten From what I can tell by this week’s article by Jim Schutze titled “To the rotten core” (February 3), the Dallas Observer brand of journalism is alive and well. Mr. Schutze’s “reporting” of my testimony in Mr. Lipscomb’s trial is totally inaccurate and a complete fabrication. I’m…

Black, white, and blue

For Roosevelt Holiday, the “bat cave” reference was just a night-shift cop’s feeble attempt at humor. A 43-year-old Dallas police officer, Holiday used jokes to soothe the jumpy nerves of new recruits he once trained to patrol predominantly minority neighborhoods in southern Dallas. Often the trainees were white. Holiday is…

Me, myself, and why

Fred Curchack is performing cunnilingus. In front of a live audience. Actually, DJ Pollochek, an obscure experimental theater artist, is going down on Serena, the veiled dancer at a sleazy subterranean strip joint called Club X. Both characters are being played by Curchack, a slightly less obscure experimental theater artist…

Faked out

If it wasn’t for bad luck, as the song goes, Gerald Peters wouldn’t have no luck at all. The well-known art dealer with galleries in Dallas, Santa Fe, and New York City was recently forced to refund $5 million for a collection of Georgia O’Keeffe paintings he sold to Kansas…

Bad planning

In the venerated legal directory Martindale-Hubbell, North Dallas lawyer David A. Schiller appears to lead a flourishing practice. Even though the 36-year-old Louisiana native graduated from the South Texas College of Law just four and a half years ago, according to his directory entry, Schiller now operates his own shop…

Buzz

Slip up Buzz was just a boy when the great Sears catalog penis scandal rocked the nation. Maybe you remember. A model for a pair of men’s boxer shorts had a vague shadow on his inner thigh that might have been the man’s dangling johnson peeking out — if you…

Fooling with Mother Nature

You would think the decision would have been a minor blip on the food-industry radar screen. After all, Plano-based Frito-Lay, the huge snack-food unit of PepsiCo Inc., uses just 1.2 billion pounds of corn, or about one quarter of 1 percent of total U.S. corn production, for its snack chips…

Letters

For the right Price Hooray! Finally, a local newspaper with enough gumption to call Al Lipscomb exactly what he is — a corrupt public official (“The plantation burns,” January 20). What is so discouraging about the whole stinking mess is that so many black leaders in this community failed to…

Biting back

Brian Fridge doesn’t look like he’s about to become an art-world celebrity. With his shorn head, thick glasses, and stiff blue blazer, you’d swear he was just another museum security guard. Standing very still, his long-fingered hands clasped low in front of wrinkled khakis, he casts a faraway gaze over…

Gimme shelter

The scripture inscribed on his stationery offers some indication of just how sacredly immigration attorney John Wheat Gibson takes his calling: Cursed is the man who withholds justice from the alien, the fatherless, or the widow. — Deuteronomy 27:19 It also should have been Immigration and Naturalization Service District Director…

Buzz

Image is everything We’re sure resting easier now that The Dallas Morning News assures us that folks in, say, New Jersey aren’t troubled by the stink of corruption rising from City Councilman Al Lipscomb’s conviction for taking bribes from Yellow Cab. At least we think that was the point of…

Unlucky strike

Many have the same dream: finding the six magical numbers that unlock the treasure known as the Texas Lottery. Then life would be good. Problems would vanish. There are even the collective fantasies of what to buy and with whom to share this new, instant wealth. Billie Bob Harrell Jr…

Letters to the Editor

We give a lit I’m sure you won’t print this e-mail in its entirety, but I’m compelled to write it anyway. When I began writing my novel, The Protégé, I promised myself I would welcome constructive criticism when it came, no matter what the form. I stuck by that promise…

Presumed guilty

Helen Bass enjoyed an ordered if unremarkable life. The 42-year-old vocational nurse worked the second shift at the state hospital in Wichita Falls. A tidy woman who lived alone, Bass occasionally entertained a friend in the evening but mostly kept to herself. After work, according to her neighbors, she would…

Questions of innocence

Odell Barnes joins a growing list of death-row inmates whose convictions have become a lot less clear-cut during the appeals process. That’s supposed to be the point of an appeal: a chance to revisit the case and make sure that if a serious mistake was made at the trial, that…

The king of Cockrell Hill

When you meet him, you can’t help but like Aurelio Castillo. At 36, he’s a big man, but in the jolly sense of the term. There’s no menace to his presence, despite his reputation for unbounded machismo. He invites you into his constable’s office with a glad hand and a…

Raise high the roof

Claude Albritton, owner of the celebrated McKinney Avenue Contemporary arts and performance space in Uptown, is steamed. Last year, city building inspectors forced him to heed zoning restrictions and scale back his plans to expand the MAC’s Kitchen Dog Theater. Because of the order, Albritton, one of Dallas’ top arts…

Fur flies

A series of lawsuits against anti-fur protesters — the latest naming John Paul Goodwin and his Dallas-based organization as defendants — appears to be opening a new front in the conflict between retailers and activists, who are facing some of the same legal weapons developed and used over the years…

Buzz

Breaching the stonewall There’s a saying newspeople like to toss out whenever we’re feeling particularly macho: “Don’t pick fights with people who buy ink by the barrel.” It’s probably not a good idea to start battles with people who buy videotape by the mile, either, but apparently word hasn’t reached…

Wading in

The FBI is conducting an investigation into possible criminal violations of environmental laws committed at the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, according to five people with firsthand knowledge of the agency’s inquiries, who spoke on the condition that their names not be published. On the record, neither the FBI nor airport…

Letters to the editor

Wade through this Since no one from The Dallas Morning News responded to your calls regarding last week’s Buzz on Norma Adams-Wade, I guess you didn’t know that not only was Cheryl Smith flooded with e-mails and phone calls, but so were Gilbert Bailon, Chris Kelley, and other DaMNewsers. By…

No class

Washington Elementary is housed in an old beige brick building in a neighborhood near downtown Sherman, a blue-collar town of about 35,000 near the Oklahoma border. It’s in a part of the city where nearly every house needs a paint job, roofs sag, and the occasional worn sofa rests on…