Betty’s In Charge

Betty Culbreath sits intently on the edge of her chair, her elbows planted on her desk and drawn tightly to her coiled frame. Tension emanates from her, like beams from the virescent lamps used to zap germs in the tuberculosis clinic several floors below her office in the county Health…

Black Maria, Don’t You Cry

On a cold winter night, Poor David’s Pub has undergone a transformation. Usually a listener’s bar, this Friday it’s the kind of place where people go to socialize, and the music is incidental–loud and shot through with the ebullience of alcohol. The woman alone on stage pays it no mind,…

Buzz

Naughty newboy Is there a good, cheap criminal mouthpiece in the house? Brian Loncar needs you to keep him out of the tank. No, not that tank. This time we mean the jug, the hoosegow, the pokey, or whatever you call the slammer. It seems that the exuberant plaintiffs’ lawyer–who…

Dueling tapes

Longtime political gadfly Rick Finlan has plunged head first into the saga of the Peavy Tapes, and a collision with the U.S. Attorney’s office could very likely ensue. In a recent letter to the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, Finlan asserts that U.S. Attorney Paul Coggins…

Letters

More fowl play I wanted Lisa McAnally to know that she is not alone with her problem [“All fowled up,” March 6]. I live in a nice apartment complex off of Haskell, east of Interstate 75, and the houses in our neighborhood have roosters running around wild everywhere. The houses…

Observer writer wins Unity Award

Dallas Observer staff writer Miriam Rozen has won a Unity Award in investigative reporting for her February 15, 1996, cover story, “Project X.” The Unity Awards In Media, sponsored by Lincoln University of Missouri, honor outstanding coverage of minority problems, issues, and concerns. Rozen’s story told how a former Southwestern…

Buzz

The town that killed Dr. L The final shoe in Dr. Laura’s March madness has dropped. You’ll remember, of course, that the Jewish Welfare Federation of Dallas invited the nationally syndicated radio shrink, who is, as she incessantly reminds listeners, a zealous born-again Jew, to speak at a fundraiser. A…

Slim Pickens

There was a time when T. Boone Pickens, the Texas oilman-turned-corporate-raider, graced the cover of Time, struck terror into America’s most powerful boardrooms, and cut deals the way he, and only he, wanted them. These days, Pickens has had to give up half his dog. Pickens, to be more precise,…

Letters

Let’s play ball I am very, very proud of Courtney Barnett [“Losing by decision,” February 20]. She reminds me of myself. Over 25 years ago, I was 1 of 2 girls on the boys’ track team. However, our coach saw an opportunity. He started a girls’ track team. Within two…

Prophets Without Honor

It is Sunday evening, and the church of the free market is in session. Joe Howard and Chevis King Jr. preach the word from their electronic pulpit–a biweekly radio show on KRLD-AM. This evening’s sermon deals with what King calls “the exportation of socialism in Dallas.” “We are two black…

Letters

White noise I’ve been restraining myself from entering the DISD fray; however, Julie Lyons put me over the edge on this one. I don’t believe Lyons has the right to challenge the people of DISD Place 1 who elected Bill Keever and call for his ouster [“Bring on the noise,”…

Dropping the bomb

J.D. Cash looked at me incredulously. He couldn’t believe that anyone bought into the supposed confession of Timothy McVeigh. “People in Dallas believe it?” he asked, speaking from the living room of his buddies, the Wilburns, in Oklahoma City last Saturday night. Yes, I insisted. Not only that, but any…

‘What is that, a muffler?’

“Texas’ Most Historic Town.” That’s how the billboard tempts drivers on Interstate 35 to exit 401B for Waxahachie. You wind your way back under the highway, past the ramshackle burger drive-in (the specialty is lasagna–go figure), down the avenue of spruced-up old houses, and into downtown. Day-trippers come to this…

Observer writers win national honors

Dallas Observer staff writers Kaylois Henry and Thomas Korosec have been named winners of the Benjamin Fine Award for Education Reporting, a national honor presented by the National Association of Secondary School Principals. Kaylois Henry won in the non-daily newspaper category for “Academy of dreams,” an April 11, 1996, story…

Sultan of swat

Around 6 p.m. each day, the neighborhood kids begin to gather at Russell Fish’s tiny North Dallas apartment, which is decorated with educational posters and inspirational sayings such as: “We don’t look for people who never fail. We look for people who never give up.” Primarily black and Latino elementary…

Buzz

Crazy for you We can’t believe she did that. Dr. Laura Schlessinger, the abrasive, conservative-values absolutist syndicated radio shrink, proved to a group of Dallas Jewish women last week that her radio persona isn’t just a shtick. The petite, dogmatic California-based Ph.D (that’s in physiology, not psychology) who has office…

The fat man sings

U.S. district Judge Jorge Solis has made it possible for a few more listeners to hear the notorious “Peavy Tapes.” Judge Solis, responding to motions made by U.S. Attorney Paul Coggins, ruled this week that the FBI can forward the tapes to the civil rights division of the U.S. Department…

Goldfingers

On a recent rainy Monday night, classical guitarist Carlo Pezzimenti performed for about 40 members of a college class taught by friend and fellow Brookhaven teacher Larry Gordon. Anyone who’s seen Pezzimenti perform knows what happened the instant his fingers hit the nylon strings: The Carlo hush fell over listeners…

Chaos theory

Just last month, Bill Keever called a press conference and tearfully announced that he would relinquish his seat on the Dallas Independent School District board. He hoisted a flag of surrender familiar to embattled politicians, saying he needs to spend more time with his family. Keever said he would step…

Libel suit dismissed

A Tarrant County judge has dismissed a libel claim filed against the Dallas Observer in 1996 by former Dallas Independent School District teacher Deen Williamson. State district Judge Bob McGrath granted the Observer’s motion for summary judgment last Friday, ruling that the case should not proceed to trial. McGrath also…

Observer gets wired

This week, the Dallas Observer goes online with a World Wide Web site (www.dallasobserver.com) where Internet surfers can read and download the Observer’s hard-edged, irreverant articles on politics, government, and business, as well as our provocative reviews of music, stage, film, and restaurants. In addition, dallasobserver.com will offer Web Extra–a…

All fowled up

For Lisa McAnally, last Christmas Day was hardly the peaceful experience most people reasonably expect from the holiday. On that morning, and well into the afternoon, the 23-year-old art history graduate student and her boyfriend sat on McAnally’s backyard balcony in East Dallas, watching in disbelief as her neighbors across…