Buzz

Peace of the action: We thought it must have been a joke. A co-worker dropped on Buzz’s desk a price list for being listed on a new Web site (www.lowergreenville.org) that aims to promote businesses, including bars, on Lower Greenville Avenue. The guy passing out the flier was Avi Adelman,…

Letters

Falun Dafa’s Dark Side Hypocritical and dangerous: In her article “Unlocking the Gong” (August 2), Rose Farley presents the members of the Dallas Falun Dafa group as very sympathetic characters. It is easy to be taken in initially; they are people who are, for the most part, soft-spoken and promoting…

Divided She Stands

Bruce Parrott remembers when his wife, Lois, discovered her hidden talent: a knack for grassroots politicking. Ten years ago, White Rock residents were outraged when the Dallas school board announced its plan to move a Montessori school from their neighborhood to North Dallas. While the Dallas Independent School District said…

A Quiet Death

When the screaming began inside No. 211 of the Atrium Apartments, Louise Doe and Neil Clement froze. It was around 2:30 p.m. on April 25. Apartment manager Doe and Clement, a resident who sometimes does odd jobs for her, were walking through one of the courtyards to check out what…

Over the Line

State Representative Harryette Ehrhardt, a popular Democrat and unabashed progressive who for eight years has represented East Dallas, Oak Lawn and parts of North Dallas that together composed the 107th House district, still lives in the same Swiss Avenue house she has called home for 30 years. But she no…

Last Call?

There are almost never employee meetings at the Lounge, the 19-year-old bar nestled within the lobby of the Inwood Theater. There has never been much need for such formal get-togethers, because families–and that’s what the bar’s nearly dozen employees, from bartenders to bar backs, consider each other–know what’s going on…

Buzz

Black not like them: As the Dallas City Council’s redistricting panel wraps up months of mind-numbing labor, some residents in East Oak Cliff’s black middle-class neighborhood of Cedar Crest are aghast at their neighborhood’s late entry into redistricting politics. They fear the hardscrabble neighborhood of black South Dallas is attempting…

Letters

Silence Is Golden Good riddance: Thank God! That fool Tom Kamb is finally gone (“Sound of Silence,” August 9). Silence really is golden. For months, KLIF listeners have endured verbal assaults from the mouth of quite possibly the most offensive person ever to sit behind the mike on AM 570…

Falling Stars

Midwestern State University’s practice field is lined with the usual media types who chuckle and babble about nothing in particular. It’s hot. Almost unbearably so. The heat index at Dallas Cowboys training camp is in triple digits again and will be for the rest of the summer–or until G.W.’s plan…

We Love You, We Hate You

The temperature approached 100 degrees, but the hundreds of children and parents stood firm in a sweaty and noisy three-block-long line outside KD Studio in Dallas. The children were all trying to land a role in the upcoming season of Barney & Friends, the long-running program on public television. The…

Big-House Guru

Pacing the Addison hotel room he calls home, a cell phone pressed to his ear, Ron Cohen is speaking in a firm but understanding voice to a 26-year-old Florida man who is standing outside a federal penitentiary in Fort Dix, New Jersey, preparing to surrender himself to begin serving a…

Buzz

The Rangers are in the toilet; the Cowboys are teetering on its rim. Dallas needs a winner. What’s a sports fan to do? Try poetry. Dallas’ entry in the National Poetry Slam Competition held recently in Seattle narrowly edged out Los Angeles 113.3-113.2 to take first place in a field…

Letters

One for the Cat Box Do yourself a favor: Like Eric Celeste, I also recently canceled my subscription to The Dallas Morning News (“Say Goodbye,” July 26) in favor of the daily Wall Street Journal and the Sunday New York Times, and I urge everyone out there to do the…

Sound of Silence

In retrospect, it could have been much worse. When KLIF-AM 570 talk radio host Tom Kamb didn’t show up for work two weeks ago, station management immediately began a worried search for him. Kamb, a race- and gay-baiting conservative known for angering Mayor Ron Kirk and garnering a nearly infinitesimal…

Unlocking the Gong

At 5 o’clock in the morning, a van pulls into the deserted parking lot outside the Richardson public library. Ordinarily at this time, a group of Falun Gong practitioners would be gathering for their morning exercises, but today they have a more urgent mission. They will spend the next week…

Rich Man, Poor Man

As Tom Stanley lay dying, his heart worn down by time, Lillian Stanley searched for ways to console her husband. Each day he spent at Presbyterian Hospital in January, she would gather family and friends around him–those who had loved him and those who had wronged him–so Stanley, 83, could…

Beg Pardon

“Little Rose” has a butter-melting smile, cascading cornrows and huge brown eyes. An adorable 5-year-old, she’s the kind of cute you can’t resist hugging. But don’t be fooled by her Shirley Temple pout; she is also a powerful weapon in the arsenal of drug-policy reformers, those men and women who…

Buzz

Kissy, kissy: With the uninterrupted lovefest celebrating the opening of the American Airlines Center under way in the pages of The Dallas Morning News, regular readers of this paper might expect us to have something nasty to say. Lord knows Buzz tried, but so far the arena seems to be…

Letters

Winning Hand Fascinating “sport”: I am probably alone and certainly biased in my assessment, but I must say it’s nice to see some coverage on a player I respect (“The Player,” July 19) and on a game I love to play and watch. For some reason, poker is treated like…

Something about Stephan

Stephan Pyles almost didn’t move into his new 5,000-plus-square-foot, three-story house. It earned him two offers before construction was even completed. One anxious buyer even asked Pyles to throw out a number. He was stunned when the would-be buyer grabbed it. But the offer fell through, and Pyles had to…

Death Become Him

Mark Brandon Read was 17 when he entered prison for the first time. A young man, yes, but one who had never really been a child. His father had spent 24 years in the Australian army; the old man was battle-scarred, to the point where he always slept with a…

Home At Last

ALVARADO–There are days now–rare but more frequent than he’d ever thought possible–when John Maddux’s life follows a routine path that he finds both welcome and comforting. But then, with the slightest provocation, his mood will darken and the memories flood back, returning him to that moment almost a quarter of…