Borderline case

Five-year-old Diana Garcia can’t sit up, eat, or do much of anything by herself. Confined to a wheelchair, she eats formula through a little tube in her stomach. Neurologically, she’s at the level of a newborn and will likely stay that way the rest of her life, her doctor says…

Letters

Cheap drugs This is one hell of a story with interesting reporting [“Busted,” July 10]. I happen to know Special Agent Julio Mercado personally. Mercado is one of the most decent men I have ever known. I would do anything to work for him. If someone can clean up and…

O little town of Bethel-sham

Folks like Larry Schone and his wife, Ruth, thought 60 miles would be far enough away from Dallas to enjoy the peace and quiet of country life. Now, they’ve gone and founded a damn town, ensuring that nothing will be quiet for a long, long time. The Schones and others…

The Saint

The horse had an ungainly name, and was a tough ride besides. I Are Sharp was rank and willful, with a bad habit of picking some inopportune moment during a race to take a breather. A jockey who didn’t figure that out might think his mount had run out of…

Jurist imprudence

Misty Murphy was terrified. It was her very first trial in her short career as a defense attorney, and she was facing a jury in the courtroom of municipal Judge Faith Hill. To say that the strawberry blonde Murphy was inexperienced is an understatement. After all, she’s only 15 years…

Buzz

Rufus unhinged Buzz was perusing a recent column by Rufus Shaw in the black newspaper Elite News and was struck when Shaw described a worker at Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson’s office thus: “Ms. Simiawsky, who is Jewish, was a unique and welcome experience for me.” Meeting a pleasant Jewish woman…

Letters

Batting zero When well-known information is reported inaccurately, I always question the veracity of information that isn’t common knowledge. To wit, Pete Geren is a Democrat, not a Republican, and Don Nelson coached the Golden State Warriors, not the New York Knicks. What other misinformation is in Miriam Rozen’s would-be…

Busted

In a corner office of the anonymous concrete bunker off Harry Hines Boulevard that houses the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Dallas headquarters, Julio Mercado, the new man in charge, is squirming like a worm on a hot plate. It’s hard to say exactly what is making the 48-year-old former New York…

Hat’s off

It’s so damned hot in Austin on this Saturday that condensation forms on your skin before you’re all the way out the door. You’re like a cold-drink bottle just taken from a frigid icebox. Your clothes are damp, sticking to your skin until they become your skin. You do not…

Stealth plant

Samuel and Helen Woodson live on a homey cul-de-sac in southeast Denton. Their kids grown and gone, they keep themselves busy working and playing with their five grandchildren. Two weeks ago, the Woodsons found a flyer on the front door of the home where they have lived for 10 years…

Buzz

Lawyer run amuck! We’re gonna go ahead and blame Jerry Buchmeyer for this one. Buchmeyer is the reigning chief federal judge in Dallas, the top dog of the black-robe set down at the federal courthouse. For a jurist, Buchmeyer possesses a rare talent–he can write. In fact, Buchmeyer authors some…

Observer honors

Dallas Observer staff writer Ann Zimmerman has been awarded one of the nation’s most prestigious newspaper writing prizes by the University of Missouri School of Journalism. In a separate competition, staff writer Kaylois Henry has received second-place recognition for feature writing from the National Association of Black Journalists. Zimmerman’s award…

Letters

Clearing the air On behalf of Downwinders At Risk, I want to thank Rose Farley and the Dallas Observer for devoting so much time, energy, and space to covering TXI’s burning of hazardous waste at its Midlothian cement plant, immediately south of Dallas [“Ill wind blowing,” June 12, “Something in…

Musician, heal thyself

Davy Jones liked to party. Hell, everybody in Austin did back in the early ’80s, and if you weren’t careful, your days could disappear into a haze of pot, noxious stimulants, beer, and pills that invoked such a hellbroth of effect and counter-effect that you might think yourself sober–at least…

The son almost rises

H. Ross Perot Jr. had just bought the Dallas Mavericks in May 1996 when the basketball team’s top executive quit. The son of Dallas’ most famous billionaire was in a bind. As he often does, Perot Jr. turned to his longtime chief lieutenant, Frank Zaccanelli, and put the fiery Italian…

Blowing off steam

Dave Gardner swears he’s not planning to blow up City Hall, but some offhand comments he made about bombs have created an explosive situation in the City of Dallas’ Code Enforcement department. On June 24, Gardner, who has worked in code enforcement for three years, was fired after a city…

Buzz

Poised for the 20th century Sure, Buzz picks on The Dallas Morning News on select occasions. But every so often we detect small signs that editorial writers at Dallas’ Only Daily are evolving beyond the Stone Age. So Buzz is encouraged that the DMN has signaled a sea change in…

Bad business

For the past month, callers trying to reach Roland Edison at the headquarters of A&M Records in Los Angeles have been told he is out of the office or on vacation. But he has not just been taking a little time off: The A&M Records vice president of urban promotion…

Letters

Ignoring the evidence Your writer chose to trivialize and ignore the factual and scientific information Texas Industries (TXI) provided the Dallas Observer [“Ill wind blowing,” June 12 and “Something in the air,” June 19]. Instead, she used anecdotal information to present a very biased two-part story. The “hump” the Downwinders…

Talk to the animals

Prince Jake never met a stranger. That much is apparent watching the three-legged dog work the waiting room of a Balch Springs veterinary clinic, nuzzling everyone in sight. A black cocker spaniel–a stuffed toy compared to the 90-pound Jake–cowers beneath a chair, fearful of becoming an appetizer. No chance. Even…

What makes Sammy run?

Sammy Allen stands meekly and hopefully outside the screen door of his family’s house in South Dallas, calling out, “Daddy! Daddy! It’s Sammy, Daddy!” Sammy’s 11-year-old nephew comes to the door. “Hey, it’s Sammy Tee,” he tells the boy, trying to come across as a treasured relative, one who sets…

End run

Attorney Dennis Eichelbaum’s law firm is paid about $650,000 a year to serve as general counsel for the Dallas Independent School District, providing routine legal advice, handling lawsuits, and things of that nature. Not surprisingly, disgruntled citizens with a beef against the district sometimes name Eichelbaum personally as a defendant…