My two sons?

For most of the last 17 years, Fonda Vera has lived like many other single mothers–balancing a full-time job with the needs of her two sons, now aged 17 and 13. With the exception of her brief marriage to a man who is not the boys’ father, Vera has been…

Letters

Our own man Thank you for writing an article that was not only refreshing, but also exciting [“His own man,” May 29]. I agree with you: DISD has a breath of young, fresh ATTITUDE–an attitude found in Ron Price that will, I’m confident, breathe “new life” into the DISD’s resolve…

Buzz

Save a buck and a tree You might remember the mesmerizing tale of the Quedlinburg treasures. For decades, no one knew the whereabouts of a trove of medieval German relics–including richly jeweled manuscripts worth millions of dollars–that disappeared from the town of Quedlinburg at the end of World War II…

Naughty bits

Artist David Alvey knew when he started work on the piece he calls “CYBER.sex” that it would contain subject matter that might offend people. “The concept consumed me and, literally, my studio,” Alvey says of the almost six-foot-long installation, a solid mahogany tabletop with three computer monitors, two of them…

Letters

Hit the road, Gordon Regarding Gordon Hilgers’ “Windy City” letter [May 15]: If Mr. Hilgers is such an independent thinker and he thinks so little of Dallas, here’s a dollar, buy a clue, LEAVE! Randy Haloran Dallas Poetry slam Regarding Jimmy Fowler’s article [“Put a lid on it,” May 15]…

Don’t you dare call it the ‘Chitlin Circuit’

It’s a weekend night, and Brandi, a honey-skinned, bitty-bodied woman in snakeskin shorts and go-go boots–just one step above hoochie-mama status–is holding forth on the finer points of man-hunting. While sitting at a nightclub table with her two girlfriends, Cynthia and Brenda, she regales them with sure-fire methods for luring…

Nerds of a Feather

For the longest time, Jim Collier held to the thinnest filament of hope. He would hear a rustling sound from the back yard, or see a dark speck on the far-off horizon, and his heart would pound. He’d run to the tidy pigeon loft in his back yard, buoyed by…

A Dream Deferred

The weed-choked, two-acre vacant lot on East Ledbetter Drive was once ground zero in South Oak Cliff’s crack cocaine epidemic. In the late 1980s, drug dealers peddled their cheap, potent rocks in the shadows of towering live oak trees. The Johnson grass grew so tall and thick it was a…

Goofy golf

In Far North Dallas, just up from the Whataburger and the Just Brakes and the Blue Star miniwarehouses, Jeffery Smith is wandering with his putter among the plastic zebras, dreaming little dreams. Sure, his sport holds about as much cachet as indoor roller-skating, or bumper pool, or lawn darts. “It’s…

Buzz

Hey, wanna paddle your boss? Are we the only ones who look around the office sometimes and ponder the relative mental stability of our co-workers? Buzz doubts it. You’ve done it–checking for suspicious bulges under jackets, or wondering why the guy at the next desk is plotting shotgun spread patterns…

Dead ducks

Carol Klein was driving down Shorecrest Drive near Bachman Lake three weeks ago when she saw four dead ducks. The smashed carcasses were another insult to Klein, who has spent more than a year begging city officials to do something about speeding drivers who keep killing wildlife near the congested…

Letters

Big bore I was truly offended by your article on the Tomorrowpeople [“Hasta manana,” April 10] and the comparisons Richard Baimbridge drew between them and Big Star, and particularly Chris Bell. The “ethereal and emotive” energy that I was shown recently at Rick’s Place was more that of a remarkably…

His own man

Someone must have said something really funny. Or maybe the photographer strode into the DISD boardroom trailing 10 feet of toilet paper. Whatever the case, he caught Kathlyn Gilliam smiling–an open-mouthed, toothy grin so jolly it looked as though she’d just burst into uproarious laughter. Needless to say, there is…

Invisible Mansfield

Every seat in the meeting room of the Mansfield Historical Society was filled with uneasy occupants. Tension suffused the tiny space. The people jittered and shifted like popcorn kernels just about to explode. Around the walls, the faces of Mansfield’s white founding families looked on, gazing serenely from a series…

Stick it in your ear

The teeming masses turned out in record numbers, a quarter-million strong, for last weekend’s Byron Nelson golf tournament, lining the fairways and craning for a glimpse of rookie phenomenon Tiger Woods. The fans will rise early again this week to stake out spots at the Colonial, the second round in…

School daze

Federal investigators, an outside counsel, and an internal auditor are all conducting parallel probes into allegations of misconduct and overtime fraud at the Dallas Independent School District, so it’s no surprise that the long corridors of the district’s creaky old administration building literally reek of fear. “You can see the…

Going for the jugular

On April 1, Chewy, a rare Asian leopard, bled to death after being bitten in the neck by Sikio, a cougar with whom Chewy had shared a cage for 13 years. Chewy’s violent and untimely death makes him the latest casualty in the bloody, protracted war being waged for control…

Buzz

Tiny bubbles Buzz is stumped. Peter Applebome, a perfectly affable fellow, is riding the promotional circuit peddling his book, Dixie Rising. From what we hear, the book is a “thoughtful and provocative” examination of how the South “has today become America itself, defining all the key qualities of the country.”…

Letters

Fricked off Spotting Ed Frick’s name and confused rantings in your Letters section [May 15] brought back painful memories of when he published a rag called Oak Lawn Today in the mid-’80s. As the unrestrained putative editor, Frick subjected the Oak Lawn area to his exclamation-point-laden gushings, outrageous fluff pieces,…

Follow the Money

It would be easy to overlook the plain, black-and-white fliers stuffed haphazardly onto a display shelf at the headquarters of the Dallas Independent School District. “Are you aware of any wrongdoing?” the handbill asks. If so, tipsters are invited to call the superintendent’s hot line, which will gladly accept anonymous…

A Lot of Gas

In the fall of 1994, independent oilman Sanford Dvorin cracked open a Dallas County Yellow Pages and sent a letter to every person connected with the oil and gas industry. Sounding like every piece of over-the-top, too-good-to-be-true, direct-mail investment scheme literature ever written, Dvorin’s letter boasted: “History is about to…

Put a lid on it

For several years now, Clebo Rainey has been called “poet emeritus of Dallas” or “the father of Dallas poetry” or–most recently in these pages–“the Papa Bear of North Texas poetry.” From hosting poetry nights at Club Clearview, the Dark Room, and the McKinney Avenue Contemporary to organizing virtually every reading…