Articles for September, 2010

Six North Texas Schools Snag Blue Ribbon Status

A DISD-loving parent sends along a link to the newest list of the nation’s Blue Ribbon schools. Congrats to all six from the area that made the cut.

Bonham Elementary (DISD)
Thompson Learning Center (DISD)
Dover Elementary (RISD)
Lake Highlands Junior High (RISD)
Central Junior High (Euless)
Hurst Junior High (Hurst)

Today Is World Suicide Prevention Day

Julies bookImagine sitting at a dinner party, making polite chatter with the guests at the round table, sipping fine wine with your dinner, wondering if they’ll be serving chicken or pork. People talk about their day, current events. Then one guest at the table says clearly, and very slowly, “well, I pulled the car into the garage today and sat in there with it running for 90 minutes trying to kill myself.”

Little jolting, eh? That’s the personal story Julie K. Hersh shared with  a group of CONTACT supporters gathered at the Ritz Carlton early this morning to mark World Suicide Prevention Day. Julie is the author of  Struck by Living: From Depression to Hope, a Dallas writer, mother and friend. We met in 2003 in a writing class I took as I embarked upon the changes in my life brought on by an empty nest. We bonded over our mutual love of words. Her book was conceived in the class and published last April. CONTACT is a Dallas organization of local volunteers and mental health experts who try their hardest to prevent suicide. One in five people in this country suffer from depression, says Dr.Madhukar H. Trivedi, Professor of Psychiatry and Betty Jo Hay Distinguished Chair in Mental Health, plus Chief, Division of Mood Disorders at UT Southwestern Medical Center, and my table-mate. (Typing in all those titles gives me depression!) He told me that UT is the center now of a tremendous amount of research into the brain and what it does, how it reacts to anti-depressant meds. Dr. Trivedi said they are just learning that the brain can actually re-generate cells, or neurons, basically replenish. And shocker — electro convulsive therapy (ECT) has an 80% efficacy in treating depression — a higher rate even than anti-depressants. ECT has been given a bad rap by the media, said Julie — recall One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest? — but it was one thing that helped her on the road to recovery. (more…)

What to Do in Dallas This Weekend: Sept. 10-12

I must tell you people that selecting the very best activities for you and yours this weekend was something akin to choosing a favorite child. That said, here’s your itinerary:

Tonight

For you those of you who like to shop, I offer Fashion’s Night Out at Highland Park Village and NorthPark Centre. If I were you, I’d stop by Chanel for a mini-manicure before checking out Escada’s inventive take on this event. Visit D’s shopping blog for tips from our resident experts.

If you want to impress your friends with how cultured you are, however, then you’ll want to snag tickets to MOMIX. Like most things these days, this performance has a “green” theme, so you can pat yourself on the back for embracing that while you’re at it.

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Homeless Man Breaches Security at George W. Bush’s House

So remember how they built this big giant gate by George W.’s Dallas home? And how he’s got Secret Service and police and everything making sure someone doesn’t try to harm him?

Well, this homeless guy from Mexico managed to get through all of that and show up on his doorstep to ask for Bush’s help in expediting his immigration status.

There’s a joke there, somewhere, about border control and George W.’s fence. I just know it.

UPDATE: Law enforcement is saying it didn’t happen. Thanks CBS 11!

Will Emmis Be Forced to Sell Texas Monthly?

The long-delayed plans of Emmis CEO Jeff Smulyan to buy back his public company collapsed yesterday.  The company’s market capitalization fell this morning to about $42 million. Emmis owns radio stations, plus Texas Monthly, Los Angeles, Indianapolis, Atlanta, and Cincinnati magazines.

Mark Foster, chief investment officer for Kirr Marbach & Co. in Columbus, said Emmis’ future options are limited by a low stock price and heavy debt, which runs 13 times its earnings. “That’s high,” he said. “This is a business that doesn’t have a lot of wiggle room. They’re going to have to throttle back growth, generate cash and cut debt.”

Emmis bought Texas Monthly in 1998 for $37 million.

10 Most Beautiful Women in Dallas: Last Chance to Vote for Week 4 Semifinalists

This weekend marks your last opportunity to select the lovely ladies that make it to the final round of the 10 Most Beautiful Women in Dallas competition. When the clock strikes midnight on Sunday (er, Monday, whatever), the selection from Week 4 will be made. Don’t let your favorites down by not giving them a click over the weekend.

Tune in again on Monday for the final round. The semifinalists with the most votes from each week will be there, competing for a chance to make the top 10 and be featured in the December issue of D Magazine. Happy voting!

Leading Off (9/10/10)

1. Sigh. Listen, I’ve been to the Dallas Animal Shelter. There are decent people working there. But apparently it’s really hard to find good people that love animals, because this happened. I know a Labrador retriever is  bigger dog, but not so big that two people couldn’t lift into a van, right?

2. How the Cowboys will do this season, after all the promises, is still up in the air. But the team has already garnered one distinction: Having the worst game-day traffic in the NFL.

3. Hazelton, Pa., has a very, very similar if not identical ordinance to the one Farmers Branch is watching wind its way through the legal system. This does not bode well for Farmers Branch.

4. Remember Anna Fermanova, the Plano woman who was accused of  attempting to smuggle rifle scopes to Russia? She’s got a new job.

5. It’s been a hard week, coming back from a long weekend, with no other real holidays with time off until November. We need zen. Yes? Lots of zen. Massive amounts of zen.

A Race That Happens This Weekend. (I Promise.)

Remember how excited I was for the Jailbreak? Yeah, wrong weekend. As you kindly pointed out it’s the 18th and 19th. Apologies. As far as this weekend, how about signing up for the City Chase? Billed as “the world’s largest urban adventure series,” it’s basically a lot like the  Amazing Race (without the travel). You and a partner will be tested physically, mentally, and emotionally as you complete 10 ChasePoint challenges all over town. And since Blackberry is a major sponsor, use of your smartphone isn’t considered cheating—it’s encouraged. The race starts and ends at Gilley’s, which is perfect! You can stop and shop at The Dallas Flea before heading home.

Rick Perry Costs Texas $830 Million in One Blow

Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett watched last year as Perry loudly bragged about balancing the state’s budget, always failing  to note that a huge deficit was averted only by the merciful and timely grant of $14 billion in federal stimulus funding — which, of course, Perry loudly opposed. So when Texas became eligible for another grant under the education jobs bill this year, Doggett attached one sipulation: the money would actually have to go to education, not to plugging the state’s once-again gaping deficit. Perry complained, threatened to sue, and finally filed for an application that didn’t acknowledge the stipulation. But the stipulation is now law, so the government has turned Texas down.

It’s called government-by-theatrics.

Pickens: Gas-Drilling Criticisms “Ridiculous”

T. Boone Pickens IMG_1744Dallas billionaire T. Boone Pickens says national-security issues trump environmental concerns when it comes to the natural-gas drilling procedure called hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking.” Critics, including many in North Texas, contend the method of drilling for gas through formations like the Barnett Shale may cause everything from earthquakes to air and water pollution. Pickens (left, in photo by Jeanne Prejean) says the drilling’s needed to end U.S. dependence on oil produced by “our enemies.”

“Fracking has been done in Oklahoma and Texas since the 1950s, and there’s no history anywhere of any aquifer being damaged …” Pickens said today after being honored for his philanthropy at a luncheon in Dallas. “We’re gonna do it. [All the criticism ] proves that there’s somebody going to a lawyer. It’s ridiculous.”

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7-Eleven Steps Up to Couche-Tard

I don’t know if you’ve heard the news yet, but a Canadian company called Couche-Tard was all set to snap up Casey’s General Stores until another company, almost certainly 7-Eleven, threw in a bid for a little over $2 billion. I think I speak for all Americans when I say that I hope 7-Eleven’s overtures prove successful. Because what the hell are the Canadians thinking with a company named Couche-Tard?

Frank Deford Knocks Cowboys Stadium

Every year at my alma mater, Notre Dame, they host a little confab called the Red Smith Lecture Series. Then they’re kind enough to print up said lecture and send it out to those of us who couldn’t attend. This year, the speechifier was Frank Deford, whose talk was titled “Sportswriter Is One Word.” At length, I expect they’ll post the speech online, but it’s not there yet.

I thought I’d share one joke from Deford, who complained about how, as technology improves, people seem happier to watch sports on TV rather than go to the games in person. Which brought him to the following observation:

Jerry Jones bought the Dallas Cowboys a 100,000-seat palace [ed: with the help of Arlington taxpayers], and then put a monster HD screen up over a large part of the field., which most everybody watches instead of looking down at the real thing in miniature below. Jerry Jones didn’t build a stadium. He built the world’s largest sports bar.

What to Do in Dallas Tonight: Sept. 9

Hello, dear readers. How was your mud bath this morning? Mine was super, thanks.

First of all, the young and hip among you need to dial 832-638-3878. DJ Neon Tiger (not to be confused with DJ Glass Tiger) will be “spinning fresh grooves,” as the kids say, at Aura Lounge. You must call to get on the guest list, so step lively.

For the rest of you wondering what to do tonight, I offer two other excellent options:
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Another Eyewitness Account of the Twister

From a Catholic FrontBurnervian:

My son and I were right there yesterday on the way home from Cistercian. Saw the tornado that the Baumbach fellow wrote about, watched it cross the Trinity river bottom as a waterspout. Then saw several other funnel clouds pop out of the sky, drop to the ground, then go back up. It was one of the most thrilling experiences I can remember (I was a HUGE tornado/weather dork growing up). Those were the first tornadoes I had ever seen live and in the flesh, so to speak. Alas, my son and I were too concerned with hauling ass and getting out of the storm’s way to snap any photos. Now I think I’m gonna have to plan a spring break tornado hunting vacation up in Oklahoma. Since no one died from this tornado, I can say without feeling guilty. That was totally kickass.

Because You Can Never See Too Many Tornado Pics

Hailey Hamilton, our tireless marketing associate, has a father who lives in the Azure. He snapped this shot of yesterday’s twister.

tornado