INSIDE: Special Section
DISHES
The neighborhood’s best off-menu items
BAKEDBRIE at The Grape
TIRED OF TREATING YOUR SYMPTOMS?
atrial
If you have atrial brillation, or A b, you’re not alone. Approximately 2.5 million Americans have this common heart disorder that can cause palpitations, chest pain, fatigue, dizziness or confusion. The Electrophysiology Laboratory at Doctors Hospital at White Rock Lake is dedicated to treating A b. We perform minimally invasive ablation procedures to help stop the abnormal electrical signals that can cause an irregular heartbeat.
For more information about A b, visit www.DoctorsHospitalDallas.com/A b or call 800-887-2525 for a free physician referral.
Rd. www.DoctorsHospitalDallas.com
oncerts at the Arboretum
6/05 6/07
LINE UP
Le Freak Disco
Macy’s Satisfaction
Rolling Stones Tribute
Kessler Collins
6/12
4 Way Street
Crosby Stills Nash
Young Tribute Band
Petty Theft
Tom Petty Tribute Band
Sendero Business
Services
Moving Colors
Variety
Key West
Jimmy Bu et Tribute
Don’t miss the hottest ticket in town!
Garden opens at 6 pm.
Concerts begin at 7:30 pm. Advanced tickets required. Enjoy magnificently illuminated sculptures and DFW’s best bands.
Junior Friends of the Arboretum
Frontiers
Journey Tribute
Professor D Variety
www.dallasarboretum.org
Keeping vessels shipshape.
Advanced Vascular Care
Vascular disease often has few symptoms. Yet it is a serious condition that if left untreated can lead to stroke, heart attack or even death. Fortunately, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas is one of the area’s leading hospitals for vascular disease detection, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation. The Texas Health Dallas medical staff includes more than 30 cardiac and vascular specialists. Many are internationally recognized for training physicians across the world on vascular procedures. They deliver a comprehensive range of therapies, from minimally invasive treatments to specialized procedures, and can provide treatment for any fixable vein or artery. Unlike most hospitals, medical staff physicians can treat blockages in veins from head to toe. To stay ahead of vascular disease, take our online risk assessment today.
1-877-THR-WELL | TexasHealth.org/DallasHeart
THE DREADED QUES T ION
A wrong answer can bring a strong man to his knees
I’ve been married long enough to know that when my wife asks certain questions, I can’t answer her honestly.
I want to be truthful, of course, but there are times in every relationship when an incomplete answer is much better — much safer — than the truth.
You probably know what I’m talking about when I tell you that there is simply no correct answer for this question: “Does this outfit make me look fat?” There’s even a TV commercial on the subject. And while on TV it’s a make-believe situation between two actors, in truth, the question is straight out of one of those reality TV shows.
Though it seems logical that the get-outof-jail-free answer would be: “No, that outfit doesn’t make you look fat,” there’s more to this risky gambit than meets the eye.
The path of least resistance obviously is the one that generates the fewest followup questions, but if I deliver even a correct answer too quickly, I’m likely to hear: “You didn’t even look to see what I’m wearing!”
And if I deliver the correct answer with too much deliberation, I’ll hear: “Why did you take so long to decide? It DOES make me look fat, doesn’t it?” followed by a considerable amount of mirror-gazing and consternation.
Either way, the discussion continues, and as it does, the situation grows more and more perilous.
I can offer up the tried-and-true “Everything you wear makes you look beautiful,” but I’ve learned that’s a hard line to deliver sincerely under pressure, particularly if the dress or top or pants or shoes or jew-
elry or makeup in question don’t immediately conjure the word “beautiful.”
Or I can try the “turn around and let me take another look” approach, which makes me appear focused on the issue at hand while also generating precious additional seconds to consider my options.
The goal, I’ve found, is to maneuver things to the ultimate sweet spot comment from her: “You know, I’m only wearing this because I want to look good for you.”
At that point, the smart money says to grab her lovingly, hold her close and whisper sweet things into her ear. If done properly and convincingly, the situation will be disarmed, and it will be safe to return to watching sports on television.
But deliver it with even the slightest waver of authenticity, or be caught glancing at the game score while giving a consoling neck rub, and I’m likely back on the path to another series of questions, beginning with the more direct: “You haven’t been listening to anything I’ve been saying, have you?”
Which, if I actually have been listening, leads to an attempt to circle back around to how great the shoes or top or pants or jewelry or whatever looks on her.
And if the blank look in my eyes proves I actually haven’t been listening (and I am only supposing here because this scenario has never happened to me), and if I don’t answer quickly enough or with enough conviction about how lovely she and her accessories really are, all of this leads to the only thing more dreaded than the question.
That would be “The Look,” which will be accompanied by another series of questions between which there is no time provided to answer because, it would appear, I’ve already said and done enough.
Rick Wamre is publisher of Advocate Publishing.
Let him know how we are doing by writing to 6301 Gaston, Suite 820, Dallas 75214; fax to 214.823.8866; or email rwamre@advocatemag.com.
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Advocate Publishing 6301 Gaston Avenue, Suite 820, Dallas, TX 75214
Advocate, © 2011, is published monthly by East Dallas – Lakewood People Inc.
Contents of this magazine may not be reproduced. Advertisers and advertising agencies assume liability for the content of all advertisements printed, and therefore assume responsibility for any and all claims against the Advocate. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any editorial or advertising material. Opinions set forth in the Advocate are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect the publisher’s viewpoint. More than 200,000 people read Advocate publications each month. Advertising rates and guidelines are available upon request. Advocate Publications are available free of charge throughout our neighborhoods, one copy per reader. Advocate was founded in 1991 by Jeff Siegel, Tom Zielinski and Rick Wamre.
Dallas Symphony Orchestra Free Family Concert
Tuesday, May 29th 5 - 9 pm
Exall Park -Live Oak & Hall StreetKids Activities Petting Zoo Face Painting Bounce House Magician Concessions with special guest Jonny Zielinski
Presented By:
lakewood.advocatemag.com
Ten days in May
Our neighborhood’s stand against parking at Winfrey Point lakewood.advocatemag.com/ winfreypoint
When neighbors heard of the Dallas Arboretum’s plan to use grassy areas at Winfrey Point for temporary overflow parking, they banded together to keep cars off the grass. Environmentalists worried that the blackland prairie remnant, an ecosystem for critters including birds rarely seen in the city, would be lost. Homeowners worried that parking lots could affect their quality of life and property values.
On lakewood.advocatemag.com, we reported on each phase of the Winfrey Point parking crisis. Ten stories, 125 comments and 223 Facebook “likes” later, it was over. (At least for now.)
April 30
The Advocate reports that the Park Board has approved allowing the arboretum to park cars on Winfrey Point during the Chihuly exhibit, May 5-Nov. 5. The city also puts the arboretum in charge of directing traffic and parking at Winfrey Point, which often is choked with cars on weekends.
“Isn’t there commercial-zoned property available along Garland Road, that wouldn’t require taking parkland and turning it into a parking lot?” WILSON!
“I love the Arboretum, but enough is enough. Meticulously planned and cultivated gardens have their place, but so does natural grassland and city park structures.” —
MillyMay 1
Local media pick up the Winfrey Point story, which appears on WFAA and other newscasts.
“The City of Dallas has had some really bad ideas. This one takes the cake. White Rock Lake is an oasis in the city. Let’s keep it that way.”
—MDB“It’s all for the greater good, according to the arboretum. We should be thankful that they’re
—NETCONTRIBUTOR
stepping forward to (profitably) manage the growing demand for parking (largely driven by the arboretum) at Winfrey Point.”
May 2
Attorney Robert Cohen wins a temporary injunction against the city on behalf of neighbor Christopher Fears, in an attempt to prevent the city from mowing at Winfrey. The filing claims temporary parking lots will damage the ecosystem and that no public hearing was held on the matter.
“What did Joni Mitchell say? ‘They paved paradise and put up a parking lot.’ I do believe it’s time to start protesting.”
PATSYMay 3
“Good Morning America” runs a segment on the exhibit, with Sam Champion reporting from Winfrey Point.
May 4
The city reaches an agreement with neighbors, and a judge dissolves the temporary injunction. Neighborhood squeaky wheel Hal Barker shows us documents wherein the city and the arboretum propose a parking structure at Winfrey Point. “I think it’s very possible that in 20 years the arboretum, at the rate it is growing, will need this,” Barker says. Brothers Ted and Hal Barker and savewinfreypoint.com collect 7,000 signatures in a petition to prevent arboretum parking at Winfrey Point.
“The city and arboretumcommissioneda study that explored all options. Options do not equal plans. The arboretum has been a very good neigh-
bor; they add a lot to Dallas and especially my corner of it. I’m willing to assume they will be above board until I see evidence otherwise. JD
“I applaud your open-mindedness. But I have to question why this would ever be considered an option by anyone, particularly anyone with the word ‘arboretum’ or ‘parks’ on their business card. Seeing the outlines of a parking grid splashed all over a map of Winfrey Point gave me the willies.” —MILLY
“We don’t want the city and the arboretum meddling with our lake area neighborhoods. This is East Dallas, folks. We’re really good at getting organized. We vote. We know 2013 is an election year, and you know what we want. Now amscray.” —CHRISTINE CAREY
May 4 (later in the day)
The arboretum announces it has hired an expert, Robert O’Kennon, to study the grasses at Winfrey Point. He says, “Almost all of the grasses at Winfrey Point are non-native invasive species … some of which are very aggressive.” Arboretum board Chairman Brian Shivers says, “Those unfamiliar with the situation are being misled by those with an agenda.”
ColdwellB_ushape_06-12
❏ Approved as is
❏ Approved with corrections
❏ Additional proof needed Signed
Thank you for your business!
“Oh, get off the whole ‘blackland prairie’ high horse, will ya? It’s a field! A field full of weeds that has, in all likelihood, been mowed and dug and parched and scorched and overgrown and trampled on and peed on and so on countless times in our lifetimes, and still it perseveres. Somehow. … Those weeds will all grow back. In no time at all. And all the little creatures will come back. And the land of Aquarius will be restored to peace and order and harmony.” —ONTHEWHIP
and the pressro reasonable variation in color between job shall constitute an acceptable delivery.
attention to spelling, grammar, difference in equipment and conditions pressroom operations, a color proofs and the completed delivery.
“Whether native grasses predominate on the disputed parkland or not, it is currently free, open public parkland. Imagining that its most valuable use is as a location for a parking garage, as some open-records documents suggest, is wrong. Dallas Arboretum may build on its own land for its own profit. White Rock Lake Park is more valuable than that.”
JENNI MANSFIELD PEALMay 5
The Chihuly exhibit opens.
“The world’s other great parks are figuring out ways to remove cars, and here we are trying to be more accommodating. Let’s stop being 30 years behind the times.” —L OS POLITICO
(continued on next page)
Remodeling Talk...
Top 5 Websites for Remodeling Information, Inspiration & Ideas
Thinking about your next home remodeling project? These are the five websites we recommend most for information, inspiration, and ideas. Our full list is online at our “Remodeling Talk Blog.” Bookmark that page as your starting point and check out our recommendations. Then join the discussion (with your neighbors in the user comments section) and tell us about your favorites, including any we may not know about.
1. Houzz.com
Need visual inspiration? The Wall Street Journal calls this site a “digital look book for interior-decorating ideas”. Start by selecting a category like kitchens, then a style like Mediterranean. You can even use Dallas as a selection filter. Then scroll through the photos and add them to your personal “Ideabook.” Have some fun filling your Ideabook with both style and product inspiration, and then share it with us in our design studio. It’s a great way to participate in the artistry of remodeling and make your home uniquely yours. You’ll also find plenty of great articles and interactive discussions on this site.
2. Letsrenovate.com
There are plenty of great tools on this site including forms, estimators, step-by-step guides, and tips on what to consider in different phases of remodeling. We especially love the project estimator. Just click on “Steps” and “Run Project Estimator.” The site will walk you through your options for any type of project you choose
and give you a fair ballpark estimate for what that project should cost.
3. HGTVremodels.com
You’ve seen HGTV, but their website is just as good. The remodels section has tons of inspirational photos for your next project, as well as tips, guides, and references. Scroll down on the home page for some strategies on remodeling kitchens and bathrooms. What we love about this site is the intuitive interface. Everything is organized by sections of the home, and then by subsections. You’ll find navigation easy, and the polished, colorful look of the site is, well…a lot like HGTV!
4. Remodeling.hw.net
This site is for industry insiders, but we think it gives consumers an invaluable perspective on the issues and topics that are trending among industry professionals. There’s also some great information we recommend reading on tax credits and green building. While you’re there, check out the blogs for some useful perspectives from builders, and see the section on new products that can be used in your home.
5. Remodelista.com
This clever international blog site features lots of quality writing on content areas you can sort by topic, products, and rooms in the home. Entertain yourself and expand your creative horizons by learning about architecture, DIY, and sustainable design. Enjoy the crisp photography and interact with readers all over the world in the discussion threads.
lakewood
May 9
The Emerald Isle Neighborhood Association delivers the petition to city council. The Dallas Arboretum announces it has asked the city not to mow at Winfrey Point: “Over the past couple of weeks, the Arboretum has heard the opinions of its friends and neighbors and recognizes any plans to temporarily park at Winfrey Point have resulted in serious misunderstandings that need to be addressed. We are committed to being a good neighbor and steward to the citizens of East Dallas, the metroplex and all of North Texas.”
“Would it be accurate to say the Arboretum has been ‘Komened’?” —LEE
GIBSON“This is a start on damage control, assuming the damage can be controlled.” —GAY
HOPKINS“We need more transparency in government. If both the city and the arboretum had been more forthcoming on their plans, there would still have been opposition, but it would not have caused the uproar that it did.” —BW
“Hopefully the bad press from this will make it so no permanent structures are erected over the prairie. But then again when has the city ever really cared what the citizens of Dallas actually want over what the ruling class wants? … This is what the elite thinks they can get away with, plebeians be damned.This is our East Dallas and our lake. We have to fight for it.”
—MICHAEL MOSTELLERREAD MORE, share your opinion and stay updated on this issue at lakewood.advocatemag.com/ winfreypoint.
Launch
community | events | food
jumping higher
Colin Spencer won the Nike Sparq Combine in Houston this past spring, scoring first in the nation out of 12,000 high school athletes. A combine is a set of athletic tests that football recruiters use to evaluate prospects. Combine challenges include a 40-yard dash, vertical jump and bench press. Spencer, who will be a senior at Woodrow Wilson High School in the fall, trained three times a week at Performance Course in Allen to prepare for the Nike combine in March. Spencer plays cornerback for the Woodrow Wildcats, and he’s been playing football since sixthgrade. He also runs track, and he says his goal is to win an athletic scholarship to a Division 1 school. Here are Spencer’s combine scores: 40-yard dash, 4.42 minutes; shuttle, 3.87 minutes; power ball toss, 39.5 feet; vertical jump, 41.7 inches. —Rachel Stone
Photo by Danny Fulgenciolocal Olympians swim across America
Celebrating 40 years of skilled, experienced and compassionate care.
Here at Walnut Hill our tradition of family continues as we announce the hiring of Dr. Jennifer Muller .
Jennifer’s mom Evelyn Scott, RN is our nurse manager and has been employed at Walnut Hill for 23 years.
Dr. Muller will open her schedule for appointments in June 2012.
Walnut Hill Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates
8305 Walnut Hill Ln. Ste. 100 Dallas, TX 75231 214-363-7801 www.walnuthillobgyn.com
Please visit our secure website to schedule an appointment, pay a bill or email your nurse.
Neighbor Daniel Watters was one of the youngest swimmers to compete in the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, when he was a junior in high school. Now he is part of a team swimming to raise money for cancer research. Watters and five other former Olympians are leading the local Swim Across America, an open-water swim event June 9 at Lake Ray Hubbard. Watters’ Seoul teammate, Janel Jorgensen, is executive director of Swim Across America, which organizes swims in several U.S. cities. She invited him to an event in San Francisco in 2008. “I really fell in love with the cause,” Watters says. Swim Across America allows organizers to choose a local beneficiary, in this case, the Baylor Charles A. Sammons Cancer Center. “We are funding phase-one clinical trials for people who have effectively run out of options for their cancer treatment,” he says. “It’s important for the body of work for cancer research, but also for people here who are likely to be treated at Baylor.” The Olympians also teach a swimming and stroke clinic to kids and anyone who wants to improve, on June 8. The oldest swimmer last year was 81, Watters says, and it’s open to swimmers 11 and older. Tribute teams honor friends or family members fighting cancer, and many employees from Baylor participate, including cancer center director Dr. Alan Miller. Watters, who lives on Swiss Avenue, is a management consultant. He and his family moved to Dallas in 1999, and they’ve lived in our neighborhood since then. Watters is not the only Swim Across America Olympian living in our neighborhood. Ryan Berube, a gold medalist in the 800-meter relay in Atlanta ’96, and Steve Barnicoat, a competitor in the 200-meter backstroke in Moscow ’80, also live here.
—Rachel Stone TO LEARN MORE visit swimacrossamerica.orgNew Construction Talk...
Top 5 Websites for New Construction Information, Inspiration & Ideas
We want to build your dream home, but we hope your dream will be a well-informed one. These are the five websites we recommend most for information, inspiration, and ideas. Bookmark our complete list of recommendations at our “New Construction Talk Blog.” Then join the discussion (with your neighbors in the user comments section) and tell us about your favorites, including any we may not know about.
1. NAHB.org
The National Association of Homebuilders site is essential for educating yourself about all aspects of building a new home, from the economic and timing considerations, to hiring a builder. We recommend starting with the information under “Housing Topics,” where you’ll see content about design, green building, financing, and more. Then check out “E-Learning” under Education and Events for some useful webinars and online learning opportunities.
2. Finehomebuilding.com
This site is chock full of content that will educate you on the finer points of quality homebuilding and construction techniques. Use this as a “foundation” for your understanding of what goes into a home, from the foundation to the roof, and what distinguishes quality construction from cost-cutting. Start with the videos. There’s a huge searchable forum that we recommend bookmarking as well.
3.
Houzz.com/new-homeconstruction-ideas
Architectural and design ideas for your new construction are boundless – but where do you begin? It’s great if you have a source for determining what styles you like best and even better if you can share that reference with your builder. So apply the filters this site offers, scroll through the gorgeous photos, and put together your new construction “Ideabook.” It’s the perfect first step toward your truly satisfying dream home.
4. Buildinggreen.com
The longer you stay in your new home, the more important it will be for you to build green. Not only will you make your home more energy efficient, but you’ll also be adding to your home’s value at resale. Our hunch is that in 2030, green will be the norm. So check out the Research Topics and Continuing Education Courses under “Learn” on this site for a good, green start.
5. Buildingscience.com
Click on “Information” for a great resource on building physics, systems design concepts, and an awareness of sustainability to promote the design and construction of buildings that are more durable, healthier, more sustainable and more economical than most buildings built today. As with building green, the longer you plan to stay, the more important it is to invest in your knowledge of sustainable building.
cheese, please
Rich Rogers thinks he has the greatest job in the world: cheesemonger. The neighborhood resident and his wife, Karen, opened Scardello at 3511 Oak Lawn about three and a half years ago. “I’ve always loved cooking and food,” Rogers says. “I love to make multi-course meals for friends and family.” About seven years ago, he “fell in love with cheese.” Dallas dairy cases, even at high-end grocers, couldn’t satisfy his constant search for new and interesting cheeses. “I would mail-order and try to find the weirdest piece of cheese I could get my hands on,” he says. Soon, Rogers decided to leave a 15-year career in film and video production to open Scardello. The shop carries dozens of cheeses, and Rogers still is always in search of something new and different. There are cheeses from all over the globe, but Scardello, named after Rogers’s grandfather Pete Scardello, focuses on American and Texas makers. “All the cool things happening in cheese are happening in the U.S.,” Rogers says. European cheesemakers are bound by tradition, he says, and many American cheese-makers are coming into their own right now. Rogers considers cheese more than just a snack or an ingredient; he likes to serve a cheese plate as its own course at the end of meals. At Scardello, customers can order cheese plates and sandwiches, along with beer and wine. Monthly cheese classes allow students to taste 17 cheeses and pair them with beer or wine. “The best way to learn about cheese is to taste it,” he says.
We do, however, have a zillion plants that thrive & look beautiful in North Texas landscapes; even in heat and drought without using a ton of water. We even have hardy edibles. Come spend some time with us at the garden center, or on Facebook. We offer tips, answer questions, and teach you how to garden successfully in summer and water the right way! Sorry, we don’t currently stock unicorns.
transplants are in stock! Prizes from NHG, Taco Joint, Artizone.com Contest details & prizes at www.nhg.com.
6/9th 1-2pm Create Contemporary Containers with Succulents
June POP UP Classes
6/2nd 1pm Ornamental Grasses
6/2nd 2pm Proper Watering
6/9th 11am Native & Adapted Plants
6/9th 2pm Summer Succulents
6/16th 11am Proper Watering
—Rachel Stone“I need plants that bloom in full sun and full shade year-round with NO water...”
Stephanie Sanoja’s great-aunt Gladys made the best bloody marys. Friends and kin who dropped by Gladys’s home in the New Orleans Garden District would quickly find a bloody mary in their hands. “She would always have a pitcher of this ready,” Sanoja says. The former marketing director always protected her great-aunt’s recipe because she thought she might bottle it one day. Near the end of 2008, Sanoja was burnt out from her job in the advertising business and wanted to spend more time at home with her young son, so she started making plans to bottle Aunt Gladys’s mix. “The whole strategy fell into my head, and I started talking more and more about it,” she says. In February 2009, she quit her job, thinking she would launch her bloody mary mix in six months. It actually took two-and-a-half years. But her Garden District bloody mary mix is now available in liquor stores and boutiques, including Talulah Belle and Brumley Gardens. The product took longer to launch because Sanoja was stubborn about certain aspects of it. She didn’t want a standard bottle, for example. Garden District is sold in carafes because that’s how Aunt Gladys served hers. Plus, the uniqueness of the bottle helps customers remember it, Sanoja says. She was also a stickler about the recipe, which manufacturers told her again and again they couldn’t produce. “I’ve been very persistent on every little detail of this thing,” she says. Sanoja started with her first run in October 2011 with a holiday campaign. Every bottle of Garden District had a gift tag that read, “Have a bloody mary Christmas!” The mix is formulated to taste good with vodka, but it also goes well with beer, gin and tequila, she says. So far, the bottles, which retail for $11.50-$20, are selling well, especially in gift stores. Sanoja financed her venture in part with a home equity loan, and she’s confident Garden District will be profitable some day. “I’m having fun with it,” she says. “The minute I launched this the way everyone told me was impossible, that to me was a success. Everything else is gravy.”
—Rachel StoneTHE STORE IN LAKE HIGHLANDS
Lily and Laura - Beautiful Nepal handcrafted beaded bracelets created with the finest glass and sterling silver beads.. $15 ea/ $12 ea for 3 more. Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30. 214.553.8850 10233 E. NW Hwy., #410 TheStoreinLH.com
YOGA MART
Carry your mat in style. A wide variety of types and colors are available. Mention this ad and receive 15% off any mat carrier in June. 6039 Oram (at Skillman) 214.534.4469 yogamartusa.com
THE T SHOP
Dad’s day the t shop way! 1911 Abrams Parkway 214.821.8314 Visit us on Facebook.
CALLIDORA
Perfect Coin Purses. We also carry other unique Gifts, Sterling Silver & do Custom Work, Restringing & Repairs. 2913 Greenville Ave. (next to Blue Goose) callidoragifts.com 214.515.9188
2 SHEA BOUTIQUE
You’ll find everything beautiful under one roof; fabulous apparel, awesome accessories, amazing cosmetics & skincare all at 2 Shea, Lakewood’s hottest NEW boutique. Mention Advocate, receive 20% off one item. 6342 La Vista Drive Suite B (Lakewood Shopping Center) 214.272.3652
HOSPITALITY SWEET
Our irresistible cup cake push-ups are the perfect treat for your summertime event! Catering custom homemade sweets and savories. Kristen Scott and Meghan Adams 214.534.2241 thehospitalitysweet.com
LA MARIPOSA IMPORTS
Discover the beauty of cool comfortable cotton. New shipments of clothing, jewelry, fiesta and folk art arriving weekly! 2813 N. Henderson Ave. 214.826.0069 lamariposaimports.com
PINOT’S PALETTE
Join us for an unforgettable evening of fun, friends, and art where you bring the cocktails and we provide the canvases. Check out our calendar to book your class. PinotsPalette.com/Lakewood 214.827.4668
ONCE UPON A CHILD
In addition to BUYING and SELLING new and gently used kid’s stuff (up through 18), we have gift cards for every family member! Check our website for specials! 6300 Skillman St. #150 Dallas, TX 75231 214.503.6010 onceuponachildlakehighlands.com
THE goods
DEBUTANTES AND COWBOYS
9219 Garland Rd. (at the Reserve at White Rock) dcboutiquetx.com
BRUMLEY GARDENS
Patio time is extra special with our exceptional Bloody Mary and Wine -a -Rita mix. Let the party begin! Makes great hostess gifts!
10540 Church Rd. Dallas 75238
brumleygardens.com
ice cream dreams
ADVOCATE ORNAMENT
The Advocate Foundation’s limited-edition, numbered, and hand-painted ornament; perfect gift for the new home owner or Dallas transplant. Sales benefit neighborhood organizations. 214.292.0486 foundation.advocatemag.com
Carnival Barker is a neighborhood ice-cream upstart that offers delightful flavors such as the Fat Elvis, with peanut butter, bananas, candied bacon and a honey swirl. It’s available at Bryan Street Tavern, among a few other restaurants and grocers around town. Carnival Barker all started with a TV show about ice cream college. Ice cream college is a real thing. It’s a seven-day short course at Penn State University, and Aaron Barker and his girlfriend, Sarah Miller, watched a show about it while relaxing in their hotel room in Austin last summer. “I started eating ice cream more, and making it at home,” he says. “I started making two or three batches a week.” Everyone loved his ice cream, and friends often put in orders. Barker had just been laid off from his job as a copywriter for J.C. Penney, and soon after, his dad died. He had a small severance and a small inheritance, so he decided to go to ice cream college in January. “It’s everything from the cow to the cone,” he says. “I was highly overwhelmed.” But for one thing, ice cream college taught him what he didn’t want to do with his ice cream. Big manufacturers send their employees to course, and among other things, they learn how far ice cream can be stretched with fillers and still be considered ice cream. “We don’t use preservatives. We shop at the farmers market, and we buy local as much as possible,” he says. Other flavors include Nutella and vodka, cookies and cream (it’s ice cream that tastes like cookies; not vanilla with cookies in it), raspberry chocolate and s’mores. Good stuff, but nothing too avant garde. “I’m not reinventing the wheel,” he says. “What I’m trying to do is make a handmade, great quality ice cream.” He rents a commercial kitchen from a caterer, and he and Miller make ice cream at night. He’s in the market for a batch freezer that he can afford, for now, he uses a 4-quart electric ice cream maker and rock salt. Carnival Barker isn’t making a profit yet, but their ice cream is selling. Bolsa Mercado in Oak Cliff sold out of their first order quickly. And the manager of City Tavern called to place a second order because employees ate all the ice cream before they could even put it on the menu. The goal is to open an ice cream shop eventually. “I love seeing people happy, and people smile when they eat ice cream,” Barker says. “I want to live being happy, and this is a step toward that.
—Rachel StoneOut & About
June 15–July 21
Shakespeare in the Park
Shakespeare Dallas presents the 2012 Shakespeare in the Park with “Twelfth Night” (June 15–July 21) and “Coriolanus” (June 23–July 20). Performances, which are held in an openair amphitheatre, begin at 8:15 p.m. Samuell-Grand Amphitheatre, 1500 Tenison, $7–$10 (12 and under free)
THROUGHOUT JUNE Concerts at the arboretum
The Dallas Arboretum’s beloved series is back again for 2012. This month’s lineup includes Le Freak, Satisfaction, 4 Way Street, Petty Theft, Moving Colors, Key West, Frontiers and Professor D.
Dallas Arboretum, 8525 Garland, 214.515.6500, dallasarboretum.org, $9–$22
JUNE 1–2
Lone Star uke fest
The Lone Star Ukelele Festival features an open mic and singer/songwriter contest, workshops and a concert with guest artists Jim D’Ville, Pops Bayless, Debbie Porter, The Wahooligans and Uke Fizz. Proceeds go to Ukes in The Classroom.
Bath House Cultural Center, 521 E. Lawther, lonestarukefest.com, $149
JUNE 9
Jackopierce
This Dallas-based acoustic duo has shared the stage with Dave Matthews Band, Counting Crows, Matchbox Twenty, Train and more. Doors open at 7 p.m.
Granada Theater, 3524 Greenville, 214.824.9933, granadatheater. com, $32–$51
JUNE 9, 23
White Rock Local Market
From 8 a.m.–1 p.m., join local farmers, artisans and more for a neighborhood farmers market. June 23 will feature farmers, growers and artisan foods, while June 9 includes arts and crafts as well. Green Spot Market & Fuels, 702 N. Buckner, whiterocklocalmarket. com, free
Through Nov. 5
Chihuly at the Dallas Arboretum
The highly anticipated Chihuly exhibit is now open with dramatic, colorful glass sculptures in more than 15 locations throughout the gardens. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings mark “Chihuly Nights,” a rare opportunity to stroll the gardens at night and enjoy these illuminated works of art. Artist Dale Chihuly’s spectacular sculptures have been showcased in 97 exhibitions in seven countries in the last decade.
Dallas Arboretum, 8525 Garland, 214.515.6500, dallasarboretum.org, $9 (child)–$15 (adult); Chihuly Nights $9–$20
JUNE 11
Painting for kids
Drop off the kiddos, ages 7-14, at Pinot’s Palette for a painting class from 1-5 p.m.
6465 E. Mockingbird, 214.827.4668, pinotspalette.com/lakewood, $60
JUNE 16
White Rock Hills Branch Library celebration
From 9:30 a.m.– 4 p.m., the Ferguson Road Initiative invites the neighborhood to a grand opening celebration. The event will include a parade, Aztec dancers, the Dallas Police Choir and African drummers. Children are encouraged to dress as their favorite storybook characters. A parade begins at White Rock Hills Church of Christ, 9220 Ferguson.
9150 Ferguson, 214.324.5116, fergusonroad.org, free
JUNE 16
Okra-palooza
This Promise of Peace community garden fundraiser, from 1-5 p.m., features performances from Douglass Fairweather and Fingerless Ghost. Taste home-brewed beer from Seven Summits and concoctions from the okra recipe contest. Promise of Peace, 7446 E. Grand, 214.240.9220, ejdry54@yahoo.com, promiseofpeace.us, $10-$20
JUNE 17
Summer Solstice Duathlon & 5k
The duathlon includes a 2-mile run, a 9.5-mile bike ride and another 2-mile run. The 5k will start with the duathlon and will continue along East Lawther. The event begins at 7:30 a.m. Bath House Cultural Center, 521 E. Lawther, whiterockracing.com, $22 5k, $50 duathlon
June 22
Roger Creager
Roger Creager’s Texas country has been compared to that of Jerry Jeff Walker, Kevin Fowler, Pat Green and Robert Earl Keen. Doors open at 7 p.m.. Granada Theater, 3524 Greenville, 214.824.9933, granadatheater.com, $19–$29
JUNE 22–JULY 15
‘Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters’
Dallas Children’s Theater presents “Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters,” the tale of a great African king’s search for a wife. Beautiful maidens, rhythmic drumming and African song make this show a lot of fun.
Rosewood Center for Family Arts, 5938 Skillman, 214.740.0051, dct.org, $20–$26
JUNE 23
‘The Magic School Bus’ book reading
From 10:30–11:30 a.m., librarians from the Dallas Public Library will teach children about weather during story time, using excerpts from “The Magic School Bus.”
Children’s Museum at Museum of Nature & Science, 1318 S. 2nd, 214.428.5555, natureandscience.org, free with general admission
Delicious Cocktails
DODIE’S CAJUN RESTAURANT
2129 Greenville
214.821.8890
dodiestexas.com
AMBIANCE: FESTIVE
PRICE RANGE: $7-$10
TIP:
—Emily TomanOn weekends, Dodie’s rooftop patio is packed, sometimes with standing room only. The New Orleans-style restaurant has some creative cocktails to go with that Greenville Avenue nightlife. The hurricane is a staple, loaded with five liquors. “It’s a pretty strong and intense drink,” says bar manager Cami Hetmer. Mix in a margarita for the Dodie’s Sluricane. The menu also includes a long list of skinny options, such as the cucumber martini, for those looking for healthier choices, using natural fruit juices instead of adding sugar. “Most guys come here for crawfish and beer,” Hetmer says. “Our cocktail menu is geared more toward women.” Stop by on a Thursday night for a more low-key atmosphere on the roof.
HAPPY HOUR IS 11 A.M.-7 P.M.
1 Neighborhood Services Tavern
Here, you’ll find cleverly named cocktails that actually taste good, too. Try the meditating mule with Hangar One vodka, Buddha’s Hand Citron, Thatcher’s cucumber liqueur, Thai basil and Cock ‘n’ Bull ginger beer. 2405N. Henderson 214.827.2405
neighborhoodservicesdallas.com
2 The People’s Last Stand
The cocktail menu here is so large, they have to break it up into different sections from classic to experimental. 5319 E.Mockingbird, Suite 210 214.370.8755 thepeopleslaststand.com
3 Capitol Pub
The seasonal drink menu features an array of summer cocktails such as the blueberry yum-yum. Fresh limes and blueberries are muddled with agave nectar and topped with Stoli blueberry vodka, Sprite, club soda and a little St. Germain. 2404N. Henderson 214.887.9330
capitolpubdallas.com
the pink stuff
Cline Mouvèdre rosé ($12) California
Welcome to the 10th annual Advocate rosé column, where — despite the changes in the wine business over the past decade and even though the wine wise guys insist that rising prices are just around the corner — you can still buy a pretty good rosé for $10.
In this, rosé is close to the perfect cheap wine. It’s fresh and easy to drink, pairs with almost any kind of food, and its style means that it’s easier to make well than cheap red wines. What else do you need to know about rosé? -
Rosés are pink wines made with red grapes, and they aren’t sweet. Why are they pink? Because the red grape skins are left in the fermenting grape juice just long enough to color the wine (which is how all wine gets its color, actually).Rosés should be served chilled, and if you put an ice cube in, no one will tell the wine police.
Look for 2011, and be careful with anything dated before 2010. Rosés are not made to age, and go bad quickly.
What should you drink? The Yalumba ($10) is an Australian rosé with flavors of mango and lemon, believe it or not, and just 11.5 percent alcohol. It’s as close to a perfect New World rosé as you’re going to find. The Cline Mouvèdre ($12) is one of the best California rosés I’ve tasted in years, bone dry and not much fruit (maybe some cranberry) and a longish mineral finish — more French in style than Californian. The Falesco ($10) is one of my all-time favorites, made by one of Italy’s great producers, with strawberry fruit and a soft elegance. —Jeff
SiegelJEFF SIEGEL’S WEEKLY WINE REVIEWS appear every Wednesday on lakewood.advocatemag.com
Ask the wine guy
Why don’t Americans drink more rosé?
o reasons: The y con f use it with t e zinfandel , and think it’s sweet. th e y d on’t t h in k it’s rea l wine, m ethin g inferior to a red wine. It iff erent, o f course, but it’s su pe d to be — bri g ht fruit and no ni n s. —Jeff Siegel ASK
with your wine mushroom and ham soufflé
Soufflés befuddle most of us, even though they’re just a fancy version of a baked omelet. This is made without fancy equipment. But if the directions still seem intimidating, just sauté the vegetables, mix with the eggs, and bake in a 375° oven for 20-30 minutes until the eggs set. Any rosé is a wonderful match with this.
GROCERY LIST
3 egg yolks, 5 egg whites
4 oz chopped ham
1 c sliced mushrooms
1/2 c fresh bread crumbs
1/2 c grated parmesan cheese
3 Tbsp all-purpose flour
2 Tbsp canola oil
1 1/2 c chicken or vegetable stock salt and pepper to taste
DIRECTIONS
1. Sauté the mushrooms in olive oil. When soft, remove from pan and set aside.
2. Use butter to grease the sides of a 6-cup gratin dish that is about 1 1/2 inches deep. Mix the bread crumbs and 3 tablespoons of the parmesan, and use half of the mixture to coat the sides and bottom of the gratin dish. Shake out the excess.
3. Heat the canola oil in the sauté pan and then add the flour. Mix with a whisk over medium to high heat for a minute or so, and then add the stock and salt and pepper. Keep whisking until the mixture boils and thickens. Remove from heat and add the egg yolks, whisking well. Mix in the mushrooms and ham.
4. In a mixing bowl, beat the egg whites until they are firm but still soft. Fold the egg whites into the sauce mixture, along with the remaining 5 tablespoons of parmesan cheese. Pour this mixture into the prepared gratin dish, and sprinkle the top with the remaining bread crumb mixture,
5. Bake in a 375° oven for 30-35 minutes, until the soufflé is puffy and brown. It should be set inside, but still a little moist. Spoon onto plates, and serve immediately. Serves four, takes about 45 minutes
Dodie’s Reef
Check out our new menu. Enjoy brunch every Saturday and Sunday on our rooftop overlooking Greenville Ave. Lunch Specials Daily. Crawfish Season is here!
Hacienda On Henderson
Wanna do the Happy Dance?
Half Price Food on Mondays! 5-10pm
Open Daily 11am-2am. Late Night Menu. Catering Available. Lunch Menu 11am-3pm.
LOCALS ONLY
These dishes from neighborhood restaurants aren’t on the menu. You just have to know.
STORY BY RACHEL STONE PHOTOS BY DANNY FULGENCIO ANDCANTÜRKYILMAZOnly so much ink will fit in print. Ask any graphic designer. That’s one reason almost every restaurant serves a dish or two that is not on the menu. Some are famous. Others are the result of cravings, hangovers and happy accidents. Even though one or two might annoy the cook or waiter, these off-the-menu dishes keep customers smiling.
SHOP LOCAL FOR DAD’S DAY!
“Live Local” is all about keeping our dollars in our communities. We live here. We work here. We spend our dollars here. That, in turn, results in a “thriving metropolis” where we reap the benefits of our “Live Local” philosophy by keeping our shopping centers fully leased, increasing our home values and drawing people into our community to eat, shop and live!
I was born & raised in Lakewood and am proud to be vocal about “living local!”
DARLENE ELLISONLive Local East Dallas is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the idea that supporting local businesses strengthens the neighborhood and its people. Follow
Terilli’s
2815 Greenville
214.827.3993
terillis.com
Terilli’s is 25 years old, and we’re so glad they made it. The large Italian salad with mixed greens, hearts of palm, green and black olives, tomatoes, croutons, mozzarella and provolone is an off-the-menu favorite. Recently retired from the menu but still available is the lobster asparagus salad with creamy garlic dressing.
The Porch
2912 N. Henderson
214.828.2916
theporchrestaurant.com
The porch has many off-the-menu dishes, including ahi tuna ceviche with diced mango, red onion and chiles, served on an avocado cilantro puree with tortilla chips.
La Calle Doce
1925 Skillman
214.824.9900
lacalledoce-dallas.com
Whole grilled catfish is on the menu, but mojarra entera a la parilla, whole grilled tilapia, is not. Another off-themenu gem is ostiones preparados, oysters on the half shell with pico de gallo and avocado atop each.
Bangkok City
4301 Bryan
214.824.6200
bangkokcityrestaurant.com
We once spied Graham Dodds, the Central 214 chef who studied cooking in Thailand, eating there with his family. So you know it’s good. One dish not on the menu: fresh basil with salmon, grilled or fried, on rice.
he Walton family has hosted a treasure trove of distinctive home decor and garden art since 1986. Discover truly innovative embellishments and conversation pieces that will add one-of-a-kind beauty and interest to your home, inside and out. Located across from the Dallas Arboretum, Walton’s is your local Garden of Eden for truly unique flora, gifts and accessories.
Walton’s Garden Center Hours
Monday - Saturday 8:30 am - 6:00 pm
Sunday 10:30 am - 5:00 pm
8652 Garland Road 214-321-2387 waltonsgarden.com
The Blue Goose
2905 Greenville
214.823.8339
bluegoosecantina.com
Terry the bartender at Blue Goose is nicknamed “chubby cheeks” in Spanish. El cachetón is his namesake drink, a sangria swirl with a floater of Grand Marnier.
Jimmy’s Food Store
4901 Bryan
214.823.6180
jimmysfoodstore.com
Jimmy’s Italian beef makes for a terrific sandwich. Equally alluring? Jimmy’s Italian sausage sandwich. Locals know; you don’t have to choose. Ask for the combo: an Italian beef sandwich with Jimmy’s sausage, mild or hot, and melted provolone and mozzarella, topped with peppers and au jus.
Torchy’s Tacos
torchystacos.com
Torchy’s is coming soon to Casa Linda Plaza and SMU Blvd. The “ace of spades” is taco-of-the-month once a year, but it’s available all the time. And it’s a whopper: a flour tortilla stuffed with jalapeño sausage, smoked brisket, a fried egg, cheese, green chili peppers, cilantro, queso fresco, sour cream and Torchy’s signature Diablo hot sauce.
Mi Cocina
6332 La Vista
214.217.3000
mcrowd.com
The Mi Cocina Lakewood location is under construction and is expected to open this summer. Order like a regular: queso con chorizo features house-made Mexican sausage and aged Monterrey Jack cheese. Queso con hongos has mushrooms, poblano peppers and onions. Both dishes are served with warm flour tortillas.
Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas, nationally recognized for quality in patient care.
Thanks to the quality care we provide to our patients, Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas has been named one of the top 100 hospitals in the United States by Thomson Reuters, a leading source of intelligent information for businesses. The Thomson Reuters 100 Top Hospitals ® study evaluates the performance of almost 3,000 hospitals in 10 areas, including patient satisfaction, patient safety and dedication to following quality standards of care. We are proud of this award, and very grateful for the opportunity to provide quality health care to our community.
For a physician referral or for more information, call 1.800.4BAYLOR or visit us online at BaylorHealth.com/Dallas
The Grape
2808 Greenville Avenue 214.828.1981
thegraperestaurant.com
Our neighborhood would hardly be the same without The Grape and its gregarious chef/owner, Brian Luscher and wife Courtney. Only those in the know order baked brie with honey and nuts.
Mextopia
2104 Greenville
214.824.9400
mextopia.com
Yes, Richard Avila’s Mextopia is known for its brisket tacos, but there’s also torta de brisket, a sandwich served with fried potatoes. Also on the secret menu: camarones mango, shrimp coated with cojita cheese, flash fried and served with a mango dipping sauce.
Angelo’s
6341 La Vista
214.823.5566
angelosspaghettihouse.com
This romantic spot in the Lakewood shopping center has been around for more than 20 years, and they are keeping things fresh with updates to the building and menu. Angelo’s has online delivery, a new menu and a full bar. A new patio is coming soon. Items no longer on the menu but still available include pasta primavera and seafood siciliano, which is linguine with scallops, shrimp and mushrooms in a garlic butter sauce.
Matt’s Rancho Martinez
1904 Skillman
214.823.5517
mattstexmex.com
Matt’s is returning to Lakewood soon with its new location on Skillman. Their famous off-the-menu dish is Mexican pizza. The pizza crust is a taco shell, topped with beans, cheese, rice and other toppings.
OPTOMETRIST
DR. CLINT MEYER
www.dallaseyeworks.com
LASIK. The freedom from glasses and contact lenses. No allergy eyes and contacts. No restrictions on what type of sun glasses that you want. Sharp, clear vision when you wake up in the morning.
At Dallas Eyeworks Dr. Meyer works with the top LASIK offices in the metroplex.
Call today for your FREE screening and experience clear, natural vision. You deserve it.
Dallas Eyeworks
9225 Garland Rd., Ste. 2120, Dallas, TX 75218
214.660.9830
COMPREHENSIVE DENTISTRY
ASHLY R. COTHERN, DDS, PA www.drcothern.com
Dr. Cothern is one of a small distinguished percentage of dentists who have invested in postgraduate training at one of the world’s premiere continuing education institutes, The Pankey Institute for Advanced Dental Education. We care about you as a unique individual and examine you in a way that together we can understand every aspect of your oral health. In our office we love what we do. NOW THAT IS SOMETHING TO SMILE ABOUT!
9669 N.Central Expwy., Ste. 220 Dallas, TX 75231 214.696.9966
ORTHODONTICS
PATRICIA A. SIMON, DDS
www.lakewoodortho.net
You have probably noticed that kids are getting braces earlier than they used to. Some problems are best addressed at a younger age, when the face is still growing. By treating early, often the removal of permanent teeth to make space can be avoided. To promote healthy smiles, our office offers complimentary exams, and if your child is not ready for treatment, we’ll see him regularly to monitor his development.
Lakewood Orthodontics
1809 Skillman St. Dallas, TX 75206 214.826.9000
COSMETIC AND FAMILY DENTISTRY
DENA T. ROBINSON, DDS, FAGD
www.drdenarobinson.com
Four Steps to a Terrific Dental Experience
1. Call and ask us about sedation dentistry options
2. Come to your appointment in our comfortable office setting
3. Take a nap
4. Awake to a beautiful, healthy smile
Fellow of the Academy of General Dentistry
8940 Garland Rd., Ste. 200, Dallas, TX 75218 214.321.6441
Alligator Café
9540 Garland
214.821.6900
eatgator.com
The Alligator Café, which recently relocated to Casa Linda Plaza, shot a segment of “Heat Seekers” for Food Network.
The kitchen created blackened alligator on dirty rice with a red Creole sauce especially for the show and ran it as a special that day. The segment has never run, but blackened alligator is still on the “secret” menu, and the spice can be ordered to taste.
Café Izmir
3711 Greenville
214.826.7788
cafeizmir.com
Veggie pirashki is lavash with grilled veggies, pan-sautéed to a crisp and served with sesame sauce. Izmir recently launched a new menu, which includes fish and several new entrées.
Scalini’s
2021 Abrams
214.821.8088
scalinisdallas.com
Scalini’s sometimes runs penne rustica as a special in the colder months, but it’s available anytime: penne baked with meat sauce and ricotta, mushrooms, red onion, spinach and basil.
FOODFIGHT!
DONUT BACON
Ever since the legendary Voodoo Donuts of Portland, Ore., mushed a crisp slice of BACON into the thick maple frosting of a warm DONUT, BACON DONUTS have been part of food culture. And why didn’t we think of this sooner? It is a tad shameful the McGriddle was invented so many years before the BACON DONUT became a thing. In a halfserious effort to determine whose deliciousness reigns supreme, we pitted the DONUT against BACON, in a virtual battle of dough and pork.
Hypnotic Donuts Mextopia
Donut: Hypnotic Donuts, which started out as a pop-up shop in North Dallas, finally put down roots in our neighborhood, and it is changing the way we think about donuts. Hypnotic doesn’t stop at just bacon. One concoction features bacon, bananas, honey and peanut butter. Plus, now and then, you can get a free beer with donut purchase.
9007 Garland, 214.668.6999, hypnoticdonuts.com
Bacon: Mextopia’s beer and bacon happy hour has it all. Beer. Bacon. There are no donuts, but still: free bacon with beer purchase. Order a $3 draft beer on Thursdays and Saturdays, and get a rasher of thick bacon cooked with brown sugar. It’s sweet and spicy.
2104 Greenville, 214.824.9400, mextopia.com
Shipley Barbec’s
Donut: Shipley’s is an old-school donut shop. It’s not fancy. It’s not expensive. But warm donuts and cheap coffee is enough to make a person happy for at least half the morning.
10332 Ferguson, 214.319.8003
Bacon: Barbec’s, too, is old school. This diner takes cash only, but you don’t need much. A big breakfast plate with lots of bacon costs about $5.
8949 Garland, 214.321.5597
Southern Maid Another Broken Egg Café
Donut: Conveniently located on the busy corner of Garland and Buckner, this donut shop is very popular. Get there early and pay with cash unless you’re putting in a big order.
1125 N. Buckner, 214.327.1552
Bacon: This place offers French toast, eggs Benedict, pancakes, omelets and every delicious breakfast thing. The bacado omelet has avocado and, yes, bacon. 1152 Buckner, 214.954.7182 and 5500 Greenville, 214.782.9927 anotherbrokenegg.com
Krispy Kreme Piggy Pies
Donut: Krispy Kreme is the favorite donut shop of many, many fine Americans. There is nothing like a warm Krispy Kreme or 12. 5811 Greenville, 214.750.5118
Bacon: Piggy Pies is a locally owned pizza place known for its ooey gooey pies. Try one with goat cheese and bacon. Alfredo bacon pizza comes with bacon, onions, tomatoes and homemade Alfredo sauce.
5315 Greenville, 214.696.9200, piggypiespizza.com
Keep on rolling
Bowling returns to our neighborhood 70 years after its golden era
Story by Rachel StoneThe last of our neighborhood bowling alleys, Jupiter Lanes, closed two years ago, even though its owner had just spent $2 million renovating it. The popularity of bowling has dwindled in the past several decades, but a new wave of upscale bowling centers is setting trends.
The first new bowling alley Dallas has seen in decades is set to open in the Shops at Park Lane this fall. Two Lakewood-based entrepreneurs, Kyle Noonan and Josh Sepkowitz, are planning the center, Bowl & Barrel, which will o er specialty beers and gourmet pub grub, along with plush banquettes at the lanes’ ends. The wildly trendy Brooklyn Bowl in New York City inspired their business idea.
Noonan and Sepkowitz, who were SMU fraternity brothers, knew they eventually wanted to go into business together. Noonan
had a 12-year career with Pappas Brothers restaurants, and Sepkowitz has a background in investment banking and real estate.
“We started looking at the major trend-setting cities — New York, Chicago, L.A. — and we saw this undercurrent that people wanted to go bowling,” Noonan says. “And it’s people you wouldn’t necessarily associate with your typical bowler.”
After a visit to Brooklyn Bowl about two years ago, they hired a consultant to determine whether such a business would work in Dallas. The answer, overwhelmingly, was “yes.” So they quit their jobs about a year ago and have been working on their upstart fulltime since then.
It took a year for Noonan and Sepkowitz to find the right location
ERIC CANTU
for their lanes.
“That’s why there’s not bowling in the city, because it’s hard to find the right building,” Noonan says.
Their space at Park Lane comprises 15,000 square feet. It will have 15 lanes, a 3,000-square-foot restaurant and bar, and plenty of parking.
A couple of other bowling lanes have been proposed in the area recently. One was announced for the former Copper Tank Brewery in Deep Ellum in 2010. And another was announced for Lower Greenville, in the former Lucky’s Roadhouse space. That idea, from Barcadia owner Brooke Humphries, was shot down by the City Plan Commission. The building’s owners sued the city over the building’s zoning, and that case is still in litigation.
So it seems Bowl & Barrel will be the first bowling alley of its kind in the city. Noonan and Sepkowitz have an advantage, they think, because they’re not renovating. Bowl & Bar-
rel will go into a big empty retail box. It takes AMF about six months to install lanes, and they expect restaurant construction to take about that long, too.
“We want to get away from the old, tired bowling alley — the dingy, stale-smoke bowling alley — and make it a very comfortable, sophisticated, upscale place,” Noonan says.
It is a place, they say, that their wives would want to go for a ladies night out. It’s a place to socialize and meet new people.
“If the three of us went bowling together,” Noonan says, “we could walk out with six new friends.”
Where we used to bowl
In the early 1940s, bowling was so popular that the daily newspaper carried league scores as well as a weekly bowling column, “On and Off Lanes,” which reported local bowling news. Rolling a perfect 300 game in league
offer several educational programs for family members as well as complimentary sitter service for your loved one while you are here.
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“We want to get away from the old, tired bowling alley — the dingy, stalesmoke bowling alley — and make it a very comfortable, sophisticated, upscale place.”
play was enough to land a mention on the Associated Press newswire. Practically every neighborhood company had a bowling league, including the Lakewood Theater, WRR and Sears & Roebuck. There were also ladies leagues, including one for housewives. In 1943, 100 teams competed in a citywide bowling tournament at Lakewood Lanes on Oram.
By the late 1960s, however, bowling leagues were mentioned less frequently in the local paper, and Lakewood Lanes, in the building that now houses Teeter’s Faucet Parts, is mentioned only in retrospectives after 1965.
Bowling hall-of-famer Bill Lillard rolled his first ball at Lakewood Lanes, against his mother’s wishes, when he was a student at J.L. Long. He remembers that the owner, Sid Henry, who built the lanes in 1941, seemed unhappy in the bowling business.
“There was no automation. You had to have pin boys,” Lillard says. “And it was hard to get pin boys, so Mr. Henry would be in the back setting pins.”
Lillard says he set pins for 4 cents a game on Friday nights, and then he would spend
all his earnings on bowling every Saturday. Lakewood Lanes was updated in 1950 with “electric semiautomatic pin setters,” according to news reports.
Lillard went on to bowl for the Budweiser team in St. Louis with Don Carter, and he was a charter member of the Professional Bowlers Association. In the early 1960s, he left team bowling and became one of the top individual bowlers in the nation. In 1968, Lillard moved with his family to Houston, where he still lives, and started five bowling centers there. Two are still in business.
“We’ve had very good success with our bowling centers,” Lillard says. “Our business is based on leagues, and people nowadays will not sign up to bowl 35 weeks out of the year. Participation is down all over the country, and it’s hard to get people to sign up.”
The transition in popularity from team bowling to individual bowling started in 1958, with the creation of the PBA, Lillard says. The PBA won over TV audiences, which was its goal, but it resulted in a loss of interest in team bowling, he says. That’s one
factor in the decline of bowling in general, he says.
Noonan and Sepkowitz found that league bowling often deters the casual bowler. “Leagues were taking up all the peak times to bowl, and you could never get a lane,” Sepkowitz says.
The business plan for Bowl & Barrel is not based on league bowling. The center will host leagues on weeknights, and they are expected to carry about the same level of seriousness as league kickball, which hit a popularity peak a few years back. Weekends at Bowl & Barrel will be reserved for individual bowlers who want to drink good beer and have a nice dinner.
“It’s like bowling for non-bowlers,” Noonan says.
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Band of brothers
The family that rocks out together stays together
Story by Christina Hughes Babb | Photo by Can TürkyilmazWhen you spot a boy band as Tiger Beat cover-worthy cute as the Hyenas, you might anticipate Disney-esque synchronized dance moves and pop-y harmonizing. But when these brothers take the stage — plopping confidently behind a drum set, tuning a bass guitar, sound checking the mics — you suspect, correctly, that this is not that kind of band.
Led by dad Terry Longhway, the Hyenas, comprising Zack, 12, Alex and Aiden, 10 and Gunner, 7, have played shows on Deep Ellum stages, The Fort Worth Music Festival and a Frisco concert in which they opened for American Idol finalist Tim Halperin, to name a few.
When you consider Papa Longhway’s curriculum vitae, it all makes sense. His father was a Hendrix fan. Mom: a guitar teacher. He embraced rock and punk, learned multiple instruments, sang, played in bands, wrote songs, studied engineering and opened up seven School of Rock franchises where he teaches kids to play musical instruments and perform, with great panache, in front of an audience.
So, when fate delivered him one adorable and talented son after another, what else could he have done but start a band?
Alex, a student at Lakewood Elementary, came up with the name.
“Hyenas are one of my favorite animals. They stick together in packs,” he says. “They are fierce and laugh a lot,” one of his brothers chimes in.
Dad, who performs with the boys, either on guitar or vocals, explains that the whole Hyenas act is themed, that the songs, which they write themselves, are all about fighting, defending and backing one another. Titles include “Die, Mummy Die!” “All Bark and No Bite” and “Birthday Air Strike.”
It really just started out as a way to have fun and be together as a family, Longhway says. His wife Mysti, is, of course, band mom, plus she is their stylist, Facebook promoter and, she says, “their numberone fan.”
It has evolved into a bonding and learning experience, Longhway says.
“I really love the fact that all of us are a part of writing the songs. As a dad, I love the entire process with the boys, from coming up with concepts for song, to starting to create the music, to rehearsing them, recording [and] playing live. Even selling merchandise. At our shows, we have a booth, and the boys sell our T-shirts and CDs. It’s all part of them learning the entire scope of being in a band.”
Onstage the boys and dad are dressed in varying shades of charcoal and grey; all have shaggy (yet shiny) locks. The eldest, Zack, looks studious in dark-rimmed glasses. Mom works the sound — more vocals for soft-spoken Gunner. Alex, still chewing on a mouthful of his pre-practice snack, is adroit beyond his years on drums. Zack and
Aiden on bass and guitar, respectively, already possess that effortless intensity exhibited in the old rock and roll bands on which they are being raised.
“White Stripes, Metallica, Beatles, Ozzy, Zepplin, Zeppelin, Zepplin …” the boys rattle off when asked about their musical influences.
“We had a kid that didn’t like Led Zepplin, but we had to kick him out of the family,” Longhway jokes.
But seriously, he adds, “when it comes to role model bands for the boys, from my perspective, it’s bands like Van Halen, AC/DC, The Black Crowes and Kings of Leon that I love because all of them involve brothers in a band.”
The Hyenas practice regularly, but not too rigorously. They have recorded one album and plan to make a summer project out of another. The recording can get a little monotonous, the boys concur.
As their dad tells them, they are special because they play instruments and write their own songs, but they don’t look down on the guys who don’t. The pop groups who sing and dance are “OK and pretty good at what they do,” young Gunner offers graciously. “They aren’t the worst things out there,” Zack adds.
Longhway leads the family in laughter when he floats the idea of the Hyenas learning choreographed dance routines.
It is all a great hobby, a valuable experience, they agree, but do the kids plan to stick with it? To make a career of music, as their father has?
“Well, even if I become a lawyer, I’ll still play in a band,” Aiden says. “I might be an archeologist first and then in a band,” another brother adds.
Aside from having access to an experienced instructor, instruments, and quality recording and practice venues, to name a few, the Hyenas benefit from being a tightknit pack.
“I always tell these guys that one of the hardest things about being in a band is sticking together as a band for a long period of time, and just by nature of being brothers, they have a huge advantage in this category,” Longhway says.
“Plus, it makes it really easy to coordinate rehearsals.”
A marriage of convenience
Three generations of the Todora family run Parkit Market
Story by Rachel Stone | Photos by Can TürkyilmazWhen Parkit Market opened in 1962, Greenville was a two-lane street, and University was a dirt road. There were no apartments and few homes.
Tony Todora, whose parents built Parkit Market on what was an empty lot, made flyers to leave at duplexes on Matilda, but when he went to deliver them, the then-18year-old found them all vacant. Their potential customers were nonexistent.
Now Parkit Market is 50 years old, widely accepted as the best place to get a keg in Dallas, and still owned and operated by the Todora family. The Todoras own their shopping center, at the southeast corner of Greenville and University, where they also operate a liquor store and a flower shop. The 90-year-old matriarch, Ann Todora, still lends a hand at the businesses. She also makes homemade Italian sausage, 25 pounds at a time, for the Parkit Market deli, as well as homemade cakes.
“She always says, ‘If you ever retire, you’ll die,’ ” Tony Todora says. “If she meets you, she’ll want to bake you a cake.”
Frank and Ann Todora each grew up in the grocery business. Both of their fathers owned grocery stores, and they met when Frank, who worked for Wonder Bread, delivered to her family store.
After they married, they operated two “superette” groceries. Their third store, Parkit Market, opened when Ann was pregnant with their sixth son. Their only daughter, Gina, was born a couple of years later.
The third generation of Todoras is represented by Frank and Ann’s grandson Christopher.
Parkit Market was off and running once the first apartment complex, which would later become part of “the village,” was built.
“This was the place to be in the ’70s,”
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Tony says. “The SMU students were all moving to these apartments, and they were all partying.”
Tony himself attended SMU, which is how Parkit Market found a niche selling beer kegs. A pal asked him if he could order a keg for a party, and he obliged. He soon became known on campus as the guy who could order a keg.
Now Parkit Market offers 760 beers by the keg. They sell about a thousand 20-pound bags of ice every week.
“There are beers you’ve never heard of on [the list], but every one of them sells,” Tony says.
It’s not just a convenience store. It can also serve as one-stop shopping for parties of any size. Liquor, kegs, margarita machines, flowers, ice and even homemade cakes can all be ordered for delivery.
Dustin Smith recently had to order liquor, beer and wine at the last minute for his wedding reception in Deep Ellum. He was frenzied, trying to pull things together the week before the event. When the order went out, one of the Todora brothers noticed he hadn’t ordered ice. So they threw some on the order and decided to charge him for it later. They
figured he had enough on his plate that day.
“I just can’t say enough about this place,” Smith says. “I came in with my suggestions, and [Tony] gave me his. They delivered on time and picked everything up.”
Even though the Todora brothers work at the store, most of them have other interests. Three of them also work in commercial real estate. While there are three generations running the store now, most of Frank and Ann’s grandchildren are not in the family business.
“This is a really labor-intensive business, and the hours are long,” Tony says. “They all want to work here when they’re little, but there’s better things they could be doing.”
The Todoras might not be running Parkit Market 50 years from now, but they’re there now, every day, and so far, this is their busiest year ever, Tony says. At 90, Ann Todora can’t do as much as she used to, although she tries. Recently she baked 40 cakes for the Bishop Lynch bazaar, plus a few dozen cupcakes, and she sold out of everything she brought. She still makes homemade spaghetti sauce for the deli’s meatball subs. She makes barbecue for sandwiches, meatloaf, chili, and tuna and chicken salad. Get them while they last.
BUSINESS BUZZ
The lowdown on what’s up with neighborhood businesses
Send business news tips to LIVELOCAL@ADVOCATEMAG.COM
Afghan Grill owners open Nora on Greenville
A new Middle Eastern restaurant, Nora, is now open at 1928 Greenville. Husband-and-wife owners Matt Pikar and Rosalind Lynam also own the highly regarded AfghanGrill on Preston Road. Nora, which is named after the couple’s 5-month-old daughter, will have much the same menu as Afghan Grill, including kebab, stews and dumplings. Lynam says they were looking for a location that is a little more hip than the Far North Dallas strip mall where Afghan Grill is. “We hope that some other restaurants will open in the area, and it will really pick up here,” she says.
Benny’s Classic Grill to open on Garland Road
A new restaurant from the owners of Lover’s Pizza and Pasta, Benny’s Classic Grill is expected to open soon in the former Arby’s on Garland Road. Owner Benin Zeqiri, who is from a town in Slovenia on the Italian border, says a trip home inspired the new concept. He noticed that panini and grilled pizzas with gourmet toppings are popular in his hometown and in Venice. Benny’s menu will include burgers, panini and grilled pizzas, all under $10.
More business bits
World of Beer coming to BLVD mixed-use development
Along with NoddingDonkey and Torchy’sTacos, Tampa-based World of Beer has been added to the line up for SMU Blvd.’s new BLVD mixed-use development. All three restaurants are expected to open this summer. This is the first Dallas location for World of Beer, which offers more than 500 bottled beers and 50 on tap.
Nora 1928 GREENVILLE 214.828.0095
Benny’s Classic Grill 10302 GARLAND BLVD 5600 SMU 866.301.1380 BLVDLIVING.COM
Talulah Belle 2011ABRAMS 214.821.1927 TALULAHBELLE.COM
East Dallas Children’s Music 214.324.2224
EASTDALLASCHILDRENSMUSIC. COM
Torchy’s Tacos
TORCHYSTACOS.COM
NorthPark Center 8687N.CENTRAL 214.363.7441
NORTHPARKCENTER.COM
Little Bean Shop 5308 JUNIUS 214.370.9111
LITTLEBEANSHOP.COM
1 The Black-Eyed Pea Restaurant on Greenville near Lovers has closed. According to Black-Eyed Pea spokesman Wes Oliver, “The lease expired after 25 years. It is zoned for commercial space [non-restaurant]. We didn’t really have a say in the future of that particular site.”
more business buzz every week on
LAKEWOOD.ADVOCATEMAG.COM/BIZ
2 Lakewood gift boutique Talulah Belle recently celebrated its 10th anniversary. 3 For the ninth year in a row, EastDallasChildren’s Music was selected to receive a Musikgarten Exemplary Program award. Program founder and neighborhood resident Cathy Mathia was presented with the award at the Musikgarten Festival in Green Lake, Wis. 4 In addition to its BLVD location, Torchy’sTacos, the taco chain that started several years ago in an Austin trailer, is opening at Casa Linda Plaza in the former Souper Salad spot.
5 Parents of teenagers 17 and younger are being asked by NorthParkCenter to accompany their kids after 6 p.m., according to a new code of conduct issued by management. New policies also prohibit hoodies or masks that obscure the face, saggy pants that make undergarments visible, and going without shoes. Read the entire list of rules at northparkcenter.com/codeofconduct. 6 Little Bean Shop is taking some summer vacation. The store will be closed Monday through Wednesday in June, and the entire month of July. littlebeanshop.com will remain open for business.
“We hope that some other restaurants will open in the area, and it will really pick up here.”
Nora owner Rosalind Lynam about the restaurant’s new location on Lowest Greenville
education GUIDE
city hall
SCOFIELD CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
3K through Grade 6 / 214.349.6843 / scofieldchristian.org
WHITE ROCK NORTH SCHOOL
9727 White Rock Trail Dallas / 214.348.7410.
The plan commission approved zoning changes that would allow the White Rock YMCA to construct a new building at Gaston and Loving. The only hurdle the Y faces now is the Dallas City Council, which has the final say on the zoning change. If that domino falls, the Y will move across the street. All of this should make way for Lincoln Property Co.’s purchase of the Far West nightclub property, and the redevelopment of Gaston and Garland/East Grand.
education
The Woodrow Community Foundation awarded 12 scholarships totaling $17,000 at a ceremony May 7 at Veritex Community Bank The foundation this year has doubled the number of scholarships offered and more than quadrupled the money available.
Woodrow Wilson High School valedictorian is NickChatham. He is no. 1 in his class, headed to New York University and also is a budding pop star.
SPANISH HOUSE
5740 Prospect Ave. Dallas / 214.826.4410 / DallasSpanishHouse.com
ZION LUTHERAN SCHOOL
6121 E. Lovers Ln. Dallas / 214.363.1630/ ziondallas. org
Woodrow senior John Schadegg is a National Merit Scholarship finalist. The National Honor Society member already has received scholarships from several colleges, including a full ride from the University of Texas at Dallas.
Dayna Martin, a senior at Woodrow Wilson, is one of 1,000 students nationwide to win the Gates Millennium scholarship this year. The scholarship provides students with money for tuition, fees, books and other expenses. Gates Millennium Scholars also are provided with personal and professional development through a leadership program. Scholars are chosen based on academic performance, leadership potential and volunteerism. Martin was featured in the May Advocate cover story, “Unstoppable Seniors.”
people
ST. CHRISTOPHER’S MONTESSORI SCHOOL
7900 Lovers Ln. / 214.363.9391 stchristophersmontessori.com
69%
of our readers say they want to know more about private schools.
ST. JOHN’S EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
848 Harter Rd., Dallas 75218 / 214.328.9131 / stjohnsschool.org
to advertise call 214.560.4203
East Dallas’ Bo Anderson, an eighth-grader at St. Bernard school near White Rock Lake who has acute lymphoblastic leukemia, is an artist. His work was selected for a book that raises money for the Children’s Cancer Fund. Bo’s contribution was “two lions overlooking a cliff.” Learn more at childrenscancerfund.net.
Margaret “Trigger” Butler, a popular teacher at St. John’s Episcopal School, retired in May to spend more time with her family. She is known for her creative approach to teaching literature and speech to junior high students.
The Young Strikers Wii bowling team at C.C. Young Retirement Community were crowned National Senior League Wii Bowling Champions at the Wii national bowling playoffs. The team formed last year with players age 50 and older.
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Please submit news items and/or photos concerning neighborhood residents, activities, honors and volunteer opportunities to editor@advocatemag.com. Our deadline is the first of the month prior to the month of publication.
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Making the Most of Your Smile
Everybody wants healthy teeth, but we often think of “health” and “beauty” as two different categories. Many people might be surprised to learn that the latest research in dentistry indicates health and beauty are more closely linked than they seem at first glance. Dr. Patty Simon of Lakewood Orthodontics explains it this way: “When things are placed in their proper position for optimal health and function, the side effect is a prettier smile.”
Most patients understand how a filling stops decay and the spread of bacteria, but cosmetic procedures that improve the tooth shape or bite alignment can also improve health.
“For so long, cosmetic dentistry has simply been about aesthetics, or enhancing beauty,” says Dr. Ashly Cothern, DDS. “But we now know there’s a direct link between our oral cavity and the rest of our system. Bacteria that we harbor in our mouth can be easily transmitted to the rest of our body. Often when we are enhancing a smile – meaning getting rid of decay or discoloration, or crooked teeth – it’s not simply a cosmetic issue.”
Cosmetic dental procedures range from noninvasive, such as teeth whitening, to structural changes that can involve reshaping the tooth or even the gums and jaw. Don’t hesitate to bring up your concerns and questions with your dentist, who will tailor treatment to your specific needs.
Dr. Kelli Slate of Lakewood says she explores the most con-
servative approach with patients first. “I always try to conserve tooth structure and do the less invasive procedure, if it can be done at all,” she says. “I recommend simple things like whitening and contouring of the teeth.” Contouring, Dr. Slate explains, means smoothing the teeth, the smile line and the edges of the teeth to make them look better. “Just removing a little bit of tooth structure can make a huge difference for some people’s smile, and it’s very easy,” she says.
If a patient’s teeth cannot be successfully whitened, the dentist might recommend a veneer, which is an ultra-thin application of porcelain or composite bonding. In some cases, veneers can be applied directly to teeth, but depending on the individual case, it may be necessary to remove part of the tooth’s enamel to achieve the best results.
Many cosmetic procedures can be done in your dentist’s office, but some work may require a specialist.
Dr. Greg Greenberg, an orthodontist who practices in Lake Highlands and Frisco, says, “A patient might show up at their dentist and want cosmetic veneers
on their front teeth — they’re discolored, or they’re crooked, or they’re chipped — they want to get that Hollywood smile today. But the dentist may feel they could do a lot better job if the teeth were straighter. With a multidisciplinary approach, we can achieve the most ideal result for patients, rather than doing just a little bit of one thing, and getting a mediocre result.”
Adults who remember the orthodontics of their youth may hesitate at the idea of another round of teeth straightening. “The big drawback in the old days for adults seeking that kind of treatment was the appearance of the metal braces,” Dr. Greenberg says. Fortunately, new products have brought about changes in technology that have removed the main drawback of braces. In other words, the metal is gone.
Because of this innovation, many of Dr. Greenberg’s new patients today are adults. “Today we can do Invisalign, which is the clear aligners that are removable. Invisalign can facilitate preparing the teeth and the mouth for cosmetic work. It does a very, very nice job of that. Invisalign has been a really big door
“Whitening is one of the most conservative, least invasive cosmetic procedures that we do. And the results are great. A brighter smile really makes someone feel fresh and new. It also makes them more motivated to improve their health.” Dr. Ashly Cothern
opener for people getting more optimal treatment which looks better, and lasts longer.”
Even when a patient needs more correction than can be achieved by Invisalign, there is no need to fear a return to the old-fashioned metal mouth. “For those cases, we have clear or ceramic brackets,” Dr. Greenberg says.
Of course, adults aren’t the only patients benefiting from improvements to teethstraightening technology. Appearances matter to teens at least as much as they do to adults, but today’s teens can get all the advantages of braces without suffering from the stigma of feeling conspicuous while wearing them. Furthermore, teens and tweens have the opportunity to correct some problems before they develop.
“Orthodontists are in the best position to alter growth direction,” says Dr. Simon. “Kids may have a mouth breathing habit, or enlarged tonsils. These conditions can create changes in their growth, and that can lead to a bite that’s off.” Dr. Simon says that orthodontists are specially trained to recognize these problems, and the advantage is clear. “We can change the growing skeleton if we get them in early enough,” she says.
Depending on your individual needs, additional consulta-
tions your dentist may recommend might a consultation with a periodontist for changes to gums, or a prosthodontist for tooth replacement or structural addition. Whatever your cosmetic issue may be, talk to your dentist to learn about your options and the latest technologies.
Of course, in addition to health benefits and functional benefits, a smile makeover can provide a psychological boost as well. The look of your smile can dramatically boost your confidence level. People who are self-conscious and afraid to smile sometimes don’t realize how their fear affects social interaction. Cosmetic dentistry can help give you a beautiful smile you can be proud of.
“Abeautiful smile can open new doors, possibilities and opportunities — especially for people seeking new careers or jobs in today’s job environment,” says Dr. Baha Duraini of Preston Modern Dentistry. “A beautiful smile will give that person an edge over the competition, and, even more so, an infectious positive outlook in these challenging times. I love what I do knowing that I can change a patient’s life for the better.”
Your appearance. Your smile.
Whether you’re considering clear aligners, retainers or today’s braces, an orthodontist is the smart choice. Orthodontists are specialists in straightening teeth and aligning your bite. They have two to three years of education beyond dental school. So they’re experts at helping you get a great smile – that feels great, too.
“Invisalign (clear aligner trays) has been a really big door opener for people getting more optimal treatment which looks better, and lasts longer.”
Dr. Greg Greenberg, Orthodontist
“I used to always keep my mouth closed when I smiled. Not anymore!”
— Jessica, 24
Weight Loss and Surgery Options
Here’s a quick formula for losing weight: reduce calorie intake (diet) and increase activity (exercise.)
This plan of action may be easy to understand, but it’s also difficult to follow. Just ask the 36% of Americans who are obese, according to 2010 statistics. A recent study at Duke University projects that the number of obese Americans may reach 42% by 2030, largely due to sedentary lifestyles.
Throughout history, our ancestors were preoccupied with obtaining enough food, rather than worrying about what might happen if we entered a prolonged period of plenty. We might be tempted to think of our collective weight problem as a luxury, if not for the overwhelming evidence that it’s also unhealthy.
Dr. Michael Green at Doctor’s Hospital in Dallas says, “Look at the epidemic proportions of obesity and its negative effects on diabetes, hypertension, obstructive sleep apnea, reflux, joint pain and even fertility. There’s not one medical discipline that obesity does not influence.”
Obesity means having too much body fat, which is different from being overweight. To determine your current status, you can calculate your Body Mass Index (See BMI sidebar for instructions.) If your BMI is under 30, it indicates overweight, which may be due to muscle, bone, fat or water weight. If your BMI is over 30, it indicates obesity, and a BMI over 40 is considered dangerously obese.
Obesity occurs if you eat more calories than you use. Factors that might contribute include your genetic makeup, a high-fat diet and sedentary lifestyle. Because losing weight requires so much effort,
some people become discouraged if they can’t reach their ideal goal. They shouldn’t stop trying, however, because losing even 5% to 10% of body weight can lessen the risk of developing weightrelated diseases.
Obesity also influences mortality rates. “Patients are dying sooner,” says Dr. Green. “We have found a ten to fifteen year difference in individuals that had a normal BMI range versus the more obese BMI range.” It can also be alarming to look at the breakdown between the ranges. Studies of non-smokers show that a BMI of 30–35 reduces life expectancy by two to fouryears, while it is severe obesity (BMIof40 or higher) that reduces life expectancy by 10to 15 years.
Because of the clear dangers indicated by obesity, physicians become concerned if a patient has tried unsuccessfully to lose weight with diet and exercise. Dr. Green explains, “People who have been battling with this disease for a period of time have struggled. They’ve tried multiple diet plans, and for the most part, those don’t work for the overwhelming number of people that we’re talking about. The population that we’re referencing may need to lose 60 to 100 plus pounds. They are the candidates for surgery.”
Bariatric surgery is an operation on the stomach and/or intestines that can help obese patients lose weight. Depending on the type of surgery, it may restrict food intake, or interrupt how food is digested, or a combination of both. Surgery could be an option for you if:
Efforts to lose weight with diet and exercise have been unsuccessful.
sformations
Your body mass index (BMI) is 40 or higher (extreme obesity).
Your BMI is 35 to 39.9 (obesity), and you have a serious weightrelated health problem, such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure or severe sleep apnea. In some cases, you may qualify for certain types of weight-loss surgery if your BMI is 30 to 34 and you have serious weight-related health problems.
A desire to maintain a healthy lifestyle can be a key component. “If one begins to look at their quality of life, and decides to improve their life by resolving the disease, that is often the driving force behind why people seek surgery,” says Dr. Green.
There are four types of operations that are commonly offered in the United States.
An Adjustable Gastric Band (sometimes called a lap-band) works by decreasing food intake. Food intake is reduced by placing a small band around the top of the stomach to restrict the size of the opening from the throat. The surgeon can control the size of the opening by adding or removing saline from a balloon in the band.
Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass restricts food intake and also decreases how food is absorbed. Food intake is limited, similar to the lap-band procedure, and then food is sent directly to the small intestine. The bypass affects how food is absorbed, which results in fewer calories being processed.
HOW TO DETERMINE YOUR BMI
Multiply your weight in pounds by 703.
Divide that answer by your height in inches.
Divide that answer by your height in inches again.
Results:
Below 18.5,Underweight
18.5 - 24.9, Healthy
25.0 - 29.9, Overweight
30.0 - 39.9, Obese
Over 40, Morbidly obese
Source: nih.gov
Duodenal Switch (Biliopancreatic Diverstion) is a complex surgery that restricts intake and also prevents absorption. One feature is to remove a large part of the stomach, so the patient feels full sooner. Secondly, food is re-routed from the part of the small intestine, which prevents absorption of calories.
In removing a large part of the stomach, the surgeon creates a more tubular “gastric sleeve” (also known as a Vertical Sleeve Gastrectomy, or VSG, discussed next).
VSG surgery restricts food intake and decreases the amount of food used. VSG has been performed in the past as the first stage of BPD-DS (explained above). However, researchers have found that some patients can lose weight with VSG alone, and avoid the additional procedures of the BPD-DS.
After bariatric surgery, patients who develop new healthy habits will have the most success maintaining weight loss. Considering the dangers of long-term obesity, lifestyle changes are well worth the effort.
You can improve your health and quality of life for years to come with bariatric surgery at The Surgical Weight Loss Center of Doctors Hospital at White Rock Lake.
As a Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence, we offer a:
Variety of surgical options. Patient navigator to support you through your weight loss process.
Comprehensive program that offers access to both pre-operative and post-operative resources and support designed to help you succeed. Start making plans for your surgical weight loss success today.
Call 888-228-6466 to register for our free, weight loss surgery seminar or schedule a free, one-on-one consultation with our bariatric nurse manager.
BAPTIST
LAKESIDE BAPTIST / 9150 Garland Rd / 214.324.1425
Pastor Jeff Donnell / Worship 10:30 am & 10:31 am www.lbcdallas.com
WILSHIRE BAPTIST / 4316 Abrams / 214.452.3100
Pastor George A. Mason Ph.D. / Worship 8:30 & 11:00am
Bible Study 9:40 am / www.wilshirebc.org
DIS C IPLES OF C HRIST
E AST DALLAS CHRISTIAN CHURCH / 629 N. Peak Street / 214.824.8185
Sunday School 9:30 am / THE TABLE Worship Gathering 9:30 am
Worship 8:30 & 10:50 am / Rev. Deborah Morgan / www.edcc.org
E PISCOPAL
THE C ATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ST. MATTHEW / 5100 Ross Ave.
Sunday Traditional: 8:00 & 10:30 am / Christian Education 9:30 am
Servicio en español: 12:30 / 214.823.8134 / episcopalcathedral.org
LUTHERAN
CENTRAL LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA / 1000 Easton Road
Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am / Worship Service 10:30 am
Pastor Rich Pounds / CentralLutheran.org / 214.327.2222
FIRST UNITED LUTHERAN CHURCH / 6202 E Mockingbird Ln.
Sunday Worship Service 10:30 am / Call for class schedule. 214.821.5929 / www.dallaslutheran.org
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL / 6121 E Lovers Ln.
Sunday: Sunday School 9:15 am, Worship 8:00 am, 10:30 am, & 6:00 pm / 214.363.1639 / www.ziondallas.org
MET HODIST
L AKE HIGHLANDS UMC / 9015 Plano Rd. / 214.348.6600 / lhumc.com
9:30 – Sunday School / 10:30 – Fellowship Time
10:50 – Traditional & Contemporary Worship
WHITE ROCK UNITED METHODIST / www.wrumc.org
1450 Oldgate Lane / 214.324.3661
Sunday Worship 10:50 am / Rev. George Fisk
NON -DE NOMIN ATION AL
SHORELINE DALLAS CHURCH / 5321 E. Mockingbird Lane
ShorelineDallas.com / 469.227.0471 / Pastor Earl McClellan
Everyone’s Welcome at 9:15am / Children’s & Youth Ministry
PRESB Y TE R IA N
NORTHPARK PRESBY TERIAN CHURCH / 214.363.5457
9555 N. Central Expwy. / www.northparkpres.org
Pastor: Rev. Brent Barry / 8:30 & 11:00 am Sunday Services
NORTHRIDGE PRESBY TERIAN CHURCH / 6920 Bob-O-Link Dr.
214.827.5521 / www.northridgepc.org / Welcomes you to Worship
Summer Worship: May 27 - Aug. 19 : 10:00 am / Childcare provided.
ST. ANDREW ’S PRESBY TERIAN / Skillman & Monticello
Rev. Rob Leischner. / www.standrewsdallas.org
214.821.9989 / Sunday School 9:30 am, Worship 10:45 am
UNIT Y
UNITY OF DALLAS / A Positive Path For Spiritual Living
6525 Forest Lane, Dallas, TX 75230 / 972-233-7106 / UnityDallas.org
local ADVOCATEMAG.COM
A HOLY CONUNDRUM
What I learned with 80 Jews and Christians in the Holy Land
“It’s complicated.”
That’s the phrase that stuck in all of our minds during a remarkable 10-day interfaith trip to Israel and Palestine last month. Eighty hearty souls traveled to the Holy Land — about half associated with Temple Emanu-El and half with Wilshire Baptist Church. Rabbis David Stern and Nancy Kasten (David’s wife) joined me as religious docents, complementing our two Israelbased travel guides.
The two congregations have nurtured a growing relationship for more than 20 years. We have worshipped together many times at temple and church. Rabbi Stern and I have spoken together at high schools, colleges and civic organizations. We long ago left behind the uneasy cordiality of initial probing conversations for the hard work of reckoning respectfully with our real religious differences. Those differences define our theology more than our faith and work.
“It’s complicated” is a phrase that describes so much of what we have discovered with and about one another over time and during our time in the Holy Land. Why do Jews practice the faith of Jesus without putting their faith in Jesus? Why do Christians put their faith in Jesus without practicing the faith of Jesus? In short, there is no short answer to these questions; there is only a long listening to each other about our histories as people of God. And we do have history, Jews and Christians — some of it growing from the common root of Jesse, some of it branching out so far we aren’t always sure we can rediscover that common ground. What’s clear is that it’s complicated and that we should seek simplicity only on the other side of complexity.
The lands of Israel and Palestine are complicated, too. For many Jews and Zionist Christians, the entire land belongs to the Jews because it was promised to Abraham and his seed in Genesis. Forget the borders of the British Mandate, United Nations res-
olutions, or peace treaties with the Palestinians: the Bible is all the deed they need. Most Jews, however, and Christians like me claim something else. God’s promise of the land, like God’s covenant with Israel, always required that the people of God act justly toward one another and toward their neighbors. Injustice invalidates any claim of God’s provision and protection. The security of the State of Israel can never last if it comes at the expense of justice for those who have been denied freedom and rights to live in the land with them. Peace has to be made before it can be kept. The military can’t make peace.
Likewise, Palestinians want a homeland in the land they called home before 1948. The Arab population poses a great challenge to Israel as a state. For one thing, the Arabs constitute 20 percent of the citizenry of the State of Israel, even though they are treated like second-class citizens because of the dual nature of Israel as a Jewish state and a democracy. The Palestinians who live in the occupied territories of the West Bank and Hamas-controlled Gaza are divided Muslim and Christian, the former representing about a 98 percent majority. Native Christians — whose holy sites in the Holy Land such as Bethlehem (West Bank), Jerusalem and Nazareth (Israel) — are a small double minority as Arabs among Jews and as Arab Christians among Arab Muslims. They are tragically disappearing from the land Jesus called home.
Palestinians will never prevail against Israel as long as they continue to employ violence as a means of achieving their ends. Radical Muslim terrorism is no more effective politically than the Israeli military defense in securing a robust and hopeful future.
Eighty Jews and Christians have learned the path to peace. Trust and respect lead to friendship and even love.
It’s complicated, but it’s not impossible. With God nothing is impossible.
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STAY IN THE KNOW
Getting the travel bug
A group of Woodrow Wilson High School Pre-IB sophomores and freshmen traveled to Costa Rica over spring break to visit schools, learn about the country’s culture and experience eco-tourism. The students learned about wildlife, volcanoes, waterfalls, beaches and people in Costa Rica. Students are following up with community service projects at the Costa Rican schools. Woodrow International Baccalaureate groups are planning trips to Spain and China this summer and to London and Paris next spring.
TO ADV E RTIS E CALL 214.560.4203
CLASSES/TUTORING/ LESSONS
ADHD TEST PREP & TUTORING Dedicated, 1 on 1, for ADD/ADHD & alternative learners. Incl SAT, ACT, PSAT & creative study techniques. Free Consult & 1st week tutoring. Outstanding References. Yale ‘93. Anthony 214-484-4488
ART: Draw or Paint. All Levels. Lake Highlands N. Rec. Ctr. Jane Cross, 214-534-6829. Linda, 214-808-4919.
ARTISTIC GATHERINGS
Art Classes For All Ages. Casa Linda Plaza. 214-821-8383. www.artisticgatherings.com
DRUM & PIANO LESSONS Your location. All Ages/All Styles. UNT Grads. Betty & Bill 972-203-1573 • 469-831-7012
JEWELRY MAKING CLASSES
214-824-2777 www.beadsofsplendor.com
Lakewood Shopping center: 1900 Abrams Pkwy @ La Vista
LEARN GUITAR OR PIANO Professional musician. Fun/Easy. Your Home. UNT Grad. Larry 469-358-8784
TUTORING All Subjects. Elem-middle School. Algebra 1, Dmath. Your Home. 25 + Yrs. Dr. J. 214-535-6594. vsjams@att.net
TUTORING Reading/Writing. All Grades. Master’s/10 Yrs Exp. Your Home. 214-515-5502. lissastewartjobs@hotmail.com
UKULELE LESSONS Instruments, Workshops. www.UkeLadyMusic.com 214-924-0408
VOICE TEACHER with 38 years experience. MM, NATS www.PatriciaIvey.com 214-769-8560
Super volunteer
Shirley Christensen recently celebrated 45 years as a volunteer at Doctors Hospital at White Rock Lake. She has put in nearly 7,000 volunteer hours with the hospital.
BULLETIN BOARD
CHILDCARE
LOVING, CHRIST-CENTERED CARE SINCE 1982 Lake Highlands Christian Child Enrichment Center Ages 2 mo.-12 yrs. 9919 McCree. 214-348-1123.
EMPLOYMENT
AIRLINE CAREERS Begin Here. Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA Approved. Training. Financial Aid, if qualified. Housing available. Job placement assistance. AIM 866-453-6204
EXPERIENCED LANDSCAPE & LAWN CARE PERSONNEL
Must have transportation. Call Cole’s Lawn Care 214-327-3923
FULL TIME TEACHER Toddler to 3 years. Early childhood experience required. MungerChildCare.com, 469-248-2905
PART-TIME TEACHER Toddlers–3 years. Park Cities Baptist Mother’s Day Out. Early childhood degree or certification preferred. Shannon McGee 214-860-1520 or skmcgee@pcbc.org
WANTED: FREELANCE BOOKKEEPER
Preferably someone living in the Lakewood neighborhood to work on business & personal. Knowledge of Advertising/Graphic Design business a plus. Call Tom Zielinski - 214-460-1667
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
$5,000 SIGNING BONUS. Frac Sand Owner Operators. More Texas Work Than Trucks. Must Have Tractor, Blower & Pneumatic Trailer. 817-926-3535
I’M LOOKING FOR A BILINGUAL BUSINESS PARTNER for expansion of 55-yr.-old start-up co. BJ Ellis 214-226-9875
SERVICES FOR YOU
AT ODDS WITH YOUR COMPUTER? Easily Learn Essential Skills. Services include Digital Photo Help. Sharon 214-679-9688
CONFUSED? FRUSTRATED? Let A Seasoned Pro Be The Interface Between You & That Pesky Computer. Hardware & Software Installation, Troubleshooting, Training. $60/hr. 1 hr min. Dan 214-660-3733 or stykidan@sbcglobal.net
DINO LIMO Yours For All Special Occasions,Casino Trips. 40 Yrs Exp. dino-avantilimousines.com. 214-682-9100
PRO DJ SERVICE & SOUND Corporate Events & Weddings. 20 + Years Experience. 469-236-8490
SIGNS: Nameplates, Badges, Office, Braille. A&G Engraving. 214-324-1992. getasign@att.net agengraving.vpweb.com
JULY DEADLINE JUNE 13 214.560.4203
TO ADVERTISE
Homerun
The Woodrow Wilson High School baseball team beat Adamson High School in its recent bi-district series, two games to one.
SUBMIT YOUR PHOTO. Email a jpeg to editor@advocatemag.com.
BBULLETIN BOARD
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
ACCOUNTING, TAXES Small Businesses & Individuals. Chris King, CPA 214-824-5313 www.chriskingcpa.com
BOOKKEEPING NEEDS? Need Help Organizing Finances?
No Job Too Small or Big. Call C.A.S Accounting Solutions. Cindy 214-821-6903
ESTATE/PROBATE MATTERS Because every family needs a will. Mary Glenn, J.D. maryglennattorney.com • 214-802-6768
HOME ORGANIZING & Senior Moving Plans/Solutions. Refs avail. Donna 860-710-3323 DHJ0807@aol.com. $30 hr.
TRANSLATIONS English, Spanish, & French at affordable rates. LenguaTutoringAndTranslation@yahoo.com or 214-331-7200.
Website Design
Flash Demos
Graphic Design RibbitMultimedia .com 214.560.4207
The bug guys
Entomologists Russ Horton and Don Schultz from Dallas-based Home Team Pest Defense put on a presentation for Alex Sanger Elementary students last month. The students received junior entomology certificates for their participation.
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TO ADV E RTIS E CALL 214.560.4203
MIND, BODY & SPIRIT
DEANNA SKUPIEN/AVA PRO Specializing In Cut & Color styleseat.com/deannaskupien 469-644-2554
MASSAGE Specializing In Oncology, Swedish & Deep Tissue. ProgressiveMassageTherapy.com 214-773-2837
PETS
FEEDMYCANINE.COM | Premium Dog Food, Value Price Free Delivery | Call Isaac Hernandez | Owner | 469-735-5686
POOP SCOOP PROFESSIONALS Trust The Experts. 214-826-5009
TROPICAL FISH & AQUARIUMS Sales & Service. Fresh, Salt, & Pond. TheAquariumBoutique.com 214-660-0537
Dallas’ First Doggie Daycare
Featuring “Open Play” Boarding
• 14,000+ sq. ft. Play Area Inside
• 5,000+ sq. ft. Play Area Outside
• 15 Lux Suites w/ Webcams
• Grooming All Breeds
• Training & Obedience Classes
6444 E. Mockingbird at Abrams www.deesdoggieden.com • 214-823-1441
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PETS
In-Home Professional Care
Customized to maintain your pet’s routine In-Home Pet Visits & Daily Walks
“Best of Dallas” D Magazine Serving the Dallas area since 1994 Bonded & Insured www.societypetsitter.com 214-821-3900
BUY/SELL/TRADE
TOP CASH FOR CARS Any Car, Truck. Running or Not. Call for Instant Offer. 1-800-454-6951
ESTATE/GARAGE SALES
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CLUTTERBLASTERS.COM Estate / Moving Sales, De-Cluttering, Organizing. 972-679-3100
ESTATE SALES & LIQUIDATION SERVICES
Moving, Retirement, Downsizing. One Piece or a Houseful. David Turner. 214-908-7688. dave2estates@aol.com
SWANN ESTATE SALES 214-793-3075
11 Years Experience With Estate/Moving Sales
be local be local
AC & HEAT
FOR QUALITY, QUALIFIED SERVICE CALL 214-350-0800 ABS AC & Heat TACLA28514E
LAKEWOOD HEAT & AIR Servicing Dallas 20+ years. 214-682-3822 TACLA28061E
QUALITY 1 ENERGY SYSTEMS
A/C & Heat Sales & Service since 1989. TACLA010760E Q1es.com 214-348-9588
S&E A/C & HEATING, LLC 214.912.7900
Half off svc fee w/repair. 10% off repair w/ maintenance pkg. Res/Com. #TACLA00029455E se-ac-heat.com BBB approved CCs Accepted
WINDOW AC TUNE UP Repair, Cleaning, Etc. Buy/Sell 214-321-5943
TACLA28514E American
CARPENTRY & REMODELING
BLAKE CONSTRUCTION CONCEPTS, LLC
Complete Remodeling, Kitchens, Baths, Additions. Hardie Siding & Replacement Windows. Radiant Barrier, Insulation. Bonded & Insured. www.blake-construction.com 214-563-5035
BO HANDYMAN Kitchens, baths, doors, cabinets, custom carpentry, drywall & painting 214-437-9730
CARPENTER Custom Cabinets, & Trim, Reorganize Closets, Repair Rotten Wood, Set Doors, Kitchen & Baths, Refs. Return Calls By End Of Business Day. Dave. 214-684-4800
ERIC CANTU CONSTRUCTION
Affordable Remodeling. Kitchens, Baths, Additions, Cabinetry & more. 972-754-9988 EricCantu.com
G&G DEMOLITION Tear downs, Haul. Interior/Exterior. 214-808-8925
HANDY DAN “The Handyman” To Do’s Done Right! www.handy-dan.com 214-252-1628
KEN’S RESIDENTIAL REMODELING 214-886-8927. kenscontracting.com
KITCHEN AND BATHROOM SPECIALISTS
JCI Remodeling: From Simple Updates to Full Remodeling Services. Competitive Pricing! JCIRemodeling.com 972-948-5361
O’BRIEN GROUP INC. Professional Home Remodel. Shannon O’Brien. 214-341-1448 www.obriengroupinc.com
PREVIEW CONSTRUCTION INC. HardiPlank 50 Yr. Cement Siding, Energy Star Windows. Kitchens-Baths-Additions & More. 214-348-3836. See Photo Gallery at: www.previewconstruction.com
S & R SOLUTIONS, LLC Spring Special 20% Off All Services. 972-839-8377 / 682 300-6755
SQUARE NAIL WOODWORKING
Cabinet Refacing, Built-ins, Entertainment/ Computer Centers. Jim. 214-324-7398 www.squarenailwoodworking.com
THE CLIENT’S CONTRACTOR www.CuttingEdgeRenovationsLLC.com
A
469 767 1868 joshangus@aksdallas.com www.aksdallas.com
214-660-8898
CLEANING SERVICES
THE MAIDS Angie’s List Service Award! Discounts at www.maids.com Free Quotes. 972-278-2551
WANTED: HOUSES TO CLEAN
20 yrs. exp., Reliable, Great Prices, Excellent Refs., Free Estimates. No Crews. Sunny 214-724-2555
WINDOW MAN WINDOW CLEANING.COM
Residential Specialists. BBB. 214-718-3134
CONCRETE/ MASONRY/PAVING
CONCRETE, Driveway Specialist Repairs, Replacement, Removal, References. Reasonable.
Chris 214-770-5001
EDMONDSPAVING.COM Asphalt & Concrete Driveway-Sidewalk-Patio-Repair 214-957-3216
FLAGSTONE PATIOS, Retaining Walls, BBQ’s, Veneer, Flower Bed Edging, All Stone work. Chris 214-770-5001
DON'T TEAR OUT
Call Us
972.849.5589
thepcelectric.com
Stronger than cement Cooler
Customizable
concreteartist.com
Swimming Pool Remodels • Patios Stone work • Stamp Concrete
972-727-2727 Deckoart.com
EXTERIOR CLEANING
Residential Commercial Construction Remodel Cleans make-readys windows carpet
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
214.692.1991
Locally owned and operated since 1980
FIREPLACE SERVICES
214.750.4888 20 years in business!
$25.00 Off – 1st Full Detail Clean Complimentary quotes! lecleandallas.com
COMPUTERS & ELECTRONICS
BILL’S COMPUTER REPAIR
Virus Removal, Data Recovery. Home /Biz. Network Install. All Upgrades & Repairs. PC Instruction, No Trip Fee. 214-348-2566
COMPUTER PROBLEMS SOLVED
Hardware/Software. Network. 20 yrs exp. Great Rates! Keith 214-295-6367
IQUEUE MEDIA COMPANY 214-478-8644
TV Installation, Computer Repair, Security.
CONCRETE/ MASONRY/PAVING
BRICK & STONE REPAIR Don 214-704-1722
BRICK, BLOCK, Stone, Concrete, Stucco. Gonzalez Masonry. 214-395-1319
CAZARES CONCRETE Concrete retaining walls, Patios, Driveways, Removal, Sidewalks. 214-202-8958 Free estimates.
CONCRETE REPAIRS/REPOURS
Demo existing. Driveways/Patio/Walks
Pattern/Color available
972-672-5359 (32 yrs.)
ANTHONY’S ELECTRIC Master Electrician. TECL24948 anthonyselectricofdallas.com
Family Owned/Operated. Insd. 214-328-1333
DIRECT ELECTRIC Inc. New, remodel, res/com. Insured. Call 214-566-8888. Lic # TECL27551
LAKEWOOD ELECTRICAL Local. Insured. Lic. #227509 Call Rylan 214-434-8735
MASTER ELECTRICIAN Lic #TECL 55703. Resd/Comcl. Bonded. Contr Lic# TECL23423. Trinity Electrical Services. David 214-802-0436
TEXAS ELECTRICAL • 214-289-0639 Prompt, Quality Services. Days, Evenings & Weekends. 34 Yrs Exp. TECL 24668
TH ELECTRIC Reasonable Rates. Licensed & Insured. Ted. E257 214-808-3658
WHITE ROCK ELECTRIC All Electrical Services. Lic/Insd. E795. 214-850-4891
BLOUNTS HAULING/TRASH SERVICE blountsjunkremovaldfw.com 214-275-5727
PARKCITIESRESIDENTIALSERVICES.COM Visit Our Website Or Call 214-335-5443
FENCING & DECKS
#1 COWBOY FENCE & IRON CO. Est. ‘91. 214-692-1991 www.cowboyfenceandiron.com
4 QUALITY FENCING Call Mike 214-507-9322 Specializing in Wood, New or Repair.
A FATHER, SON & GRANDSON TEAM Fences, Gates, Decks. Haven 214-327-0560
AMBASSADOR FENCE INC.
Automatic Gates, Iron & Cedar Fencing, Decks. Since 1996. MC/V 214-621-3217
ARTdECk-O.COm 20 Year Warranty! Decks, Fences, Pergolas 214-435-9574
CREATIVE METAL SOLUTIONS LLC
Automatic Gates, Fence, Stairs, Stair/Balcony Railings, Wine Cellar Gates. 214-325-4985
KIRKWOOD FENCE & DECK
New & Repair. Free Estimates. Nathan Kirkwood. 214-341-0699
LONESTARdECkS.COm 214-357-3975
Decks, Arbors, Fences, Patio Covers Trex Decking & Fencing.
STEEL SALVATION Metal Art, Unique Crosses, Funky Fire Pits. steelsalvation.com Local Resident 40+Yrs. 214-283-4673
CHIMNEY SWEEP Dampers/Brick & Stone Repair. DFW Metro. Don 214-704-1722
FLOORING & CARPETING
BEAR FOOT HARdWOOdS 214-734-8851
Complete Hardwood Flooring Services
CUTTING EDGE FLOORING Hardwoods, Carpet, Tile. New/Repair. 972-822-7501
dALLAS HARdWOOdS 214-724-0936
Installation, Repair, Refinish, Wax, Hand Scrape. Residential, Commercial. Sports Floors. 25 Yrs. HASTINGS STAINED CONCRETE New/ Remodel. Stain/Wax Int/Ext. Nick. 214-341-5993. www.hastingsfloors.com
STAINED & SCORED CONCRETE FLOORS New/Remodel. Res/Com. Int/Ext. Refin. 15 Yrs. TheConcreteStudio.com 214-321-1575
SUPER QUALITY WOOD FLOORS Jim Crittendon, 214-821-6593
WILLEFORD HARDWOOD FLOORS 214-824-1166 • WillefordHardwoodFloors.com
WORLEY TILE & FLOORING
Custom Marble Install. 214-779-3842
GARAGE DOORS
GARAGE DOOR & SPRING REPAIR
972-672-0848 TexasGaragePros.com
20% off with “Advocate Magazine”
ROCKET GARAGE DOOR SERVICE -24/7. Repairs/Installs. 214-533-8670. Coupon On Web. www.RocketDoorService.com
UNITED GARAGE DOORS AND GATES Res/Com. Locally Owned.214-826-8096
GLASS, WINDOWS & DOORS
A FATHER, SON & GRANDSON TEAM Expert Window Cleaning. Haven 214-327-0560
LAKE HIGHLANDS GLASS & MIRROR custom mirrors • shower enclosures store fronts • casements 214-349-8160
ROCK GLASS CO Replace, repair: windows, mirrors, showers, screens. 214-837-7829
CLEAR VIEW
Windows and Doors
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS Save Up To 30-40% On Utility Bills
Locally Owned Maintenance Free Lifetime Warranty Call for your FREE estimate! 214-274-5864 clearwindowsanddoors.com
Energy-Efficient Windows Quality Workmanship, Quality Materials, Reasonable Prices, since 1987. 214.319.8400 fosterexteriors.com
HANDYMAN SERVICES
FRAME RIGHT All Honey-Dos/Jobs. 10+Yrs licensed neighborhood bus. Matt 469-867-9029
HANDY DAN “The Handyman” To Do’s Done Right. www.handy-dan.com 214-252-1628
HANDYMAN SPECIALIST Residential/ Commercial. Large, small jobs, repair list, renovations. Refs. 214-489-0635
HARGRAVE CONSTRUCTION Kitchen, Bath, Doors, Tile & Handyman Services. 214-215-9266
HOMETOWN HANDYMAN All phases of construction. No job too small 214-327-4606
HONEST, SKILLED SERVICE With a Smile. General Repairs/ Maintenance. 214-215-2582
WANTED: ODD JOBS & TO DO LISTS
Allen’s Handyman & Home Repair 214-288-4232
Your Home Repair Specialists
Drywall Doors Senior Safety Carpentry Small & Odd Jobs And More! 972-308-6035 HandymanMatters.com/dallas Bonded & Insured. Locally owned & operated.
HOUSE PAINTING
1 AFFORDABLE HOUSE PAINTING and Home Repair. Quality work. Inside and Out. Free Ests. Local Refs. Ron 972-816-5634 or 972-475-3928
HOUSE PAINTING
LAWNS, GARDENS & TREES
25% OFF TREE WORK Trim. Dead Tree Removal. Roberts Tree Svc. Insd. 10 yrs exp. 214-808-8925
A BETTER TREE COMPANY • JUST TREES
Painting · Remodeling
214-870-3939
www.amistadcsc.com
NAT-90143-1
BRIAN GREAM
PAINTING & RENOVATIONS LLC
• Interior/Exterior • Drywall
• Rotten Wood • Gutters
All General Contracting Needs
PayPal ®
214.542.6214
WWW.BGRONTHEWEB.COM
BRIANGREAM@YAHOO.COM
INTERIOR DESIGN
BORED WITH DECOR? UPDATE COLORS! Exp’d. Design Pro. Call Carolyn 214-363-0747
ROB’S HOME STAGING.COM 214-507-5688 Changing Rooms For All Reasons and Seasons
KITCHEN/BATH/ TILE/GROUT
ALL SURFACE REFINISHING 214-631-8719. Tub/Tile/Refinishing. allsurfacerefinishing.com
Complete tree services including Tree & Landscape Lighting! Call Mark 214-332-3444
A&B LANDSCAPING Full Lawn Care, Landscaping, Tree Trimming, Fireplaces & Stonework. Lic #0283917- Degreed Horticulturist 214-534-3816
ADVANCED TREE SERVICE
Quality Tree Trimming & Removal. 214-455-2095
ALTON MARTIN LANDSCAPING Spectacular Curbside Appeal! Excellent refs. 214-760-0825
ARBOR WIZARDS Professionals, Experts, Artists. Trim Rmv Cable Repair Cavity-Fill Stump Grind Emergency Hazards . Insd. Free Est. 972-803-6313
AYALA’S LANDSCAPING SERVICE
Call the Land Expert Today! Insured. 214-773-4781
BLOUNTS TREE SERVICE Spring Special 20% Off Tree Work. 45 yrs exp. Insured. blountssodinstallation.com 214-275-5727
CASTRO TREE SERVICE Quality Work at Great Rates. Free est. Insured. 214-337-7097
CHUPIK TREE SERVICE
Trim, Remove, Stump Grind. Free Est. Insured. 214-823-6463
COLE’S LAWN CARE • 214-327-3923
Quality Service with a Personal Touch.
DALLAS K.D.R.SERVICES • 214-349-0914
Lawn Service & Landscape Installation
HOURS: M-F 8:30a-5p
1350 N. Buckner Suite 216 premium quality custom shower doors & enclosures 214-530-5483 showerdoordallas.com
many glass & hardware options
HANDYMAN SERVICES
A HELPING HAND No Job Too Small. We do it all. Repairs /Redos. Chris. 214-693-0678
A R&G HANDYMAN Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Fencing, Roofing, Light Hauling. Ron or Gary 214-861-7569, 469-878-8044
A+ HANDYMAN KARL Home Repairs, Remodels & Restoration. 214-699-8093
ALL JOBS BIG/SMALL 38 years exp. Ron Payne 214-755-9147
ALL STAR HOME CARE Carpentry, Glass, Tile, Paint, Doors, Sheetrock Repair, and more. 25 yrs. exp. References. Derry 214-505-4830
BO HANDYMAN Kitchens, baths, doors, cabinets, custom carpentry, drywall & painting 214-437-9730
#1 GET MORE PAY LES Painting. 85% Referrals. Free Est. 214-348-5070
A + INT/EXT PAINT & DRYWALL Since 1977. Kirk Evans. 972-672-4681
A QUALITY PAINTING SERVICE
Interior & exterior plus small repairs. First two gallons free! 214-824-6112
A TONY’S PAINTING SERVICE Interior & Exterior 972-234-0770 mobile 214-755-2700
ABRAHAM PAINT SERVICE A Women Owned Business 25 Yrs. Int/Ext. Wall Reprs. Discounts On Whole Interiors and Exteriors 214-682-1541
ALL TYPES Painting & Repairs. A+ BBB rating. Small jobs welcome. Call Kenny 214-321-7000
BENJAMIN’S PAINTING SERVICE Quality
Work At Reasonable Prices. 214-725-6768
BLAKE CONSTRUCTION CONCEPTS, LLC
Complete Painting Interior/Exterior, Stain Etc. Custom Finishes, Custom Texture, Custom Trim www.blake-construction.com
Fully Bonded & Insured. 214-563-5035
SARATOGA INTERIOR PAINTING & REPAIR
Affordable. Free Estimates. Reed. 214-577-0622
TOP COAT Professional. Reliable. References. TopCoatOfTexas.com 214-770-2863
VIP PAINTING & DRYWALL Int/Ext. Sheetrock Repair, Resurfacing Tubs, Counters, Tile Repairs. 972-613-2585
WHITE ROCK PAINT & REMODEL
References. Mark Reindel 214-321-5280
BATHTUB, COUNTERTOP & TILE Resurfacing: Walls, Tub Surrounds, Showers. Glaze or Faux Stone finishes. Affordable Alternative to Replacement! 972-323-8375. PermaGlazeNorthDallas.com
BLAKE CONSTRUCTION CONCEPTS LLC
Complete Kitchen And Bath Remodels Tile, Granite, Marble, Travertine, Slate Bonded And Insured. 214-563-5035 www.blake-construction.com
BRIAN WARD STONE & TILE 972-989-9899
LH Dad & Firefighter. 12 years of Tile Experience.
FENN CONSTRUCTION Any Tile Anywhere. www.dallastileman.com 214-343-4645
HANDY DAN “The Handyman” Remodels Done Right. handy-dan.com 214-252-1628
STONE AGE COUNTER TOPS Granite, Marble, Tile, Kitchen/Bath Remodels. CJ-972-276-9943 cjrocksthehouse1@verizon.net
TOM HOLT TILE 30 Yrs Experience In Tile, Backsplashes & Floors. Refs. Avail. 214-770-3444
GREENSKEEPER Fall Clean Up & Color. Sodding, Fertilization. Lawn Maintenance & Landscape. Res/Com. 214-546-8846
HOLMAN IRRIGATION
Sprinkler & Valve Repair/ Rebuild Older Systems. Lic. #1742. 214-398-8061
MOW YOUR YARD $27
White Rock Landscaping 214-415-8434
MOWPROS Most Houses $25 Weekly. Reliable and Convenient. 214-669-7767
ORTIZ LAWNCARE Complete Yard Care. Service by Felipe. Free Est. 214-215-3599
PARADISELANDSCAPES.NET · 214-328-9955
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RONS LAWN Organic Solutions. Not Environmental Pollution. Landscape & Maintenance 972-222-LAWN (5296)
SPRINKLERS, LANDSCAPING, Stone Work, Drainage. Installed and Repaired. Call Kevin at 214-535-3352,Lic#7840. www.bigdirrigation.com
TAYLOR MADE IRRIGATION
Repairs, service, drains. 27 yrs exp. Ll 6295. Backflow Testing Cell-469-853-2326. John
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PEST CONTROL Keeping the environment, kids, pets in mind. Organic products avail. 972-564-2495
McDANIEL PEST CONTROL
Prices Start at $75 +Tax for General Treatment
Average Home, Interior, Exterior & Attached Garage Quotes for Other Services
214-328-2847
Lakewood Resident
PLUMBING
ALL PLUMBING REPAIRS • 972-742-3858 Master Plumber, M-17697 StaggsPlumbing.net
ANDREWS PLUMBING • 214-354-8521
# M37740 Insured. Any plumbing issues. 24 Hours/7 Days. plumberiffic@yahoo.com Sewers • Drains • Bonded
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ARRIAGA PLUMBING: Faucet, Sewer, Sink Repairs. Water/Slab Leaks. Shower Pans. Gas Testing. Remodels, Water Heaters, Stoppages. Insured. Lic 20754 214-321-0589, 214-738-7116
BLOUNTS PLUMBING REPAIR Rebuild or Replace. 45 yrs exp. Insured. 214-275-5727
JUSTIN’S PLUMBING SERVICE
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REPAIRS, Fixtures, General Plumbing, Senior Discounts. Campbell Plumbing. 214-321-5943
Slab Leak Specialists – inquire about reroute instead of jackhammering
• All Plumbing Repairs • Licensed/Insured 214-727-4040
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POOLS
ADAIR POOL & SPA SERVICE
1 month free service for new customers. Call for details. 469-358-0665.
MICHAEL’S POOL SERVICE
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LEAFCHASER’S POOL SERVICE
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Lock’s pool service
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A+ BBB RATED ROOFING CO. Ehlers Roofing. New/Repairs. 214-699-8093. Est. 1960
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BERT ROOFING INC.
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SOMEONE SMASHED AND GRABBED.
Amy Guisay likes to stay in shape. Like many, she finds White Rock Lake the perfect place for a nice run or bike ride. She is a regular, and on April 15 had gone about her routine as normal. She parked her car and locked it, did some stretching, and set off for a jog around the lake. Guisay knows cars are targets for theft, and hid her belongings as usual.
“The purse was on the floorboard under a towel in the rear of the SUV, with dark tinted windows and people around playing in the park,” she says.
The Victim: Amy Guisay
The Crime: Burglary of a motor vehicle
Date: Sunday, April 15
Time: Between 3:30 p.m. and 6:38 p.m.
Location: 900 block of Lawther
A few hours later, she returned to her car, and the crime was immediately clear. A side rear window was shattered, and glass shards littered the interior. Her purse was gone, along with all her cash, ID, credit cards and checkbook. She immediately called to cancel the credit cards, but someone had already used them a couple of times at gas stations.
The theft left Guisay with a creepy feeling and thoughts of not returning to the park for her runs — she may be considering a treadmill instead.
Dallas Police Officer Mitchell Gatsen of the Northeast Patrol Division says it is always important to be aware of your surroundings, and that some criminals may lie in wait looking for someone who leaves their belongings inside their cars. Whenever possible, it is important to avoid leaving any valuables at all in a car, he says.
“It’s possible someone watched [to see] if she put her belongings in the back after she arrived at the lake,” Gatsen says.
Sean Chaffin is a freelance writer and author of “Raising the Stakes”, obtainable at raisingthestakesbook.com. If you have been a recent crime victim, email crime@advocatemag.com.
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CRIME NUMBERS |
$85 2 900
Amount of cash a suspect came away with after robbing the Comerica bank on Garland Road, brandishing a machete; he had hoped for $45,000
SOURCE: Dallas Police Department
Number of times that Dallas Northeast Patrol officer Rafael Mendoza has been arrested, most recently in late April after brandishing a weapon at a driver in Mesquite; he was previously arrested on a domestic violence charge
Block of Winfrey Point Drive where someone broke into a parked car May 13, stealing two iPods, a cell phone, an ATM card and $50 in cash; the owner was on a dock near the lake when he heard the window break but could not get there in time to catch the criminal
IN THE BLACK OR IN THE BLEAK?
The city’s budget leaves much to be desired
The annual city budget charade kicks into high gear this month, with the final public workshop before the city manager’s proposed 2012-13 budget. Why a charade? Because the city is broke, and has been since before the recession started — only no one Downtown has ever really admitted that. Hence the idea that we’ll cut a few things here and there, and pretty soon — presto, like magic — things will be back to normal. Which, of course, has not happened. We’re actually worse off in a variety of
on the city’s website, and you can see for yourself.
A couple of caveats, first: The city changed the way it did the budget several years ago, so just because something was in the 2002-03 police budget, for example, doesn’t mean it was in the 2011-12 police budget, and vice versa. I made every effort to compare apples to apples, but the current budgeting process doesn’t make that easy (the cynical among us might think that was the point of the change). So there’s a chance I missed a budget item.
Second, I used usinflationcalculator.com to measure the 2002-3 numbers in 2012 dollars, which was current for the U.S. Consumer Price Index through April.
What I found was quite depressing:
system a decade ago, and just $20.3 million this fiscal year. That’s a decline of 11 percent, and a whopping 30 percent in real dollars. Even I, who have been ranting about the way the budget has gutted the library system, didn’t know it was that bad.
• If it seems like there are more potholes today than a decade ago, that’s because there probably are. We spent $69.3 million on street services in 200203, and $72.4 million this year. In real dollars, that’s an 18 percent decline. We do, however, have a signature bridge.
areas now than we were a decade ago — not that anyone Downtown would ever acknowledge that. But pore through the 2002-03 and 2011-12 budgets, available
• Overall spending increased from $1.7 billion a decade ago to $2.0 billion. Adjusted for inflation, the budget is 8.5 percent less in the current fiscal year than it was 10 years ago. We’re not even treading water — and with a tax rate that went from 51.11 cents per $100 assessed valuation in 2002-3 to 79.70 cents this year. That increase exceeded the inflation rate, which would have pushed the tax rate to only 65 cents per $100 assessed valuation.
• We spent $22.8 million on the library
• The numbers for code compliance seem like manna from heaven compared to the others. We spent $27.6 million in 2011-12, which was actually a 7.8 percent increase in real dollars over the sum in 2002-3. I was so excited to see actual growth that I didn’t check population growth, the number of new buildings, and the like over the past decade, all of which would increase the code compliance workload and negate the gain. Why ruin a relatively good thing?
• There was similar good news in the police budget (assuming I found all of the things that were in the 2011-12 figures that were located elsewhere in 2002-3) — a 4.3 percent increase in real dollars, assuming that the workload was about the same as a decade earlier.
Finally, the city manager’s office spent $1.9 million in 2002-3, and just $1.5 million this fiscal year. That’s a decline in real dollars of more than one-third, an actual contribution to the budget crisis.
Even I, who have been ranting about the way the budget has gutted the library system, didn’t know it was that bad.