HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE TO REPORT A CRIME TO DALLAS POLICE? 4
AUGUST 2019 VOLUME 15 NO. 8
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Retired, photography-loving Dallas architect shares tales of his retailer relatives and the joy of taking pictures. Page 12
LEONARD VOLK
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SCHOOLS
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Ursuline graduate promotes equity with technology 20
Sisters share passion for edgy jewelry 32
Opening doors to asylum seekers 42
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August 2019 Vol. 15, No. 8 prestonhollowpeople.com @phollowpeople @peoplenewspapers
2 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Letter to The Editor Editor’s note: A public meeting on Preston Center garage plans is scheduled for 6 p.m. Aug. 8 at the Walnut Hill Recreation Center.
Retired Architect Advocates For Preston Center Planning The redevelopment of the parking structure block in Preston Center West could be an asset or another missed opportunity. Question 1: How could the city, the engaged community, and the leadership at all levels have missed the opportunity to require setbacks for the recent development at the northeast corner of Preston Road and Northwest Highway like the setbacks at the southwest corner – to keep the intersection open? Question 2: If housing and office space are considered as well as a park, is this a “right location” to include affordable housing? Question 3: Who is the park for – shoppers and diners, the residential and office occupants, or for the Preston Center neighborhood at large; or can it be a park for all? (This is not a Klyde Warren Park location.) Fact 1: Density is not a four-letter word, and public transportation to serve Preston Center should be a major component in planning any development within the Preston Center neighborhood. Fact 2: Density at a destination site supports public transportation, and that
asks the question: Is the shopping mix at Preston Center a destination site? Recommendations: The sidewalks around the redevelopment of the block should be at least 12 feet wide and include trees and landscape furniture, and wider setbacks to support bus stops — suggesting a different traffic pattern; and the ramps for subgrade parking should be designed thinking light wells. The weather shelters for the ramps/light wells, elevators, stairs, and exhaust chimneys for the subgrade garage can be interesting features for the street level park. Yes, I’m pro street level park and pro subgrade garage. During construction, the city and DART can arrange for off-site parking locations and make the shuttle service from these locations to drop-off locations within Preston Center an enjoyable part of the shopping and dining experiences. One more time: Who is the park for? One more question: Will the city’s program for the redevelopment of Preston Center West attract the best solutions from our local professionals? Dallas can’t miss this opportunity to get it right, and that means thinking credit card stations for charging your car in the sub-grade garage as well as providing affordable housing. Howard C. Parker, American Institute of Architects fellow emeritus Dallas
Contents Crime ............................ 4 News ............................... 8 Community ................. 12 Schools ........................ 19 Real Estate Quarterly... 22 Business ....................... 32 Sports........................... 34 Society ......................... 36 Living Well & Faith..... 42 Weddings ..................... 45
Obituaries ..................... 46 Classifieds .................... 47
EDITORIAL Editor William Taylor Managing Editor Bianca R. Montes Staff Writer Timothy Glaze Sports Editor Todd Jorgenson Production Manager Melanie Thornton
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4 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Crime S KU L D U G G E RY of the MO NTH
MEGA-MILLIONS? Reported at 2:42 a.m. on June 22: Lottery tickets were stolen from the Texico at the intersection of Preston Road and Lyndon B. Johnson Freeway on June 21. No word on whether any of the tickets were winners.
BAD DEAL Reported at 11:47 a.m. July 2 from the 6000 block of Woodland Drive: A 61-year-old man was defrauded to the tune of a $20,000 during a July 1 vehicle transaction.
CAN’T MOW THIS Yard work is going to have to wait for a man whose truck and attached trailer full of lawn equipment were stolen on June 27 from the 5500 block of Preston Haven Drive.
CRIME REPORT JUNE 10 - JULY 7 JUNE 10
Reported at 5:55 p.m. a wouldbe thief damaged a pickup truck at a home in the 4800 block of Allencrest Lane during a failed attempt to remove the tailgate.
JUNE 12
Reported at 8:23 a.m.: The burglary of the Shell gas station at Preston Valley Shopping Center involved breaking a window and taking property. Reported at 11:08 a.m.: A vehicle was stolen from a home in the 6800 block of Orchid Lane.
JUNE 14
Reported at 8:21 a.m.: A criminal trespass warning was issued at Sparkman/Hillcrest Funeral Home on Northwest Highway. Reported at 10:35 p.m.: A robber brandished a gun and demanded money at Berry Naked in Inwood Village.
JUNE 15
Reported at 7:59 a.m.: A 27-year-old woman got a scare in the 8100 block of Lemmon Avenue when a robber grabbed her and took her property. Reported at 4:56 p.m.: A vehicle was stolen, and credit card fraud was also reported, from a home in the 4500 block of Dorset Road.
JUNE 18
Reported at 8:20 a.m.: A vehicle parked at a home in the
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Two different shoplifting incidents were reported on the same day from Ulta Beauty at Inwood Village: Merchandise thefts were reported at 3:33 and 4:22 p.m.
JUNE 21
Sometime after midnight, a theft occurred at an apartment complex at the 6800 block of Bandera Avenue. A 65-year-old woman had a cash bag stolen from her at 12:37 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ – Latter Day Saints on Willow Lane.
JUNE 22
After midnight, a vehicle parked in the 8600 block of Hillcrest Road was broken into and property was stolen.
JUNE 23
Reported at 5:39 p.m.: Property was stolen from a home at the 6200 block of Turner Way on June 17. Reported at 6:14 p.m.: Property was stolen from Sephora at Preston Royal Village.
JUNE 24
It was a troubling day at the Cuddly Kids Daycare on Lovers Lane. A 62-year-old woman there reported her vehicle stolen at 6:50 p.m. and then at 11:12 p.m. reported that someone kicked in the daycare door, causing damage
Is Reporting Crimes Too Much Trouble? By Tim Glaze
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5000 block of Thunder Road was forced into on June 17.
A
Preston Hollow man, who had his pickup twice targeted by criminals in one week, found his interactions with the Dallas Police Department also frustrating. Derick Schaefer, who lives in the 4800 block of Allencrest Lane, said it took him more than six hours to successfully file a report after some-
one attempted to remove the tailgate from his pickup truck on the evening of June 10. “The DPD made it very difficult,” Schaefer said. “I had to press the issue to get the report filed.” It bothered him to hear it would only be filed as “criminal mischief,” which Schaefer said he believed put less importance on the attempted theft in the eyes of the police. In fact, Schaefer said he didn’t speak face-to-face with an officer
to the door frame. Reported at 4:40 p.m.: A Plano man’s vehicle was stolen at a home in the 6000 block of Orchid Lane. Reported at 8:35 p.m.: Property was stolen from a Farmersville man’s unlocked vehicle while parked in the 4300 block of Ridge Road.
JUNE 25
It was a rough day for a 29-year-old woman at a home in the 6400 block of Tulip Lane: She reported her vehicle stolen at 3:09 p.m. and other property stolen at 6:45 p.m.
JUNE 26
Women’s perfume was stolen from Sephora at Preston Royal Village at 7:38 p.m. Shoplifting was reported from Ulta Beauty at Preston Forest Village at 10:06 p.m.
JUNE 29
Reported at 4:59 p.m.: a 22-year-old woman received a threatening telephone call at Arepa TX in Preston Royal Southwest.
JUNE 30
A criminal trespass warning was issued at 12:06 p.m. at Chipotle at The Market at Preston Forest.
an unlocked vehicle parked at the 8600 block of Edgemere Road.
JULY 1
A vehicle parked at Cooper Fitness Center on Preston Road had its windows broken and items stolen from inside at 7:32 p.m.
JULY 4
Reported at 9:28 a.m.: A burglary occurred July 3 at a home in the 6700 block of Joyce Way.
JULY 5
Reported at 8:48 a.m.: The back door of Preston Hollow United Methodist Church on Walnut Hill Lane was pried open by the hinges on July 2 and property was stolen. Reported at 12:39 p.m.: A vehicle backed into and damaged a parked vehicle at The Market at Preston Forest and then left without its driver leaving any information.
JULY 6
Reported at 7:22 a.m.: Copper was stolen from First Watch at Preston Forest Village on July 5. A criminal trespassing warning was issued at 4:22 p.m. at the 7-Eleven on Preston Road, near Preston Royal Village.
JULY 7
Reported at 5:43 p.m.: Property was stolen on June 29 from
Reported at 5:42 p.m.: A vehicle was stolen on July 5 from a home in the 4400 block of Caruth Boulevard.
until after a second failed attempt to take the tailgate. Schaefer is not the only person to feel the sting of a delayed response. At the beginning of 2019, the Dallas City Council learned that only 37 percent of calls in 2018 were handled by officers who arrived in less than eight minutes. The eight-minute response goal is for what the department classifies as Priority 1 calls; the goal for Priority 2 calls is 12 minutes. Priority 3 (30 minutes) and Priority 4 (60 minutes) calls can take even longer. Calls and emails to the department seeking comment for this story were not returned.
The state of the police department has been a constant issue for politicians more recently, with council members like Jennifer Staubach Gates – who oversees District 13, which includes Preston Hollow – promising to make department improvement a priority in her new term. That includes better pay, with the hope of attracting more officers, which in turn could cut down response times. In the meantime, residents like Schaefer may face continued delays depending on the severity of their calls. “I wonder how many other reports are not getting filed due to the difficulty in filing,” he said.
8 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
News
HOUSING PRICES POSE ‘UNACCEPTABLE’ BURDEN
Advocates: Dallas needs more homes working families can afford By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers One in six Dallas residents – whether renting or owning –- are paying more than half of their monthly income on housing. “That’s unacceptable,” said Dallas Habitat for Humanity’s Tosha Herron-Bruff. When so much money goes toward putting a roof over their heads, other essentials like groceries, medicine, and transportation are sacrificed, she explained. Herron-Bruffand and other affordability advocates participated in a panel discussion this summer and addressed what they saw as unsettling numbers for the local housing market. Dallas has only a 41 percent homeowner rate – the lowest of all major Texas cities – plus a more than 50 percent rental rate, indicating resident’s inability to purchase a home. There also is a shortage of approximately 20,000 housing units that would only bring Dallas back
COURTESY DALLAS HABITAT FOR HUMANITY
Affordable housing was discussed at a Dallas panel in June. to the minimum level of providing homes. The Affordable Housing Panel on June 27 also included representatives from the city of Dallas, MetroTex Association of Realtors, and Dallas Housing Authority. “We definitely had all the right people together to have a good discussion,” Herron-Bruff said. “I don’t think any of us thought we could walk away with a solution, though.” The city passed a new housing
policy in 2018, and Dallas Habitat has launched a program called Cost of Home – a hub to organize organizations and volunteers with a passion for helping the homeless get under a roof. And besides building the actual homes, Habitat is also expanding its outreach to educate residents on the ins and outs of the finances of buying. There is also hope, Herron-Bruff said, that the new faces of Dallas
government – including newly elected mayor Eric Johnson – will place a greater emphasis on helping the homeless. “We currently have that shortage of units in Dallas, and Habitat can’t build those by ourselves,” Herron-Bruff said. “But the panel proved to me that other people are motivated to do something about that. We need to put affordable inventory in place, and we need to incentivize developers to want to build affordable inventory in Dallas. But right now, the money just isn’t there.” One of the top focuses of the
neighborhoods of Dallas. “It seems like all of the inventory in Dallas is for the affluent,” Herron-Bruff said. “Right now, in Dallas, you see construction everywhere, but they all seem to be for fancy high-rises and expensive buildings. What’s going on behind those fancy new buildings? There are a lot of forgotten neighborhoods that are economically stressed.” Investing into those neighborhoods would address more basic needs for residents, such as schools, safe parks, libraries, and medical offices, panelists said. “We should be creating communities of opportunity, like neighborhoods with the resources needed to survive,” Herron-Bruff said. “Schools need to be stable; there should be adequate transportation – basic things for residents.”
Right now, in Dallas, you see construction everywhere, but they all seem to be for fancy high-rises and expensivebuildings. Tosha Herron-Bruff discussions on the panel was the need to economically revitalize the lower- and middle-class
10 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
The Not-So-Miracle Mile
City leaders seek ‘just right’ solutions o
BIANCA R. MONTES
W H AT ’ S I N A N A M E ? The late A.B. Cass Jr. developed a quarter-mile along Lovers Lane in the 1940s and called it the Miracle Mile, named after a shopping strip in Los Angeles that was transformed by a developer who saw the potential for the automobile to change settlement patterns. Sources: Dallas Morning News and KCET in California
By Bianca R. Montes People Newspapers
Remember the childhood story where Goldilocks enters the house of the three bears, eats their porridge, and lays in their beds? Young Goldilocks learns about the bears’ individual preferences, determining that one’s was always too much on one extreme (too hot, too hard), one’s was too much of the other extreme (too cold, too soft), and one’s was just right. Consultants hired by the city of University Park used that concept, called the Goldilocks principle, to steer the design process for revamping a stretch of Lovers Lane between Douglas Avenue and Lomo Alto Drive. The idea: Solutions are found within certain margins, as opposed to the extremes. In November 2018, council members approved a nearly $470,000 contract with Huitt-Zollars to create a master plan for portions of Preston Road, Hillcrest Avenue, and the Miracle Mile along Lovers Lane. Public Works director Jacob Speer said the proposed $7.2 million Miracle Mile renovation would address 60-something-year-old deteriorated pipes as well as the pavement – all the way to the base – which is crumbling apart. “You can’t fix that,” Speer said. “The question became, if we are going to cause disruption, what else should be done at the same time to gain additional benefits.” Parking, pedestrian flow, and traffic flow were all identified as crucial areas to address after the city and consultants analyzed traffic and parking patterns and met with Miracle Mile merchants, owners, neighbors, and Highland Park Independent School District representatives. Those issues were addressed in three design
IF YOU GO: University Park City Council members are expected to consider final design options to upgrade the Miracle Mile on Lovers Lane at their Aug. 6 meeting. concepts: a parking extreme, an access extreme, and the “just right” compromise. Adding significantly more parking, the consultants told the city, would come at a high cost: reduced access and creating cramped quarters (seen in option A). To provide more pedestrian access, including designated fire lanes on either side of the shopping center, Miracle Mile would also come at a cost: less parking (seen in option B). “Parking is the most evident issue; it’s literally staring you in the face,” Speer said. “All you see is parked cars. It’s the first and last thing you experience. “Part of the problem is that people do not view it as a shopping center, but instead two different areas (eastbound and westbound). If it felt more like a shopping center where people could cross from one side to the other, you’ve doubled your parking, even if nothing changes.” Christie Leinart, who has been shopping on Lovers Lane for more than a decade, said she sometimes has to turn around due to a lack of parking. “If (the city) is going to do anything here, they should add more parking,” she said. Other shoppers disagreed, saying they come to the Miracle Mile for “the vibe.” Merchants remain skeptical about the project. Rena Kim, of Yummy Donuts, questioned how small business owners would survive months of construction and whether additional parking would actually improve the situation. “Everyone wants more parking, but it’s not worth the time it would take for construction to finish,” she said. During a work session early July, most council members favored Option C, a compromise of the two extreme offerings, but wanted the consultants to address some of the access issues. The council is expected to review reconfigured designs at their next meeting and would have to sign off on a design before September to submit a proposal to Dallas County’s Capital Improvement Fund, which if approved could help share costs. Though, Speer added that the project is not contingent on being awarded any money from the county. Keyuri Parab and Jaxx Artz contributed to this story.
Parking is the most evident issue; it’s literally staring you in the face. All you see is parked cars. It’s the first and last thing you experience. Jacob Speer
on Lovers Lane A1 The parking aisle and
first entrance would be stretched toward the Dallas North Tollway, starting a block before the Shell Station at Lomo Alto Drive and Lovers Lane.
A2
A1
Turn lanes would be removed from Lovers Lane at Lomo Alto Drive and Armstrong Parkway. A three-way signal would replace current lighting at Armstrong Parkway.
A3 * All three options would
A2
create mid-block pedestrian crossings at Lomo Alto Drive and Armstrong Parkway.
A3
Option A: The Parking Option If there was a place to put a parking spot the designers have found it and used it in option A. By shrinking Lovers Lane a foot in each direction and extending parking nearly to the tollway; this option increases parking from 260 spots to 344. The option also increases ADA parking spots from eight to 17. What is lost with option A is access points for through traffic into surrounding neighborhoods; for example, there will be no travel lane access for Northbound Lomo Alto Drive, resulting in heavier turning movements at Armstrong Parkway. Turning lanes also will be removed at all access points, and the actual turn space will become extremely narrow.
B1 A reduction in parking would for designated If you’re a fanallow of elbow room, then this option will likely be your fire lanes both the eastbound favorite – butonyou might be alone seeing as most stakeholders and westbound parking aisle. disliked it. This option would keep Lovers Lane at 12-feet-wide in both directions; offer a landscaped median, create more room between parked cars and traveling cars, and B1 m a k e room for fire lane access on both the eastbound a n d westbound drive aisles. Currently, emergency vehicles must B2 close off Lovers Lane when called. However, all of that space comes at a cost: parking. While additional parking would be made on the north side, available spots would decrease B2 A landscaped median would stretch from 17 spaces. the Dallas North Tollway to Armstrong Parkway.
B1
Option B: The Access Option If you’re a fan of elbow room, then this option will likely be your favorite – but you might be alone seeing as most stakeholders disliked it. This option would keep Lovers Lane at 12-feetwide in both directions; offer a landscaped median, create more room between parked cars and traveling cars, and make room for fire lane access on both the eastbound and westbound drive aisles. Currently, emergency vehicles must close off Lovers Lane when called. However, all of that space comes at a cost: parking. While additional parking would be made on the north side, available spots would decrease 17 spaces.
C2 * All three options would create a
C1 All parking in the drive aisles would be horizontal,
continuous pedestrian path between the Dallas North Tollway and Douglas Avenue.
creating a broader path for drivers, wider sidewalks, and a buffer area between parking and travel lanes.
Option C: The Mix of Options C2
C1
Option C is the “not too hot, not too cold” design. It provides more openings and access than Option A and more parking than Option B. It is the closest to what is currently seen on Lovers Lane and increases parking spots from 260 to 285, 13 of which would be ADA compliant. This option shrinks Lovers Lane a foot in each direction, offers broader parking in the drive aisle and wider sidewalks and a buffer area between parking and the travel lanes. But, there is no room for a designated fire lane. ILLUSTRATIONS COURTESY OF HUITT-ZOLLARS
PA R K I N G S T U DY A parking study was conducted from March 4 to 11 on Lovers Lane. In 15 minute intervals, researchers looked at parking spots from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. Here are a few takeaways from the results. - Regardless of the time of day, people typically parked at Miracle Mile for 30 minutes or less. About 20% are parked up to an hour and 10% for up to an hour and a half. For weekdays
and weekends, there is a noticeable 10% of vehicles that were there for the duration of the study, three hours and four hours respectively.
time to a maximum total occupancy of 85%. On average, parking spaces in the Miracle Mile are occupied 78% of the time.
- The parking demand is highest around noon on weekdays and weekends and at 4:30 p.m. on weekdays. Many zones reached 100% occupancy. It was noted that at least 67% of parking spaces were occupied at any time of day. Occupancy increased during lunch
- Parking enforcement is not consistent.
- 41% of those surveyed said they want more parking spaces, and 35% said they wanted designated spots for businesses.
- A 10-question patron parking study conducted during the same time showed that 71% of the 37 people surveyed said they sometimes or usually find parking and 80% stated it
Note: Follow this article online to view the entire study.
takes them five minutes or more to find a parking space.
12 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Community
VOLK FOCUSES HIS LENS ON DALLAS
Did You Know Jayne Mansfield?
Son of legendary Dallas retailer embraced architecture, photography, volunteering
After authoring “Jayne Mansfield: The First Reality Star?” for The Hollywood Reporter, Erik Liberman is looking to do a book on the blonde bombshell f rom the Park Cities. Liberman, a Broadway and TV actor and writer, is looking for those who knew Mansfield (formerly known as Jayne “Honey” Peers) or her parents, Harry and Vera Peers, during her upbringing in the area in the early 1950s. Leave word for him at 213-375-8175 or visit erikliberman.org.
‘Seeing Red: Extinction and Other Mysteries Surrounding the Redhead’
Leonard Volk’s photos capture many sights in Dallas.
By William Taylor People Newspapers
L
eonard Volk has loved photography since Jan. 3, 1950. That day, he bought his first “good” camera – a Leica IIIc – in Limburg, Germany, during 14-months he spent traveling after graduating from Yale in 1949. Through the years, he has photographed sights in Europe, Japan, and all over Dallas. But along the way, he somehow missed out on shooting a few landmarks of particular personal importance: the Volk Brothers stores, including the George Dahl-designed, six-story downtown store in the 1800 block of Elm Street. “To me they were permanent, and I didn’t have to save that memory, because they would always be there,” he said, recalling how the downtown building was torn down without warning in 1980, the year after his father’s death. Volk, now 91 and retired from his careers in architecture and volunteering, talked during a Dallas Historical Society “An Evening With!” program this spring at Dallas Fair Park about his experiences as well as those of his namesake grandfather and father, Harold. His grandfather moved here from Baltimore in 1889, when Dallas was “a tough frontier town of perhaps 20,000 or 30,000
LEONARD VOLK
[and] still a destination for cattle drives,” and went to work for an Elm Street shoe store. Grandfather bought the store the next year and started Volk Bros. with older brother George.
Leonard, like his father Harold, went to Terrill Preparatory School in Dallas, and later to Yale University but didn’t share his father’s passion for retail, so studied architecture at MIT. Harold retired in 1965 and Volk’s was sold to Colbert in 1970. Leonard worked in architecture for 30 years, designing a hangar and industrial building for Texas Instruments, commercial remodeling at Highland Park Village, staff housing at McDonald Observatory, public-housing modernization in West Dallas, and many other projects. His volunteer work included Goals for Dallas, organizing a Community Design Center for neighborhood improvement, and leading the Dallas American Institute of Architects’ Affordable Housing Committee. In retirement, he has continued to focus on his photography and published Everyday, a book of essays and photographs available at Interabang Books. He considers it an open letter of encouragement to all photographers, professional and amateur, to explore the subjects they strongly care about. “Art, like flying, is freedom,” he said. “We are all artists if we allow ourselves that freedom.”
Art, like flying, is freedom. We are all artists if we allow ourselves that freedom. Leonard Volk After the opening of the six-story George Dahl-designed main building in 1930, Volk’s Bros. became a retail specialty store selling a variety of products including women’s apparel and hats, men’s furnishings, and gifts as well as shoes. In the early 1930s, Harold became president of the company, and with the opening of a Highland Park Village store in 1935, Volk’s became the first downtown Dallas retailer to open a suburban location. “His retailer friends all told him he was crazy to do this, that he would just take sales away from his downtown store, but Highland Park became a national record-setter for sales per square foot of store space and was enlarged twice in the ‘30s,” Leonard said.
By Stewart Cohen $40 dreameditionspress.com The Canadian-born photographer, who lives in the Bluffview area of Dallas, explores the notion that redheads are on their way to extinction with more than 300 photo sessions on two continents. He styled the portraits in his latest book to show how an extinct species might be displayed for posterity. “Once the word spread that I was shooting redheads, I had an overwhelming response from gingers around the world – each wanting to be immortalized as a part of the project,” Cohen said.
‘The MAD Entrepreneur: Making a Difference in the World, in Business and in Life’
By Phil Romano $22 philipjromano.com The nearly 80-year-old Dallas restaurateur, who lives between Bluffview and Preston Hollow, has created more than 25 concepts during his 50plus years in the industry and continues to own and operate eatZi’s Market & Bakery, Nick & Sam’s Steakhouse, Coal Vines Pizza, and other businesses. He wrote about “points of difference” when starting a business and his father’s lessons about making a difference in the world. “He told me to ‘be known near and far for what you are’ and that became a driving force behind my businesses and gave me the passion to make a difference in so many people’s lives,” Romano said. – Staff report
August 2019 13
Beating Heat and Robocalls
It’s that infernal part of the year when Dallasites scramble to exit for a bit of respite before the pace quickens. Increasingly, it’s even hard to go to the movies for a little getaway. Put your phone on vibrate and feel the buzz from the ubiquitous telemarketers. Don’t return missed calls without a message from a known source? Now spoofLEN BOURLAND ers are getting more conniving and using Dallas area codes. Vacationing without a phone is next to impossible, if not for calls, then for texting loved ones, taking photos, and sometimes as a wallet. Why the deluge of calls? For one thing, it’s easy to block nuisance calls to a landline with an answering machine, and many people no longer even bother with landlines. But does anyone actually buy those security systems with “free installation,” vacation packages with “great discounts,” credit cards with “0% interest rates” or worry about threats from the “IRS”? Sadly, the naïve do get played, but it turns out it doesn’t even matter if the phone calls go unanswered. Crooks create bogus companies, buy up blocks of unused cell numbers, create the robocall, and the launch begins. It seems a tiny fraction of a penny is charged by phone carriers for searching for the caller and credited back to the company doing the dialing. Those pennies turn into real money if enough dials are made. Adrian Abramovich from Miami was apprehended after making nearly 100 million robocalls. The FTC slapped a $120 million fine on him (yet to be collected). He’s a drop in the bucket. In April alone, it was calculated that 3.4 billion robocalls were made. There are no laws for prison time on the books. Yet. And most scammers are difficult to catch with call centers out of the country. An entire industry has sprung up to combat the problem. Among many phone apps, my personal favorite is Nomorobo. The national do not call registry (1-888-382-1222) can’t handle the problem alone. My carrier, AT&T, is trying. Every now and then I get a loud alert that a telemarketer is calling. I’d rather they just blocked it. I guess all you can do is pay it forward by annoying your congressman with several calls for political action. Then turn off the ringer and head for the hills. The heat will eventually end. Just not those calls. Len Bourland can be reached at lenbourland@gmail.com
16 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
‘Secret Dallas’ Author Explores Village, Snider Plaza, Lakeside Park
Every city has its quirky corners and haunting crevices that clutch dark secrets, illicit details, and peculiar facts. MARK STUERTZ Dallas is no exception: It’s an entanglement of idiosyncrasies and unexpected triumphs. Billed as America’s first shopping center and the prototype for shopping enclaves all over the U.S., Highland Park Village had its DNA stamped in 1906. That’s when land speculator John S. Armstrong purchased a 1,326-acre stretch bisected by an old cattle trail, now known as Preston Road. He envisioned an exclusive planned community north of the emerging city of Dallas. To bring his vision to life, Armstrong enlisted architect Wilbur David Cook, designer of Beverly Hills. Highland Park opened in 1907 as a separate township and was so named because the community was 130 feet higher than Dallas’ elevation and was enveloped in green space. Roughly a quarter century later, Highland Park Village emerged. It featured a unified architectural style with stores facing in toward an interior parking area. But completion of this luxe shopping destination took an agonizing 20 years as the Great Depression and World War II
exacted their toll. Today, the village features a central fountain, 10 acres of brick paths and walkways, lush landscaping, and the circa-1935 Highland Park Village Theatre—the first luxury suburban theatre in Texas. In 1938, an in-and-out cash revolution rocked the banking sector on the edge of Snider Plaza in University Park. That’s when the Hillcrest State Bank opened its doors on Hillcrest between Daniel and Haynie Avenues. The bank was a utilitarian masterpiece designed by architect George Dahl, the creative force behind the 26 signature Art Deco buildings erected in Fair Park for the 1936 Texas Centennial Exposition. Hillcrest was the first bank ever in the U.S. to feature a drive-through window — no doubt in recognition of the tens of thousands of registered motor vehicles wheeling over a 1,000 miles of paved and unpaved roads crisscrossing Dallas County at the time. Dahl’s classic design and the bank are long gone. Hillcrest State Bank became Texas Commerce Bank in 1981, and Chase Bank of Texas in 1998 before it was folded into Chase Manhattan Bank in 2000. Hillcrest’s low-rise replacement was vacated in 2012 and demolished in late 2017 to make way for a mixed-use development. Burrowed deep along Turtle Creek, Lakeside Park is 14-acres of meticulously
manicured grounds surrounded by an imposing legion of multi-million-dollar residences. The park is a showcase of walking paths, sitting benches, and ducks paddling over waters teeming with bass. Traverse the bridge over Turtle Creek Dam and witness the park’s charm offensive cast in stone: enormous teddy bears. Sculpted by Vermont artist J.T. Williams, the 10-foot-tall mother bear and three 4-foot-tall cubs were commissioned by the Harlan Crow family and gifted to Highland Park on Christmas Day, 1995. The bears were inspired by bronze sculptures that once graced the stores of FAO Schwarz, America’s oldest toy retailer. This is just a small dose of the secrets locked in the Big D’s urban landscape.
Mark Stuertz is the author of “Secret Dallas, a Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure”
SIGHT SEEING • The Plaza Solana scenic overlook on the West Lawther side of White Rock Lake was funded by Hampton Hodges, who envisioned it as a memorial to his first wife, Buffy. • The Museum of the American Railroad in Frisco has 1.8 acres, 2,000 feet of track, and 28 pieces of vintage rolling stock. • Yard Art at Abrams Road and Trammel Drive, where owner Gary Isett displays a cornucopia of the weird, the quirky, even the creepy — a cavalcade of kitsch, including a giant T-rex.
Are You Overwhelmed Caring For An Aging Parent? Here Is A NEW ACTION-BASED Report To Empower Your Success In This Situation – Read Below For Immediate Tips & Where To Learn More By: Leading Balance Expert, Dr. Jeffrey Guild, Physical Therapist Are you worried about the daunting realities that can come with taking care of an aging parent? Are you overwhelmed by how to get your parent the best care possible in this crazy healthcare system? Do you feel lost in this new position you’ve found yourself? Here are some helpful tips from a professional that works with families EVERY DAY to promote independence for aging individuals: 1) Demand The Rehab Team Train The Caregivers: Rehab is a valuable window of time. Use this window to make sure the caregivers/family are trained how to best work with the person being cared for. Once the rehab is done, it’s all on you! 2) Surround Yourself With A Great Team: It takes multiple specialists to take care of an aging person who is losing independence. Network, research, and seek guidance from others who have gone through the process to establish the right team. The right team working together will make this whole process SO MUCH EASIER! 3) Shop Around When Hiring A Caregiver: A caregiver can make or break a situation when taking care of your aging parent. You want someone with their heart in the right spot. Because this job is so important, you want to do your homework.
In other words, don’t just hire to fill the role. Hire the RIGHT PERSON! Want more information & solutions? My BRAND NEW special report provides Actionable Tips that will empower you to be successful when facing taking care of an aging parent. This FREE TIPS REPORT will provide you with the tools to be successful at promoting your parent’s independence and your success in managing the situation. And the best thing is it’s 100% FREE, and you’re under no-obligation to buy anything when you call. IMPORTANT: For obvious reasons, my offer to send you this report FREE must come with a restriction on the number I can mail out…so it’s critical that you call TODAY and request your free report now. What To Do Next? Call or Text: (214) 712-8242 (Leave a Message 24/7) & Choose: • Option 1: Have your FREE Report mailed or emailed to you • Option 2: Free Report + FREE In-Person Info Session/Discovery Visit Author Dr. Jeffrey Guild, Physical Therapist is owner of Optimove Physical Therapy & Wellness. You can contact him at (214) 712-8242 or email at J.Guild@ OptimoveDFW.com
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prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019  17
18 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Preston Hollow Resident Biking to Alaska for Cancer Research Ursuline graduate joins other UT students on 70-day, 4,000-plus-mile ride By Jaxx Artz
DeLaRosa attended St. Monica Catholic School and Ursuline Academy before moving to Austin. “I have been fortunate to live in great neighborhoods and attend great schools where my neighbors and friends are like family. I would love to move back to Dallas eventually,” she said.
People Newspapers Scroll Julie DeLaRosa’s Facebook page and notice her farmer’s tan darkening with each photo. The tan is caused by her cycling uniform, which she had worn for 30 days as she biked from Austin to San Francisco – yes, San Francisco. A senior at the University of Texas at Austin, DeLaRosa is part of Texas 4000 (T4K), an organization whose mission is to engage communities in the fight against cancer through organizing the longest annual charity bike ride in the world. During the 18-month program, UT students are chosen to raise money, volunteer in their community, and plan their ride to Anchorage, Alaska. That’s right, Alaska. “One of the biggest reasons we get on the bike every morning and continue to peddle even when the hills seem like they will never end is to spread hope that there will be a cure for cancer,” DeLaRosa said. Throughout the 70-day ride, DeLaRosa will put on programs in the communities she bikes through to talk about cancer research. Her team’s fundraising efforts go towards research grants and donations to facilities. The main pillars of T4K – hope, knowledge, and charity – are the reasons why DeLaRosa joined the organization. She’s definitely not doing it for the workout. “Getting on the bike every morning, even when my legs feel like they can’t go another mile, has been one of the most difficult parts,” she said. “I joined because I connect with the mission, not because I enjoy biking.” Another difficult part of her ride is being away from her family and community for over three months, something she has never done before. A Preston Hollow resident,
One of the biggest reasons we get on the bike every morning and continue to peddle even when the hills seem like they will never end is to spread hope that there will be a cure for cancer. Julie DeLaRosa
COURTESY PHOTOS
G E T U P D AT E S Check facebook.com/julie.delarosa.92 for daily posts as Julie DeLaRosa continues to ride through Aug. 9. Visit texas4000.org to donate. Julie DeLaRosa and other University of Texas cylists are using three routes to Alaksa. DeLaRosa is taking the Sierra Route through New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada on the way to California.
She has found a temporary family in her teammates and the people she’s met on the road. Communities have hosted movie nights for the riders and provided food and shelter as the 28 students make their way to Anchorage. After the ride, DeLaRosa will head back to Austin to complete her degree in social work. She plans on applying to law school. “I think the world is a beautiful place, but there are also times when it can be incredibly cruel,” she said. “We need to do better in acknowledging the injustices that take place.” Though she probably won’t bike for a while, DeLaRosa will take with her the lessons she’s learned and the beautiful things she’s seen on the 4,000-plus-mile ride. “My body is capable of so much more than I ever thought it was. And seeing the world from the seat of a bike is just incredible.”
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 19
Schools
COLLEGE FRIENDSHIP 101 Five tips from an award-winning SMU student researcher
W
hen SMU senior Page Hurley transferred to SMU in 2015, she didn’t know a soul, but she soon found new friends in her classes. Along the way, the psychology major found a topic for her senior research project – college friendship. Her research won the grand prize at SMU’s Research Day Colloquium, but the crowd of students and faculty members who gathered around Hurley to ask questions made it clear her research was more than academic. “Friendship is a personal topic,” Hurley said. “People can relate to it and apply the research to their lives.” With the help of Chrystyna Kouros, SMU associate professor of psychology, and her own research, here are Hurley’s five research-based tips for making and keeping friends in college: • Friendship is good for you. Better quality friendships can increase psycho-
logical well-being and decrease negative emotions like anxiety and depression. • Students with close friends are more likely to stay in college. College students who report having close friends in college are more likely to attain their academic goals. One study found a person whose close friend left college within the first two years also was more likely to leave college. • Invest in friendships. Face-to-face interactions do matter. Individuals who engage in frequent online social interactions report being more lonely and unhappy. Those who reported making lifelong friends in college attributed their success to mutual investment in the friendship and similarity between the two friends. So put down the phone and talk to people. • Friends with benefits? Maybe not. Research suggests that being “friends with benefits” – friends who also have casual sex –can be detrimental to psychological well-being,
COURTESY SMU
Page Hurley fields questions from other SMU students about her prize-winning research on friendship. particularly among women. Make sure friends share similar expectations. • The key to maintaining good, quality friendships? A successful relationship – one that is related to better psychological well-being – is one that meets the needs of both people. Check in with your friends to make sure their needs are being met, and speak up to your friends if your own needs are not. That way, your lines of communication are open and you can make sure you are both benefiting from the friendship.
COURTESY PHOTOS
Troops 68, 518 Introduce New Eagle Scouts
Dmitri Cary
Colllins Grushey
These Boy Scouts have earned the Eagle Scout rank, Scouting’s highest. Doing so typically takes several years and requires earning a
John Power
Nico Zevallos
combination of 21 or more badges plus a special project.
Troop 68
Highland Park United Methodist Church
Harris Jones
Dmitri Nicholas Cary, 17, the son of Dave and Stacy Cary of University Park, attends Highland Park High School. His Eagle project: building two large
Page Hurley graduated May 18 from SMU with three majors – psychology, chemistry and biology, and a minor, neuroscience. The Reno, Nevada, native planned to put her research into practice soon when she moves to Waco, to continue her studies as a doctoral student in Baylor University’s psychology and neuroscience program. “I don’t know a single person there,” she said. – Staff report
wooden chests and filling them with toys for Dallas Medical City Children’s Hospital. Collins Grushey, 17, the son of Douglas and Krissy Grushey of University Park, attends Highland Park High School. His Eagle project: painting and constructing superhero-themed stage backdrops for the Dallas Children’s Theater Center. John “Jack” Power, 16, the son of Kate and Will Power of Dallas, attends the Shelton School. His Eagle project: redoing the landscaping for the physical therapy area of Operation Kindness.
Nico Zevallos, 16, the son of Meredith and Pedro Zevallos of University Park, attends Highland Park High School. His Eagle project: making improvements to the top of the dog pen fence at Dog and Kitty City.
Troop 518
Park Cities Baptist Church Harris Jones, the son of Miriam and George Jones, attends Lakehill Preparatory School. His Eagle project: building video game kiosks for use by patients at Dallas’s Scottish Rite Hospital for Children.
20 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Ursuline Graduate Takes Love of Service to UT, Microsoft Jacqueline Gibson promotes equity within and through technology By Jaxx Artz
People Newspapers I met Jacqueline Gibson at Ursuline Academy, where she was a year ahead of me. She was recruiting members for the Sewing for Others club, and though I didn’t share her passion for sewing, she still waved to me in the halls. I hadn’t contacted Jackie since she graduated in 2015, but that’s what Facebook is for. I’ve liked her photos, been impressed when she announced she’d scored an internship at Microsoft, and when a classmate told me about the work she’s done to make technology more equitable, I wanted to reach out.
I felt alone. It would’ve been great to have a mentor or friends with a similar background for support. Jacqueline Gibson My first question made her laugh. “I loved Sewing for Others! And I kept up with my crafting,” she said. Jackie’s philanthropic spirit flourished in Austin, where she joined service organizations like Delta Sigma Theta and continued making hats for people in need.
So how does computer science fit into her passion for service? It all started at Ursuline, a school she didn’t expect to love. “I didn’t like that it was an all-girls school, but when I went to the open house, I just knew that I wanted to be part of Ursuline. It seemed magical,” Jackie said. As she sought to embody the Ursuline motto of Serviam (I will serve), Jackie realized that, surprisingly, she could apply service to technology. “I took Mr. Poellot’s web development class and found myself drawn to the curriculum. We created websites for our community, and it showed me how something as simple as writing a few lines of code can make an impact.” After attending UT’s computer science camp First Bytes, she realized technology was the perfect fit. When she started college, though, Jackie found that black students were sprinkled throughout the computer science department without any unification. “I felt alone. It would’ve been great to have a mentor or friends with a similar background for support.” Inspired by Ursuline to be a change-maker instead of someone who accepts what’s been dealt to her, Jackie created UT’s Association of Black Computer Scientists to offer students mentorship and support. Since then, she’s seen the community grow. “There is a larger class of black students,” she said. “When they come in, they
COURTESY PHOTOS
Jacqueline Gibson created an association at the University of Texas to help mentor other black computer science students. have built-in mentors. We’ve also seen a higher number of black students get internships.” With degrees in computer science and African and African diaspora studies, Jackie uses an interdisciplinary perspective to “create equity in society through technology.” She applied to Microsoft’s internship program her freshman year. “Their mission is to empower every person and organization to achieve more and create technology for good.” After graduating in May, Jackie returned to Microsoft as a full-time employee on the Accessible Development team
and is working on a tool to scan webpages to ensure they are accessible to people with low vision. It’s familiar work on familiar ground, but Jackie can’t help but feel nervous. “It will be weird to be far away from my family, but if something doesn’t challenge you, it won’t change you.”
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 21
Northeast Texas Girl Scouts Honor Gold Award Winners The Girl Scouts of Northeast Texas presented Gold Award pins this spring to 150 girls from the region, including several in Preston Hollow. Girl Scouts’ most prestigious designation recognizes girls in grades nine through 12 who demonstrate extraordinary leadership through intensive, multi-year projects that have sustainable impact in the community and beyond.
Troop 45
Ruthie Keyes, the daughter of Kevin and Laura Keyes, attends Ursuline Academy of Dallas. Her project: creating a cookbook of tested recipes to exclude ingredients that can post common dietary issues for those who stay at the Ronald McDonald House.
Troop 62
Chloe Johnson, the daughter of Jill and Sean Johnson, attends The Hockaday School. Her project: fulfilling a request for fleece blankets at the Ronald McDonald House so that each family staying there receives a blanket to provide comfort to their child and setting up a website on how to make the blankets.
Caroline Podvin, the daughter of John F. and Stefani Podvin, graduated from Ursuline Academy of Dallas. Her project: making presentations about how to avoid, identify, and recover from concussions and raising money for safety helmets for Children’s Medical Center.
Troop 839
Caroline Zagielski, the daughter of Mark and Christine Zagielski, graduated from Ursuline Academy of Dallas. Her project: working on Mondays with second-graders at Preston Hollow Elementary, where she used healthy snacks as a way to explain how the food they consumed impacted the way they slept, looked, felt, and thought.
Troop 3218
Castanheira, attends Townview Talented and Gifted Magnet Center. Her project: creating a reading area for the children and parents at The Family Place by building bookshelves, categorizing more than 1,000 books by age group, and arranging for the agency to receive Barnes & Noble’s book donations.
Chloe Johnson
Sophie Gilmour
Caroline Podvin
Dominique Castanheira
Caroline Zagielski
Emma Eades
Troop 8775
Emma Eades, the daughter of Tom and Suzanne Eades, graduated from Parish Episcopal School. Her project: designing and building a waterproof ball pit used for the SPCA of Texas animals in need of behavioral therapy and creating an instruction manual and video for the shelter’s adoption software, Shelter Buddy.
Sophie Gilmour, the daughter of Colleen Gilmour, graduated from The Hockaday School. Her project: working with the Nexus Recovery Center rehab facility to install a children’s garden and play space to encourage outdoor play, academic skills, and creativity.
Troop 8537
Dominique Castanheira, the daughter of Roberto and Judy
Ruthie Keyes
22 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Real Estate Quarterly BUILT WITH BACKYARD LIVING IN MIND
Endangered midcentury modern homes still loved by many
SHARON ADAMS
ALEX LYDA
ALEX LYDA
FROM LEFT: Marla Boone, Patty Pritchett, and Cele Johnsen tour midcentury homes in the Park Cities.
By Alex Lyda
Special Contributor
T
SHARON ADAMS
he midcentury modern structures that once defined many neighborhoods are increasingly threatened by soaring lot values, unmitigated disposable income, and North Texas’ perpetual drive to build new. “The culture of Dallas is to always be looking forward and never in the rearview mirror,” said Mark Lamster, architecture critic of the Dallas Morning News, at a recent preservation symposium hosted by SMU. The midcentur y modern architectural and interior design period rose to prominence in the early and the mid-1950s and began a resurgence at the turn of the century. Its characteristics include: ample windows, open floor
plans, and advances in post and wooden beam construction that created high ceilings with exposed rafters, eliminating the need for bulky support walls while allowing more light through large glass panels. Think Frank Lloyd Wright’s cantilevered “Fallingwater” house in Pennsylvania or the more pedestrian Southern California house seen in the iconic 1970s sitcom The Brady Bunch. Architect and University Park councilmember Ta y lor Armstrong led a tour this spring for mid-century modern fans, homebuyers, and preservationists alike. Two of the houses on Park Cities Preservation and Historical Society (PCPHS)
The days of Webergrilling and backyard barbecues were not really seen until after [World War II], and the way these houses are built is an extension of that. Taylor Armstrong
tour stand side-by-side in the 3500 block of Villanova Street. Their giveaway characteristic: carports – basically open-air garages – adjoining squat single-story houses made conspicuous only when compared to newer homes across the street. “The orientation is more toward a life that plays out in the backyard, not the street,” Taylor said. “The days of Weber-grilling and backyard barbecues were not really seen until after [World War II], and the way these houses are built is an extension of that.” Former dancer Emily Bywaters Cochran invited the 20 tour members into her expansive living room that holds not one but two grand pianos, and renown oil-oncanvas paintings bathed in plenty of natural light afforded by design. “We’ve had 50 people who have been over for dance parties and music,” said the Julliard-trained dancer who once performed to international audiences in New
York, Paris, and Washington. “Some great and memorable evenings we’ve had here, made possible by the layout.” Alex Jodry, 33, a bank credit officer and prospective first-time buyer, wants to buy a midcentury modern, so he and his wife (who studied historical preservation at Baylor) “can actually have a backyard,” he said. How many midcentury moderns young people like Jodry will have to choose from in the coming years is the question, said Rick Brettell, the Margaret McDermott Distinguished Chair of Art and Aesthetics Studies at UT Dallas. “We may not be saving them, but they are selling like hotcakes,” Brettell said. “The good news is that inexpensive houses are not at risk. The difficulty is midcentury modern houses in high-value areas [where teardowns are occurring]. I wish, I truly wish that the Park Cities could be designated a national historic district, but I don’t see it happening anytime soon.”
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 27
A Dallas Difference Maker: Virginia McAlester
Author’s takes on residential architecture and preservation remain relevant By Alex Lyda
Special Contributor Next time you pass any of the remaining prewar brick ramblers being replaced by post-modern cubic behemoths, you may want to skim through A Field Guide to American Homes to better understand what you’re actually seeing.
Virginia was meticulous in describing exactly how to go about establishing a historic district. John C. Waters As the veritable bible for identifying older houses, the book is the equivalent of a bird-watchers’ guide for the residential architecture encountered not just in Dallas, but across America. “The Guide,” as it is known, is the work of the “human embodiment of preservation” in American residential architecture, experts say: Dallas’ own Virginia McAlester. McAlester was honored this
COURTESY PHOTOS
Virginia McAlester in 1972 founded the Historic Preservation League, now known as Preservation Dallas.
spring at a symposium on historic preservation at Southern Methodist University, which hosted a distinguished panel of design and
architecture leaders to discuss her efforts to protect Dallas architectural history from the perpetual forces seeking to remake it. “Dallas is one of the few large cities in America where one person can make a difference,” the late Margaret McDermott told UT Dallas art professor Richard Brettell when he first moved here
as a “callow kid” from Chicago, Brettell said. “Virginia McAlester was one of those persons who has made a difference.” McAlester’s landmark field guide is the standard reference on American residential architecture across eras and regions, and she has been recognized by the American Library Association and the National Trust for Historic Preservation for her scholarship. Before publishing the book, McAlester was the founder of the Historic Preservation League in 1972, now Preservation Dallas, which has helped designate and sustain more than 4,000 landmarks. It is a model adopted by many cities for historic preservation. In 1984 she created the advocacy group Friends of Fair Park, which successfully petitioned to protect and preserve the permanent buildings in Fair Park, site of the 1936 Texas Centennial, now home to the State Fair of Texas and a broad range of museums and cultural venues. Her many awards include receiving the key to Dallas in 2014, an American Institute of Architects honorary membership, and the Friends of Fair Park Spirit of the Centennial Award in 2017. In
May, McAlester added another accolade to the list: an honorary doctor of arts from SMU, in recognition of her life’s work. McAlester, who was not able to attend, watched remotely by live video as the auditorium erupted in applause and her honorary degree was conferred. Her other books include Great American Houses and Their Architectural Styles, A Field Guide to America’s Historic Neighborhoods and Museum Houses: The Western States, and Homes of Park Cities, Dallas: Great American Suburbs. Other panelists at the symposium included John C. Waters, who pioneered preservation legislation in the state of Georgia and has written preservation plans for numerous cities. “Virginia was meticulous in describing exactly how to go about establishing a historic district,” Waters said. “And it is a real tribute to Virginia that the things she wrote a while ago are still useful today.”
LEARN MORE Visit virginiamcalester.com for a biography and information about her books.
28 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Margaret Chambers: Creating A Winning Look
Interior designer talks trends, don’ts, white walls, and HGTV By William Taylor
changed how homeowners think about interior design. In the beginning of my career, using an interior designer was the only way to furnish a fine home. The majority of people think it’s so simple to put together a room on their own and order everything online, but in reality, a designer has much better sources that are only available to the design trade and can rectify the problems that arise with vendors and shipping. On the plus side, we can more easily source items from all over the world, and that allows us to be more creative.
People Newspapers
The owners of a 92-year-old Spanish Colonial wanted their master to double as a secondary, private living space. Margaret Chambers and Allen Keith of Chambers Interiors & Associates Inc. delivered a room full of custom pieces to fit the space’s unusual dimensions, disguise the desired small refrigerator and coffee bar, and balance competing style preferences – the husband likes contemporary; the wife likes traditional.
Tell us about your favorite current design trend. I love the eclectic mix. We are no longer doing “period” rooms in homes where everything is French or English. Once we stopped doing that, antiques went out of style, but now they are coming back. Nowadays, we mix in a few good antiques with modem furniture and art. I also love textiles and beautiful inlaid furniture from India that is trending right now.
Nowadays, we mix in a few good antiques with modem furniture and art. Margaret Chambers “The long length of the room was balanced by incorporating more seating than is in most masters,” Chambers said. “Both clients were big readers (so loved) an additional reading area among the tree-top views of their historic neighborhood.” The result brought the Chambers’ team two coveted prizes from the Dallas Chapter of the American Society of Interior Designers. The room won best of show residential out of 106 entrants as well as first place master bedroom transitional/ traditional. Another Chambers’ design won first place in dining room transitional/traditional. We caught up with Chambers to get her thoughts on the direction of interior design and the latest trends in the industry. What in the interior design industry has changed the most since you began your career four decades ago? The Internet and HGTV have really
NATHAN SCHRODER
GOLDENLIGHT CREATIVE
TOP: The custom bed in this award-winning design features perfectly-sized headboard posts to appropriately match the low walls beneath the molding of the angled tray ceiling and fit into the room through a narrow hallway and arched vestibule. Low posts on the footboard allow for watching television from the bed. LEFT: Margaret Chambers and her team have worked on interior design projects across North Texas, including in Highland Park, University Park, and Preston Hollow.
We always hear about the value of kitchen and bath remodeling, but what’s another change a homeowner can make that would really add value and appeal? Crisp white walls (or slightly warm white depending on the other architectural elements in the home). Everything looks good with white; that’s why museums and galleries use white. It really brightens up a home and brings it up to date. When you walk into a pre-redo Preston Hollow or Park Cities home, what’s most likely to cause you to shake your head? Hand-scraped hardwood floors, dark stained libraries, and old speckled granite countertops. We were overloaded with all of these in the 2000s. I also don’t like wall-to-wall carpet and puddling draperies.
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 29
With Ample Supply, Home Buyers Expect Their Money’s Worth Home shoppers in the Park Cities and Preston Hollow should have more options to consider but still expect to pay plenty to live in the stately homes that characterize the area. Active listings are up along with the months’ supply of homes, and although homes are staying on the market for more than two months, median prices remain high, though not much different than they’ve been during the last year, according to the most recent statistics from North Texas Real Estate Information Systems Inc. While buyers may not be paying less, they are expecting to get their money’s worth in style. “Buyers are super picky these days. So if you plan to sell, it pays off to work with a Realtor in advance
to prep your home because we know what buyers are looking for,” said Marti Voorheis, a Dave-Perry-Miller agent. “The seller who puts in the effort before talking to a Realtor may spend money and effort in the wrong places,” she said. “Sometimes, updated pieces can elevate a home’s visual appeal. In other cases, it’s important to freshen the paint or even more involved remodeling. Otherwise, you may be looking at sitting on the market longer or reducing your price. The bottom line is that the buyers want it perfect.” Fit For a Prince? While the market boasts many homes that look fit for a prince, at least one has a letter to prove it. We wrote online in May about
COURTESY PHOTOS
Completed in 2001, 3509 Crescent Ave. includes a 4,671-square-foot main house, a 730-squarefoot guest quarters above the three-car garage, and a separate cabana bath on the south side of the pool. the grand home at 3509 Crescent Avenue in Highland Park. It remains listed by Perry-Miller Streiff Group for almost $5 million. Scott Merrill designed the house to meet the desires of a man who developed an eye for well-designed 1920s English residential architecture while bicycling as a
MARKET NUMBERS: PRE STON HOLLOW Month
Closed Median sales price
boy to Bradfield Elementary School and Highland Park Village. Prince Charles, a student of architecture, wrote Merrill after reviewing the American architect’s portfolio. “All I can say is that I am enormously impressed – particularly by your enviable ability to
produce such an incredibly ‘appetizing’ Arts and Crafts feel to your buildings,” the prince said. “This is such a rare gift in today’s soulless world and, for me, was best demonstrated in your Highland Park house.” Compiled by William Taylor and Tim Glaze
MARKET NUMBERS: PARK CITIE S
Price per Sold to Active Days on Months’ sq. foot list price listings market supply
Month
Closed Median sales price
Price per Sold to Active Days on Months’ sq. foot list price listings market supply
June 2018
73
$1,058,500
$316
94%
338
53
5.7
June 2018
94
$1,316,680
$390
96%
391
64
6.4
Sept. 2018
60
$995,000
$270
96%
349
70
5.8
Sept. 2018
50
$1,100,000
$390
95%
363
100
5.7
Dec. 2018
56
$1,140,000
$341
94%
277
91
5
Dec. 2018
58
$1,125,000
$396
95%
258
74
4.3
March 2019
63
$821,250
$297
96%
393
56
7.2
March 2019
62
$1,357,620
$392
96%
418
60
7.2
June 2019
70
$997,000
$273
96%
446
65
8.2
June 2019
97
$1,492,500
$387
95%
435
71
7.4
Source: North Texas Real Estate Information Systems Inc.
30 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
HOUSE OF THE MONTH 3900 Potomac Avenue
T
his one-of-a-kind, beautifully updated Tudor home sits on almost a half-acre corner lot in the heart of Dallas. Listed by the Thayer Braymer Team with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, this lushly landscaped corner lot offers a secluded sport court, fire pit, putting green and large covered entertainment patio. Located near the Dallas Country Club,
COURTESY COLDWELL BANKER
this exquisite home has four bedrooms, four full and one-half baths and a twocar garage. The kitchen boasts fantastic views of the backyard and easy access to the family room. All the bedrooms are upstairs, including the oversized master with vaulted ceilings. The master bathroom is stunning, recently updated in 2016 with a walk-in shower and freestanding soaker tub.
31 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
The Midcentury Ranch, Reimagined
THE PERRY-MILLER STREIFF GROUP
Private Estate in Strait Lane Estates
DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE
Perry-Miller Streiff Group lists updated home with pool
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN URBAN
5703 Llano Avenue 3 Bedrooms | 2.1 Baths | 3,009 SqFt Offered For $739,000 6722 Norway Road, represented by Tessa Mosteller and Lucinda Buford for $1,495,000 This exceptional Midcentury Modern ranch home — thoroughly updated for today — is in coveted Preston Hollow, at 6722 Norway Road. The three-bedroom, four-bath, single-story house is just blocks from Preston Center and minutes from downtown Dallas. Its cleaned-lined and open spaces flow from formal to casual settings. The kitchen is a chef’s dream, with white marble countertops and dual sinks with cinematic views of trees and foliage. A breakfast bar means fun and easy conversations between the open kitchen and family room. The family room boasts great utility and versatility, and features a stone-wall fireplace, walls with hidden closets for extra storage, a full wet bar and glass sliding doors that lead to the private backyard. The master suite comes with a private sitting area and custom closets. The spa-like master bath is a perfect escape from the busy city, while still living in the heart of it. Outside, enjoy those Texas summer nights in the covered sitting area, with views of magnolia trees and the sparkling pool — but of no other homes in sight. To see all the exceptional homes, ranches and land offered by Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty — in North Texas and around the world — go to briggsfreeman. com.
EBBY HALLIDAY REALTORS
GRAND VIE SHOWCASES LAKE PROPERTIES
4827 Kelsey is a private estate property in the heart of the Strait Lane Estates area being offered for $2,895,000. One of the most private and serene estate properties in the heart of the coveted Strait Lane Estates area, 4827 Kelsey is being offered for $2,895 ,000. Sited on 1.17 acre lot in the midst of some of the finest homes and estates in Dallas, this elegant and timeless residence offers six bedrooms, six and one half baths, formals, a study, three living areas, sport court, pool, three-car garage, and 7,073 square feet. The kitchen opens to an oversized living area with a wall of French doors and windows that overlook a cozy, covered back patio with fireplace and parklike backyard. Incredible downstairs master suite with vaulted ceiling has a lovely view of the backyard and boasts a gorgeous marble master bathroom. Classic tasteful finishes are visible throughout including a recently installed roof in January 2019. Contact Courtney Jubinsky (courtney@daveperrymiller.com) or Ryan Streiff (ryan@daveperrymiller. com) for more information or visit DPMFineHomes. com.
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
Top Producers Choose Allie Beth Allman & Associates
Tucked away in a hidden North Dallas neighborhood on a corner lot just off Forest Lane near Hillcrest Road, is 6415 Forestshire Drive (6415forestshire.daveperrymiller.com). Offered by Karen Fry and Ryan Streiff for $1,549,000, the completely renovated four-bedroom home with three full baths, two half-baths and a fabulous pool area for entertaining. After taking in the impressive drive-up and multi-level exterior, step into the two-story foyer of the 4,611-square-foot (per tax) home to see a floating stairway. Open-concept living and dining spaces with high ceilings, a light paint palette and large expanses of hardwood flooring, further enhance the sense of spaciousness. Windows galore provide natural light to show off its many luxe amenities. Other noteworthy features: a remodeled kitchen with high-end appliances, first-floor master suite, large study with balcony, 50-year metal roof, three-car garage and whole-house audio system. To schedule a showing, contact Fry at 214288-1391 / kfry@daveperrymiller.com or Streiff at 469-371-3008 / ryan@daveperrymiller.com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate (daveperrymiller.com) is a division of Ebby Halliday Real Estate, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, with four locations that specialize in Preston Hollow, Park Cities, North Dallas, Lakewood, East Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Farm & Ranch properties.
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
Allie Beth Allman & Associates Reports Strong Market, Increased Activity
New Orleans style M Streets area home on the best corner in the neighborhood! Walk to lower Greenville shops, restaurants and Trader Joe’s from this home with designer touches and updates throughout. Fully renovated kitchen includes pro series stove with cut marble tiles above, beveled subway tiled walls, Carrera marble counters, waterfall island, and coffee bar in breakfast area. Large Master suite with Thibaut wallpaper and balcony, second bedroom currently used as gym, large third bedroom with sitting area or office currently used as art studio. 5 inch white oak floors and custom lighting throughout. Cabana in side yard, extra storage in garage. Two new oversized AC systems added last year. For more information please contact Mary Alice Garrison (214) 543-7075 or Rob Williams (805) 637-5699.
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
New Report Confirms Impact of Home Staging
Homeowners looking to sell may want to pay attention to the way their property is presented. According to a recent report from the National Association of Realtors (NAR), 83 percent of agents representing buyers said staging a home made it easier for clients to visualize a property as their future home. Additionally, about quarter of those agents reported the way a home was presented increased the amount buyers were willing to spend. Real estate professionals have long preached the value of staging. It is a premarketing activity in which a home is decorated to make it appealing to more potential buyers. The numbers indicate that touches like paint and minor carpentry can have an enormous impact. Research also shows that most today’s homebuyers want a property that is move-in ready. Therefore, despite what they may have seen on TV, sellers should not expect buyers to be in the market for a “fixer-upper.” The Internet has completely changed the way people shop for homes. Today, most buyers have already conducted extensive online research before ever stepping foot in a home. If buyers don’t see what they want online, they are unlikely to give the home a second thought. To find a real estate consultant, visit alliebeth.com
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN The five-bedroom home on approximately 36 acres at 4370 Palm Drive (4370palm.ebby.com) at Cedar Creek Lake is offered by Liz Tyler-Loncar for $7,580,000. In addition to featuring some of Dallas-Fort Worth’s premier luxury properties, the 27th edition of Grand Vie: Luxury in Living magazine also includes a special section highlighting nearby lake properties. Nothing brings family together like a lake home a short distance from your primary residence. Long, relaxing weekends await at the remarkable lake homes featured in the pages of Grand Vie, the luxury-home publication of Ebby Halliday Realtors and Fort Worthbased Williams Trew Real Estate. The 27th edition of Grand Vie also offers a plethora of inspiring editorial content, including “At Home with Cary Deuber,” featuring a Q&A with the Bravo Real Housewives of Dallas star; “Weekend Getaways: Austin,” offering travel advice for a visit to Texas’ most-Instagram-able city; “Houses of Art,” featuring some of the area’s top cultural events of the season; and special sections for lake, farm, ranch and recreation properties. Also in the spring/summer edition: Partner and designer at IBB Design Fine Furnishings, Shay Geyer, shares insight into how to revitalize your kids’ room this summer. To view the digital version of Grand Vie, visit grandviemagazine.com. Visit the award-winning, mobile-friendly ebby.com.
The closing of Virginia Cook Realtors meant some of Dallas’ best agents were eager for new homes. They wanted a professional home committed to first class service with a proven record of sales success. So far, 13 of them have chosen Allie Beth Allman & Associates in the Spring, joining several others who came prior to the announced closure. “We will miss our business friendship with Virginia Cook,” Allie Beth Allman & Associates General Manager Keith Conlon said. “The Virginia Cook culture matches up really well with our culture and the same boutique feel. The agents we’ve added are professional, knowledgeable, service-oriented, highly trained good people that will fit and grow their business with our brand.” Among others who have recently come over are Teri LaJone, David Short, Kimberly Cocotos, Kristen Scott, Julie Haymann, Lauren Savariego, Simone Jeanes, Bob Spurlock, Carolyn Pearson, Maureen Frieze, Stephanie Davenport, Laura Graves, Greg Pape, Lori Sparks, Mayo Redpath, Jill Noland, Pam Metzger, Rennie Meriwether and Tric Sohosky. According to Conlon, each one is a tremendous asset to the team that will help Allie Beth Allman & Associates continue to be Dallas’s luxury market leader. Learn more about these agents and the Allman firm at alliebeth.com
Allman Leads Park Cities Home Sales All signs point to a continued strong real estate market in Dallas and North Texas. Allie Beth Allman & Associates agents report greater numbers of people looking to capitalize on increased housing inventory and favorable mortgage rates. The year began slightly off 2018’s record setting pace. Many consumers were concerned about the government shutdown and stock market volatility. Now that those fears have subsided, the housing market has regained stability, reflected in steadily climbing sales. The Federal Reserve’s decision to leave interest rates low should keep mortgage rates optimal for buyers over the next several months. Millennials appear to be seeking out homes in larger numbers. As their families expand, many say they want more space and a neighborhood setting. Oftentimes they are surprised to discover that they can buy a home and make payments comparable or lower than their apartment rents. While the market is favorable for buyers, sellers can still expect to get what they ask for if their property is priced correctly. Buyers are increasingly unwilling to purchase a home if it needs repairs. Realtors report time and time again that homes with even moderate upgrades move faster and attract higher offers. To find a real estate consultant, visit alliebeth.com
Allie Beth Allman & Associates continues to lead all other brokerage firms in home and estate sales in the Park Cities. According to MLS data for the first three months, Allman had an almost 27 percent share of the market, handling 44 transactions in the premier neighborhoods of Highland Park and University Park. Here are two Park Cities homes you may want to consider: On Highland Park’s most prestigious street is a neoclassical estate at 3800 Beverly Dr. with four bedrooms. This home was built on a large lot in 1922 and updated in 2000. It features formal rooms with fireplaces, a card room, two offices, wine room and wet bar. The spacious, well-equipped kitchen has two islands and a breakfast bar. French doors lead from the family room outdoors to a spectacular backyard with a pool, cabana, covered and open patios. The three-bedroom home at 4538 Arcady Ave., built in 1937, has been updated to add modern amenities. The brick home has a circular drive with landscape lighting. Its kitchen has stainless-steel appliances, including a Thermador double oven, Wolf cooktop and Sub-Zero refrigerator. The eat-in kitchen also has under-cabinet lighting and a large island with USB ports. To find your Park Cities home, visit www.alliebeth.com.
32 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Business
OVER ACCESSORIZING? NOT WHEN IT’S NICOLE LEIGH Sisters’ edgy jewelry line designed for layering, not matching By Keyuri Parab
N I C O L E L E I G H J E W E L RY
People Newspapers
Nicole Leigh Jewelry was started by the sisters Samatha DeVito and Taylor Kurz in 2015. Their jewelry can be found at their online storenicoleleighjewelry.com and in stores like Blue Print, Cotton Island, Saint Bernard and Swoozie’s in Dallas. A full list of retailers is on their website.
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hat started as a hobby four years ago for Preston Hollow sisters Samantha Nicole Devitto and Taylor Leigh Kurz has quickly grown into a successful jewelry line sold nationally in nearly 80 stores. “We have always worn a ton of jewelry, and that’s kind of what we were known for, we never put on an outfit without over accessorizing,” DeVito said. Using their middle names, which the two say they’re very attached to, the sisters named their company Nicole Leigh Jewelry and said they knew the hobby would quickly turn into a business the very first year after being picked up in 10 local stores. As third generation business owners, you could say success was in their DNA. Kurz said coming from an entrepreneurial family helped kick start their journey to success in the business sector just like their grandfather and his brother, and father and uncle who also had businesses together. The sibling entrepreneurial duo said that one of the perks of working with family is having the freedom to be honest without having to worry about hurting the others feelings. They love creatively challenging themselves, and every season is different, and they each have their favorites, DeVito said. However, creating a brand
Best Seller: Charlie (earrings) We designed our “Charlie” earrings in 2017, and it is still one of our best sellers today. We love the mixed metal design, and the diamond shape is what draws people to this earring. “Charlie” has a unique look that can be dressed down with a tee and jeans or dressed up with a cocktail dress. COURTESY PHOTOS
FROM LEFT: Samantha Nicole Devitto and Taylor Leigh Kurz wasn’t exactly easy, Kurz said. The sisters ended up rebranding the line toward the end of 2015. The sisters said they were designing for trends in the beginning, and it was more colorful, but decided they wouldn’t personally wear those pieces and rebranded to their style. “We don’t design to follow the trends; we actually want our pieces to look different,” DeVito said. The duo designs earrings, bracelets, rings, and other things and plays around with texture, neutral colors and even gunmetal. The siblings describe their jewelry as neutral and edgy, and it is meant for lots of layering. It doesn’t ever have to match,
Kurz said – it’s all about how one puts the pieces together. Starting Nicole Leigh, the sisters said they never expected to be successful. It was refreshing to see that other people liked what they wore and made, they said. Going forward, they said, their inspiration to grow stems from their entrepreneurial family and to be able to go to their dad for advice, and hopefully getting to that level of success in the next 30 to 40 years. “We still continue to learn,” DeVito said. “I mean every single market we go to, every single retailer, every single conversation we have with our customers, we are always learning.”
Fun Fact: Preskey (hoop earrings) Before we started Nicole Leigh Jewelry, we were both known for always wearing hoop earrings. We wanted to wait to design our own hoops until we envisioned exactly what we wanted ours to look like – from the size to the texture to the exact shape. We launched our first hoop earrings, “Presley,” a couple of months ago, and we couldn’t love them more! They’re small enough for every day and any age, but big enough to stand out and make a statement. Most Worn By Us: Reagan (ring) Our Favorite ring, ever. We wear our “Reagan” rings (in gold) almost every single day. We love that the ring stands out alone, but we personally love wearing it alongside our other many rings on both hands. The detail is so unique, and it is a staple for us.
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 33
SMU Student Learns and Earns By Working For Himself
22-year-old millionaire launches third business to help others succeed, too By Keyuri Parab
People Newspapers Yash Sutaria was 19 when he launched his first successful business, Greek Socials, an event planning company. Within a year, he made his first million and went on to launch his second business venture, an apparel line called Fat Bear Agency. Sutaria, an SMU business student and former Park Cities resident, recently launched his newest venture, Fat Bear Coworking, designed to serve as a luxurious, yet affordable, coworking space in downtown Dallas.
It’s about being able to learn from your failures and getting right back up and doing it again and again, and you end up doing something special. Yash Sutaria What many don’t know about him, the 22-year-old said, is that before there was success, there were multiple dead ends and failures. He saved up $5,000 working at a call center and then invested it. His past ventures failed because he was more focused on making money, but once he focused on doing what he liked and providing good services, his business took off, he said.
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SMU business student and self-made millionaire has opened a coworking space.
What started as an event planning venture for sorority and fraternity parties soon grew into a more wide-spread concierge party planning services. From finding a venue, catering, to DJ’s and providing transportation, Greek Socials has it all. Sutaria started off working more than 100 hours a week, acting as the CEO as well as bookkeeper and doing it all by himself. It was a learning experience because he didn’t have a mentor. “At first, my family was really skeptical,” Sutaria said. “I lost a lot of friends in the process because I was working so much.” Sutaria said it was hard dealing with losing people and being busy. He was struggling with school as well. Now he takes time off on weekends, has more staff, and is enrolled in school parttime, he said. His fun time involves playing video games to get his mind off work and working out, he said. His inspiration lies in making a difference in the world. When he was first planning his business, he worked out of a coworking space which really helped him, and he wanted to give back and help other start-ups and young entrepreneurs build their businesses, he said. He hosts monthly meetings with the tenants of the coworking space to offer them advice and assistance. “My biggest thing is persistence,” Sutaria said. “When you first start a business, you’re gonna fail many times. It’s about being able to learn from your failures and getting right back up and doing it again and again, and you end up doing something special.”
Comings and Goings NOW OPEN Mattison Avenue Salon Suites The Hill, 8041 Walnut Hill Lane The “one-stop-shop” with individual suites for such beauty professionals as makeup artists, hair stylists, massage therapists, nail specialists, and estheticians has opened a new location.
Hadleigh’s Highland Park Village Ed and Gable Shaikh opened their first shop in Highland Park Village in September of 2009. The men’s atelier (still located upstairs at 74 ½ Highland Park Village, near Lounge 31 and the central clock tower) was the first location for the pair, and with its success, they were able to expand the square footage as well as the collection of women’s lines over the 10year stretch. When opportunity arrived to move into a coveted corner spot (the former GOOP space), the couple took it. The new boutique space opened its doors the first week of July and is 350 square feet larger than their previous location, allowing Hadleigh’s to connect the ladies’ shop and existing men’s upstairs atelier.
Muchacho Monkey Bar Third Floor, Highland Park Village The hush-hush spot atop Highland Park Village’s Mi Cocina recently reopened, showing off a lighter look with furnishings imported from recent travels, an outdoor terrace, and an Instagramable food and libation menu that falls in line with MiCo’s back-to-its-roots mentality. Did we mention it’s triple the space?
COMING SOON Drake’s
5007 West Lover Lane The creative mind behind favorites
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like East Hampton Sandwich Co. and Hudson House is bringing Old Hollywood to Lovers Lane. Drake’s, a steakhouse described as unlike any other will open this October.
items will range from queso to fajitas, made with smoked and grilled meats.
Muchacho
Mi Cocina
The Plaza at Preston Center Dallas chef Omar Flores, who earned multiple James Beard Award nods for his now-shuttered Casa Rubia, will open a Tex-Mex restaurant early September in what used to be Taco Diner. The restaurant will serve classics influenced by the food Flores grew up eating in El Paso – but elevated. Menu
Highland Park Village Don’t panic — this one is only temporary. After 20 years of serving the families of Highland Park, Mi Cocina is temporarily closing its dining room for remodeling and expected to reopen mid-August. In the meantime, pick-up orders are available, and a limited menu is being served on the #micocinafoodtruck.
CLOSED
34 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Sports
ST. MARK’S GRAD FULFILLS NBA DREAM WITH GRIZZLIES
League’s second-youngest head coach ready to get to work By Todd Jorgenson
The team has struggled since its most recent playoff appearance in 2017.
People Newspapers
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It’s our daily work habits that are going to carry us through our journey. I can’t wait to roll my sleeves up and get after it. Taylor Jenkins
ust 16 years after playing his senior season at St. Mark’s, Taylor Jenkins has earned an NBA head coaching
job. Jenkins, 34, was hired by the Memphis Grizzlies in June after quickly rising through the ranks as an assistant over the past few years with the San Antonio Spurs, Atlanta Hawks, and Milwaukee Bucks. Jenkins, who doesn’t have any playing experience at the college or professional level, will be the second-youngest head coach in the league. “I know there will be challenges that come my way, but I’m super excited to take the next step,” Jenkins said. “I feel confident and prepared.” So how did Jenkins get to this point so quickly? After St. Mark’s, he graduated from the prestigious Wharton Business School at the University of Pennsylvania. As a junior, he took a summer front-office internship with the Spurs, which led to a full-time position the following year. He became an assistant coach with the
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Memphis Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins, left, was joined by former St. Mark’s coach Scott Jolly at his introductory press conference. Austin Toros of the NBA Development League, then the head coach for a season. Hawks head Mike Budenholzer, a former Spurs assistant, hired Jenkins as an assistant in 2014. Last year, Jenkins followed Budenholzer to the Bucks, which posted the league’s best record during the regular season.
“I’m obviously very happy and excited for Taylor, but not surprised,” said former St. Mark’s coach Scott Jolly. “He is a brilliant person, a natural leader with a strong competitive spirit and an unstoppable work ethic.” Jenkins will become the f ranchise’s fourth head coach in the past five seasons.
“We wanted someone who had incredible basketball acumen but also the ability to connect with people,” said Zach Kleiman, the team’s new executive vice president of basketball operations. “The more we got to know Taylor, the more it became obvious that he was the right guy.” Jenkins hopes to spearhead a rebuilding project with that same grit and passion from his internship years to his dream job on an NBA sideline. “It’s our daily work habits that are going to carry us through our journey,” Jenkins said. “I can’t wait to roll my sleeves up and get after it.”
Ex-Jesuit Slugger Takes Unique Pro Path Nic Ready delays military duty to pursue Olympics
By Todd Jorgenson People Newspapers
Only weeks into his professional baseball career, the clock is already ticking for Nic Ready. The former Jesuit standout was selected by the Miami Marlins in the 23rd round of the Major League Baseball draft in June, and has emerged as one of the top hitters for the Batavia Muckdogs, a Class-A minor-league team in western New York.
Class Athlete Program, which allows graduates to defer their active-duty service commitment for up to 24 months to pursue a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. With baseball readmitted to the Summer Olympics for 2020 in Tokyo, Ready hopes to try out for the roster next spring. After that, he’ll have to put his pro career on hold for two years of Air Force active duty, followed by an extended reserve commitment. In the meantime, he’s embraced the long bus rides and two-star hotels that are hallmarks of the minor-league experience in Batavia and elsewhere. “It’s been a blast, transitioning to that non-glamorous lifestyle,” Ready said. “It’s a little faster, but it’s the same game I’ve been playing since high school. I think I’ve adjusted well.” Ready’s opportunity came after a
It’s a little faster, but it’s the same game I’ve been playing since high school. I think I’ve adjusted well. Nic Ready However, since Ready played collegiately at the U.S. Air Force Academy, his transition to pro ball carries an added urgency. He’s a member of the military ’s relatively new World
decorated career as a third baseman for the Falcons. This spring, he broke the Air Force career record with 50 home runs. In 216 collegiate games, the right-handed slugger also finished with a .327 batting average and 224 runs batted in. Jesuit won 35 games and reached the Class 6A state semifinals during Ready’s senior season in 2015. One of his teammates on that squad, former West Virginia outfielder Darius Hill, was drafted this spring by the Chicago Cubs and is playing for their Class-A affiliate in Eugene, Oregon. Ready evolved from the contact hitter with the Rangers to more of a slugger in college. His power surge led to perhaps the biggest highlight of his career so far: He won the 2018 College Home Run Derby in Omaha, Nebraska. As the first member of any service academy to participate in the postseason competition,
JOHN ANDERSON
Jesuit and U.S. Air Force Academy graduate Nic Ready has embraced the grind and road trips that come with playing minor league baseball. Ready said it was a way to spotlight an Air Force baseball program that hasn’t been historically successful. “That was definitely huge to be on that stage,” Ready said. “It was a way to thank those who had gotten me there.” After his military commitment, Ready plans to resume his baseball career, although he
knows that under the circumstances, his MLB hopes are a long shot. “I’ve wanted to be a Major League Baseball player ever since I was a little kid,” Ready said, “It would be a dream come true.”
36 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Society
DAVIS TURNS HER KNACK FOR FINDING A-LIST SPEAKERS INTO A PREMIER BOOKING BUSINESS
Gail Davis leads a premier speaker’s bureau, booking athletes, entertainers, CEO’s and other A-list speakers at high profile events.
By Bianca R. Montes People Newspapers
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hen Turtle Creek business owner Gail Davis left the security of a corporate gig and launched her speaker representation enterprise in 1999, she had no employees and just one speaker on her roster. Today, GDA Speakers is one of the premiere speaker’s bureaus in the country, booking athletes, entertainers, CEOs, and other A-list speakers at high profile events around the world every year. We caught up with Davis to get her thoughts on her 20-year journey: What made you decide to leave the security of a corporate gig and start your own business? When I was well into my career managing corporate incentive events for the company formerly known as EDS (Electronic Data Systems), the chairman challenged me to find a keynote speaker who was “new and different.” This ultimately led to me booking Nando Parrado, one of the survivors of the 1972 crash of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 and the hero of the 1993 movie
“Alive,” in which he was played by Ethan Hawke. Nando’s speech at an EDS event in Hawaii blew everyone away, including me. The CEO told me, “Kid, you should retire now because you’ll never outdo this.” The whole experience fueled me to take the leap and start my own business, with Nando as my first speaker. I still represent Nando, and we’re still friends to this day. How has your business changed over the years? One of the most obvious changes is technology. In the early days, we mailed out VHS tapes and paper contracts; now we do everything electronically. But an even bigger change is our focus: Initially we wanted as many speakers as we could get, but eventually, we became more selective. As our reputation grew, the fact that a speaker had our ‘seal of approval’ became very valuable to clients.” What are some crazy or memorable things that have happened over the years? Once I was in a restaurant when a news story came on TV announcing that NBA legend Bill Russell had collapsed and then been carried off the stage during a presentation in Lake Tahoe —
an item of great interest to me since I had booked Bill for the event.
The key is for women to respect each other’s choices, help each other, and know that there’s a season for everything. Gail Davis Another time a speaker called to inform me that he was going to be a little late—he had been in a car accident on the way to the airport, gone back home to change out of bloody clothes, swung by a clinic to get a few stitches, and was now on his way to catch a later flight. What advice do you have for aspiring women entrepreneurs? Recently, I told a young entrepreneur who is also a new mom that there is no right or wrong way to be either of those things. The key is for women to respect each other’s choices, help each other, and know that there’s a season for everything — sometimes your focus will be on family, and other times it will be on your career.
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A B O U T G A I L D AV I S Gail Davis grew up in Altus, Oklahoma. “I still consider Altus home — it’s an incredible community.” COLLEGE: University of Oklahoma COMMUNITY: Gail is a past president of IASB (International Association of Speakers Bureaus) and a member of the Entrepreneur Organization. In 2014, she cochaired the Soup’s On! Luncheon benefiting The Stewpot in Dallas. FUN FACT: This fall, Gail will join three other women to hike the Camino Frances, the best-known section of the Camino Santiago de Compostela, an extensive network of ancient pilgrim routes that wind across Europe and converge in Spain. Find out more about Gail Davis and GDA Speakers at gdaspeakers.com.
38 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
THE FAMILY PLACE SNEAKER SOIRÉE
Mary Mendelsohn, Parker Brooks, and Katy Brooks
Tina Smith and Mindy Stein
Jonny Truedelle, Adele Wildburger, Ralph Brooks III, and Carlee Bates
Connie Babikian, JD Roberts, and Mary Catherine Finney PHOTOS BY SNAP THE PICTURE
Ralph Brooks III and Ethan Alfano
Leah Hammett, Marcus Williams, Amanda Petit, and Meredith Murray
Allie Greenberge, Lauren Vonder Haar, Kristen Miller, and Wyndham Burney
Dallas-based family violence agency, The Family Place, hosted their inaugural Young Partners of The Family Place Sneaker Soirée on June 7. The event, which encourages young adults in the Dallas community to “take strides to end family violence,” was held at the Mavs Gaming Facility. Guests wore sneakers with their best cocktail attire to “walk in the shoes” of victims of family violence.
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 39
ZOO TO DO: WILD AT HEART KICKOFF
Diane and Hal Brierley Dawn and Steve Moore THOMAS GARZA PHOTOGRAPHY
Jim and Amanda Lake
Kevin Harahan
Steve and Dawn Moore with Blair Raggio and Brett Moore
Supporters of the Dallas Zoo gathered June 13 for a party at the Dallas Zoo’s Simmons Safari Base Camp where the details for this year’s exciting Zoo To Do fundraising event were revealed. Zoo To Do: Wild At Heart is slated for Nov. 2 at the Dallas Zoo. Guests and patrons strolled through the awardwinning Giants of the Savanna habitat, sampled exquisite dishes from more than 25 of Dallas’s premier chefs and restaurants, and enjoyed interactive animal demonstrations and musical entertainment.
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 41
H100 LATINA GIVING CIRCLE
Cynthia Gonzalez and Sara Madsen Miller Roslyn Dawson Thompson, Maria Mendez, Cris Zertuche-Wong, Arcilia Acosta, Patricia Rodriguez Christian, Veronica Torres Hazley
Elsa Alcala-Grivas, Michele Bobadilla, Pearl Garza Fracchia, and Mary Valadez
Claudia Medina, Dora Tovar, and Sandy Colman
Camile Elena, Veronica Torres Hazley, Margie Aguilar, Adriana Gallegos, and Melissa Alfaro
Marivel Robinson and Catalina Garcia
Laura Mendivil and Aidée Granados
PHOTOS BY KIM LEESON
On June 19 at Latino Arts Project, the H100 Latina Giving Circle at Texas Women’s Foundation officially launched and joined three other giving circles hosted at Texas Women’s Foundation: Orchid Giving Circle, HERitage Giving Fund and The Village Giving Circle. The H100 Latina Giving Circle was formed by the Hispanic 100 Network to further engage Latinas in philanthropy and to expand resources for local organizations whose mission is to empower, educate, and support Latinas and the community.
42 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Living Well and Faith OPENING THE CHURCH DOORS TO ASYLUM SEEKERS
More than 300 volunteer to provide food, clothes, transportation By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers
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he congregation and staff at Oak Lawn Methodist Church know firsthand the plight of Dallas’ less fortunate. Situated where they are, it’s commonplace to see the homeless population nearby. So, for many years, the church has been in “ministry for the marginalized,” as member Cathy Bryan put it. The sanctuary is open four days a week so the homeless can take shelter, and the church kitchen provides a community meal every Sunday. There is also an emphasis on providing shelter during the winter months, when the Texas temperatures can
There was an immediate and unfettered response by our faith community. Cathy Bryan get below freezing. But Oak Lawn didn’t stop there –- in recent months, the church, working with the organization Faith Forward Dallas, became a satellite “respite center” in support of El Paso’s Annunciation House, an organization in the Texas border town that became overwhelmed by the number of asylum seekers coming to America. “Rev. Rachel Baughman immediately offered our church since we had the space, experience, and some of the components like cots, a kitchen, and clothing distribution already in place,” Bryan said. “We were then able to quickly spread the word through the greater faith community,
PHOTOS COURTESY OF OAK LAWN METHODIST CHURCH
Asylum-seekers in Dallas can find a surplus of supplies at Oak Lawn UMC. which responded magnificently with food, donations, transportation, lodging, volunteers, and financial donations.” Besides providing for immigrants in
Dallas, Bryan said Oak Lawn would be sending vans and cars loaded with supplies in the upcoming months to the McAllen and Brownsville areas, where the need for
aid for asylum-seekers continues to grow. In June, an Oak Lawn bus arrived in El Paso with supplies, but the group quickly found out that the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement was no longer releasing more than 1,000 asylum seekers per day. The church regrouped, Bryan said, and is now considering other approaches to the situation in border towns. “We are considering a number of different ways we can continue to be in ministry to immigrants in our community, even if it’s not exactly what we envisioned less than 30 days ago,” Bryan said. The hub in Dallas, however, is continuing to provide help to those who have recently been released from border town centers into cities and towns around the state. The bride room at the church has been turned into a medical clinic, and a donation room is stuffed with supplies. There are also areas of the church where immigrants can paint, read, and write. When the church decided to get involved, volunteers arrived by the hundreds, Bryan said, including Spanish-speaking members of the congregation who have been instrumental in communicating with immigrants. Donation items poured in, almost to the point of overwhelming the church workers. More than 300 people are signed up as volunteers through Oak Lawn’s volunteer management system. “There was an immediate and unfettered response by our faith community,” Bryan said. “In this time of division without nation and community, to see people of all faiths responding so fully, and working side by side to provide comfort and aid to the asylum-seekers is not only beautiful but also hopeful.”
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 43
Faith-Inspired Farm a Refugee Haven
Mars Hill offers plots of land, jobs to assist with resettlement By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers About 30 miles south of downtown Dallas sits a slice of land owned by three Park Cities families but cultivated almost entirely by refugees. Primarily a flower farm, but with areas set aside specifically for growing grass-fed beef, honey, and other vegetables and herbs, Mars Hill Farm exists to hire refugees and give them an environment where they can “acclimate to living in the United States,” said Julia Schwarz. She and her husband, Blake, own the farm along with Julie and Trevor Farr and Kendall and Jonathan Herb. The couples describe the farm as a way of sharing Jesus Christ’s love. As an example of the farm’s global reach,
Our community is full of supportive, compassionate people who care about local farming and the needs of others. Julia Schwarz two full-time employees are refugees from Homs and Damascus, Syria. “As we were getting to know some of the refugees, we came face to face with the difficul-
COURTESY MARS HILL FARMS
Land is available for refugees to work at Mars Hill Farm in south Dallas. ties they come up against in trying to find jobs,” Schwarz said. “Many are from agrarian backgrounds, and they know farming, and they love being outside and working the land. But there was really nowhere for them to do that and still stay close to the community and services that Dallas provides.” Plots of land are offered free of charge with the hope that, eventually, enough people will be working on Mars Hill to provide them fulltime work as employees of the farm. The refugees also help run the Mars Hill Farm booth at different farmers’ markets on the weekends. Mars Hill officials said they have workers
from Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, and countries throughout the Middle East. “Dallas is such a United Nations hub for refugee resettlement from places around the globe,” Schwarz said. “Refugees are often presented as a drain on our economy, but the reality is that they have really valuable skills. They just have no way to use them because of the language differences and other barriers.” The farm also offers a flower subscription program. Orders are delivered by a refugee employee to houses every week. The flowers are a favorite in the area and have led to residents also signing up for grass-fed beef deliveries.
“We have had a huge outpouring of support from the community,” Schwarz said. “Our community is full of supportive, compassionate people who care about local farming and the needs of others.” Schwarz and the other families are hoping the farm will serve as a gathering place for Dallasites to come and meet the refugees. “We have party rental spaces and special events, and we hope those will bring people in to experience the farm and meet our employees,” Schwarz said. “Our goal is to create a sustainable, for-profit business that will serve the refugee community and give the broader public a place to come and interact with people from all backgrounds.” LEARN MORE
Visit marshillfarm.com
44 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
A New Kidney for Bonnie Morren?
Mom joyfully takes search to social media By Tina-Tien Nguyen Special Contributor
Bonnie Morren lives each day knowing she needs someone else’s kidney. “That can be overwhelming and fearful,” she said. “Even then, I always go back to my mantra to always be joyful and give thanks.” Morren, a Park Cities resident for more than 26 years, is battling stage 4 Chronic Kidney Disease after long-term use of the medication lithium to treat bipolar disorder. Her kidney function has dropped to an irreversible 8 percent. With approximately 100,000 people in America on the waitlist for a kidney transplant, it can take five years to get a transplant – even longer for those like Morren who have type O blood.
Receiving a kidney is an enormous gift. It is a big ask and also a big give because it changes your world. Bonnie Morren To bypass the waitlist, her best solution is to find a living donor. To stay positive, she relies on her mantra, which she took from Scripture: “Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18. She includes that message on the T-shirts and mailers her family distributes for her Kick For a Kidney campaign to find a living donor. On a Facebook page titled, “My Mom’s Journey: Kick for a Kidney,” her daughter Lucie describes Morren as the most “bubbly, vivacious and enthusiastic” person. The page also encourages visitors to post their own versions of the “Kick for a Kidney” dance to draw attention to Morren’s need in particular and kidney disease in general. “I get energized by people that are genuinely interested in my cause, and that is where most my enthusiasm comes from,” Morren said. “Everyone can help by telling their
JAXX ARTZ
Bonnie Morren faces her wait for a lifesaving organ donation by relying on faith and friends, many of whom have brought her magnets from around the world to put on these boards in her home. friends, creating awareness, and getting the word out through social media. There are people out there that are matches, and they just don’t know it, but they can be tested,” she said. “Even if this person is not a match for me, I hope people would still be willing to give a part of themselves and consider being a match for someone else.” The Morrens have been active in the community through helping and attending schools, churches, and several charities. She hopes to live many more years and serve as an advocate for those suffering from kidney disease and mental illness. “Receiving a kidney is an enormous gift,” Morren said. “It is a big ask and also a big give because it changes your world. If you can share your spare to save a life, you know you have made a big difference. Life is the most precious gift that we have.”
WA N T T O H E L P ? • Donors must be between 18 and 65 and undergo a physical evaluation. Visit livingdonordallas.org to fill out a questionnaire and call 214-820-6981 for more information. • Visit facebook.com/kickforakidney to post a video or leave a message.
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 45
Take the Pizza Party Outdoors When my husband and I were first dating, we went out for pizza fairly often. Chatting over a large pepperoni, mushroom, and black olive pizza and a pitcher of beer was a good and relatively inexpensive way to get to know each other. CHRISTY ROST Campisi’s on MockHOME + KITCHEN ingbird Lane was our choice for authentic flavors, Pizza Inn for convenience, and Shotgun Sam’s just west of Bachman Lake when we were feeling a bit crazy. I don’t recall much about the pizza at Shotgun Sam’s, but I vividly remember baskets of peanuts and guests being
Ingredients: 1 envelope active dry yeast 1 ½ cups warm water pinch of sugar 1 ½ tablespoons olive oil 2 teaspoons salt 2 ¾ cups all-purpose flour ½ cup whole wheat flour ½ cup cornmeal ½ cup olive oil, for brushing tops of pizza 1 teaspoon kosher salt 2-3 large vine-ripened tomatoes, rinsed and thinly sliced 1 large red onion, peeled and thinly sliced 1 14-ounce can artichoke hearts, drained and quartered
encouraged to discard the shells on the floor. These days, it’s almost impossible to drive between 4 and 7 p.m. without seeing pizza delivery vehicles zipping through the neighborhood. Pizza has become more of a convenience food than one we go out for. Although I enjoy the occasional pizza delivery, I’ve always thought of homemade pizza as a celebration. When our sons were growing up, the aroma of dough slowly rising under a soft towel, and the sight of individual bowls filled with chopped onion, peppers, mushrooms, olives, pepperoni, ham, and shredded mozzarella cheese, brought huge smiles of anticipation. I’d make several pizzas, and everyone got to ‘decorate’ their own with favorite toppings. This summer I’ve taken the fun outdoors with grilled pizza. Ideal for charcoal or gas grills, the pizza dough is shaped, placed on a flat cookie sheet liberally sprinkled with cornmeal, and
Fresh basil leaves, rinsed and dried, for garnish
Directions: Place yeast in a medium bowl, add warm water (hot water will kill yeast) and sugar, stir, and place the bowl in a warm place until the yeast softens and begins to foam. While the yeast softens, mix flours together and set aside. Pour the yeast mixture, 1 ½ tablespoons of olive oil, and salt into the large bowl of an electric stand mixer fitted with a dough hook. Add enough of the flour to make a soft dough and mix at lowest speed, scraping the bowl as needed. Adjust
the speed to medium and knead 2 minutes. The dough will be very soft and sticky. Transfer the dough to a large greased bowl, turn it over once to grease the entire surface, cover with a towel, and set it aside in a warm place until the dough has doubled in volume, about 45 minutes. Preheat the grill to 400 degrees. Sprinkle the counter liberally with flour, punch down the dough, turn it out onto the counter, and briefly knead by hand just until the dough comes together in a ball. Add flour as needed to prevent the dough from sticking. Divide it in half, return half the dough to the bowl, cover,
ENGAGEMENT
THOMPSON - BAILEY
JOHN CAIN PHOTOGRAPHY
M
r. and Mrs. John Philp Thompson Jr. of University Park are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Lauren Elizabeth
then slid directly onto the grill for two to three minutes until the bottom firms and the top puffs. It’s easy to transfer the pizza back onto the cookie sheet with a set of tongs, flip it over, and ‘decorate’ with toppings. Then it goes back on the grill for final baking. Within minutes, the flamekissed pizza is fragrant and ready to enjoy as a late-summer celebration. For more from cookbook author and public television chef Christy Rost visit christyrost.com or follow her on Facebook and Twitter @ChristyRost.
Thompson, to Mr. William Ross Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy William Bailey of Preston Hollow. The bride is a graduate of Highland Park High School. She received a Bachelor’s degree in communications, human relations from The University of Texas at Austin. She is a client service associate for Wealth Partners Alliance which is aligned with Raymond James Financial Services. The groom is a graduate of The Episcopal School of Dallas. He graduated cum laude with a bachelor of Science degree in finance from the Culverhouse College of Business at The University of Alabama. He is the founder and portfolio manager of Saltstone Capital Management, LLC, an energy investment firm. The couple plans to wed in August of 2019 at Highland Park United Methodist Church followed by a reception at Brook Hollow Golf Club.
CHRISTY ROST
Summer Tomato, Onion, Artichoke and Goat Cheese Grilled Pizza
and set it aside. Sprinkle the remaining half with flour and roll it out into a 12inch circle about ¼-inch thick. Don’t worry about perfection. Rustic-looking grilled pizzas are best. Sprinkle a flat cookie sheet, or a cookie sheet turned upside down, liberally with cornmeal. Transfer the pizza dough to the cookie sheet, take it to the grill, and slide it off the tray onto the grill’s surface. Close the grill and cook 2-3 minutes, until the bottom is lightly browned and the top is puffy. Transfer the pizza back to the tray with tongs, turn it over, brush with olive oil, and sprinkle lightly with salt. Top the
pizza with tomato, red onion, artichokes, and crumbled goat cheese. If using a charcoal grill, move the coals to one side of the grill to provide indirect heat and slide the pizza onto the opposite side. If using a gas grill, turn the center burners to low, adjust the outer burners to medium-high, and slide the pizza onto the center of the grill. Close the cover and cook 4 to 5 minutes, adjusting the heat as needed to prevent the bottom of the pizza from burning. Using tongs, slide the pizza onto a large cutting board, repeat with the remaining half of the pizza dough, and enjoy. Yield: Two 12-inch pizzas
46 August 2019 | prestonhollowpeople.com
Escape Dallas In Dallas: Three Places To Try Out Let’s be honest, being stuck in Dallas during August straight-up stinks. It’s hot, sticky, mosquito-y, the pool feels like a sauna, and it’s three weeks of monotonous hell before people come back from wherever they are that isn’t Dallas. A sense of place is the feeling that captures KERSTEN RET TIG the essence of a destination. It’s not just geography, and it’s more than a feeling, it’s sensorial immersion. The best way to avoid the August doldrums is to leave Dallas but if that’s not an option, check out these restaurants that have created environments and menus that are transformative, if only for 90 minutes. Rise N° 1 This magical little restaurant is as ethereal as the soufflés it serves. Hedda Dowd, the visionary behind Rise, summered at her mother’s home in France and traveled the country extensively. She said Rise doesn’t reflect one French design aesthetic or locale, rather the soul of France. I say she nailed it. August specials include a traditional gazpacho, a lobster souffle, a crab soufflé, and a stunning lobster salad with arugula, citrus, mango, hearts of palm, and a half Maine lobster. August’s sweet soufflé specials are the key lime and the Cassis, which is a beautiful, slightly tart black currant pillow of lavender.
Café Madrid Donica Jiminez fell in love with Spanish culture early in life and decided to start a business where she could feel like she was in Spain every day. She’s done so brilliantly. The wall murals are painted from Donica’s own photos, and the artwork and décor are souvenirs from her travels. Hot August calls for cold red, white, or cava Sangria and a plate of Ibérico and serrano ham and chorizo served with a trio of cheeses such as Idiazabal, Mahón, and Manchego. First Friday Flamenco includes live music and Flamenco dancers twirling among the tables. There’s also live music from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The French Room Bar Go to Paris for the night, or just a few hours, at one of the most elegant bars in Dallas: The French Room Bar – not to be confused with the City Hall Bar or the French Room Salon. The deep sapphire-walled sanctuary haloed by a gold-leaf ceiling is a sexy, sophisticated substitute for Paris. Just left of the entrance to the inspired French Room restaurant, the bar is as dark and moody as the restaurant is light and refined. While you can order anything from the French Room there, I suggest you start with the Hamachi with lemongrass-ginger gel, caviar, and daikon and a glass of champagne. Summer inspired cocktails are also available – my favorite being the C&C with Waterloo gin,
COURTESY RISE
Try out Rise to get that taste and feeling of visiting France. cucumber, celery, lime pink peppercorn, and thyme – so refreshing. When the dog days are here, and you need respite, treat yourself to these cultural escapes in your own backyard. You’ll be glad you did. Safe travels. Kersten Rettig, a Park Cities-based writer with more than 30 years’ experience in food and beverage marketing and PR, is a member of Les Dames d’Escoffier and the VNA Board of Trustees. Follow her on Instagram @KickshawPapers.
S O N G PA I R I N G “More than a Feeling,” Boston
O B I T UA RY
GERALDINE GALENTREE
05/20/1948 - 06/22/2019
K
ind, caring, loving, gentle, joyous – these are the words that the friends, family and colleagues of Geraldine Iversen Galentree used to describe her. Geraldine was born on May 20, 1948, in Chelsea, Massachusetts and passed away on June 22, 2019, in Dallas. She attended Incarnate Word Academy in Corpus Christi and graduated in 1966 from W. B. Ray High School in Corpus Christi. Geraldine married the love of her life, Samuel James Galentree, on June 21, 1970 in Texas. The couple later moved to Rhode Island where Geraldine studied journalism and psychology at the University of Rhode Island in Providence. They were married for 39 years until Sam’s death in April of 2009. Per Geraldine’s wishes, her ashes and Sam’s will be taken to Rhode Island where they can be together again in a place where they were so happy. Geraldine had a life-long interest in and
knowledge of mystery books, and from May of 1992 to September of 1998, she served as the manager of The Mystery Bookstore in Snider Plaza. It was an experience she always cherished, particularly for the friendships that evolved with the owner, staff, and customers. She remained a vital part of the North Texas book community and was active in the Skyline Mystery Book Club at the Skyline Branch Library. In October of 2000, Geraldine applied for the position of receptionist with People Newspapers, but with her journalism and advertising experience, she was soon recruited to join the advertising staff as an account executive handling the marketing of classified advertising. In recent years, she had the added responsibility of the engagement and wedding announcements and the obituaries for Park Cities People and Preston Hollow People. Geraldine was preceded in death by her parents, Betty and Robert Iversen, and her husband, Sam Galentree. She is survived by her stepsister, Patricia Moore; niece, Teresa (Matthew) Brennecke; stepbrother, Donnie Linsteadt; half-sister, Sharon (Rob) Proulx; her half-brothers, James and John Iversen; brothers-in-law, Charles (Kathy) Turner and Fred Spicer; her People Newspapers’ family; and her Skyline Mystery Book Club family. She is also survived by her beloved cat, Midnight Louie, who now lives in Satellite Beach, Florida with her niece, Teresa and her family. A fitting tribute to Geraldine would be to make a monetary contribution or to donate a favorite book to the Dallas Public Library. https://catalog.dallaslibrary.org/.../payments/donation.aspx
Outstanding Awards. Outstanding Community.
PrestonHollowPeople
“This newspaper stood out to me from all others in this category.” “Absolutely wonderful. Engaging and delightful!” -NNA Judges ONCOR, RESIDENTS AT ODDS OVER TREE CLEARINGS NEAR TOLLWAY 8
PrestonHollowPeople DECEMBER 2018 VOLUME 14 NO. 12
“THE BEST COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER IN TEXAS”
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
2018 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PREVIEW PrestonHollowPeople
PeopleNewspapers A SUPPLEMENT TO PARK CITIES PEOPLE AND PRESTON HOLLOW PEOPLE
JULY 2019
September 2018 | prestonhollowpeople.com @phollowpeople | @peoplenewspapers
I
CRYSTAL CHARITY
Annual ball celebrates $6.5 million in gifts to benefit eight children’s organizations, including Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts. PAGE 32
THE SON ALSO RISES
E.J. SMITH AND JESUIT WANT TO KEEP PUSHING THE PACE COURTESY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
ART EXPERTS DISCUSS ROLE OF MUSEUMS IN COMMUNITIES
Panelists from around the country converged in Dallas to discuss opportunities for cultural institutions to engage better the residents they serve.
12
PRESTON HOLLOW ACTRESS STARS IN LIFETIME MOVIE
CHURCH MINISTERS TO BANGLADESH COMMUNITY
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48
After performing in local theatre, Ella West Jerrier, 12, landed a role in a Lifetime movie, a thriller that focuses on mental health and recognizing online dangers.
nity outreach from a local church that supports mission work in Bangladesh.
ESD excited about defense Experience boosts St. Mark’s Stone leads Parish offense
People Newspapers has won the 2019 National Newspaper Association’s Better Newspaper contest with the following awards: • 1st Place General Excellence • Honorable mention, Best Special Section - 2018 Scots Championship • 1st Place Story Series, Preston Hollow People, ESD Algae (Bianca Montes) • 3rd Place Best Feature Series, Park Cities People, Helping the Homeless (William Legrone, Pat Martin)
• 1st Place Best Advertorial, Preston Hollow People, CMC Family Night at Six Flags • 2nd Place Best Multiple Advisor Section, Preston Hollow People, 20 Under 40 • 2nd Place Best Sales Promotion Section, Park Cities People, Scots 2018 • Honorable Mention Best Sales Promotion Section, Preston Hollow People, 2018 Football Preview
prestonhollowpeople.com | August 2019 47
Things to Do
the Roof, a heartwarming story of fathers and daughters, husbands and wives, and life, love, and laughter. The musical will make a run at the Music Hall at Fair Park from Aug. 7 to 18.
Experience First Fridays Support local shops from 4 to 7 p.m. Aug. 2 at Preston Royal Village. The “first Fridays” event highlights include engaging in-store promotions, specials, tastings, and events at your favorite retailers throughout the center, as well as activities for children.
Meet a former Master Chef Season 6 Master Chef contestant Hetal Vasvada will present her cookbook Milk and Cardamom from 6 to 7 p.m. Aug. 8 at Interabang Books. Nostalgic for the Indian desserts she grew up with, her book showcases a versatile selection of classic recipes and creative interpretations.
Toast a New Production Dallas Summer Musicals will close out its season with Fiddler on
COURTESY PHOTOS
CLASSIFIEDS ANNOUNCEMENTS
Beautiful Steinway Model L Ebony in excellent condition. Upgraded piano bench included.
$39,500 For inquiries : (214) 616 - 5127 Full Care Horse Boarding, Training & Tune Ups Polo & Riding Lessons 214-676-2006 Kim Follow us on Facebook @Legends Horse Ranch
To place your ad in People Newspapers, please call us at 214-523-5239, fax to 214-594-5779, or e-mail to classified@ peoplenewspapers.com. All ads will run in Park Cities People and Preston Hollow People and online on both websites. Prepayment is required on all ads. Deadline for our next edition is Monday., July 29. People Newspapers reserves the right to edit or reject ads. We assume no liability for errors or omissions in advertisements and no responsibility beyond the cost of the ad. We are responsible only for the first incorrect insertion. HEALTH
HOME SERVICES
Weight Loss, Energy, Focus,
FIREWOOD DELIVERY SPLIT SEASONED OAK 972-333-8444
Depression, Impotency and Fatigue etc.
Leslie Duong, 214-887-8325 LESLIEDUONG.COM BS Biology, Health Nutritionist, Licensed Herbalist
BURIAL PROPERTIES
Find it Right Here in the Classifieds!
$169,000
(Normally $200,000)
Premier Family Estate burial property at Sparkman/Hillcrest with Internment Rights for up to Twelve individuals. Property is private, hedged and landscaped, and carries forward a Forever Perpetual Maintenance agreement. For further detail please contact owner by telephone 214.585.2609 or via email: fmafg@mac.com
EASILY ORGANIZED
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Holly Estates II, 4 sites with 4 second rites, totalling 8.
Sparkman Hillcrest 2 Plots. Garden of Prayer. $6,300 each. 214-789-4926
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SPARKMAN HILLCREST
214-475-1003
HOME SERVICES
LEARN TO PLAY POLO Men & Women all ages
No Prior Riding Experience Needed
scott@willowbendpoloclub.com
214-624-9940 EXT 703
ADVERTISE HERE! Classifieds: 214.523.5239
HEALTH
R E A L E S TAT E - F O R S A L E
WEEKEND GET-AWAY with 27 ACRE LAKE One-of-a-kind 312.31 Acre Estate Property with 27 Acre Lake, 2 Creeks, Rolling Terrain and amazing Trees located just North of us in Dallas’ prestigious “Golden Corridor.” Perfect for the sophisticated-informed Proprietor who values, above all else: PRIVACY, SECURITY and NATURAL BEAUTY. Website: www.DallasGoldenCorridorProperty.com FOR SALE BY OWNER: Tommy Staley @ 972-603-8647
Be Seen. Be Heard. Be Here. Classifieds: 214.523.5239