An Uneasy Alliance

Less than 24 hours before the Miami-Dade County Canvassing Board met to halt the manual recount of ballots in the presidential race — a decision that all but doomed Al Gore’s chances of winning the White House — Alex Penelas was dining with a Republican state legislator at the Governor’s…

Socialism or Suntan, Part 2

Read Part 1 If you really want to ponder the strange and wonderful world of Florida politics, forget the ongoing Gore-Bush drama. Look instead to Cuba. As a reminder that not everyone has given up on Boris-and-Natasha cold war games, this past week saw the opening of the trial of…

Letters to the Editor

Demetrio’s Ethical ChallengeDidn’t that law-school honor code mean anything? As a student at the University of Miami School of Law, I have followed with great interest the tale of young Demetrio Perez’s candidacy for the Miami-Dade County school board. Since moving to Miami in 1994, I have been repeatedly disgusted…

Shake

The CIA-backed exile invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs failed in 1961. The Beatles were more successful, taking the beaches in the years that followed via portable radios perched precariously on Havana’s sea wall and secretly tuned to Miami’s WQAM (560-AM). Sixty-one-year-old Alexander Dominguez remembers listening to “La…

The Untold Story

Lost amid the hullabaloo over Florida’s presidential recount is this profound fact: The only reason Al Gore is within a few hundred ballots of George W. Bush is the historic turnout among Florida’s black voters. According to election analysts, blacks cast between fifteen and sixteen percent of all votes in…

Socialism or Suntan

Read Part 2 As the results of the Florida presidential election came in on November 7, Volusia County officials sitting in Daytona Beach were faced with a situation much more alarming than Gore and Bush tally irregularities, or even rumors of stolen ballot boxes. Without any advance warning Volusia County…

Letters to the Editor

History Might Have Been Different if Only …Al Gore had publicly opposed an airport at Homestead AFB: As Jim DeFede pointed out (“Collision Course,” November 23), if Al Gore loses Florida’s 25 electoral votes and with them the presidency, he can blame himself for having refused to stand in opposition…

Letters to the Editor

The Missing Mayor’s Buttered BreadHe may be a snake in the grass, but he’s our snake in the grass: I read Jim DeFede’s slanted article concerning Mayor Alex Penelas (“The Dead-End Kid,” November 16). While I can understand those who feel the mayor is a political snake in the grass,…

Letters to the Editor

Completely Unsolicited Praise for Suzy Stone, Part 1Up with kidz, down with New Times: The fact that my son has happily been a student in the Hip Hop Kidz program for more than four years allows me the opportunity to voice my opinion more than the obviously bitter parents Robert…

The Dead-End Kid

Where’s Alex? In the midst of the closest presidential election in U.S. history, at a time when the eyes of the world are riveted on South Florida, our sexy little mayor is nowhere to be found. And I’m concerned. I fear that Alex Penelas may be thinking about ending it…

The Other E-Commerce

What happens when subcultures come of age? The answer would look a lot like the roomful of 75 social workers, therapists, teachers, activists, and self-professed “party people” who sat in a circle in a meeting room at downtown Miami’s Wyndham Hotel last month. An intense high school girl in baggy…

Raver Madness

A camouflage-clad National Guardmember pokes his head into Kulchur’s car window. “Are you here for the special event?” he asks gruffly. I’m here for the drug-free rave apparently is the correct password. The guardsman motions to drive on to a parking spot past his hulking military truck outside Coconut Grove’s…

Letters to the Editor

Watch Where You’re Going!It’s not enough that you’re obnoxious; you’re also a lousy driver: I am writing in response to Victor Cruz’s article “Loud, Proud, and Out of Work” (November 2), about Ezell Robinson being fired by the Metro-Dade Transit Agency. You probably don’t remember me, Mr. Robinson, but I…

Sex Sells

Wrapped tightly inside a black gown with eye-grabbing side slits and a strategically cut gap across her straining bosom, Keri Windsor doesn’t look like your typical e-commerce analyst. Indeed her ownership of a stripper agency, and her starring roles in X-rated films such as Low Down Dirty Dames, I Touch…

Letters to the Editor

I Was a Grand JurorAnd she was the hardest-working woman in law enforcement: I read with interest Tristram Korten’s story about State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle (“Friendly Fire,” October 26). I served on the grand jury with her and let me tell you, she is tough, fair-minded, and one of…

It’s Bigger Than Hip-Hop

You know I — thug ’em, fuck ’em, love ’em, leave ’em/’Cause I don’t fuckin’ need ’em…./I’m a pimp in every sense of the word, bitch. — Jay-Z, “Big Pimpin’” “Big Pimpin’?” snorts Lee Williams with a mixture of derision and incredulity at the mention of Jay-Z’s signature tune, whose…

Letters to the Editor

McIntire: What Was the Purpose?If it was to inflict pain on widow and daughter, you succeeded: I am a retired college professor living in Colorado. I was a colleague of the widow of Alex McIntire, the subject of David Villano’s article “Admired in Life, Reviled in Death” (October 19). I…

Splitsville

Generally I’m no fan of lawyers. And as a rule I’d say we live in society that is far too litigious. But show me a lawsuit in which one lawyer is suing another lawyer, in which both lawyers are high-profile county hall lobbyists, and damn it, that’s a cause of…

Letters to the Editor

Off with Its Heads!Miami corruption gives new meaning to the phrase Herculean effort: Thanks to Tristram Korten’s dogged efforts, a spotlight has remained on the corruption that exists within the bail-bonds industry (“Justice, Bloody Justice,” October 5). Hopefully the State Attorney’s Office will be taking action on the information it…

The Battle Was Won but the War Continues

For Scott Souther it’s been a long day in the office. As a booking agent with the Boston-area International Music Network, Souther is responsible for setting up the North American tours for Cuba’s most in-demand artists: the family of musicians known as the Buena Vista Social Club. He’s also just…

Letters to the Editor

Miami, the City That Eats Its YoungThat’s what Wasserman gets for mouthing off: After reading Tristram Korten’s interview with Daily Business Review editor in chief Ed Wasserman (“The Last Iconoclast,” September 28), I must ask why is it that South Florida regularly seems to ship out its best and brightest?…

Welcome to the Edge

Arriving in Miami with his family as an eighteen-year-old punk rocker, Brook Dorsch fondly recalls the state of South Beach in the Eighties. “The Beach was my stomping ground,” he says. “The Dead Kennedys at the Cameo, Jane’s Addiction at Woody’s, Rat Bastard’s shows, Charlie Pickett, F. I can still…