Voices
Latest (Page 12)
Voices
The Mad Housewife Returns
For years I wrote for Preston Hollow People – until I went into overdrive as a mom and took some time off.
Voices
You’re Too Sexy for This Paper
It’s been a rough year, and we wouldn’t have dreamed of participating in April Fools hijinks last year — a tornado followed by a pandemic was more than enough confusion, thank you very much.
Voices
Letter to the Editor
I just got home from Trader Joe’s — a grocery store in Preston Hollow I’m so lucky to have within walking distance of where I live.
Voices
April Hope: Fertile Ground
We are set for the most beautiful spring ever in Dallas. April Fools!
Voices
Texas Needs Planned Resilience For The Next Unlikely Event
From the coronavirus pandemic to the winter storm that knocked out essential infrastructure across the state, the “unprecedented” events of this past year have caught us unprepared.
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor
An endorsement letter signed by several former PTA members was illegal, one reader insists.
Voices
YMCA Thanks the Park Cities
For over 75 years, the Moody Family YMCA has served the Park Cities with a mission to put Christian values into practice through programs that build a healthy spirit, mind, and body.
Voices
Want To Be in The Paper?
Tag Us on Instagram With #PeopleReadingPeople. It’s always fun — even when it’s criticism — to hear from our readers. After all, without you, this paper doesn’t exist.
Voices
No Fretting Over The Ides of March
Anniversaries by and large bring celebrations: birthdays, wedding dates, milestones.
Letter to the Editor
Letters to the Editor
Readers respond to other letters to the editor, and have praise for an article on local faith leaders who wrote to state leaders.
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor
Should Sen. Ted Cruz and Sen. John Cornyn vote to impeach Donald Trump? One reader weighs in.
Election
‘The Hill We Climb’ Is Steep, But a Worthy Effort
"For there is always light,
if only we’re brave enough to see it
If only we’re brave enough to be it"
Faith
Local Faith Leaders Pen Letters to Elected Officials
After the events at the U.S. Capitol last week, several local faith leaders joined together to craft letters to both Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patric, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, and Sen. Ted Cruz.
Letter to the Editor
Letters to the Editor
You may know that the city of University Park is considering removing the parking ratios in Snider Plaza to allow more restaurants to move into empty retail spaces.
Best of
Best of 2020: ‘Everything Worthwhile Isn’t Easy’
As the nation reacted to the death of George Floyd during an encounter with police in Minneapolis, one Black mother took to the keyboard to discuss her feelings about helping her family navigate the world.
Best of
Best of 2020: Dreaming of The Charles
In May, restaurants had been relegated to curbside and take out service only, and the day when they would be able to welcome guests again seemed far off. It was a yearning to have dining be an experience, and not an impersonal pickup from your car so you could plate it at home that drove Kersten Rettig to write about The Charles.
Best of
Best of 2020: Senior Returns to Much Different HPHS
Our fall high school intern, Shaye Wattson, couldn't have imagined that her senior year would begin with virtual school and then segue into a much different experience on campus as masking, social distancing, and other measures were enacted to help students and staff avoid exposure to COVID-19.
Voices
2020 Hindsight: At Last, 2021
“The vaccine is coming. The vaccine is coming!” Such comes the battle cry of 2021, so take that coronavirus.
Voices
A New Way To Keep Texas ‘Business Friendly’
This time last year, Texas was wrapping up a year of record low unemployment and job growth in which nearly 1,000 jobs were being added every day. Economic growth seemed limitless, driven by a business-friendly climate and a relatively stable energy market.
Best of
Best of 2020: ‘Be Nice’
Fourth grade is usually when students start really learning the mechanics of writing, but it's no surprise that one particular fourth grader took to writing like it was genetic.