Texas
Letters to the Editor — Texas Family Project, Sen. Lankford, stadium name, gas costs
Respect religious beliefs of all
My state representative for District 89 is Republican Candy Noble, and she is running for re-election. I do not know Noble personally, nor do I know yet for whom I will vote in the primary election.
Delivered to my mailbox recently were two flyers from the Texas Family Project stating that Noble “voted to make the 88th Texas Legislature the most pro-Muslim session in Texas history” and asked “Why is Candy Noble voting to celebrate Texas Muslims?”
This example of religious bigotry must be a result of Noble supporting a resolution to recognize March 23, 2023, as Texas Muslim Day, as did many other House members from both political parties. But I suspect it has more to do with the fact that Noble voted to impeach Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, and now she faces Paxton’s wrath.
I wonder if the Texas Family Project would insert Jewish, Hindu or Buddhist instead of Muslim if it helped them elect their chosen candidate. By the way, I am not Muslim, just a concerned citizen asking all of us to please respect others’ religious beliefs.
Jim Thomas, Allen
Censured for negotiating
Between newspapers, television and internet news, information is coming at us at a pace like we’ve never seen before. It is inevitable that some news items will slip by the average person. I’d like to offer a public service by highlighting a recent story that you may have missed. Apparently, stories such as this are deemed either too hot to handle or just not important to the mainstream media. But each week, you can find at least one item that makes you slap yourself in the forehead and scream, “Are you kidding me?”
Last week’s gem was given to us courtesy of the Oklahoma Republican Party. They “censured and condemned” U.S. Sen. James Lankford. Was he caught accepting bribes or guilty of inappropriate behavior? No. His “crime” was negotiating with Democrats on a bill to improve border security.
Lankford was dumbfounded by the move and remarked that he negotiated to give the Republicans what they asked for, but their response was, ” We don’t want a change in law because of the presidential election year.”
Slap! Are you kidding me?
John R. Dorgan, Flower Mound
Arlington, anyone?
Re: “What’s in a stadium’s name? Jokes, criticisms fly as new moniker favors Dallas over Arlington,” Tuesday news story.
Why are folks losing their minds over a name change for the soccer games? If Arlington is so incensed over the Dallas name, why don’t we call the Cowboys the Arlington Cowboys? Doesn’t that have a certain ring to it? After all, the Cowboys haven’t played in Dallas since 1971 or Dallas County since 2008. Better yet the Tarrant Cowboys.
If I were Dallas, I would sue Jerry Jones and Arlington for perpetuating a fraud with that name and demand payment annually for using the name Dallas Cowboys.
Gaylard French, Waxahachie
Try DFW Stadium
The stadium for the World Cup final has two names. Possibly we could call the one in our area Dallas Arlington or maybe DFW Stadium to represent the entire area.
Don DePuy, Richardson
Can’t blame liberals for gas bill
Re: “$361 gas bill for 63 degrees,” by Anton Skell, Monday Letters.
I share Skell’s frustration over soaring natural gas bills. Last month we paid more for natural gas than electricity at our home! I was right there with him until the last line of his letter, “Please vote for fiscal conservatives before we all go broke.”
No, our crazy utility bills are the result of 30 years of electing overwhelmingly right-wing lawmakers to every level of state government. In that three-decade run they have done what they always do — coddle and cuddle with the energy and utility industry, whose lobbyists have kept a torrent of campaign money flowing to Austin.
The result: — Texas taxpayers get to cover the industry’s losses from the February 2021 deep freeze. Plus, we’ll pay to beef up the grid, which the industry was supposed to be doing all along. It will cost us billions over the next 30 years. As a 2022 Dallas Morning News op-ed stated, “We are being cleverly asked to foot the bill for years of incompetence in Austin.”
We have given the far right in the Texas government more than enough time to prove they care about Texans. This is what we get. Are we not ready to try something else?
Andy Shaw, Dallas/Lake Highlands
Stop waving separatist flag
Re: “Texas is acting like California,” by Abby McCloskey, Jan. 21 Opinion.
I just want to applaud McCloskey’s comments about Texas’ winning attributes as a business magnet. I, too, want Austin politicians to realize that improving education will draw more business to our state than talking about the right to bear arms and red attitudes. Stop waving a Lone Star separatist flag and recognize that millions of middle-of-the-road good people live and work here.
Texans are a divergent and caring lot — whether families or singles. Politicians tend to see citizens through red- or blue-colored glasses, but we all (Texans and Californians alike) have health, educational and family needs. Don’t confuse that with your personal state power plays. We are a welcoming part of this nation’s future growth.
Elisa Berger, Carrollton
Who’ll stop the rain?
Another example of President Joe Biden’s incompetence. He has known for over a week of this impending storm coming to wreak havoc in California, yet did nothing to stop it. How much longer must we deal with this?
Jim Cargile, Plano
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
Texas
North Texas man gives away 120 Christmas trees after slow sales
The first year selling trees didn’t go as planned for one North Texas man.
Tim Miller, co-owner of Hidden Honey Farm in Midlothian, still had more than half of his inventory earlier this week. But he made the best of a tough situation.
One after another, families kept Miller busy picking, preparing and packing up trees— just in time for Christmas.
All of a sudden, trees were flying off the lot. But that wasn’t the case just days before.
With more than 100 Douglas firs still standing, Miller said sales had come to a grinding halt.
“Four days straight with no one,” Miller said.
With Christmas quickly approaching, he had a decision to make.
“We have two options: We’re going to have to dispose of 100 plus trees, or I can give them away and somebody will get some use out of them, so that’s what we decided to do,” he said.
On Tuesday, Miller posted on Facebook: “Our first year of selling Christmas trees didn’t go as well as we had hoped for… If anyone doesn’t have a tree, or knows of someone who needs a tree, they are free for the taking.”
Families who otherwise couldn’t afford a tree began showing up—and word spread quickly.
“I thought, ‘Hey, I wanted to get a Christmas tree for our house anyway. Let’s go get one!’” said Miriam Beachy, holding her 1-year-old son Jeremiah.
Miller said the response was overwhelming, with donations pouring in from across the country.
“All over! Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina, California, somehow or another, people have seen our post and said, you know, we’d like to help,” he said. “I had no idea we would get the results that we have.”
In just two days, all 120 trees found their “fir”-ever homes.
“It really felt like a gift,” Beachy said.
“The appreciation that they have, and I know there’s results I’ll never know of,” Miller added.
He’s still deciding whether to sell trees again next Christmas, but said after the feedback and support he’s received, he’s leaning toward it.
Texas
Texas Tech head coach Joey McGuire pitches his solutions for college football’s calendar
Joey McGuire has worn many hats over his career through the high school and college coaching ranks, but he’s looking to add a new one: Commissioner of fixing the college football calendar.
The fourth-year head coach jokingly offered his name up for the self-imposed fake title Wednesday during a media availability, but his frustration with the current format is real. He believes every team should play Week 0, that a champion should be crowned by Jan. 1 and bowl games should be invitationals set for Week 1.
McGuire’s team had a historic season, winning a Big 12 title and earning a bye in the College Football Playoff. Its reward is 26 days of non-compete before playing in the Capital One Orange Bowl on Jan. 1. McGuire loves it for player health. He hates it because it makes football a two-semester sport.
“Texas high school playoffs are playing 16 games, and they’re crowning a state champion this weekend. FCS has 24 teams in their playoff and they’re crowning a national champion on January 5,” McGuire said. “People are so stuck on traditions and all that. I get that, man. I’m a traditionalist 100%. But guess what? It’s changed.”
By finishing the season on Jan. 1, teams would be able to seamlessly transition into the transfer portal, which opens on Jan. 2, he said. This doesn’t eliminate the unpredictable coaching changes that can happen at programs competing in the playoff, but McGuire argues that unfavorable personnel changing is inevitable regardless of calendar shifts.
Many programs with general managers can handle the current overlap of playoffs and the portal window. Some programs’ philosophies, such as Texas Tech’s, separate the responsibilities while in season. McGuire’s job in recruiting extends only as far as daily texts at this stage in the season, while general manager James Blanchard is working 20-plus-hour days on recruiting trails.
However, only 12 teams are playing for a national championship in December. The rest of the country is either finished with its season or competing in bowl games with a withered staff and roster due to opt-outs and the rapid coaching carousel.
McGuire has his solution ready for that problem.
“How about moving the bowl games to an invitation? And that would be week one, Aug. 23, and we’re playing bowl games Thursday, Friday, Saturday,” McGuire said. “ … You’re going to lose a home game, but you still would have a huge attraction TV-wise. It would be a big watch because you know everybody’s dying for college football week one.”
As McGuire stated, the invitational bowl game would erase a home game for teams. But McGuire wouldn’t be a successful commissioner if he didn’t have a solution to ensure teams could fill out their schedules as they pleased.
“We’ve got these kids all summer long. Camp doesn’t need to be a month long,” McGuire said. “We can play zero week, and you know rock and roll.”
Unfortunately for the hopeful-minded “commissioner,” changes in the college football calendar start with the networks, which he does not work with. However, McGuire said he will speak on the subject whenever given the chance because the conversation starts with him and other college football coaches being outspoken in a time of change.
Find more Texas Tech coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
Texas
Texas A&M teases uniform against Miami in the first-round of the CFP
Texas A&M (11-1, 7-1 SEC) is three days away from hosting Miami (10-2) in the first round of the College Football Playoff on Saturday afternoon, as this will be the first appearance in the tournament for both programs, and by far the best game of the weekend outside of Alabama vs. Oklahoma on Friday night.
This week, Texas A&M’s media team teased the fan base and those of us in the media, changing the Texas A&M Football X page’s profile picture to a blacked-out Texas A&M emblem. Still, on Wednesday, the team released a video showing the CFP symbol printed on the standard Maroon jersey, which likely means the Aggies will go with their regular home look.
However, nothing is set in stone until the final uniform reveal, which will likely release on Thursday afternoon, so for those hoping for a blackout, which would be a first during an early afternoon kickoff, that scenario is still in play. Still, it won’t matter which uniform the Aggies play in, knowing that Miami will field a roster chock-full of NFL talent on both sides of the ball.
For Texas A&M to defend home field, starting quarterback Marcel Reed need to avoid turnovers and play with confidence in the pocket, knowing that Miami star defensive end Rueben Bain is looking to cause havoc in the backfield, meaning Reed will need to get the ball out of hands seconds after the snap, and rely on his elite wide receiver corps to make plays after the catch.
Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.
-
Iowa4 days agoAddy Brown motivated to step up in Audi Crooks’ absence vs. UNI
-
Washington1 week agoLIVE UPDATES: Mudslide, road closures across Western Washington
-
Iowa6 days agoHow much snow did Iowa get? See Iowa’s latest snowfall totals
-
Maine3 days agoElementary-aged student killed in school bus crash in southern Maine
-
Maryland4 days agoFrigid temperatures to start the week in Maryland
-
Technology1 week agoThe Game Awards are losing their luster
-
South Dakota5 days agoNature: Snow in South Dakota
-
Nebraska1 week agoNebraska lands commitment from DL Jayden Travers adding to early Top 5 recruiting class