The Dallas Observer Blog



Add to Technorati Favorites

Blogroll

The Concession Stand

The Midway

Why Rod Dreher Really Isn't Wild About the Woodrow Wildcats

Mon Apr 14, 2008 at 04:19:42 PM

My last few dog-walking tours over the weekend have revealed to me that Rod Dreher, editorial writer at The Dallas Morning News, is the New Great Satan of Old East Dallas and Lakewood. I think I’m jealous.

Lord. I had people coming off their porches at me to complain about him, waving rolled-up Points sections from their Sunday papers. Dreher had an op-ed piece in the paper yesterday about a campaign to get parents in Ancient East Dallas and Lakewood to put their kids in Woodrow Wilson High School, a public school.

He pointed out that the campaign is aimed at white people, which it is, and then he went on to describe Woodrow as two schools: a white one and a minority one, which it is. In fact, I was all with him for the first half of his piece. But Dreher then veered off into a take that I can only describe as painfully convoluted and racially neurotic.

He seemed to be painting a picture of the white people who send their kids to Woodrow as somehow racist, because their kids are mainly in the advanced placement classes and the kids of color are mainly not. Then he twists off again into a thing about how the white families at Woodrow seem to think white folks like Dreher are chicken-shits. He quotes the Woodrow principal as saying, "Parents choose private schools out of fear."

And then ... I guess … look, his piece is very difficult to follow because, like a lot of what he writes, it doesn’t have a consistent logical thread. But he seems to be saying that Woodrow parents aren’t so great, either, because Woodrow is internally segregated.

At this point in any discussion of Woodrow I need to make full disclosure of a potential conflict of interest in my personal situation: I personally think Dreher is an idiot.

But let me say this about that. The Woodrow-Lakewood parents are an odd interesting mixed bag. Some of them are very progressive: Woodrow has the wonderful Ballet Folklorico program in part because white Lakewood parents pushed for it, knowing that the school’s extracurricular programs could not and should not go on being all-white.

But lots of Lakewooders are less than progressive about it too. They’ve been going to the school for generations. I don’t think some of them are especially liberal. It’s more like, “By God, that’s our school, and if they want to take it away from us, they’ll have to pry this moldy Wildcats banner out of our cold dead heads.”

Frankly, in the long run, in terms of who will stay the course in the long battle for diversity and progress, I’m gonna bet on those clammy-handed Bobcat dead-enders every time.

So what does this all come down to? Easy. I can tell you. Woodrow is 18 percent white. It’s 12 percent black kids, some from newer apartment complexes in East Dallas, some from the very toughest stuff in South Dallas down where Dolphin Road becomes Hatcher Street. And it’s 68 percent Mexican kids, many of whom are recent immigrants within the last few years from Guanajuato and other central Mexican states.

There’s gang stuff, but there also are a lot of poor, hard-working serious families of all ethnic stripes, very much including poor whites.

And there are a bunch of white kids there, many of them middle-class, some rich, and they go on to Stanford and UVA and Yale and the University of Dallas and UT and Austin College and A&M and Kansas and OU and all kinds of cool places.

Woodrow is not perfect, but it tends to be a wonderful experience for the kids who do well there. News reporter Michael Landauer, by the way, has a much more closely reasoned, far smarter rebuttal of Dreher than this over on The News' opinion blog.

For my own two bits' worth, you know what Dreher’s problem is really? He’s from a small town in Louisiana. And he doesn’t think his white kids can survive in a diverse school.

So here’s how I answer that. You have to picture me with my thumbs stuck up under my armpits and my knees bent. I’m walkin’ around. And I am making the wok-wok-wok chicken sound.

You got, it buddy. WOK WOK WOK!!

That’s it, man. That’s the story. --Jim Schutze

Category: Schutze

19 Comments:

Rawlins Reality Realty says:

Lord, I was wondering when you'd come in from the front porch and shoot your bow and error at Rod's Woodrow's Sunday piece de resist-at-all-cost.

As someone who a) came from East Dallas and went to once-Woodrow ultimate rival, North Dallas which, when I went there, was about as 'North Dallas' as Cole and Haskell are today, but picky-picky. Those days gone by before people who moved here 5 years ago told me regularly that I (who grew up between the Old Monk and Louie's off Henderson) was raised in the 'Park Cities Adjacent' wonderland of Knox-Henderson, (then considered very marginal/let's not talk about where Rawlins is from sorta thing) and went to High School in 'Uptown'. (When our housekeeper lived in State-Thomas?)

Oh well, I count on Rod to stir things up, but until the hive has Schutze creating a buzz, there is no 'Honey, I'm Home’ for me!

Dave Little says:

neighborhood kids should go to neighborhood schools. if it sucks, help fix it.

Los Politico says:

Jim,

I’ve been thinking about this all day and I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s a good thing that Dreher (and Wick at D) doesn’t like Woodrow, he’s not supposed to. American’s are increasingly separating them-selves based on their lifestyles, right? Well, Woodrow and East Dallas are the manifestation of the liberal lifestlyle. The hypothetical college educated, high performing liberal couple is the East Dallas identity. The tree hugging, prius driving, Austin loving, New York Times reading, Peace Corps volunteering, public school supporting Liberal. And while we can’t all walk the walk in every regard, we can make damn sure that our kids go to school with kids from likeminded families.

On some level Dreher (and Wick) and the rest of them recognize this and have labeled Woodrow the enemy, because we are the enemy. Our Wildcats will always be the enemy to their Scots. So while it’s well and good to try and recruit like-minded families to “Choose Woodrow,” reality is when someone knowingly chooses not-Woodrow, we don’t want them there anyway. They aren’t really part of the East Dallas community, at least not my East Dallas community.

Emilio Velasquez, Jr. says:

Señor Rawlins, because cruel fate cries out to us that we shall never be so fortunate as to have the Observer give you your own bright spot where you might recount for us the history of your genome in Texas one glorious, timeless day at a time, would you not then be better served at this difficult Woodrow juncture by throwing such coy hedging to the wind and giving Señor Dreher the full measure of tongue so that your next, long overdue op-ed piece in the News is delayed from us no longer?

Emilio

wWw Spirit of '76 says:

My stomach has been in knots since Sunday morning? Who could possibly hate our beloved Woodrow? Why would they attack the very people who have kept it a school where you can be the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court or you can be a garbageman?

Then I realized once again that they will never get it. The garbageman and the Chief Justice actually are friends and can have a beer together after the reunion or the game.

I'm sure that really frightens people like Rod and Wick. How can you not sink to the garbageman level? How people of different colors and backgrounds possibly be great friends, even like family?

And the ultimate, why don't they want to live in Highland Park? They must not have the money, yes that's it. The money keeps out 'the riff-raff' as a Parkie stated on the DMN blog today.

I know I'll be received as Tom Robinson, but I really feel sorry for those two and their ilk.

Dallas Can't Academy says:

When will Dallas and most other school districts realize this one thing: While segregation was removed some time ago,it is alive and well at least in the DISD.

Here is how it worked while I was in the district: White, asian, and indian kids=AP classes. All other races go to regular classes. Sad to say, but this is how it seemed to breakdown.

So yes, DISD was very safe for us white kids as we had different lunch tables, classes, activities, but not sports. I guess all the races mixed together were supposed to get into fights during this time. It did not happen.

So wait, it didn't breakdown by race? No, we broke it down by people that wanted to be there and those that didn't. The bad element kept to themselves and the kids that wanted to learn and interact stayed together.

Once everyone realizes that we can finally stop this stupid debate.

Mike says:

Look, there aren't too many smart conservative opinion writers out there today. Few of them want to live in Dallas and not NYC or DC and write for a second-tier major daily.

jd says:

We send our son to Lakewood. I thought it was to receive value from the taxes we are paying. We also visited several schools and Lakewood was the most integrated (staff & students) and also just had the best feel to it. I’ve had no regrets until Rod Dreher set me straight that it is really because I’m a racist. I was hoping he could send me a “Choose Belo” sign for my yard.

Tim Covington says:

IMO, both sides are right and wrong about private schools. Do some people send their kids to private schools out of fear? Yes. However, some also send their kids to private schools for other reasons. Some send them to private schools because they want them to have a religious aspect to their child's education. And, some send their children to private schools because public schools can't offer them what their children need. One of my wife's best friends is a good example of this. He has a learning disability that makes it next to impossible to learn in a classroom with a large number of students. So, his parents sent him to a private school that offered small class sizes (5-10 students) and the focused attention he needed. He excelled at this school.

scott says:

This city needs a civil war. Right now, Dallas vs. HP. I suggest stop-light embargoes until the park cities acceed to our demands. I want toll booths to leave the blue bubble, until they widen Mockingbird and Lovers to six lanes with an additional left turn lane.

If they want real war, while they got the bucks we got the numbers. While they must have sophisticated armaments I dare say the larger military ordinance they have will be a liability for them. Rank use of missles and bombings of Dallas neighborhoods would obviously carry negative PR, but our more likely tactic of house to house fighting with small arms should prove much more media friendly.

My fear is that the Park Cities might try to form an alliance with Far North Dallas. This Preston Axis of Affluence is the gravest threat. I can hear some sceptics saying "pshaw" over the prospects of North Dallas Jews and Parkies actually uniting but I will remind you to look at the Military Industrial Complex--this nexus is a fait accompli.

I do have worries about divisions that may erupt between East and West Dallas, this will require some cleaver political manuvering, significant sums of money to make Bachman Lake more of a destination and so on. But with some inititiative, and some subterfuge we can do it and Make Dallas weird.

Dee says:

Mike said

"Look, there aren't too many smart conservative opinion writers out there today. Few of them want to live in Dallas and not NYC or DC and write for a second-tier major daily."

This is just what Jim Schutze said above, but look how much more clearly and succinctly you said it!

ericthegardener says:

Only in the mind of a conservative is sending your kids to a mixed-race public school instead of an all white private school the racist decision.


Up is down. It's a typically transparent tactic.

Amy S says:

Scott, fear not, I am currently training a group of young public school boys to manipulate unmanned drones to fly over the bubble. They are taking a break from training as Concert Guitar Heros to dedicate their thumbs to this effort. Yesterday there was a blimp flying over North Dallas, now if it could just be recruited?

wWw Spirit of '76 says:

From the battlements at Fortress Woodrow, once more into the breach dear friends!

When the blast of war blows in our ears,we imitate the action of the Wildcat!

Now set the teeth and stretch the nostril wide - from the crimson crenellations we pour our crimson (and gray) hearts!

old school says:

Did anyone here go to Lakewood Elementary? Remember Mr. Young? Good times...

anna says:

i remember mr. young...that was back in the days of the paddle!!!

wWw '76 says:

When I was at Lakewood, it was Mr. Steele - his paddle was named 'woody'.

old school says:

Coach Steele? I can't tell you how many times he made me 'hold up the wall.' What a beating.

anna says:

if my memory serves me correctly, mr. young's paddle was called "the wolf".

both mr. young and coach steele would weight our arms with rubber mats whilst hold up the wall.

good times!!

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)



Dallas Observer Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff