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  Texas : Features : Humor : Column - "A Balloon In Cactus"
Gaylord Texan Resort | Grapevine Hotels
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TEXAS: INTO THE FUTURE
AND INTO THE PAST

by Maggie Van Ostrand
Maggie Van Ostrand
Where in Texas can you bypass summer's deadly heat, avoid Transylvanian mosquitoes, and never feel the sting of a bee?

The Gaylord Texan, that's where.

It may be 99 degrees Farenheit outside, but the temperature under the Gaylord's biosphere, referred to as a "climate controlled atrium," remains at 72 degrees.

They say that hot Texas air was personally lassoed by Guy Allen and dragged under the biosphere to cool.

It's a unique experience to leave your room in the evening, go "outside" to the gardens, and look skyward to see the stars. Here, however, all the stars in the heavens are combined into one, a gigantic, golden Star of Texas at the atrium's crown.

Guests stroll along inviting stone paths which wend across bridges and rivers, through "Texas Hill Country," rock formations and waterfalls, Alamo façades, a replica of the San Antonio River Walk, swimming pools (outdoor and indoor), statues of Texas Longhorn, and the occasional cowboy who's very much alive and twirling.

The Gaylord is so large that several of the 2000-member staff can be found almost everywhere. "Turn left at the blue cow," is a popular direction, as is "Turn right at the fountain." It could take some time to find any specific fountain, since there are many, some with geysers of water and some with fountains of chocolate.

That's right. Chocolate. A three-tiered fountain of flowing chocolate awaits guests who wish to dip into it with their giant strawberries. God is in the details.

The real San Antonio River Walk, the contiguous United States, and the Empire State Building, could probably fit under this massive atrium, with room left over for for the National Society of Newspaper Columnists' 2005 conference.



NSNC members had occasion to leave the Gaylord's protective confines only once during their stay. We attended a special event in Dallas: the pre-opening of "Covering Chaos," a new exhibition featuring media coverage of the Kennedy assassination.

Organized by The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, the exhibition explores the challenges facing Dallas reporters in November 1963. Journalism back then, long before cell phones, faxes, and laptops, was quite different. No CNN cameras were there to block the motorcade view from ordinary citizens. The Abraham Zapruder 8mm, silent color home movie of the motorcade is the only known film of the entire Kennedy assassination.

Three eyewitnesses to history spoke to NSNC members. Journalist Hugh Aynesworth was standing in Dealey Plaza as a spectator to see Kennedy's motorcade, and ended up covering the day's catastrophic events. His eyewitness account can be read in his book, "JFK: Breaking the News." Aynesworth said that only three shots were fired, and there's no doubt about that, despite "more than 200 conspiracy theories" which are still cropping up in 2005.

The second speaker was James Leavelle, former homicide detective, known worldwide as the man in the white Stetson and white suit, handcuffed to Lee Harvey Oswald.

Leavelle, tall and lanky, recounted his story with clarity, telling it like it was, and dispelling the "JFK" movie version, though he was a consultant on it. Instead of truth, director Oliver Stone insisted on inventing "facts" for the purpose of entertainment.

Leavelle originally became involved with Oswald in the case of slain police officer JD Tippet, and did not know at the time that Oswald was also a suspect in the assassination of JFK.

The third speaker was Bert Shipp, then WFAA-TV's Assistant News Director who, like Aynesworth, was not assigned to cover President Kennedy's motorcade; he just happened on by to the story of a lifetime.

When one hears such eyewitness accounts, one is reminded of how much revisionist history is out there in today's schools. Perhaps our students even believe Hollywood director Oliver Stone's imaginary events of the period.

History can also be seen "in the flesh" as it were, when taking a guided tour of Grapevine, the delightful town which lies between Dallas and Fort Worth. Costumed actors portray various local figures from Grapevine's rich historical past, stopping to tell tourists their characters' stories of Grapevine folklore.

After the conference closed, I was waiting at Dallas-Ft Worth Airport for my flight back to Los Angeles, when the clerk behind the American Airlines desk pointed at the large black "GAYLORD TEXAN, GRAPEVINE" on my shirt. She said there's a year's waiting list for a reservation.

Small wonder. It's a rare city that can take a visitor simultaneously into the future and into the past.
Copyright Maggie Van Ostrand
"A Balloon In Cactus"

July 30, 2005 column
Email: maggie@maggievanostrand.com
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