The Jockey Club’s Wild Ride

Walter Troutman’s two-story penthouse atop the original Jockey Club high-rise, which he designed specifically for himself when he built the place in 1968, is anachronistically opulent, with its spiral staircases, panoramic view of the Intracoastal, and indoor pool on the upper level. Still, with all the plaques, magazine covers, snapshots,…

Coming of Age on the 50-Yard Line: The Epilogue

In the South Florida equivalent of the Ice Bowl, with the temperature hovering in the low 40s at kickoff Saturday, the Gwen Cherry Bulls lost to the Goulds Rams 8-0 in the championship game of the 80-pound weight division of the Greater Miami Pop Warner football league. “We’re a better…

Mudslinging Matriarchs

It’s 1:35 a.m. and Eunice Liberty is on the phone, fuming with anger. “I didn’t work all these years to be treated like this,” protests the 93-year-old, who, despite her advanced age, is decidedly more alert than the bleary-eyed reporter on the other end of the line. The object of…

The Music Man

For the past two and a half years music instructors at Miami’s New World School of the Arts have watched in dismay as a majority of their full-time colleagues, who had helped build a small but respected conservatory, abandoned the enterprise to join other faculties. Moreover, those who remain have…

Why They Called it XS

It’s been more than six years, yet Ronnie Greenspan can’t talk about the staff party without feeling a rise of queasiness in the pit of her stomach. The shame she felt that night, though diminished by time, has never quite disappeared. Rather, it has spiraled down through the years to…

The Waiting Game

James Burke didn’t seem to want to leave. The November 18 county commission meeting had been adjourned, and while his colleagues quickly packed up and left, Burke remained in his chair, papers and reports scattered in front of him. Who could blame him for lingering? For the past fourteen months…

It’s Lonely at the Top

Xavier Suarez’s first incarnation as Miami mayor didn’t go that well. The Harvard-educated lawyer came into office in 1985 with a host of proposals and a promise to control the city commission’s notoriously circuslike meetings. But he neglected to bring along the ability (or perhaps the willingness) to patch together…

Sherlock Holmes, Meet Melanie Morningstar

Melanie Morningstar arrived in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, one Saturday afternoon this past September toting a backpack full of books and speaking the fractured Spanish one might expect from a blond gringa tourist. Little did the clerk checking her into the Honduras Maya Hotel imagine that the slightly ditsy visitor from Miami…

Coming of Age on the 50-Yard Line

Info: Coming of Age on the 50-Yard Line Most of the boys who play in Gwen Cherry Park’s pop warner football program live in the Scott Projects, but they do their growing up on the gridiron By Robert Andrew Powell What politics is to the Cuban community, football is to…

With Kidnappers Like These, Who Needs Social Workers?

James and Emma Somerset say they were just trying to help their son and his girlfriend escape the dangers of Liberty City and begin a new life in Columbus, Ohio. Their August excursion to Miami to pick up the girlfriend and her children began as an errand of mercy, but…

Overpriced, Underdone, and Left Behind

Miami Beach’s South Pointe neighborhood, the area below Fifth Street, has really taken off. The Portofino group of companies headed by German bad boy Thomas Kramer is fulfilling its vision of towering condominium projects lining some of the most pricey waterfront real estate in Florida. Renowned architect Helmut Jahn has…

Into Africa

In the darkness the warehouses along Opa-locka Boulevard all look alike. Flat, one-story boxes strung in a line, they offer no welcoming fluorescent signs, no explanatory billboards. Rarely are people seen on the sidewalk. Parking lots stretch out like vast asphalt plains. But six nights a week interior lights illuminate…

Loads of Dirty Laundry

As laundromats go, My Dream Coin Laundry is spectacular. Row after row of shiny front-loading washing machines hum along to reggae tunes on the sound system. The white tile floor is spotless; dryers along the walls work for free. Men and women fold clothes in air-conditioned comfort while kids skip…

When the Flak Flies, the Flack Flees

Three weeks after withdrawing his name from consideration for the job of Miami Beach Police Department public information officer, Jack Sullivan still feels betrayed. When he first submitted his application for the newly civilianized post in September, he knew he was walking into something of a war zone: Relations between…

The Oat Wars

The morning light draws glistening stripes along the metal gates that open into Manolo Garcia’s South Dade stable and feed store. The aroma of grain and seed sweetens the air as a laborer emerges from the door of a storage building wheeling a dolly laden with two 50-pound bags of…

Black in Blue

At a little after 8:00 a.m. on Sunday, September 7, more than half a dozen City of Miami police cars are parked in front of an abandoned building on a quiet corner in Overtown. Boxed in by a Florida Power & Light substation, the structure at 470 NW Eleventh St…

First Draft

Five years ago Ivonne Lamazares decided to learn how to ride a bicycle. As a girl growing up in Cuba, she didn’t have a bike, and the couple of times she’d had a chance to ride didn’t go well. “I’ve felt inadequate about physical things all my life,” she says…

My Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, My Fist Gets in Your Mouth

A product of three generations of northern Italian restaurateurs, Maurizio Farinelli came to the United States in 1989 with the dream of opening his own eatery. First he toiled as a busboy to raise enough money for English classes. Having learned the language, he worked his way up through the…

A Merciful Court of Public Opinion

Humberto Hernandez is A) a former attorney for the City of Miami fired in 1994 by his boss for allegedly conducting outside legal work on city time. B) an attorney who the Florida Bar determined should have his license suspended following charges that he violated Bar regulations by soliciting family…

The Rise and Fall of Miamiland

In recent days French and Canadian warships have begun conducting hostile maneuvers in the Bay of Fundy in support of the fledgling secession movement in northern Maine. Meanwhile, talk of statehood for Los Angeles once again dominates the California political debate. Though these developments might lead one to expect a…

Calypso Carnival

February 27, 1968, was Carnival Tuesday in Trinidad, and 22-year-old Claude Clement was rushing to join a band of masqueraders gathered in downtown Port of Spain. Led by a group of parading steel pan players, Clement and the other revelers danced. They jumped. They gyrated. Just as they reached Charlotte…

A Dramatic Exit

For such a tiny theater, the Calusa Playhouse boasts a long history. The 100-seat former coconut plantation dormitory, erected in 1917, is the second-oldest structure on Key Biscayne, after the Cape Florida Lighthouse. It has seen incarnations as a church, a hurricane shelter, and a school. For the past four…