Professional athletes. Famed pilots. Well-known philanthropists. Television personalities. Race car drivers. Corporate honchos. Politicians.
What do all these people have in common? They’re graduates of our neighborhood’s
To help mark this milestone, we contacted three members of the school’s Hall of Fame (there are 51 members, with 11 more to be inducted in March), and sat down to talk with them.
Here are their stories.
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CARROLL SHELBY, CLASS OF 1940
In high school,
“I spent a lot of time in Pop Ashburn’s office,” he says laughing, referring to the school’s beloved principal at that time.
“I wasn’t a bad boy, I was just always the one who got caught doing stuff.”
He wasn’t pulling straight A’s either, he says, adding: “All I cared about were cars and airplanes back then.”
Not surprising. Anyone who knows anything about cars knows
But it may have been his induction into the Woodrow Wilson Hall of Fame that surprised him the most.
“I never thought I’d make it,” he says. “Now if they had a hall of shame …”
But
In addition to his many automotive-related accomplishments, he and some friends started an event that survives to this day with the original 1967 Terlingua Chili Cook-off.
“When I owned it, it wasn’t anything but an old woman who collected cactus and a goat that lived there,” he says.
He also started the Carroll Shelby Foundation, an organization that helps fund heart transplants for indigent children.
The inspiration for the latter accomplishment came in the summer of 1990 when, after years of complications,
“I had two weeks to live. I was a very, very lucky human being,” he says now. Seven years later,
At 81 years old, having faced down some of life’s more difficult challenges, he isn’t through yet.
“I don’t know why the old man’s kept me around this long, but I’m still kicking, and I wake up every morning with a new project,” says Shelby, who lives in
And, in true
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BRADLEY SUE HOWELL, CLASS OF 1951
While not a celebrity of
When Howell was inducted five years ago, the ceremony program read: “Bradley Sue deserves to inscribe her academic credentials with B.S., M.S. and A.F.W.”
A.F.W.? It stands for “Anything For Woodrow.”
That’s because Howell, who’s maiden name is La Fon, has been the school librarian for 23 years and also has a well-earned reputation as one of Woodrow’s biggest supporters.
That reputation, she says, is just her carrying on a tradition.
“The original teachers and principals thought very highly of this school,” says Howell, who has lived in our neighborhood since 1945, and whose children and grandchildren have been Wildcats.
“There was not a whole lot of money in the ’30s, but they took care of this building and were proud of it. They set high standards and traditions and made Woodrow into what was really a top school. There were very proud of it, and they infused that in the students.”
And, though times have changed — students these days care less about their school, less about books and more about television, she says — Howell maintains Woodrow still has a lot of community support.
“We have probably the largest PTA in
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JERRY HAYNES, CLASS OF 1944
Who would have thought that the “shy, country boy” would grow up to become one of the
Haynes is best known for his role as Mr. Peppermint on WFAA’s “
,” which he played from 1961-1995 (with a five-year hiatus in the ’70s). And even though he claims he was bashful in high school, it was there he discovered he had a knack for the spotlight.
His favorite class was speech and, one year, he was doing a presentation in front of the entire school at an assembly.
“It was a monologue somebody had written in the paper about a soldier, done in first person,” he says. “And I remember in the middle of it, I flat forgot the words.
“Somehow,” he continues, “I had enough presence to kind of bow my head and say to myself, ‘Now let me see.’ Miraculously, it came back. I came close to walking off.”
From high school, Haynes launched himself into a career dedicated to the world of entertainment, eventually landing at WFAA in 1952, where he did sports broadcasting, conducted interviews, hosted variety shows and a little show called Dallas Bandstand.
“I was kind of the Dick Clark of
But it was his role as Mr. Peppermint that is his most cherished.
“It gave me a niche, and it also it was so much fun,” he says. “It was very creative, and when I went into it, I didn’t mess around. I studied French, took guitar lessons, took voice lessons.”
At the age of 76, Haynes is still throwing himself into projects. He was recently in
Of Linklater, Haynes says: “He was wonderful. Just totally unassuming and really a regular guy.”
In the pilot, Haynes’ plays Jim Hoak, a character who opens and closes an all-night diner in
“We’re a sad lot,” Haynes says of the show’s characters. “A group of losers who work in the restaurant.”
If the pilot successful and the show is put into full-time production by HBO, Haynes says Linklater told him there was a “strong possibility I’d be called back from time to time for a semi-recurring role.”
It’s a proposition he would welcome, he says.
“You work to stay alive.”