
Wilson and Fawcett happened to be at the same party late last year at The Great Caruso, a southwest Houston restaurant. No, he didn't really have a date with Farrah Fawcett, so let's call a halt to the "Charlie's Angel" jokes, please. Six months ago he sold his share in the fancy nightclub and, says Wilson, "announced that because of my poor judgment I was getting out of the disco business and into the ice cream business." He invested in a Haagen-Dazs ice cream store in Texas and told reporters, "The first one of you SOBs who refers to my ice cream parlor as a massage parlor, I'll sue." Wilson, whose sense of humor and love of night life earned him the nickname "Good Time Charlie" on Capitol Hill, says he intends to be photographed with 10 happy children licking ice cream cones.Īnd while we're on the subject, let's wrap up a couple more Wilson items: Wilson, incidentally, represents a largely dry district in Texas, and press reports of his role as a minority investor in Elan never played all that well back home. Shortly thereafter the car was returned to the front of the nightclub "with profuse apologies," according to Wilson. But when an alert Federal Communications Commission employe saw Wilson's car disappear, he called the congressman's office. It was parked illegally in front of the Elan nightclub.
#GOODTIMES TOW DRIVER#
The tow truck driver apparently paid no attention to the Texas "SO-2" license plates (the letters mean "state official") on Wilson's car.

A District of Columbia tow truck operator received a fast lesson in politics recently when he had the misfortune to tow away the car owned by the chairman of the House District committee, Rep.
