June 1980 Cover

June 1980

Table of Contents

Features

Here’s how to achieve inner peace, perfect serenity, spiritual calm, and a nice, neat lawn.

If throwing a spitball is an art, Gaylord Perry is Michelangelo.

They are the latest arrivals on the sexual frontier: the New Gay Macho Men.

There’s more for the traveler in San Antonio than meets the Alamo.

The biggest landholders in the state, acre by acre.

Columns

None of the old clichés about voluntarism are true except this one: it works.

Politics

A lot of farmers and gardeners think Congressman Kika de la Garza is a pest.

Film

What’s up, documentaries?

Dining Out

You can find the spice of your life at Uncle Tai’s in Houston; you don’t have a choice at Joe T. Garcia’s in Fort Worth - except good, reliable Tex-Mex.

Theater

When NBC televised The Oldest Living Graduate, it broadcast the flaws of live TV drama. Theatre Three’s Second Stage Festival deserved a larger viewing audience.

Popular Music

The beat goes on in Texas music - from Christopher Cross’s pop ‘n’ roll to the ever-rich rhythm and blues of the Fabulous Thunderbirds.

Classical Music

The Texas Little Symphony’s April concert was no whistle-stop - it was Carnegie Hall. Two chamber groups, Voices of Change and Syzygy, take the Twentieth Century Limited.

Church

On Palm Sunday Episcopalians at St. David’s in Austin rekindled their faith in the life and teachings of Jesus. At nearby Greater Mt. Zion on Easter, Baptists relived the miracles of His resurrection.

Stepping Out

Not even a freak April snow could keep the glittering multitude from the Y.O. Ranch’s one-hundredth birthday party.

Country Notes

As more and more city dwellers tread on the landscape, farmers and ranchers are less inclined to forgive those who trespass against them.

Reporter

Reporter

Exploding the myth of the long-haul trucker; half a million Texas students get snookered; beating the IRS - maybe; praise the Lord and pass the ballot.

Miscellany

Light at the end of the tunnel, frost on the top of the mountain, brass knucks in the lunchbox.

Party hearty.

A controversial nuclear plant moves to Texas; Clements costs us $11 million; making census out of Houston; the Senate moves toward the center.

Face the music and dance.

Fowl language.

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