September 1982 Cover

September 1982

Table of Contents

Features

Between watching girls and getting a great tan, lifeguards occasionally have to save lives.

The University at one hundred; how good is it, really?

So read our guide to the 1982 UT football season, and you can skip the games.

The famous cartoonist aims his pen at the Texas mystique.

The end of the Chagra family’s drug empire, a few words on murderer-for-hire Charles Harrelson, and the most incrimminating tapes since Watergate.

What you won’t see from Dallas designers is lots of froufrou. What you will see is a look tailored for the working woman.

Who’s who, and who’s doing what to whom: a brief guide.

It looks fragile with its lacy leaves and fragrant flowers. Looks can be deceptive.

Columns

The phantom building.

Books

Things are looking good for the Sunbelt, says political prognosticator Kevin P. Phillips. Unfortunately, things are looking bad for America.

Food

Ethiopian food is spiked with pungent spices, served without plates or forks, and eaten by the adventurous—and lucky—few.

Theater

In the past two years Kjehl Rasmussen has opened two acclaimed Dallas theaters and directed a hit musical. And that’s just for starters.

Jazz

The late alto saxophonist lived a life marred by heroin addiction and prison time, but his pain was only a counterpoint to the beauty of his music.

Movies

With its folksy-talking tarts and rubes, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas tries to make a virture of vulgarity. Bard-olaters who flock to two Shakespeare-inspired offerings may be disappointed: Woody Allen’s A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy is puckish but prosy; Paul Mazursky’s Tempest leaves the viewer at sea.

Reporter

Reporter

Dallas a haven for mystics and misfits? La Raza Unida just a memory? Plus: a real, live train robber reminisces; public TV fades in and out; C.A. Doerge gets all pumped up.

Miscellany

Harding Lawrence’s handiwork; Daddy’s fancy footwork; the mayor’s legwork.

Taller-than-thou in Houston; Bullock and his feelings; the fate of the Boll Weevils; yellow journalism in Dallas.

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