S.A. Print Wars Revisited
It seems like only yesterday that media czar and San Antonio Express-News owner Rupert Murdoch rallied his troops in Texas’ most heated daily newspaper war with the battle cry “Bury the bastards.”
It seems like only yesterday that media czar and San Antonio Express-News owner Rupert Murdoch rallied his troops in Texas’ most heated daily newspaper war with the battle cry “Bury the bastards.”
Recognition has come very late for Texas’ oldest living artist.
We’ve Never Been Licked, the World War Two vintage drama starring the Texas Aggies.
Jim Wright is passing out copies of his book again-and this time it’s required reading.
Own a piece of history and get in on the ground floor of the booming penal-corrections-facilities industry.
A racetrack that need not take a bite out of your pocketbook.
Is the universe too small for two Texas radio star shows?
An avid doodler puts a good face on his obsession with snack food.
Indifference to the KKK may mean that the secret organization has a new cross to bear.
San Diego’s museum is just on box short of telling the whole truth.
A new contender for the margarita-inventor title turns up in S.A.
Three galas are all in a night’s work for Houston’s TV party animal.
Found! One lucky hunk who actually loves the ultimate male fantasy.
El Paso’s number one health official keeps watch over both sides of the Rio Grande.
On a clear day at Palo Duro Canyon, you can film forever.
A wiry Texas native rivals St. Augustine on its home turf.
“We’re feeding off the public,” brag the shameless, self-promoting Art Guys.
A jazz-and –blues guide spotlights the Texas venues that have withstood the test of time.
An aficionado of (gasp!) canned chili accepts an impossible mission.
Can a movie that cost $23,000 compete? Bet your bohemian lifestyle.
Rice producers hit on a surefire way to forecast turmoil.
In the urban-makeover contest, San Antonio’s downtown still draws the biggest crowds.
Singers Edie Brickell and Sara Hickman share a formula for success attend the right school and take up art.
Bodybuilder John Jacobs wants to pump you up-for Jesus.
Refugees from a polluted world do battle for a toxic-free zone in the Trans-Pecos.
Gas prices, weather, and day of the week all count in the dismal task of predicting holiday highway death tolls.
Check Magazine.
The Africanized bees have arrived, and Anita Collins can’t wait to take them on.
Nuclear polka blasts Japan! Brave Combo basks in the radioactive afterglow.
PR and nostalgia keep the legend alive. But will the town survive?
Funeral home director Murphy offers a commonsense option.
Psychedelic pioneer Erickson gets his due.
Poodle slayer helps “Satan of Journalism” peddle p.m. paper
Nibbe’s Twin Plant News explains border economics to the world.
Painter Keith Clementson demonstrates how to turn a bluebonnet painting in to a work of art.
Disc freestyle champion John Houck puts a new spin on golf.
Expressway anxiety? Dallas therapist Richard Carson can help you cope.
You have probably seen the little green or yellow packages at convenience-store counters.
West Coast folk festivals got Kennedy’s Kerrville touch.
Is this the knife Jim Bowie took to the Alamo? Owner Bart Moore and Spirit of the Alamo founder John Stokes believe that the bladesmith’s stamp and Bowie’s name prove it is.
As the Mega Borg blazed, the Gulf absorbed the toxic oil spill.
When hurricanes come in, Carrie Doughty and Joe Garza head out.
Dick Armey sneered at D.C.’s chummy politics. Then he found he liked being a member of the club.
In honor of the Economic Summit, Houstonians are cleaning up their act and driving themselves nuts.
Robert Bass must sometimes wish he had coveted an easier takeover target than the Flordia company that owns the St. Petersburg Times.
Friendly Cowboy Jim gives San Antonio tourists what they want.
Pumping iron at Austin’s laundro-gym.
Conquering Arlington’s Texas Giant.
Author Don Diebel offers how-to tips for hungry gals in search of available guys like himself.
Kicking the habit in Randall County Jail.