Armadillos In Toe Shoes
Austin does it again, an exciting new pas de deux for balletomanes: ballet and beer.
Austin does it again, an exciting new pas de deux for balletomanes: ballet and beer.
Some recommendations on what to do, see and buy this month.
The Real ThingWhile billows of smoke encircle the Holmes Road dump, the City of Houston atones somewhat for its ecological sins by its production of Hou-Actinite, a remarkable 100 per cent organic fertilizer which is recycled at the Northside Waste Water Control Facility from city waste water and raw sewage.
Big-time poker players don't worry about luck; they don't need it.
Fantasy finds it hard to compete with reality.
What to do with your quarters.
Turn off the T.V. and read a spell. These books are fun.
Ryan O'Neal, Adolph Hitler and Tom Sawyer have a lot in common. Trust us, you'll see.
Another Texan stuns the New York art and theater world.
Where to find the best food, crafts, and arts in the Alamo City.
In which nice guys finish last, if they finish at all.
Bright lights and movie madness in Big D.
Why movies play where they do, when they do, and if they do.
Old films and old themes come uneasily back to life.
A single-minded Houston director puts on new plays.
Getting the most from the Met for less.
Marlon takes it off and movies will never be the same.
Dionysus in 69 brings nude, bloody experimental theater to Houston.
Dylan Thomas and Ingmar Bergman top some films of varying quality.
Across-the-border radio stations milk the boondocks.
Bikes have changed. Here’s how.
Don Meredith brings football and TV into focus.
“The theater center will mark the spot where Dallas once stood.”
About the AuthorDebbie Deepsheet Takes a Dive, by Mary Margaret WisheyMISS WISHLEY LIVES IN NICE ‘n Rustic, Connecticut, with a pet ‘coon and her two nuns. She is presently at work on the third volume of the Debbie Deepsheet trilogy, titled Debbie Deepsheet, Astronaut. Miss Wishey hopes that the story
Why the best runner in pro football ran right out of the game.
Sakowitz and Neiman's advance and retreat.
LUIS BUNUEL’S THE DISCREET CHARM of the Bourgeoisie is a deliciously pungent concoction by the 72-year-old filmmaker and his young co-scenarist, Jean-Claude Carriere, that will set your spirits soaring and your mind aglow. Never before has this always fascinating artist been quite so tantalizing, so tongue-in-cheek and so deft in
Willie Nelson, Beck, Lisa Loeb, SwingSeparated at Beck: Some of you may have caught Willie Nelson’s appearance last week on “The Tonight Show” where he held the stage with one of LA’s most original artists, Beck. There’s an interesting story behind that collaboration and behind that whole night in