That is a pretty stark way to get the point across.
More surveillance cameras at the border, and the Ebola task force makes its recommendations.
Amy Poehler’s favorite Austin teen band has an EP on the way—here’s a taste.
It’s better to have video evidence than not, but those who present police body cameras as a solution to our national predicament involving police relations need to look at cases from Jasper, Texas, to New York City to see that the problem is more complicated than that.
The Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals halts the execution of Scott Panetti, and Ebola cost Dallas $155,000.
A taco tour of Austin, traversing Burnet Road, South Austin, and the East Side.
Hicks, who died twenty years ago, is not Alex Jones. Or is that just what the sheeple want you to think?
On Thursday, the president said that Congress had left him no choice but to act alone. Conservatives can argue otherwise.
Talk of reprising the ol’ A&M-Texas rivalry in a bowl game has led to reports that the Aggies might be avoiding the Longhorns in such a scenario.
Who inject $11 billion into the Texas economy.
The occasional Austinite allegedly tore up a ridiculously large check rather than do a 35-date Led Zeppelin tour.
Senator Ted Cruz jumped into the Net Neutrality debate with a tweet heard ‘round the world yesterday. What does it really mean?
The 101-year-old Aggie tradition found a new purpose on Monday morning.
The state’s top offerings, from a book reading full of quirky drawings and even quirkier words in San Marcos to a giant tamalada in San Antonio.
The Reverend Charles Moore ardently dedicated his life to the service of God and his fellow man. But when he couldn’t shake the thought that he hadn’t done enough, he drove to a desolate parking lot in his hometown of Grand Saline for one final act of faith.
Nose-to-tail, locally sourced, and heavy on the protein: Austin chef Jesse Griffiths’s Dai Due moves from the supper club circuit to a permanent home.
After twelve years in office and two crushing political defeats, the soon-to-be-former lieutenant governor gamely discusses his tenure and Texas’s future. Just don’t ask him about Dan Patrick.
The next lieutenant governor is a former radio shock jock who became one of the most conservative members of the Legislature. How will Dan Patrick act now that he is one of the most powerful officials in Texas?
Never has the Waco university been so big, so rich, so athletically powerful, or so committed to becoming the country’s first elite Protestant university. What does its ambition mean for its identity?
Mike Modano on being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame—and embracing golf.
Lone Star was just a brew for dads and cowboys, until Jerry Retzloff helped turn it into the coolest beer in the country.
For the past 26 years, the Pampa High Fighting Harvesters have counted on their equipment manager not only to fold their uniforms but also to keep their spirits high. Because in Pampa, there is no Friday night without Trent Loter.
Olivia Lord told Dallas police officers that her boyfriend put a gun to his head after a drunken argument. Detective Dwayne Thompson couldn’t see how the evidence—or motive—made any sense. How did Michael Burnside die on May 9, 2010?
I thought being a landman in the Eagle Ford Shale would help replenish my bank account. I quickly got more than I bargained for.
What to hear, read, watch, and look at this month to achieve maximum Texas cultural literacy.
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Still have last-minute shopping to do? Find something special for everyone on your list.
A night with the company that recycles the thousands and thousands of gallons of oil used during the fair.
The area along Greenville Avenue and Skillman street, parallel north-south arteries through the city, has become an Ebola corridor.
Max Soffar is dying on death row, where he sits for a crime I’m certain he didn’t commit. Maybe this letter will convince you to let him spend his last days at home with his family.
Rooted in Business: C. T. Bauer College of Business