
Texas Primer: The Petroleum Club
People who have watched a certain prime-time soap opera think they know what goes on at the Petroleum Club. They don’t.
People who have watched a certain prime-time soap opera think they know what goes on at the Petroleum Club. They don’t.
The genteel practice of law is dead. Nowadays lawyers fight for clients, raid each other’s firms, and bill, bill, bill.
My father had to have an answer for everything—adultery, spiritual crises, the pigeons defecating in the church gutter. No wonder I didn’t become a preacher. The miracle is that my sister did.
They’re cheesy, they’re tasteless. But each black velvet painting is a one-of-a-kind work of art.
The odds for having a child of our own were slim to none. We took a chance on slim.
A new chapter in art history? Five artists dabble in a medium you’ll never see at the Met.
This story is from Texas Monthly’s archives. We have left the text as it was originally published to maintain a clear historical record. Read more here about our archive digitization project. From 1983 to 1986, Texas Monthly’s regular feature, “Western Art,” highlighted artists’ takes on the classic
With one bold acquisition the Dallas Museum of Art could double the value of its holdings. But there were a few strings attached.
It had to happen. Novelist James Michener has finally trained his macroscope on Texas, and the result is, well, long.
Compact discs: coasters? Frisbees? or the best sound you’ll ever hear?
Graze on the street corners of Texas for fast, tasty, and inexpensive meals.
White Nights is too much cold war, not enough Baryshnikov; After Hours is overwrought Scorcese; Mishima is a mishmash.
A turf battle over shrimp on the coast; a nominee for the meanest man in Houston; a former Cowboy’s reflections on why athletes go broke.
IT WASN’T BECAUSE I was touring West Texas that I ate a cheeseburger for breakfast. It was after stumbling upon Johnny B’s for lunch the day before. Never mind the open sky and distant mesas, the cheeseburger at this inviting luncheonette was all I could envision.Open only since November (and
Fast becoming a master soda jerk, Marilyn Shackelford, manager of Johnny B’s Old-Fashioned Soda Fountain, showed us how to make a fresh Lime Rickey at home.1 juicy lime Crushed ice 1 1/2 oz. cherry syrup (Jubilee brand is good)Fill a pint glass with crushed ice. Squeeze in juice of one
They said it couldn’t be done, but Larry Brumfield built Texas’ largest indoor bass aquarium.
You have to wonder if guys like San Antonio’s C. A. Stubbs aren’t the future of urban politics.
NorthPark Mall inaugurated an epoch twenty years ago. It’s still the standard for upscale shopping.
Fundamentalists lose ground in textbook war; White maneuvers to keep Hispanic support; round two for Crystal City.