
September 1980 Issue
Features


The Modified Triple-Reverse, Double-Handoff Option
Football has degenerated into a routine encounter between two sets of programmed, steroid-stuffed robots. These trick plays could change all that.

The $38,000 a Year, Wife and Two Kids, House and a Pool Blues
Is inflation deflating your standard of living? You are not alone.
Columns
Lights, Camera—Willie!
Willie Nelson tries on a starring role and comes out smelling like a Honeysuckle Rose; in Willie an Phil Paul Mazursky pays homage to Truffaut, although he shortchanges himself.
Capote Changes Coler
In Music for Chameleons it’s hard to tell whether Truman Capote is telling the whole truth or nothing at all of the truth; Conspiracy ferrets out much of the truth about John F. Kennedy’s murder.
Onward, Brother Roloff
The feisty pastor of the People’s Baptist Church keeps marching on to war with the State of Texas. Mexican American Pentecostals in the Valley ask Houston’s God’s help on a hot problem.
The Heat Treatment
This one has been a humdinger, but every Texas summer is broiling hot—and that’s nothing to get all steamed up about.
Fit To Be Thai’d
Go east, young Westerners, for the oddest, spiciest food in Dallas; Houston’s Cho is chic, but its kitchen is all shook up.
The Inheritance Factor
In Austin, experts in genetics are helping parents of children with birth defects come to terms with the most painful questions of their lives.
Shock Tactics
Houston’s Equinox Theatre has fine actors and directors, but its raunchy sex and violence can make you squirm. The nineteenth-century Granbury Opera House is a fetching setting for Texas Meg.
Reporter
Texas Monthly Reporter
A black Houstonian revised the Horatio Alger legend; making a racket in Mason; UT astronomers yearn to conquer the universe; requiem for a reef.
Miscellany
State Secrets
Texas chic hits bottom; bak error pinches UT law school; carter alienates Texas again; a test for teachers.