
The Real Mean Green
Talk to coaches and team owners about AstroTurf and you’ll hear all its advantages. Talk to the players and you’ll hear a different story.
Talk to coaches and team owners about AstroTurf and you’ll hear all its advantages. Talk to the players and you’ll hear a different story.
We’ve found them: nine of Mexico’s best colonial inns and lodges. All you have to do is make reservations.
“In the League, you’ll run into a little tradition, some noblesse oblige, and a lot of talk about diets, dyslexia, designer dresses, and divorce.”
You can always spot a smoker. He fiddles with matches, his shirt pocket bulges in a tiny rectangle, and fumes emerge from his mouth and nose. But what should we do about him?
If you want big, we’ve got big. If you want small, we’ve got that, too.
Albert Giacometti’s sculptured figures, now at the Dallas Museum of Fine Art, are tall, emaciated, uncomprehending—and breathtaking.
A.C. Greene’s singular, exquisite vision of West Texas; a thriller that’s better than it should be; and a historical novel with too much history.
The difference between jogging with the Lord and just walking along behind.
A young Russian defector blows his chance to win the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition and goes on to find fame and fortune.
With open arms—that is, mouths—Texas welcome a new breed of bakery.
Werner Herzog reverently remade the classic 1921 version of Nosferatu. He should have left scary enough alone.
Al Neiman’s Fortnight the attractions varied between eccentric Americans and somnambulant British.
A remembrance of the late Texas playwright who spent his days and nights pondering imponderables.
For the sake of the audience, it’s a question that needs to be asked. College productions of A Doll’s House show why actors go to school. Fort Worth has good actors and good producers—but not, alas, in the same theater.
Whose blonde, curly scalp are the farmers after how do the rich and powerful run? Why, pray tell, does Houston need parks?