
If you need a last-minute stocking stuffer, Mike Peterson at the Daily Cartoonist has updated this list of cartoons, cartoonists and their Patreon and other support pages. A great gift is a subscription to one of your (and their) favorite artists!


.@TexasMonthly gives Bum Steer of the Year to the Texas Democratic Party: https://t.co/ZzmBbWPcXh
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) December 16, 2020
.@ProgressTexas's Top Ten Best and Worst Texans of 2020 https://t.co/cwmrsIac8g #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 18, 2020
In a state that gave us Beyonce and Whataburger, making a "best of" list is a tall order. Proud to make the cut in @TexasMonthly's best of 2021 list!https://t.co/F3waX9Y1LR
— Lina Hidalgo (@LinaHidalgoTX) December 16, 2020
The late, great Molly Ivins: “The Democrats never miss a chance to miss a chance.”
— Tenilla Sheehan (@tenilla) December 15, 2020
.@GovAbbott vows no more shutdowns as #COVID19 rages, widespread vaccines are months away https://t.co/jgNnNWdIKP #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 17, 2020
Texas reported nearly 17,000 new #COVID19 cases today, about 6,000 more than the peak in July. pic.twitter.com/gNBZPN7jrs
— Meredith Yeomans (@YeomansNBC5) December 18, 2020
Because this year was such a special one, we reserved a distinguished place among our 2021 Bum Steer (dis)honorees for the not-quite-twenty Texans who spectacularly disgraced themselves during the pandemic.
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 17, 2020
Let's give it up for the COVID Nineteen y'all: https://t.co/IO51x4YQzZ
At Houston hospital, head of #COVID19 unit sees some staff wary of a vaccine https://t.co/Hr1tC1Nxik #HouNews
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 16, 2020
NEW: Despite CDC guidelines to avoid public gatherings, 80+ legislators from both parties scheduled in-person fundraisers in Austin this past month.
— Lauren McGaughy ๐ (@lmcgaughy) December 15, 2020
We scoped out the most popular venues — and got kicked out of a couple — to bring you this story:https://t.co/SonagGBmDm #txlege
"I saw a guy with an oxygen machine. He was carrying around an oxygen machine to *breathe,* but he didn't have a mask on."
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 16, 2020
Grooms with COVID, flying bodily fluids, and maskless dance floors: Texas wedding photographers are telling all. https://t.co/e2Opnc3Xcm
Prosecutors: A former HPD captain faces assault charges after accosting an A/C repairman at gunpoint who he believed was involved in a ballot fraud scheme https://t.co/PDIUA568yz
— St. John Barned-Smith ⚔️ (@stjbs) December 15, 2020
Aguirre was apparently paid more than $200k from the "Liberty Center for God and Country," to investigate the alleged voter fraud. The vast majority of the money — $211,400 — came the day after the alleged aggravated assault. pic.twitter.com/Y8WlFtrP2d
— St. John Barned-Smith ⚔️ (@stjbs) December 15, 2020
Jesus Christ, what’s wrong with you people? So much for separation of church & state. Your gov’t just gave $4.4 million ‘stimulus’ loan to billionaire conman Joel Osteen's Church. https://t.co/7JNZw3NxAY via @houstonchron
— kotawi (@kotawi) December 15, 2020
Mysterious dark money group that backed @RepCuellar, 'Big Oil's Favorite Democrat', was funded by Big Oil https://t.co/FaglFS7q76 via @sludge
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 17, 2020
Cuellar's revenge... https://t.co/Tj37iZZL4m pic.twitter.com/JU6eXZFnSG
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) December 18, 2020
Last weekend, @HoustonDSA protested Rep. Lizzie Fletcher's ties to fossil fuel donors & her failure to #FightForOurLives with a Green New Deal.
— DSA for a Green New Deal๐ฑ๐น⚡️ (@DSAecosocialism) December 18, 2020
Today Nancy Pelosi rewarded Fletcher & 4 other pro-business "New Democrats" with powerful positions on the Energy & Commerce Committee. https://t.co/hnMgtVyGeP
✨๐ pic.twitter.com/RJheevduya
— El Arroyo (@ElArroyo_ATX) December 13, 2020
THE SPIRIT OF GIVING: The rapper and entrepreneur was spotted donating toys during and emergency toy drive in Houston. https://t.co/I7uHjMUIkG
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) December 18, 2020
Dallas buys Oak Cliff hotel to serve as COVID-19 quarantine location and housing for homeless people https://t.co/o2iq9R6di9
— Dallas Morning News (@dallasnews) December 17, 2020
UT-Austin establishes Dan Rather Medals for courage in journalism https://t.co/rQeGx77ucr
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 18, 2020
I wrote a story about the actor Barry Corbin, who left Lamesa, Texas, & wound up playing the roles of Uncle Bob, General Beringer, Maurice Minnifield, a couple of psychotic patriarchs, 15 sheriffs—and Macbeth. @TexasMonthly https://t.co/sPL3UYnqAF
— Michael Hall (@mikehalltexas) December 17, 2020
“Selena: The Series” has reignited interest in her music.
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) December 15, 2020
For more on the next generation of female Tejano artists, we’ll talk to Veronique Medrano.https://t.co/orlOrfBEbV
KEWX, the New Braunfels Radar, has gotten into the Holiday spirit. Each year our electronics staff add red and green lights to the tower around Christmas time.
— NWS Austin/San Antonio (@NWSSanAntonio) December 18, 2020
Bonus content for the astronomy folks - getting Jupiter and Saturn being buddies in the picture!@NWS @NEXRADROC pic.twitter.com/DiwqQkEbHh
THROWBACK: In this 1961 photo, Houstonians line up for their free polio vaccine shots at the Minimax store off Holmes Road. The special clinic, sponsored by the city, was set up at the store because the area was so far from any public health facility. (Jim Morgan/Chronicle file) pic.twitter.com/LehYdv1xuQ
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 17, 2020

It might help get the attention of people with pardon power, though. https://t.co/nDFX2j4l9s
— Jay Root (@byjayroot) December 8, 2020
GA AG: “The Texas Attorney General is constitutionally, legally and factually wrong about Georgia.”
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 9, 2020
Mich. AG: a “publicity stunt, not a serious legal pleading.”
Wisc. AG: “I feel sorry for Texans that their tax dollars are being wasted on such a genuinely embarrassing lawsuit.” https://t.co/IJfsrDOqKB
In a very brief order, the court says Texas lacks Article III standing to sue other states over how they conduct their own elections. In layperson's words: a state has no valid interest, under the Constitution, in attempting to police other states' voting procedures. pic.twitter.com/o2TRRN2PmM
— SCOTUSblog (@SCOTUSblog) December 11, 2020
There were zero votes for the TX AG on the merits, including zero votes from Trump appointees. It was a clown suit from the beginning, and 126 representatives, 18 state AG’s, and a host of prominent right-wing activists beclowned themselves by supporting it.
— David French (@DavidAFrench) December 12, 2020
#NEW: Texas GOP chair Allen West suggests "law-abiding states" should "form a Union" after Supreme Court rejects lawsuit on election results https://t.co/wWejq2kMTZ
— CBSDFW (@CBSDFW) December 12, 2020
Undermining American democracy is a non-starter but smart politics? https://t.co/mAECcUTU8q
— Evan (@evan7257) December 10, 2020
The meter's running ...
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) December 15, 2020
Lawyer hired to defend Texas AG Ken Paxton in whistleblower case will cost state $540 an hour, according to latest by @lmcgaughy and @MorrisReports #txlege @KenPaxtonTX https://t.co/9XqJBpY6wv
National lawyers group seeks sanctions against Texas AG Ken Paxton, colleagues who sued to undo Biden’s win https://t.co/lVLGFTwvGV
— Dallas Morning News (@dallasnews) December 15, 2020
Texas has the absolute worst Republicans in the nation. https://t.co/G8BrXcqFLq #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 15, 2020
More from @TexasDSHS: this is what the first 2 days of #COVID19 vaccine shipments look like for TX hospitals: pic.twitter.com/2WkzK3Lu8U
— Wes Rapaport (@wesrap) December 14, 2020
Vaccine Expert Says There Isn’t A ‘Better’ COVID-19 Immunization; Suggests Taking 1st Option | Texas Standard @TexasStandard https://t.co/rvv2fiZMQu
— Prof Peter Hotez MD PhD (@PeterHotez) December 14, 2020
“I’ve never seen this level of human suffering in my 20 years of healthcare." https://t.co/baBU0aFLJE
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) December 14, 2020
The White House Coronavirus Task Force is increasingly suggesting that states including #Texas begin shutting down again since they aren’t doing enough to slow the worst surge in COVID cases that the country has seen, writes @BenjaminEW➡️ https://t.co/ot7O0vgzad
— Zach Despart๐️ (@zachdespart) December 14, 2020
Nurse Christian Ramirez said he’s started to dream he’s in the hospital and will wake up wondering where his patients are.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 13, 2020
At one point during the summer, he saw a nurse weeping next to a dying patient — her own mother — wondering if she’d infected her. https://t.co/zuCDXS4t0o
The @EPA is fast-tracking the review of hundreds of products that may be effective against COVID-19—even as many experts warn that some of these products could be dangerous to consumers and the environment, especially when overused or used incorrectly.https://t.co/9YHk9Nhumw
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) December 11, 2020
๐จ๐จ According to a study from the University of Texas at Austin, 21 people who died from the virus while incarcerated had served 90% or more of their sentence. And nine people had been approved for parole but died before they could be released. https://t.co/0AKRzyNTuG pic.twitter.com/DDj9meXxq3
— Rio Slade of the Guillotine Party (@RioSlade) December 14, 2020
14 Fort Hood soldiers fired or suspended over violence at base after investigation spurred by death of Specialist Vanessa Guillen https://t.co/vhlA1HGg8t pic.twitter.com/W9NPRTl8Ra
— The Hill (@thehill) December 8, 2020
SCOOP: Texas prisons been flouting state fire officials for years, ignoring orders to get working fire alarm systems. MOST inspected facilities don’t have them - which is how prisoners can keep starting fires to protest conditions. Here’s a story& a THREAD https://t.co/FfHrXk0XRj
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) December 13, 2020
In rush of federal executions, two men set to die for Texas murders https://t.co/tikPuUhaDe via @Progrexas #BrandonBernard #AlfredBourgeois
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 10, 2020
Three Houston Democrats indicted for election fraud in #TXLege races https://t.co/CPY9UJy2hS #HouNews #HD132 #HD142
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 12, 2020
Congratulations to Houston City Council Member - elect Tarsha Jackson.
— City of Houston (@HoustonTX) December 13, 2020
She prevailed in today’s #RunoffElection to represent people living in District B. pic.twitter.com/jqSkX8sgCm
Two #atxcouncil races and two #aisd school board races will be decided in tomorrow's runoff election. Please vote! https://t.co/VowwuNzmlO
— Bridget Grumet ๐ฆ (@bgrumet) December 14, 2020
The head of the Texas Democratic Party has appointed a committee to take a "deep dive" on what went wrong in the November election after a group of executive committee members wrote to him demanding answers, reforms and a shakeup in senior staff.#txlege https://t.co/NssalBfhlV
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 8, 2020
Let me introduce @DatCrazyGuardie to @DelilahforTexas and @mathemattic and @dbcgreentx
— Map of Green Parties, Politicians and Events (@Green_Maps) December 10, 2020
Let us organize Texas!https://t.co/ZOR4XVxYFR
"It’s going to take an extraordinary sales pitch to get the Texas Legislature to say yes to casinos." — @rossramsey #txlege https://t.co/QJuv9E9dK2
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 14, 2020
Looks like the dedicated data and mapping staff of the @TXLegeCouncil will not be pulling all-nighters during the Christmas season this year to get ready for redistricting. Key Census geographic boundary data will not be available for another six or more weeks. #txlege https://t.co/5HBft9BMLA
— Texas Election Source (@TXElects) December 11, 2020
Texas to leave the US again? A state rep. proposes a vote on it https://t.co/btUcFDgc6O pic.twitter.com/VgbiMAX2vD
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) December 9, 2020
You see it, right?
— Joe (@CPO_JOE) December 13, 2020
They wanna leave a country they hate, and go to someplace named after a country they hate. pic.twitter.com/bYHwQlj8XK
While electoral college votes are officially being certified, they broke out a fiddle to keep people entertained here in Texas. That is Brendon Anthony, director of the Texas Music Office. And yes, we have a Texas Music Office. pic.twitter.com/9xiZ0OBzbd
— Jeremy Wallace (@JeremySWallace) December 14, 2020
NASA has famously used fuel cells to power spacecraft & satellites, and that existing technology led many to believe hydrogen will eventually replace gasoline and diesel as the world’s primary transportation fuel.
— HOUmanitarian (@HOUmanitarian) December 12, 2020
https://t.co/kunp7s2gf5 by @cltomlinson
Green transition friction prompts wave of resignations at Shell https://t.co/Pj8caMjpxc https://t.co/DPClGRAFQO
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 9, 2020
Oil companies are struggling with falling energy demand this year and as world leaders pledge to address climate change. But Exxon Mobil has doubled down on its commitment to oil and gas and is making relatively small investments in future technologies.https://t.co/1D6RaJDIbv
— The New York Times (@nytimes) December 11, 2020
“#Wind and #solar are the cheapest forms of e#nergy on a levelized cost basis for electric generation, and that will continue to be the case,”
— TXsharon (@TXsharon) December 8, 2020
Why are we still permitting new #oilandgas wells that #taxpayers will pay to clean up? https://t.co/efnN7sqgff
How Texas and other red states tried to jump start carbon storage a decade ago https://t.co/mgc8qxp2Ta
— Laredo Morning Times (@lmtnews) December 10, 2020
Federal wildlife managers are considering offering permits to landowners in the Permian Basin that environmentalists say could further compromise habitat for a rare lizard found only in parts of southeastern New Mexico and West Texas. https://t.co/mGDG2yc5tE
— Miami Herald (@MiamiHerald) December 13, 2020
Although we visited these four companies today, they are far from being the only offenders. Today we shed light on the devastation that ensues when corporations and donors hold power over politicians. pic.twitter.com/TAQyOqf1es
— Houston DSA (@HoustonDSA) December 13, 2020
UPDATE: I said that Dallas' "Allied Security Operations Group"—behind the disinformation-fueled attack on Michigan's certification for Biden—would be traced to Flynn.
— Seth Abramson (@SethAbramson) December 14, 2020
Well, one of the men who headed it until days ago "served as an intelligence operations leader under DIA Flynn." pic.twitter.com/oANiTXzs8P
SolarWinds, the software company at the center of a suspected Russian cyber attack on U.S. federal agencies, has deep roots in Austin https://t.co/Fqprn5SM0o
— Austin Statesman (@statesman) December 14, 2020
“I am kind of just marked, for what feels like years. And nobody is going to give me a chance because of that one mistake on my record.”https://t.co/5F26DUSueD
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) December 15, 2020
Evictions filed in Texas during COVID-19:
— Gregorio Casar (@GregCasar) December 7, 2020
Houston: 16,917
Fort Worth: 8,525
Austin: 687
Our tenant protections in Austin are succeeding. Progressive local government really matters. #EvictionMoratorium #CancelRent pic.twitter.com/CrziRvaoVN
From sports and school graduations to protests and a presidential election, our photographers captured the unique experiences of a year saddled with social-distancing and shutdowns.
— Dallas Morning News (@dallasnews) December 13, 2020
๐ Check out the images in The Dallas Morning News year in pictures https://t.co/qVVqxqtzBt pic.twitter.com/KBXObKS5jQ
The largest wildlife bridge in the United States opened Friday in San Antonio.
— KUT Austin (@KUT) December 13, 2020
The bridge will be covered with native trees and plants and connect a previously divided 330-acre park. | via @TPRNews https://t.co/0JaCi6GdzL
Texaco vehicle in East Texas circa 1915. Texaco was born in Beaumont, Texas in 1902. At first it was "The Texas Company," but when a salesman saw the abbreviation "Texaco" in a telegram, it became the nickname of the company & the its official name. The Texaco star came in 1903. pic.twitter.com/zwm8QpFXBC
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 12, 2020
Goddamit!!! Kiss an angle good morning..and let her know you think about her when you're gone.
— PJ Smith ☠ Buccaneer (@PJTheAltrusian1) December 12, 2020
๐
"Country music legend Charley Pride dies at 86 from COVID-19 complications" https://t.co/xklazDSnwu
Meanwhile, somewhere in Texas ... Better safe than sorry, I reckon. pic.twitter.com/mZuYJeQqU2
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 9, 2020

Join us at our food fairs in December. Food fairs start at 11AM.
— BakerRipley (@BakerRipley) December 2, 2020
Please remain in your car, and a volunteer will place the food in your trunk. pic.twitter.com/GTzhMP85Gc
“We have a governor we need to primary out,” #sd30 candidate @ShelleyLuther said at the oddball @texasgop rally Saturday in Dallas— https://t.co/QD41JdBEkv
— Bud Kennedy / #ReadLocal (@BudKennedy) December 6, 2020
#Festivus season begins early for @TexasGOP https://t.co/UZYKcTRyZJ via @ReformAustin #TXLege #TX2022
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 8, 2020
Texas GOP chairman Allen West is at war with the governor and in love with the camera.
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 5, 2020
Chris Hooks charts his rise: https://t.co/C1TMgTeLJR
Details of the way the Texas Senate will operate in a pandemic started to leak Friday evening: There's talk of voting remotely if a senator is quarantined, media mostly in the gallery, and Redistricting will apparently be the only committee taking testimony virtually #TxLege https://t.co/oH79y9DQXY
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) December 5, 2020
New: Lt. Gov. @DanPatrick told senators this week that people may need to take a coronavirus test 24 hours before testifying at the Texas Capitol during the legislative session https://t.co/mysyhsAgTA #txlege
— Cassi Pollock (@cassi_pollock) December 5, 2020
How will lawmakers address the effects of COVID-19 on Texas during the upcoming #txlege session? What does the state's political future look like?
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 7, 2020
Don't miss our virtual symposium Dec. 7-11. RSVP and send in questions here: https://t.co/ANJYE3s7lN #ttevents
Here's my updated COVID-19 dashboard for Texas.
— Christopher Adams (@cadamsKXAN) December 6, 2020
Texas is averaging 12,217 new cases per day, a new record high. Previous record was 11,505 on November 26.
Texas is averaging 170 deaths per day, the highest since August 28.@KXAN_News pic.twitter.com/vTq3MRv0Dl
Hoping my friends in Far West Texas - and those who operate the few healthcare facilities in Marfa, Alpine, Presidio, Marathon - can weather this storm. pic.twitter.com/COfpKx3neH
— Tom Michael (@Tom2Michael) December 4, 2020
The city of Lubbock, Texas, has reported that it is out of hospital beds as the nation faces a record number of coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths. https://t.co/9FVz9OW231
— NBC News (@NBCNews) December 5, 2020
Only 6 ICU Beds Available In Denton County: ‘We Are At A Critical Point With COVID-19’ – CBS Dallas / Fort Worth https://t.co/IscIct1pjo
— Pro-Movement๐ป๐น๐ฉ๐ด (@ProMovement1) December 5, 2020
UT researchers Daniel Wrapp and Jason McLellan can thank a llama named Winter for a scientific honor they received this week.
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 7, 2020
And we can thank all three parties for their role in the development of a synthetic antibody against the COVID-19 virus. https://t.co/Xk8TxCCIkO
The fight to save the Mary Allen Seminary reveals the challenges of preserving Black placemaking in Texas.https://t.co/IB6SHekyvR
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) December 6, 2020
As @TxDOTHouston inches closer to a Record of Decision for the I-45 expansion, community members and advocates will keep fighting this $7 billion boondoggle. Take a look at our and @StopTxDotI45 storytelling project. Real people. Real impacts.https://t.co/9XFDdyZq5A
— LINK Houston (@LINK_Houston) December 1, 2020
'You'll be fine': Mother tells son who later died in Dallas police custody on way to mental health hospital https://t.co/vssOxEafx4 #DFW
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 6, 2020
Man experiencing mental issues dies in custody after, Houston police say, he 'tripped and fell' #HouNews https://t.co/yDGYZU0F0a
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 6, 2020
Austin: Over a hundred charges dropped from summer protests (and other struggles) https://t.co/HG1Vb37Q2e #ATX #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 4, 2020
'I don't have any words' | 29 people found in Houston home after man escapes alleged human smuggling operation https://t.co/5SBex8NsEd #KHOU
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) December 4, 2020
There are some anecdotes of children thriving with remote learning. But districts including Houston, St. Paul, Minn., and Fairfax County, Va., have reported historically high failure rates this fall.
— NPR (@NPR) December 4, 2020
Here are 4 other lessons from virtual schooling so far:https://t.co/ULgFiW44FB
U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee led House Democrats’ effort to pass a bill legalizing marijuana on Friday. https://t.co/OIPqtJuAta
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 4, 2020
The @OurEsquina bylines this week included stories by Latino writers with Ecuadoran, Dominican, Puerto Rican & Mexican roots. The subjects were from PR, Venezuela, the Dominican & a Mexican-Am from the San Fernando Valley. The sports included baseball, soccer, skateboarding . 2
— Jose de Jesus Ortiz (@OrtizKicks) December 4, 2020
A school in a small town in Texas has ignited hope across the community by opening a student-led grocery store to support families in need.
Linda Tutt High School in Sanger launched the grocery store in November so students could purchase necessities including toilet paper, meat and basic food items. They pay for their purchases by earning points from good deeds.
"In our school district, there's roughly 2,750 students enrolled and throughout the district 43% of these students are considered economically disadvantaged," Anthony Love, the principal at Linda Tutt, told CNN. "About 3.6% of our students are considered homeless. We thought it was important to support them and their families and make sure they had food on the table."
The Texas bullet train has survived backlash for the better part of the last decade, but governor’s reconsideration of support indicates its future is more uncertain than ever. I broke down Abbott’s decision in my latest for TM. Thanks for edit by @ben_c_rowen! https://t.co/dlYzw2D0xQ
— Morgan O'Hanlon (@mcohanlon) December 4, 2020
What Hewlett Packard's move means for Houston: It's not just about jobs https://t.co/u7GaEZpvM7
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 3, 2020
"Bottom line, it was money and politics. Does that sound like Texas? Oh my gosh, that's the Lone Star State, ain't it?" Absolutely loved this piece from @skhanjr, @dwil and @AlexS_ESPN on the rise and fall of the legendary Southwest Conference: https://t.co/m0cOkR5YdR
— Ben Baby (@Ben_Baby) December 2, 2020
Britton Banowsky, executive director, College Football Playoff Foundation, former SWC assistant commissioner: "I think everyone assumed it would be [Texas] Tech and Houston. Because it was the publics [Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Houston] and the privates [Baylor, Rice, SMU, TCU]. That was kind of a clean way to do it. Public schools get public funding and it just seemed like the legislature would want to make sure it happened. Then out of the blue, Houston was out and Baylor was in."
Texas' governor at the time, Ann Richards, was a Baylor graduate. Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock graduated from both Texas Tech and Baylor. The Texas House Speaker [Pete Laney], House Appropriations Committee Chairman [Rob Junell] and Texas Senate Finance Committee Chairman [John Montford] were all Texas Tech graduates.
According to the book "Bob Bullock: God Bless Texas," by Dave McNeely and Jim Henderson, Bullock summoned Texas and Texas A&M's presidents to his office in early 1994 as the merger neared. "You're taking Tech and Baylor, or you're not taking anything," Bullock told them. "I'll cut your money off, and you can join privately if you want, but you won't get another nickel of state money."
The @Colts recover the bad snap and takeover late in the 4th quarter.
— NFL (@NFL) December 6, 2020
๐บ: #INDvsHOU on CBS
๐ฑ: NFL app // Yahoo Sports app: https://t.co/nO8DOddpx2 pic.twitter.com/M4XgdqKMLk
TOT reader Jennifer Baacke Schrade graciously shared this nifty photo of Santa in Goliad yesterday. Jennifer says that Santa rides his "reinsteer" in the Christmas parade every year there, making his way around the courthouse square. It doesn't get much more Texas-ish than this! pic.twitter.com/cyAjE6JI3m
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 6, 2020
Mike Peterson at the Daily Cartoonist has updated this list of cartoons, cartoonists and their Patreon and other support pages. You don’t have to support them all, of course, but if
you enjoy my weekly aggregation, please choose your favorite artists and back them up!