CenterPoint’s Puzzling Deal for Generators Faces New Scrutiny
Critics argue that the leases were unfairly awarded because of an unspecified "relationship" between the utility’s CEO and a Life Cycle Power employee.
Critics argue that the leases were unfairly awarded because of an unspecified "relationship" between the utility’s CEO and a Life Cycle Power employee.
Critics argue that the leases were unfairly awarded because of an unspecified "relationship" between the utility’s CEO and a Life Cycle Power employee.
A half century of chronicling Texas.
Looking to have somebody murdered? You might want to call Gary Johnson, the number one hired killer in Houston. Then again, you might not—he works for the cops.
Two prominent families, one soapy feud. What could be better for a summer miniseries?
The only American ever to design scarves for the exclusive French fashion house Hermès is Kermit Oliver, a 69-year-old postal worker from Waco who lives in a strange and beautiful world all his own.
The end of the Chagra family’s drug empire, a few words on murderer-for-hire Charles Harrelson, and the most incriminating tapes since Watergate.
The Olympian is the Beyoncé of gymnastics, and Bey is the Simone Biles of pop stars.
The silky-sweet fruit, known for growing in a patch of West Texas, has been declining in production for the past two decades. But it’s still a summer treasure for those who remember its glory days.
At least thirty hundred-year-old hotels are still operating across Texas, offering experiences that newer chains just can’t match. Here are six of our favorites.
She was pressured into convicting a man she believed was innocent—and was haunted by remorse. Three decades later, she did something about it.
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