#TXST COMMITS 2027 No. 5,6,7,8: Alexandria DE Bryson Phoenix, Iowa Colony DT Charles Egbo, Atascocia WR Brian Manuel Jr. and Duncanville OL Aiden Williams.
Texas State doubled its 2027 commitments in one night after successful recruiting camps last week and OVs this weekend.
Can I return back to college football?
I only played 2 seasons, should have 2 more eligibility years left….
Can you find me a judge in Louisiana who can see to it that Honey Badger gets to finish his last 2 years of college football?
Who’s going to say no ?????
If you know, you know… @txst is blessed to be located in the best college town in Texas and one of the best in the country. We love our hometown of the @CityofSanMarcos!
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It's 1982 in Austin and you're at the City Coliseum to see The Clash perform "Rock The Casbah" (44 years ago today)📽️🎸
AUSTIN, TX June 8 & 9, 1982 (@fox7austin) -- On this day in Austin history, British punk legends The Clash rolled into town—not just to play two sets over consecutive nights at the old City Coliseum, but to spend those same two days filming the music video for what would become their biggest commercial hit, "Rock the Casbah." Directed by punk icon Don Letts, the video makes a commentary on Middle Eastern oil politics, censorship, and rebellion right onto a distinct, sun-baked 1980s Austin landscape across June 8th and 9th.
The storyline features shots of the downtown skyline, cooling off by a local hotel pool, grabbing a drink at a dive bar, and tracking down a scurrying armadillo near Congress and Oltorf.
If you look closely at the footage, you can spot local landmarks hidden in plain sight. The pool scenes were shot at the old Villa Capri Hotel, the characters grab food at a former Burger King on Guadalupe, and the convenience store stop was filmed at the old Rio Mart at 29th and Rio Grande.
This edited version has isolated all of those classic Austin backdrops from the original 1982 music video.
On this day in 1944 Amon Carter presented FDR with the deed to the land that would become Big Bend National Park. Famously FDR had nothing else going on June 6, 1944, which you can tell from his extremely relaxed demeanor
Tropical Storm Allison makes landfall over Houston, Texas, completely flooding the city.
The Texas Medical Center, the largest hospital in the world, loses power and sustains severe damage, forcing the Army to airlift patients in temperatures of 100° F (38° C).
The Baylor College of Medicine loses 90,000 research animals, totaling $2 billion in damage. The entire book collection of the University of Houston Law Center is also lost.
Every freeway in the city is under several feet of water, stranding thousands of people.
@jaylenhubbard19 Some guys who aren’t playing and want to go D2, I get it. Guys that are trying to go somewhere else to be a bench player, I don’t get. Unless it’s your dream school. Why not stay play. You’ll get more looks to go pro