- While researching potty training, you can find some interesting things online, but that pic above cracks me up as a Cowboys fan.
- It would be nice to see Gene Wilder do something new, but I bet he’s enjoying retirement.
- The roofers must be really happy with the hail storm, we had three stop by our door offering free inspections.
- I left a box of Junior Mints in my car and they have melted into one massive glob. I’m determined to finish that glob by the end of this week.
- I’d take Junior Mints over a York Peppermint Patty any day of the week.
- Scion has a heck of a commercial aimed at men that likes girls, donuts, and milk.
- There are several things I don’t like about my Altima, and one overall thing I don’t like about the Altima line in genral is that they don’t change much even when a new model comes out. Nissan is going to continue with the trend.
- I got an email from Cowboys Stadium informing me tickets to a Glenn Beck event are going on sale.
- Baylor Law School released the personal data of every student accepted for attendance via an email attachment over the weekend.
- Victoria, TX Hospital Won’t Hire Very Obese Workers
- The most creative and earth friendly lawn mower I’ve ever seen.
Texas Tech Recruits Get Lost and End Up in East Texas
Texas Tech is one of those programs that feel if the coaches can get a recruit to their West Texas campus, they have a good shot at getting him to commit.
Last weekend, they found out just how tough a task that can be.
Houston (Texas) Bellaire wide receiver Devin Lauderdale – a Texas Tech commit – and three other Houston-area players were planning on making the roughly 550-mile drive to Lubbock, Texas, to take in the school’s Spring Game.
But they never got there.
The never even got, in fact, to West Texas.
“(We) didn’t use a GPS, and we didn’t even know we were going the wrong way,” Lauderdale said. “So we were driving (and we ended up) in East Texas.”
The group didn’t realize their mistake until they found themselves in Nacodoches, Texas – which was roughly 100 miles east of I-45, the road they should have been on, and still more than 500 miles from their destination.
The players, in fact, were roughly an hour away from the Louisiana border. Texas Tech, meanwhile, is roughly an hour away from the New Mexico border.