Separated at Birth?
NBC Late-night Funnyman Jay Leno
Houston Astros Outfielder Lance Berkman
Stanley Kubrick, here whispering to Peter Sellers on the set of "Dr. Strangelove."
from the Texas Petrochemical Underarm
NBC Late-night Funnyman Jay Leno
Houston Astros Outfielder Lance Berkman
Stanley Kubrick, here whispering to Peter Sellers on the set of "Dr. Strangelove."
Posted by Banjo Jones at 5:20 PM 0 comments
(courtesy, R.B., a reader in Lake Jackson)
He said . . . I don't now why you wear a bra; you've
got nothing to put in it. She said . . . You wear
pants don't you?
He said .. . Shall we try swapping positions tonight?
She said . That's a good idea - you stand by the
ironing board while I sit on the sofa.
He said . . .. What have you been doing with all the
grocery money I gave you? She said . .Turn sideways
and look in the mirror!
On a wall in a ladies room .. . "My husband follows
me everywhere" Written just below it . .. . " I do not"
Q. How many honest, intelligent, caring men in the
world does it take to do the dishes?
A. Both of them.
Q. How does a man show that he is planning for the
future?
A. He buys two cases of beer.
Q. What is the difference between men and government
bonds?
A. The bonds mature.
Q. Why are blonde jokes so short?
A. So men can remember them.
Q. How many men does it take to change a roll of
toilet paper?
A. We don't know; it has never happened.
Q. Why is it difficult to find men who are sensitive,
caring and good-looking?
A. They already have boyfriends.
Q. What do you call a woman who knows where her
husband is every night?
A. A widow.
Q. Why are married women heavier than single women?
A. Single women come home, see what's in the fridge
and go to bed. Married women come home, see what's in
bed and go to the fridge.
Q. What is the one thing that all men at singles bars
have in common?
A. They're married.
Man says to God: "God, why did you make woman so
beautiful?" God says: "So you would love her."
But God," the man says, "why did you make her so
dumb?" God says: "So she would love you."
Posted by Banjo Jones at 7:05 AM 0 comments
Who's the A-List celebrity that's tantalizing Hollywood with his pseudonymously written Blog? The Clute-based daily surely will pounce on this one should "Rance" lance a certain local editor's fragile feelings, say the gals down at the courthouse typing pool.
Link to "Rance"
Posted by Banjo Jones at 1:41 AM 2 comments
In keeping with the theme of the last few days, we link to The Houston Press story this week by Sarah Fenske about the teeny tiny Brazoria County island village of Quintana, where the hard-drinkin', sunblock-eschewing residents and their elected leaders essentially have sold their soul to the company store -- a huge Liquefied Natural Gas terminal facility linked to President Bush's recently remarried brother Neil.
The village will get a million bucks a year in the deal, and the townsfolk, save for a few, figure they're already surrounded by stuff that could blow them all to kingdom come, so what the hey. Yup.
LINK
The old Quintana "swing bridge" (above) was replaced with a taxpayer-funded $10 million span after plans for the LNG terminal got underway. As we recall, officials touted improved hurricane evacuation as a reason for the pricey bridge. Obviously, the new bridge should help facilitate the mobilization of medical personnel to Quintana in the event the LNG terminal incinerates the fatalistic residents of the sparsely populated isle. That's not a half-empty (as opposed to half-full) view of the situation, just good planning, in our opinion.
Posted by Banjo Jones at 6:11 PM 0 comments
Anyone smell benzene on May 1, about 2 p.m.-ish?
About 414 lbs of the stuff leaked into the air over at Dow that day, along with about 16.9 lbs of ethylbenzene, 1.21 lbs of toulene and a pound of diethylbenzene.
Dow officials at first said they thought a lightning strike caused the "emission event," but upon further review (to coin the NFL phrase) it was attributed to "multiple relief devices ... relieving to the flare."
Like we were saying yesterday, that's the way things go here in Paradise. Valves fail, people make boo-boos, shit hits the fan. Not casting aspersions here. That's just our realist view of life on the Texas Petrochemical Coast. Like the old guy Mobster character portrayed by Lee Strasberg in Godfather 2 said, "This is the business we have chosen."
Or where we have chosen to live, as the case may be.
The world has decided it needs all the plastic stuff Dow (and others) make, and no one raises much hell when benzene or other stuff get leaked, and we're all gonna die someday anyway, so relax.
And we need gas, too, besides all the plastic. Same deal. Stuff happens. There are "emission events" at refineries like the Chevron Phillips complex in nearby Sweeny, where more benzene (33 lbs) escaped, along with a bunch of other stuff, on May 15. The "event" began at 5:25 pm and continued for 3 hours before the cause was discovered.
When it was discovered, quick action was taken. Yup, they closed a valve. Dang!
If you really REALLY want to know what happened, read the next italicized paragraph, but if you really don't want to immerse yourself in this information, just skip it. (Ed. note: It's italicized for your reading comfort, not because most of you have any remote interest in this stuff, but if you wade into it, you just may decide that you made the right decision not to pursue that engineering degree your daddy was pushing all those years ago) ...
Here goes, gulp:
"The Regenerative Thermal Oxidizer (RTO) tripped off-line at 17:25 and was restarted at 20:25 am. The RTO is the control device for the wastewater treatment system. When the RTO is off-line, vapors from the wastewater treatment system which contain VOC are vented to the atmosphere through the Aeration Tank 69. The RTO shutdown due to a high temperature alarm. It was discovered that a controller on a fuel gas valve had received a bad reading on oxygen content which caused the valve to fully open. This controller reads oxygen content in the vapors at the compressors which collect vapors from Wastewater Treater #1 and the loading racks and routes to the RTO. The controller compares the oxygen content to hydrocarbon content (ratio) in the vapor to ensure the vapors stay above the UEL (upper explosive limit). This valve allows fuel gas into the system to keep the ratio in a safe range. It appears to have received a bad reading for the Oxygen content. When this happens, as a safety feature, the fuel gas valve fails open to ensure enough fuel gas is in the line to keep the vapor above the UEL. The excess fuel gas in the feed to the RTO caused an elevated BTU content in the vapor feed to the RTO resulting in high exhaust temperature at the RTO. The RTO automatically shutdown as a safety precaution when the exhaust temperature exceeds 450 F. When the RTO shuts down, the valve on top of Tank 69 opens to the atmosphere. Once the problem was discovered, the valve on the fuel gas line was closed. The RTO was cooled down and restarted as soon as possible. "
WHEW!
But then, 3 days later, another emissions event strikes again at the same refinery, AND, at that SAME TANK 69! It happened at 5 a.m. and ended at 8:20 a.m.
Since some of you are about to nod off by now, only the annoted version of the report is presented herewith:
"...compressor...shut down...vented vapors...compressor was restarted...no problems..."
Here's the toll of the second emissions event at pesky Tank 69:
1-Butene 3.0 lbs (est.)
Benzene 20.0 lbs (est.)
Butane 2.0 lbs (est.)
Ethylene 4.0 lbs (est.)
N-Hexane 1.0 lbs (est.)
Pentane 2.0 lbs (est.)
Pentene 1.0 lbs (est.)
Propane 5.0 lbs (est.)
Propylene 2.0 lbs (est.)
There are more of these emission events to report on, but not now and maybe not ever, as far as The Brazosport News is concerned. Let the Clute daily or the new paper in Angleton worry about it. Besides, nothing went kablooey in the aforementioned events. No one's dead. Or hurt. As far as we know. And benzene dissipates rather quickly, they say. SO HAVE A NICE DAY!
Posted by Banjo Jones at 9:04 PM 2 comments
Things happen...
Machinery fails. Substances combust. Flares burn. People goof up.
Sometimes, things go kablooey. Kablooey doesn't happen that often, considering the volatile mix on the petrochemical coast of TX.
In the parlance of our times, there are "emissions events."
Nonjudgmental Translation: Shit happens. Whattya gonna do?
Not that many people, as best we can tell, are all that upset about any of it. Gotta work. Gotta eat. We have cheaper gasoline that the people in California. Yippie!
Sometimes, wrists must be slapped. Shareholder value be damned!
The guilty range from the mighty multinational giants to the Girl Scouts. The recent tally:
Posted by Banjo Jones at 11:18 AM 0 comments
For years my most memorable experience at Luby's dated all the way back to Oct. 16, 1991. It had nothing to do with the food. Me and about a thousand other reporters went to the Luby's in Killeen that day to ask whoever happened to be standing around what on earth would possess George Hennard to drive his pick-up through the cafeteria's plate glass window and then calmy shoot 23 people to death. Nobody had a very good answer.
Flash forward to May 24, 2004. We're at the Luby's in Lake Jackson. It's about 8 p.m., 30 minutes til closing. I ordered the chicken fried steak. Scooter ordered liver. Scout, home from college for the summer, chose a piece chicken that looked like it had been sitting out for a few hours, unable to entice anyone until we walked in, too hungry to give much thought to the big picture of what we would soon be stuffing into our mouths.
The cafeteria was pretty deserted. Maybe a dozen people scattered about the facility. I was well tucked into my CFS when Scooter remarked something about a wedding. I looked to my right, but only briefly because I was keeping my eye on the CFS, and saw two microphone stands and a couple guitars leaning against a pair of Luby's dining room chairs.
Yeah, must have been some kind of party or something. In Luby's? Uh, whatever. I refocused on the task at hand. There were mashed potatoes with gravy and fried okra also on the agenda. No pie, though, and that is always a tragedy.
A few minutes passed.
Then, off to the side, there was guitar strumming. Two people, a guy and gal, were playing the guitars, and the guy, dressed in black with hair greased back all Elvisy, started singing an old song once made famous by The King.
Holy mother of God, Luby's has entertainment? LIVE entertainment?
Why would this flabbergast me? I don't know. Because I've never seen it before? During any of the thousands of cafeteria meals from Tucson to Tucumcari to Tulleyville, during my entire life, there has been no "act" to entertain the diners. Because live entertainment isn't, well, a forte of any restaurant anywhere in the Greater Brazosport Area? Because the guy looked and sounded like The King? All of the above.
The singer? I've seen him once before. Over at the Lake Theater, where they have the weekend hootenanies and hoedowns. Heath is his name. Just one word. Heath. In my opinion, he has a fine singing voice. And you have to admire a performer who's willing to perform at Luby's 4 nights a week to pursue his calling. When he was a boy, envisioning his path to stardom, performing in a cafeteria probably wasn't in the dream.
Moreover, Heath has the snarly lip of Elvis. He's a little shorter than E was, but he's also not as fat as the old Elvis, which is a good thing for Heath, who used to live in Houston but now resides in Sweeny.
He followed the Elvis song with a Roy Orbison song, then an Everly Brothers song. Then he was finished. Some in the crowd applauded after each number, including us. Scooter applauded even though, as an LA girl, she professed astonishment at the spectacle of live entertainment in a small Texas town's cafeteria.
"I've gotta get out of here," she said, laughing. Not out of the cafeteria. She meant out of this town. It's a refrain that comes up from time to time.
Scout laughed through it all, too, thinking, more than likely, that her parents are weird, and that she can't believe she's gonna be stuck here in this one-horse town for the better part of a summer.
But, I'll tell you what. I'm happy to have a new and better Luby's memory to replace the last one, in Killeen. Heath takes the Luby's stage...Correction, there is no stage per se ... Monday through Thursday, 4:30 to 8:30. I'll be back and next time, I might just get up and dance, but probably not.
(P.S. Heath said he's performing Friday night @ The Lake.)
Posted by Banjo Jones at 9:18 PM 3 comments
DO NOT BE ALARMED AT THE ENORMOUS SIZE OF MY HEAD. I COME TO YOUR PLANET IN PEACE. PROCEED TO YOUR NEAREST PLACES OF WORSHIP TO AWAIT FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS. WE WILL BEGIN BOARDING THE SPACESHIPS IN APPROXIMATELY 24 HOURS. THAT IS ALL.
Posted by Banjo Jones at 12:02 AM 2 comments
(courtesy, a reader in Austin)
An elderly lady phoned her telephone company to report that her
telephone failed to ring when her friends called - and that on
the few occasions when it did ring, her pet dog always moaned
right before the phone rang. The telephone repairman proceeded
to the scene, curious to see this psychic dog or senile elderly lady.
He climbed a nearby telephone pole, hooked in his test set, and
dialed the subscriber's house. The phone didn't ring right away,
but then the dog moaned loudly and the telephone began to ring.
Climbing down from the pole, the telephone repairman found:
1. The dog was tied to the telephone system's ground wire via a steel chain and collar.
2. The wire connection to the ground rod was loose.
3. The dog was receiving 90 volts of signaling current when the phone number was called.
4. After a couple of such jolts, the dog would start moaning and then urinate on himself and the ground.
5. The wet ground would complete the circuit, thus causing the phone to ring.
Which goes to show that some problems can be fixed by pissing and moaning.
Remember, life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.
Posted by Banjo Jones at 5:59 PM 0 comments
The Brazosport News never talked about sex. As far as I can remember. Better check the archives. Too bad she didn't work for Sheila Jackson Lee, who lives by the motto "any publicity is good publicity" -- even if it involves The Gloved One. Or Ron Paul, who doesn't have a motto as far as we know. Or Tom DeLay, whose motto is, oh, never mind.
A chronology of "Who is this ho?" -- courtesy, Wonkette.com
Posted by Banjo Jones at 9:54 AM 0 comments
In a worldwide exclusive last week, we revealed that Houston radio personality Dan Patrick was the man behind the Midnight Writer pseudonym that's featured on the Houston Chronicle-bashing weblog Chronically Biased.
Now, in yet another worldwide exclusive, we can report that Patrick and others are secretly involved in the pseudonymously penned rants.
Background: Patrick's byline appeared, then suddenly disappeared, when the Midnight Writer's first screed made its intial online broadside. A generic "staff" byline replaced Patrick's byline, but not before I saw it with my own peepers and quickly told the world via this weblog, ie. The Brazosport News. Since then, the wussyish, generic staff byline has been placed atop the Midnight Writer's incendiary prose.
Kevin Whited, the writer behind the Publius Texas weblog (which also regularly nips at the heels of the uber-sensitive Chron), explained what the real story is behind the Midnight Writer, in an exclusive interview with The Brazosport News.
"That one's on me," he said of the Patrick's byline snafu on the first Midnight Writer communique. "The Midnight Writer is Dan Patrick's idea, for a "mystery" writer among the merry crew to post at midnight most nights. Except I didn't realize he wanted it to be (a) mystery, I thought he wanted it to named. So yep, you caught us -- me actually. :) But the writer won't always be Dan. Necessarily. I don't think."
Curiously enough, Whited did not know that Patrick, in his former life as a KHOU Channel 11 sportcaster, had painted his face blue during his sportscast to show solidarity with the then-hot Houston Oilers (who moved to Nashville, TN many years later, still disgusted and embarrassed at Patrick's clownish face-painting antics) "Maybe we can work that in somehow," Whited said of the face-painting schtick. " Maybe I will paint my face blue. If I don't start sleeping more, maybe it will turn blue all on its own. :)"
If so, we will do our best to report it. Accurately and Fairly, so You can decide.
Posted by Banjo Jones at 3:10 AM 0 comments
Bladder problem, Bud?
Posted by Banjo Jones at 10:56 AM 0 comments
Lots of new readers, foreign & domestic, to the blog, largely due to someone (OK, it was me) linking the "Deadwood" post on an HBO msg board.
Changes on right side sidebar of the page: added stories written about us way back when. See "History." This done when we noticed via our site meter referral page function some of you were searching out more info. Included is a story written by our founder for "Neiman Reports," the quarterly publication put out by the Neiman Foundation, the Harvard-affiliated "journalism think tank" (Oxymoron Alert!)...
The note about the author moving to Santa Barbara, CA, while intended to be true at the time, did not happen. It's a long story.
Also, under "Lost Archives," added old postings that were lost when the site was taken down, briefly, in July 2002, when caca hit fan. Some postings are still missing, though.
Have a swell day and feel free to post comments in the Guest Book on the right sidebar or at the bottom of this post, where it says "comments." You can do so anonymously.
Posted by Banjo Jones at 8:11 AM 1 comments
In Deadwood, the bloody and profane HBO series about the Old West, the characters utter foul language at such a rapid clip that some viewers question whether the show accurately reflects everyday language in the 1870s.
The dialogue isn't just salty. It's salted, peppered and marinated overnight in a stew of f-words, p-words and dreaded c-words.
Historically accurate? Don't know.
Some suspect the verbal assault spat from the cast of thieves, whores and murderers is more a product of our own profanity-laden times instead of a true depiction of the lexicon in pre-territorial Dakota land.
Wisely, though, story editors realized some dialogue in the original scripts were, in fact, embarrasingly reflective of the young script writers' current life experiences rather than a reflection of covered wagon days. Those scenes were cut or rewritten.
The deleted scenes somehow slipped into the hands of The Brazosport News.
Episode 3
Wild Bill Hickock, drinking heavily while mired in a losing streak at the poker table, talks about the last man he killed:
"Dog, I popped a cap in his ass. The mo'fo got in my face and was disrespecting me big time. And I was like, `Bam! Bam!' And he was all, `Whoa, dude.' "
Episode 5
Saloonkeeper/brothel owner Al Swearengen instructs Trixy the prostitute to make sure widowed society matron Alma Garret resumes her opium use so he can cheat her out of her gold claim:
Swearengen: "I want her higher than `Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds.'
Trixy: "She's Jones-ing big-time now."
Swearengen: "I want her trippin' her ass off."
Trixy: "I'm down with that, Al."
Episode 6
Smallpox strikes Deadwood. Doc Cochran tells the camp's leaders what must be done:
"I want that vaccine -- STAT!"
Episode 10
Hotelier E.B. Farnum reacts to his appointment as mayor of the fledgling Deadwood government:
"Is that not totally awesome? I'm geeked, dude. Totally."
Episode 2
Following Custer's Last Stand at the Battle of Little Big Horn, newspaperman
A.W. Merrick talks about the story with Swearengen.
Merrick: "The native Americans lured Custer into a trap."
Swearengen: "The who?"
Merrick: "The native Americans."
Swearengen: "Holy crap. The Pioneer's gone multicultural."
Episode 8
Calamity Jane, after Wild Bill Hickock's death, goes on a grief-induced drinking binge, then returns to Deadwood and is confronted by a friend.
Jane: "How am I? My fuckin' head hurts. I've been fuckin' drunk for 5 days!"
Friend: "One's too many and a hundred's not enough."
Jane: "Here's a quarter. Call someone who cares."
Friend: "Jane, you're powerless over alcohol."
Jane: "I forgot my higher power."
Friend: "One day at a time, Jane. Progress, not perfection."
Episode 9
Seth Bullock, former lawman-turned-shopkeeper, makes a play for Alma Garret, but must first explain his current marital situation.
Bullock: "I'm in a transitional period."
Garret: "There are lots of available women here in Deadwood."
Bullock: "Hos & bitches. Skanks."
Garret: "Well..."
Bullock: "YO, I'd like to hang with you."
Garret: "Oh...my...gosh."
Bullock: "Is that cool?"
Garret: "Word."
Bullock: "Yesss!"
Moments later, they're entwined in the dance of lust, on the floor.
(Fade to black, bring up banjo music)
Posted by Banjo Jones at 10:48 PM 0 comments
For a certain age demographic, Dan Patrick, no matter what he does, will always be the guy who painted his face blue to show support for the hometown Houston Oilers during his TV sports report back in the '70s Luv Ya Blue Days.
Now, it can be reported, he has decided to put on another hat, that of an anonymous Weblog Super Hero, The Midnight Writer. It appears on the brand new "Chronically Biased" blog, aimed at the Houston daily's purported left-wing bias. Sigh.
Posted by Banjo Jones at 12:08 AM 1 comments
The Scene: Wag-A-Bag #2, Oak Street, Lake Jackson. Consumers, mostly young males, are giving the clerk what-for about the high gas prices the last week or two. This is a Chevron outlet, across the street from the Lake II Theater (Elvis tribute acts, etc.), maybe a quarter mile from the Lake Jackson P.D. Clerk, female in her late 20s, is all, `Hey, I just work here' to the hostile clientele. It's getting worse, she says. Today, 2 pump 'n runners hit. Happening all over town, she says. One of her scofflaws was driving a camper-RV vehicle! "What can I do? Run after 'em down the street?" she says, hand on her hip. Hmmm, call the cops maybe? Call O.P.E.C.? The owner has to re-set the pumps to require payment before pumping. But he's outta town right now. Premium: $1.99/gal. (UPDATE:Premium @ Wag-A-Bag today, 5-18-04, now $2.079. Damage:$36.85 for 17.723 gallons. Doh!)RAIN REPORT:2" in last 24 hours ending @ 11 am Fri. 5-14-04
Posted by Banjo Jones at 2:44 AM 5 comments
HOGAN: "The Nazis were enemies, but there was a certain amount of respect there, even during the bad times. The Krauts were bored and basically just wanted to cover their asses and stay outta trouble with their superiors. Getting shipped to the Russian Front was their big fear. Running a POW camp was a light duty compared to bayonetting drunken Bolsheviks. There was none of the sexual crap back then, like we're hearing in Iraq, except for, well, when me and the Colonel's secretary stole away for some private time. She was a hot fraulein, and very sweet. Loved her pigtails. But none of of it was coerced. We both just had certain needs. The sexual weirdness, for me, began after I came home and got into video. Hell, that's what got me murdered in Arizona. Man, what I would have given to have a digital camera back then. So much more portable. In the POW camp, no, I mean, Schultz never asked me to wear women's panties on my head and stand on a stool. But Klink's secretary, well, she was adventurous, I guess you'd say..."
COL. KLINK: "I tell you, the American prisoners were complete pains in my backside, always escaping and trying to discover our secrets. And so smug! Always talking about baseball. Always baseball. Joe Dimaggio. Blah. What a boring American pasttime. I didn't understand them. Even so, there was never any thought to placing foreign objects into any orifices to 'soften them up' for the Gestappo. And, what's with the naked pyramids in the Iraqi prison? Who dreams up these things? We would order them to the cooler or cut their rations when they would escape or try to make those radios they were always tinkering with, but sexual antics? No, that wasn't in our portfolio. That's something I can say would never have occurred to me, to be quite honest. Mrs. Klink, not to mention General Burkhalter, would not stand for it. Perhaps there's a moral vacuum today that wasn't present during our war. It's difficult to say. Perhaps it's this MTV influence I keep hearing about..."
SCHULTZ: "I would whisper to Col. Hogan, 'Colonel, if you ever escape for good, -- please would you take me with you?' He would always have a chuckle at that. Hogan and the rest of them, they were not bad people but one didn't want to become too friendly with them. They would certainly not hesitate to take advantage of any opportunity they could to help the Allied cause. Col. Klink -- what an unhappy man -- was always on my ass, too, so I had to be concerned with both him on the one hand and Hogan and his "heroes," as they called themselves, on the other hand. Yes, yes, I raised my voice at the Americans many, many times, and sometimes lost my temper, I must admit, but I had no desire to humiliate them or take liberties. The Geneva Convention prohibited anything of that sort. From my point of view, it was best to know nothing and hear nothing. I said that many times. `I know nothing!' It became a bit of a catch phrase around the camp and the Americans would mimic me. I'm not sure why it gave them such joy, but it seemed to relieve the tedium. For the circumstances, I think both sides tried to get along."
Posted by Banjo Jones at 3:14 PM 4 comments
Titanic was one of the biggest boxoffice movies of all time -- even though we already knew how it ended before we bought a ticket.
Cause it was a movie and, thus, under time constraints, a number of "back stories" could never be explored in Titanic. That's why I almost always get more enjoyment from the book, instead of the movie made after the book, cause there's just more "meat on the bone," so to speak. There are exceptions, naturally. All the "Ernest" movies held up better than the books on which the films were based, in my opinion.
But back to the Titanic and one of its little known stories that the movie completely ignored. Which is understandable. After all, many many lives were lost.
Anyway, back in 1912 the Titanic's cargo included 12,000
jars of mayonnaise, which were scheduled for special delivery to the port of Vera Cruz, Mexico, the next port of call for the great ship after its stop in New York.
At the time, it was to be the largest single
shipment of mayonnaise ever delivered to
Mexico. As we know, the great ship did not make it
to New York cause it hit an iceberg and
sank in the icy waters of the North Atlantic.
The people of Mexico, according to Mexican periodicals at the time, considered mayonnaise a delicacy, and were disconsolate at the
news of the Titanic's sinking. Their anguish was so great, and Mexico's leaders were so eager to share the pain of their people and avoid the possibility of civil unrest, that a National Day of Mourning was declared.
Amazingly, that "day of mourning" is still observed today as it was so many years ago, which is why the 5th of May became forever known as "Sinko De Mayo."
Posted by Banjo Jones at 9:57 PM 2 comments
Great news for Dow Chemical workers who will be laid off in the latest impending round of job cuts. Local convenience store juggernaut Buc-ees (home of the 20 lb. $0.99 bag o' ice) is building a huge new fuel/beer distribution outlet -- just down the road from Dow's Texas Works. Jobs, jobs, jobs! No union dues! Flexible hours! Polo shirts & khakis IN , fire retardant jumpsuits OUT! The new Buc-ees will be on Tx Hwy 332 @ Plantation Dr., across the street from Randall's. Land being cleared now. Trees uprooted. Dirt being pushed around. Wildlife fleeing. Huge project. 28 fuel pumps to be installed. CVS drug store going in, too. According to word on the street.
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