Name Confusion
When Hilda stepped out the back door and saw the Texas Gulf Coast sunset, she couldn’t decide whether to burst out singing “You light up my life” or “Come on baby, light my fire . . .”
When Hilda stepped out the back door and saw the Texas Gulf Coast sunset, she couldn’t decide whether to burst out singing “You light up my life” or “Come on baby, light my fire . . .”
After the storm muddied the waters, fishing on the Gulf Coast had been tough, but the frog leg supply seemed to be holding up . . .
Howard, trying to tell his his mother about the Texas Gulf Coast sunset, could only describe it as “Mixed emotions . . .”
Billy and Imogene didn’t mind having close neighbors; in fact, it was kind of comforting. They did wish they would quit coming over daily to borrow a cup of flour or a beer . . .
When Tommy, a Texas cowboy, won a trip to Paris from the Louisiana casino, he was a little overwhelmed. When the taxi driver tried to sell him the Arc, he declined–no place to put the horses . . .
Catch and release sounded good over drinks with his girlfriend (who thought killing animals was cruel), but some doubts surfaced when Glen tried the first actual release in the wild . . .