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Two Pesos was a Tex-Mex restaurant chain in the U.S. state of Texas that opened in 1982 in Houston. It was similar to Taco Cabana but Two Pesos never opened in Taco Cabana's home market of San Antonio. The Two Pesos chain was sold to Taco Cabana in 1993 after losing a drawn-out trade dress suit that appeared before the United States Supreme Court.
Gale Group Document Number: GALE|A15546806. Wooster, Ralph A. (Lamar University). "Black Dixie: Afro-Texan History and Culture in Houston. The Centennial Series of the Association of Former Students, Texas A&M University, No.41" (Book Review). The Journal of Southern History, 1 November 1993, Vol.59(4), pp. 796–797. Available from JSTOR.
Seven Keys To Texas, 1983, ISBN 0-87404-069-8, LCCN 82-74272 Texas: A Salute from Above , 1985, ISBN 0-940672-28-6 , LCCN 84-52739 Sources for book publication data: United States Library of Congress , Amazon.com .
Make Haste Slowly: Moderates, Conservatives, and School Desegregation in Houston [1] is a 1999 book by William Henry Kellar, published by Texas A&M Press, which discusses school desegregation in Houston, Texas, involving the Houston Independent School District. The book's main focus is 1954–1960.
Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO) is a digital collection of books published in Great Britain during the 18th century. [1] [2]Gale, an education publishing company in the United States, assembled the collection by digitally scanning microfilm reproductions of 136,291 titles.
Letters followed, recommending and expanding ideas, and concluding with a telephone call between Gale in California and Rob Kolstad (a member of the steering group) in Texas. They brainstormed and created the basic structure of the event to be both a design competition and a management simulation game.
The agency was established in 1937 as the Texas Board of Professional Engineers. [2] In June 2019, Governor Greg Abbott signed Texas House Bill 1523 that merged the Texas Board of Professional Engineers and the Texas Board of Professional Land Surveying into the Texas Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors, effective on September 1 ...
In 1956, the United States, Canada, and Mexico came to an agreement with the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators, the Automobile Manufacturers Association and the National Safety Council that standardized the size for license plates for vehicles (except those for motorcycles) at 6 inches (15 cm) in height by 12 inches (30 cm) in width, with standardized mounting holes. [4]