BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Central Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644356924
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251006
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644357949
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251007
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644358974
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251008
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644361023
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251009
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644362048
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251010
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644364097
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251011
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644365122
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251012
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644367171
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251013
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644368196
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251014
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644370245
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251015
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644371270
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251016
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644373319
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251017
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644375368
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251018
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644377417
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251019
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644380490
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251020
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644383563
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251021
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644385612
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251022
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644387661
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251023
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644390734
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251024
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644392783
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251025
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644395856
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251026
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644398929
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251027
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644402002
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251028
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644404051
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251029
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644406100
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251030
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644409173
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251031
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644413270
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251101
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644417367
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251102
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644419416
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251103
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644423513
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251104
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644425562
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251105
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644427611
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251106
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644428636
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251107
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644429661
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251108
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644430686
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251109
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644431711
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251110
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644433760
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251111
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644434785
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251112
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644436834
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251113
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644439907
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251114
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644441956
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251115
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644445029
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251116
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644447078
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251117
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644448103
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251118
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644449128
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251119
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644450153
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251120
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644452202
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251121
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644453227
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251122
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644455276
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251123
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644456301
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251124
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644459374
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251125
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644462447
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251126
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644463472
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251127
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644464497
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251128
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644465522
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251129
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644466547
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251130
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644468596
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251201
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644469621
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251202
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644472694
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251203
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644474743
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251204
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644476792
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251205
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644479865
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251206
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644482938
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251207
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644486011
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251208
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165201Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644489084
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251209
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644490109
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251210
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644492158
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251211
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644494207
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251212
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644496256
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251213
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644498305
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251214
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644500354
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251215
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644502403
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251216
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644503428
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251217
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644504453
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251218
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644505478
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251219
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644507527
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251220
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644509576
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251221
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644511625
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251222
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644514698
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251223
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644516747
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251224
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644518796
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251225
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165202Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644520845
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251226
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644523918
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251227
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644526991
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251228
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644530064
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251229
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644531089
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251230
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644533138
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251231
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644534163
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260101
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644536212
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260102
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644538261
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260103
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644540310
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260104
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644542359
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260105
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644544408
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260106
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644545433
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260107
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644547482
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260108
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644548507
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260109
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644549532
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260110
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644550557
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260111
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644551582
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260112
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644552607
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260113
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644553632
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260114
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644555681
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260115
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644556706
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260116
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644557731
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260117
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644559780
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260118
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644560805
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260119
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644562854
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260120
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644564903
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260121
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644567976
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260122
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644571049
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260123
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644573098
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260124
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644574123
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260125
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644576172
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260126
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644580269
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260127
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644583342
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260128
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644586415
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260129
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644589488
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260130
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644591537
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260131
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644593586
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260201
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644596659
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260202
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644598708
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260203
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644601781
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260204
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644603830
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260205
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644608951
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260206
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644613048
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260207
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644616121
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260208
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644618170
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260209
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644621243
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260210
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644623292
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260211
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644625341
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260212
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165203Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644627390
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260213
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644628415
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260214
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644630464
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260215
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644631489
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260216
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644633538
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260217
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644635587
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260218
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644636612
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260219
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644638661
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260220
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644640710
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260221
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644641735
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260222
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644643784
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260223
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644645833
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260224
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644647882
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260225
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644649931
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260226
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644651980
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260227
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644653005
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260228
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644655054
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260301
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644657103
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260302
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644659152
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260303
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644660177
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260304
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644661202
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260305
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644662227
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260306
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644664276
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260307
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644665301
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260308
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644666326
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260309
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644667351
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260310
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644668376
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260311
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644669401
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260312
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644670426
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260313
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644672475
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260314
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644673500
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260315
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644674525
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260316
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644675550
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260317
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644676575
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260318
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644677600
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260319
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644679649
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260320
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644680674
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260321
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644682723
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260322
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644684772
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260323
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644686821
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260324
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644688870
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260325
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644690919
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260326
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644693992
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260327
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644697065
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260328
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644700138
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260329
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644702187
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260330
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644704236
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260331
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644706285
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260401
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165204Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644708334
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260402
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644711407
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260403
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644713456
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260404
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644716529
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260405
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644717554
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260406
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644718579
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260407
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644719604
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260408
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644720629
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260409
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644722678
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260410
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644724727
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260411
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644725752
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260412
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644727801
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260413
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644729850
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260414
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644731899
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260415
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644733948
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260416
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644734973
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260417
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644738046
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260418
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644741119
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644743168
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260420
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644745217
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260421
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644746242
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260422
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644748291
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260423
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644749316
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260424
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644751365
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260425
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644752390
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260426
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644754439
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260427
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644755464
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260428
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644756489
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260429
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644757514
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260430
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644758539
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260501
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644759564
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260502
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644760589
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260503
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644761614
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260504
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644763663
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260505
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644764688
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260506
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644765713
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260507
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644767762
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260508
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644768787
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260509
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644770836
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260510
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644772885
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260511
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644773910
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260512
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644775959
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260513
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644778008
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260514
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644779033
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260515
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644780058
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260516
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644782107
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260517
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644784156
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260518
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644785181
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260519
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644786206
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260520
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644790303
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260521
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644793376
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260522
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644794401
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260523
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644795426
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260524
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644796451
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260525
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644799524
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260526
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644801573
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260527
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644803622
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260528
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644805671
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260529
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644808744
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260530
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T165205Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51003644810793
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260531
DESCRIPTION:A new exhibit at The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Cul
 ture and Sports celebrates the history of the Lone Star Showdown\, the foo
 tball rivalry between the University of Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M 
 Aggies. \n \n\nThe first competition between football teams from the Unive
 rsity of Texas and Texas A&M took place in Austin over 130 years ago in 18
 94\, on a roped-off field two miles north of campus around what is now 44t
 h Street and Duval. Texas won 38-0\, and like this first\, lopsided score\
 , the Horns have remained dominant over the years with an all-time record 
 of 77-37-5. Not limited to football\, anytime the Longhorns and Farmers sq
 uare off in any sport\, more is on the line than just the game. From its f
 ounding in 1883\, The University of Texas seemed to be in full opposition 
 to Texas AMC. It offered higher education that focused on liberal arts and
  the humanities and its campus was located in beautiful\, downtown Austin.
  Once sport became a part of campus life\, friction between the rural\, co
 nservative “Farmers” of A&M and the big-city “Steers” of Texas gre
 w into a true rivalry. We tell “aggie jokes.” They call us “t-sips.
 ” Our fight songs bid each other farewell.\n\n \n\nIn 1900\, the Texas a
 nd Texas A&M football teams faced off on Thanksgiving Day for the first ti
 me\, rooting the rivalry deep within Texan culture for many generations of
  Aggies\, Longhorns\, and the unaffiliated. The game has always carried su
 ch immense cultural significance\, that when Texas A&M left the Big 12 Con
 ference for the Southeast Conference in 2012\, state legislators attempted
  to pass a bill to restore the rivalry a year later\; Governor Greg Abbott
  pushed an agenda of political compromise when he articulated his desire t
 o bring back the game during a 2019 address of the legislative session. In
  2024\, the rivalry finally renewed when Texas joined the SEC and reappear
 ed on Aggie football schedules. This year marks the 120th Texas versus Tex
 as A&M football game. In celebration\, this exhibit pays tribute to the gr
 eat players\, coaches\, history\, hijinks\, and traditions that have made 
 the Lone Star Showdown mean so much to so many\, and the so many more to c
 ome.
GEO:30.284674;-97.732179
LOCATION:The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports\, NE
 Z 5.700
SUMMARY:Farmers  v.  Longhorns
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/farmers-v-longhorns
CATEGORIES:Arts & Humanities
CATEGORIES:Sports & Recreation
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
