| There's more than one way to go batty, especially in Austin, a city that'sdeep in the heart, and heat and humidity, of Texas.
 
 It's a Capitol city, one that boasts the nation's largest domed statehouse.
 And, because this is Texas, the capitol towers 311 feet, 14 feet taller 
        than
 the U.S. Capital in Washington, D.C.
 
 
         
          |  |  |   
          | Austin's Statehouse | Looking Up to the Dome |  Austin is also musical. Most evenings live music is played at more than 
        100
 venues. It doesn't take more than a quick spin through downtown to see 
        club
 after club, with many offering a surprising mix of musical possibilities,
 from Texas swing to jazz to pop to country-western to rock 'n roll. Minutes
 after stepping off the airplane, my friend and I heard our first band, 
        a
 country-western group near the airport's main entrance. A short while 
        later,
 while checking in at the downtown Radisson, Steve and Edie nightclub-style
 crooners were performing in the lobby.
 And, because this is a city where folks go batty over music, among theattractions along the Town Lake running/bicycle trail is a larger-than-life
 statue of the late blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughn. The Town Lake trail 
        is
 a treasure, a highly used artery that serves as a wonderful recreational
 outlet.
 
 My friend and I had some great runs on the trail, and one memorable run-in.
 One morning we were trotting along a section of the always busy trail, 
        which
 loops around Town Lake and the Lower Colorado River, that crosses a
 lightly-traveled road. A 50-something year-old driver in a pickup truck,
 with his dog sitting alongside, accelerated as we ran across a crosswalk,
 causing me to speed up and my friend to abruptly halt. When I yelped and
 hollered, he braked, backed up, rolled down the window, turned down the
 radio and asked, "You got a problem?"
 
 After I complained he shook his head and explained (as though I was
 seriously retarded )"Son, this is Texas. If you run in front of a 
        car,
 you're gonna get killed." Then he turned the volume back up LOUD, 
        rolled up
 the window, patted his dog, and sped off.
 
 
        
          |  |  |  
          | Atop the Capitol | Looking Down |  He certainly didn't represent Austin, which is a big-little city. An
 estimated 657,000 people live within its city limits, with 1.2 million 
        in
 the city's greater metropolitan area.
 
 More uniquely, Austin is a city where people are bats about bats. One
 evening my friend and I joined more than a thousand people for one of 
        the
 city's signature events, the coming out of 1-1/2 million Mexican free-tailed
 bats from their roosts under the Congress Avenue Bridge. We joined the 
        mob
 in ooohing, aaahing and cheering as the twilight sky and downtown's Gotham
 City skyline were darkened like a two-day old beard by phalanxes of
 undulating bats that shimmered like wind-blown curtains.
 
 Until recent years bats weren't greeted so favorably. A years-ago newspaper
 headline warned, "Mass fear in the air as bats invade Austin," 
        over a story
 warning of bats attacking humans. Opinions were revamped when Bat
 Conservation International leaders began preaching the values of bats. 
        That
 led to having bats being named the Lone Star State's Official Flying Mammal.
 Bats, as Texans now know, eat 10,000 to 30,000 pounds of moths and beetles
 nightly, saving farm crops and, possibly more importantly, backyard barbecues.
 
 Backyard barbecues are part of Austin life. Excluding a certain pickup 
        truck
 driver, many people regard Austin as the most progressive, happening and
 cosmopolitan city in Texas. Food is part of its reputation. During our
 visit, our meals ranged from lively flavored barbecue to creamy thick
 milkshakes to fluffy omelettes to sumptuous Italian entrees complemented 
        by
 red wines to spicy nachoes best chased down with a local brew.
 
 My Oregon accent sounded out of place to the herds of Southerners during 
        a
 guided tour at the Capitol, the massive pink granite statehouse that's
 perched on a hill overlooking downtown. Its top is capped with a zinc
 statute of the Goddess of Liberty, while the entrance features life-sized
 marble statues of the city's namesake Stephen F. Austin and Sam Houston. 
        Its
 terrazzo floor commemorates 12 battles fought on Texas soil, including, 
        of
 course, the Alamo.
 
  
        
           
            | There's some presidential flavor on the 
              walls. A painting of George W. Bush, the White House's current occupant, is among the gallery of past 
              governors'
 portraits.
 |  |   
            |  | Governor Bush |  It's just a short walk or drive from the Capitol and downtown to theUniversity of Texas campus, a sprawling campus. The university is the 
        home
 of the Texas Longhorns, and their edifice is a massive football stadium.
 Actually, everything on the campus is large, grand and, well, Texas.
 
 
        
           
            |  | On campus, but less grandiose than the stadium, 
                is the surprisinglyfascinating Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum. One of 10 
                presidential
 libraries administered by the National Archives and Records Administration,
 it houses 45 million pages of historical documents, 650,00 photos, 
                a million
 feet of motion picture film and 5,000 hours of recordings about 
                LBJ's
 career.
 |   
            | LBJ Exhibit |  |   The first floor features a fascinating chronology of Johnson's life and 
        his
 often successful, eventually troubled presidency during the Vietnam War.
 Overall, the library exhibits help to create a sympathetic view of Johnson,
 a man who seemed an unlikely champion of civil rights and who was ultimately
 buried under a torrent of war-related events.
 
 The highlight of the library is an eighth floor replica of the Oval Office
 as it appeared during the Johnson presidency. It's not like being in the
 White House, but it's as close as most of us will get. At least until 
        George
 W. leaves office and creates his own edifice.
 With its delights and fascinations, Austin is like a proudly struttingpeacock: sometimes showy, proud and maybe even a bit pretentious. It is,
 after all, Austintatious.
 
    
 |