Vol 28, Issue 4 Print Issue

Counting Noses

When San Antonio Sen. Gregory Luna, a Democrat, was dying in 1999, he got the lieutenant governor at the time — Rick Perry — to agree to give him 24 hours notice before any Senate vote on a public school voucher bill Luna opposed. He would get to Austin, he said then, to be the deciding vote against that legislation.

The Week in the Rearview Mirror

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Political People and their Moves

Sam Kinch Jr., the founding editor of Texas Weekly and a former political and government correspondent for The Dallas Morning News, died shortly after midnight, according to a spokesman for the family. He was 70, and had been battling pancreatic cancer, emphysema and congestive heart disease.Kinch started Texas Weekly in 1984 with two friends, George Phenix and John Rogers. He sold his share in 1998 and retired to write, travel and enjoy his family. He was a terrific reporter and mentor to other journalists, irreverent, smart as hell, a great lover of dirty jokes, full of history, an incurable reader, a Presbyterian elder and a surprisingly soft touch for people who needed some help. He wrote books, including Texas Under a Cloud, with Ben Proctor, about the Sharpstown stock scandal that rocked the Capitol and resulted in the biggest turnover in legislators in modern history, and Too Much is Not Enough, with Anne Marie Kilday, a book on campaign finance in Texas. Kinch was a University of Texas grad, with bachelors degree in history and a master's degree in journalism, and a former editor of The Daily Texan. Survivors include his wife Lilas, three adult children, and six grandchildren. Services will be held on Sunday the 6th at 2pm at Covenant Presbyterian in Austin. [photos of Sam, and Sam with Ann Richards, courtesy of the Kinch family]