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                    <h3><a href="/2010/jul/15/why-national-parks-are-better-state-parks/" title="Why National Parks Are Better Than State Parks">Why National Parks Are Better Than State&nbsp;Parks</a></h3>
                    <p>
                        <span class="location">Amarillo, <a href="/writing/united-states/1/" title="travel writing from the United States">Texas</a></span> &nbsp;
    
                        <time datetime="2010-07-15 09:00:00">07/15/10</time>
                        <img src="http://images.luxagraf.net/post-thumbnail/2010/paloduratn.jpg" alt="Why National Parks Are Better Than State Parks" class="post-image" />
                    </p>
                    <p class="intro hyphenate">There are many reasons, but here's the one I currently consider most important: National Parks never close. Take Palo Dura State park outside of Amarillo, Texas. Were it a National Park, I would be there right now. But it's not, it's a state park and so I'm sitting in a hotel room in Amarillo because everyone knows nature closes at 10PM.</p>
                    <span class="button"><a class="permalink" href="/2010/jul/15/why-national-parks-are-better-state-parks/" title="Why National Parks Are Better Than State Parks">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a></span>
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                    <h3><a href="/2010/jul/11/legend-billy-the-kid/" title="The Legend of Billy the Kid">The Legend of Billy the&nbsp;Kid</a></h3>
                    <p>
                        <span class="location">Hico, <a href="/writing/united-states/1/" title="travel writing from the United States">Texas</a></span> &nbsp;
    
                        <time datetime="2010-07-11 17:00:00">07/11/10</time>
                        <img src="http://images.luxagraf.net/post-thumbnail/2010/Billykid.jpg" alt="The Legend of Billy the Kid" class="post-image" />
                    </p>
                    <p class="intro hyphenate">History rarely offers neat, tidy stories. But the messier, more confusing and more controversial the story becomes, the more it works its way into our imaginations. The legend of Billy the Kid is like that of Amelia Earhart or D.B. Cooper &mdash; the less we know for sure, the more compelling the story becomes.</p>
                    <span class="button"><a class="permalink" href="/2010/jul/11/legend-billy-the-kid/" title="The Legend of Billy the Kid">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a></span>
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                    <h3><a href="/2010/jul/08/dixie-drug-store/" title="The Dixie Drug Store">The Dixie Drug&nbsp;Store</a></h3>
                    <p>
                        <span class="location">New Orleans, <a href="/writing/united-states/1/" title="travel writing from the United States">Louisiana</a></span> &nbsp;
    
                        <time datetime="2010-07-08 16:00:00">07/08/10</time>
                        <img src="http://images.luxagraf.net/post-thumbnail/2010/nopharmacymuseum.jpg" alt="The Dixie Drug Store" class="post-image" />
                    </p>
                    <p class="intro hyphenate">New Orleans is it's own world. So much so that's it's impossible to put your finger on what it is that makes it different. New Orleans is a place where the line between consensus reality and private dream seems to have never fully developed. And a wonderful world it is.</p>
                    <span class="button"><a class="permalink" href="/2010/jul/08/dixie-drug-store/" title="The Dixie Drug Store">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a></span>
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