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ANDERSON & COMPANY! COFFEE TEA SPICES TWO JEFFERSON SQUARE AUSTIN, TEXAS 7S731 512 453-1533 Send me your list. Name Street City Zip Our outstanding lunches have been an Austin must for eleven years. Our international grocery features food and wine from around the world. Come see us at our new home. 1610 San Antonio Austin, Tex. 78701 472-1900 Hours: 7am 7pm Mon. to Fri. and 8am 6pm on Sat Spiders . . . the first thing that springs to mind when you mention the word “web.” But, our web is a press high speed and economical! From newspapers to quality book work, in black and white or color. Call us at 442-7836 for a quote on your next project. Em loyee Owned ,and Managed AUSTIN, TEXAS 1714 S. Congress 442-7836 Data Processing Typesetting Printing Mailing Farm protest, Campbell Soup plant, Paris, 7X., 1978. “For a lot of years farmers have tended to be Democrats, and smalltown people have tended to be Republicans. But now the connections for those people are getting easier to make. Stores are closing up. Jobs are being lost. Working people in urban areas will find that farmers who go to the city will find work. They have business experience, work with their hands and with machinery, and a lot of them are computer proficient. They are skilled workers in a lot of areas. Plus, they’re used to working for little pay for many years. They won’t be the ones who end up on long-term unemployment. They’re smart, hard-working, reliable people.” The key to the Farm Belt effort is the attempt to return the political debate to hard-core economic issues and away from the social issues which Reagan uses to mask his own economic agenda, which exploits the poor and middle class. It is geared to work as an antidote to Reaganism. “We try to keep people focused on farm issues,” said Zabel, “and not on issues like abortion and prayer in schools. Keep it on the gut stuff. Today Reagan is in South Dakota talking about drugs. So the farmers are rallying there about farm issues. The Republican governor, meanwhile, is at the other end of the state. That should tell you what people, in South Dakota think about the drug crisis. They’re worried about the farm crisis.” G.R. THE TEXAS OBSERVER 17 .