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BOOK& 593 5 WEST 17 TH 476 0116 Itustin, Texts 75701 La Fonda de \(a Noche Southwestern Cuisine Liberal FoodConservative Prices * 2405 Nueces .4, a , 474-7562 .,,, …., ,.. GINNY’S COPYING SERVICE Combining Future Technology with Old Fashioned Diligence to provide Professional Services for Today. 44 Dobie Mall Austin, Texas 108 Congress Austin, Texas 400 University Dr. San Marcos, Texas channeled UT funds into his own pocket by billing the university for the work of professors employed by his private consulting firm. He bankrolled the scheme with vouchers written for workshops never held and classes never taught. Five other former Division of Extension employees and associates were indicted along with Barron. Two have pleaded no contest to lesser charges and three are awaiting trial. Under Barron, the Division of Extension was a full-fledged, though small, empire within the university. Since the former dean’s indictment, that empire has been dismantled. The public school desegregation unit is gone. Night school will bite the dust this August. Employees of other sections of the division are unsure of their futures. Regents had been talking about dissolving the division for a long time; many university watchers believe UT saw Barron’s fall from grace as a convenient excuse to get rid of an unwanted stepchild. Anderson, Clayton & Co., the Houston conglomerate that makes Chiffon margerine, sells life insurance, and owns feed mills, continues to reach out for more. It has made an offer to buy Gerber Products Co., the baby food bigtimer that controls 65 percent of the U.S. market. In the last quarter of 1976, Texas industries received $786,993,000 in defense contracts, the fourth highest amount among the fifty states. The Texas figure represents 5.6 percent of the total. California industries led the list, receiving 22.8 percent of the $14 billion in Pentagon contracts last fall. summer benefits in your areas. If none of the above fit, send a donation to our Investigative Reporter’s Fund, buy an additional subscription or two for folks who ought to be reading the Observer, or take out an ad in the magazine. The Observer can make a difference in Texas. It’s no longer enough to be scruffy, finding our satisfaction in defeat. At 22 years of age, it’s time for this publication to begin to fulfill its promise. Contrary to popular wisdom, a progressive majority exists here, though it has not been properly addressed since the turn of the century, when the populists successfully organized diverse constituencies around issues of economic democracy \(see Lawrence Goodwyn’s excellent book, just out, Democratic Promise: The Populist Moment in AmerAn expanded, enlivened Observer can speak to that majority, lay the groundwork for progressive change and literally alter the political debate in Texas for the next ten years. That’s what we’re asking you to invest in. J.H. Printers Stationers Mailers Typesetters High Speed Web Offset Publication Press Counseling Designing Copy Writing Editing and Trade Computer Sales Services Complete Computer Data Processing Services #1111t LIP UM& 512/442-7836 1714 South Congress P.O. Box 3485 Austin, Texas 78764 ,