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La Fonda de la Noche Southwestern Cuisine Liberal Food Conservative Prices 2405 Nueces 474-7562 EARTH SHOE STORE 474-1895 1610 Lavaca Austin, Texas 78701 Union printing with competitive prices. Support the movement, help us build the ideal. Come to I.D.A. for your printing needs. 901 W. 24th St., Austin 477-3641 CLASSIFIED Classified advertising is 300.per word. Discounts for multiple insertions within a 12month period: 25 times, 50 percent; 12 times, 25 percent; 6 times, 10 percent. BOOK-HUNTING? No obligation search for rare or out-of-print books. Ruth and John 8, Box 173, Austin, Texas 78703. BACKPACKING/MOUNTAINEERING for individuals, families and small groups. 12-24 days. Outback Expeditions, Box 444, Austin, Texas 78767. NEW ORLEANS ON $8 A YEAR. The Weekly Courier, 1232 Decatur, New Orleans, La. 70116. NEED SOMETHING from Germany? Jim & Hanni International, 1600 Northwood, Austin 78703. 474-2582. JOIN COMMON CAUSE. Only one person can make democracy work again . . . YOU. 711 San Antonio St., Austin, Texas 78701. WIN YOUR NEXT ELECTION. Send for free catalogue of services and materials available from one of America’s best known political consulting firms. Write Campaign Associates, Inc., 516 Petroleum Bldg., Dept. TO-1, Wichita, KS 67202 LIBERTY LUNCH. 405 W. 2nd. Austin. Eclectic fare. Jazz Theatre. LEARN TO FLY A HOT AIR BALLOON at the first balloon school in the Southwest. Contact Derek Howard, 6106 War Bonnet, FOREIGN AUTO SERVICE. In Houston. Honest, reliable service. VW, Volvo, and some others. 729 Tulane, 864-5111. BOOKPLATES. Free catalog. Many beautiful designs. Special designing too. Address: BOOKPLATES, P.O. Box 28-1, Yellow Springs, Ohio 45387. JOIN THE ACLU. Membership $20. Texas Civil Liberties Union, 600 West 7th, Austin, Texas 78701. FINANCE YOUR NON-TANGIBLE sales contracts through me. Trade school, health spas with service contracts financed without credit check. Write Kenneth Edwards, Economist, 3237 Ewing Ave., Houston, Texas 77004. EIGHT LARGE COLORED PRINTS, UT and Austin. $5.90 ppd. Longhorn Frame, 507 Bee Caves, Austin 78746. TRAVELERSOVERSEAS RESIDENTS: Special personal affairs service, mail forwarding, banking and buying assistance, etc. Johnson Services, Box 18245, San Antonio, Texas 78218. NEW OBSERVER STAFFER needs a room. In a house preferably. Between $80 and $100 monthly. Furnished, if possible, with kitchen privileges. Close to Capitol, if possible, or UT. I am 24 years old, nonsmoker, neat and absolutely barrels of fun to be with. Please Or write 875 16th, Boulder, CO. 80302. FREE WHEELING BICYCLES, 2404 San Gabriel, Austin. For whatever your bicycle needs. From where I sit amid the North Carolina pines, the time between “today” and “tomorrow” for the Observer cannot be much more than about three months. From my own experience on the journal almost a generation ago, I don’t see how the Observer helmsmen can hold the new, expanded ship on course much longer than that without massive help. It seems to me there are three ways to help the Observer; at this stage, all three involve money. For those like myself, comfortably ensconced in the academy, a $100 contribution would seem the minimum admission ticket, renewable two, three or four times a year. I would think there are a couple hundred of us, so that’s ten or twenty thousnd dollars. Secondly, for a handful of very select people \(I never met more than a dozen in mission ticket can and should run into the thousands of dollars. This hardy band of affluent progresssives \(and you through. Finally, there is everybody elsethe thousands on the Observer mailing list. If anybody in Texas is in the “not resigned” category, it should be you who read the Observer regularly. It may be that all of us still have our political self-respect, but how much are we willing to pay to demonstrate it? Popular democracy has to start somewhere. It won’t start in Washington, flowing down from a “populist” president. It might as well begin with the Observer, in Texas, where the original populist movement began 99 years ago this September. Popular democracy has suffered many crushing setbacks in these 99 years. We are all very much more sophisticated, that is to say culturally intimidated, now. Millions are resigned, but are waiting only for a sign of hope. What do you think? Is it worth some of your money? The old Texas Observer, now the new Texas Observer Cooperative of the Hightower era has convinced some old salts like me that it is. I hope thousands of you agree. I hope you will send letters. With checks in them. Fraternally, Larry Goodwyn Larry Goodwyn is an associate professor of history at Duke University and codirector of the oral history program at the Center for Southern Studies in Durham. His Democratic Promise: the Populist Moment in America \(Oxford Award nominee this year, was cited in April by the Texas Institute of Letters for its “contribution to public knowledge.” Goodwyn was the Observer’s associate editor from 1958 to 1959.