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the legendary RAW DEAL Steaks. Chops, Chicken Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30, Sat. 4:30-12:00 605 Sabine No Reservations Russell Lee Photographer Text by F. Jack Hurley Introduction by Robert Coles cloth edition. $15.95 paperbound. Observer subscribers may obtain RUSSELL LEEPHOTOGRAPHER from the Texas included. No charge for postage if payment accompanies your order. MORGAN & MORGAN, INC. Publishers of Photographic Literature 145 Palisade Street. Dobbs Ferry, New York 10522 Austin’s Authentic Arredondo Mexican Recipes JORGE’S 2204 Hancock, 454-1980 CASITA JORGE’S 2538 Elmont, 442-9091 JorgeChief Cook & Pearl Diver Good books in every field JENKINS PUBLISHING CO. The Pemberton Press John H. Jenkins, Publisher Box 2085 Austin 78768 CARAMBA! Can something this good be legal? Si! Superior, the pfemirro light beer of Mex ico. Introduce some people you know to a beer they might like better than their old favorite imported beer. Pour them a Superior. the Mexican Premium Light Beer. 18 DECEMBER 29, 1978 r .’111V;f : In praise of By Maury Maverick Jr. San Antonio What kind of a person is Ramsey Clark? Having come from a more leftwing Texas political background than his, having identified myself with Vietnam war resisters and grieved over the indictment of Benjamin Spock, I have never known, until recently, what my final attitude was about Clark, although instinctively I always wanted to like him. Now, after spending two days in November with Ramsey Clark, watching him try as an ACLU lawyer to save the life of a man on death row at Huntsville, all without a fee, I believe I know the answer: he is a genuinely good person and may be the most important liberal person of stature in the country. And for icing on the cake, he can laugh at himself. A few weeks earlier, Clark’s partner, Mel Wulf, an old friend of mine, and one of the top constitutional lawyers in the country, had called from New York to ask if I would help in getting Ramsey from the airport to a district court in Jourdanton, some 25 miles south of San Antonio. Clark was coming to Texas for a hearing in the case of a white man by the name of Leonard W. Freeman, who, according to an opinion by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, was driving from San Antonio toward Cotulla on January 19, 1973, with intent to rob a bank. Stopped for speeding by deputy sheriff Luis Garza, whose wife happened to be with him at the time, Freeman took the couple as prisoners and then allegedly murdered them. Given the death penalty, Freeman was scheduled to die on August 3, 1978, but this was prevented by a petition for habeas corpus signed by Ramsey Clark together with Olin B. Strauss and R. Thomas Franklin, lawyers who had represented Freeman on a court-appointed basis at the trial level. The habeas corpus petition listed numerous points of error, including one to the effect that Freeman could not have had a fair trial in Jourdanton, as testified to by every single private-practice lawyer in the immediate area. But the judge who was to hear the much-later habeas corpus pleading, R. L. Eschen