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WO0 {JIM TO CHAMOIS THAT TO IOM OVISIIIVISOOY MATINS Texas 11711 ,, Farmers L ARIA Union Ilk 800 LAKE AJt DR. WACO, TEXAS 76710 817 772-7220 THE COS PRICE 4!S#1144410101 In a Hurry? Fast Self Service; New Soup & Salad Bar. …or Sandwiches, Chili, Tacos, Chalupas, and restaurant baked Buttermilk Pie ser’ed by our staff. Daily Specials.. Sunday Brunch. Omelettesand Eggs Benedict. Haagen Dazs Ice Cream and fresh yogurt. the greenhouse Above the Kangaroo Court. Downtown Riverwalk 314 North Presa, San Antonio, Texas. Bob and Sara Roebuck Anchor National Financial Services 1524 E. Anderson Lane, Austin bonds stocks insurance. mutual funds optional retirement program THORP SPRINGS PRESS Committed to the publishing and promotion of new authors Write for our current catalog: 3414 Robinson Avenue Austin 78722 the legendary RAW DEAL Steaks, Chops, Chicken Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:30, Sat. 4:30-12:0Q 605 Sabine No Reservations Austin’s Authentic Arredondo Mexican Recipes JORGE’S 2204 Hancock, 454-1980 CASITA JORGE’S 2538 Elmont, 442-9091 JorgeChief Cook & Pearl Diver ished South Texas countiesZavala, Dimmit and LaSalle. The project would also lay the groundwork for just the sort of local cottage industry, based on renewable energy technologies, that the Fisks had proposed to NCAT the year before. This was not what is known as an “unsolicited grant proposal.” The Fisks were responding to a formal Request for Proposals issued in June by the Departments of Energy and Labor and the Community Services Administration.It was an atypically exciting RFP, suggesting the possibility that the federal government was at last prepared to do something productive. The Fisks were confident of their chances for funding. The RFP had stated that ten such projects would be selected across the U.S., each to receive $107,000, and the Fisks had reason to believe that Max’s Pot was virtually the only organization of its kind in the Southwest with the experience needed to do the job. They had, in addition, the solid backing of the widely respected TDCA, l as well as good relations with CSA officials in Washington who had been impressed with the Fisks’ endeavors in Crystal City. But once again, as the Fisks learned last October. the word from the feds was “no” to appropriate technology and “yes” to a big corporation. Instead of giving the Southwestern grant to Crystal City with its makeshift but effective mass-producible solar collector, the federal consortium awarded its “solar utilization/economic development” money to the Tarrant County Manpower Employment and Training Agency which had written a proposal in collaboration with Lennox Industries of Fort Worth. Lennox, a major national producer of air-conditioning equipment, had introduced an expensive line of solar heating and cooling hardware in 1974. The company strengthened its position last year by joining with the Honeywell Corporationitself the recipient of more than $20 million in federal solar R&D moneyto produce a new Lennox/ Honeywell solar system. It is this system that. Lennox and the Tarrant County agency will use for training the solar technicians in the federal project. This means that, while those technicians may be drawn from low-income communities solar equipment they will learn to install and service is destined for the homes and commercial establishments of the strictly affluent. Meanwhile, the Fisks were advised in their notice of rejection that the energy devices and systems they intended to use in their “solar utilization/economic development” projectthe devices that had shown their potential in spite of federal disdain the previous winter in Crystal Citywere, once again, “technically insufficient.” Ray Reece THE TEXAS OBSERVER 21