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Evenin’ Stephens ST. HEN’S After work or during the evening, enjoy the quiet sophistication of the newest bar in town. STEPHEN’S, located in the historic Stephen F. Austin Hotel, offers lunch, happy hours 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. with free hors d’oeuvres and piano entertainment from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. STEPHEN’S provides a welcome change of atmosphere in the downtown area. We’ll be looking for you some evenin’., ;’,11/ Yi 7th and Congress Ave. 1608 Lavaca 32nd & Guadalupe 201 E. Riverside 478-3281 452-5010 441-5331 Create a positive first impression with your next paper or report. Complete your project with one of our inexpensive bindings to create your own special effect. Remember, first impressions can have lasting effects. Copying is our middle name but not our only service Ginny’s Copying Service, Inc. 108 co ng res s Call 476-9171 for details 2700 \\N Anderson Lane Bindery Services 2021Gua d al u pe not ruined her politically. “I felt doubly used by the situation to discover that he had seriously thought it might damage my career but had asked me anyway. I was angry that he had not leveled about what reservations he had.” The various autobiographic snippets I have used here will not endear Barbara Jordan to Observer readers. But even though she has not chosen the political route we might have chosen for her, we should remember that her calculations have put her in a position to do some very fine things from time to time. Although the nitty-gritty of legislating always bored her, she successfully sponsored an extension of the federal Voting Rights Act to Texas. Under that law the federal government will be overseeing redistricting legislation after the next census, and minorities should have significantly more voting clout during the 1980s. And she has provided us with some of the most inspirational political oratory of the ’70s. I must admit that, after reading her book, I like Barbara Jordan and find her to be a much more interesting figure than I had previously thought. In part, it’s the reaction of a woman marveling at another woman’s audacity in alien territory..! appreciate Jordan’s penchant for stopping at various points in the book and discussing what she learned from particular experiences. A number of times I found myself saying, “I wish I’d learned that lesson as early as she did.” Teaching now at the LBJ School here in Austin, she seems to be in an uncharacteristic interlude of quiescence. Presuming that she is as sound physically as she claims, what’s next? In the last paragraph of the book she writes, “I won’t know what the next step is until I get there. I know that when I went to Boston, and Austin, and Washington, I took with me everything I had learned before. And that’s what I will do this time. That’s the point of it, isn’t it? To bring all you have with you wherever you go.” I like that. I like it that Barbara Jordan, for all her accomplishments, thinks of herself, in Lillian Hellman’s term, as “an unfinished woman.” I hope she’s around for another 40 years, just to see how far this talented and unlikely politician can travel. Former Observer editor Kaye Northcott is an Austin-based freelance writer. Personal Service Quality Insurance ALICE ANDERSON AGENCY INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE 808A E. 46th, Austin -, Texas 459-6577 \(y-oet azeited todaze. at 9X-e , eattal& 67 4, 912 e/ .Aezetth, X/2\(.4 Sowed J1m0\(a c y ,tivweyA 71..80 t a .2.. 00,m,. Olizziep served ./ifotaag. tkveyA oo 00-40, 0,.Z7 at ks1tiaaotz,04: fatiay419. td/ 1.0 0 am 19 THE TEXAS OBSERVER