ustxtxb_obs_1979_06_08_50_00015-00000_000.pdf

Page 23

by

THE COsI Sue PRICE : w.O LINO TO CHANCE 114AT TO KOMI OVERVIDOOT EATING Texas Farmers I A Union cho tz’s 477-4171 Closed Sundays 1607 San Jacinto U 800 LAKE MR DR, WACO, TEXAS 76710 817 772-7220 the legendary RAW DEAL Steaks, Chops, Chicken open lunch and evenings 605 Sabine, Austin No Reservations A Summer Program of West African Culture and French Language Study at the SUMMER UNIVERSITY OF DAKAR July and August 1979 $965.00 plus air Courses included: A Texas Tradition Since 1866 No games, no gimmicks, no loud music. Just good conversation with the most interesting people in Austin. And the best of downhome cooking. “that nice little Italian restaurant” ANTIPASTO BAR NEW MENU LUNCH/DINNER Happy Hour 4:30-7:00 Reservations call 476-7202 Convenient4: located at 1601 Guadalupe by Ray Farabee on behalf of the transportation industry’s self-regulating rate bureaus, but only Ron Clower and Lloyd Doggett were listeningthe bill shot through the Senate by a vote of 26 to 3 on March 5 \(Obs., for the bill was a vote against competition, against consumers, for one of the most powerful lobbies, andgiven the shrill free-enterprise oratory echoing through legislative halls this sessionfor to the 26 who couldn’t say no to the truckers, railroads, and bus companies. 11. Nuclear waste By the last day of the session, the conference committee appointed to work on House amendments to Sen. Peyton McKnight’s nuclear dumping bill \(see agreement, and opposition to SB 910 was growing. In a last-ditch effort to save his bill McKnight used a point-of-order ploy to bring the bill back to the Senate floor for a vote on approving the House amendments. Babe Schwartz, whose natural resources committee had originally heard the bill, led the opposition, saying that he had not realized the bill’s implications until it had already passed the Senate. “I was left with the impression that this bill was required under a federal act in order for the state to control uranium tailings generated from uranium mining,” said Schwartz. “But the federal act does not require Texas to take any action until November 1981.” Schwartz observed that under McKnight’s bill the state would become the owner of nuclear dump sites and would be liable for maintenance of the sites if the companies leasing them go out of business. Schwartz moved not to agree to the House amendments, and his motion passed 17 to 14. Stars go to the 17 senators who kept Texas from becoming a nuclear dump site. 12. Strip mining The state’s strip minerssuch outfits as Texas Utilities and Shell Oilhave been used to the light-touch regulation of the Texas Railroad Commission, which administers a 1975 law on the subject. However, a 1977 federal law requires states to toughen up their standards or else the federal law, administered by the Interior Department, will take precedence. So the strippers and the railroad commissioners teamed up to write and back HB 1424, an 80-page bill that its sponsors said would bring the state law into compliance. On April 3, the huge bill was brought to the floor before anyone had given it much thought, and it sailed through with little discussion and a lopsided vote of 117 to 18. The problem is, the federal law quite properly requires especially careful PROOST! Duvel is an extraordinary Belgian ale, a “strong ale” twice fermented, naturally brewed with only Czechoslovakian hops and Danish barley malt, blonde and incomparably smooth. It is the product of one of Europe’s last small family-run breweries, the Brouwerij Moortgat, and it is available outside of Europe in only one place, Texas. Try it! Distributed by Shiner Beer Distributing Co. 204 E. 4th, Austin, Texas 78701 THE TEXAS OBSERVER 15