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1000 West Lynn, Austin, Texas 478-3001 Store hours: Mon-Sat 9:30-7, Sun 12-6 Vor162 Friendly Spot Ice House Live music Friday and Saturday 1001 S. Alamo, San Antonio ANDERSON & COMPAINTY COFFEE TEA SPICES TWO JEFFERSON SQUARE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78731 51.2 453-1533 Send me your list. Name . Street City Zip Personal Service Quality Insurance ALICE ANDERSON AGENCY INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE 808A E. 46th, Austin, Texas 459-6577 the legendary RAW DEAL Steaks, Chops, Chicken open lunch and evenings 605 Sabine, Austin No Reservations Golden Triangle during the ’50s and ’60s. Many changes are already apparent. In the political realm, a two-party system has emerged. The 1980 elections will further define the philosophy and electorate of the two parties. From that process, I am confident that Democratic candidates will come more and more to rely on the traditional Democratic constituency for their support. That means the election of more Democrats who align themselves with labor, minorities, consumer groups, and middle-income working people. It is apparent that the Republican Party does not intend to recruit candidates who call themselves conservatives, but their allegiance, nonetheless, is to special, private interests which have dominated the State Legislature and state government for as long as any of us can remember. By Jack Hopper Austin Not for. 100 years has Texas faced such social and economic problems as it will for the next 25. The state will require extraordinary political leadership, leadership beyond that ordinarily provided under Texas’s system of government to cope with population and urban growth, energy transition, and environmental quality. For possibly ‘a quarter of the rest of this century, Texas could be under the leadership of the first Republican governor since 1874. The fact that it took over 100 years to elect a second Republican iovernor testified to the leadership that Governor E. J. Davis assumed in his attempt to solve the problems of his era. Ironically, Texas’s reaction to its first Republican governor led to a constitutional fragmentation of political power so By Mary Lassen and Margot Beutler Austin The first Texas Constitution, in 1843, had the right idea”All political power is inherent in the people and all free gov That, too, is a good sign for the future. At the local level of government, also, we see the emergence of elected officials who owe their allegiance to neighborhood communities, to local union organizations, and to men and women who have had the time to develop political skills away from their jobs. The changing political and social order which has resulted from rapid industrial-technological growth gives us hope for a future Texas which encourages union organization, economic opportunity, and greater social change. The next 25 years, I expect, are going to be a period during which I am happy to be around and, I hope, make some contribution towards that change for the better. Harry Hubbard is president of the Texas AFL-CIO. extreme that a second Republican goyernor couldn’t exert strong leadership even if he wanted to. Davis’s attempts to reconstruct Texas to satisfy a vindictive Congress, to defend the frontiers against Indian raids and Mexican incursions, to impose law and order where little existed, and to educate a large body of illiterate blacks and whites, all in the teeth of a rebel majority’s recalcitrance, left a crippling legacy. While the memory of his regime may have receded enough to allow another Republican governor to be elected, the effects of the first remain as the state wrestles with problems of transition into the next century. Texas’s 19th-century government will be an excessive burden when we try to solve problems in the 21st century. Jack Hopper is an economist, a utility rate consultant, and a regular. Observer contributor. ernments are founded on their authority and instituted for their benefit”but elected representatives ever since have forgotten their mandate. In fact, political power in Texas has never been in the hands of the “people,” those without wealth, influence, privilege, or distinctionthe populace. A crippling legacy Toward popular sovereignty 40 DECEMBER 28, 1979 ,./A 0.