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Martin Elfant, CLU 600 Jefferson St., Houston, TX 77002 OF CANADA Life Insurance and Annuities Sutife Luncheon Specials Monday through Friday till 5:00 p.m. Shrimp Creole $2.80 Seafood Gumbo $3.15 Soup and Sandwich $1.80 Gazpacho . and Sandwich $2.05 Serving sandwiches to seafood, from 11:30 until 11:30 every day of the week; open till midnight in the Metro Center, San Antonio, Texas 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. Ginny’s Bindery Services Austin, Texas 2700 Anderson Lane Call 476-9171 for details Copying is our middle name but not our only service Ginny’s Copying Service, Inc. 108 Cong ress 2021Gua dalup e 1980 turned out to be Goldblatt’s year, as he trounced insurance agent and establishment candidate Larry Davis. Goldblatt hauled in 67 percent of the vote to win the Pleasant Grove seat. Place 8. In the South Oak Cliff district, black real estate man Fred Blair was unopposed. When the lines were redrawn last year to satisfy the Justice Department, Blair’s major opponent, respected civil rights lawyer L. A. Bedford, found himself in the crowded District 6 field, where he finished third. Although most of the black political leaders consider Blair to be more an establishment type than other blacks who could have sought the office, Blair may still prove to be an occasional opponent of Folsom and the developer types. Place 9. This at-large seat was won by attorney and former park board president Sid Stahl, who received a large chunk of the PAC and establishment money. Stahl got 72 percent of the vote over poorly financed Barrot Steven Sanders, an Oak Cliff history buff. Place 10. In the other at-large place, incumbent councilman Steve Bartlett, a businessman who has often sided against Folsom and the mayor’s “team,” was unopposed. Bartlett reportedly is seriously considering a race for the mayor’s post in 1981. Prior to the election, Folsom said he considered four candidates possible successors as mayor. They were Haggar, Stahl, Tucker, and Brown. Haggar, however, is the man most observers believe the establishment will rally behind and try to push into the top spot next year. And already there is talk of the downtown boys’ making sure what happened in this election does not repeat itself in the next one. For the moment, however, the “voices of the people” are still celebrating. The PACs were supposed to be the successors to the now-defunct Citizens Charter Association, a group of downtown business types who were able to field a slate of candidates, finance them, and be virtually certain of victory in all the races. But the election of 1980, according to city observers, put in office what is believed to be the first batch of true representatives of single-member districtscouncil members who care about the needs of their districts first and the growth of Dallas second. And that’s a new twist for Dallas. Looking down and pointing at Heggins, Goldblatt, Simpson, and Medrano, long-time black political activist Al Lipscomb surveyed the new council on inauguration day February 6. “This group,” beamed Lipscomb, “will put the people first and then consider bricks and mortar.” 0 Sam Attlesey is the political writer of the Dallas Morning News. THE TEXAS OBSERVER 9