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Fresh Seafood Dinner 5:30-10:00 Sunday Brunch Specialties Tues.-Sun. Steaks, Spirits, Live Jazz 10:00 p.m. until \(? .Tut: 1111 o USE ift,N.&-ftlatVadi 46ic 6;ttaA citte5-50 vf -rm5 [44-.e61.Mioel,A1 mbilt6404/4\(5 40–ovitd-Co 66ndeblot:* i i–4 Printers Stationers Mailers Typesetters High Speed Web Offset Publication Press Counseling Designing Copy Writing Editing and Trade Computer Sales Services Complete Computer Data Processing Services – 7= nun UP ILIPIRIA 512/442-7836 1714 South Congress P.O. Box 3485 Austin, Texas 78764 502 Dawson Road Austin, Texas never did and I don’t now. The whole thing makes me tired.” And so Earle finally got funding for his Public Integrity Unit, with the help of former Criminal Justice Council chief James Adams, now head of the DPS; but it came to only $129,981, covering only one year instead of two. And not without Bullock’s continued objection. “Such a grant might be good with any other district attorney.” Bullock wrote in a harsh letter to Gov. William Clements Jr., “but having been subjected to the political whims of Mr. Earle’s office, I cannot support his application. “The district attorney should withdraw his application. He should resubmit another application to another agency, this time for remedial education. That I could support,” Bullock said. Bullock’s suit regarding the release of the first grand jury report is still pending, and a special judge, retired Supreme Court Justice Ruel Walker, has been named to hear it because it’s too hot for the locals. Tony Proffitt, Bullock’s current press aide, says the suit may set a precedent concerning the release of grand jury information. Bullock himself won’t talk about the suit or the points raised by the grand jury on the grounds that Judge Walker doesn’t want him to. “The judge wants to try this in the court, not the media,” Proffitt said. But the legal machinations are not the crux of the Bullock saga. The politics are what count, and Bullock is going to have to go some to recover the ground he’s lost. More damaging than whether or not he spends money for champagne instead of cheaper beer is whether he uses his office for reasons far outside the scope of his charter. Bullock’s practice of manipulating state revenue forecasts the means by which the governor and legislature prepare and pass the state budget for political ends is of much more real concern to Texans than $180-a-day hotel bills. The maintenance of KGB-type political files, the massive use of the spoils system to staff his offices, and the unabashed wielding of his title to intimidate those who displease or threaten him are the real wounds in Bullock’s soul. 0 Janie Paleschic is an Austin journalist whose stories on Bullock in 1976 for the Austin Citizen were among the first to examine Bullock’s role as State Comptroller. 20 MARCH 14, 1980