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In the Bible WHY SHALL A WOMAN HAVE HER HAND CUT OFF? When did God prescribe public one 11114d3 adultery? What passI ages in the King James Version arc too obscene for a minister to read to his congregation? THE X-RATED BOOK SEX AND OBSCENITY IN THE BIBLE, By J. Ashleigh Burke. ,;,ves the Answers, And reveals many more surpr tse3. Among otht r subjects covered in the 60 ualitv Prostitution…Cannibalism \(women eat winner J.A.B. Press, Dept. 312-T 1052 Telephone Rd. Houston. TX 77075 ANDERSON & COMPANY. c\(w FEE TEA SPICES TWO JEFFERSON SQUARE AUSTIN, TEXAS MU 512 453-1533 Send me your list. Name Street City Zip Life Insurance and Annuities SVIdeire Martin Elfant, CLU 4223 Richmond, Suite 213, Houston, TX 77027 COMPUTER CAMPAIGN CONSULTANTS Prepare NOW for your Spring Campaign Consultation/Training/Programming-4 0–for all your Hardware /Software Needs Call or Write for details: intellectronics, inc./dale napier 403 NASA Road 1 East, Suite 116 Houston 77598 BED & BREAKFAST CORPUS CHRISTI Take a break from the sameness of motel accom modations. Over 20 listings, many within walking distance of the water. Friendly, hospitable hosts. Breakfasts continental to Texas-size. Rates from $20. Sand Dollar Hospitality, 3605 Mendenhall, Cor The LCRA wasn’t the only group with an eye on the lignite. The City of San Antonio was already busily buying up chunks of northern Bastrop and far western Lee counties, as was the Shell Oil Company. The lignite seam also ran under the 52,103-acre Camp Swift military reservation, and the federal Bureau of Land Management had shown a willingness to lease a portion .of this acreage. And south of Camp Swift, Texas Utilities had acquired 4,800 acres of leases. Those TU leases, if combined with the Camp Swift land and the San Antonio leases, would make a neat package together the land parcels could provide enough fuel for several thousand megawatts of power. So LCRA acquired the TU leases as a way to get a toehold in whatever power development was to come about in Bastrop. The LCRA knew the leases, in their own right, were no bargain. A 1980 evaluation by LCRA fuel acquisition manager Larry Siler pointed out serious problems with the TU leases: the land had been riddled by previous mining, leases on a third of the property would expire if “commercial production” did not begin by the end of 1984, and there was only enough lignite to fuel one standard-size boiler for nine or ten years. The TU lease by itself, Siler concluded, was “marginal.” No matter. “Since the probability is high that at some point in time the property [owned by TU] will be mined for generation purposes,” Siler wrote in July of 1980, “acquisition offers LCRA additional leverage in negotiating future projects in the Bastrop County area.” LCRA decided that this “leverage” was worth a gamble. The LCRA’s Larry Siler described the newly-acquired land as “marginal.” The LCRA put the money down. The river authority had no commitment from San Antonio or Austin to join in a Bastrop County lignite project. And the LCRA had no reason to believe that the Camp Swift acreage would ever be leased. But for a relatively small cost, just $480,000 up front, the LCRA could be ready, just in case. In Las Vegas this would be called “betting on the come.” THE FIRST PROBLEM facing the LCRA was holding the lignite under the 1984 deadline. Even though only a third of the leases were scheduled to expire unless “commercial production” had begun, this was a life threat to the project. If the leases expired, it would make the lignite field a checkerboard of areas that could and could not be mined, and the entire leasehold would then become useless. To hold the lignite, Larry Siler suggested a “dual development” strategy. The LCRA would negotiate with landowners, in the hope of extending the 1984 leases. At the same time, the authority would begin planning a 250,000-ton lignite mine in the Powell Bend area of Bastrop County. If the authority, could renegotiate all the leases, fine. If it couldn’t, the LCRA would open a small “commercial” mine at Powell Bend and maintain the leases that way. Meanwhile, Siler suggested that the authority “begin project agreement discussions with the City of Austin and September 1, 1980.” It would have helped if the folks at LCRA had known in 1980 that, over the next four years, everything about the Powell Bend leases would go wrong. They didn’t know it, and for a while it appeared that the authority would put together a deal with San Antonio and Austin that would make it the premier power producer in central Texas. Congressman J. J. “Jake” Pickle had done his part; he passed a piece of legislation in 1976 that would prevent anyone but 10 MARCH 8, 1985