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May 5, 1987 was a big day for us. Our fi rs anniversary passed with a quiet pride in a successful year. Now we’re ready to mov e forward and build upon our solid foundation. The employee-owners o f Futura want you as a satisfied customer. Call us at 442-7836 for a prompt quote on your next project. COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AUSTIN, TEXAS 1714 S. Congress 442-7836 1444. WV4STAINGre :;r: 7040044.41\(asaiiia. m.r4.44.w.wa noti.a.go.Wer.so&ti nLe2ciaat .a.UvArimaahmais.! amaze, inform, delight Choose from our business or family gifts of lasting value, for all ages, price ranges and any occasion. Call or stop by and let us make suggestions. 2410 San Antonio St. 4006 South Lamar Blvd. 8868 Research Blvd. Whole Earth Provision Company 1 Nature Discovery Gifts And what about the so-called adultery question. . . ? It’s easy for me to answer no. But I don’t want to play their game. My game is I’m here to talk about issues. If I want to talk about my personal life I’ll go to a psychiatrist or I’ll write a book. I am concerned about where the country’s going. Why do you need to know the name of my first-grade teacher? And if I got sent to the hall four times for chewing gum, you know, why do you have to read that. . . ? I think in the Gary Hart case, it’s an issue. He made it an issue. He said follow me around. . . . But if you take every candidate and ask to see their medical records and high school records . . . Why do they do it? What should we do about AIDS? I agree with the surgeon general. There are limited bucks. Why do you go out and immediately test the world? It’s crazy. The idea is you educate people. You don’t run the disease underground. And I’d send out Koop’s report and ask the newspapers to print it. Do you think AIDS will be an issue in the election? It shouldn’t be a political issue. It’s a disease. And we should all try to reach a consensus on how to fight it. To change the subject, what are your thoughts on the Iran-contra hearings? Oh God! I think that’s part of what drove me to run. Before I grew up, I’d say to my mother, “the other kids do it.” She’d say, “too bad. You don’t.” So now these guys say, “other countries do it.” I say, “too bad. That’s not America.” They don’t seem to care. I see all these guys who by night are out lighting firecrackers for the 200th anniversary of the Constitution, and by day are thumbing their nose at it. And the only time they care about the Constitution is when they can use it to shield themselves from any kind of pain from having trampled all over it. But they can do anything they want to it. These are the guys who want to test everyone in the federal government. One week it’s polygraphs. Another week it’s drugs. The next week it’s AIDS. I chair civil service and no one has ever told me there’s a problem with the civil service, with drug use, AIDS, anything. I want to test them on the Constitution. And the players? Abrams? North? I don’t think I’d give them immunity. Abrams! Do you think George Marshall of the Marshall Plan would have kept him ten minutes? We have a president who has had more ethics scandals than anybody. He never opened his mouth. Put a microphone in front of him and he yells about women cheating on welfare. You would prosecute these players, then? Yes. What do you think of Reagan ‘s plan to protect Kuwaiti tankers in the Persian Gulf? I think it’s insane. We put up our blood for their oil. Our cash for their free trade. It’s a classic. We have all the burdens of empire and none of the benefits. I listen to Reagan talk about the Persian Gulf and he thinks it’s an American lake. What should the U.S. policy be toward Nicaragua, toward Central America and Cuba? [Reagan] aligns us with countries that have the worst human rights records in our hemisphere, and then wonders why it blows up in our face. You say to Nicaragua, Hey, you’re a sovereign nation. You’re big boys. 14 AUGUST 14, 1987