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ekftzteca 2600 E. 7th St. Austin, Texas 477-4701 vegetarian food 1117 West 5th Street Austin, Texas 78703 REALTOR Representing all types of properties In Austin and Central Texas Interesting & unusual property a specialty. 477-3651 .\\,11 and Associates E ANDERSON & COMP4NY COFFEE TEA SPICES AUSTIN,, TEXAS 731 1.2 453-1533 Send me your list. i .Name :Street City Zip Mailing The free advice you get at a cocktail party is usually worth about what you paid for it. At Futura, the advice is free, but the Its can be invaluable. Our friendly tint representatives are trained to help you ough the toughest print job and they’re cked by years of experienced, professional service. Call us at 442-7836 for a prompt quote on your next project. yee Owned and Managed ICATIONS, INC. AUSTIN, TEXAS 1714 S. Congress 442-7836 Data Processing Typesetting Printing COMMUN ‘W1111111111111111111111111. “Prisoners are not angels, but they shouldn’t be treated like rats.” V AT ABOUT THE TIME John Connally was back in the national news because of his bankruptcy sale in Houston, his face started popping up in advertisements for financial institutions. In a recent full-page ad in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, a twelve-inch high mug of the former governor stares out above the caption: “John Connally on the importance of saving.” The ad copy has Connally saying that even though “things haven’t quite worked out like we’d planned,” there is “no better place than Texas to start over and to save a little something.” The ad was on behalf of Houston-based University Savings. Connally will also pick up an extra $24,000 a year for serving on the board of the Coastal Corp., to which he was recently elected. Chicago newspaperman Mike Royko had a little fun with Connally in a syndicated column in which Royko’s font of barstool wisdom, Slats Grobnik, speculates that Connally’s new life might not be terribly difficult, in light of his $60,000-a-year pension and his continued possession of his ranch house. “Put me in a big house on 200 acres with 60 grand a year, and I’ll keep my chin up and start a new life, too,” says Grobnik. V GARY’S CHEATING HEART, a Star investigation, was a prominent feature in the San Antonio Express-News on the day before the Iowa caucuses. The newspaper blurbed the story on the top of the front page with the headline GARY HART’S 15 YEARS OF ADULTERY. The story in the Star, the tabloid insert to the newspaper, purported to tell “Why his wife tolerated his escapades with topless starlets, a ski bunny . . . and an airline stewardess.” V H. ROSS PEROT is donating one million dollars to Southern Methodist University in Dallas, the university announced this month. Perot gave the money to improve SMU’s academic programs \(not have a world-class university.” V GRIFFIN AND BRAND, the McAllen-based agribusiness giant, surfaced a few months back in the pages of the Kansas City Star. In a series on food and toxic hazards, Star reporters discovered that Griffin and Brand zucchini shipped to Kansas in 1986 had been dumped in a county landfill. Landfill disposal documents led Star reporters to believe that the produce had been treated with Monitor, a pesticide not approved for use on zucchini. V ANOTHER AWARD for the Gover nor, this time for his characteristic support of working women, men and children. Texas farmworkers, members of the United Farmworkers Union, voted Gov. Clements the first recipient of the Short-Handled Hoe Award. During the last session, the Governor, who is known to regale friends with anecdotes about his own working days as a roustabout, vetoed legislation, that would have outlawed the short-handled hoe. The hoe, which many growers insist that farmworkers use, causes damage to the lower back. Its purpose is to allow supervisors to see that field laborers are stooped and working. PUBLIC CITIZEN Public Citizen needs your help in fighting the South Texas Nuclear Project. for more information, or send your contribution to Public Citizen, 1611 E. First, Austin, Texas 78702. THE TEXAS OBSERVER 21