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A OW & COFFEE HOUSE Serving Austin’s University & Capitol Communities Monday Friday 7:30 am 7:00 pm 105 W. 20th Street 479-6109 behind Perry Castaneda Library Independent. Free-Wheeling. Informative. THE TEXAS server Our outstanding lunches have been an Austin must for eleven years. Our international grocery features food and wine from around . the world. Come see us at our new home. Oommori MFNIKET 1610 San Antonio Austin, Tex. 78701 472-1900 Hours: 7am 7pm Mon. to Fri. and 8am 4pm on Sat ANDERSON & COMPANY COFFEE TEA SPICES AUSTIN, TEXAS 78131 512 453-1533 Send me your list. Name Street City Zip East Dallas Printing Company Full Service Union Printing 211 S. Peak Dallas, Tx 75226 *THE AUSTIN* CHIONICIE Austin politics. Austin entertainment. Austin iconoclasm. For seven years now, the Austin Chronicle has been keeping tabs on the social and political kaleidoscope that is Texas’ capital city. From the South Texas Nuclear Project to Greater Tuna, from the war between the developers and the environmentalists to the battles for arts funding, from Bill Clements to the Butthole Surfers, the Chronicle covers it all. Available free at over 350 locations throughout the central Texas area, or by Reagan has been quoted as saying, “that is a national tragedy.” “Now you’re hearing all kinds of horror stories,” Ronald Reagan said on another occasion, “about people that are going to be thrown out in the snow to hunger and [to] die of cold and so forth. . . . We haven’t cut a single budget.” Kozol sees it differently and accuses this President of “terrorizing women with the fear of hunger.” Nor does Kozol forgive Reagan’s “complacent ignorance” \(more out in the quotes previously cited. And the editors of the New England Journal of Medicine take Ronald Reagan to task for his Administration’s “relentless efforts” to reduce health services for “low-income persons who are aged, blind, disabled, or members of families with dependent children.” Recently, policy intellectuals, and writers such as Hunter Thompson, have made the argument that the Presidency of the United States is not something that the Democrats really should be going after in 1988. The big budget cuts required by the GrammRudman-Hollings deficit reduction act, by no coincidence, do not come until 1989, the year that Ronald Reagan leaves office. Better to sit this one out, leaving President George Bush to deal with the fiscal crisis on the horizon. Then in 1992 . . . I tried this argument out on Dallas Times Herald columnist Molly Ivins. It is an argument that we can no longer afford, Ivins insisted. For the poor, four more years of a Republican administration will mean “unimaginable suffering, for some, death. Kozol’s book supports Ivins’s argument. It also includes a brief public policy agenda in the form of an appendix, is informative, well-written, and, after all, optimistic. Democrats and others who genuinely care about social services should buy this book and read it. Then vote, early and often, for Michael Dukakis. Observer Bequests Austin attorney Vivian Mahlab has agreed to consult with those interested in including the Observer in their estate planning. For further information, contact Vivian Mahlab,attorneyat-law, P.C., at 1301 Nueces, Austin, Texas 78701, or call 512/477-9400. 20 JULY 29, 1988