Page 8/The Batta I ion/Wednesday, April 20, 1983 Months spent in jail could be ‘for nothing’ 1 Lisa Barber, a biomedical science freshman from Houston, plays pin-the-blackheart-on-Joan Jett at Rudder fountain. Tracy Cochran, left, the projects chairman for MSC Town Hall, and Kyle Benson, right a junior accounting major from Longview, watch. Joan Jett and the Blackhearts will be at G. Rollie White Coliseum on April 28. The three participants who pinned their hearts the closest won two tickets. Vietnam vet lauds Texas dioxin study United Press International AUSTIN — The commander of the United Vietnam Veterans in Texas praised the state’s efforts to identify problems caused by Agent Orange expo sure — efforts he said the U.S. government was hesitant to pur sue because of the potential ex pense it would face in medical aid. Vietnam from 1962-1970. More than 60,000 veterans have filed suit alleging ill effects to them selves and their children from their exposure to the herbicide. “What it (the Texas study) will do, hopefully, is to provide the missing link that the Veterans Administration and the U.S. gov ernment claim is not now in exist ence, and that is to furnish credi ble, medical evidence to link dioxin to the health problems suffered by the veterans,” Dan Jordan said Monday. To mark Vietnam Veterans Day in Texas, lawmakers and a veterans organization sponsored a photographic exhibit in the state Capitol that graphically de picted birth defects and other physical problems allegedly traced to exposure to the dioxin- based Agent Orange. The research program was the result of a bill passed in the 1981 legislative session. Another measure introduced this session would strengthen the program by setting up an advisory com mittee of veterans, doctors and medical researchers to oversee Agent Orange studies. The federal government used the chemical as a defoliant in Exxon employee finds second bomb United Press International DALLAS — An Exxon service station employee, who pulled a garbage bag out of the opening of an underground gasoline storage tanks, said it never occurred to him initially that the object might be a bomb. Dallas before a small bomb ex ploded in a trash can at a sub urban Grand Prairie station Fri day afternoon. No one was in jured but the blast shattered the rear window of a nearby police car. “I thought someone had stuf fed a garbage bag down in the opening of the tank,” Richard Ryan said Monday after finding the second bomb hidden in a Dallas-area Exxon station in three days. A police bomb squad took Monday’s pipe bomb to the de partment’s shooting range and detonated it. Spokesman Ed Spencer said fragments of the bomb would be analyzed by the FBI to see if the two cases were related. “I pulled the bag out and took it into the station and began cut ting it open. I hit a pipe and realized it might be a bomb. I walked back outside with it and set it out near the street and cal led police.” Agents for the FBI refused to comment on the case. Police Monday had no suspects in either case. An Exxon spokesman said there was no extortion attempt connected with Monday’s inci dent. A demand for more than $100,000 was telephoned to Ex xon regional headquarters in Spencer said police explosives experts, could not determine when the bomb had been set to explode. “I was told it had the potential of giving off a pretty good blast,” Spencer said. “We don’t have any suspects and don’t know where the bomb came from.” RYDER TRUCK RENTALS announces: 10% DISCOUNT on All One-Way Rentals Call: 779-5582 846-9455 L 12/31/83 Good for 10% Discount I For All Students, Faculty & Staff.* I I 779-5582 846-9455 *Must bring Coupon. United Press International HOUSTON — A man who spent nine months in jail to appeal his trespassing convic tion may have stayed behind bars for nothing because no offi cial record was kept of his trial. In a case the 1st Texas Court of Appeals has called “shocking to our sense of justice,” Cleve land Hicks Jr.,24, spent seven months in the Harris County Jail awaiting his June 1982 trial be cause he could not pay the $400 bond. After his conviction and a six- month jail sentence, he decided to appeal, and because he could not afford the $2,500 bond set by County Court at Law Judge Jimmie Duncan he went back to jail for nine more months. The appeals court criticized Duncan for not releasing Hicks after the trial stage, even though he had asked to appeal, because he knew Hicks already had served the maximum sentence plus one month. After he got a new lawyer, Hicks was released on a $100 personal recognizance bond. Duncan said he was surprised Hicks was still in jail. But now some officials say Hicks may not get a genuine appeal. Attorney Ron Mock, the court-appointed lawyer who represented Hicks at his first trial, said that by law the appeals court will have to affirm the con viction because there is no offi cial record of the trial for them l.mi to review. Mock said he does not re member why he did not ask that Hicks’ trial be recorded. In some misdemeanor courts, court re porters record trials without M having to he asked. Mock said that at theti the trial he did not expect i to appeal since he already erlia spent seven months in jail ml slativ only was sentenced months. Attorney Leta MoelletHa new lawyer, said the ladoli wex trial record dims Hicks'hop of" 1 clear his name on appeal,fc she said she was not readt concede that the appeahask Hicks was convicted oftcli ing to leave the Methodist Ha bred pital employment officelol jalj 1 out a job application. 0 Ces BUY 1 MEMBERSHIP ^ — GET 1 FREE — JGet ready for MAY 1st TANNING CONTES! •JL (1st PLACE — MOO 1 ". 2nd ‘75, 3rd '50.) ^ Park Centrai. (Texas Ave.) 260-tD Jordan said the government would have to pay affected veter ans more than $100 million a year for several decades if it admitted responsibility for Agent Orange-related maladies. “It is ultimately a question of economics,” Jordan said at a news conference. “We’ve seen historically a pattern of govern ment handling of incidences like this, especially in situations in volving veterans, where the gov ernment has stonewalled, has drug its feet, has attacked scien tists and disputed their stand on the issues.” /\J* j, Hro iqer \ « i v effective at Kroner April Ift.ltfJ. Right to limit ‘ ‘ ■ irM) lor*.(Copyright) THI ^kuniki Ceiite/i) BLUE BEir* ICE CREAM CELEBRATE f BROWN, GOLD, SILVER & WHITE RIM MINRIl INC ffATURI Of THI WIIK MILLER HIGH LIFE REGULAR OR LIGHT Pearl ... Ih Nice 'N Cheesy DETERGENT m Purex KROGER CHILLED FLORIDA Orange Juice • ••••• PKG. KROGER GRADE A LARGE OR • • • • DOZ. 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