Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, December 6, 1984 NEW DINING HOURS SHOE by Jeff MacNelly Dine at the MSC Cafeteria HOW W VDU UK£ MV NEW SUIT?.. IT ITS PfiOSKS OFFMWK- : OMYOU, IT LC0K6II K£ N\ApX Off 7WEWAH-. 7X Bill seeks donations of organs United Press Internationi! |I kMW Vfc SHOE by Jeff MacNelly Open Each Day Mon thru Sat 6:30 AM to 7:00 PM Sunday 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM TOWER open Mon. Thru Fri. 11:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. £AV. PERF££S£C ..WHEN WA6 ^ lUB. U&T TIME WOU O^AN6£P •m-EE $PARK POJ65? 1 THINK IT WAS JUMS. Wj&j ~N7 A TREASURE I1UJVT Court refuses plea by Mattox United Press International Register TODAY for these treasures! • Trip for 2 to So. Padre • Color Television (4 days and 3 nights) • Microwave Oven • VHS Video Recorder • Telephone (Drawing on Jan. 15, 1985) Looking for hidden treasure? Follow the map to SCANDIA and find: ★ Spacious 1,2 or 3 Bdrm. floorplans ★ Pool ★ Tennis Court ★ 24-hr. Emergency Maintenance Service ★ NO Electricity Deposit ★ Clubhouse ★ Patios or Balconies ★ Large Closets and Storage ★ Laundry Center ★ Professional On-Site Management ★ 1 /2 Mile to TAMU Campus Just for stopping by, you can register to WIN!! Hours: 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat., and 1-5 p.m. Sunday ★★★ SPECIAL OFFER: Receive FREE Basic cable when you sign a 6, 9, or 12 month lease! 401 Anderson SCANDIA 693-6505 AUSTIN — A state appeals court ruled 2-1 Wednesday that Texas At torney General Jim Mattox’s chal lenge of his indictment for commer cial bribery was premature. The 3rd Court of Appeals said it had no authority to consider such a pre-trial appeal and issues raised by the attorney general should be con sidered by an appellate court after his trial. Neither Mattox nor his lawyer, Roy Minton, were available for com ment on the opinion. But Mattox has ^ said he would take his appeal to a * higher appellate court, if necessary, to avoid going to trial on the indict ment on Feb. 11. Minton argued during a Nov. 13 hearing before the three-judge panel that the 1983 indictment should be dismissed because it does not allege a specific offense. But the appeals court said it was only em powered on pre-trial appeals to de termine the state’s legal authority to prosecute, not whether the indict ment is valid. “We may as well just hook up with the Court of Criminal Appeals be cause we’re going to run out of time,” Minton said. Mattox is accused of threatening to ruin the public bond business of a Houston law firm, Fulbright & Jaworski, unless the firm abandoned efforts to question his sister in a civil lawsuit. In affirming a Travis County Dis trict Court ruling, the 3rd Court of Appeals said that issues raised by the attorney general are matters that should be addressed in post-trial proceedings. The panel’s majority also rejected Mattox’s claim that the commercial bribery statute under which he was indicted is unconstitu tionally vague. Mattox has argued the state is prosecuting him for nothing more than engaging in heated negotia tions with another lawyer. But the appeals court said, “For one lawyer to offer another lawyer an economic benefit in consideration for the latter’s breach of a Fiduciary duty owed to a client is not a legiti mate negotiating tactic; it is bribery.” The court said this specific type of conduct has been alleged against Mattox, but that it will be up to a jury to decide whether he is guilty. In a dissenting opinion, Judge Jim Brady said if there are defects in an indictment it should be addressed at any stage in criminal proceedings. To consider alleged defects after a trial, he said, “seems to be totally in adequate to prevent the irreparable damage that a full blown trial will in flict upon an accused, especially a public official, when it is clearly pos sible that the conviction will be re versed on appeal.” Brady also said he believed pros ecutors charged Mattox under the wrong statute because the law was written to address kickbacks to poli ticians. He said the law “was never intended by the Legislature to em brace a fact situation as herein al leged against the attorney general.” According to the indictment, Mat tox told a partner in the Houston law firm that he would not delay a multimillion-dollar package of pub lic bonds being handled by Fulbright & Jaworski if attempts to question his sister were abandoned. OF 1952.. Op*.- {( / .egislal filed Wednesday tnatv Texas justice of the peaceorn examiner to simplify the donaiti organs if the dead person's [ does not object. A second bill prefiled byStii Farabee, a democrat front Hill Falls, would make it illegal toy sell human organs for profit Farabee said his interestinj transplants increased after aj boy near his hometown i doctors could not locate a fej him. “This case, along with mati| tional pleas for help, hasheigl my awareness of the need lot# donations,” he said. “If their! of donors can be increased e slightly ... it will result in aii candy greater increase in thtj her of organs available for J plant.” Farabee’s bills will be consul during the legislative sessionifel gins Jan. 8. Chernenko calls for serious talks United Press International MOSCOW — President Konstantin Chernenko said Wednes&l the Soviet Union is ready for “radical solutions" on all disannamci issues at forthcoming arms talks with Washington but its mainyoi:| to halt President Reagan’s “Star Wars” program. “Resolving the question of space weapons is now of primanirl p>ortance,” Chernenko said in a message to an international conlfl ence of physicians campaigning against nuclear war. “Militarization of outer space, if not securely blocked, wll cancel everything that has so far been achieved in the field ofaEi limitation, spur the arms race in other areas and dramaticallyincraif the danger of nuclear war,” Chernenko said. Chernenko said, “The Soviet Union is prepared to go fortheiKl radical solutions which would allow to advance along the waysleadnl to the cessation of the arms race, the prohibition and, eventually,m| plete elimination of nuclear weapons.” Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister tel drei Gromyko are scheduled to meet in Geneva on Jan ’ Statements from each side have indicated a Soviet preoccupationtcl space weapons and a U.S. concern with limiting nuclear-armedc.! siles. The United States has a lead of several years in thehigh tei ogy industries that are basic to developing the space weapons pi gram. “The Soviet Union looks to the forthcoming Soviet-U.S. negotj tions with a view to achieving mutually acceptable understandinpii| the entire set of questions related to nuclear and space weapons' Chernenko said. Soviet concern has grown as tests continue on an American anil satellite missile, with Washington ignoring requests for a moratoncl on development. Chernenko told the International Physicians for thePrevenw4 Nuclear War that “the leaders of certain states” are pursuingdanfI ous “nuclear illusions.” “Chasing the specter of military superiority, these leadersij loading with weapons the land and the oceans and are nowp to do the same thing in outer space," Chernenko said. Gromyko and Shultz will decide the f uture pattern of the anl talks, but both sides agree that the negotiations will cover both sps! weapons and nuclear missiles. 707 Texas Avenue 696-6933 This location only. 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