Tuesday, October 13, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 You'll lose, ugly FAT RIGHT POWA) TO THE. BOtfE.. -J i information, f dom and Den. AMU overseas first floor of tilt MSC. ■ volleyball, pit. meet, picklebi 11 discuss “Reft. ATIONS COM. idder. lying Tomato, will discuss nil. ences Building. 11 meet at 7 pi i. in 404 Rudder leet at 5:30 pi will discuss tlit ths Chapel. IS: The Tea at 205-1 Sulphin it 7 p.m. inRuh in 607 Rudder, in 604 Ruddei vill present “Tlif e Building, will meet at B: ASSOCIATION: thouse. 11 compare Ui udder, a.in. to 3 pan i Jensen wife ine” at ^ s of synchrony speak at 7 p.ni.t rager will expla ), the “Choral,'!: litv Center, 13i Varped y£5, EMEWD5, WITH THIS PIET YOU'LL B£ ABLE TO Lost HALP YoUK. fRESEYT Bopy WEIGHT... by Scott McCullar A/aldo by Kevin Thomas SEE MrTHIhJ&, DR. GLADSTOWE? NO, I CANT F/ND VJALDOON THE TIME'SCOPE! J GEEZ... LOST IN TIME! YES, AND SINCE WALDO ISN'T HERE, WYLBOR HAS TO LOOK FOR A JOB! ) wylburT A JOE>V I JUST .SHOWED HIM HOW TO TIE A TIE.' Joe Transfer [Logic Joe, 1 kuow VolTuke ' ' I BASEBALL ,,, BUT VOU REALLY SHOULD EXPAUD YOOIE IOARDKD6E ([TiIidE?ARE KiUDOF COMSERVATIVE ' HERE .., YOU'D PROBABLY GATHER More womeu Here if you 6ot a HAIRCUT AMD SHAVED.-, f HAirlut?,,, shaved? by Dan Barlow to The working days It Suspect in slaying of three will be taken to Nebraska AMARILLO (AP) — A Nebraska tan charged with theft and sus- ected in a triple-slaying in Omaha taived extradition Monday and was I Y et to be taken back to Nebraska, au- |horities said. ■ Patrick Hankins, 22, of Omaha appeared before two judges after . turning himself in to police early Sunday, saying he might be wanted ^ for murder, Potter County Sheriffs Bgt. Austin Brown said. Two Omaha police detectives were in Amarillo Sunday to question information.’ | Hankins about the slayings a week .go in Omaha or Danae Cook, lo; Kevin Cook, 16; and their mother, arbara Cook, 45. Their bodies ere found in Danae Cook’s apart ment. Hankins appeared before Justice of the Peace Lewis Brazier for ar raignment on the theft charge and Brazier set bond at $150,000, Brown id. A short time later, Hankins ap- ht animal disease!! c or nutritional lis unit may lelf cover the diseas which bone mtf aid. in bone mintii detected in vetfli an X-ray, he sail percenf to e bone minenh-i re an X-ray e said. photon absorjWj detect changes in tent with only a f :ent change, peared before State District Court judge Don Emerson and waived ex tradition. Authorities were making arrange ments to take him back to Omaha, Brown said. “If they can’t take him back today, we’ll keep him another night,” Brown said. Hankins was arrested on a felony warrant charging him with the theft of a car belonging to Danae Cook. Amarillo Deputy Police Chief James Skinner said Hankins called the Amarillo police at 12:05 a.m. Sunday from the Union 76 Truck Stop on Interstate 40 in east Am arillo. Hankins was taken into cus tody about 10 minutes later. Earlier, Omaha police had said they had no evidence to link Han kins directly with the deaths. Omaha police learned that Han kins had been staying with Danae Cook for some time and had stopped living with her just before last weekend. Investigators said they did not believe she and Hankins were romantically involved. Mrs. Cook and her son, Kevin, formerly lived in Omaha but had moved to Aurora, Colo. The three murder victims all suf fered fatal head injuries. Police de clined to comment on how the inju ries were inflicted except to say the three died violent deaths. Danae Cook’s 1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo had been missing since the bodies were found. Hankins’ arrest came after a nearly two-day manhunt for him in New Mexico. State police recovered Cook’s car after a 70-mile chase Fri day in east-central New Mexico. New Mexico authorities said offi cers lost the man when his car be came mired in sand and he fled on foot. ontroversy over state bail law delays Dallas County revenues iay be things;..', y DALLAS (AP) — Hundreds of know aboutbfc- thousands of dollars in payments to i way to measiiii''|,:Dallas County have been delayed by a new state law affecting the respon- e also maybek| pibility bail bondsmen have for cli- >n of stress fracs j ents who don’t show up for trials, lightower saii v |i, b a j| bondsmen have flooded lensity statisticr judges with requests for jury trials in I routine bond forfeiture cases be- *ollman, a L#'I cause of the new law, and the contro- n Dallas, saidfc'W lies in the appb ', e to all animals; versy will probably be settled in court. The new law took effect June 20 and changed several of the rules re garding bond forfeiture hearings. Judges were confused by the law and stopped conducting bond forfeiture hearings and collecting payments from bondsmen during most of the summer. t is productive iti archers at Atoii'l s applications, may consider ik; l device ’ ' 1 mals. Founder of children's home unexcited about retirement f DALLAS (AP) — For a woman who devoted the last 25 years to se verely handicapped children, re tiring from the home she founded t for them is nothing to look forward gff|^/| | “Life is a little threatening right now,” Thelma Boston said as she f iiondered her future and its income fv/l/lflV ol $50 per month. “I’ve got to learn J t0 shut my eyes and wade myself out.” . ,;§§£ Through her window she can see not menuone - ^ f oster home next door that she phase. I“Lj-rfounded 25 years ago for severely ower-court dewd handicapped children. After a series .if of recent illnesses, Boston helped ittorneys conic'.-1 p] an f or t h e day when she would no ar . j longer be at the helm of the Thelma ole idea of the Boston Home for Handicapped ih penaltyjunsfi Children. arbitrary, capnH But now that she is retired, she ■position of readily admits that her new role is - 4 d be more freaf man on the bask otions on .ate and otbef Ron Dusek,af' ;as attorney R At age 64 and a widow since 1969, striking out on her own with a new household to maintain indepen dently of the foster home has pre sented new concerns — and some re grets, she said. ■ “I know I should have planned for me while I was planning for the children,” she said, but the children came first. As founder and director of the home, she received room and board but too’ no salary. All donations, in cluding a $60,000 bequest from a benefactor two years ago, went to the foundation for care of the chil dren. She has no pension or medical in surance and has not yet qualified for Social Security. After a heart attack three years ago, her insurance com pany discontinued her coverage. The board of the Thelma Boston Foundation, which now operates the foster home, is helping pay the bal ance of her medical bills and will pay her $50 a month as a consultant. But the prospect of paying utility bills on her own this winter is unset tling, at least until her eligibility for Social Security benefits is deter mined, she told theDallas Morning TVewsMonday. But worry fades when conversa tion turns to nurturing more than 200 “children nobody wanted” over the last quarter-century. But two weeks ago, several judges, believing the new law is faulty, began conducting hearings and demand ing payments from bondsmen when clients don’t show up for trial. “You’ve got to pretty much throw a monkey wrench in the system,” said Randy Adler, a Dallas attorney representing several bail-bonding companies. “I don’t think the judges are out to get anybody. It’s just that right now, we don’t know what the rules are.” The controversy stems from a state criminal appeals court ruling two years ago that overturned a key section of the state bail-bond act dealing with the liability of bond smen for clients who are no-shows. Under the nullified section, bond smen were liable for 5 percent of the amount posted to get a person out of jail if they helped bring the de fendant back for trial within two years of the original court date. But Dallas County judges im posed formal guidelines about how much a bondsman should pay the county if a client misses the trial and when the payment was due. Bondsmen who liked the 5 per cent provision pressed for and ulti mately won a new rule, outlined in the law that took effect in June. It forces the county to wait 18 months before seeking payment from a bondsman if his missing cli ent is charged with a felony crime and nine months if the charge is a misdemeanor. The bondsman is liable for noth ing, except expenses, if the bail- jumper is captured within those time frames, regardless of whether the bondsman aided in the apprehen sion. Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart Starring: Lauren Chew, Kim Chew, Victor Wong Directed by: Wayne Wang English and Cantonese with English Subtitles A loving portrait of families in a Chinese-American community Tuesday, October 13, 7:30 p.m. Rudder Theatre, $2.50 MSC Aggie Cinema General Meeting Mondays in Rudder Tower, 7:00 p.m. Check the screen for room number. New members welcome. WE’VE GOT MORE m Y m SWJ r f\ m r j\ FOR YOU! 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