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SMITH CORONIX TOMORROWS TECHNOLOGY AT YOUR TOUCH CALL BATTALION CLASSIFIED 845-2611 For FAST Results Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, October 3, 1988 Warped by Scott McCullar ...LOOKS LIKE CAMILLE CHM0EP INTO SOMETHING AND FELL ASLEEP AGAIN. T "'T I W0NPEX WHAT THIS BUTTON ON HEX DOES? Waldo by Kevin Thomas U.S. Supreme Court to hea Texas death penalty cases WASHINGTON (AP) — Among the most significant criminal cases that will come before the U.S. Su preme Court when it convenes for its 1988-89 session Monday will be two Texas death penalty appeals. The justices will decide whether Texas can execute a mentally re tarded murderer who has the rea soning capacity of a 7-year-old, and if a black man sentenced to die by an all-white jury was afforded due process of the law. Johnny Paul Penry, described by his attorneys as an illiterate man with the mind of a 6- to 10-year-old was convicted of the October 1979 rape- murder of Pamela Carpenter of Liv ingston. Carpenter, who was stabbed with a pair of scissors and beaten, described her assailant before she died and Penry later confessed. Penry’s attorneys argue that exec uting the mentally retarded consti tutes cruel and unusual punishment. They also argue that the Texas law does not permit juries to consider all mitigating evidence during the pun ishment phase of the trial, such as the fact Penry often was beaten se verely as a child by his mother. But Assistant Texas Attorney General Charles Palmer said safe guards are currently in force to pre vent the execution of the insane or those who do not understand the charges against them. Penry, he said, passes all the current tests designed to protect those who have some mental disease or defect. Meanwhile, attorneys for Phillip Tompkins are challenging the re quirement to sentence a capital mur derer to death or life in prison with out considering lesser offenses as unconstitutional. Tompkins was sentenced to die for the January 1981 robbery and suffocation of Mary Berry, 24, a pharmacist at a Houston hospital. Tompkins’ attorney argues that his client intended only to quiet the woman, not to kill her. Thus, the jury should have been allowed to consider involuntary manslaughter or criminally negligent homicide charges. the session are a church-stati tions case prompted bytheTa Legislature granting taxexempi for religious periodicals; anabo rights case sparked by a Ha anti-abortion group whichchii constitutional rights toduept were violated when the group ordered to limit its picketing.! clinic. Still other Texas cases lobt sidei ed include the highlypu removal of South Oak Clifts coach, Dallas' attempts to rtf juveniles’ access to dance! adults access to adult booL and the first cases stemminf the state’s banking crisis. In addition, Tompkins’ attorney argues that three blacks were struck from the jury for racial reasons, a charge denied by the prosecutors and rejected by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. If the high court overturns Texas law in either case, it could have na tional ramifications in capital cases, attorneys said. Among other Texas cases to be considered by the high court during Two non- l exas cases couldk significant impact on theLont State. In one, the justices agreed to decide whetherasiat prohibited from taxing inti earned f rom oil and gas extrac on the outer continental < cision that could mean i dollars to the state treasury.Aik involves a Louisiana case seekinj extend the Voting Rights Acitoji cial elections, which could rffl lionize the way judges are eletit! Texas by requiring single-mei districts forjudges. Some small telephone companies don’t require PUC rate approval HOUSTON (AP) — Although most small telephone companies are twice as profitable as the big compa nies, some have never had to appear before the Public Utility Commission for rate approval. Southwestern Bell spends millions of dollars to win new rates from the PUC, but it is the small companies that sometimes stand to gain the most from the increases, the Hous ton Chronicle reported Sunday. Before the PUC was created in 1975, the small companies were reg ulated by local government and their profit margins were regulated by state law. Today, the commission al lows the 60 small companies in the state to live in the regulatory shadow of Southwestern Bell, charging the same rates even though they may have different costs and overhead. The Chronicle’s review of the 1987 financial statements of 17 small Texas telephone companies shows that light regulation has helped many a company provide lucrative returns for the family or investors who own it. Of those 17 small companies, 15 showed profit margins of from 18 percent to 38 percent. By compari son, the 10 largest U.S. telephone companies earned just less than 10 percent last year. “The small, privately owned com panies have been able to do ex tremely well,” Tim Raven of the Texas Telephone Association said. “But how do you define too profita ble?” Most of the small companies de clined to list salaries in their required annual financial statement to the PUC. But some of the companies that did showed that a job with a family-owned phone company can be very profitable. Fort Bend Telephone paid $503,596 in salaries and other com pensation to five members of the family that owns the company in 1986, including $238,620 to its pres ident. Over the last four years, Fort Bend Telephone has paid out $579,000 in stock dividends to own ers of the company. earned $ 160,930 last year. Some small telephone compfl pay out significant stock divide Will • * * m • l l t aivzv.i\ San Marcos Telephone Co. f $7.3 million in dividends Iasi 1! while it brought in $15.71 operating revenues. Telephone companies of spread money around the coM nity, writing checks to a widen of civic causes. But somesf siderably more on company pe^ Lake Dallas Telephone Co., which serves about 4,100 customers near Dallas, paid its two top managers $99,596 each last year, an expense that comes to $50 per customer. United Telephone of T f! which serves about 103,000oi5 ! ers in (he Tyler area, spent®' on civic causes such as4-Ha» YMCA, while it spent $37,W' year on country club metnW I and various chamber of conn# dues, including $5,621 fora' 5 membership in Hollytree C01 5 Club and 15 other private elute- ( The president of Contel of Texas, the third-largest phone company in ~ ... 5V,c-- Texas with 157,000 customers, Telephone companies of-town owners send profits 1 ® I parent company. CentralTeM ! of Texas, which serves 1 ; 117,000 customers in the f area, sent $17 million of tfc> million it made last year to^ Corp. ATLAS Save this TRANSMISSION 10% Discount Coupon Exp.11-15-88 $ with student oi staff ID THE STRONGEST NAME IN THE BUSINt Locally Owned Service Nalionwiilt Phone 779-0555 1507 Texas