IMPERIAL CHINESE RESTAURANT Celebrate our Third Anniversary! Enjoy delicious Chinese food while dining in beautiful surroundings All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet 11:00 - 2:00 Tues. Thurs. Sat. $4. 35 11:30 - 2:00 Sun $6 95 We serve the best food in town! At Lamar Savings, our regular checking account costs just $4.00 a month. That’s it. No per check charges. No minimum balance. Just the ease and convenience of unlimited checking at a very affordable price. It takes just $100 to open, so ask for the checking account that tips the balance in your favor. And buy the one book that won’t put you in a bind. Lamar Savings can expect more from us. Member FSLIC Call 779-2800 for the branch nearest you. 2411 Texas Avenue South 696-2800 SIGN UP! INTRAMURAL/REC SPORTS SPORT: Flag Football DIVISION: Co-Rec DATE: Through September 15,1987 TIME: 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m PLACE: 159 Read Building IN ASSOCIATION WITH ■ I M/REG General Motors is proud to sponsor your campus intramural/ recreational sports. CHEVROLET PONTIAC Oldsmobile JOIN THE FUN Read the information above and sign up with your Intramural/Rec reational Sports Department today! BUICK < &idc0&ic C3IVICZ > TRUCK EVERYONE CAN PLAY All students, staff and faculty are eligible. GMAC FINANCIAL SERVICES GMHH9 General Motors, "sharing your future” IM/REC SPORTS AUTO EXPO Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, Septernb« World and Natio Bork’s nominatior 1 ° f4 reaches Senate ASHINC of [every 42 i been execute the Supreme tal punishme after war of wordrrr This May Be The Cheapest Book Ybu Buy All Year. WASHINGTON (AP) — To his supporters, Robert H. Bork would give the Supreme Court a lasting conservative legacy. To his liberal foes, he would end three decades of progress for women, blacks and civil libertarians. After waging an ideological strug gle through rival news conferences, studies and letter writing, the rival camps will move their battleground Tuesday to the place where it counts: the Senate Judiciary Com mittee. More than 100 potential witnesses have asked to testify in support or opposition to the 60-year-old Bork His fate is now held by a large group of undecided senators on a political hot seat. Much is at stake in these televised proceedings. According to both sidt has reached a turning p Sii a death sentei and 68 of thi pt ‘ ,lllst ’ deluding 18 la 1 I-; Justice Statisi ■ aeei: more th; whcn ,h ' ’ the,past decaci fired Watery.ite special pp. \i < hibald ■ Since 1977 era! Elliott R Attorney Ruckcishaus Yet Richa pron testil i dson and fenders on c neral V, successful cor ■■rdtodoy commutation: :i is one and 41 died t s sched tion. A total < Bulk. on death row including 1 8 v hav the follow Aug. ild re “(The confirmation vote) will turn on the matter of (Bork’s)views. We know that many of his views are off the mainstream. ” — Sen. Howard \fetzen- haum, D-Ohio Leadei ) is a Of those u , said in the past dei tope i were exec ute lay inf cent of the v :!Senate percent of the ('hairmati ' last year, 57 . 1 who has death row w< the : • black and 1 p that them Indians or Asi he SenateVf More than . lies in the awaiting execi w.nt hr the; South, 1 Bo de ngs tall affect o two Democn and Paul Sint' bme gs, h se I re Vieti omr Ohio. ing the retirement of Jut Powell Jr. It can move toward model at i< strict conservatism. For that reason, lobbying go from both sides have l>een spen freely to whip up their members convince senators they are right. Conservatives want a justice would protect the rights of the born, be tough as nails on crim and put religion hack in the Liberals want a swing vote or court who, when it counted, c prolong a string of pro-civil r civil liberties rulings that begai the 1954 decision outlawing s segregation. Senators and viewers will concerns about free 1 speech, pi Lewis F comm numtx ill tu Met ups lintt aiT NU-ud BANC KOI •i member Vietnam is r< nice-, said Sc ers ’ including votr will n officials of the sues girm it topple n .Mi the m,trVietnam New enhatnn said The agenc government < ili Mirim' anc * reduced Other prise mei saries. who ■ un- inals rob. i the -ould ghts- with rhool Bork h profess. ton which hear '''Mtl Among the 1 us'.ie D:. were 4go niili ue - the go’ sonnel of the ' !l 8‘ namese gover a i ale I ministers, 18a tvorked lor .ninL officers field officers a ! ’ K b.u 1 it said. \ppeals in" “They were appellate against the pec in iinpcict monitored in f After the cc Iran’s president wan to be punished South Vietnan Iraq BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar ^ook his peace mission to Iraq after Iran’s president told him Sunday that Iran will keep fighting until a Nuremberg-style court pun ishes Iraq as the aggressor. Earlier in the day, Iraq threatened what one official called a “more se vere war” unless Iran accepts the U.N. Security Council’s July 20 reso lution demanding a cease-fire in the 7-year-old war. Iran says the war began when Iraq invaded in September 1980. Iraq maintains the conflict broke out two weeks earlier when Iran shelled bor der towns. Asked whether the U.N. leader failed to get Iran to accept the cease fire resolution, his spokesman, Fran cois Giuliani, refused comment. “The secretary-general will make no comment whatsoever until fie has briefed the Security Council” upon his return Thursday, Giuliani said at U.N. headquarters in New York. A convoy of Kuwaiti tankers and U.S. warships protecting them from Iranian attack meanwhile was re ported near Bahrain, halfway through its voyage south t it rough the Persian Gulf. Iraq’s Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz welcomed Perez de Cuellar when he arrived in Baghdad after two days of talks in Iran. Iran’s official Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus, quoted the U.N. chief as say ing the talks were “valuable.” Perez de Cuellar talked with Presi dent Ali Khamenei, Prime Minister Hussein Musavi, Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati and the powerful Parliament speaker, Hashemi Raf- sanjani. Tehran Radio quoted Khamenei as telling him Iran has been “dissatis fied with decisions made by the Se curity Council” but; that “considering th r good in trip will b withdrawal of thousands of were sent to re The official said the Co granted the a tional Day Sep nivtrsary Aug. The did not say wht veyed Tehran’s U.N. cease-fire lilt rea in ther Kharo final wort resolution. Auto i for str Iran h; jected tl qu din s neither e resoluti fhe broadcast as saying “no pe has objected to tl als” of top Nazi many’s defeat in punishing Iraq a Iran-Iraq war “is world.” The official Ir also monitort ruling Revt Council rnet dent Saddam Hussein and Iraq will abide by the i “provided Iran declares a stand in support of thecal! Iraq accuses Iran of stall' resolution to muster supp U.N. General Assembl official, who spoke oncotat not be identified further,s will not permit this. “Either they accept thert in full or they face a tnoresf 1 in which we will use weaf have not deployed yet,” he , 5f interview. He did not elal# w; The resolution (.tlioi 'H* mediate, unconditional withdrawal of (loops tor- 'v ally recognized holders•v change of prisoners. Iran occupied partoflt^'H ern Faw peninsula in FebU'* and holds pockets of ;f S| around Basra and othf J along the 730-mile front Rafsanjani said before ader ar rived in Tehran 1 $ % Irac) or its allies, which 1 Jc * * OMM*. DEARBOR d h-Strike p re para elaniplete at the lor; te XuretnhWorkers as ne^ leaders aMor Co. and th World V: contract deadli . instigate!* acceptable For the 1 Ford Motor C iqi Net" left to do bu Nionia.' whether unioi lution ity (’ gainers would •vernight uini! the 11:59 p.m talks resumed I leader would not risk an unf" cease-fire because it doe* or its allies, which 11 eludes the United States. com One < The Me YESTERDAYS EVERYONE WELCOME DART TOURNAMENT Blind Draw Doubles Mondays 8:00 pm House Dress Code - near Lubys 046-2625