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Find out more about the Navy Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate Program, and make your education start paying off today. Call Navy Manage ment Programs: (713) 226-2445 Collect calls accepted navy-¥- officer. -- 1 -• 'a---:-!-,,i *3^ World and Nation Bork’s chances remain in doubt after testimon WASHINGTON (AP) — After the first week of his confirmation hearings, Robert H. Bork’s chances of becoming a Supreme Court jus tice remain as much in doubt as the effect his extraordinary five days of testimony packs for future nomi nation fights. As the Senate Judiciary Commit tee prepares to hear from Bork’s backers and detractors in the hear ings’ second phase, key questions are unanswered: • Will the impressions Bork cre ated in his bid to win approval by a majority of the committee’s 14 mem bers be bolstered or eroded as the hearings continue? • What effect will the committee’s vote, still weeks off, have when the nomination reaches the full Senate? • Has the Senate now established beyond a doubt the propriety of asking a Supreme Court nominee about his or her judicial ideology and political beliefs, and then voting based on those views? • Has Bork’s willingness to pro vide answers to such queries, a break from recent precedent, set the model for future nominees? Among the committee’s eight Democrats and six Republicans, Bork appears likely to win the sup port of five Republicans and attract negative votes from five Democrats. Bork’s fate in the committee then would be determined by three Dem ocrats and one Republican still claiming to be on the fence — Rob ert Byrd of West Virginia, Dennis DeConcini of Arizona, Howell Hef lin of Alabama and Arlen Specter, a Republican from Pennsylvania. DeConcini and Specter asked Bork the toughest questions, but Byrd, the Democrats’ leader in the Senate, is considered the most likely of the four to cast a negative vote. The often-contentious atmo sphere that permeated the Senate hearing room as Bork testified is not likely to dissipate this week. Numerous groups already have spent millions lobbying for and against Bork. Groups including the Organization for Women, tional Abortion Rights League, the AFL-CIO, th can Civil Liberties Union Leadership Conference Representatives of the Am Bar Association are to tesi hearing is sure to be peppertt questions about the ABA’s vote on Bork. The organization's Ik standing committee on judiciary split 10-5 in fin qualified for the Supreme Nationa the Na Actior e Ameri and the on Civi eject Rights will urge the Senate t< Bork’s nomination. Croups including Concerned Women for America, the American Conservative Union and the Na tional Right to Work Committee will urge confirmation. Three prominent Bork support ers — retired Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, former presidential counsel Lloyd Cutler and Illinois Gov. Jim Thompson — are sched uled to testify first when the commit tee reconvenes Monday. Four of the ABA members found him not and one voted “nottr Bork’s supporters b» nounced the vote asabl; ical one, noting that the mittee unanimously gave highest rating when he ml considered for the fedei judgeship he’s held for fivev As a law professor, B«i never shy about promotingfc theories. And perhaps expects a close vote, Borlbj further than any recent Sgj Court nominee in lavingoui views for his Senate intentrof Whether future nominee || the Bork hearings, or nihrM- Scalia hearings, for guidancnH ing with the Senate spothgfcJjP piend on their level of confidriag Scalia, who seemed sEi:gl confident of confirmationp-B refused to discuss raanyarcifl® law during his hearings,m:: ?- .98-0 vote. ' * Report says administration wrong to reinterpret treaty HP LEAD THE ADVENTURE. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan administration incorrectly claims it can unilaterally reinterpret the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty to allow expanded U.S. “Star Wars” testing, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said Sunday. The attempt by the Republican administration to change the U.S. view of the 15-year-old treaty could affect Senate consideration of a pos sible treaty on intermediate-range nuclear weapons, the Democratic- controlled committee said in a 106- page report. wants to move from the existing in terpretation to a so-called "broad" view of the ABM treaty, which would allow expanded testing of Star Wars. See related story, Page 1 The report was the latest round in a long-running fight between Presi dent Reagan and congressional Democrats over the 1972 pact, which limits the variety and type of de fenses that each superpower can de- ploy. At issue in the battle is devel opment of Reagan’s Strategic De fense Initiative, known informally as “Star Wars.” The administration Last week the Senate split gener ally along party lines as it voted 58- 38 to approve a proposal banning spending for expanded Star Wars tests that violate the existing view of the ABM pact. While releasing the report, the Foreign Relations Committee also sent to the floor a resolution spon sored by Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., that rejects the attempt to reinter pret the ABM pact. “This report underscores the pro found constitutional issues which will surround Senate consideration of an INF (intermediate nuclear forces) agreement if the treaty power question is not resolved," Bi den said in a statement released with the report. preliminary decisions « agreement. According to the report,1i ministration’s theory oftre* ing, having cast a darkshaiii the Senate’s considerationofi ture treaties, could severtivis cate and greatly prolong til . mittee’s consideration of £ treaty.” The committee’s report came in the wake of a series of joint hearings it held earlier this year with the Sen ate Judiciary Committee to make The committee will hold's! on any new treaty, probabl' l sometime early in 1988, So| borne Pell, D-R.I., chairnOT panel, said. k Congressional critics of j ministration’s proposal to ^ pret the ABM treaty say dq utive branch cannot change-T a pact is viewed. When the Senate “givesiti® and consent to a treaty, in s fj treaty that was made, irrespH the explanations it was pn" the report said. Instead of reinterpret®!l treaty, the administration»%’ ally proposing a new trean : ort said. po Historian's research of executions Yet, Y turns him against death penally 1 HEADLAND, Ala. (AP) — Seventeen years spent documenting more than 15,000 executions by every method from the gallows to a saw have turned amateur historian Watt Espy into an ardent foe of capital pun ishment. electrocuted the youngest pc ;ar-old George Stinncv J His cluttered rural home, which doubles as a work place, is decorated with scores of grainy pictures of exe cuted felons. A wooden card catalog and two large led gers record the names and crimes of those put to death. “Believe me, the stress is awful,” Espy, who has ul cers, said of a life dedicated to chronicling every legal execution in the United States since Colonial times. “I’m depressed half the time.” And every new execution makes it worse. “With every execution I feel a part of me dies,” he said in a recent interview. shon® slcanes tr# • In Louisiana, there was the 1767 execution of a man who was nailed in a box which then was sawed in half. One Alabama inmate fought for two hours before guards got him into the electric chair. Dr. J.H. Snook, respected head of the veterinary medicine department at Ohio State University, was exe cuted in 1930 for the murder of his girlfriend, a nym phomaniac he couldn’t please. In 1944 South Carolina >erson ever execu^Rf United States, 14-year-ola George victed of the rape-murder of two girls. Even though Espy has no college degree, he*- , ployed as a researcher at the University of Alab i school for S'A years before he decided tomovt : OL(XH3 s man Capital Punishment Project back to his ho® Espy said he had no particularly strong 1 '' about capital punishment when he began I 1970, but years of sifting through old courtr newspaper accounts have changed that. • jT"|TT"\OY Executions of innocent people are the - 1 -*JkJ'VJ'I. bother him the most. Through August, Espy had documented 13^ : , cutions in the United States dating to 1608,v/M George Kendall, a governing councilor in wha ; ; Virginia, was shot for spying. Espy said evideij cates Kendall was framed because of political > ! larity. Of the executions carried out this centuP' United States, Espy said a recent study indfel wrong person was put to death 25 times. BllW ber must be higher, he said, because he figures 22,500 people actually have been executed | United States. He just hasn’t gotten to all thecasn. Battalion Classified 845-2611 It’s No Mystery! The best looking heads in town are styled at Bill’s. Barber & Bill’g£yj e Shop 2 15 University Dr. 846-2228 Appointments Available • Walk-Ins welcome Mon.-Sat. $4 OFF CUT & STYLE with this ad Perm Special $32.75 includes cut & style