Friday, November 11, 1983/The Battalion/Page 9 t L Antenna won’t jjstop Columbia I ways kt if thecas 1 he war, it,” \ cieservi eddritit ■ichigarj ather ?pt. 31 :h,80, was senitj rison. Hi Jer chaJ 1 Louisi,; United Press International ■space CENTER — Trou bles with an antenna which transmits data between the shuttle Columbia and Earth will not delay its planned Nov. 28 launch, space agency offi cials said Thursday. m One of two relay antennas on Columbia’s KU-band was found to be “seriously de graded” about two weeks ago, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said. pected to be re-installed on Columbia within a week. Despite the problem in the antenna system, NASA said the system will be able to func tion properly for the mission. I On Wednesday, techni cians switched to a backup antenna system, which also failed to work. The antenna is crucial for the successful operation of the upcoming nine-day mission, in which scientists conducting 70 experiments plan to use the KU-band antenna to transmit scientific data from the shuttle to the $100 million Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRSS) for relay to Earth. o d f| Workers then removed the KU-band antenna from the orbiter and shipped it to Hughes Aircraft Co. for re pairs. The antenna is ex- A NASA spokesman said the cause of the antenna prob lem was under investigation. Columbia, with its Spacelab cargo, is scheduled to be laun ched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. Vesco suspected in smuggling ~ United Press International BROWNSVILLE — A feder al prosecutor charged Thursday that fugitive Robert Vesco is masterminding the smuggling of banned goods from the Un ited States to Cuba from his beach front home in Cuba. Federal officials said that Vesco, wanted in the United States in connection with $300 million mutual fund swindle, is orchestrating a scheme to thwart the American economic block ade of Cuba by routing technol ogy through Canada and other nations that trade openly with the Fidel Castro regime. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jack Wolfe made the allegation at the trial of a man who is charged with attempting to ship — de spite the U.S. technology bans on trade with Cuba — sugar pro cessing machinery to the com munist country. The man is charged with two others under the Trading with the Enemy Wolfe told a U.S. District Judge that attorney Richard Sil vio Bettini flew to Cuba by way of Mexico and met with Vesco after the three were charged. Vesco arranged for the cash bonds for the defendants, Wolfe said. The prosecutor said that a New York man later brought $240,000 across the border from Matamoros, Mexico, and provided the money to post the cash bonds for the three defen dants. Only one defendant, Salva dor Ramirez Preciado, appeared for the trial which opened this week. Another de fendant, Alejo Quintero Peralta, reportedly died in Mexico. The third defendant — Albert Ahthony Volpe, a Canadian with organized crime links — jumped his $50,000 bond. Wolfe requested to show the connection between Bettini and Vesco. Thejury was ordered out of the courtroom and Wolfe continued his allegations. “Mr. Bettini is a lifelong ac quaintance of Mr. Vesco and they went to school together in Detroit,” Wolfe said. “Vesco needed a warehouse in Houston and he instructed Bettini to procure it for him. In the end, Vesco did lease the warehouse.” The three were arrested July 10 at the Harlingen Internation al Airport where U.S. Customs officials seized 31 crates of machinery that were being loaded onto an airplane. The machinery was to be used to turn the waste products of the sugar cane crops into fuel to run the Cuban sugar mills. In the case on trial, prosecu tors said the three men paid a charter airline $30,000 to fly goods to Merida, Mexico. From there, they charge, a Canadian air freight company was to have transferred the cargo to Cana da, where it would be picked up by a Cuban plane. The Brownsville Herald quoted government sources Thursday as saying the FBI, CIA and other national security organizations were compiling a file on the case. The report that Vesco may be in Cuba was the first clue to his whereabouts since the U.S. offi cials requested his extradition from Guatemala. Vesco lived in Costa Rica until he was expelled in 1978 for get ting involved in internal politics. He then went to the Bahamas where he also was expelled. 'll MSC OPAS MOZART at the Fountain 11-1 efG rammar ‘hotline’ n Be nK . , iday’i 3. Valla. DlC o hadlM| ree coueIS niinmf JH United Press International stead Cm EDINBURG — Businessmen ! and women, take heart: Pan 1 j i ' American University is keeping V up its “Wi iter’s Connection” for p^l'l instant help over the telephone , with undangling your partici- plesand recasting your run-ons. . ? y’Bp’an Am introduced the ser- n " 16 ' vice last year, keeping a rosier of T English professors on stand-by ll " [ for business and professional ;—people who screw up the lan- adiesg^se. Department of Food Services Supports the Bonfire By Offering Raised Donuts 1O0 Each juniors—seniors grad, vet, med in the Following Locations: Commons Snack Bar MSC Snack Bar The Underground at Sbisa Now Through Bonfire Night The Best Food - The Lowest Price’ Don't forget to have your ■ “Last year we helped several hundred people with their sub jects, verbs, pronouns and adverbs,” said Dr. Paul Mitchell, who founded the service. “So we decided to keep it going for another year.” §. Mitchell said the service is aimed at business people be cause students have their own teachers to consult. He said the service pays off for those who use it. pictures taken before Thanksgiving for the year- lining 0tocm book! ^■“Clear and effective com munication is good business,” Mitchell said. mo *txhj ■-.t'-ij ftwiwin :> t - r * RT'he telephone service work- Ktad is divided up among the En glish faculty’s 30 members, who sign up for a set periods during the week. People who telephone in to the English department are directed to the “Writer’s Con nection professor” on duty. * ' < .. ■' ? Serving Luncheon Buffet Sandwich and Soup Bar Mezzanine Floor Sunday through Friday 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. pDr. William L. Davis observes there has been a general drop in the number of English majors in the past few years, making for a i-ishortage of communications SalGiskills. Delicious Food | ^ Beautiful View Yearbook Associates, located at 1700 S. Kyle behind Culpep per Plaza, will be taking pictures Nov. 11 and Nov. 14-18 from 8.30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. For more intormation call 693- 6756 or 845-2681. | ■“We may not be attracting any English majors, but we’re making people realize English professors are accessible,” Davis said. Open to the Public “Quality First” ^ . , „ fKotr office Nov. 28-Dec. 2 and at the ('■irstOiy Member FDIC