The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 13, 1986, Image 10

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Page 10/The Battalion/Monday, October 13, 1986
World and Nation
Senator: U.S. bypassed
bounds for Contra aid
mBriiiif-TnirrT||rnirfrrriifTTirMiriMi^|-MMitiirBrwiipi<iiii
SCHULMAN THEATRES
2.50 ADMISSION
1. Any Show Before 3 PM
2. Tuesday - All Seafs
3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With
Current ID'S.
4. Thurs. - KORA Over 30 Nile
‘DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
2Ei
226 Southwest Pkwy
WASHINGTON (AP) — As long
as the administration openly encour
ages gun running in Central Amer
ica, more Americans will become in
volved and the distinction will be
blurred between who's official and
who isn’t, the \ ice chairman of the
Senate Intelligence Committee said
Sundav.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said
most members of Congress feel the
L’.S. government has overstepped
the hounds by giving a “wink and a
shrug" to private groups supporting
Contra rebels seeking to overthrow
the government of Nicaragua.
“T he question that hasn't been an
swered fullv to all the congressional
inquiries is whether they stepped
over the line from political encour
agement to illegal cooperation,"
Leahy said in a telephone interview
f rom his home in Vermont.
Congress barred military aid f rom
the United States to the Contras in
198T hut later authorized non-mili-
tarv aid.
The question of whether the U.S.
government has gone beyond that
has come under intense scrutiny
since Eugene Hasenfus, an ex-Ma-
rine who once flew for Air America,
a CIA-operated airline in Vietnam,
was captured in Nicaragua after his
at ms-laden plane was brought down
bv a Nicaraguan missile.
Hasenfus told a news conference
in Managua Thursday that Max Co
me/. and another Cuban-American
“work for the CIA (and) did most of
the coordination’’ for the gun-run
ning llights lie took part in.
Leahy said as long as people
openly encourage Americans going
to Nicaragua, more and more Amer
icans will become involved; there will
he some captured, some killed and
some put on trial.
American downed in Nicaragua
to be tried soon; charges unclear
693-2457
CROCODILE DUNDEE pu 13
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2002 E. 29th
SCHULMAN 6
775-2463
LINK
FLIGHT OF THE
NAVIGATOR pc
MANAGL’A, Nicaragua (AP) —
President Daniel Ortega says that an
American captured after a rebel
supply plane was shot down will be
tried soon, hut it still was not clear
Sunday what charges would be filed
against him.
The president made his first com
ments on the Oct. 5 downing of a C-
I23 transport over southern Nicara
gua in a nationally broadcast town
meeting Saturday.
Ortega angrily denounced what
he called the “direct participation”
of the L’.S. government in aiding
guerrillas fighting the Nicaraguan
government.
Ortega later told reporters that
Eugene Hasenfus, 45, of Marinette,
Wis., will he tried soon in the Peo
ple's Courts.
Other Sandinist of ficials have said
Hasenfus could face up to 30 years
in prison. The People’s Courts were
formed after tfie lef tist Sandinist Na
tional Liberation Front came to
power in July 1979, ending 42 years
of government by the rightist, pro-
American Somoza dvnastv.
I he president said documents
found in the C-123’s wreckage
proved the U.S. role. “There are no
doubts about the involvement of the
United States in all these actions,”
Ortega said.
President Reagan and other offi
cials have denied any U.S. govern
ment involvement in the flight.
But Ortega said U.S. officials
“stimulate terrorist actions such as
this, but when people die they do not
take responsibility for the action. . . .
T hey just call them heroes."
Shultz calls
Iceland smm
'disappointing'
REY K | AY I k, Iceland (AP|-
Sec reiarv of State George Shuk
said Sundav the two-dav IcelarJ
summit ended with U.S. ollidif
deeplv disappointed" bcauj
"extiemelv important pt
agreements" on arms issuesdlj!
not materialize, despite intent
talks between President
and Mikhail Gorbachev.
He said the hangup was Soil
insistence that Reagan curtailtJ
searc h on tire Strategic Defeittl
Initiative. Reagan andGorbadiJ
did not agree on the date of a fd|
low-up summit, Shultz said.
1 It- said the leaders nearly tail I|
agreed on ways "to dealefftdhfHeil
lv with intermediate range mJ
silt's, and had made pingity npnl
ward an agreement on liniiiii^ I,I
underground nuclear tests, buwa'
that the potential agreemftn|
f ailed to materialize because<! ■!
iht pans were interrelated, Brel
On the |> t ospects |["ate
agi c ement on arms treatiesin(< Bnij
nrva. in view of die failurehm |jb
Shultz said. T hope it doesn't till I'd
the chances lot agreement;bullBt 3 !
can't sav for sine."
Shultz began Ins post-sum!
news conference bv saving tin
altei “two, full intensive days, d
which "the president's perfci-L j
main e was magnificant, fin
leadeis reached "evtiemeh I
p<n taut potential agreements
Investigators try to unravel LaRouche network
KKYS 105 Presents
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
This Week's Features Are:
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NOTHING IN COMMON pg u
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9:45
FERRIS BUELLERS
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9.35
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7:25
9:55 '
WASHINGTON (z\P) — Federal investiga
tors, with more than two truckloads of seized re
cords to sort through, are focusing on obstruc
tion of justice charges as they try to unravel
political extremist Lyndon LaRouche’s network
of organizations.
After nearly two years of investigating what
U.S. Attorney Henry Hudson called “an organi
zational policy of fraud and bilking,” the govern
ment last week raided LaRouche’s Virginia head
quarters and indicted several of his inner circle
members, his fund-raisers and assorted corpora
tions and committees.
T he government provided a broad look at its
case last week in persuading a federal magistrate
to hold without l>ond two top LaRouche lieuten
ants facing obstructon charges.
That evidence tone lied LaRouche himself,
who has not been charged hut who prosecutors
contend “dominates and controls” an organiza
tion charged with conspiracy toobstruct justice.
It also shed light on what is one of the most bi
zarre political organizations ever — whose mem
bers, according to the FBI, make late-night ha
rassing telephone calls to opponents and thought
thev could get CIA help to “spike” a federal
f raud investigation of them.
LaRouche is a frequent fringe candidate foi
president who espouses a complex conspri
view of the vvoild th.ti (lelics ideolosjiui L |(
lumping the Oueen of England, Soviet l< L| n( i
and piominent Americans as(o-t(>nspiiat«'.<! E
ding drain v |L|
Fen ol lus followers and five of his organ Ijn
lions were indicted in Boston on charjei Ej 0 |
fraud, in a scheme in which $1 millm!!
was bilked in unauthorized c t edit card dug 1^1
and conspiracy to obstruct justice for alleyfC; | 01l
forts to thwart the fraud probe. m,,
The Boston grand jurv investigation bet-:
the last weeks of LaRouche’s 1984 presides
campaign.
MCDONALD’S
mcc^. intramural highlights
DRIVE-THRU
SERVICE
University Drive
Hwy 21
Texas and S.W. Parkway
Manor East Mall
McDonalds
BREAKFAST EVERY
MORNING
IM Game Plan
ENTRIES OPEN
Bowling Singles: ENTRIES OPEN: Mon., Oct. 13; ENTRIES CLOSE: Tues., Oct. 21;
PLAY BEGINS: Sun., Oct. 26 at MSC Bowling Lanes; FEES: $2. 30 fee for Classes A, B and
C payable at entry. All subsequent fees will be paid at the Bowling Alley. A fee of $6. 90 fee
for Class D payable at entry. TOURNAMENT STRUCTURE: Classes A, B, and C will play a
qualifying round. The top percentage will be seeded into single elimination playoff based on
a 2 game average. Class D will play a round robin with no playoffs.
Punt, Pass & Kick: ENTRIES OPEN: Mon., Oct. 13; ENTRIES CLOSE: Tues., Oct. 21;
PRELIMINARIES: Tues., Oct. 21, 6-8:30pm, Intramural Sports Center; DIVISIONS; Men’s
& Women's; FORMAT: Each participant will be allowed one attempt at each of the three
activities in the preliminaries. The three distances will be totalled for an individual’s score.
Top 5 scorers advance to the finals to be held Mon., Oct. 27, 6:30pm, Kyle Field; EQUIP
MENT : Footballs are provided; participants must provide thier own tee.
ENTRIES CLOSE: All Entries Close Tue., Oct. 14
Volleyball - ENTRY FEE: $25/team; PLAY BEGINS: Sun., Oct. 19; RULES: USVBA Rules
with IM exceptions; DIVISIONS: Corps, Fish, Men’s & Women’s Dorm, Men's & Women's
Independent; Men’s & Women's Fac/Staff/ Grad and CoRec in Class A, B, C and Recre
ation; CAPTAIN’S MEETINGS: Dorm and Independent, Thurs., Oct. 16, 5pm, 701 Rudder;
Corps, Thurs., Oct. 16,7:30pm, 162 Read.
Preseason Volleyball Tournament; ENTRIES FEE: $5/team; PLAY BEGINS: Thurs., Oct.
16; DIVISIONS: Men’s, Women's and CoRec in Classes A&B; SCHEDULES: Will be posted
after 3pm, Wed., Oct. 15, in 159 Read. No Reschedules! No games will be scheduled dur
ing the A&M-Baylor game. "Sponsored by the Texas A&M Officials Association."
Flickerball: ENTRY FEE: $20/team; RULES: Available in IM-Rec Sports Office, 159 Read;
DIVISIONS: Men’s & Women's Dorm, Men’s & Women's Independent, CoRec in Classes A,
B, C and D. CAPTAIN S MEETING: Thurs., Oct. 16, 6pm, 164 Read.
Swim Meet: ENTRIES: Teams must complete a separate card for each individual for each
event. EVENTS: 20 Yard Medley Relay, 100 yard Freestyle, 50 Yard Backstroke, 50 Yard
Breaststroke, 50 Yard Freestyle, 50 Yard Butterfly, 100 Yard Individual Medley, 200 Yard
Freestyle Relay; PRELIMS: Corps & Fish Sun., Oct. 19, 6pm, P.L. Downs Pool; Dorm & In
dependent, Mon., Oct., 20, 7:30pm, P.L. Downs Pool; DIVISIONALS: Mon., Oct. 27,
7:30pm, P.L. Downs Pool; ALL UNIVERSITY FINALS: Thurs., Oct. 30, 7:30, P.L. Downs
Pool. SCRATCH AND INFORMATION MEETING: Thurs., Oct. 16, 6:30pm, 167 Read.
Horseshoe Singles: PLAY BEGINS: Tues., Oct. 21; SCHEDULES. Will be posted after
3pm Thurs., Oct. 16, on bulletin boards outside 159 Read; RULES: 2 our of 3 games to 15
points; LOCATION: Houseshoe pits are located just north of the Penberthy Complex.
Field Goal Kicking Contest: CONTEST DATE: Wed., Oct. 15, 7pm, Kyle Field; LATE EN
TRIES: Accepted at event site on availablity basis only; FORMAT: Participants will attempt
a kick at every distance beginning at 20 yard line for men and 5 yard line for women;
AWARDS: Will be given in men's and women's divisions for longest field goal and total yard
age.
Flag Football
Playoffs
Playoff schedules are tentatively
scheduled to be posted Thurs.,
Oct. 16 on the bulletin boards
across from Racquetball Court
#2. Any further rain delays be
tween now and then will push the
date back.
TAMU Outdoors
TAMU Outdoors has scheduled
two kayak clinics for the end of
October. Interested individuals
may sign up for these clinics in
the Intramural office, Rm 159
Read.
Kayak Roll Session, Sat., Oct. 25,
8:30am - 10:30am, Outdoor Pool.
Intermediate Kayak Workshop,
Sun., Oct. 26, 10am, Hildalgo
Falls.
... ■
-
■ i «v ^ ~ 1 bQ
- f B jL
m l f w
■
r.
Team up and enter Volleyball TODAY! Entries close tomorrow.
A&M Wrestling Club
Texas A&M University may be SWC Champs in many
varsity sports, but they can also boast of being the State
Wrestling Chmapions 2 years in a row. According to Club
President, Robert Simpton, the club plans to win again this
year.
Wrestling may sound like a strenuous activity, and it is,
but club members also have a good time. Not all members
of the club start out as highly skilled as one may think. The
membership includes former high school state champions
as well as first time wrestlers. The club is geared towards
self improvement and discipline Because there is no coach
and peer pressure is not really a factor, the club members
must discipline themselves to practice and work our on their
own. Club members assist each other at work
outs, but the assistance and discipline go beyond the prac
tices.
Being a member of the wrestling club requires great per
sonal committment and discipline. The committment and
discipline in turn reflect in their personal life. The discipline
helps them to manage their lives in a much better way.
The Wrestling Club competes against other clubs in the
state. After taking the ’84 and '85 State Championships,
they are confident they can take the title this year. The club
practices on Monday and Wednesday from 7-9pm and on
Tuesday and Thursday from 5-7pm in Room 260 G. Rollie
White. For more information; contact Robert Simpton at
846-2852 or Jim Boggs 260-6779.
Swim Meet
Preliminaries
Corps & Fish,
Sun., Oct. 19, 6pm,
Indoor Pool
Dorm & Independent,
Mon., Oct. 20, 7:30p!n,
Indoor Pool
tn<
MONDAV
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Saturday
SUkIDAY
3 open;)
• Punt. Pass & Kick
• Bowling Singles
lEWTRlES
CLOSE*.
• Flickerball • Field Goal Kicking •
Swim Meet • Volleyball • Preseason
Volleyball • Horseshoe Singles
F/ELD GOAL
KICKING CONTEST
C APTAIkJ'S
MEETING-:
• Innertube Water Basketball Playoffs
Posted after 2pm
• Volleyball 5pm (Corps 7:30)
• Flickerball 6pm
• Swim Meet Scratch & info 6:30pm
• • •
• Preseason Volleyball Tournament Begins
• LaCrosse at Sam Houston
• Men's Soccer v.s. Baylor !0am East
Campus
> Men’s Rugby at San Antonio
>hd,
Ns t J
'ea,!
: distil