The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 16, 1986, Image 10

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    Unique-Exciting-Pure Enjoyment
Coming Soon!
Watch for it!
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Opening January 20
701 Texas Ave., C.S.
Next to Julie’s in the Saber Inn
Page 10/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 16, 1986
Voyager begins Warped
non-stop flight
around globe
^7/ie
HARVEY HOTELS
Welcomes the
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1987
A » HARVEY HOTEL/ADDISON
D - HARVEY HOTEL / DALLAS
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contact: Jessa Kolehmainen
WM,
81
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orexia and Bulimia Learning
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PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL
AN AFFILIATE OF
HCA HosprtaJ Corporation
MOJAVE, Calif. (AP) — The
spindly airplane Voyager got a boost
Monday from a tailwind off a storm
near Guam, and a chase plane found
the craft sound despite losing its
wingtips, as it began its attempt to
circle the globe non-stop without re
fueling.
Spokesman Peter Riva at Mojave
Airport’s mission control center said
the chase plane from Hawaii in
spected Voyager early Monday.
Voyager, heavily laden with fuel,
maintained an average speed of 123
mph on its first day “and higher
speeds are now being realized with a
more favorable wind,” mission oper
ations director Larry Caskey said.
By afternoon. Voyager was more
than 600 miles past Hawaii — 3,400
miles into its 27,000-mile, 10-day
journey — and heading for the Phil
ippines.
The crew of Dick Rutan and
Jeana Yeager planned to switch off
Voyager’s front engine and fly most
of the record-attempting flight on its
rear engine to conserve fuel, al
though it will lose speed in doing so.
“You do better by going a little
slower,” Jack Norris, flight technical
director, said. “It’s more efficient.”
Norris said the loss of the stream
lined wingtips probably would di
minish performance by only a cou
ple of percentage points.
In contrast. Voyager had more
help from the wind than expected,
picking up a strong tailwind from a
Pacific storm 180 miles southeast of
Guam.
Sandinistas say American
carried maps of prison are
Tel Co
the anin(
| anyone v
jhone calls
in and m;
Ice prost
Chief meteorologist Ten Snellman
said Monday, “We have a typhoon
developing which could be devastat
ing if it was in the wrong place.
We’re going to vector him just as
close to the typhoon as we can get.
We should get really good tail
winds.”
Voyager, which took off Sunday
from nearby Edwards Air Force
Base, where it must land to claim the
title for first non-stop, non-refueled
flight around the globe, was placed
on a course to skirt the northern
edge of the storm, he said.
Rutan, 48, stayed at the controls
in the 5V2- by 2-foot cockpit from 8
a.m. Sunday to 5:45 a.m. Monday,
then slept for three hours with the
autopilot on while Yeager, 34,
watched the systems from the adja
cent 7‘A- by 1.8-foot cabin.
After passing the Philippines,
Voyager will cross the Thai penin
sula and the northern Indian Ocean.
From there it may cross central or
southern Africa, Riva said.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) —
Officials said Monday a man they
identified as an American caught
near an air base carried maps of
areas around the prison where Eu
gene Hasenfus is serving 30 years
for flying arms to Nicaraguan rebels.
They said the man they named as
Sam Nesley Hall, 49, also carried
maps of the Pacific port of Corinto,
where ships from the Soviet bloc un
load cargo. Hasenfus, of Marinette,
Wis., is in the Tipitapa prison 12
miles east of Managua.
U.S. news reports said the man
captured Friday is the brother of
U.S. Rep. Tony P. Hall, D-Ohio.
Tony Hall said Monday in Wash
ington that he and his brother do
not agree on the rebel question.
“I didn’t know what he was doing
in Nicaragua,” he said. “I wasn’t
aware of the type of activities he’s al
legedly been participating in.”
Sandinista officials said Monday
the man had not been charged. He
was captured in a restricted military
zone near the Punta Huete air base
13 miles northeast of Managua, they
said.
In Washington, White House
spokesman Larry Speakes said, “We
cannot confirm that the prisoner is
Sam Hall. We will not even be able to
confirm that he is an American until
we have a chance to speak to him
and see who he is, what he is and
why he is there."
The official Sandinista newspaper
Barricada quoted Interior Minister
Tomas Borge on Monday as saying
the captured man carried maps in
one of his socks, including one of the
area around the prison.
In addition to Hasenfus, 45, an es
timated 1,500 members of the late
President Anastasio Somoza’s mili
tary are held at Tipitapa. The leftist
Sandinistas overthrew Somoza’s
U.S.-backed government in July
I 070.
Hasenfus was captured Oct. 6, the
day after Nicaraguan troops shot
down a cargo plane in the jungles of
southern Nicaragua and he bailed
out. It had been carrying arms and
supplies for the U-S.-suppomp taf t | (
bels known as Contras.
Barricada quoted Bor?eajidj an y u °|, 8'
the man caug
map of Corinto, 80 milfi ,;v r
Managua. The Corinto haikty 1 ® u l’
;c f ir ,afi« ; J^edtow(
mined in 1983 in a campairnl em< , o,..,
sored by the CIA. ' f"
Sandinista official! uid
would be treated Uke thatofl. 115 ,^^
fus, who was tried byaPeopIti’B w hen
bunal. r . ’ _i,
pnity to clt
l-MM-ign Mimstn T ad( ic(l tl
said his presence confirmed *:^ ^ e ^j n
mation that we have gathod® cal f s as
many sources about a pb,at* being ,
States plan, to attack Niara^l ments
Nicaraguan officials said tk^T^ho ti
oner first said he was a wrier,
an adviser to the Miskito lbe
fijjiti'ig ihf .Sandinista this wed
eastern Nicaragua. Tlif Ini^™
Ministry
said he event, ■ !£ amn( , M
worked for a group calledOitPr^
nix Battalion. 1
turn th<
of America
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SPECIALS
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MONDAY EVENING
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Mushroom Gravy, Whipped Potatoes, Choice of Vegetable M 11
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TUESDAY EVENING
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WEDNESDAY EVENING
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
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THURSDAY EVENING
ITALIAN DINNER
Spaghetti. Meatbalis, Sauce, Parmesan Cheese, Tossed $1#
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"There’s bet
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By Rob
Stai
See little Joey
ttlestar Galaci
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raj. See little
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While the nam
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harmful pla)
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boxes, says B
(fard M. Swa
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wartz’s book
ipaign for sa
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lowever, not
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ody Levin, pr
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