The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 16, 1986, Image 10
Unique-Exciting-Pure Enjoyment Coming Soon! Watch for it! x& x<X 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 Texas Aggies to COTTON BOWL 1987 A » HARVEY HOTEL/ADDISON D - HARVEY HOTEL / DALLAS □ 1 Q LBJ (1-635) hop* £ I 7 a N J DOWN § TOWN tk COTTON BOWL / $40 up to 4 guests per room CALL TOLL FREE AT: 1-800-922-9222 Ask for the Dallas or Addison hotels DALLAS 7815 LBJ Frwy (at Coil Road) (214) 960-7000 contact: Jeff Robinson ADDISON 14315 Midway Road (1 mile north of LBJ) (214) 980-8877 contact: Jessa Kolehmainen WM, 81 “I’ve got a terrible secret. If theY only knew what I go through to stay thin.” When the extreme tear at being overweight becomes obsessive, it leads to unusual and harmtul eating practices, Anorexia and Bulimia are eating dis orders which are becoming more prevalent Anorexia, the excessive pursuit of thinness, can result in mal nutrition, low blood pressure, loss of hair, irrational thinking and even death Bulimia, compulsive eating binges followed by the purging of food, can lead to severe dental problems, kidney failure or cardiac arrest. Warning Signals may vary, but often include: □ The secret fear of becoming fat Feeling out of control around food Binging on huge quantities of food and then purging, by vomiting, laxatives, or diuretics □ Feeling irritable, depressed and self-conscious □ Extreme dieting and exercise □ □ Greenleaf's ABLE Program (An orexia and Bulimia Learning Experience) can help you regain control of your life. The 4-week program is being offered December 29 - January 25, to coincide with school and work vacations. Living with your secret could be killing you. Call us now for a free confidential assessment. (409)822-7326 405 West 28th Street. Bryan TX 77803 Greenleat's services are covered by most health insurance plans reeniea 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 Create your own Lifestyle with Covered Parking Fully Furnished Condos Washer/Dryer Connections (some units are Included) Walking Distance to Campus 2 Bedroom Condos from $375 3 Bedroom Condos from $595 Call or come by today for our December Specials! The pay me i 1 start next we line student It the size c J added that brk out a p |e students Kg their pa Ted Hajovsl the student U handled a NORMANDY SQUARE %46 -S560 4Q3NAGI. E (amenities differ at each property) Professionally Managed by REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT OK AMERICA, INC. Ft The nurnbt Texas A&M L ||can tly, offi Texas A&IV jtudents has ir o780. Hispar ege Station ca Total enro 16,570, officia Grace B. Cl i&M, said th< [fease the m gma MSC CAFETERIA MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER-TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SPECIALS $o 89 MONDAY EVENING SALISBURY STEAK Mushroom Gravy, Whipped Potatoes, Choice of Vegetable M 11 Cornbroad, Butter TUESDAY EVENING MEXICAN FIESTA Two Cheese Enchiladas With Chili, Rice, Beans. Tostadas WEDNESDAY EVENING CHICKEN FRIED STEAK Cream Gravy. Whipped Potatoes. Choice ol Vegelabe Cornbread, Butter THURSDAY EVENING ITALIAN DINNER Spaghetti. Meatbalis, Sauce, Parmesan Cheese, Tossed $1# Hot Garlic Bread FRIDAY EVENING FRIED CATFISH Tartar Sauce. Cole Slaw, Hush Puppies. Choice ol Vegeub* SATURDAY NOON & EVENING YANKEE POT ROAST (Texas Stylo). Tossed Salad. Mashed Potatoes WGra*y l,t1 ' Cornbread. Butter SUNDAY NOON & EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce. Cornbread Dressing, Roll d® bread. Butler. Giblet Gravy, Choice ol Vegetable TEA OR COFFEE INCLUDED AT NO EXTRA CHARGE ON SPECIALS EVENING SPECIALS AVAILABLE 4 00 PM TO 7:00 PM DAILY MSC CAFETERIA OPEN 11:00 AM-1,30 PM AND 4 00 PM TO 7:00 PM 0AIL v "There’s bet able for By Rob Stai See little Joey ttlestar Galaci le Joey put raj. See little •‘small missiles While the nam :y, the acciden »lany Americ ired or killed harmful pla) the market; boxes, says B (fard M. Swa «ly released k,“Toys that wartz’s book ipaign for sa ents and othe ecially vigilan ■giving seaso igerous toys ely available, lowever, not ustry agrees v ody Levin, pr he Toy Make thinks Swartz ge of the toy ii “Quality First”