Page Tuesday • January 21,1! Balloonist sets records, fails to circle globe naacp SULTANPUR, India (AP) — Steve Fossett’s silver bal loon drifted down in to a field of mustard and wheat and the applause of hundreds of villagers — none of whom could communicate with the Chicago adventurer. It took a villager an hour’s walk on rain-ravaged roads to bring back a policeman who could speak English. Then Fossett was taken off to a nearby town, a curry dinner and bed — having failed to fly non stop around the world, but setting new records for distance and endurance in a balloon. “I had a little rough landing but the only problem I have is that I am way behind in sleeping.” Steve Fossett Balloonist “As I prepared to land, I saw hundreds of people. I did not know what to expect. But they were love ly people. They all cheered me,” Fossett said in an interview late Monday, appearing relaxed and jovial in running shoes, gray slacks and several days’ growth of beard. The 52-year-old securities trader set off in his Solo Spirit from St. Louis last week. After running out of fuel, he landed Monday at Piparpur, about 370 miles southeast of New Delhi, the capital. He was later brought to nearby Sultanpur to eat and sleep. “I had a little rough landing but the only problem I have is that I am way behind in sleeping,” Fossett said. He said he had only two hours of sleep a day. He traveled 9,000 miles and floated in the air for six days, two hours and 54 minutes, according to Fos sett’s ground crew in Chicago. Fossett said he struggled to keep his balloon over the Ganges River valley, which he considered a safe place to land. “Thunderstorms came and I was real worried be cause my balloon could have been pushed toward the Himalayas in Nepal and that would have been very difficult,” he said. The fuel problem that robbed him of a round-the- world feat remained unexplained. He had lifted off with an ample supply—700 gallons of propane fuel in tanks. “I have to have a closer look why it didn’t work,” he said in the interview at the police chief’s house in Sultanpur. Fossett burned up extra fuel waiting for Libya to give him clearance to fly over, spokesman Bo Kemper said, but that alone didn’t explain the fuel shortfall. Fossett planned to return to his landing site Tuesday to begin preparing to get his balloon back to the United States. The Smithsonian Institution wants to display the gondola at the Air and Space Museum in Washington. Fossett had hoped to become the first hot air bal loonist to travel around the world without stopping, but had to settle for breaking his own record for the longest distance traveled in a balloon and another record for staying aloft longer than any other balloonist. He also claimed an altitude record, but could not immediately say what height he reached or what the previous record was. Fossett matched a six-day, 16-minute balloon endurance mark about 11:30 a.m., then hovered at 500 to 1,000 feet, drifting with the winds for more than an hour. He eclipsed by several thousand miles his own world distance ballooning record, 5,435 miles trav eled on a 1995 flight from South Korea to Canada. Fossett conceded from the start that his chances of making it around the world were slim. Unlike other balloonists who had set out this month to try to float around the world, Fossett was flying solo, in an unpressurized cabin capped by a Plexiglas bubble. He endured bitter cold in his cramped cabin. For long stretches, temperatures hovered near zero while Fossett’s flight sets records Steve Fossett, a 52-year-old securities trader from Chicago, broke his own record for the longest distance traveled in a balloon, and another record for staying aloft longer than any other balloonist. He covered about 9,000 miles and floated in the air for six days, two hours and 54 minutes. Solo Spirit ) Began: | St. Louis, Jan. 13 l .-x ' rrxi* ..rr.' ...v HHE Ended: Prithviganj, India, Jan. 20 AP/Wm. J. Gastello he was flying too high for his heaters to work properly. Fossett had said he picked midwinter for the trip because of brisk winds and fewer thunderstorms. The high point of his adventure was crossing the Atlantic t)cean, he said. “It is very tricky because weather conditions can make you go in circles. I was relieved when I crossed the Atlantic.” Fossett failed his first round-the-world attempt a year ago, landing in a field in northeastern Canada. On Jan. 8, British tycoon Richard Branson’s balloon, Global Challenger, was forced down by equipment prob lems in the North African desert 19 hours after lifting off from Marrakech, Morocco, with three crew members. Four days later, Swiss psychiatrist Bertrand Pic card and his crew ditched in the Mediterranean af ter kerosene fumes filled their cockpit. They lasted six hours. Continued from Page 1 admissions or scholarships. Last year the A&M NAACP held a protest in the Flagri of the Memorial Student Center: participants wore all bk Wheatfall said the ’90’s movement is objection lo Hopwood decision, the removal of affirmative action Proposition 209 in California. “There’s always a cause to have an active voice,” Wh? fall said. “There is a cause for college students to fight fori ter education. The NAACP faces obstacles while trying to fightfor dividual’s rights. Two of the obstacles are the white males controlling the islation and the "red tape called the administration,”\Vtn fall said. The lack of empowerment and decisiveness of norities are other obstacles, he said. Wheatfall said at A&M, tradition can prohibit theNAil from achieving its goals. Tradition is found in every sect of society, he said, an: is important to continue traditions, but they can also ale ate some groups. “Whenever those traditions infringe exceedingly... rights of another group, it is time to alter those tradition! Wheatfall said. .a By Th Candidates f rticipated in < MU-TV stati< The purpos< the League s County, th gle and The ters of the coming elec The candidc •■Pan- r< lo: Fire Continued from Page 1 The A&M Critical Incident Re sponse Team contacted parents and notified the students’ professors of the situation, so they could help re place textbooks. Bill Thomas, director of the Amer ican Red Cross in Brazos County, said his biggest concern at the scene was to take care of the residents who had been evacuated, and to handle their immediate needs. Thomas said most of the stu dents remained calm and quiet, and carried themselves in a sub dued manner. “ft was a traumatic experience,” Thomas said. “They didn’t know the extent of the damages into their apartments.” Mies said he wants to stress to students the importance of keeping their fire detectors in working con dition. The fire detector in the Inauguration A&M has many small innuendoes of racism, hesakU one of the more prominent examples is the display off Confederate flag. Wheatfall said the NAACP wants groups to careaboutk offended parties feel, and then try to include them in traditio: At the last state NAACP conference in October, theAi ^ chapter was recognized as the largest chapter in Texas wi 65 members. Wheatfall said one of his goals, as president, is to increa; | membership in the A&M chapter and the state. “There is power in numbers,” Wheatfall said. “Onevoi; may be heard, but a thousand voices will definitely be heaif Herbert said the NAACP’s reputation is one of thereasoi The eight his she decided to join the group. "I joined the NAACP because it seemed like a dignifiedoi ganization to be a member of,” she said. “1 wanted tobelood and sister part of an organization on-campus that will respond.” i n the 1930’ Council was est can-controlled Congress so tli^ndfoursororit two could squabble and Continued from Page 1 Dave House, The Battalion A wreath and candles were placed near the unit that burned at Kensington Place Apartments on Saturday. ington Place Apartments, said the burned apartment was found in the closet with the batteries removed. “In that building, we found three other detectors with the batteries removed,” Mies said. Gail Armstrong, manager of Kens- residents have helped solve prob lems in the aftermath of the fire. “Everyone just pulled together like one big family,” Armstrong said, “ft’s re ally pulled everyone closer together.” “May [King’s] dream finally come true for all of us,” Graham prayed. Prior to the oaths, Virginian Eagle Scout David Morales led the Pledge of Allegiance, and the Children of the Gospel Mass Choir sang “Let’s Build a Bridge Across America.” Clinton took the podium as his wife and daughter looked on, and Chief Justice William Rehnquist ad ministered the oath of office, initi ating the final presidency of the 20th century. Proclaiming in “a moment that will define our course and charac ter for decades to come,” Clinton addressed the nation with a theme of unity. He reiterated that government should “do more, not less,” to grant all Americans the opportunity to build better lives. “Today, we can declare that gov ernment is not the problem, and government is not the solution ... Our Founders understood that,” Clinton said. The President said for the coun try to successfully enter the 21st Century, Americans must unite. “The divide of race has been America’s constant curse ...We shall overcome (it),” he said. Clinton then outlined his new vision of government. He includ ed such things as the information superhighway being made avail able to all, an improvement in school standards, the gradual transfer of the underclass to the middle class and creating a planet free from nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. He also stressed the importance of a balanced budget, health-care reform, a clean environment and an overhaul of special interest-ori ented politics. The President said the Ameri can people did not re-elect a De mocratic Presideqt and a Republi- hey must be “repairers of tl.! or, said the Nai breech,” Clinton said. Finally, in observation ofthehcl (leas and aim to iday, the president quoted Kir.: saying America should treat‘al Americans as equals before thela [anization, i.e. i and in the heart.” The journey of our America torn other Gre By 1 Jason Brewei Council was di “A lot of issue loncerned the r The Pan-He i ential applicai eview process :he University tie taken into must go on ... Let us build bridge to a blessed land of promise,” Clinton said. The Immanuel Baptist Cliu Choir and Orchestra performedfrieets these rei “The Battle Hymn of the a membership lie,” and poet laureate Mite First-semest Williams read his original poe rushPan-Hellei “Of History and Hope.” The poeitio not have a gi reflected on America’s past an pondered what is to come. “We mean to be the peoples meant to be,” he read. The Rev. 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