Wednesday, October 12, 1C33 1 .' il H I"! .'V " ' i - Mr I I! 'T f ICS" i ? i lr t ! I c L I . f t H0RSEPEATHERSV7.CS j EVERY WEDS. HITS' I A c Cousteau, crewsst 'sail' in cylinder-run boat PARIS Underwater explorer Jacques-Yves Cousteau sets off for the United States tocby to prow that a revolutionary wind-powered vessel lacking any sails or motor can soil 'the Atlantic. A spokesman for the Cousteau Foundation said the 42-ton catamaran Moulin a Vent will leave from Tankers at sunset today for a voyage that the vete ran 72-year-old explorer hopes will revolutionize sea transport Cousteau and his five-man crew hope to make the crossing in about a month, predicting an arrival in New York between Nov. 5 and 15, the spokesman said. The Moulin a Vent is powered by a 44-foot cylinder mounted on the deck instead of conventional sails. A wind-driven propeller at the top sucks air through perforated windows and propels the craft by deflecting the air current. Cousteau maintains that the revolutionary pro pulsion system has practical, energy-saving applica tions for sea transport. He thinks a cylinder equipped ship which also has conventional power could save up to 35 percent in fuel ...... Wind tunnel tests have shown that an 800-ton ship equipped with two "Aerolian" cylinders could sustain 15 knots in a 24-knot crosswind, Cousteau said. "We are convinced that the fixed cylinder wind boat has important and immediate commercial applications. It would be fairly simple to convert any ship to mixed propulsion by equipping it with one or more cylinders," he said. France has helped subsidize the $1 million pro ject, and Cousteau says he eventually will replace his conventional powered research ship Calypso with one employing the new system. The TT 0 Harmon Kardon Receivers from $248 . Turntables from $198 Cassette Decks from $268 . - r r Timers at $198 ; Integrated Amplifiers at $198 Here at The Sound Environ ment, were pleased to announce the arrival this very week of the popular Harmon Kardon line of stereo components. Representing high performance at everyday prices, Harmon Kardon is now ready for you to audition. Just Ariivad! : ' rn TP . ' TT T 1 1 I - T i 1 1 Come in and see and hear the tremendous variety we have &r "you in the Harmon Kardon - vss pixduaf;.chooefomttirn ' i (f tables, receivers, cassette ' '- amps. Most products are represented in several model choices and prices. 7m"'''rT2',-:.- wb doht mean to imply m - t. fL. that Harmon Kardon com ponents literally go right out as quickly as they come in... still, we have had many .inquiries about this popular line and have presold several components prior to their arrival on Monday. And we believe that once you in-, vestiate the Harmon Kardcn value, you won't be happy until we pack up a whole system and cend it home with you. r S fef -j e4 i. . - ,j tl Li o 2710So.70thSt. 4334511 GecretcwriFkra National and international nsws frcra the Rcutcr News Report Iran: Western winter may be Very cold' TEHRAN Iran, renewing a threat to does the Pershn Gulf U Iraq disrupts its cli experts, Tucsdsy wexned that Western nations coul J face "a very cold winter. rarlbrncntnry Speaker All Akbsr Hushemi K:.r.u-r.;r,i sal J Iran h sticldng by its curlier decision to block the Strait of Hcrnuiz nt the Galf entrance if Iraq or any other power interrupted Iranian oil shipments. Rafsaiysni's sttenient, carried by Tehran radio, came rJlcr a nieetbg llonday rJ.ht of Iran's Supreme Defense Council, which he said discussed reports that five French warplanes, purchased by Iraq, had arrived in that country. About one-sixth of the non-Communist world's oil conies from the Gulf. Panic buying hits Israel TEL AVIV Israelis Monday emptied supermarket shelves in panic buying of basic food3 after the new government of Prime Minis ter Yitzhak Shamir announced it b slashing subsidies on bread, milk and other items today. Gasoline stations ran out of fuel and were forced to shut down after motorists hurried to fill their tanks before an announced 23 percent price increase. "I don't quite know what I'm buying, I'm just taking whatever I can," one grocery store cus tomer said. Some stores were so crowded that . shoppers could not push through the doors. Soviet threats worry U.S. WASHINGTON US. officials Tuesday ex pressed concern over fresh Soviet threats to break off nuclear arms control talks. As the White House urged Moscow to continue the talks in Geneva, a UJ5. arms control oClcial said he found the new Soviet walkout threat more the belligerency of their tone." He said this is especially true of a Soviet threat to break off talks on intermediate-rane nuclear forces (INF) irt Europe, but that Moscow seems more likely to toughen its negotiating stand at the separate Strategic Arms Reduction Talks rather than walking out of that meeting as welL U.S. officials said the latest threat wa3 made at the INF talks, and the Soviet delegates told their U.S. counterparts they would let them know today how much longer Moscow wants to continue the current round, which begin Sept 6. , 'v-. Court rejects Hiss appeal ; WASHINGTON The Supreme Court Turn- day rejected without comment an appeal from' ; Alger Hiss, who was convicted of perjury in a highly publicized spy trial 33 years ago. libs,' -who' is 73 and lives in New York City, spent nearly four years in prison and became a sym bol of America's preoccupation with Ccramu nist infiltrators in the early 1950s. Hie farmer State Department official was accused cf steal ing sensitive documents in the ICCOs and giv ing them to a former member of the Commu nist Party for relating to-the. Soviet Union. He was found guilty of perjury in 1ZQ. Hiss has mounted Ruraerci3 legal pampfjgnjs tb try to clear hhname .'Hams nc4 immediately avail able for comment on Tuesday's actioa Ice crubliea Soviet ship; ; MOSCOW sSrcf cla Soviet freighter, trapped in frozen seas north cf Siberia had to be rescued by helicopter as the pressure of the ice crushed th e v-sel's hull causing it to sink, the governz.;w;t x!I!'7;Iircrtia said Tuesday. The 45 crewmen c I,l:a Sagaidak arrived in Uladivcstc?: I rzz j, lrr::;iln said. A further , 14 cut cf 40 th!3 rrartcd Monday to to sit- " t i f ' 5 r r. -- - i - km A A -v. 1 , Tha extreme ccld that hij caught ships I rL:g- -; ing goods to isolated towns along the northern ' Siberian coast is the worst in 40 years, experts ' :; BurmecepoMc3:ldIlKor.ean'r : RANGOON Dunacae pcliee have l!ed" cr.e Korean terrcrirt, cepturcd ar.'.thrr and V' are secldr.g a third aTter Sunday's tcr.b blast in which fsur South Ilcrtn mr.lstsrs and 15 ether people died, the gsvsrnmcnt a-r.c '-.ieci Tuesday night It gavero percer.al detail cf the "crcs:.3 did net z:y Esther they carr.2 frcm I.'crth cr Ssuth Her; e. ' if