J- China Garden . ' Mon^Frt . 11 a,m. 2 i 4 9S CAN EAT! Sat. Sun,; 11;30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. 2901 S. Texas Ave. Bryan (Next to First National Bank) 823-2818 Page 12 The Battalion Friday, September 13,' Officials find recorders in eras! Frids Investigators retrieve 'black box' from tail section of aircraft Who what where when and why? STUDENT GOVERNMENT TEX/iS A&.M UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE APPLICATIONS ROOM 221 PAVILION DUE BY 5:00 PM SEPTEMBER 16 to become a part of BIG EVENT BLOOD DRIVE CENSUS & RESEARCH CONFERENCE ON STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATIONS (COSGA) ELECTION COMMISSION FRESHMAN PROGRAMS HIGH SCHOOL PUBLIC RELATIONS AND RECRUITMENT (HSPR2) LEGISLATIVE STUDY GROUP (LSG) MUSTER PARENTS' WEEKEND PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE (PIO) TRADITIONS COUNCIL UNITED WAY AND MANY OTHER SGA COMMITTEES EAGLE LAKE (AP) - Federal investigators on Thursday re moved the "black box" recorders from the wreckage of a twin-en gine Continental Express plane that crashed in a corn field, killing all 14 aboard. Continental Express released the names of 11 passengers and three crew members aboard Flight 2574, but the Harris County Medi cal Examiners officials continued work to identify positively the re mains Thursday. Tine dead included seven Mex ican nationals, a crew of three from the Houston area, and peo ple from Laredo, Texas; Sterling Heights, Mich.; Quito, Ecuador; and Phoenix, Ariz. The Mexicans included three young couples from Monterrey heading to Canada together for a vacation, said a spokeswoman in the Mexican Consulate in Hous ton. The other Mexican was a prominent social activist from Ciudad Juarez. The Brazilian-built Embraer 120 commuter plane was en route from Laredo to Houston's Inter continental Airport, crashed about 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, about 75 miles west of Houston, spewing wreckage over a four-mile stretch of southeast Texas farmland. Investigators from the Nation al Transportation Safety Board and six other agencies found the voice recorder and the flight data recorder in the tail section of the shattered aircraft just before noon Thursday. Though somewhat dented from the crash, the shoe-box-sized orange boxes "appear to be in fair ly good condition," said NTSB Chairman James L. Kolstad. "We really can't tell the conditions of the recording until we get inside." The voice recorder provides a taped record of cockpit conversa tions, while the flight data recorder records the aircraft's speed, altitude and other parame ters. The two boxes were shipped to the NTSB laboratory in Wash ington for read-outs and analysis, said NTSB spokesman Brent Bahler. "We may have some nary information from black hi Friday night," Bahler said. A new federal regulationtl goes into effect Oct. 11 requj that both boxes be in the tail off aircraft, Bahler said. "This aircraft was ahead schedule," Kolstad said. NTSB crews led investigate at the site from the FBI, Fede Me Aviation Administration,Con: foott O nental Airlines and its owned subsidiary. Continental! j^efor press; Empresa Brasileira deAei nautica SA, the plane manufadi er; Pratt & Whitney Canada,!: engine manufacturer; and the!i tional Air Traffic Controller Ass ciation, Bahler said. trage C alco Servi occui Chief exec, employees plead guilty to bank fraud ’Killer’ bees attack Texas map DALLAS (AP) — A former ex ecutive and three other employees for a failed Colorado City thrift have plead guilty charges of bank fraud and conspiracy, federal offi cials said. Neva C. Turner, the former chief executive officer of First Western Savings & Loan Associa tion, was charged Wednesday in Dallas with participating in a con spiracy to steal more than $500,000 for investment in the stock market. The indictment also names three former employees of the West Texas thrift. Katy Byrd, Roy Byrd and Mar ilyn Roberts were all charged with conspiracy. The defendants have reached plea bargain agreements with fed eral prosecutors and all have pleaded guilty, according to FBI Agent Oliver B. Revell. McALLEN (AP) - African ized honeybees attacked and stung a South Texas man more than 300 times in the first major at tack by the so-called "killer" bees in the United States, authorities said Thursday. Adan Garza, 65, was released Thursday afternoon from Mission Hospital, where he was treated for the stings, officials said. Garza was attacked Wednes day about 10 miles west of McAllen while clearing brush near an abandoned shack where the bees had built a hive, agriculture officials said. Preliminary tests conducted by the Animal and Plant Health In spection Service confirmed the hive was contaminated by Africanized bees. "This is the first severe inci dent," said Elba Quintero, manag er for the U.S. Department of Agri culture's Africanized honeybee project. "We have had three or four (small) incidents. But this is major." First American Bank’s 12th Man Checking Account is an Aggie tradi tion, created especially for students like you. The account has no mini mum balance re quirement and no monthly ser vice charge. There is a $1 fee per MPACT trans action and a $1 fee for each check written after the first 12 free checks per month. A $12 an nual fee is charged beginning with the second year the ac count is open. An initial $12 set-up fee and $100 opening deposit pro vide you with 200 Aggie checks and an MPACT® Auto matic Teller, card. Your first 12 checks per month are FREE! The 12th Man Checking Account gives you a great handle on your money, at a cost you can live with. Keep your money in the only bank located just across the street from the cam pus: First American Bank. $5 towards the purchase of a Texas A&M t-shirt of your choice at Loupot’s Book Store (pronounced Loo - poes), another Texas Aggie tradition. The 12th Man Checking Account: only from First American Bank. Open a 12th Man Checking Account and we’ll give you a certificate worth BANK UNIVERSITY CENTER 711 University Drive College Station, TX 409/846-8751 MAIN OFFICE till Briarcrest Drive Bryan, TX 409/268-7575 CONVENIENCE CENTER 1660 Briarcrest Drive Bryan, TX DOWNTOWN BRYAN 27th St. at Texas Avenue Bryan, TX SOUTH COLLEGE STATION Longmire Center 2202 Longmire Drive College Station, TX 409/764-1370 bees last May. The only fatal sting ing recorded in the Rio Grande Valley was a dog killed by the bees in July. The bees, often called killers because they attack in swarms and pursue prey for long distances, were first sighted in South Texas last October following a decades- long journey from Brazil. They have been spreading through the Americas since 1957, said. However, the bees are expe; ed to continue their spre: throughout the region, said Fra: Eischen, a scientist at theTei A&M Research and Extensic Center. "What we expect is thattel density ot the honeybee colori will go up, and that's primarii Lc drivi W the si If indui sobei due to the influx of Africanizli id. "Wll "When you have a higher density of bees, you have a higher probability of people running into them." Frank Eischen,scientist, Texas A&M Research and ExtensionCenter honeybees," Eischen said you have a m when African queen bees escaped from an experiment in Brazil and began breeding with more docile European bees. The Africanized bees are their descendants. density of bees,™ have a higher ptf: ability of peo:,.. running into I The bees beg| swarming again! ( the area this mq , • and will continlf, P through October,! , 11 1 " said. ip so But he added that hivesal Wei more dangerous than the swarc?Jfon't r A Brownsville man survived after being stung 18 times by the APHIS trappers on Thursday combed the area where Garza was attacked, but it was apparently clear of Africanized bees, Quintero because they have staked out ten ready 1 tory and are reproducing. fwe've ] "They have every reason: l['s tim defend that," Eischen sa:bh ern ii "They're like a homeownel y 0 c they're going to defend th-:| )arent . home." ■ , pea ted Well, tc mie thi Two more die as cholera spreads in Mexico City ■ler : • If Bier tol linothei unders actual! MEXICO CITY (AP) - Two people have died of cholera in Mexico City and more than 800 people nationwide have contract ed the disease, the Health Depart ment said Wednesday. The two who died — an adult and a 5-year-old child — were members of the same household in the Iztapalapa neighborhood on the eastern fringe of the city, de partment spokesman Eduardo Arvizu said. They died last week at home, Arvizu said. He said 22 cases have been confirmed in four different city neighborhoods — Iztapalapa, Xochimilco, Tlahuac and Iztacalco. Another 20 suspected cases are under observation in those neigh borhoods which lie on the south and east edges of the city. Arvizu said health officials have not discovered any common thread linking the Mexico City vic tims, most of whom were people of modest means. "The cases are very dis persed," he said. "If anything, the common denominator was poor , „ Blse I Si hygiene. ■ ,. He said health officials wem 01 ^ )e interviewing victims and thfl* 16 v n ° l families and neighbors, searchi;| * p l for the source of infection. K— yes, "We're not standing in t:|ixpresj doors of the hospitals waitingffflack. I sick people to show up,” hesaic|v\'ouldi Cholera has spread to ninei] • \ ferent states and Mexico City 2%^ pa sickened 808 people since it w; §[1'^ discovered in Mexico thrf| 7 months ago, Arvizu said. |P 0 . j 1 The worst hit states are ^ go, with 392 cases, and Pueblii* 6 "/ ^ with 185, he said. * Lt Arvizu said health officialsafound i confident cholera can be corlknow t trolled in Mexico City becausef!with ki the availability of health care fadll n( j ^ ities. Jferyday "People are close to hospita ', jS and attention can be very fast Kir ^ don't see it as very dangeroiiL., 1 here," he said. "There is a chawr^ ^ 8 of responding rapidly in the city 1°° f” 0 } The Western hemisphere's fc| as hue cholera epidemic of the centurjAggies began in January in Peru. *Won't t More than 2,500 people havi died in Latin America fre disease this year. Texas girls die from exhaust system fumes YAKIMA, Wash. (AP) - Tior- ivio and Angela Mancillos bought an old truck recently so the farm workers could take their four daughters back to Pharr, Texas, to begin school. Now they have to find the money to send three of them home for burial. A defective exhaust system ap parently caused the carbon monoxide poisoning deaths of three of the girls this week. A fourth remains at Children's Hos pital in Seattle. "I'm hoping the truck and the camper were sold unknowingly with this problem," said Maggie Cuellar-Lopez, a friend who has given the family shelter in a sub urban Seattle home. "They are just taking it step by step," Cuellar-Lopez said. "She tends to cry a lot and let a little bit out. He is holding everything in." The family lived each summer in Lynden, about 90 miles north of Seattle, and had finished harvest ing berries and cucumbers in that area. They were heading back to their home in Pharr so the girls Nov simplei • In [ jbr bioc ed yoi your pi extra pi • In p ever you. a • In could begin the school year, Cue! k e p esi lar-Lopez said. They stopped near Cle Eluu i , . T4-4-Q Q LU /*» (ml' along Interstate 90, and thefom girls were found unconscious it the truck camper. They apparently asphyxiated when carbon monoxide fume! from the 15-year-old truck leaked into the camper, Cuellar-Lopez said. The Kittitas County coronei is still investigating and hasnol determined the cause of death. One girl was dead at the scene One died at a hospital in Yakima A third, 11-year-old Sylvia, died Wednesday at Children's Hospital in Seattle. Yadira Mancillos, 14, remained in satisfactory condition into kink al ellect a Vvill see It is to Exi ma hospital, spokeswoman Susan pusdu Macek said. She is suffering mem ory loss, and does not know aboiii his sisters' deaths, Cuellar-Lopez said. The other victims were identi fied as Arangelica, 13, and Maria del Rosario, 10. The parents and an 18-year-old pining son were riding in the front were not hurt. The family had left the Belling- I Erankh Nee 0 I ha °f fact, kon! But table a