You've taken the MCAT. Have you explored all your options? When it comes to health care, Scholl College of Podiatric Medicine Offers you a rewarding choice. For a free CD-ROM about Scholl College and your opportunities as a Doctor of Podiatric Medicine Page 8 » Thursday, November 11.1999 w ORLD Plane crashes, 18 kille K I FR I LJ 1^ SERIES Call 1-800-843-3059 or admiss@scholl.edu Visit our website at www.scholl.edu John D. Huntley Class of '79 313B South College Ave., College Station, TX 77840 (409) 846-8916 An authorized TAG Heuer dealer. GUYS - YOU'LL BE A BIG HIT AT ALL THE PARTIES IF YOU GET REALLY DRUNK AND ACT STUPID. WHATEVER. YOU VE COT MORE COIN6 FOR YOU THAN THAT, ACS!! THU If COLLEGE. BE YOUR/ELF. i Student Life Alcohol and Drug Education Programs floCIlt 222 Beutel Health Center (409) 845-0280 adep@stulife2.tamu.edu ^0 You can request an ADEP presentation at http://stulife.tamu.edu/adep I ...a parr of the Division of Student Affairs TZARARACUA, Mexico (AP) — A DC-9 jetliner fell from the sky in central Mexico, killing all 18 people on board shortly after most of its passengers had disem barked. Aviation investigators said yesterday they had recovered the “black box” flight recorders. “This is the most important thing of all,” Andres Perez Zentella, Mexico’s chief of aviation security, said of the flight recorders for Taesa Flight 725. Dozens of investigators, soldiers and police were searching the avocado field where jagged chunks of the plane had fallen, hoping to find clues on what brought the plane down. The flight took off Tuesday from the western border city of Tijuana with 91 passengers aboard. After stop ping in Guadalajara and Uruapan, it was carrying just 13 passengers and five crew members as it headed to Mexico City, 180 miles to the east. One minute after the plane left Uruapan, the pilot ra dioed controllers to declare an emergency, according to Agustin Arellano Rodriguez, director of the state’s Nav igation Services in Mexican Airspace. “We did not have any more contact,” he said by telephone. “We never knew what the type of emer gency was.” Accounts of the crash varied. Witnesses said they saw a brilliant light in the sky and the debris fall to the mountains six miles southwest of Uruapan, inspector Juan Alfonso Lara of the Mi- choacan state civil protection agency, said. Agustin Gutierrez, Taesa’s manager in Michoacan, said the plane nose-dived before crashing into the avocado planta tion. The planta tion caretaker, Felipe Guzman, told the state news agency, 200fnile9 Notimex, that —■■■ the rear of the 200km plane was on fire as it hit the ground and exploded. “After that, there were! explosions,” he said. Taesa spokesperson Eduardo Cacho conference the airline was not aware ofanys nance problems. He also said he had noinfoi about communications between the crewj flight control tower. Because it was a domestic flight, the airlinej record the nationalities of the passengers. In the Mexico City airport TUesday night,nyj atives were led into a hangar where airline off fered to take them to Uruapan. Uruapan, a city of 250,000 dating backtotfl century, is known for its avocado pnJ Tourists frequently stay there when visiting: ^ V Tesnr icutin volcano, 20 miles to the west. Aggies’ 2-1 Barak keeps promise to PalestiniarNo. JERUSALEM (AP) — Forced to choose between Jewish settlers and Palestinian demands. Prime Minister Ehud Barak kept Israel’s commit ment to the Palestinians yesterday, approving a troop pullback from 5 percent of the West Bank and send ing soldiers to drag Jews off an ille gal hilltop encampment. The land handover, to take place Monday, will leave a smat tering of West Bank settlements isolated and surrounded by Pales tinian-controlled territory — set ting the stage for more tensions. Barak has spent his four months in office making good on promises to revive the peace process, while reassuring Jewish settlers that he sympathizes with their mission to reclaim biblical lands. Palestinian and settler claims to the same rocky hills seemed im creasingly irreconcilable, however, and scenes televised yesterday of soldiers holding red-faced settlers in headlocks could be a glimpse into the future. Soldiers moved in on Havat Maon as light crept from Israel’s coast over its plains and up the West Bank’s layered hills. Settlers climbed on rooftops, clung to door frames and flung themselves to the ground, making it harder for the unarmed troops to forcibly evacuate them. “We’ll be back! ” the settlers shout ed as they were driven away in buses. The strongest resistance came from settlers holed up in a makeshift wooden synagogue. BY Israeli control ; Palestinian/ Israeli control I Palestinian control Tulkarem ! 2% land to be given to Palestinians Tel Aviv* Mediterranean Sea •v ll ^ lte the top ¥ the Bay A&M Vi '< straighi WesiBff. match, in front W lie Wh M Wit ISRAEL 0 4 Big *5er|0)ily U Big 12 iHtfc Gaza Gaza Strip Havat Maon The quirin Horn blocke reer hi her int in kill also rt Your Site for Digital Audio, Free Audio Software and Other Things to Stick in Your Ear. re 10 .cscam Tfte UJoi'ld i/% JLi/%tcamia*g