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Informational Meeting by NSEP Representative Friday 16 November ( 1 1 am-12noon) Room 358 — Bizzell Hall West Scholarships arc for study in summer '02, fall *02 and/or spring *03 For more information, contact your NSEP campus representative: ^^^IO»tl^ecn^durm^^3miiumi^(jjt)ipomaU^tam^edu^^^^ MC Foodmart Texaco © 815 Texas Ave. (Next to Red Lobster) Fille Featuring Pay at the Pump Texac- - — r D t s G e r S-b^® Be er Parrot Ice s De Bice c iais JIVeW ®Wnerg}lij> <5 J#ff ‘Deft !£ x duress re °**er s ^ rea ^fast Coldest BEER in Town! Believe it or Not You are a Senior go get your picture in the yearbook Class of 2002 Don't miss your chance to be in the 2002 Aggieland year book. Get your FREE Senior picture taken at AR Photography. No appointment needed. Visit AR Photography at 1410 Texas Ave. South or call 693-8183. Open M-F 9-11:30, 1:30-4. AGGIELAND Texas A&M University Yearbook *100 Years of Excellence Nation Page 6B THE BATTALION Thursday, Novemberli 587 airborn less than 2 minute irsday, F NEW YORK (AP) — Investigators raised the possibility Wednesday that turbulence from the wake of a 747 led to the crash of American Flight 587, saying the doomed plane took off less than the standard two minutes after the jumbo jet. “We do not know whether this contributed in any way to the actual accident, but we are looking at this very closely,” said Marion Blakey, chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board. Wake turbulence, the swirl of air behind a plane, can endanger planes flying too close behind or below. The phenomenon has been blamed for at least one deadly crash in the past. Investigators want to know whether it caused Flight 587 to break apart three minutes after takeoff from Kennedy Airport on Monday, killing all 260 people aboard and as many as five on the ground. The plane’s tail assembly sheared away and its twin engines fell off as the jet went down. Standard protocol says there should be at least two minutes between takeoffs. However, Blakey said it appeared there was less than that between Flight 587, an Airbus A300, and a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 that left ahead of it from the same runway. “We believe that in fact it was one minute and 45 seconds,” Blakey said. She said it appears air traffic controllers followed proper proce dure, and that tower clearances for the two takeoffs came two min utes and 20 seconds apart. But investigators believe there was a delay from the time Japan Air Lines got clearance to take off and the time it actually did so, NTSB spokesman Ted Lopatkiewicz said. Pointing to a map of the two planes’ flight paths, Blakey noted that although the jumbo jet’s path was 800 feet above Flight 587’s, the winds probably pushed the turbulence lower. The cockpit voice recorder from Flight 587’s final minutes revealed two rattling noises and indicated the pilots complained about the wake of another plane before their aircraft went down. Walter Sheriff, a retired American Airlines captain who studies the phenomenon, said the wake turbulence from the four-engine 747 could have struck the Airbus with “tomado-like lateral force.” The Federal Aviation Administration has set minimum distances for planes flying near each other, based on aircraft size. After a 1992 crash in Billings, Mont., that killed eight people, federal investiga tors found that the pilot failed to follow the established “vortex avoidance procedure” and fiew too close to a jet. Blakey, at a news conference, also said that Flight 587’s other black box — its flight data recorder — was repaired by the manu- Piece of the puzzle Not long after American Airlines 587 crashed in New York the Airbus A300’s 27-foot tail fin was fished out of Jamaica Investigators are working to discover what role the tail and breakage played in the catastrophe. A carbon fiber skeleton strengthens the tail and anchors it to the fuselage. The tail is designed to flex from side to side, but A300tai assemh 1 whether lateral force could snap it off is unclear. s the ball s close stability while-jopc for Tex. rudder controlsByearly m Horizontal stabilizers control thepu lift, working in concert with the rudder banking mechanisms in the wings A critical loss If the tail snapped off in a turn - when the force exerted on- greatest - the aircraft would be critically imbalanced. At low a*: the pilot would have almost no time to compensate. SOURCES: "Modem Commercial Aircraft"; Embry-Riddle Aeronautical L facturer, allowing investigators to extract data on the last mil the doomed flight. The recorder had been scorched and baas in the crash. Both of the plane's engines have been recovered and lake; hangar at Kennedy. Authorities have not ruled out sabotage or other causesbui said all signs point to a mechanical failure. ■eve a win toftghorns ta II winning ■back on t Bom ably c i H of rivalr i Bsh more c Mm. ■t is fair to ■a values ■1. the Agg ■rs. UT de ■places me Be with th< Bahoma. ar 01 has focus filing Nebrs Bonsidered Bis, and A6 Id of a nev\ The beaut] llry is that prd of eith re is a larg IFREEUP1 your wireless Get the wireless phone, price, features and technology you want. lived and i\ matter m turn’s fin ■ramal ct ks^rness and »with a 1 klVeBvg II i terms c Jood for th fit of sport tier a fain Ice. 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