University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 2, 1986 5 Crash Continued from p. 1 he said investigators had not yet determined whether it was working properly. "If it was working they should have been able to see it on the screen." Lauber said. He did not say whether it has been determined if the plane was visible on radar screens. Lauber said information indicated that the Piper's pilot was not in voice contact with air traffic controllers as he should have been. NTSB spokesman Ira Furman said investigators had determined that the collision killed none of flight 408's passengers and crew. Investigators said it took between 20 and 60 seconds for the let to hit the ground Furman said the airliner's "black box" flight recorder, containing a recording of the flight deck conversation, was to be flown to Washington yesterday and reviewed by experts today. It was found in a back vard. A passenger list released by Aeromexico indicated that 36 of the 58 travelers aboard the plane were U.S. citizens. There also was one Colombian and one Salvadoran. The rest of the passengers, as well as all six crew members, were listed as Mexican citizens, some of whom lived in the United States. Most of the bodies were removed by daybreak, but Gold said rescue workers were taking care in picking up the remains of the passengers in hopes of expediting identification. "You might have a wallet near a man's body and a handbag near a woman's body. We're being careful about moving things until we've had a chance to examine the connections," he said. About 20 families spent the night in a shelter set up at Cerritos High School. Most of them, Wright said, "cannot return to their homes because the FAA has the area cordoned off." "Security is tight around the area," he said. "At that point this is where we're having people go for shelter and other social services. We're having families come in there to confirm whether relatives were on the plane." Gary Mucho, head of the NTSB's Los Angeles office, said the Piper took off from the airport at Torrance, Calif., at 11 a.m. Sunday, bound for Big Bear, Calif., under visual flight rules on a day when visibility extended 14 miles. It struck the underside of the DC-9 between 11:56 and 11:57 a.m., as the airline was descending from 7,000 to 6,000 feet before landing at Los Angeles International Airport 20 miles away. Mucho said the impact sheared away 10 to 18 feet of the DC9's horizontal stabilizer and some of its vertical stabilizer. We're in the racket for restringing. Take your swing with our popular name brand rackets, multi-accessories too. Monday thru Saturday 9-5-30 Thursday till 8:30 Welcome to our team, we're up to your game! ROLL OUT THE BARREL Every Tuesday and Thursday Refill Your "HAWK" Glass ONLY $1.00 1:30 p.m.-Close It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO OPEN EARLY OPEN LATE. KINKO'S business day starts early and ends late, so we're here when you need us most! 904 VERMONT 843-8019 12th & INDIANA 841-6177 23rd & IOWA 749-5392 kinko's Divestment NATIONWIDE NETWORK OF ELECTRONIC PRINTSHORE Copies • Reproductions • Enlargements • Passage Photo • Binding • And much more Continued from p. 1 nation. He said that sanctions had to originate from the federal government to be effective and that he had written President Reagan and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum last month urging a national policy. No response has been given yet, he said. Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said the association will keep its holdings in South Africa. "We still follow the ruling of the present state attorney general that we can don't vent in order to bring about social change," Seymour said. Because of that ruling, he said, a governor's sanctions against apartheid couldn't pressure the Endowment Association to change its policies. Both candidates in the gubernatorial election in Kansas say they favor sanctions against the Pretoria government. "Constructive engagement is clearly a failed policy," said LL Gov. Tom Docking, and Democratic candidate for governor. "Apartheid is appalling in a modern society, and we should take every step possible to abolish it." Mike Hayden also is in favor of a wheat embargo against South Africa, Kelley Hayden said. HOW TO GET BLOOMING FLOWER "Grain embarges hurt farmers without having any effect on South Africa." Docking said. However, Docking disagrees. James Drury, KU professor of political science, said the governor mostly had informal influence. The governor can appoint people to the different investment boards, but he has to wait for openings. For instance, the trustees on the KPERS board serve overlapping four-year terms. Two terms will expire in 1987, two in 1988, two in 1989 and one in 1990. Larry Childs, a marketing specialist in the Kansas Department of Agriculture, said private companies in the United States had shipped 16,587,000 metric tons of wheat to South Africa in 1985. "It's kids talking to kids," Courtney said. "I tell them that I'm no psychologist. I'm not, nothing. I just a kid." United States, entertaining students and talking to them about drugs and peer pressure. Singer In his senior year in high school, Courtney joined the Parents Resource Institute for Drug Education. Continued from p. "If they have a conference, they send me and four others to sing." Courtnev said. Because members come from all over the country, the group's music director sends a practice tape to each member. They then rehearse together for one day before performing. The group also teaches dance routines to students and lets them perform. Courtney said teaching high school students to sing and dance was another way to convince them that there was more to life than drugs. "I tell them I get high off of singing and dancing," Courtney said. Courtney said he thought that talking informally to high school students about drugs did more good than taking a clinical approach. "They hate that," he said. "That's all they hear in health class when they're in 10th grade — 14 million people die." He said he thought that famous people such as Nancy Reagan impressed teen-agers when they spoke out against drugs. At the national convention in Atlanta two years ago, Nancy Reagan received a standing ovation. "These kids had never seen the first lady before," he said. "She's someone they can look up to." Courtney, a broadcast sales major, also studies voice at KU. He wants a career in singing but knows that few people make it in the entertainment industry. "But you never know who's watching at a show," he said. Steve Courtney, Overland Park sophomore, has sung before first lady Nancy Reagan three times. He is scheduled to sing before her and President Reagan this month at a state dinner in Washington to promote awareness for drug abuse. FINALLY A FREE FLIGHT PLAN JUST FOR STUDENTS. YOU WON'T GET A BREAK LIKE THIS ONCE YOU'RE OUT IN THE REAL WORLD. INTRODUCING COLLEGIATE FLIGHTBANK, FROM CONTINENTAL AND NEW YORK AIR. If you're a full-time student at an accredited college or university you can join our Collegiate FlightBank. $M$ You'll receive a membership card and number that will allow you to get 10% off Continental and New York Air's already low fares. In addition, you'll get a one-time certificate good for $25 off any domestic roundtrip flight. Plus, you'll be able to earn trips to places like Florida, Denver, Los Angeles, even London and the South Pacific. Because every time you fly you'll earn mileage towards a free trip. 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