NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 14, 1996 - 7A Scordings found in India plane collision CHARKHI DADR , India (AP) - As a Kazak cargo plane flew head-on toward a Saudi jetliner, controllers told its pilot to watch out for the 747 in the clouds ahead. The pilot asked how close it was. "Fourteen miles." a controller said. Seconds later:"Thirteen miles" The pilot's acknowledgement of that message was the last word New elhi airport flight controllers had rom either aircraft before they hit and spun to earth in spectacular twin fireballs, taking 349 people to their deaths. The exchanges, in transcripts released yesterday, indicate the planes did not see each other in time and hint that the pilots were misled by their instruments or mis- understood the tower's directions. They were supposed to pass with a 1,000-foot 1ifference in altitude -- instructions that ihe Saudi plane's pilots never confirmed, the transcripts show. The Saudi Boeing 747 was seven minutes into its flight and the Kazak plane was descending for its final approach into Indira Gandhi International Airport when the collision occurred Tuesday about 60 miles south- west of New Delhi. Whether there was a last-minute eva- ive maneuver by either plane was *nclear, but India's top civil aviation rministry official said the crash was not direct. "It was not a head-on collision," DIVERSITY Continued from Page 1A impressed by the panelists and their grasp of the issue. "I liked that Dr. Dyson and Dr. Takaki provided the more global vision that really is a part of diversity," said Education doctoral student Michael Dumas. The conference, titled, "Diversity - The Way Things Are... The Way Things Can Be," broke its talk halfway through to allow university groups across the nation to hold discussions. Students divided into groups led by facilitators to react to the conference and talk with each other about diversity at the University. The discussions began with exercises to get students to open up about their views. Students said the local discussion made them think about diverse views. "When you talk about it, you relate to how other people think and you stretch yourself," said Nursing junior Amy Stewart. "We have so many things in common - we all want to be respected." The videoconference continued with panel discussions on how to promote more diverse campuses across the coun- try. They said a continuance of educa- tion about different cultures would fur- ther understanding of diversity at uni- versities. The student panelists said a need exists for more student activism. Facilitators said they were pleased with the conference though the atten- dence was smaller than expected. "Quality is more important than quantity," said Jeff Howard, director of the Office of Community Service Learning. "The quality of the telecon- ference and the quality of discussion was really high caliber." AP PHOTO A firefighter sprays water yesterday over the smouldering debris of the Saudi jumbo Jet that collided in mid-air with a Kazak airliner cargo plane Tuesday. Yogesh Chandra said at a news con- ference. "The cockpit and fuselage of the Kazak airliner was found intact." Searchers retrieved hundreds of bodies from wreckage strewn in a six- mile area around Charkhi Dadri. Grieving relatives tried to identify the badly mangled remains of their loved ones lying on blocks of ice at. makeshift morgues. Many of the victims of the Saudi Airlines flight that carried 312 pas- sengers and crew apparently were Indian workers returning to jobs in the Middle East or making the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca; the Kazak plane carrying 37 people had been chartered by a clothing company in Kazakstan. A weeping Irene Colaso said she identified her 20-year-old daughter Sanim, a flight attendant on the Saudi plane, by her feet - the rest of her body was burned beyond recognition. Searchers found the flight data recorders of both planes yesterday but only the cockpit voice recorder of the Kazak plane. The recordings were not made public immediately. But flight control transcripts showed that the airport tower instructing the Kazak plane to fly at 15,000 feet and the Saudi plane, which was ascending, to level off at 14,000 feet. The Saudi plane never acknowledged the order to hold its altitude. The tower then tells the Kazak plane's pilot that the Saudi aircraft is 14 miles away: "Identified traffic 12 o'clock reci- procal. Saudi Boeing 747, 14 miles. Report in sight." The Kazak pilot replied: "Report how many miles? "Fourteen miles now," the tower said. HOMEWORK HELPER Pickup 4th grade boy 2-4 afternoons/wk. Help w/ schoolwork, play 3:20-5:30 or 6. West side A2. Days: 764-3292 Eves.: 747-7021 E-mail: mevans@umich.edu. OVERNIGHT CHILDCARE for eleven yr. old boy while mom is on call. 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