The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 1, 1979-Page 7 SAYS PURSELL BEATABLE IN 1980 Bullard mayrun for Congress THE WESTERN AIRLINES DC-10 crash left a trail of debris yesterday on top of a slum area about a quarter mile from Mexico City Airport. The FAA and other officials have begun investigations to determine the cause of the crash. DC-l1i Continued from Page 1) "confirm that the pilot was authorized to use runway No. 23-Right, which is in use. " In Los Angeles, Western Vice President Ray Silvius said it still wasn't known if the pilot "was attempting to :land on the wrong runway, or was just over there. We have no confirmation yet.", THE PLANE careened out of control, first striking a construction building and then an Eastern Airlines main- tenance building, the Mexican statement said. One of the DC-10's three turbines came to rest intact near a fence about 900 feet from the rest of the wreckage near a slum housing area, witnesses }said. The ground near the crash was strewn with pieces of the wreckage. Mangled bodies were recovered as far .away as 100 feet from the building which the plane finally hit. tapes exio "AROUND THREE or four minutes before we were landing, there was a lot of fog around the place and the airplane sort of rattled up a bit and about a half a minute later, it just went flat," said Pedro Jose Ruiz, a surviving passenger who said he escaped by jumping from a gaping hole near the wing. "Inside the plane there was a lot of fire and a lot of dead people. .. The seats were right on top of one another and the plane was cracked open," he said. McDonnell Douglas sent its own team of investigators from its Long Beach, Calif., assembly facility, to aid in the crash investigation. McDonnell Douglas spokesman Harry Calkins said top engineers and technicians met "to pool their information and decide on the form our investigation will take." He said there was no information available on the cause of the crash. IN LOS ANGELES, Linda Dozier, aiminedi director of public relations for Western Airlines, said the plane was a substitute for another DC-10 scheduled for Flight 605 which was grounded for routine maintenance. The airport is located on Mexico City's outskirts, where there is a population of more than one million in an immediate 20-square block area. The airport was closed for about four hours after the 6:40 a.m. crash. Flights resumed in late morning. Manuel Bustamante, a spokesman for the Mexican Civil Aviation Ad- ministration, refused to speculate on the cause of the crash. Airport control tower operators would not talk to repor- ters. Two other DC-10 jetliners developed engine problems shortly after takeoff from West Coast airports within a 24- hour period and both turned back- and landed safely, officials said. (Continued from Page 1 yes," he said. Bullard's statement sounded closer to a campaign announcement than any of his previous non-committal declarations, but it did not come as a surprise to many local Democrats. Perceived as a viable contender, the Ann Arbor representative's name has come up often in the rumor mill surrounding next year's contest. Councilwoman Susan Greenberg (D- First Ward) is one of those who have heard recent rumblings about a poten- tial Bullard candidacy. "I HAVE HEARD people talking about Perry, and how he would be a good candidate for the party. I think he'll run now that Kennedy has declared," said Greenberg. The Kennedy factor is a key one because if he were to win the Democratic nomination, many party observers believe more Democrats would turn up at the polls. And only with a higher voter turnout, many Democrats - including Bullard - believe, can a Democratic candidate hope to unseat the popular Pursell. "It's very important how area Democrats perceive the party's chan- ces nationally in 1980. If people think it will be a Democratic year, then I think my chances would improve. And with Kennedy as the nominee, so would the chances of the Democratic party in 1980," Bullard said. IN ADDITION to the local view of the presidential contest, the state represen- tative said it is also important how he is seen in the eyes of local voters. To determine the district's perception of Bullard, who has served almost seven tears in Lansing, and his platform, he said his staff has prepared a question- naire for voters in Washtenaw, Livonia, and Monroe Counties, which make up the Second Congressional District. The survey results will be a major factor in determining whether he will run against Pursell in 1980, Bullard said. Another key factor - as is usual in most campaigns - is money. Bullard said he has been talking with a lot of local Democrats to evaluate his chan- ces and to speculate whether he could raise enough cash to wage a strong district-wide campaign. WHILE HE WENT to great pains to stress he is still only "considering" running for Congress, Bullard did make it clear he could beat the incumbent. "If you take a look and see how close it was in 1976 - when Pursell beat Democrat Ed Pierce by only 236 votes - you realize that this man is far from unbeatable. And I think I can beat him," said Bullard. Greenberg, however, offered a more cautious appraisal of the 37-year-old Bullard's prospects. "HE'L L DO well in Washtenaw Coun- ty, but I have no feeling about how well he would do in Livonia and Monroe counties," she said. Those two counties contain more Republican voters and pushed Pursell over the top in 1976. v v ,,,r Guest Lecturer LINWOOD DUNN Academy Award-winning Linwood G. Dunn (ASC), who worked on KING KONG and was the man who introduced Orson Welles to the Optical Printer (opening to him the enormous range of effects that could be achieved in Citizen Kane after its principal photography had been completed), and among whose major film credits are West Side Story, Airport, Star Trek, It's A Mod, Mad, Mad, Mad World, will present his "magic" 3-hour film- lecture, "SPECIAL EFFECTS in the Cinema." Admission $2.50 CINEMA GUV LD TONIGHT at 8:00 Old Arch. Aud. Former.A 2 mayor heads local Connally for president (Continued from Page 1) 'fidence that goes with being around the federal government for a long time." Connally was governor of Texas in the early sixties, and served as Secretary of the Navy under President Johnson and Secretary of the Treasury under President Nixon. He switched from the Democratic to the Republican Party in 1973. CONNALLY IS A friend of business, favoring , tax cuts, construction of nuclear power plants, and the loosening of federal pollution standards to allow more use of coal. Stephenson said critics of Connally think "he's a wheeler dealer. He was in Washington at, the time of the Watergate scandal, and he's a crook because he took money from the milk cooperative. " Carter ready to propose bail-out of Chrysler Continued from Page 1 contract that provides an estimated '$403 million in savings to the automaker ,ecause of UAW concessions on wages and pensions. Robert White, vice president and Canadian director of the UAW, said he thought there had been seven dissents in the show of hands vote in a closed meeting of 256 officers from 184 locals in 71 plants in the United States and Canada. The contract, which also gives Fraser a seat on Chrysler's board of directors, must be ratified by the company's 110,000 UAW-represented workers. In 1974 Connally was tried and acquit- ted for taking a bribe from a Texas dairy cooperative in return for lobbying to increase federal price supports to the dairy industry. STEPHENSON yesterday defended Connally, saying that the testimony in the milk trial came from one man, and furthermore, the trial itself took place in a hostile post-Watergate, Washington atmosphere. Stephenson called Connally's wheeler-dealer image "simply another name for being a skilled negotiator and I don't find that to.be a drawback to the man's qualifications." But a random sampling of ten city and county Republican organization workers and elected officials showed that most supported former United Nations ambassador and Central In- telligence Agency director George Bush, with Senate Minority Leader campaign Howard Baker also mentioned., MANY OF THOSE surveyed said Connally, along with Ronald Reagan, was too far to the right for the moderate Republicans of Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County. "My choice without any hesitation is George Bush," Republican First Ward Chairman and LSA senior David Jaye said yesterday. Bush is "a leader, an articulate speaker, and he's also a moderate," Jaye said. Although City Council member Louis Senunas (R-Third Ward) said he was undecided, his two favorites were Bush and Baker. Senunas said he liked Baker "because of the positions he takes on issues" as Senate Minority leader. "There doesn't seem to be a concen- sus at all," Mayor Louis Belcher, a Bush supporter, said yesterday. "I guess Connally's very popular in some circles," he added. St AJNivenue a iberty St ~. 761-9700 Formerly Fifth Forum Theater Mon. Tues. Thurs. Fri 630. 820 1010 Mon. Tues, Thurs. Fri---Adults $2,50 t~i7:00 (or capacity) Wed 12:50 2 40.4 30 r 630& 820.1010 Wed- Adults S$1.50 ti 1:30 (or capacity) Midnite Shows Fri & Sot HYPNOSIS' LIVE SHOW An incredible experience! 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