Vol. T e ihgn-D l LXXXIX, No. 19-S L ) Saturday, May 26, 1979 e M cigan aily Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Jet crashes in Chicago DC-10 falls after takeoff; no survivors From AP and UPI CHICAGO-An American Airlines wide-bodied jet loaded with 272 Memorial Day weekend travelers crashed nose first and broke apart into flames yesterday just after takeoff from O'Hare International Airport. Authorities said all aboard were killed in the worst air disaster in U.S. history. Seconds before the Los Angeles- bound DC-10 jetliner crashed, one of its three engines fell off and landed on the runway, said Chicago Fire Com- missioner Richard Albrecht. He said the plane hit nose first about a half-mile from the runway in an abandoned air- field in Elk Grove Township. THE DEATH toll was set by American Airlines at 272-259 passengers, three crew members and 10 flight attendants. "There were just pieces of bodies, nothing that looked alive," said a priest who rushed to the crash. "The destruc- tion was so complete I'm sure they never knew what happened." Police and firefighters worked through the night under floodlights searching for bodies in the fragmented wreckage. They said their job would not be finished by daybreak. THE GROUND near O'Hare Inter- national Airport was littered with a grisly mixture of severed limbs, twisted bits of debris, books and airline brochures. Acting Police Superinten- dent Samuel Nolan said officerswere dealing with "bodies and parts of bodies." "We don't know where the bodies are,"' he said. "We're looking and trying to remove as much as we possibly can." Body bags were placed in rows aboard trucks for transport to a makeshift morgue at the airport. An See JET, Page 13 AP Photo A PORTION OF AN American Airlines DC-10 engine lies amidst burned wreckage caused by the crash yesterday at Chicago's O'Hare International airport. The incident was the third major crash in O'Hare's history, and the worst in U.S. history. A TTORNEYS PREDICT MORE: lorida From AP and UPI RAIFORD, Fla. - A black-hooded executioner sent three 2,500-volt jolts of electricity surging into the body of con- victed killer John Spenkelink yesterday in a milestone execution which some lawyers predict will once again open the floodgates to such killings in America. Spenkelink, a 30-year-old California drifter who rejected plea bargaining in his case because he was convinced he had killed in self-defense, went calmly to his death. WITH A black hood draped over his head and firmly strapped to the big oak electric chair which Raiford Prison in- mates call "Old Sparky," Spenkelink was hit by the first two-minute jolt of electricity at 10:12 a.m. Two more surges quickly followed, and the sallow- faced Spenkelink went limp in the chair. A sickening odor of burned flesh waf- ted from execution chamber, and Spenkelink was pronounced dead by the prison doctor at 10:18 a.m. convict executed When the hood over Spenkelink's head was lifted, his face, jaw and cheeks appeared to be burned black. SPENKELINK WAS the first person to be executed in the United States sin- ce Gary Gilmore was put to death before a Utah'firing squad in 1977, and the first to be executed against his will since Luis Monge went to the gas chamber in Colorado in 1967. Protests erupted immediately from within the prison and all the way to the Supreme Court building in Washington. Inside the prison, inmates pounded on the bars and screamed, and across from the penitentiary in a cow pasture another 100 protesters pounded on oil drums with sticks and shouted "pig," and "killer pigs" at the highway patrolmen who were keeping watch over the scene. "YOU WOULDN'T kill a dog like that," shrieked Darlene Downs, whose ex-husband, Ernest Downs, has been on theFlorida death rowfor a year. Thirteen protesters were arrested outside the Supreme Court in Washington after the high court refused for a final time to stay the execution, and in Tallahassee about 100 demon- strators pounded with such force on the See SPENKELINK, Page 11 Republicans win city council budIget battle asa result of the tax reduction. BY JOHN GOYER COUNCIL ALSO raised water and After five hours of bitter exchanges sewage rates 18 per cent and 12 per cent between Democratic and Republican respectively. The rate hike will add council members, the Ann Arbor City about $17 to the average homeowners' Council Wednesday night passed a $43.8 utilities bill next year. million 1979-80 city budget which in- The budget also gives all city em- cludes a half-mil reduction in property ployees a six per cent raise, but em- taxes. ployees are expected to ask for a The half mil property tax cut greater increase in contract represents a seven per cent reduction negotiations this summer. on property tax bills. A homeowner As a result of the reduction in taxes, paying taxes on a house with an assessed value of $30,000 will save $15 See REPUBLICANS, Page 14