Page 12-Tuesday, June 12, 1979-The Michigan Daily AP Photo FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION (FAA) head Langhorne Bond points to where a DC-10 engine is bolted to the wing. Bond was accused of allowing "unsafe" planes to fly again after airlines inspected them. He is testifying before a House subcommittee. Reps say FAA head OK'd unsafe jets WASHINGTON (AP)-The head of the best information we have," Bond "YOU DID IN fact put unsafe air- the Federal Aviation Administration said in reply to a long series of hostile planes back into the air," Rep. Robert (FAA) was accused by congressmen and angry questions from members of a S. Walker (RPa.) told Bond. yesterday of putting "unsafe airplanes House transportation subcommittee. Bond said that has not been back into the sky" after the deadliest "We have done the best we know how established. air disaster in the nation's history. to do," Bond said. "We gather infor- Following the DC-10 crash in But FAA Administrator Langhorne mation, we analyze it and we take ac- Chicago, the FAA issued a series of Bond, who since has ordered the entire tion. As every layer was peeled back in three airworthiness directives, each of U.S. fleet of 138 DC-los grounded, this investigation, the FAA acted." which had the effect of grounding the responded that the FAA acted prom- He said the DC-10 fleet will remain DC-10 fleet temporarily until certain ptely and correctly immediately after grounded "until I am convinced that parts of the engine pylons were inspec- receiving information of a pattern of safety will not be compromised." ted and, if necessary, repaired. The problems with the aircraft's engine BUT REP .), Chicago crash occurred after one of the mountings. the subcommittee chairman, said ac- plane's engines separated from the "ALL WE CAN do when we search tion was slow in coming, contradictory wing during takeoff. through a tragedy of this kind is act on in nature and a danger to the flying Once the inspections required by the public, airworthiness directives had been ac- And James Dunne, president of the complished, the planes were permitted STAINED GLASS Airline Passengers Association (APA) to fly. NEW YORK (AP) - A stained-glass claimed the FAA has shown "near total During the third inspection, however, triptych,, created from a design by incompetence." He said President Car- new cracks were found in parts of the Israeli artist Shalom of Safed, is on ter should demand Bond's resignation, engine pylon that suggested a basic view at the Jewish Museum through Burton said "yo-yo" policies by the flaw might exist in the design of the Oct. 8. FAA permitted the DC-10 fleet to fly for engine mounting. Bond then suspended Illustrated in brilliant colors are several days after the crash of the design certificate of the DC-10, Moses Receiving the Law on Sinai (cen- American Airlines Flight 191 at grounding the domestic fleet, and or- ter panel) and the Exodus (two side Chicago's O'Hare International Air- dered foreign-owned DC-10s barred panels). port. The crash killed 275 persons. from U.S. airspace. Judicial Committee probes Ca. ruling delays SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The California Supreme Court could have decided a politically sensitive case almost seven months before it did, ac- cording to a report submitted yesterday at a televised hearing into allegations the court "played politics." The hearing, recessed for one week less than three hours after it started, was carried live by public television station KQED. The report, compiled by Seth Huf- stedler, special counsel for the state Commission on Judicial Performance, which is conducting the investigation, indicated it took 319 days - ten months - to process the so-called Tanner case. The case involved mandatory prison sentences for criminas using a gun in the commission of a crime. THE COURT, which ruled that a judge did not have to sentence a criminal to prison, has granted a rehearing and the previous decision is not binding. The commission is investigating allegations that members of the court withheld sensitive rulings until after last November's election, thus helping Chief Justice Rose Bird gain confir- mation for an eight-year term. The investigation started after elec- tion-day reports in the Los Angeles Times said the Tanner decision had been delayed to prevent a political backlash against Bird. As it was, she won confirmation by the narrowest margin in the history of the court. JUSTICE BERTRAM Janes of the Third District Court of Appeal, head of the eight-member panel conducting the hearing, made clear as he opened the probe that it was an "investigative hearing" and that no charges had been filed. Janes was expected to review the staff report and consider whether there See COMMISSION, Page 13 company gas shortage Dougherty, who previously has criticized the Energy Department's handling of the nation's fuel problems, said an investigation would best be handled by a congressional panel because federal agencies have a harder time getting information from oil com- panies. A spokesman for the American Petroleum Institute, an oil industry trade group, could not be reached for comment on Dougherty's testimony. DOUGHERTY SAID, "It appears that some crude oil was being stock- piled." He based this on figures showing that crude oil imports have continued at about the normal rates while refineries have not been operating at normal rates. Dougherty said refineries normally rpdtige their stocks of crude oilin the See OIL, Page t4 , . r , VD Doesn't Discriminate Neither does the Hesith Service treatment program. Our VD clinic is available to any Washtenaw County resident, not only University students. The clinic gives free diagnosis and treatment of both syphilis and gonorrhea. And clinic service hours are among the best in Michigan: Monday-Friday: 8am-11 AM; 2PM-4PM; 6PM-1OPM Saturday: 8AM-12 NOON HEALTH SERVICE VD CLINIC is located at 207 FLETCHER, across from the Michigan League (between the Dental School and Power Center for the Performing Arts) Haven ugestion? Cel YD/HeDine: 763-4511 Don't become another statistic FTC cites oil c ":+ { stockpiling in WASHINGTON (AP)-Oil companies apparently helped bring on current gasoline shortages by stockpiling crude oil instead of refining it into gasoline, a top Federal Trade Commission (FTC) official said yesterday. Alfred Dougherty, director of the FTC's Bureau of Competition, told a House Government Operations sub- committee that information from oil companies is held tightly by the Depar- tment of Energy. He said his tentative conclusion was based only on infor- mation available to the public. "IT IS INCREDIBLE that two gover- nment agencies can't cooperate on this," Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal (D- N.Y.), the subcommittee's chairman, told Dougherty. "People are shooting at each other at gas stations, and you are conducting leisurely negotiations overt how to get the information'! e