Page 6 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 10, 1985 Plane lands safely after engine trouble Two MSA officers resign positions LONDON (AP) - A Boeing 747 jet en route from London to Copenhagen made an emergency landing yester- day shortly after takeoff from Heathrow Airport when one of its four engines failed. The TWA jumbo jet had flown to, London from Boston with 309 passengers aboard and was con tinuing on to the Danish capital with 94 passenger when the outer left engine failed, airline and airport of- ficials said. THE PILOT, Capt. Donald K. Stitt, said one of the turbines in the Pratt and Whitney JT9D engine failed. Fire engines and ambulances lined the runway at Heathrow as flight TW754 made a safe landing, a TWA spokesman said. Emergency vehicles followed the jet as -it taxied normally to the terminal. ~ The captain said he heard "a loud bang" soon after takeoff and shut ,down the engine. "I DID ONE circuit of the airport and came straight back in," Stitt told reporters. "There were no problems. Jt was all routine. In five years, I've had this happen once before." Stitt said the faulty engine would be replaced. ON AUG. 22, a Pratt and Whitney JTBD-15 enigne on a British Airtours Boeing 737 exploded as the- plane raced down a runway at Manchester Airport in northern England, engulfing the rear of the plane in flames and killing 55 of the 137 passengers. British aviation authorities have ordered checks on all JT8D engines, which power most 737s, and are the most widely used engines in commer- cial aviation. British Airways said yesterday that in another incident, passengers on one of its Boeing 737 jets were switched to another aircraft after the pilot ex- pressed concern about the idling speed of one of the engines. The British Airtours charter jet had been scheduled to fly from the nor- thwestern England city of Man- chester to Pisa, Italy, on Saturday af- ternoon, said a spokesman for British Airways. (Continued from Page 1) wouldn't be fair to my hall or to MSA, and I probably would have cracked under the pressure." ACCORDING to Eric Schnauffer, MSA's vice president for personnel, Feusse 's responsibilities included president of the board of directors of Student Legal Services, overseer of 10 MSA committees, and supervisor of the day-to-day MSA office functions. Josephson said he understood his vice president's decision to leave her post. Since he isn't sure how MSA has replaced executive officers in the past, however, he has appointed MSA parlementarian Rick Frenkel to study the assembly's constitution and other guidelines. Josephson added, however, that he would like to leave the ultimate decision up to the entire assembly. He said he will actively seek a qualified minority or woman to replace Feusse. IN THE meantime, Schnauffer will assume her responsibilities on the board of Student Legal Services, an Cheryl Bullard, MSA's administrative assistant, will run the MSA office. A replacement for Feusse's spot as chairperson of the assembly's steering committee has not yet been found, Josephson said. Steve Kaplan, last Oar's vice president of MSA, said it "just won't be possible" for remaining assembly members to take on Feusse's duties in addition to their own. Calling his successor's resignatieo a "deep blow to MSA," Kaplan said Feusse "didn't realistically put aside enough time for msa." " "It's a very time-consuming job and it's funrealistic of her to put in ,2 hours and be an RF," he said, adding that he was "literally in the office during most of the day and often for meetings at night." Spanish guerilkas dtonate car bomb, wounding 18 n wi o'J: f &"Ng ahf MADRID (UPI) - Basque guerrillas detonated a bomb packed with screws, nails and bolts yesterday as a van carrying paramilitary guar- ds passed near the Soviet Embassy. Seventeen people were injured, in- cluding an American jogging in the area. The bomb went off before dawn in- side a Peugeot sedan parked beside the van, carrying paramilitary Civil Guards who had been relieved from overnight duty at the Soviet mssion and were changing shifts at em- bassies near the Republica Argentine square. AS THE van stopped in the square, the bomb - packed with screws, nails and bolts - was detonated by remote control by Basque guerrillas waiting nearby, police said. The assailants then opened fire at the guards before fleeing in a tai stolen earlier in the day. The ca4 driver, his hands tied, was found later in the day in the trunk. Police said they recovered 30 9mm shells, the type of ammunition normally used by the Basque separatist group ETA, near the van. Ken Brown, 40, an American engineer at Johnson & Johnson headquarters in New Brunswick; N.J., was jogging in the area when the explosion occurred and was seriously injured along with 15 paramilitary guards and one other civilian. o ___ "P. - _ 11W --d 17 ° 66 e$ss' Associated Press Art Chris Snyder stands beside one of ten welded sculptures he's made out of parts of cars from a junk yard he runs with his brothers. This one represents a prehistoric pterodactyl with a 12-foot wing. STOP WORRYING. YOUR COLLEGE MONEY IS AT 1-800-732-6356. First witness testifies in Belushi trial LOS ANGELES (AP) - The first witness in the John Belushi murder case said yesterday that she saw defendant Cathy Evelyn Smith inject the comedian two or three times with a cocaine-heroin mixture four days before his death. Leslie Marks-Moritz also testified that Belushi appeared ill the day before he died, and woke up coughing after sleeping at her house that night, BELUSHI, star of "Saturday Night Live," "Animal House" -and "Tle Blues Brothers," died at age 33 of all overdose of such "speedball" mid- tures on March 5, 1982, at a Sunset Strip bungalow. Miss Smith, 37, a former backup singer for such singers and songwriters as Gordon Lightfoot and Hoyt Axton, is charged with second: degree murder and 13 counts of fur- nishing and administering drugs to Belushi. Mrs. Moritz took the stand yester- day as the lead-off witness at a preliminary hearing to decide whether Miss Smith should stand trial. Prosecutors say the hearig could last about two weeks. MRS. MORITZ told of seeing the defendant take money from Belushi to buy heroin. Later on March 1, 1982, Miss Smith administered injections t the comedian, Mrs. Moritz said. Mrs. Moritz also received injections of cocaine from Miss Smith, as did two other people, Mrs. Moritz testified. She said that Miss Smith injected her with cocaine and warned her: '51f she didn't do it right she could kill me." MRS. MORITZ'S statements cony cerning the lethal nature of the dru injections was the first indication tha, the prosecution would try to show Miss Smith knew she could be giving fatal doses to Belushi.j Miss Smith's attorney, Howar4 Weitzman, asked Mrs. MoriQ whether she had ever attributed the statement to Miss Smith before, and she said she had told prosecutorp about it but didn't mention it at grand jury hearings because. "it didn'tco . up." "Was there some discussion abo shooting heroin and cocaine together?" asked Deputy District AC torney Michael Montagna. "YES," said Mrs. Moritz, whb recalled that Miss Smith then prepared a syringe. "John took off his belt and put i around his arm, and Cathy injected him in the crook of his arm," she said* Outside court, Weitzman said Mrs: JUSTASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEED STUDENT LOANS. If you've been worrying about where your college money is going to come from, relax. D&N Savings is offering government-subsidized Guaranteed Student Loans (GSLs) to every stu- dent who is eligible* And the application form is only a simple phone call away. A GSL lets you borrow up to $2,500 for each year you're enrolled as an undergraduate, depending upon your financial aid eligibility- up to $12,500 over a five-year period. As a graduate student, you may borrow as much as $5,000 a year, for a total of up to $25,000 for both undergraduate and graduate school. You'll get a favorable interest rate (usually lower than the prevailing market rate). And you'll have anywhere from five to ten years to pay back the loan, starting six months after you leave school. 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