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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page paper discusses the crash of American Airlines flight 191 in May, 191, with the loss of all persons on board. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KV32_HVama191.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. The Crash of American Airlines Flight 191 Research Compiled for
, Inc. by K. Von Huben 4/2010 Please Introduction May 25, 1979, was a beautiful day in Chicago, and
the start of the Memorial Day weekend. It was also the day that American Airlines flight 191, bound for Los Angeles, crashed shortly after takeoff, killing everyone on board the
aircraft and two people on the ground. This paper discusses the accident, with particular attention to the response of emergency services personnel. Discussion Flight 191 was a McDonnell-Douglas DC-10-10 type
aircraft that American had been operating since they were introduce eight years earlier (American Airlines 191, 2008). This particular aircraft was number N110AA, which the airline had accepted on February
28, 1972; it was a reliable airplane with over 20,000 flight hours on it since its delivery (American Airlines 191, 2008). The crew was comprised of captain Walter Lux, 53,
"an extremely experienced pilot who had 22,000 hours to his name and had been flying DC-10s since their introduction to American Airlines"; his co-pilot was James Dillar, 49, with "almost
10,000 hours" and his Flight Engineer was Alfred Udovich, 56, with 15,000 hours to his credit (American Airlines 191, 2008). There were ten flight attendants in the cabin crew (American
Airlines 191, 2008). At 2.59 p.m., Flight 191 was "cleared to taxi to the holding point for runway 32R" and at 3.02 p.m. it was cleared for takeoff (American Airlines
191, 2008). The aircrafts takeoff weight was 379,000 pounds and it had a full load of fuel (American Airlines 191, 2008). Everything was normal on the takeoff until 6,000 feet
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