Monday, September 25,1989 The Battalion Page 7 Town still gripped by pain of bus accident Truck driver distraught by deaths MISSION (AP) — The driver of the soft-drink delivery truck that struck a school bus is dazed and dis traught over the accident that killed 20 school children and injured 63 others, his family and neighbors said. Ruben Perez, 25, remained at his parents’ home in rural Mission. He was the driver of a truck that went through a stop signand struck the school bus, sending the bus into a water-filled pit. Twenty junior-high and high-school children were killed in the accident Thursday morning. Perez refused to answer questions from investigators on Saturday, said National Transportation Safety Board member Lee Dickinson. “His counsel advised him not to talk to the Safety Board and to exer cise his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights,” Dickinson said. “So we did not talk to the driver.” Perez’s uncle, Tieurcio Santiago, said his nephew is not ready to talk about the accident. “I haven’t talked to him too much,” Santiago told the Dallas Morning News on Saturday. “He’s in bad shape emotionally. He’s doing all right, but he’s in shock right now.” Perez initially told authorities that the truck’s brakes failed. Dickinson said preliminary NTSB tests showed that “the brakes did work,” although they were not perfectly adjusted. The truck passed state inspection last month, he said. A neighbor of Perez said many people in the area have thought of Perez. “I don’t know him, but I felt like calling him today,” Alma Bean said. “I feel sorry for him. You’re in nocent until proven guilty.” Investigators recreate accident to answer questions ALTON, Texas (AP) — Grief-stricken neigh bors watched Sunday as a soft-drink delivery truck and a school bus loaded with federal inves tigators recreated the events leading up to a colli sion that killed 20 students. The National Transportation Safety Board said the re-enactment helped determine the speed the bus was travelling and from what dis tance it and a Dr Pepper truck could have been spotted as the vehicles approached the collision intersection. “In the range of 150 feet was the first time that either vehicle could see the other one,” NTSB member Lee Dickinson said. “We feel reasonably comfortable that the speed of the bus was some where in the range of, give or take, 30 miles per hour.” The speed limit along the road on which the bus was travelling is 55 mph. As the sun began to peak through nearby palm trees, investigators and law officers gathered next to the water-filled caliche pit which the bus plunged into during the Thursday accident. The accident was reconstructed about the same time of day as the actual 7:25 a.m. wreck. Helping in Sunday’s test was 14-year-old Edna Morales, who was the last student to board the bus before Thursday’s crash. Morales, who had cuts on her neck and face and bandages on her left arm and right leg, came to the site because she thought it might cure her of the nightmares she has suffered since the accident. Morales told investigators she boarded the bus about 800 feet from the crash site. She described to what level the bus accelerated after making its last pickup. That information helped investiga tors arrive at the approximate 30 mph speed. In conducting the tests Sunday morning, in vestigators were among 42 people who boarded a school bus similar to the one involved in the acci dent. They also used a Dr Pepper truck pulling the same trailer involved in the accident so that the trailer’s brakes could be tested. Investigators found no evidence of brake failure on the trailer. In addition to sight distance and speed tests, the transportation team drove the vehicles slowly up to the suspected point of impact in an attempt to determine how they struck each other. A previous NTSB inspection indicated no evi dence of brake system failure on the truck, dis puting truck driver Ruben Perez’s claim to Texas Department of Public Safety officers that the brakes had failed. icy, fused Saturday to talk with NTSB officials, citing his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights. While some members of the investigation team were headed back to Washington Sunday af ternoon, others remained behind to complete in terviews with bus driver Gilberto Pena, truck driver assistant Ruben Pena, rescue workers and students. On Monday, NTSB officials plan to further examine the bus wreckage, particularly looking at a v-shaped deformation in the top of the bus that Dickinson said may have been caused when the bus struck a stop sign. Whitmire leads race Poll puts mayor 18.7 points ahead of Hofheinz HOUSTON (AP) — Mayor Kathy Whitmire, who is seeking a fifth two- year term in the Nov. 7 election, holds an 18.7-point lead over her main challenger and former Mayor Fred Hofheinz, a poll by the Hous ton Post and KHOU-TV shows. Whitmire leads Hofheinz in vir tually every category sampled in a survey of 600 registered voters be tween Sept. 14-20, the newspaper reported Sunday. Asked how they would vote if the election were held today, 49.2 per cent of those surveyed named Whit mire, 30.5 percent said Hofheinz, 3 percent named another candidate, 17 percent said they were undecided or refused to answer and 0.3 percent said they would vote for neither can didate. “It seems like this is going to be a very difficult race for Mr. Hofheinz to turn around — very diffi cult,” said Bob Stein, a Rice University po litical scientist. “At this point I Whitmire can’t identify an issue that he can do that with.” Stein and Keith Hamm, both of the Rice Institute for Policy Analysis, complied the results from a random sampling from the county’s voter registration lists. The error rate in rate in the citywide survey is plus or minus 4 percentage points. James Carville, chief strategist for the Hofheinz campaign, said the poll’s results “are inconsistent with our own data.” “Regardless of what numbers you accept, it’s still a long way to Nov. 7,” he said. “We are pretty encouraged, and we have got a lot of things left to say.” The poll show Whitmire leading with voters across the board. She gets 45 percent of white vot ers’ support as compared with Hofh- einz’s 36.5 percent and 14.9 percent undecided. Whitmire also leads with a major ity of black and Hispanic voters polled. Mattox, Richards begin dispute over issue of alcoholic history AUSTIN (AP) — Democratic gubernatorial hope ful Jim Mattox says a candidate’s history of alcohol ism is an issue for state leadership, and he says he will bring it up in the 1990 gubernatorial campaign. Mattox, the state attorney general, has not for mally announced his candidacy. The only an nounced Democrat to this point is State Treasurer Ann Richards, who has openly discussed her 1980 treatment for alcoholism. Richards, 56, called the treatment the greatest thing that ever happened to her and said that if Mat tox wants to make it a campaign issue, “let him raise it.” “In some sense, I think that treatment for this dis ease has made me an even better candidate and cer tainly a better officeholder,” Richards said. “And the reason for that is that I have had the privilege of get ting a real perspective on what is important in life.” Mattox questioned whether a recovering alcoholic has the “vision” to lead the state of Texas. Many re covering alcoholics “still talk about living ‘one day at' a time,’ ” Mattox told the Dallas Morning News. “I think you’ve got to have very strong willed peo ple, with vision, to lead this state forward,” he said. “I’m just saying that if drug or alcohol abuse keeps us from having that kind of vision ... it could be very harmful for the state of Texas.” Said Richards: “One of the tenets of a . . . recovery program that is very important to me is humility — the acceptance that I am human. I am not perfect. Never will be. I think we need more of that in public office, rather than big talk and big egos.” Mattox, who says he doesn’t drink or smoke and stays away from caffeinated beverages, has “very strong feelings” about alcohol and drug abuse be cause of his father’s problems with drinking. 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