THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 12-S Ann.Arbor, Michigan--Thursday, May 24, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Page; Three persons kill ed in local airplane crash Nose-dive narrowly misses house Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM RESCUE WORKERS sift through the wreckage of a twin-engine plane which crashed yesterday. They are attempting to piece together the bodies of the three people who were killed. McCORD ACCUSED OF LYING: RkChardson aed By LAURA BERMAN and DAN BIDDLE A twin-engine p r i v a t e plane crashed into a south Ann Arbor resi- dential area yesterday, killing all three persons aboard. The plane, apparently having en- gine trouble, nose-dived into a va- cant lot and burst into flames on impact, flinging wreckage against the wall of a house and across sev- eral lawns, THE CRASH victims have been iden- tified as Dr. William Pollard, 30, of San Gabriel, Cal.; Dr. Thomas Nicholudis, 41, of Los Angeles; the plane's pilot, and Carolyn Howke, 33, of Inglewood, Cal. Pollard was the son of Dr. Marvin Pol- lard, a University physician. While the wreckage caused minor dam- age to the roof and walls of an adjacent home, no area residents were injured. THE PLANE took off from Ann Arbor Municipal Airport yesterday afternoon on a flight to Kansas City, Mo., and was un- der instrument guidance from air traffic controllers at Detroit Metropolitan Air- port due to poor visibility. Officials at Metro say the plane, a Cess- na 310, appeared to be in trouble almost immediately after takeoff, and Nicholu- dius attempted to circle back into a land- ing pattern. Attempts to contact the plane by radio failed. Officials refused to speculate yes- terday on the possibility that Nicholudis' instruments or radio malfunctioned sec- onds before the crash. EYEWITNESSES say one of the plane's engines failed, and that, the pilot success- fully managed to gun the remaining en- gine and nose the plane up in time to avoid hitting ,a large house behind the impact site. "The plane sounded like it stalled twice," said Mike Muller, a 13-year-old local resident who watched the crash. EYEWITNESSES say the plane slam- med into the ground at a 75. degree angle, hurtling wreckage and bodies across a huge area. Mary Ann- Decker was asleep in the narrowly-missed house when the crash awakened her and she saw "a wall of flame outside." MRS. RAY CROSS was talking on the phone when the plane's impact showered her house with debris. She dropped the phone and looked from her front window at "pieces of wreckage and the bodies in a big mess all around the house." While no information was available on the cloud ceiling at Ann Arbor, Willow Run Airport reported an unusually low ceiling of 600 feet. A pilot at Ann Arbor's airport yester- day said Nicholudis had "four or five seconds at the most" to avoid Decker's house after breaking through the clouds. A TEAM of officials from the National Air Safety Board flew in from Chicago late last night to begin a thorough inves- tigation under flood lights to uncover the reason for the crash. WASt vote of nomina torney; after tt the non This cabinet of healt rently served THE the ma special to begit Befor nomina said he Senate Nixon's Byrd, he had Atto rney Ge HINGTON .()-The Senate, by a personal integrity and regards him as "a 82 to 3, yesterday confirmed the man of high intellect, a very competent lion of Elliot Richardson as at- lawyer and a very dedicated public ser- general. The vote followed quickly vant." he Judiciary Committee approved BUT, BYRD SAID, the.appointment from mination unanimously. within the administration of the nation's will be Richardson's third top chief law enforcement officer "has the post. He has served as secretary appearance of the administration investi- h, education and welfpre and cur- gating itself." - is secretary of defense. He also , The committee eventually was satisfied, as undersecretary of state. however, because pf the selection of Cox as special prosecutor, and Cox's assur- APPROVAL freed Archibald Cox, ances that he will be independent and go n tabbed -by Richardson to be the wherever the facts lead him. prosecutor in the Watergate case, At the Senate Watergate hearings yes- n work officially. terday, John Caulfield testified he knew e the Senate vote on Richardson's he was breaking the law by relaying tion, Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) executive clemency offers to James Mc- and some other members of the Cord Jr. in the midst of the Watergate Judiciary Committee supported trial. But he said he was spurred on in the nomination reluctantly. . belief President Nixon made the offer. the assistant majority leader, said no question about Richardson's "I KNOW WHEN wrongdoing is occur-' nera ing, "the former White House aide told the Senate Watergate investigating com- mittee. "My loyalties, especially to the Presi- dent of the United States, overrided those considerations." But Caulfield emphasized again he had no personal knowledge that the offer had come from Nixon. CAULFIELD SAID he did not ask for and was not offered immunity from prose- cution for his testimony. Caulfield repeated earlier testimony that he was acting as a reluctant messenger in the clemency offers for John Dean III, who was White House counsel at the time. Dean was fired-by the President April 30. Caulfield said he asked Anthony Ulase- wicz, a friend from the New York City police force also once employed at the White House, to contact McCord and let See RICHARDSON, Page 10