Thursday, May 31, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page ThreeI Ehrlichman blasts CIA action Abortion bill LANSING - Despite warnings the bill may be illegal, the Michigan House has approved legislation permitting both hos- pitals and their employes to refuse to per- form abortions on moral grounds. The measure was sent to the Senate Wednes- day on a 94-7 vote. Similar legislation cleared that chamber earlier this session. Under the proposal, any hospital, clinic or other health facility and any doctor, nurse or employe working in them could refuse to perform or participate in the abortion operation. Yorty defeated Los Angeles elected its first black mayor as Councilman Thomas Bradley unseated Mayor Sam Yorty in a run-off election. Bradley collected 56 per cent of the vote compared to Yorty's 43 per cent. Los An- geles becomes the largest U.S. city to elect a black mayor. About 16 per cent of the city's population is black. Yorty, seek- ing his fourth term as' mayor, refused to concede defeat. Gas shortage Shell Oil Co. announced yesterday that it will limit the amount of gasoline it will sell its service stations starting Friday. Texaco said it would ration drivers to 10 gallons at its stations on toll roads. The new restrictions fell into a growing in- dustry pattern of allocating supplies as a result of the nation's gas shortage. Exxon Co. and Gulf Oil Co. took similar steps on Tuesday. Dollar down LONDON -The U.S. dollar weakened in money markets across Europe yesterday, dropping to record lows in Paris and Frankfurt. The price of gold hit new highs. With the low volume of money changing hands, there were no signs yet of the panic rush out of dollars and into gold that has touched off recent monetary crises. Some dealers blamed the doltar's new weakness on continued concern that the Watergate affair will w e a k e n the Nixon administration's ability to soloe U.S. economic problems. But others sug- gested individual f a c t a r s in European countries were running the dollar down on thin v o 1i u mi e, perhaps only for the short term. Happenings ... . . . are slim again today. There's a meeting of the women's caucus of the Human Rights Party at 7:30 p.m. in the Anderson Room of the Union. And there are always the movies: M*A*S*H at Aud. A (7:30, 9:30) and Prime Cut and The Chase at the MLB (7:30, 9:30). A2's weather A goad day to drop in on the diag. Today will be partly sunny with a broken to scattered cloud cover. Enjoy today for tomorrow finds us in the grim clutches of a northernly flow. Highs should be be- tween 67-72 with lows tonite 4-s. Bugging blame pinned on Walters WASHINGTON UP) -- Former White House adviser John Ehrlichman yesterday blamed the Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA) deputy director, Vernon Walters, for the CIA's role in the Watergate coverup. Ehrlichman also said he can't recall asking the CIA to help E. Howard Hunt, challenging testimony by former CIA deputy Robert Cushman. Ehrlichman testified behind closed doors to the intelligence subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Subcommittee Chairman John McClellan (D-Ark.) said later there has been seriously conflicting testimony in his hearings. He scheduled former White House chief of staff H. R. (Bob) Haldeman for an appearance today. Ehrichman's statement dealt with two matters. One was the 1971 burglary by Hunt and others of Dr. Lewis Fielding, a psychiatrist who treated Pentagon Paper defendant Daniel Ellsberg. The other was an attempt to limit the FBI's investi- gation of last year's Watergate wiretapping. Ehrlichman's account of the Watergate matter generally supports a statement by President Nixon last week. Nixon said he ordered Ehrlichman and Haldeman to ensure that the FBI's investigations into Watergate didn't uncover secret operations by the CIA or White House agents. Ehrlichman said Walters and CIA Director Richard Helms met with him and Haldeman in late June, 1972, Helms and Walters said the CIA hadn't been involved in Watergate and that an FBI investigation wouldn't uncover any past CIA operations. But Ehrlichman said Walters gave an "equivocal response" to a question about whether any ongoing CIA activities in Mexico might be uncovered. Walters was then ordered to con- tact acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray and "give him all the facts." Gray has testified that Walters told him to postpone FBI interviews with two men, one of them a Mexican lawyer, whose checks supplied a financial link between the Watergate wire- tappers and the Nixon re-election committee. Gray said Ehrlich- man interfered with his efforts to straighten the matter out, and that he once warned Nixon that he was being mortally wounded by men around him. Ehrlichman painted the matter as a misunderstanding. See EHRLICHMAN, Page 11 GuerrilIlas hijack Colombian airliner MEDELLIN, Columbia (') - Two mask- ed hijackers with submachine guns oem- mandeered a Colombian airliner with 89 persons aboard yesterday and forced it to the Caribbean island of Aruba. They demanded $200,000 and freedom for 140 "political prisoners." PILOT JORGE LUCENA radioed the Medellin control tower from the-Dutch Is- land that the hijackers, who wanted to take the prisoners to Cuba, had set a 9 p.m. EDT deadline for Colombian action to meet their demands. The Caracol radio network said the hi- jackers threatened to blow up the four- engine Electra turboprop and the passen- gers if the demands were not met. The 9 p.m. deadline passed with no report of action by the government or the terrorists. Eighteen of the passengers - women and children - were allowed to get off the plane at Aruba in two groups of nine. That left 71 aboard, inclidin the hijackers, said to be leftist guerrillas. THE PLANE remained at the Aruba airport. The pilot said in a shaky voice: "Negotiations with the government should be accelerated." Lucena said the hijackers wanted the political prisoners taken with the ransom money to Panama, where they would be pickedtup by the hijacked plane and F flown to Cuba. About 150 persons, accused of having guerrilla connections, were arrested in Colombia last year in an official cam- paign against the leftist National Libera- tion Army. Only about 40 of those arrest- s he prepares to ed remain in custody. Base for his trip TWO YEARS ago, Lucena foiled a hi- rench President jack attempt by grabbing a grenade that playing a bully- turned out to be fake from the terrorists. President Misael Pastrana met last - night with other Colombian officials and the foreign minister messaged Aruba E asking authorities for "protection for the tty. II passengers and crew of the aircraft." Aruba is 20 miles north of Venezuela and 45 miles west of the Dutch island of Curacao, which also had been mentioned Cuba. ched for comment. SAM AIRLINES, -owner of the plane, ion becomes effec- said it had 85 passengers and a crew of -pcts Pear's nomi- four aboard when it was seized before a uncil at next Mon- scheduled stop in Medellin. The Colombian plane was hijacked on a domestic -flight that started at Cali, in resident, Pear re- western Colombia, After it stopped in to degree from the Pereira and was on its way to Medellin graduated from the the pilot was ordered to advise the control ol in 1966. tower that the plane had been taken over a member of the and the Medellin airport should be closed. ough not politically The hijacking was the first in Colom- nson indicated he bia in more than a year. A new Colom- member to fill the bian law increased prison terms for air . piracy to 15 years, He's off to Ice land President Nixon waves to the crowd at the Elipse yesterday as board a helicopter to take him to nearby Andrews Air Force I to Iceland on Air Force One. He will hold talks there with F Georges Pompidou, hoping to dispel any fear of the United States boy role in Western Europe. Story on page 10. Stephenson nominee for city a soon to be approved by Coun By GORDON ATCHESON Mayor J a m e s Stephenson has tapped Edwin Pear as his nominee for the post of city attorney according to several high level City Hall sources. The 12 year old Pear pra tices law with the Ypsilanti firm of Lawronce, Ul- rich, Tripp, Pear, and Leutheuser. BEFORE PEAR can officially assume the post, however, his nomination must be confirmed by City Council. Confirma- tion would seem to be automatic since seven Republicans sit on council and only six votes are needed for approval. The present City Attorney Jerold Lax met with Stephenson and Pear Tuesday. During that meeting it became apparent Stephenson had chosen Pear as the next. cit attorney, Lax said. Several o t h er city officials voiced a s i m i l a r understanding yesterday. One termed Pear's nomination "absolutely cer- tain. STEPHENSON refused to comment on the likelihood of Pear's nomination. His secretary said he wished to confer with Lax before releasing a statement. Pear could not be rea Lax, whose resignat tive July 15, said he ex nation to go before co day's meeting. A LIFETIME cityj ceived an undergradua University in 1963. Heg Wayne State Law Schc Pear is reportedly4 Republican Party, althc active. Earlier Stephe would seek out a GOP position of city attorney