The MichiganDaly Vol. XCI, No. 7-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 14, 1981 Twenty Pages Pope wounded; condition 'guarded' POPE JOHN PAUL II is helped by aides after being shot yesterday. A Turkish terrorist was accused and arrested by police. Hea ringheld for Kelly' trialI From AP and UPI VATICAN CITY-Doctors removed part of Pope John Paul's intestines in a "suc- cessful" four-hour operation yesterday following an attempt on the pontiff's life. A fugitive Turkish terrorist shot and woun- ded the Pope yesterday in a close- range assassination attempt before 10,000 people in St. Peter's Square. "The main risk now is infec- tion," the spokesman said. "But the risk is limited because he is a healthy man." "THE PATIENT came through the operation in a satisfying manner. The prognosisremains strictly guarded in part because of risks deriving from post- operative infection," the Vatican press release said. Earlier, the director of the surgery unit at the Gemelli Policlinico hospital, Professor Giancarlo Castiglioni, had ter- med the operation "successful" and told reporters, "The pope was very lucky." - As John Paul II beamed and waved to the crowd packed yesterday in the sunlit square, shots were fired and the pope slumped in his white jeep, wit- nesses said. Blood stained his white garments and horrified witnesses cried, "Oh no! Oh no! " Police quickly took into custody a man identified as a Turkish right-wing terrorist who had vowed to kill the pope. He told them he "couldn't care less about life." THE GUNMAN'S bullets also wounded two women in the crowd, one of them American. Witnesses tackled the gunman and police identified him as Mehmet Ali Agca, 24, a convicted murderer who publicly vowed in the past to kill the pope. Vatican guards prevented a lynch mob from seizing the suspect. Agca, a member of an extreme right-wing group who escaped in 1979 from a prison in Istanbul, Turkey and was sentenced to death in absentia for murdering a newspaper editor. TURKISH police said that while he was on the loose, Agca had vowed to1kill John Paul during the pope's visit to Turkey in 1979. Turkey's ambassador to the United States, Sukru Elekdag, said Turkish police have standing orders "to shoot him (Agca) on sight." Rome doctors offered a "guar- ded" but optimistic view of the pope's condition following two sessions of surgery. See POPE'S, Page6 By ANN MARIE FAZIO Leo Kelly Jr., the defendant in last month's murders of two University students, will un- dergo extensive psychiatric examinations to determine his mental competency to stand University law professors discuss the complexities of a "not guilty by reason of insanity" plea. See Story, Page 3. trial, an Ann Arbor district court ruled yesterday. Judge S.J. Elden of the 15th District Court signed an order at yesterday's preliminary hearing allowing the 22-year-old peychology major to be examined by independent psychiatrist Dr. Emmanuel Tanay and a team of state psychiatrists. TANAY WAS BROUGHT on to the case by Kelly's lawyer, William Waterman, who said Tanay's abilities will provide his client with "the benefit of the best medical examination." Tanay's examination will take place at the State Center for Forensic Psychiatry in Yp- silanti, complying with Waterman's wishes that they be held someplace other than the Washtenaw County Jail, where Kelly is currently being held without bond. Elden agreed to postpone the pre-trial examination, which was originally scheduled for yesterday, until June 17 to allow time for the tests. ACCORDING TO WATERMAN, Tanay is the best psychiatrist available. "His eminen- ce speaks for itself." As for location, the at- torney feels that anyplace is better for the examinations than the county jail. He originally wanted Kelly's examination to be held in Tanay's downtown Detroit office. Prosecuting Attorney William Delhey questioned the necessity of transporting Kelly across county lines. Delhey said he wascon- cerned about Kelly's personal safety as well as the slim chance of escape. As a compromise, Elden suggested the Forensic Center as "a comfortable place for the examinations." KELLY HAS BEEN accused of murdering two Bursley students after opening fire with a See COURT, Page 1 Geography report released The University Executive Committee formally recommen- ded that the Geography department be discontinued in a report released to faculty members Tuesday. For coverage of the report's comments and faculty members' and students' reaction, see story, Page 3.