Newspaper Page Text
Richardson continues search for prosecutor
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WASHINGTON (UPI) - At
torney General-designate Elliot
L Richardson today carried on
“mutual explorations” with the
toree remaining top candidates
in his search for a special
Watergate prosecutor.
As Richardson continued his
search for the right man, six
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Democratic members of the
Senate Judiciary Committee
met to discuss their concern
over his intention to keep
“ultimate authority” over the
prosecutor.
Some said they could not vote
to confirm Richardson unless
he granted the prosecutor
“complete independence.”
Richardson was conferring by
phone with Warren M. Christo
pher of San Francisco, deputy
attorney general in the Johnson
Administration; Colorado Su
preme Court Justice William H.
Erickson, and David W. Peck,
retired New York appellate
justice.
“It wouldn’t be helpful to
keep a score board on who’s
turning it down,” Richardson
told reporters late Tuesday,
saying he would not reveal the
order of his choices.
U.S. District Court Judge
Harold Tyler Jr. of New York,
assistant attorney general in
the Eisenhower and Kennedy
administrations, turned down
the job Tuesday, saying it was
not appropriate for a sitting
judge to take such a post.
Richardson said that persons
may wish not to be considered
because of such things as
personal problems, a wife’s
health, finances, or they belong
to a law firm that had a client
with a connection to the
Page 17
Watergate case. He said for
these reasons he wanted to
confer with all three of them
before announcing which one he
was selecting.
How much authority Richard
son will grant to the prosecutor
remained unresolved in his
hearing before the Senate
Judiciary committee. After four
Griffin Daily News Wednesday, May 16,1973
days of hearings, the commit
tee was in recess today, with no
date set for reconvening.
Sens. Phillip A. Hart of
Michigan, Edward M. Kennedy
of Massachusetts, Birch Bayh
of Indiana, Robert C. Byrd of
West Virginia, Clinton N.
Burdick of North Dakota and
John V. Tunney of California
met privately Tuesday to
discuss the issue of the
prosecutor’s authority.
Later Hart said he could not
vote for Richardson’s confirma
tion on the basis of what the
nominee had testified so far.
Tunney said the nomination
was in “grave danger” unless
Richardson granted the
prosecutor “ complete indepen
dence.”
Williams
released
from jail
ATLANTA (UPI)- The Rev.
Hosea Williams is out of jail and
back on the front lines of a
protest against Rich’s De
partment Store.
The local Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC)
leader was freed Tuesday night
on $250 bond following nine days
of imprisonment.
Williams was jailed on May 7
following a demonstration
against Rich’s. Police said he
never paid a $37 fine in 1967.
Williams still is refusing to pay
the fine “on principle” but
posted a property bond to get
out of jail.
“It is my firm belief that it
was the leadership I was giving
to the Rich’s strike seeking em
ploye rights that sent me to
jail,” Williams said following
his release, “but that won’t stop
us.
Rich’s must understand that
truth crushed to earth shall rise
again until we get these rights.
Protests will never cease.”
Williams appealed the origin
al $37 fine through the state
courts and lost. He said he nev
er paid the fine because he
didn’t know the appeals were
completed.
Williams said he will begin
the appeal process all over
again, fighting the fine on the
grounds the case was handled
improperly.
Atlanta
feels pinch
on fuel
ATLANTA (UPI)-The city of
Atlanta really felt the gasoline
crunch Tuesday.
City officials received bids
ranging almost 60 per cent high
er on a year’s supply of gaso
line, deisel fuel and heating oil
for city vehicles and buildings.
Purchasing Director J. For
rest Gee said the small number
of bids means “we’re definitely
going to have to cut back on
driving, since it costs so much.”
Heating the airport terminal
would be a problem, too, he said
after going over the bids
Monday, since the only bidder
offered 77,000 gallons while the
city had asked for bids on 161,-
000 gallons of heating oil.
Gee said also each bid con
tained a warning that the price
could go up if the companies
were forced to use imported oil.
Suspects
in fire
face tests
REIDSVILLE, Ga. (UPI) -
Lie detector tests will be used to
search out the inmates who set
fire to a prison school building
at the Reidsville State Prison.
A prison spokesman said
Tuesday the tests will be
administered to two men
suspected in the fire which
damaged several rooms and
burned a hole in the roof
Monday.
Damage in the fire was not
serious, but it has prevented the
prison from holding the reg
ularly scheduled classes. The
rooms should be back in use by
Thursday night or Friday.
The prison was back to
normal Tuesday following a
brief hunger strike by 100 of the
2,300 inmates who were protest
ing to be paid for the work done
in the prison.
Warden Jack Caldwell said
there is no money to pay the
men and no law which autho
rizes payments.
Reidsville is one of 16 state
prisons. Inmates make auto li
cense tags, picnic furniture, and
cent rails used in the front of
parking spaces.