Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 230, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1972 Page: 5 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Hall, Bartlett &<***>*/
* Af'RnCfi in Tnuiar/I I Dniiu
Clash Over Tax
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)-
Gov. David Hall and former
Gov. Dewey Bartlett clashed
Wednesday over the property
tax reassessment program
passed during Bartlett's ad-
ministration.
Hall said property taxes have
been hiked because of legislation
promulgated by Bartlett, his
Republican predecessor.
Bartlett said Hall “again is
having trouble with the truth."
The GOP U. S. Senate candi-
date previously had pointed to
the 1967 law as being among the
accomplishments of his first
year in office, under what he
termed “a program of excel-
lence."
The law provided for a five-
year program of local reassess-
ment of property values.
Hall's charge came at the
opening session of a 20-member
committee studying ways to re-
vise Oklahoma's property taxes
going to schools and to make the
laws comply with recent court
decisions.
Sources close to Hall said the
governor had taken the ap-
proach because "People are
blaming Gov. Hall for their
property taxes going up.”
Bartlett, who lost a re-election
bid to Hall two years ago, replied
a few hours later
“Gov. Hall's accusation that
my administration proposed and
raised ad valorem taxes is un-
true," Bartlett said.
“He is attempting to camou-
flage the fact that he promised to
reduce the tax on drugs and
groceries and further promised
no new taxes,” he added.
Bartlett said most Oklaho-
mans are paying more taxes, in
addition to the taxes on drugs
and groceries.
The property tax committee,
headed by Purcell publisher
James C. Nance, opened its
meeting in the historic Capitol
Blue Room Wednesday afteroon.
Both Hall and Nance repeat-
edly emphasized purpose of the
committee was “not to raise
taxes” but for “tax reform.”
ACROS8
1. Cupid
5. Belea-
guered
11. Skid row
character
(si.)
12. Harmo-
nious
(2 wds.)
13. --
bellum
14. Lubricant
15. Alkali
1C. Feminine
suffix
17. Red-eyed
carp
IS. Was
afraid
20. "Bone”
21. Droop
22. Intellect
23. Trim
24. Shell
beads
25. Whale
20. Flower-
less
plant
27. Circle
section
23. Set free
31. How
awful!
32. Spanish
queen
33. And not
34. Cushion
36. Tequila
chaser
37. Girl's
name
38. Military
meal
39. Weedy
grass
40. Toward
shelter
DOWN
L "Oscar,''
for ex-
ample
2. Sour-
dough
3. Expectant
(4 wds.)
4. Fish
eggs
5. Official
seal
6. “The
Lady —”
(2 wds.)
•7. French
season
8. Body
guard
of
a sort
(2 wda.)
9. Resulting
10. Signed
over
16. On
strike
19. English
river
22. Bare
23. Covered
walk
24. Chinese
wax
25. Engen-
dered
YnlfrSar'l Answer
26. Herb of
the
parsley
family
28. Della of
song
29. Tippler
30. Expunge
35. Metal
36. Candle-
nut tree
Davis Defense Rests
Its Abbreviated Case
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SAN JOSE, Calif. < UPI )—
Angela Davis' defense rested its
“abbreviated case” Wednesday
after only three days of
testimony during which 11
witnesses were called, including
one of the two surviving
“Soledad Brothers."
Miss Davis, 29, did not testify
but acted as co-counsel during
the nine week murder-kidnap-
conspiracy trial in which she is
charged with helping plot the
Marin County shootings of i970
In contrast, the prosecution
presented 95 witnesses and
numerous exhibits in its effort to
prove that the former UClJt
philosophy instructor provided
the guns in the courtroom kid-
napings and gunbattle in which a
judge and three others died.
The state claims that Miss
Davis was so in love with
Soledad Brother" George
Jackson that she planned the
taking of hostages to gain his
release from prison.
Judge Richard E. Arnason will
hear arguments in chambers
today, where the prosecution
will decide whether to call
rebuttal witnesses Friday. Final
arguments were set to begin
next Tuesday.
Fleeta Drumgo, one of the two
surviving Soledad Brothers, took
the stand for the defense Wed-
nesday before attorneys
abruptly rested their case. He
said he did not know of the
courthouse incident until he
heard it on the radio several
hours afterwards, and that it
was not until the next day that he
heard reports that the kid-
napings were a plot to free him.
Sapulpa (Okla.) Herald. Thursday, May 25, 1972—PAGE FIVE
inn.'iimmwiiwii
Hospital News
Bartlett Memorial Hospital
Admissions: Floy I.*e Bright,
Edward Harrendorf, Frank
Webb, lacy Shirley, lais Stuck,
William Coburn, Nettie Drye,
I aura Antriken.
Dismissals: Elsie Westbrook,
Carrie Hamilton, Charley
Miller, Bennie Hunter, Nancy
Sixkiller, Charles Rivett, Emma
Davis.
hearing the news of the
shootings and that the guns used
in the shooting incident were
taken from her apartment by
Jackson's younger brother
Jonathan without permission.
Jackson and John Clutchette
Clutchette had been next to
testify, but the defense rested its
case. Jackson was killed in
August in an alleged escape
attempt from San Quentin
Prison in which five others died.
Chief defense attorney How-
ard Moore presented witnesses
to show that Miss Davis was
“shocked and dismayed" on
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One letter simply stands for another In this sample A is
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CRYPTOQl’OTES
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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE WISE HUSBAND MEETS
A MARITAL CRISIS WITH A FIRM HAND-FULL OF
CANDY AND FLOWERS-AUTHOR UNKNOWN
Nixon Takes Day
Off From Talks
MOSCOW (UPI)—For Mrs. a snack."
Richard M. Nixon, today was the Wednesday night was even
day her husband finally knocked worse,
off work and took her out on the a Night Out with the Boys
town- Just about the time Mrs. Nixon
The day started with a visit to might have expected her
the Bolshoi Ballet School at 11:15 husband back “home" in the
a.m. (4:15 a.m. EDT). Kremlin after a tough day’s
But the itinerary also held work, Leonid I. Brezhnev talked
President and Mrs. Nixon’s first him into a night out with the
night of relaxation and en- boys—a five-hour negotiating
tertainment in Moscow, an session, plus dinner, at Brez-
evening performance of Mrs. hnev’s country home.
Nixon’s favorite ballet—"Swan
Lake”—in the red-and-gold The President got home about
Bolshoi Theater. half past midnight this morning.
“I haven’t even seen that Before the evening’s ballet
guy,” Mrs. Nixon said with a performance, Mrs. Nixon got an
chuckle in response to reporters opportunity to see where
questions about the President tomorrow’s prima ballerinas
Wednesday. “He called me last will come from with her morning
night (Tuesday) to say he’d be visit to the Bolshoi School of
late for dinner, but that he’d had Choreography.
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 230, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1972, newspaper, May 25, 1972; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1493652/m1/5/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.