Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 91, Ed. 2 Thursday, June 6, 1974 Page: 6 of 20
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Governors Back Ethics Call
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Nixon Opposes Repeal
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National Affairs
SINCE 1964
n
is to be any hope of con-
quering oil-price-based in-
flation.
John C. Sawhill, admin-
istrator of the Federal En-
ended without addressing
Itself directly to Watergate
and the possibility of a
Tubt* ClMr, Fite
Biuthing Restored
torches and pried open
three smaller safes, police
said. Desks and personnel
files were ransacked.
Hughes’ representatives
would not tell police what
the personal papers con-
tained.
Hughes has
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SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
(AP) — Actress and model
Jennifer O’Neill has con-
firmed she plans to marry
actor Elliot Gould.
Bronchial Tubes
Clogged with Mucus
communications center
went undisturbed.
It marked the third time
a Hughes' office had been
robbed or burglarized
since the start of the year,
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The volunteer Army topped its
enBstment objective in May for the first time this year.
Citing this and other indicators, Pentagon officials
now predict the Army will hit or come close to its target
of 781,600 men by June 30, the end of the first full year
since the draft law died.
This is a marked change from their predictions last
winter that the Army probably would fall about 20,000
men short.
Figures just compiled show the Army enlisted 14,848
men and women in May, which was 103.9 per cent of its
Objective for that month.
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"They must have been early Wednesday. The guard
The two-story office is
headquarters for Hughes'
old motion picture busi-
ness. The reclusive billion-
aire, now in the Bahamas,
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Armed safecrackers spent
almost four hours in indus-
trialist Howard Hughes'
Hollywood office, rifling
J petaonal files and taking
’■ $60,000 while
COOL
ONE ROOM OR
$ggoo
Cwrti«..d By Aliooollon
Hom. Appbooc. MowuUmu,.,
VIUA TO RENN ON N W. 23rd.
The governors also
called on Congress to
make permanent the five-
year revenue-sharing pro-
gram adopted in 1972, un-
Hr
Oil Pacts Bill Pending
independent
and strong
volved — in his absence —
in considerable controver-
sy, including a current
long-running suit by his
former Nevada chief, Rob-
ert Maheu, who has said
Hughes tried to influence
the White House particu- ning
i D.
owner of a bookstore.
Bauhaus had been on
trial for second degree
murder in the Oct. 17,
1972, slaying.
Hunt was killed by a sin-
gle shot from his .22-cali-
ber revolver when he and
his wife surprised a man
in their home.
Bauhaus* attorney said
he would appeal.
Actress to Wed
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Im
Former Atty. Gen. Elliot
Richardson tells the gover-
nors conference the Water-
gate scandals may be the
last straw turning political
and moral direction back
to the states. (AP Wire-
photo.)
SEATTLE (AP) — The
nation's governors have
endorsed a far-reaching
ethics proposal calling for
broad financial disclosure
by public officials and re-
forms in campaign financ-
ing.
The resolution, a bid by
the 66th National Gover-
nors' Conference to bolster
the image of government
amid the Watergate scan-
dals, was passed unani-
mously on the meeting's
closing day Wednesday,
with two abstentions.
A move by New York's
Republican Gov. Malcolm
Wilson to scale down the
measure, offered by Wis-
consin's Democratic Gov.
Patrick J. Lucey and Re-
publican Gov. William G.
Milliken of Michigan, was
rejected 16 to 9. quirements for advance
Although the conference public notice and written
minutes.
—Registration and full
disclosure of lobbying ac-
presidential impeachment, tivities by all special inter-
the need for higher ethical est groups.
standards in politics was a
recurrent theme through-
out the four-day session.
The Milliken-Uicey reso-
lution pledged vigorous ef-
-------------— 1 r ■ ■■ ■
L* U
r AMCvreoN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of the Treasury Wil-
liam E. Simon says the Nixon administration opposes re-
peal of the oil and gas depletion allowance because it
would result in higher prices to consumers.
An effort to abolish the depletion allowance was
among a series of tax reform proposals strongly at-
tacked by Simon as he testified Wednesday before the
Senate Finance Committee.
Senate liberals plan to offer the proposals as amend-
ments to a minor House-passed bill tentatively slated for
Senate debate next week.
'“‘lim if,
Il In 11
larly in opposing nuclear
tests in Nevada.
Police said although the
intruders walked on both
floors
warehouse-like
a handful of workers man-
telephones at the
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eminent in four areas:
S:
—Campaign financing,
including limits and disclo-
sure for contributions and .
spending, "selected pilot
projects to determine fea-
sibility of public campaign
financing,"
enforcement
penalties.
—Strict ethical codes for
government officials, in-
cluding clear definitions of
conflict of interest, "ap-
propriate and timely dis-
closure of personal fi-
nances" by both public of-
ficials and candidates and
independent enforcement.
—Open meetings of pub-
lic bodies except in "limit-
ed, specific circum-
stances," with penalties
for noncompliance and re-
quirements for
Army Betters
M
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3 BIG DAYS! J/
JUNE7,8&9 “
You'll see a fascinating display of
talent when the Oklahoma Museum
of Art presents the annual Arts
and Crafts Show on the mall Art
ists from throughout the South-
west will be eihibitrg their handi-
work wtudi win iociuoe tewelry.
pottery, sculpture, glassblowing
and weaving . to name a few.
Two prizes will be awarded for the
most attractive display areas Die
show will be open from 10 a m. to
9 pm Friday and Saturday, from
12 noon to 6 p m Sunday Don't
miss the eicitement ol rare talent
on display... see it in Shepherd
Mail's comfortaMe 76° weather!
SERVIN
* CHICAGO (AP) — The United States will have a criti-
cal shortage of water by the turn of the century unless
consumption and use patterns can be changed, an engi-
neering executive predicts.
Except for some arid regions, the country now has an
adequate supply, Brian Gallagher of Milwaukee, Wis.,
said. But he said as the population, cities and industries
grow, the increased demand soon will create a shortage
at the present rate of consumption.
GallaghdT*president of Limnetics, Inc., is chairman of
the organizing committee for a conference under way in
Chicago sponsored by the International Water Resources
Association.
Administration rather than
private insurance compa-
nies as urged by the Nixon
administration.
The conference produced
less talk than in recent
years about ways to get
more federal dollars since
most states, barred from
deficit spending, are in
better financial shape than
the federal government.
m your «i,
Inifoll H yourself
raporily |OI
.1 Quiet,
TULSA (AP) — A jury
has convicted and recom-
mended life imprisonment
for James Scott Bauhaus,
20.
The jury deliberated
nearly three hours
Wednesday before declar-
ing Bauhaus guilty of kill-
WASHINGTON (AP) — role in negotiations if there ing Jefferson D. Hunt,
The Senate Foreign Rela-
tions Committee is draft-
ing legislation to forbid
American-based oil com-
panies from entering into ergy Office, agreed and
agreements with foreign promised support for the
governments without bill.
Washington's approval. The large oil companies,
Sen. Frank Church, D-I- in testimony before the
daho, who is presiding panel earlier this year,
over a Foreign Relations said they do not have ade-
subcommittee probe into quate leverage to negoti-
multinational oil compa- ate price agreements with
nies, said the U.S. govern- Middle East oil-producing
ment must take an active nations.
said he
glimpsed two men and
thought there were four or
five all told. He said some-
one stuck a gun in his back
as he was making the
rounds.
The men burned open
two safes with acetylene
of the two-story
structure, although authorities drew
no connection.
Confidential papers were
reportedly taken in a Feb-
ruary burglary of Hughes'
Summa Corp, in Las Ve-
gas, and in April a
voice scrambler, typewrit-
er and camera were taken
from the Summa offices on
Ventura Boulevard in Los
Angeles. ___
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in federal funds is being
returned each year to
states and localities.
They urged prompt en-
actment of a federal
health insurance program
but backed away from en-
dorsing a program like the
Kennedy-Mills bill, which
would operate the system
through the Social Security
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very well organized to pull
it off," said Dick Hannah,
a Hughes spokesman.
The gang gagged, bound
and blindfolded security
undetected guard Mike Davis, 40, who still keeps it as a message
by nearby workers, police called police shortly after and communications
said. working his bonds loose ter for personal business.
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Bennett, Charles L. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 91, Ed. 2 Thursday, June 6, 1974, newspaper, June 6, 1974; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1789962/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.