Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 90, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1979 Page: 4 of 96
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The three military
men were indicted in
May on charge* they
conspired to aell vari-
ous amounts of PCP to
Friedrich...
the best
inside story
undercover police offi-
cer* from Moore and
Oklahoma City. They
entered guilty plea*
last month in exchange
for dismissal of ail but
the single conspiracy
count.
BOVS GIRLS'
SWIMWEAR
munist Party newspa-
per called on its read-
ers. the pies* and the
party to help insure
truth in reporting
LADIES
SWIMWEAR
■pond directly to Carter's atateasent that an effort
would be made to gut the bill." currently before
the Senate Finance Committee
But Carter's plea to the American people for
help left two Republican members of the commit-
tee unimpressed
"We want to work with the president, but we re
not going to be intimidated," said Sen Bob Dole.
K Kansas, top-ranking Republican on the tax-writ-
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• Th'"*ddy, July M 1079___OK 1 .4 ROM 4 CITY TIMER
Oil chief says windfall
Eubanks ciao sen-
tenced Dale W l.uwton,
25, Oklahoma City, to a
six-year term in prison
for his involvement in
the Oklahoma City PCP
distribution ring which
allegedly operated
(rum the apartment of
Kasik and 1-ec. -
Eubanks ordered
Lawtons sentence to
run consecutive to a
four-year state sen-
tence he currently is
nerving
Vlrrwi. 81. dies
MILL VALLEY. Calif.
(AP) — Silent film ac-
tress Isabel K Fowler,
who appeared in Laurel
and Hardy s "A Perfect
----r
profits tax unnecessary
WASHINGTON (AP) — The oil Industry says
President Carter's windfall profit* tax'* isn’t
needed, despite a fresh presidential declaration
that the levy Is crucial to his new multi-billlon-
dollar energy program
"We continue to believe that added new taxes in
addition to those already on the books are unnec
essary," aays Charles J DiBona, American Petro
leum Institute president
Paper M*ekw aid
PEKING < AP) - Ad-
mitting it has pub-
lished false or exagger
aled reports la the
past, the Chinese Com-
_ one a brown
use YOUR K)HN A BROWN CHARGE CARO /
Commenting Wednesday night after Carter's Ing committee
news conference. DiBona said that without the
new tax. the nation's otl companies should be able
to increase production of domestic oil by about 2
million barrels a day by the mld-HMiOs With the
proponed new tax a million barrels a day will be
lent," he said.
DiBona made his comments after Carter used
his nationally broadcast news conference to ap
peal to the American public to help him wtn ftmtl
congressional approval for the proposed tax The
president said his proposal is net essary to fund
his 1142 billion energy program designed to loos-
en the nation's dependence on imported oil
The proposal already has cleared the House of
Representatives, and Carter said "there will be a
massive struggle to gut the windfall profits tax
bill" in the Senate.
The oil industry spokesman said that under cur-
rent law. government will get 60 penent of any
real Increase in revenues resulting frbm decontrol
of oil prices.
He said the proposed "windfall profits' lax
would increase the government s take so that only
20 percent or 25 percent would be left to finance
the coots of new production.
DiBona declined through a spokesman to re-
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> Dole predicted Congress eventually will enact a
tax on oil companies, but said it might include
! some of the exemptions Carter said he opposes
These include leaving the tax off the first 3.000
barrels of oil produced daily by independent oil-
men.
"We'd like to structure It so we have more em-
phasis on production,** Dole said
Dole algo said Cat let'• statement <rt ihe news
conference differed markedly from his attitude on
Tuesday at a White House meeting for ail mem-
bers of J he committee
A^ the White House, Dole said. He dldn t get
Into all the histrionics about the oil lobby . . But
they're an easy target **
Sen William Roth, R-Del , also a Senate Finance
Committee member, said Carter's new* confer-
ence statements "dldn t seem consis^n^to be
with yesterday, when he was talking about work-
ing together "
Tuesday, "he was offering the olive branch."
Roth said. At the new* conference, he said, the
president seemed more like a candidate."
Sen Russell B. Long. D-La . chairman of the
* Finance Committee, said he didn't watch most of
Carter's news conference and declined comment.
An Air Force non-
commissioned officer
and two young airmen
stationed al Tinker Air
Force Base were sen-
> tented along with a ci-
vilian co-defendant to-
day to prison terms on
federal drug charges
Russell Lee Hesford,
2K. an Air Force techni-
cal sergeant. Dale Ray-
mond Kasik. 22. and
Gary Mark Lee, 18. all
! appeared in Air Force
uniforms before U.S.
' District Judge Luther
Eubank* on charges of
conspiring to distribute
the drug PCP.
‘ Eubanks tu*ntenceu
• Hesford to five years in
J prison and ordered Ka-
sik and I-er imprisoned
under provisions of the
federal Youth Correc-
tions Act which pro-
vides for a maximum
four years in prison
and two years of super-
vision.
tevVs’
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gOW
'<zro^
Rich Brilon dirs
LONDON (AP) - Sir
Charles Clore. 74. one
of the richest men ia
Britain, died in the Lon-
don Clinic todav
Tvrv
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best selections.
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gees
In the Philippines, reports from Subic Bay said
the 31 refugees towed by the patrol boat, in clean
clothes snd looking well-fed and healthy, were not
allowed to leave their 30-foot fishing junk docked
near the U.S. naval base, located about 60 miles
northwest of Manila
Four Filipino soldiers guarded the vessel, which
carried men. women and children One trooper
said the Vietnamese will be towed to a remote is-
land refugee camp in the central Philippines.
A spokesman for the Vietnamese said the group
left Cam Ranh Bay six days ago and drifted to the
Philippines where it was intercepted by a U S. Na-
vy patrol boat after slipping into Subic Bay
Air Force trio sentenced
I sited Press Islernstlsnal ____I___2_______..J._____;
• A U.S. Navy patrol boat today towed a fishing U.S. military costs for air and sea search for refu-
junk with 31 Vietnamese refugees to safety near
‘the 7th Fleet Subic Bay base In the Philippines
and a guided missile cruiser rescued 44 refugees
from a leaking boat in the South China Sea
Planes from the 75,BM-ton carrier Kitty Hawk,
aa well as the guided missile cruiser USS England
and other U.S. naval craft with Vietnamese lin-
guists aboard were in the South China Sea area
'today on refugee patrol.
• The England took aboard a group of 41 refu-
gees. four of them i|l. from a 2B foot boat that was
'“leaking badly" and had a damaged engine, a Na-
’vy spokesman in Washington said
In.Washington, the Carter administration asked
Congress for 9307 million to construct and operate
□'ml tout." ** ■
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 90, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1979, newspaper, July 26, 1979; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1802118/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.