Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 129, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 19, 1967 Page: 1 of 34
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McCarty Trial
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(See McCARTY—Page 2)
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Paid Circulation 294,379 A.M.-P.M. Daily Average, June 1967
VOL. LXXVIII, NO. 129
34 PAGES—OKLAHOMA CITY, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1967
5c IN OKLAHOMA—10c ELSEWHERN
IRLINER BLOWS UP
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WITH 78 ON BOARD
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Small Plane
Elderly May Live in Montgomery Ward Building
Girl Hit by Car.
Landmark Eyed for Housing
Dragged 52 Feet
$4 Million at Stake
A llocation
accountant, said on question-
Nev Rain
Woes Eased
in tax liabilities for the years ty since 1959 is $893,142.
Drain
□
neys for Dolese’s astranged tax litigation with the federal
Shame
The city council has adopt-
(See DOLESE—Page 2)
Missile
Police-Killer
Site Hit
Seeks Parole
I,
without
additional
dium midway between Hanoi
Pilots claimed their rock-
have to be cut.
CLOUDYETK
pardon and parole board’s
nearly 13 years of a life sen-
sources of revenue to finance
tence for the murder of Ben- its operations.
nie F. Cravatt.
Excise board records
E.
of
trict Attorney Curtis Harris than 1.7 percent last fiscal
said. He said he did not know reinforced by the new sales
mendation outside a general ords show.
were down 2 percent from
letter of protest he addressed
Oklahoma City has had an
to the clemency board Tues- overall increase in spending
were down 11 percent.
(See COUNTY—Page 2)
(See CITY—Page 2)
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27
Today9s
News •
Today
lawyer for Mrs. Dolese, that
Dolese’s personal tax liabili-
Skinner was on the list, but
will not make any recom-
tax, jumped 35 percent for
the same 12 months, the rec-
Sandlin said the tax liabili-
ty of the three Dolese indus-
tries is more than $3 million.
He said the company and
Dolese have been involved in
City officials say if their
part of the millage is cut,
Poultry Output
Decline Seen
trial went into its third day
on Wednesday morning,
called the testimony highly
estimate of needs to the
county excise board. It is
known, however, that the es-
timate of needs cannot be fi-
By Jack Taylor
Of the State Staff
49
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5
77
HENDERSONVILLE,
C. (AP) — A Piedmont
one U. S. plane, the Ameri-
can command reported.
plans and submit a formal
proposal to the authority
and to instruct the housing
staff to begin preparation
of a development program,
which must receive federal
approval.
Albert Cohen, president
of the realty firm, said ten-
tative plans for the 6-story
(See WARDS—Page 2)
year (1966-67) over the year
before.
Oklahoma C i t y’s funds,
Need help? Write to Oklahoma City Times, P. O.
.Box 25125. Oklahoma City 73125 or telephone CE 2-3311
between 10 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Amusements
Bridge
Business
Classified Section
Comics
National Affairs
Oil Reports
Our World Today
Sports
TV Tidbits
Vital Statistics
Women’s News
N.
Air-
1
There are no signs identifying the streets at NW 10
and Morgan Rd. Mrs. A. D. H.
By John Bennett
Federal Judge Luther Bo-
Mrs. Sherian Kay Arthur, 18, holds daughter, 2, as she tells police how her
car struck Linda Joyce Eason, 9. (Times Staff Photo by Jim Argo.)
Street drainage at NW 8 and Trellis Ct. is bad. The
street Is dirt and drainage backs up after a rain. Mrs. B
D.
Fire Marshal John D. Anderson says this smoke
comes from a company that burns wrecked or junked
cars to get the base metal. A city ordinance permits such
activity under supervision of the fire marshal’s office.
v
23, 24
12
25, 26
27-33
14
4
17
8
20-22
26
27
10-12
on events surrounding
I filed for Social Security on January 20, but have
heard nothing. What has been done for me? L. R., Spen-
cer.
The street marker now has been replaced by the of-
fice of traffic control.
A struggle was shaping up
Wednesday over three mills
of the ad valorem tax that is
traditionally allocated to cit-
ies of Oklahoma County.
The county excise board
begins budget hearings
Thursday and will divide up
the 15-mill ad valorem levy
next Tuesday.
The testimony was given
in the absence of the jury of
five women and seven men.
It came as the federal gov-
ernment focused its investi-
Joseph J. McCain, district manager of the Social Se-
curity Administration, says he can find no record of your
having applied for Social Security. If you will provide the
(See ACTION LINE—Page 2)
We called the street maintenance department and it
now has cleaned out the inlets and graded the ditches.
This should improve the drainage.
I
since 1959, a tax lawyer said
Wednesday.
The testimony came in a
district court deposition
hearing requested by attor-
ART AND BOOKS harmonize at the Oklahoma County
Libraries’ second annual Staff Art Show which opened
this week at the main library, NW 3 and Robinson. Er-
nest Craig, county libraries’ staff artist, looks over
T-
A'h.
There Is a fire that burns continually on E Reno and
the smoke is visible for quite a distance. B. A.
some of the more than 50 pieces of art on exhibit
through August 5. Several of Craig’s award-winning
works have been exhibited at Tulsa’s Philbrook
Museum. (Times Staff Color Photo by Bob Albright).
HOURLY
2:20 p.m.
18282 p:m:
U?
1:00 a.m.
2:00 a.m.
5 01 a.m.
4:00 a.m.
' •97
882
4
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Judge Kills Testimony!
1 *
A mid-morning walk to the
grocery store ended tragically
Wednesday when 9-year-old Lin-
da Joyce Eason was struck and
critically injured by a car.
Linda, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. A. C. Eason, 1315 SE 42.
was hit and dragged more than
52 feet beneath a car driven by
Sherian Kay Arthur, 18, who
gave her address as 704 SE 32.
Linda apparently darted in
front of Mrs. Arthur’s south-
bound car in the 4300 block of S
High.
Fight Due
Dolese Tax Debt Aired Over Mill
ried 73 passengers and a
crew of 5.
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kab
wife, Mrs. Ardith Carlene
Gossi Dolese, who filed suit
for divorce in late 1959.
Custer W. Sandlin, a tax
attorney and certified public
Oklahoma City Times
ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED 1967 OKLAHOMA PUBLISHING CO., 500 N BROADWAY
jt
includes revenue from three
mills.
County commissioners say
they don’t intend to fight for
any portion of the three
mills, but only to present an
Ammunition for tax fight
is unloaded by Oklahoma
J
The mid-front of Mrs.
Arthur’s car struck the child,
denting the hood and breaking a
plastic ornament.
Nearly hysterical, Mrs. Ar-
thur was taken to police head-
(See GIRLPage 2)
that about Sept. 9, 1960, Pate
showed her a sum of money
on a return trip.
She said Pate told her he
was taking the money to Tul-
sa to give to “Mr. McCarty
and Mr. Collins.”
Craig identified a picture
of McCarty and Everett Col-
lins, former house speaker,
ets and
blew up
holds option on the proper-
ty, reported preliminary
estimate of the cost for a
“turnkey” job would be
$1,812,800.
The turnkey project
Another Proposal, Page 2
would allow the Cohen
firm to hire architects, en-
gineers and construction
contractors for mthe job,
in Oklahoma City.
“It doesn’t do me much
good to protest,” Harris
six witnesses called Tuesday
in the income tax evasion
trial of former legislative
leader J. D. McCarty.
Bohanon, in a conference
ma City police detective dur- Wednesday.
750-pound bombs ing a 1954 supermarket rob-
Sandlin also said Dolese ---e-
owes his three companies . a 228.1 million budget that
then sell the completed
project to the housing au-
thority.
The authority had inves-
tigated the possibility of
purchasing the building
and rehabilitating it itself
before Wednesday’s pro-
posal.
The authority adopted a
resolution inviting the firm
to prepare preliminary
Local: Partly cloudy and
a little warmer with
chance of scattered thun-
dershowers through Thurs-
day. Overnight low 69.
High Thursday 84. (De-
tails, Page 26.)
Royce Craig; Robert Shutt, a
Tennessee coal company ex-
ecutive, and Carl H. Knox,
former stock salesman for a
Midwest City newspaper.
Pate took the fifth amend-
ment to a series of questions
including one asking him if
he had ever paid McCarty
for the purpose of influ-
encing legislation.
His former wife testified
The impact jolted the little
girl loose from one of her red
sneakers. The other sneaker
was found near a pool of blood
where Linda’s body came to
rest.
three of the
some retrenchment in poul-
try production because of
prices unsatisfactory to pro-
ducers are being borne out in
statistics on chick hatchings.
The agriculture depart-
ment reports hatchings of
On Way
Summer showers contin-
ued in the western half of
Oklahoma Wednesday and
the weatherman said more
rain is possible in all sec-
tions except the northeast
through Thursday.
Forecasters said thunder-
storms in the Panhandle
could become severe.
Largest rainfall amount
reported Wednesday morn-
ing was 2.02 inches at Erick.
Stations reporting more
than an inch were Laverne,
Cordell, Hobart and Altus.
Others were Gage, .21; Ard-
more, .19; McAlester, .02;
Ponca City, .34; Tulsa, .02;
Clinton, .21, and Fort Sill,
.33.
Oklahoma City’s Will Rog-
ers World Airport measured
.21 inch, and Tinker Air
Force Base .41.
hausted?”
Sandlin said eventually the
tax assessments would have
to be paid unless Dolese
wins.
He said the government
could levy against Mrs.
Dolese’s home at NW 38 and
Shartel, against objects of
art, automobiles and any
other personal property.
already late on its flight and Haiphong,
schedule. The airliner car-
government since early 1966
and that the case now is in
the appeals division of Inter-
nal Revenue Service.
Sandlin was asked by
By Mary Jo Nelson
Roger M. Dolese and the
three cement industries he
owns have nearly $4 million
leyball a short distance
away, but none was injured.
A spokesman at Piedmont
Airlines headquarters in Win-
ston-Salem said the airliner
was Flight 22, which left At-
lanta at 10:40 a.m. bound for
Ashville-Hendersonville air-
port, Roanoke, Va., and then
to Washington. It was due
in the nation’s capital at
12:57 p.m.
The collision occurred min-
utes after the airliner left
the Hendersonville - Ashe-
ville airport at 11:18 a.m.,
42 broiler type chicks in June
69
County commissionerg
July docket after serving argue that the city has other
the like month last year. Tuesday and the raids cost
Hatchings of egg-type chicks
a 1961 bill to legalize parimu-
tuel betting in Oklahoma.
McCarty was speaker of
the house at the time.
Struck from the record
was testimony given by Whit
Pate, Poteau attorney;
Pate’s former wife, Mrs.
Betty Barclay of Belton,
Texas; Tulsa photographer
McALESTER — A Dallas bery will be considered for nanced w:u.cu
hoodlum who pleaded guilty parole this weekend, the par- county revenue,
to killing a veteran Oklaho- don and parole office said
I
WASHINGTON (AP)
Government forecasts
Miskovsky, “What happens
James Edward Skinner, proposed city services will
33, was added to the state
’ ‘ a*
h. 14, Aeag gmtk .
SAIGON (AP) — Ameri-
can bombers flew more
heavy raids Tuesday against
North Vietnam, striking at
four major rail yards north
of Hanoi and blasting a mis-
sile site inside a soccer sta-
The parole office said it showed Wednesday that
has received no recommen-
Oklahoma County’s operat-
dation from the office of Dis- ing budget increased by less
hanon Wednesday struck
from the record testimony of prejudicial and hearsay.
City, county commis-
sioners and mayors of oth-
er cities. Page 16.
By Kay Dyer
Conversion of the old
Montgomery Ward store
building at the southwest
corner of Main and Walker
into a public housing pro-
ject for the elderly was
proposed Wednesday to the
Oklahoma City Housing
Authority.
The Cohen Realty and
Investment Co., which
[lines Boeing 727 with 78 per-
sons aboard crashed near
this mountain city Wednes-
day after colliding in flight
[with a smaller plane.
A sheriff’s department
spokesman said there ap-
peared to be no survivors.
A sheriffs deputy at the
scene said bodies were
strewn “all over the area”
just off Interstate Highway
26, about 2.5 miles northeast
of the city.
The deputy said 35 bodies
had been counted two hours
after the crash. One body
went through the roof of a
nearby residence.
“There’s no possibility of
survivors,” he said.
Witnesses said the small
plane, a Cessna 310, which
has two engines, exploded
immediately after the col-
lision. The airliner, one wit-
ness said, “continued on in
flight as if nothing had hap-
pened. Then, all of a sudden,
it blew up too.”
The airliner crashed near
a boy’s summer camp. Sev- :
eral boys were playing vol-
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TEMPERATURES
68 5:00 a.m.
68 6:00 a.m.
2 2:0 •m
28 2:29 a.m.
68 2:00 a.m,
M 10:00 a.m.
fl 11:29 a.m.
69 12:00 noon
Soviet-made surface-to-air
missiles and their launchers
in the Hai Duong soccer sta-
dium.
“We really nailed them
good,” reported Lt. Cmdr.
Gene Lund, 33, Biloxi, Miss.,
one of the carrier pilots who
attacked the stadium and re-
ported orange fire and
smoke billowing from the
missile site.
Navy, air force and ma-
rine pilots flew 133 missions
— about 400 individual strike
sorties — over the North
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 129, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 19, 1967, newspaper, July 19, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846912/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.