Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 91, No. 50, Ed. 2 Friday, April 18, 1980 Page: 6 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
, Friday, Apn) 18, 1960
ig business awarded
BETTER PICTURES?
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ans at Ras El-Sheikh, a
base 12 miles north of
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dark, apparently sur-
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- TEL AVIV (AP) -
Seaborne Israeli forces
t- raided a Palestinian
’ . base, on Lebanon’s
southern coast early to-
dayjand killed six
Palestinians, the mili-
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| ‘Oscars^ but fights back
Anscetated Press Business, America,” and the Heritage Foundation,
F California activists handed out pig-shaped a conservative public policy think tank, sponsored
‘ awards, union advocates stormed a Seattle bank a breakfast forum for response to the attacks.
, meeting and 10. °0° hard-hatted workers marched “Ralph Nader and the other critics who have
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The attack, first of
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F tion for the Palestinian
raid April 7 on the Mis
gav Am border kibbutz
in which the five raid-
E ers and three Israelis
5 were killed.
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in Boston as critics of corporate America turned been so busy recently would have us believe that LJ
out for “Big Business Day" crime, greed and social arrogance are pandemic I
get But business boosters fought back with inter- in the nation’s executive suites,” said Alexander E"E
views, newspaper advertisements and endorse- B. Towbridge, president of the National Associa- Ll
' ments, and when the day was over, the chairman tion of Manufacturers. LJ
of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce pronounced the "This kind of verbal overkill may be good for I
activist effort a failure. whipping up emotions, but it simply doesn’t EE
“It appears the effort to get a lot of free media square with reality.” —
attention apparently has just fallen apart," Jay He suggested action to stimulate worker pro- LJ
p - Van Andel said Thursday. ductivity, tighten federal spending and draft ”en- ■
Labor groups, senior citizens’ organizations and lightened” environmental policies. eg
E consumer activists, with Ralph Nader at the helm, Nader said critics were only asking business “to Ll
j attacked alleged business abuses with elections to stop polluting the environment so much, to stop ^J
L a Corporate Hall of Shame” and a series of corrupting the government so much ... and to fg
marches, rallies and speeches. make decisions that are not always based on the
"They (businesses) are telling you, ‘we know almighty dollar ’ U
what is best for you," said civil rights activist Supporters and backers of local causes turned ^J
-amesFarmer, one ” the sponsors of Big Busi- out for rallies and speeches in such cities as Ev- m
. nessDay:- .5^ ve ever been injured on the ansville, Ind., Concord, N.H., Hartford, Conn., M
job, or discriminated against by an employer, or Springfield, Dl., Columbia, S.C., and San Diego. Li
] had your taxes raised because company taxes
were lowered or lost your job because of a plant In other developments: EE
shutdown . . . then you know corporations don’t —Business Day activists named "shadow” Ll
know what’s best for you." boards of directors to monitor 11 corporations — IJ
_ g.I Citibank, Grumman Aerospace, Occidental Petro- mI
ronee esHimated 10,900 eopstruetion trade leum, Exxon, Du Pont, U.S. Steel, American Elec- M
worxers, “y.0.*071”* signs Warning business trie Power, Eli Lilly drug company, Winn-Dixie U
for taking food from your table,” turned out for a food chain, Fluor Construction and Castle-Cooke Lj
. march in midtown Boston. Labor officials said the food conglomerate. M
2 rally was the biggest for labor in nearly 20 years, —The annual meeting of the holding company LI
and the marchers included the unemployed as for Seattle-First National Bank, Washington’s
well as workers released from their jobs for the largest, erupted into an angry confrontation as
occasion. union representatives denounced the bank’s refus-
Meanwhile, corporate supporters responded al to recognize a union. Some of the 100 protesters
with “Growth Day” events. The U.S. Chamber of were admitted by proxy shareholder passes.
Commerce draped a 70-foot banner across its Seafirst Chairman William Jenkins said later the
, a : Washington headquarters proclaiming, “B’s Your protest “didn’t help their cause any.”
---------
1. ENTIRE STOCK
I ~_____.1- A-
Tyre and about 25
mites north of the Is-
raeli border.
Two Israeli soldiers
were wounded, the com-
munique said, and the
raiders blew up two
buildings before pull-
> tag out Ras EHSheikh,
; near the town of
Saratand, reportedly
serves as a base for
three groups in the
Palestine Liberation
C Organization, including
; PLO leader Yasser
Arafat’s Al Fatah fac-
> tion.
“We consider this a
y very successful opera
tion," said an Israeli of-
ficer.
The command
claimed the base was
used as a supply center
and staging base for
terrorist raids against
Israel.
After the attack on
Misgav Am, Israel sent
some 300 troops into
southeast Lebanon and
said their mission was
to block infiltration
routes used by the
Palestinians But the
government announced
their withdrawal sever-
al days later
The retaliatory raid
apparently was de-
layed until Prime Min-
ister Menachem Begin
completed three days
of talks with President
Carter on the dead-
locked Egyptian-Israeli
negotiations to work
out an autonomy plan
for the 1.2 million Pal-
estinian Arabs living
on the West Bank of the
Jordan River and the
Gaza Strip, occupied by
Israel in the 1987 Arab-
Israeli War.
Begin returned home
today. He, Carter and
President Anwar Sadat
of Egypt agreed to step
“ . up the frequency of the
1 . negotiations, but there
was little or no expec
tation that they would
i reach Agreement by
the target date
Etby the Camp David
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 91, No. 50, Ed. 2 Friday, April 18, 1980, newspaper, April 18, 1980; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846981/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.