THE DAILY OKLAHUMAJN Since 1907 The State Newspaper 20c 26 PAGES TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1980 OKLAHOMA CITY, OK Soviet Family to Get Tests lodeo Death I and the state of Illinois 'roves Wife's orst Fears CHICAGO (AP) A Circuit Court judge ruled Monday that a 12-year-old Ukrainian boy and his sister are in need of state supervision, frustrating at least temporarily the parents' attempts to take the boy back to the Soviet Union. Judge Joseph C. Mooney recommended that Walter Polovchak and his sister, Natalie, 17, now live with an aunt and uncle in Chicago, but ordered them to visit their parents at least three timesaweck. He ordered the children placed in custody of the Department of Children and Family Services until a Sept. 9 hearing on their status.
and ordered psychological evaluations of the family by court-appointed psychiatrists, according to Rick Michael, a Cook County assistant state attorney. The iamily came to Chicago seven months ago from the Ukraine and the parents want to return. Earlier. Dr. Ner Llttner of Chicago, a child psychiatrist called by the parents' lawyers, testified that the boy may be displaying a rebelliousness typical of children his age and could suffer psychological harm if he gets his way.
U.S. immigration officials have granted the boy See SOVIET, Page 2 Trantmoll By Robby After his ruling. Mooney mei wiui Aiier President Denies Probe Influence Carter Calls day. Witnesses said Furness, 39, was thrown and fell underneath the animal. As the horrified crowd watched.
Its hind legs struck him on the back and right side. In the crowd was Furness' 15-year-old daughter, Penny. She rode in the ambulance with her injured father to the Wewoka hospital where he was given emergency treatment and transferred to Shawnee. Mrs. Furness, said one of her girlfriends who was at the rodeo telephoned her about the accident.
She met the ambulance at the Shawnee hospital, but her husband was already dead. He and a whole bunch of other guys who worked at Mobil signed up for the rodeo in Wewoka," Mrs. Furness said. "It was a rodeo for amateur people who had never been In rodeos before. My husband had been on a diet and had lost 15 or 20 pounds preparing for the rodeo," she said.
"He was always very lillv's SHAWNEE Her asband thought it ould be exciting, but 3an Furness was un-isy about his decision try his hand at ro-eoing in last week-nd's Greenhorn Rodeo Wewoka. Her observation was hat rodeo is a "rough, ough sport," so she de-ided not to go. She ldn't want to see him hurt. Mrs. Furness' tears ifere borne out when ler husband ol 16 'ears, George Robert urness, died early Sat-irday from injuries he offered when he was rampled by a bull he rled to ride.
The 39-year-old pro-iuction superintendent Mobil Chemical Co. if Shawnee had never participated in a rodeo before. This was to be his first time on a bucking bull. "I had a premonition that something was going to happen and that's why I didn't go to the rodeo with him," Mrs. Furness said.
"I felt he was going to get hurt suffer a concussion, broken arm or something. I felt it was too dangerous. We didn't argue about it, but I asked him not to go," she said Monday as the family was preparing for Furness' funeral to- 'A Mistake' WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter said Monday he did not try to influence a Justice Department investigation of Billy Carter and stated that he tried twice to dissuade his Using Billy Not Urged, Official Says WASHINGTON (AP) A high State Department official said Monday the department did not recommend, but might not have ruled out, the use of Billy Carter to seek help from Libya in winning the release of the American hostages in Iran. Undersecretary of State David D. Newsom made the statements as a special subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee began hearings on Billy Carter's links with Libya's Arab government.
Billy Aid Sought The White House has said that President Carter's younger brother at the request of When balloonist Maxie Anderson of Albuquer- UPS Gfld DOWnS que M-. "ed off from the U.S. National Hot day left a smiling Anderson of time to contemplate his ruined craft. brother from journeying to Libya in 1979 because the trip would be "a mistake and an embarrassment." The president, in a report to a Senate subcommittee investigating his brother's ties to Libya, also-said he did not learn until last month that the radical North African government had given Billy Carter $220,000. Assertion Repeated Tht nresident repeat Before he left for the festivities, she said, the family took pictures of him in his rodeo outfit as a keepsake.
Billy Carter subject of controversy. REPORT DENIED TODAY Cloudy skies and scattered showers are forecast for eastern Oklahoma today and Wednesday, with clear to partly cloudy conditions elsewhere. Highs statewide will range from 95 to 102 today and from 92 to 100 Wednesday. Pa8e 6 Eddie Not Mad About Profits Newsman Accused Of Afghan Killings murder of three Afghan Zbigniew BrzeztnsKi, the president's national security adviser set up a meeting last Nov. 27 between U.S.
and Libyan officials to discuss the Iranian hostage crisis. Sen. Patrick Leahy, a member of the special Senate panel, asked Newsom if the State Department "ever recommended that Billy Carter be used in any way" as an intermediary with Lib- ed his assertion that he did not let his brother influence U.S. policy toward Libya and said he did not receive any of the money Billy got from the Libyans. A copy of the president's statement, part of a report to the subcommittee, was obtained by The Associated Press.
It includes dictated notes from Carter's -daily journals. 'No Influence' In his statement, as he has said previously, Carter said: "I can state categorically that my brother Billy has had no influence on my decisions or on any U.S. government policy or action concerning Libya. I can also state that Billy has never asked me to take any step Eddie Chiles, the outspoken critic of big government, wasn't mad about his company's earnings. The chief executive of The Western Company of North America reported in Oklahoma City that his company's earnings and revenues for the second quarter and for the first six months of this year were the greatest in the company's history.
MOSCOW The Soviet press agency Tass reported Monday that an Afghan newspaper had accused Dan Rather, a CBS News correspondent, of participating in the murder of three villagers while he was in Afghanistan in March. According to the official Russian account, the newspaper Hagi-gale Enquelnbe Sowr said: "It becomes absolutely clear that Rather, the CBS-TV commentator, participated in the bloody workers." Tass did not make accusations of its own, but its account seemed to accept the Afghan newspaper's charges at face value. In New York. Rather said in a statement made public by CBS: "The story is completely untrue and totally without foundation. It is fantasy from first letter to last, sheer unadulterated nonsense." Rather said in a telephone interview Sec KILLINGS, Page 2 Chiles Page 8 Cool Front Killer Hurricane Creeps In Widows at Trial Smashes island oartiv nloudv skies ya.
Panel Questions "No," Newsom replied. "Can you think of any reason the State Department would have recommended him?" Leahy asked. "I can't exclude that possibility." Newsom said. "All I can say is that it was not done." Newsom said he was not approached by Brzczinskt or anyone else at the White House about the matter, and as far as he knows Cyrus Vance, who was then secretary of state, was not approached either. Called Unofficial Earlier, under questioning by Son.
Robert Dole, R-Kan Newsom said Billy Carter had "no official mission" In Libya and the State De-partment was not asked to facilitate his two visits there. Newsom told the pan Ordered to Jail Squads of game wardens begin shutting down crabbing, shrimping and oysterlng in 350 square miles of prime fishing waters, as a result of a deadly chemical spill in Louisiana. Page 1 The Oklahoma Transportation Commission takes the first step toward building a new Arkansas River bridge In Tulsa, although one cornmts-sion member questions the manner In which the issue is presented. rae 15 Monster-hunts have disturbed the waters of Loch Ness since the year 565. In the latest attempt, a team of naturalists plan to dredge the Scottish lake and hope to "net" Nessie.
Page 12 AN EDITORIAL! Talk of "dipping" Into general fund revenues to shore up the financially ailing Social Security system Is deceptive when the gov-ernment is running massive deficits. Page 4 Dissident Won't Return to Jail CASTRIES, St. Lucia (AP) Hurricane Allen delivered a devastating swipe at this impoverished Caribbean island Monday, destroying hun-nVMln of homes and causing at least eight deaths, and a cold front which crept into the northwest corner of the state Monday brought lower temperatures but little moisture into Oklahoma. The cooler weather, however, is expected to continue today. Highs today should range from 87 to 99 statewide, the National Weather Service said, with readings Wednes day ranging from io 100.
Monday Highs' from 95 at Ard- that would affect any of these actions or policies." The president said he did not learn of the Libyan payments to Billy until July 15, "when this information was widely publicized in the news media." Billy Carter registered as an agent of the Libyan government on July 14 to settle the Justice Department investigation. 'No Payments' "No payments or tranfers of this money have been made to me. My trustees assure me that no such payments or transfers have been made to Carter's Warehouse (the family peanut warehouse business) or to the trust. My trustees and I will see to it that no direct or Indirect benefit will flow to me in the future," Carter's statement said. The president denied knowtng any details of the Justice Department's Investigation of his brother under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
He said he did not try to Influence the department's With a call for President Ferdinand E. Marcos to dismantle his martial law rule in the Philippines, dissident politician Benigno A. Aquino says he will accept a fellowship at Harvard Unlver-sity instead of returning-as promised to his Jail cell in Manila. 5 the trial, which is expected to last about three months. Jury selection took six weeks.
The Klnnsmen and Nazis are charged with five counts each of first-degree murder in the shooting deaths. They also are charged with felonious rioting. Shortly after Long began instructing the jury, Mrs. Nathan jumped to her feet and shouted, "This trial is a sham and a farce. The U.S.
government is trying to enforce fascism," she con-tinued. "They conspired to kill members of the CWP, including my husband." At that point the judge removed the jury from the room. Depu-' ties, holding Mrs. Nathan's arms securely, escorted her to the front of the courtroom, where they gagged her with a wide band of adhesive tape after she refused the judge's orders to be uuict, GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) Shouting that the trial was a "sham," the widows of two leftists were led from a courtroom and sentenced to 30 days In jail Monday for disrupting the opening of the murder trial of six Ku Klux Klnnsmen and Nazis.
Deputies put adhesive tape over one woman's mouth. Marty Nathan, widow of Michael Nathan, one of five Communist Workers Party (CWP) members killed a( a "Death to the Klan" rally last Nov. 3, was gagged when she refused an order by Superior Court Judge James M. Long to be quiet. Long ordered her and Florence Cauce, widow of Cesar Vlnce Cauce, to serve 30 days lor contempt of court.
The outbursts occurred as Long was giving an opening statement to the all-white jury of six men and six women that will hear Aquino Michael Pilgrim called It "a "leSelSe officials the killer storm was "among the great ones, with winds peaking up to 140 mph. Allen, the first hurricane of the season, swept just no th of Barbados and south of St. Lucia and then moved westward, churning the open sea with hurricane watches were ordered in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, which share the island of Hispaniola. Weather service officials said the storm probably would not strike any land area for at "eart IS hours, but Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands should expect heavy weather. Barbados also was pummeled as he killer storm passed by, and there were unconfirmed of two storm-related deaths there.
Lucia officials said there were eight known deaths on the small Island and the toll was pec -cd to rise as rescue teams looked for missing per- The savage winds blew away part of the roof over wards at Victoria Hospital in Castries, the capital of St. Lucia. But Pilgrim said the greatest damage was. inflicted in the Vieux Fort area at the southern tip of the island. Telephone service was disrupted, but Pilgrim said reports arriving from Vieux Fort said it was In a terrible stale." He said his own home In the southern district had been "smashed apart.
caused mudslides in some areas. Inside Features Amosem*nts 1 8 Women's News. Ann mnaers more and Gage to 103 in Tulsa. Isolated thunderstorms were reported in central Oklahoma during the morning, but had dissipated by noon. Light showers also fell In the northeastern corner ol the state.
The Weather Service's forecast said the front, which reached from Amarlllo to Gage In northwest Oklaho-ma, may move slightly but should remain over Oklahoma through today. The forecast calls for continued cooler temperatures and the possibility of scattered showers statewide el that he met with Libya's United Nations ambassador last Nov. 8 to urge Libya to speak out against the holding of the hostages in Teheran. Message Gotten He also testified thai on Nov. 29, Col.
Moanv mar Khadafy, Libya's leader, sent Presldeni Carter a messagt which Indicated tha he was against th seizure of the hostagei and would try to helpful in securlni their release." George Henry Maye Schuler, an expert See BlLLYageft 262,975 Dally Paid Circulation Morning-Evening Average for Last Week Delivery Service 239-7111 Want Ads 235-6722 Bother Calls 232-3311 Classified Comles Editorials Horoscope Markets WJ Obituaries Oil 11 SprU IS-" TV "Neither I nor anyone else In the White See DENIES, Page inoft TK "llnhAmn Entire contents copyngm Publishing Box 25125, Oklahoma City, Oklaho-ma 73125, Vol. 89, No. 213..