10-Saturday, May30, 1981-The Michigan Doily 4 Windfall profit tax collections on upswing I WASHINGTON (AP) - Collections from the "windfall profits" tax on crude oil are picking up and should bring in close to $25 billion this year, Treasury Department officials said yesterday. Officials said that collections of the tax, enacted by Congress last year, were below predictions for November, December, and January because of un- certainty about Internal Revenue Ser- vice regulations governing payments. THE TREASURY Department had predicted last year that the tax would bring in $25 billion in fiscal 1981, but for the first five months of the year collec- tions were $6 billion. February collections, however, were more than $2 billion and it is estimated that they will average $2.7 billion for March through September, the last month in the fiscal year, according to Cynthia Wallace, of Treasury's Office of Tax Analysis. "It looks like we are getting exactly what we should be getting," Wallace said. The decision by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to freeze prices could have an impact on tax collections, but that impact is not expected to be significant for 1981, she said. THE WINDFALL profits tax, which took effect in March 1980, is not actually applied to oil company profits but to each dollar-price increase for oil above 1979 levels. It is expected to raise $227 billion in the next decade. The Treasury Department prediction came as other government officials said investigations were continuing into allegations of widespread cheating on royalty payments for oil and gas leases. The U.S. Geological Survey estimated earlier this year that the government may be losing as much as $400 million a year in royalty payments because of fraud and theft. IN AN EFFORT to combat the problem, the FBI is conducting an in- vestigation in several .Western states, the Interior Department's own auditors are examining how the department's bookkeeping methods can be improved, and the USGS is working to upgrade its computer operation, officials said. Interior Department spokesman Ed Essertier said investigators are focusing on Wyoming, Utah, Montana, and Colorado. The most publicized probe so far in- volves a federal grand jury in- vestigation in Cheyenne, Wyo., into alleged multimillion-dollar oil thefts from the Wind River Indian Reser- vation. Investigators have said the Arapahoe and Shoshone tribes may have lost $16 million in royalty payments in the past two years through various schemes. 4 4 4 Summertime Photo by DAVID GAL Climbing this slide may seem like climbing Mt. Everest to these kids, but give them a chance, and they'll soon have a shot at the top. IMICH--IGAN REPERTORY'ol POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Suspects arrested in sex extortion attempt 0 Mis JUN By Geor Directed alliance alliance6 Member of the E3, 4566 Ben lsa Wedding °ge Bernard Shaw By James Martin JUNE 10, 11, 12, 13 By Carson McCullers Directed By Jon Hallquist Loose Ends JUNE 17, 18, 19, 20 By" Michael Weller Directed By Terryl Wright Hallquist OREGON, Ohio' (UPI) - A police spokesman said yesterday authorities would soon issue a photograph of a woman they believe was part of a plot to extort $20,000 from a suburban Toledo man by filming a sexual liaison with him. Two suspected accomplices were arrested Tuesday by police and are being held on $10,000 bond in Lucas County Jail. They are to be bound over to the grand jury next week. THE TWO MEN, Virgil Phillips, 39, of Kalamazoo, Mich., and Michael Babbit, 25, of Plainwell, Mich., were arrested at a motel in Oregon, but the woman, who the victim said wore a mask during the encounter, was still at large. The victim said the woman had been sitting alone at a bar in the hotel, and he had several drinks before he went to her seventh-floor room at the hotel. The victim said the woman insisted on wearing a mask during the encounter to fulfill a sexual fantasy. Police did not release many details of the investigation, but Cleveland police Lt. Ralph Howard, who was contacted by authorities after the arrests Tuesday, said he was told a photograph of the woman would be made from the film that was confiscated. HOWARD ADDED, "I don't know for sure what type of mask she was wearing, whether it was a Lone Ranger type or not." The victim said he was later contac- ted by two men who sent him photographs of the liaison taken through a see-through mirror. The men told him they would show the pictures to his family and friends unless he paid them $20,000. Howard said the two men and the woman registered at two rooms, bet- ween May 15 and 19, cut a hole in the door, and put a mirror on' one side, Later, he said, they apparently removed the mirror and covered it with the picture. Police said they found the names and addresses of other men in the Oregon motel room where the men were arrested. They believe some of those listed may have been victims of the same scheme. A spokesman for the Oregon police said at least one other man had been "lined up" for an extortion attempt, but had not been contacted. I 6 THREE DOLLAR REVUE A late evening vaudeville following Rep performances June 12, 13 and 17-20. LIGHT UP YOUR SUMMER! TICKET OFFICE OPEN PTP Ticket Office, Ml League M-F, Noon-4:30p.m. 764-0450 SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS STILL AVAILABLE All performances at 8:00 p.m. in Power Center 0