(Khr i4~igan Dail Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CAROLINE DOW State Income Tax Faces Ultimate Disaster THE STATE INCOME TAX is dead. There is virtually no hope of getting through the Senate any of the remaining 13 bills in the tax package tied to the income tax. The GOP old guard will have its way once again and the state will have to accept just another collection of nuisance taxes and perhaps an almost unprecendented five per cent sales tax. The sabotage of the coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans was a well-planned maneuver. After the GOP regulars whittled the coalition down to 18 votes-the bare minimum needed to pass legisation in the Senate-the coalition rammed through the income tax in an all-night session. But the Republicans still had a couple of cards left in their hand. First there was dissension within the coali- tion. Several of the Republican members want- ed tax concessions for industry, including ex- emption of tools, jigs and fixtures from the personal property tax. Since the personal pro- perty tax is collected by local units, the loss of revenue to cities would be made up by diverting one cent of the sales tax to cities. BUT THE DEMOCRATS didn't particularly like the idea. Although both the Demo- crats- and Republican moderates agree that tax reform is necessary, there is a basic dif- ference of opinion between the two groups in the coalition on exactly what it should do for the state: Democrats want a tax that will bring in more money to the state while the Republicans major objective is a system which distributes taxation differently in order to attract business to the state. Since at least two Republican Senators promised to abandon the whole package if these industrial concessions were not included, the Republican regulars could count on a better than even chance of having the in- come tax rescinded. After all, coalition mem- bers have made it consistently clear that all the tax measures pass along with the income tax or nothing would be passed. Even if the coalition had been a little more flexible, Gov. John B. Swainson has promised to veto an income tax if it is the only revenue producing measure passed by the Legislature this ses- sion. All the Republicans had to do was get one defector from the coalition; the odds-simply because of internal problems of the Moderates and Democrats-were on the side of the con- servatives. But they were determined not to take any chances. So, last Thursday, the first session of the Senate after passage of the income tax, the Republicans stalled and stalled and stalled. Sometimes the stalling degenerated into stupidity. For 45 minutes, two irate con- servative senators traded points of order and insults with Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski. THE STALLING was more than a move to delay the inevitable. The conservatives wanted to keep the Senate from doing anything until after the weekend because, as one GOP regular put it, "when these Senators go home, some of them from conservative districts are going to catch hell for voting for an income tax." And catch, hell they surely did. Chambers of Commerce and other business organizations were up in arms. Of course, there is also the problem for outstate members of the coali- tion of getting re-elected next fall. If the regular Republicans could get the vote to scuttle the coalition, surely they would be forgiving to the defector for his past sins. So, Michigan is right back where it started. Undoubtedly, the state will have to limp along on another inane package of nuisance taxes. Once more, each of the conservative senators will be able to go back to his constituents and boast that they have not passed an in- come tax; but they have also lost any possi- bility of winning the governorship. Everything taken into account, the con- servatives have won a hollow victory. Cer- tainly, it is a victory which will get a majority of the Senators re-elected this November; but they have lost a greater battle. THE REPUBLICAN blue-chip candidate, George Romney, has come out in favor of the income tax. What can he tell the people of the state when his own party has repudiated his stand? How can he win support in in- dustrial Wayne County when Republican Sena- tors have spent hours railing against Detroit as a useless drag on the state economy? Finally, how is Michigan going to attract much-needed industry when the tax structure is such a mess? The business activities tax and personal property tax all have to be paid re- gardless of whether a business mnakes or loses money. They lighten the burden on prosperous General Motors; but they discourage the me- dium and small businesses from locating in the state. An income tax is necessary only as a part of a tax reform program; if the conservatives have an idea of how to redistribute the tax burden of the state without an income tax, let them propose it. But wailing against Wayne County is no solution. The prosperity of most of the state ultimately depends upon the pros- perity of indistrial Detroit. The outstate areas want the benefits of the great industrial com- plex without having to pay the costs. THE STATE-SUPPORTED institutions-uni- versities, schools, mental hospitals and many others-do not exist by magic. They need money. All these activities have been hurt, some visibly and some not so apparently, by the state's constant financial wrangling. Sen. Carlton Morris said in the Senate, while debating taxes, that even though the univer- sities keep saying they need more money, they keep operating, and even though the mental hospitals say they need more money, they keep on operating. For how much longer? That's the question. -DAVID MARCUS k uV l '. w y t? "' .. "' : ' . 't .: v a Y-4'. a, -' y WATCH ON THE POTOMAC: Two-Fifths of the. Nation 'LOVERS MUST LEARN' Prudence Triumphs As .Renaissance Reigns NOW LET ALL Ann Arbor rejoice, for Warner Brothers, which has brought to the screen such greats as Bugs Bunny and Porky Pig, has done it again. Love-s Must Learn, which (for reasons best known only to itself) is alternately titled Rome Adventure, is filmed in the deeply spiritual tradition of The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone, except that the characters are all a little younger, and all still potent. Here, too, is the plot we've all been waiting for, the one that asks the burning question, "Should a girl sleep with Troy Donahue?" And two girls ask it, but arrive at slightly different answers. The first is a whole- some and proper girl, but not without spirit, who comes to Italy to find love. It is indeed a moment of high symbolism when we find out that her name is Prudence, The second is a wicked sensual rich girl. Her name is Leda. AT THIS POINT, the plot stops and the Renaissance takes over. Those who don't thrill to Troy Donahue and Rossano Brazzi might enjoy Michaelangelo and Giotto as they flash across the screen for local color and added ticket sales. The photography is intense, and there's a lot of Italy showing. The film is not without humor, but it comes close. Example: "Now I know what Shakespeare meant when he said 'alone at last'." "Did Shakespeare say that?" "He must have; he said just about everything else." More truly amusing are a young Etruscan scholar and a wise Ameri- can lady who runs a bookstore. In order to squeeze the last potential viewer out of the public, the movie becomes not only a travelogue, a comedy, a tragedy, and a love story of cosmic proportions, but also vaguely musical; we shall no doubt be hearing its theme song soon in the juke boxes of better ice cream parlors everywhere. THE PLOT ENDS as you like it: Leda, who, with better acting, could have been one of the great classic bitches of the silver screen, merely loses to Prudence. Troy Donahue is last seen fighting his way through a crowd towards Prudence, waving his symbol, a candlestick on which he pledged his integrity. For people who want more than the eternal city, the eternal triangle and the eternal question, there's a newsreel of John Kennedy pushing a button that bounces a radio wave off a star and turns on the elevator going to the top of the Seattle space needle. For people who want even more than that, which should include almost everyone, there's always the May Festival. -Dick Pollinger CORNELL TRIO: Mus icians I ow ~vto Odds PLAYING on the tag end, of a music-saturated weekend for an audi- ence numbering 35, the Cornell University Trio started off with two strikes against it last night at Rackham. One would like to say that the group bravely overcame these odds, but unfortunately the music-consisting of trios from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries-never really got off the ground. Starting with the Mozart G Major Trio, which perhaps shows Mozart's style at its most stock and stereotyped, the group showed a reluctance ,to lend some measure of drama to its performance; among other things, tempi remained distressingly constant, repetitions received identical treatment throughout, and transitional passages were played with as much deliberation and protraction as exposition and development. * * * WHILE THE MOZART, due to its particular lack of development, pointed up these performing traits, they were not quite as obviously displayed in the trio by Robert Palmer since the work emphasizes much variation of basic structural patterns. Still, the 15resentation lacked a feeling of continuity, which seems necessary in a work emphasizing a theme-and-variation type of structure, so that at least each fresh vari- ant appears to be inevitable, and not just additional and useless com- mentary on an already-stated proposition. Closing the program with the Brahms Op. 87 Trio, the group managed to use tempi with the slightest contrast even among adjacent movements. When one thinks of the dynamic, yet lyric, finely balanced performance given by the Beaux Arts Trio of the same work just two months ago, it is hard not to feel that the Cornell Trio suffered by comparison. -Mark Slobin LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Criticizes Writer (EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert Spi- vack is substituting for Walter Lippmann, who is in Europe.) By ROBERT G. SPIVACK BACK IN THE 30' , Franklin Delano Roosevelt stirred Amer- ica with his declaration that "one third of the nation was ill-housed, ill-fed and ill-clothed." Today, almost three decades later, Economist Leon Keyserling, who was head of President Tru- man's Council of Economic Ad- visers, has completed a study which shows that almost 40 per cent of America still lives in,-pov- erty and deprivation. These figures are so startling that I found them hard to be- lieve at first. I still find it in- credible that in a nation which has made the technological and scientific advances we have, that there has been so much neglect of a vital segment of the economy. . * MR. KEYSERLING'S study has been published by the Conference on Econonmic Progress and bears the title "Poverty and Depriva- tion in the United States." It is factualmandcarefully-documented, which makes it all the more devas- tating. There are great debates now going on inside the administrat- tion as to what we should be do- ing about low economic giowth and chronic unemployment. The record, to ' date, is not very im- pressive. But about the facts there seems to be no argument. *R * *f WHAT ARE the facts? There are some 38 million Americans with incomes under $2,000 per year and families with under $4,000 per year. That is the description of what consti- tutes poverty in 1962. Another 39 million Americans live in "depri- vation," which means individual incomes of $2,000 to $2,999 per year and families with incomes of $4,000 to $5,999 per year. This means that there are 77 million Americans-or two-fifths of the nation-living at substan- dard levels. This hardly sounds like the "af- fluent society." The Keyserling report notes with some disparage- ment the conclusion of Prof. John K. Galbraith that poverty in the United States is no longer a "mas- sive afflication." Galbraith said it is more nearly "an after- thought." UNFORTUNATELY that seems to be the attitude at high levels in the government and the Key- serling study dissents vigorously: "But this sooth'ing conclusion is based upon treating as living in poverty those families with in- comes of lessythan $1,000 a year, contrasted with the $4,000 which many authorities fix , as the amount required to place the multiple-person family above pov- erty in the American context to- day." The point seems well-taken. How many individuals, let alone fami- lies, could live on $1,000 a year? Common sense rejects that as a standard by which to measure the degree of national want * * * WHAT KEYSERLING finds dis- tressing is the "growing compla- cency about the poverty and de- privation still in our midst." While he advocates the administration's foreign trade program he believes that this would be insignificant as a remedy for what ails the nation The most hescan see, assuming its approval, is about another $3 billion coming in through the development of overseas markets. But what we actually need, ac- cording to Keyserling, is another $50 billion and eventually another X100 billion increased production. If we were just to look homeward, in his judgment, we could dis- cover that we have an immense "underdeveloped market." He would give high priority to meeting the needs of these 77,000,000 Ameri- cans. * * * "LIFTING the living standards of these 77 million is not only imperative in human terms, but also is the key to maximum em- ployment and production and more rapid economic growth," Keyser- ling has said. . It is ironic that a top Demo- crat should be using words like "complacency" and "soothing" to describe the non-activities of a Democratic administration. Btt the hullaballoo about the trade program and the Kennedy "vic- tory" over Big Steel seems to have diverted us from the real and nagging domestic problems that still exist. Maybe we need a Marshall Plan for the United States. 'Vice' THE COMMONEST objection to birth control is that it is against "nature." (For some rea- son we are not allowed to say that celibacy is against nature; the only reason I can think of is that it is not new.) Malthus saw only three ways to keeping down the population: moral restraint, vice and misery. Moral restraint, he admitted, was not likely to be practiced on a large scale. "Vice," i.e., birth con- trol, he, as a clergyman, viewed with abhorrence. There remained misery. In his comfortable par- sonage, he contemplated the mis- ery of the great majority of man- kind with equanimity, and pointed out the fallacies of the reformers who hoped to alleviate it. -Bertrand Russell DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Sportation is Segregation (Continued from Page 2) THE SEGREGATIONIST Citizens Council of New Orleans has sent a family of ten on a oneway, all expense-paid trip to New York city in hopes that the family would never return. This was the first attempt by this organiza- tion to deport Negroes from Louisiana in an effort to maintain white supremacy in that state. This was a test case which has proved successful. Intelligent Americans cannot sit back passively while the Citizens Committee is planning to send more families on a similar journey. New Orleans' irresponsible officials and citizens feel that the best way to avoid recog- nizing human equality is by making sure there are no so-called "inferior" people left to form a strong opposition. Some Southerners and Northerners have rationalized that if the Ne- groes can be persuaded or even volunteer to leave, violence will be averted and the Negroes will be doing themselves a service to . leave a part of the country where they are disliked and not respected. The Negroes might even improve their lot in another state anyhow. Why then oppose this push for a Negro exodus? FIRST, if this practice is condoned, integra- gration will be set back many years. This is obviously another method to deny the basic MICHAEL BURNS.....................Sports Editor DAVID ANDREWS ............Associate Sports Editor CLIFF MARKS ................Associate Sports Editor Business Staff human rights which all true Americans should support. The southern states have set up private school systems, literacy tests and poll taxes in an effort to discourage Negroes from living within their states. These practices have worked to some extent, but the segregationists will not be satisfied until every Negro has departed; so they have begun to subsidize the exodus. Second, it is true that Louis Boyd, the first man who accepted the offer, was able to secure a job at $100 a week in the North, but how many such jobs are awaiting other Ne- groes? New York has an unemployment prob- lem just as many other sections of the coun- try. Perhaps Boyd had some education, but what if the New Orleans Committee sends un- educated Negroes to other cities? Surely these people will not receive jobs so quickly because jobs may not exist for their skills. Uneducated people hinder a community and their ignorance is Louisiana's fault for denying basic educa- tion. Why should New York suffer from the shortcomings of another state's educational system? FINALLY, supposing these people do not find work. What then? The people of New Or- leans do not care; they have satisfied their consciences by giving these people cash and writing a letter to a welfare agency in New York. The people of New York city and New York state should start to worry; they are the very' ones who should be putting up the most resistance to this particular practice. If the Negroes arrive and do not find work, they will join the other citizens of New York who are unemployed and on the welfare pay- roll. From selfish standpoint then, why should in state of Minn. Residence waived. Will perform elementary prof. engrg. work. Sarkes Tarzian, Inc., Bloomington, Ind. - Employment opportunities in Radio, and Television: Program-Prod. Mgr.; Continuity Dir.; Account Exec.; Studio Assist.; Secretary; Newscaster; Traffic Mgr.; Research and Develop- ment Engr.; Accountant and others. Michigan Civil Service - Adult Cor- rections Trainee; Men with BA and courses in social work, social, psych., criminology, or related field. Must ap- ply by May 7. Parti-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are available. Applications for these jobs can be made in the Part-time Place- ment Office, 2200 Student Activities Building, during the following hours: Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring students for part-time or full-time temporary work, shouldcall Bob Hodges at NO 3-1511, ext. 3553. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobs should consult the bulletin board in Room 2200, daily. MALE Please call Bureau of Appointments, General Div., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 for further information. Consultant Landscape Architect to held design a garden. Recreational Therapist. Must be able to improvise. 10 hours per week, some evenings and weekends. Architect who is from the informa- tion and Design Dept. or Commercial Art. Must be a Junior or better. Part- time. FEMALE Recreational Therapist. Must be able to improvise. 10 hours per week, some evenings and weekends. Saleswomen with experience. 2 part- time and 1 full-time. Must be able to work during the summer and have transportation. Pay rate: $1.30 per hour. To the Editor: ONE CANNOT help but feel that one of the indirect benefits which may accrue from the "shake up" at The Daily is that Michael Harrah will take on such great responsibility with the paper that he will flunk out of this Univer- sity. The severity of this statement is vindicated if one looks at his articles from the ridiculous ac- cusation that Khrushchev was the murderer of Dag Hammarskjold to his present oration on the fact that the people of Michigan should be called upon to decide on mat- ters which the Legislature is elect- ed for and paid for. I may be wrong but it seems that Harrah would be the first person to insist that the Youth of Amer- iqa be set straight that we are living in a republic and not in a democracy. -Richard A. Brosio, Grad Injecting . To the Editor: IT WAS with great interest that I read the motion before the Student Government Council that asks that the Council "not inject itself intothe current controversy over appointments to Senior Edi- tor's positions on The Daily. I can truly sympathize with such a motion. With the Council "in- jecting" iteslf into such current controversies, they might not be able to devote enough time to oth- er pressing campus issues -- such as segregation in the South ,. -Michael S. Pinkert, '63E. 1 FEIFFER Rtlo LO Po&t'pouft BAR MKI WA'1. I M 601060 TO 1WALK Pgi&H PAST' 'iOU.. (J 100 ~OO P4OL t iYK6 MC. G6t5 MP I W4ANE qO'101TOK~OL4)THAT tI A -1NfATy Att R16HT'. X1 WA W 71 - UK6. 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